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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 30
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 30

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St. Louis, Missouri
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30
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MusiaVs Five Homers in Doubleheader a New Major League Mark Swish! All Eyes Up as Another Goes Out of Park Determine Will Not Run in the Preakness I i wiwi in iiiiii i ii i.i i mi ii. i i twnffnnmr mmnm Average Now .400, 21 RBh 1- It; ft (..., LOUISVILLE, Ky May 3 (AP) Kentucky Derby winner Determine will not run in the Preakness at Pimlico on May 22, it was announced today by the thoroughbred'a trainer, WUllt would be given a couple of weeks' rest before running at Hollywood. Ray York, who rode Deter mine to victory in the Derby, left by auto with his wife today for California. Crevolin could not be reached immediately for comment -V" 1 Molter. Molter, who said he was speaking for owner Andy Crevo-lin, said, "We don't want to push our luck too far." The trainer said Determine would be returned to California by plane, leaving here Wednesday.

He said the Derby winner Middlecoff Gets 6 on Last Hole; Mayfield Wins SAN FRANCISCO, May 3 (AP) Shelley Mayfield, a transplanted Texan playing professional golf olit of Chlcopee, long will remember the 1954 San Francisco open invitational tournament. So will Cary Middlecoff, the former Memphis dentist who decided years ago that a molar maestro's career was less profitable than snatching dollars from the fairways. Mayfield. born in Seguin, near San Antonio, backed into the winner's circle yesterday. Middlecoff, the favorite and leader on the fifty-fourth and final hole, saw his hopes buried in a sand-trap breasting the last green of the Lake Merced course.

Middlecoff took a 6 when a par 4 would have meant the big win. Mayfield won the tournament, revived after eight years, with scores of 72-70-70212. It was worth $1400 to him. Middlecoff had rounds of 69-70-74213. His payoff was $1000 but the way he lost probably hurt more than being out $400.

Jimmy Clark, Los Angeles, got $750 for a third-place score of 75-69-72216. Gene Littler, 1953 national amateur champ, and now a Palm Springs, pro, and Simley Quick, Los Angeles, each won $600 fourth money with 217. A crowd estimated at 5000 followed Mi'idlecoff up the last fairway. He hooked his second and the ball buried completely in the sand. It was a toughie.

The U. S. open champion of 1949 dug his feet in and blasted with his wedgie. The ball popped out but was still in sand a couple of feet away. His next landed just off the green but 35 feet from the cup.

Middlecoff had lost his chance to bag first place by himself. He now needed this long putt to tie Mayfield. The ball rolled past the cup and it was all. over. The winners: Mayfield, $1400; Middlecoff.

$1000; Clark, $750; Littler, $600; Quick $600; Kroll, $450; Ward, $325; Inman, $325; Ford, $325; Mayer, $325; Joseph, $250; Wall, $200; Fleming, $150; Holscher, $150; Schneiter, $150. By Pojt-Dlnpatrh Photographer. Umpire, catcher and STAN THE MAN all look upward as MUSIAL clouts his third home run of the first game of the Sunday doubleheader at Busch Stadium. This blow, in the eighth inning like the first two went to the pavilion roof. Watching the flight are Umpire AUGIE DONATELLI, Giant' Catdher WES WESTRUM and the Cardinal hero himself.

Musial hit two more circuit blowa in the second game for a major league record of five in a doubleheader, split by the slugging teams. PQSTrDISPATCH Raschi to Pitch Tonight Tall Tom Alston, making a convincing bid for the Cardinals' first base job'since Steve Bilko was sold and a mitt was thrown to Ray Jablonski to use if and when, has learned quickly how Lou Gehrig felt In the same batting order with Babe Ruth. ft i vi Cardinal Averages Edited by virJ.ROY.,STOCKTON J. ROY STOCKTON 4C May 3, 1954 Phillies Slip Into First Place; 'Most Runs' for Yanks a Mere 12 Stan's Big Day FIRST GAME. FIRST INNING Walked by Johnny Antonelli.

THIRD INNING Hit home run to roof of pavilion off Antonelli with nobddy on base. FIFTH INNING Hit home run to roof of pavilion off Antonelli with Red Schoendienst on base. SIXTH INNING Singled to right off Jim Hearn. EIGHTH INNING Hit home run to roof of Pavilion off Hearn with Wally Moon and Schoendienst on base. SECOND GAME.

FIRST INNING Walked by Don Llddle, later scored. THIRD INNING Flied out to Willie Mays In deep center off Liddle. FIFTH INNING Hit home run over pavilion roof off Hoyt Wilhclm with Schoendienst on base. SEVENTH INNING Hit home run over pavilion roof off Wilhelm with nobody on. NINTH INNING Popped to Whitey Lockman against Larry Jansen.

SUMMARY. Eight official trips five home runs, one single, 10 runs batted in, 21 total bases. Also two bases on balls. Worsham Exhibition and Muny Golf Postponed Rain caused the postponement of two golf events yesterday the Lew Worsham exhibition at Sunset Country Club and the final round of the Municipal tournament at Forest Park. It was said the Worsham exhibition will be played here some time in July.

