) V'' WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1948 1: Boston Braves May Sew Up Pennant Today New York, Sept. 22 ilPiThe Boston Braves, who needed a "mir acle" to win the National league pennant in 1914, needed only one jtvictory and a Dodger defeat to win the nag today. , Only a slight ease of mathemat Sics separated Billy Soiithworth's Braves from the flag after they swept a doubleheader from the 1 St. Louis Cardinals yesterday, 11 I to 3 and 4 to 0, while Brooklyn dropped two games to Pittsburgh, Boston, sporting a stylish seven' and-a-half-game lead, has nine re maining games to play, the same number as Brooklyn. Either two Boston victories or two Brooklyn defeats also will give the Braves their first senior circuit title in 34 years. Johnny Sain, who registered his 22nd victory of the vear in the oDener. scattered nine Redbird ihits while hurling his 26th com Iplete game and sixth triumph in succession, four uosion runs in the second inning and five more in the sixth sealed the verdict. Wins Second Gam? Rookie Vern Bickford captured his ninth win in the second game when he limited the Cardinals to I fnnr hits. The Braves drove lef t- ifhander Howie Pollet to cover in !4 the first inning with three runs on fa Cardinal error, Alvln Dark's a stinging double, Mike McCormick's single, three walks and a sacrifice pit. J Pittsburgh defeated Brooklyn 1 12 to 11 in the playoff of a pro- tested game on Aug. 25 and then beat theOodgers again, 6 to 3 in a regulation game. In playing over part of the ninth inning of I the Aug. 25 contest, the Bucca Ineers loaded the bases and pushed 'across three runs on Stan Rojek's I double off Tom Brown's glove. The three runs gave Pittsburgh a total of six in the ninth, just enough to beat Brooklyn. I Little Vic Lombardi, an ex CDodger, held Brooklyn to five hits ?in the regular scheduled contest while the Pirates collected seven ' hits off losing pitcher Rex Barney S and Carl Erskine. ' Red Sox Win 1 The Boston Red Sox increased 'ithelr American league lead to a ? full game over the idle Cleveland f Indians by thrashing the Detroit STigers 10 to 2.. f t The Red Sox lumped on Ted A Gray for two runs in the first on J Dom DiMaggio s triple ana a io,ng fifly by Ted Williams and then pushed across six more markers in me mira on live nils nu iwu walks. Lou Stringer hit a homer for Boston. Giants Win The New York Giants won the first game of a day-night double header by beating th,e Chicago Cubs, 3 to 2, on Johnny Mize's three-run homer, his 38th of the lyear, In the sixth. Larry Jansen, wno ouipucnea uoyie L,aae, won his 18th game. Chicago, however, broke its 10-game losing streak by wining the nightcap, 3 to 2, on Andy Pafko's three-run homer in the ninth. Southpaw Johnny Schmitz, who chalkod up his 18th i triumph, had a no-hitter until two It were out in the eighth. Rookie pitcher Sam Webb broke the spell with a single and the Giants got their only other hit In the ninth a homer by Whitey Lockman off reliefer Jess Dohernic. 1 In another day-night double header, Cincinnati beat the Phil lies, 6 to 5 in the first game while Philadelphia took the second j game, b to i. tteuei pncncr narry Gumhert won tha opener, and rookie John Thompson, recently called up from Toronto, checked the Reds on five hits on the arc-lighter. THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON PAGE THREE Sport Parade By Oscar Ftaley ' (United Prero Snoru Writer) Jersey City. N. J., Sept. 22 U) There was a dull, vacant stare in Tony Zale's blue eyes, a look which had all the lost listlessness of amnesia. It had been there several times during the 11 rounds he pawed hopelessly at the elusive shadow in front of him. It was there when he pitched forward on his lace to lose the middleweight championship of the world to Marcel Cerdan. And It still was there a half hour later as he slumped on a chair in his dressing room, wrap ped in asheet. He looked like a body in the morgue, a body on which they carelessly had forgot ten -to close the eyes. Finally Cornea To Finally he moved. Jerky like a puppet on a string, but still those empty blue eyes couldn't seem to focus. And it seemed to be all hje could -do to summon a husky whisner in which the words fought their way through the thin, battered lips. "I Just wasn't there," Zale's voice rattled almost inaudibly. "I didn't feel right from the start. I think I had him hurt in the fourth round but he got away." The medical examiner had cqjne out of Zale's dressing room a few minutes earlier. "Complete exhaustion," the doc said. And Tony looked the part. This wasn't the famed "man of steel" who used to knock them dead with crippling punches to' the body. He had tried. But Cerdan hadn't given him anything to shoot at. Cerdan Looks Ooo ;The man from Morocco was a will o'the . wisp who covered beautifully, made tough Tony look like a preliminary boy and then swarmed over him with a se ries of hooks which first filled those blue eyes with perplexion and then chased all reason away. Now Cerdan, the new cham pion, was down the hall in his own dressing room, accepting congratulations in a noisy bed lam. Fifty million Frenchmen, or so it seemed, all tried to kiss him at once and Marcel was explain ing his plans. "I take two months in France and then I come back here to de fend the title against anybody these people pick out," Cerdan grinned. Dr. Grant Skinner DENTIST ODonnell Bldff Office Phone IS . Residence Phone 819-W DENTISTRY Dr. H. E. Jackson At his residential office NO PARKING PROBLEM 230 Lava Road Phone 134 ADDITIONAL SPORTS (Continued on Page 8) Instruction In Tap, Acrobatic, Ballet & Toe DANCING Beginning, Advanced and Professional Routines LIMITED CLASSES so REGISTER NOW WITH M. 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