TUKSIMY, MAY II, 1054
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
Lopez
Indians
Cut Down
Bombers
II)' MS lll I'tiAlt
A I1 Spurt Writer
Al lyopn' untrr obviously have
utvrn the Clevi'mmt immuKer
new M'l'ipl lor the Indiana' nerlcs
Willi New Yolk thin utinton.
Alter trying it out twice out ol
town with great aurceaa, the
tllani played Ihr nrw vemlnn lor
the honui lolka (or lha flrnl tlmr
1M nluht ami Inli 'em limn.
'Hi la one li a rru thriller. The
loiy him It a dliect awllth from
lanl miring when the Indiana
played the mr"lc little lamb being
Iril regularly to alauglitcr by the
big bad Ynnkcea.
Tim 1UM fecript canta the Indiana
hi the role tit Iho hero who cut
the "complacent" Yankcea down
to rile.
In the thrre allowing) no far the
"actor" have aliown great verttil
llllty. 'llio llrat time. In New York.
Ihr Indiana It-It the tin Ills lor the
curtain call, acormit live run In
the loth liming lor a M triumph.
The neit day. alill In New York,
the Indians allowed .the Suturday
matinee crowd their muaclea and
came oil with a 10-3 victory.
M KI'fc.VSK
The vernloii Unveiled In Cleve.
Imid lanl niiiht tupped anything ao
lar. Moat ol the action wan
Jammeil into the lirat act, but the
auapense continued right through
to the final curtain ai the Indiana
won a.7,
Cleveland sxtled the Yankee
three tuna, Uicn roared bark with
itovrn belore the Ni"V Yorkeri
could Ret anybody out In the home
hall ot the Ural lining. Umpire
Hill Hummers thumbed Yogi Herra
and then Caany Stengel Irom the
liainn during the uprising.
With avven runs home, Jim lie
van on Hard, nobody out and
Whliey Pont and Hob Kutava
ahelled irom the mound, tn came
Yankee luokle llob Urim.
The younnster promptly started
pitching a no-hltter. Hcgan got
li(,me on a asrrillce (ly, but one
after another Grim looted the In
dians clubbers until Wally West-Ink-
dually broke the spell with a
amgle at Uie start ol the fifth.
Meanwhile, the Y a n ke es cut
their 8-3 deficit to 8-5 after two In
nlnits and 8 7 after three. Al this
point Don Mossl checked them.
Cleveland not only one more hit.
a harmleiw alngle by Al Btnlth In
U aeventli. The Yankees, though,
put two on In the eighth and Mike
Oarria replaced Moaal.
HKATMMIKI)
Oiircla weathered the clKhlh
without furtlier damage only to
have Charley Bilvera walk and
tlene Woudling sluule with one out
In the ninth. Uul Eddie Robinson
popped up and Gil McDounald
lofted a long lly to Dave l'hllley
lor tho final out.
l'hllley poled a grand slam home
run over Uie left field fence In the
first Inning.
The Cleveland-New York show
goes on again tonight In Cleveland.
Only one other major league
game waa plnyed last nlghl. The
llaltlmoro Orioles milled lor lour
ninth-Inning runs and shaded the
I'hilndrlphla Athletics 7-6. Tile run
total was the highest for the
Orioles this season.
A pair of walks, singles by Bob
Young and Oil Conn, a double by
Dick Kryhoskl and a sacrifice lly
by Hum Mele provided the rum
Haltimore needed to overcome a
0-3 Philadelphia lead.
Kryhotkl got another double and
a tingle during the chilly evening
and drove In four runs,
llob Trice, last ot three Athletics'
pitchers, was charged with his aec
ond defeat In two days. The, vic
tory went to Howie Fox. who look
over alter seven Jor atarlcd Don
Larsen,
Ned Garver
Leads ERA
N12W YOHK l.fl - Righthander
Ned Clnrver ol the Detroit Tlgcra
and southpaw Curt Uinnions ol Uie
Philadelphia Phillies, both of
whom were sidelined lor a good
part of last season, aro leading
the major leagues In earned run
average.
Oitrver, troubled by an ailing
kneo in 1033, pncea the American
Leiiguo with an earned run aver
age of 0.45, figures compiled by
The Associated Press disclosed
Tuesday. Tho 28-year-old native ol
Ney. Ohio, has given up only two
earned runs In 37 Innings while
recording three victories against
. no defcaUi.
Slmmou.i, sidelined lor a month
In '63 following the partial am
putation ol the big toe on his left
foot, leads the National League
with an average ol 1.40.
Baltimore's Bob Turlcy la sec
ond In Uio American League with
i.m.
Runnerup to Simmons In the Na
tional League la teammate Robin
Roberta, The durable righthander
has permitted 12 earned runs In
53 Innings lor it 3.04 slate.
SI'OKTH IN tIRIKF
By TUB AHSOt'IATKD I'RF.KS
FOOTBALL
. TUSCALOOHA, Ala. Prank
Thomas, former head conch at
Alabama, died niter a long illness
al the age of 65,
NEW YORK The Nation!
Broadoaating Co. announced plans
to televise Canadian pro football
wis inn on Haiurnny nnernoons,
, 10Lr'
BIRMINGHAM, Aln. Mnry
T Ann V.tillr wnn mrfnllat hntiA.
In the Women's Southern cham
pionship lor tho third straight year
with a 2 over par 76.
TENNIS
ROMS Enrique Mores, ot Ar
gentina upset top-aoeded Tony Trie
bert of Cincinnati 10-6. 8-4, 8-3,
1-8, 7-6 to gain the final round of
Italy's International Tournament.
Small Ballplayers Fill
Baseball's Hall Of Fame
CLAYTON HANNON, Sport tdro
Hardtops
Open On
Sunday
Hardtop racing officially gets un
derway this weekend at Clems
Speedway, but "Old Man Weather
la in the drivers seal lor the first
part of the racing season.
Racing luns are In lor the best
opening day, and season Uiat they
have seen so tar, according to
Speedway Manager Sam Netlln.
Last Sunday, racing officials held
a special practice session, and
somewhere around 1000 hardtop en
Uiuslasu saw a preview ol what
to expect lor Uie coming season,
including "Mr. Weather. "
Twenty aeven cards were entered
In the Sunday special, and until
Uie ahowers, good racing was in
progress.
Tills weekend, there Is a possi
bility that over fifty cars will be
on the track tor opening day for
malities. About thirty-five ol those
will probably be owned, and driven
by local hardtop men.
Inlcuded In the program will be
the llmo trails, several heat races,
the B main event, and the main
event. There Is a possibility thut
NeMin might achedule a special of
aome sort to give the opening day
crowd eomelhing extra.
Included In those local drivers
who will be back lor more hardtop
racing Uila season, are Bob Craw
ley, Russ Newell, ls.il year's high
point man In the local racing circle,
Dale Hanklni, BUI Hilton, Matt
Christian, Benny Morrison and
many others too numerous to men
tion. from California will come some
top notch drivers, who gave the
local boya a beating al limes la:t
year, such as Chick Robinson and
Al Kosal, who won Uie last week
end special main event.
The regular prices will go Into
effect this weekend, according to
Neslln, as will the lull rsclng pro
gram. Time trials start at 1:30,
and the tlrst of the hest races get
underway about 3:16, i
Hitters Led
By
Tuttle,
Stan Musial
NEW YORK iifl Tile major
league season swings Into Its fifth
week with outfielders Stan Mustnl
of the Cardinals and Bill Tuttle
of the Tigers leading their re
spective circuits In batting.
Musial. aiming tor his seventh
hitting title, tops the . National
League with a .383 average. Tuttle,
a rookie. Is the American League
pace-aetler with a mark of .375.
Figures Include Monday's games.
Brooklyn's Duke Snider Is run
nerup to Musial with .373, followed
by Don Mueller ol the Olsnts at
.370. Billy Goodman ot the Red
8ox ranks second In the Junior
loop with .382 and teammate Jack
ie Jensen is next at .340.
Musial Is the NL runs batted In
leader with 38 and Is tied wl'n
Hank Buuer ot the Cubs In tho
home run derby, each having 10.
In the Amercan loop Minnie Ml
noso ol tho White Sox has in
moat RBI a. 31, and Yogi Berrn
ot the Yanks and Roy Blevera ol
tho Senators share home run su
premacy with five aplect.
Ex-Alabama Grid
Coach Succumbs
TUSCALOOSA. Ala. Frank
Thomas, 65, Uie stocky, a 0 f t-
spoxen man who coacned Alabama
to one ot football's moat spectacu
lar records, died Monday night,-
Death resulted from a heart ail
ment which forced him to glvo up
coaching In 1047 and to surrender
his duties as alhletlo director In
early 1(62.
During his 16 years as boss ol
tha Crimson Tide, Thomas saw his
learns win 116 games, lose 34 and
tie 7.
Ho carried teams to Uireo nose
Bowl games and to Cotton, Orango
and Sugar Bowl appearances. His
bowl record was 4-3.
Perhaps his most famous team
was that of 1334, one of his four
undefeated squads. This power
house, featuring the passing com
bination of Dixie Howell to Don
Hulson, whipped Stanford and Us
crushing ground attack 23-19 on
Jan. 1, 1336.
FOR JETS
SEE JUCKELAND!
t: r -i i i k r a
MONDAY'S rUKKIlAI.I.
By TIIK AhHOOlATKD I'lthSS
AMERICAN I.KAtil K
W I, Fit. CI!
Del roll 11 5 .088
Cleveland 13 8 .61V
Chicago 14 9 .co ij
New York 11 10 .M4
Philadelphia 8 12 Alt 4'i,
Washington 7 12 .308 5'j
Baltimore 7 12 .308 5?
Boston 6 8 .357 5';
Monday's Results
Cleveland a. New York 7
Baltimore 7. Philadelphia 6
Only games scheduled.
National, Pacific Coast and West
ern International League standings
unchanged. No games played on
Monday.
Bevos, Suds
In Important
PCL Meeting
Portland and Seattle Pacific
Coast League baseball teams hook
up Tuesday night in their first
lace-to-lace duel ol 1054 with each
out to nuike a "cousin" of his
neighbor.
Only two games behind Iront
running Oakland and Sacramento,
PorUnud hopes to gel fat at the
expense of the Ratutcrs who have
had an up-and-down season. And
the Hauliers who bested Charley
series margin last week have sim
ilar designs on the Beavers. At
Uiough In sixth place, Seattle Is
only three gmes sway Irom the
top.
Meanwhile Hollywood and Oak
laud will tangle In Uie league's
llrst real test of strength.
The two tunes champion Stars
host Oakland in seven games start
ing Tuesday night, and It either
club makes a runway of the series
It should indicate whether Holly
wood Is headed lor Its third title
In a row.
Manager Bobby Bragnn of the
Stars says his club, which got
away to a miserable stsrt and wal
lowed around at Uie bottom of the
standings with San Francisco lor
three weeks, la now on Its way.
The Stars last week took six of
seven Irom Ssn Diego, a team
some of Uie experts figured might
make a determined light for Uie
pennant.
In other games San Diego re
turns home as host to Sacramento
and Los Angeles moves to Ssn
Francisco.
Pieretti Leads
PCL Pitchers
SAN FRANCIRCO ti The Pa-
clflc Coast League's list of unde-
tented pitchers was halved front
12 to 6 Inst week but. little Ma
rino Plerctil of Sacramento stayed
out front by turning back 8nn
Francisco 6-1 for his tilth straight
O n k 1 a n d's Don Fcrrarodo
whiffed 12 Seattle batters and was
tar out liunt In the strikeout de
partment, May :
O RB SO W L
6 0
0
0
0
0
0
Fighters Meet
For Carter Shot
SPOKANE Spokane's Bob
by Woods and Henry Davis ot
Honolulu meet over the 10-round
routo here Tuesday night, with the
winner getting a, shot at former
lightweight king Jimmy Carter
here In June. - '
Pieretti, Sac 7 14 30
II. Nicholas. Oak 8 II 14
Cnndlnl, 8no 7 6 8
Romonosky, SD 7 12 13
Beamon, Oak 4 22 7
Ihde, LA 7 1 S
Queen, Hwd 8 16 33
O. Elliott, Port 8 7 24
Fiedler, Port 7 10 8
Johnson, Sue v . 8 17 16
Walbel, Port 8 13 11
Munger, Hwd 9 13 14
Donoso, Hwd 8 7 16
Cleltel, Oak 9 17 28
Thomason, SD 7 28 26
Fannin, 8D 7 28 36
Atkins, Oak 8 19 11
Chandler, LA-SF 4 3 7
Oumpert, LA 11 8 6
Kimball, Sao 9 9 1
By GAYLK TALBOT
NEW YORK i! Willie Keeler,
the remarkable little man who con
tributed the sage advice to "hit
'cm where Uicy ain't" to baseball
lore, stood only 6 feet 4 and
weighed but 140 pounds, yet he
was large enough to post a bat
ting average ol .345 during his 10
years ot outfleldlng in the big
leagues.
Johnny Evers, member ot the
famous Tinker to Evers to Chance
double-play combination, was even
smaller than Willie, though. If you
want to Judge them on weight
alone. The pugnacious second base
man curried only 135 pounds on his
5 feet Inches over an 18-year
span and was by far the thinnest
athlete yet to be incarcerated In
the Buscbnll Hall of Fame at
Cooperatown.
The largest member of that sel
ect company appears to have been
the famous Adrian (Cap) Anson,
who weighed in at 220 pounds
while inflelding and managing,
irostly lor the Chicago Cubs, from
1876 to 1807. Babe Ruth Is listed
al a mere 215, along with Uncle
Wllbert Robinson, but many ad
mirers ol the pair will contend they
were given a short count.
The three tallest specimens
among the 64 superstars whose
plaques adorn the walls ot the
bn.-cbull shrine were Dizzy Dean.
Ifty Bob Grove and Cy Young,
ail pitchers and all measuring 6
feel 3. The late Herb Pennock,
cno ol Uie greatest ot Uie left
handers, weighed 165 pounds and
u much the lightest of the mod
ern group of pitchers In the hall.
He and Young had the longest
curcers In Uie big show, 22 years
each.
If there's anything to be learned
from these facts snd figures culled
from a handsome pamphlet pre
pared by Sid Keener, custodian of
Uie Coopcrstown gallery, It seems
to be that there's no such snlmal
as an average ballplayers. One
notes from Uie chart, though, that
U.cy average a good deal larger
these days than they did around
the turn ot Uie century. Rabbit
Maranvillc's 6 feet 6 and 146
pounds would not have been con
sidered unusually small 40 or 50
years ago. and Paul Waner's 6
tect 8' 2 would have made him
quite a big teller.
It cornea as no great surprise
t.) learn that a player named Ty
Cobb posted Uie highest lifetime
butting average among the Im
mortals, .367. but It was news to
this writer Uiat the reverd Connie
Mi.ck set the lowest mark with a
biasing .249 and powered only four
homers during his 11 years behind
the plate.
Oregon Back
Into Contention
NORTHERN DIVISION
W L Pet.
Oregon State 3 .iw
Oregon J -7
Washington 6 8 .545
Wnshlnalon State 6 7 .417
Idaho 1 1
.083
By TIIK ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tie university of Oregon Ducks,
lighting to keep in tlUe contenuon
in the. Northern Division osseoau
pennant chase, knocked over
Washington, 4-3, Monday In the
loop's onlv gsme ot the dsy.
Dick Schlosstcln's two-out dou
ble, which scored John Keller in
the top ot the ninth, was the key
blow ot tne game.
Washington grabbed off an early
lead with a singleton In the third
inning, but Uie Ducks stormed
back with two runs In the fourth
and another tn- the sixth. The
Huskies scored In Uie fourth ana
seventh to tie Uie game up. but
schlossteln's double broke the knot
jnnd the Huskies couldn't recover
In their half of the ninth
Three Washington errors helped
the Oregon causo along.
Oregon 000 301 0014 11 0
Washington 001 100 1003 8 3
Forbes and Marlett; Hill and
Ballard.
COLLEGE SPORTS
Br THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BASEBALL
Oregon 4, Washington 3
Willamette 6. Whitman 3
College of Idaho 10, Lewis and
Clark 3
Llntleld 10, Pacific 1
CAR OWNERS
Springtime Is
Once Again We Are
WASH
AND
LUBE
ANY MAKE - ANY MODEL
DRIVE IN TODAY !
ASHLEY CHEVROLET
410 Sa. 6th
TIME OUT
mr
"Boy! This town of Milwaukee
aure is baseball mad!"
Top Mile
Race
In Making
VANCOUVER. B.C. A race
featuring the lour fastest milers in
the world, including Roger Bannis
ter, the lanky Britain who cracked
the 4-mlnute barrier last Thursday,
may be In the offing.
Oeorge Duthle, sports director
of the Canadian National Exhibi
tion, aald Monday he has started
arrangements toward making the
race a reality. He said If possible
It would be held In Toronto late
this summer.
In addition to Bannister, who
ran the world's fastest mile, In
3:59.4 at Oxford University, the
field would be made up of Austral-
la's John Landy, Wes Santee of
the University of Kansas and Mur
ray Halburg of New Zealand.
Landy's best time for the dis
tance Is 4:02. Santee has been
clocked at 4:02.4 and Halburg at
4:04.2.
Duthle said the only hitch may
be In Bannister's scheduled ap
pearance In the European cham'
DlonshiSD about Aug. 20.
Duthle said, however, that in
a cabled invitation to Bannister,
Uie CNE offered to fly Bannister
back to Toronto if he would race
during the exhibition scheduled for
Aug. 27-Sept. 9.
Bannister is entered on the Brit
Ish Empire Games here July 30-
Aug. 7.
Santee. who entered the Ma'
rlncs June 13, said be was more
Interested in "doing a good Job
with the Marines" than participat
ing in the Toronto race.
WIL Teams
Close After
Two Weeks
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Western International League
teams, still closely bunched nearly
two weeks into the new season,
open new tests of strength Tues
day night with only the Edmonton
Eskimos and Calgary stampeders
out of action. -
The aptly named Eskimos, rep
resenting the look's "farthest
north"' city, and the stampenders
wUl be Idle until Friday under the
rescheduling agreed to when Cal
gary was brought back into Uie
league last week.
The Eskimos originally were
scheduled to open Tuesday night
at Calgary. But In Uie agreement
settling the controversy Involving
Calgary s lrancnise uie series was
left open, to be made up later,
while Uie Stampeders' manage
ment completes preparing the
home park for the season debut
The Calgary franchise was sus-
pended April 39 after a dispute
over paying the players. It was
reinstated at a directors' meeting
Isst Saturday.
Tuesday night's scheduled games
will find victoria and Salem, vir
tuallv deadlocked In llrst place.
trying to open daylight In the
standings. Victoria will be at Yak-
ima for the first of three games
with the Bears and Salem will be
home to the Lewlston Broncs.
The schedule also sends Spokane
to Trl-Clty and Vancouver to We-
na tehee.
Spokane and Vancouver are tied
one half game behind the leaders,
Yakima is a single game out, and
Edmonton, Lewlston and Wenat-
chee are bunched one and a halt
games back.
-ATTENTION!!
Cleon - Up Time.
Offering Our Special:
ONLY
Phent 4113
wA Mi
p f m
Sparando Makes Bowling
Look Easy To Beginners
By JIMMY BRESLIN
NKA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK (NEA) The
bowlers who were strolling Into
Sparando's Lanea at Rego Park,
Long Island, didn't seem inter
ested at all by the news that Uie
proprCitor, Tony Sparando, had
Just been announced the winner
ol bowling's major singles cham
pionship. They were more Interested In
getting an alley lor themselves
than going over to the bespectacled
Sparando, who was sitting In a
booth alongside Uie bar.
The 300 game he had rolled
while winning the American
Bowling Congress Singles Cham
p.onship in Seattle hardly entered
their conversation. People In these
parts, you see, take It lor granted
that whenever Sparando goes to
the line he Is going to take It
all.
But the rest of the nation's 20
mlllton bowlers still can't get used
to the fact Uiat Sparando beat
every name bowler In Uie nation.
The 300 game excited them
but not nearly as ' much as the
IrtCt that Sparando has a defective
right eye.
"I hurt my eye in an accident
a couple of years back, but it
doc-an t bother me a bit." Tony
says. "I Just roll as anybody else
would."
The veteran kegler dismiss
es this vision problem Just
as simply as he passes off that
300 made In his first game
in the tournament and the whole
business ol bowling.
"Bowling." says Tony, "Is a
simple thing. You take this young
kid I saw a couple of years ago.
He had a tape measure and was
measuring the distance to the
foul line from where he was. Then
he'd take his turn and bowL
"I asked him what be was doieg.
He tells me be Just finished
reading a book and Uie book said
to get rid of Uie ball at a certain
distance from the foul line. He
said be wanted to be sure he was
doing Just that.
"That kid was crazy. There's
no such thing as a hard and fast
rule to bowling. You Just do what
comes naturally to you. Any way
is good as long as It's legal and
knocks down a lot of pins."
This elementary approach to
what, if you listen to many, can
be a complicated, term-filled game
appears to - be surprising. A
check of the memory recalls top-
notchers in nearly every sport re
ducing their feats, verbally, to
the point where you gather that
it is the simplest thing In the
world to hit a golf ball as well
as Ben Hogan or make a double
play pivot in Uie Pee Wee Reese
manner.
"You've got to get pleasure out
ol bowling," stresses Sparando.
"The minute you begin to work
at it Uie entire thing is no good
and your score will show it.
"The big thing is to be com
fortable have the ball you like,
the shoes which are the rftost com
fortable for you and the style best
for you,"
Bowling, if you listen to the
1954 ABC singles champion, who
beaded the Ronson Lighter team,
is Just an easy litUe thing.
Melbourne
Gets Olympics
ATHENS lifl The 1956 Olym
pic Games were assured Tuesday
lor Melbourne.
The last obstacle to staging the
games in Australia was removed
when the International Olympic
Committee voted by a two-thirds
majority to hold the equestrian
events at a site to be selected
later.
There had been considerable agi
tation that the games be taken from
Melbourne because of the Austral
ian law which prohibits the im
portation of horses until alter a
six-month quarantine. The law.
which the Australians refuse to
change, virtually eliminates the
possibility of holding the full Olym
pic equestrian schedule.
This Week's Winners
JAY HAWK'S
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Klsmaui Flower .
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Louie's Food ...
Oregon Woolen .
JoneJlea .
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6 74
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Southern Orefon Music
Stone s signal
I-nat niflhr retult:
Klamath Flower 4 Southern Oregon
Music 0
Blnfe Cafe. 4 Utile Swedes 0
Louie's 4 Stone's Signal I
Rrhni-lcten 3 Bold and Sonfl 1
Joneauts a Oregon Woolen 1
Schneiders took the league lead
from Bold and Sons In last night's
Moose Ma's league acUon at Lucky
Lanes.
Clara Beard and Scotty . Bray
took individual scoring honors last
night, by rollng- a high game of
303 pins, and a series total of 543
respectively.
Mary Morris had runner up spot
In high game with a 190, and Doris
Scott had a second place series
score of 488.
In team action Louie's Food took i
both -the game, and series scores
with a line ot 867, and a three
line total ot 2534.
Schneiders was second to Louie's
in game action with their 863 games
while Jlng s naa secona mga ser
ies with a 2537 pin total.
Splits were many in last night's
MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
No games scheduled
INTERNATIONAL LEAuUE
Buffalo 8, Havana 6
Syracuse 3, Rochester 3
Only games scneautea
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Indianapolis 4, Columbus 2
Charleston 5, Kansas City 3
Louisville 3, St. Paul 1
Minneapolis 9. Toledo 8
TEXAS LEAGUE
Beaumont 5, Houston 1
San Antonio 10, Shreveport 3
Fort Worth at Dallas, postponed
Tulsa at Oklahoma City, postponed
- PIONEER LEAGUE
Boise 7, Billings 3
Magic Valley 8, Great Falls 7 -Idaho
Falls 31. Salt Lake City 5
Ogden 16, Focatello 10
THE WINNING YELLOW TICKETS
001325 - 000644
000491 - 000823
000015 002529
SPARANDO
action with seven woman keglers
picking up comDinauon snots.
Those who got splits were: VI
Kenaston, the 4-6-7. Lucille Nan
carrow, the 4-7-9, Ruth. O'Connell,
the 3-4-7, Scotty Bray, 4-7, Mildred
Ecklund, the S-8-10, Dasle Douglas,
the 5-7, and Ila Douglas, the 4-6-7.
BOATS!
BOATS!
BOATS!
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