The muny tournament will finish next Sunday. Three players tied for the lead in the first round of Muny play Saturday. They were Bill Mathews, Lakeside, Jack Rossin, Forest Park, and Fleming Cody, Paramount, each with a 72. If at First WILMINGTON, N.C.. May 3 (UP) After 12 unsuccessful tries, Marge Bums of Greensboro today owned the title in the Carolinas women's golf tournament.

She defeated defending champion Mrs. W. B. Cocke of Charlotte, 7 and 6, to win the tourney in which she had twice been runner-up. NEW YORK, May 3 (UP) While Stan Musial was cracking records in St.

Louis, the Phillies yesterday quietly slipped into By Bob Broeg About 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon a New York newspaper man, gathering material for magazine story, asked Manager Eddie Stanky a question, on the tteps of the Cardinals' dugout at Busch Stadium. It was phrased carefully by Archibald Gordon (Tiger -Murray, the eminent Princeton alumnus and sporting writer. Who." he inquired, "is the best player in baseball? Stan i-tanky's reply wasted as little time as one of Stan the Eighty-Grand Man's hardest-hit drives reaching the streetcar tracks. ''You," said manager to writer, "have just asked and answered our own question." The Tiger nodded and explained that all other managers had agreed, and certainly a crowd of 26.662 that sat through a seven-hour doubleheader yesterday wouldn't voice disapproval. Cheered for Pop Fly.

In fact at about 7:55 p.m. there was an amazing phenomenon of baseball as, just before climbing over one another to get away for warmed-over dinners, spectators applauded Mu sial for of all things hitting hiEh pop fly to first base. They had stayed, you see, not because they had great hopes of the Cardinals sweeping a doubleheader instead of settling for a plit, but because they were fascinated to see if Stan could do it once more. Incredibly, they wondered whether Musial could add, further luster to the greatest day of his brilliant career by hitting a sixth heme run in eight official times at bat during the twin bill in which the Kedbirds won the opener, 10 to 6, and lost the nightcap, 9 to 7. "But," Stan explained afterward, smiling, "(Larry) Jansen got me out on a bad pitch a high, fast ball inside.

Yeah, I was going for one that time." Earlier, becoming the first player in major league history to hit five homers in a double-header, Musial had hit at only one bad pitch, a low, inside fast ball thrown by Johnny Antonelli, fast-firing New York southpaw, in the fifth inning of the opener, by holding his arms close to his by holding him arms close to his body and away it went. Breaks 6-6 Tie. Two innings earlier he lifted one of Antonelli's slow curves to the roof. Then after singling to right off Jim llearn in the sixth, he faced the former teammate in the eighth with the score tied, 6 to 6. And when he slammed a slider to the roof again for a game-winning three-run ihomer, it became the first time he ever hit three in one game in the big leagues.

Only once before as a $150-a-monih weak-armed Class outfielder at Springfield, in 1941 had Musial ever pasted three home runs in one game, he nd wife Lil remembered, laughing, when Mrs. Musial called him between games yesterday to offer congratulations. "She didn't see 'em that time, either, even though she was in the park," Stan said, chuckling as he explained that his son, Dickie, then had been a babe in arms whose unco-operative calls of nature had coincided with the innings when his 20-ysar-old father teed off. Musial munched on a sandwich between games of yesterday's doubleheader, drank a glass of milk and then went out to make it a memorable day of nine RBIs by whacking one of Hoyt Wilhelm's slow curves onto Grand avenue in the fifth inning of the second game and then drilling a knuckler even farther down the boulevard toward right-center in the seventh. 410-Foot Out.

Before he popped up in the ninth, the only previous time manly Stanley had been retired was on a third-inning blast to dead center, the only one of his smashes aided by a wind that favored righthanded hitters. That one gave the crowd a thrill, too, because Willie Mays backed onto the gravel path some 410 feet from the plate to catch it. So it was Musial's day from beginning to end as he set a record for 21 total bases in a doubleheader, and it's likely to become one of his greatest years because, a notoriously slow starter, he's already hitting .400, has the most RBIs in the majors 21) and is tied with the Cubs' Hank Sauer for the most homers 8. The guy was so happy that, as Manager Stanky told it, he not only smiled for the first time trotting around the bases on his fifth homer, but actually laughed for joy. Still, he retained his wonderful sense of proportions.

He xoia reporters btanky had helped i .1 uy mm Meauny xnrougn spring training so he'd get into stride earlier. He observed with a true team man's attitude that the day could have been complete if the Cardinals only had won both games. And then the mighty Musial. though smiling again, shook his head and said: "I still can't believe it. You mean real sluggers like Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Ralph Kiner men like them never hit five homers in a doubleheader?" Hack to Use Bilko As Reserve Player CHICAGO, May 3 (AP) Steve Bilko, 25-year-old first baseman purchased by the Chicago Cubs from the St.

Louis Cardinals last Friday, reported to the team yesterday. Bilko is the thirty-second player on the Cubs' roster, and Manager Stan Hack lans to use Steve in a utility lie. first place in the National League pennant race by winning in Cincinnati and the lowly Pirates went on their best batting spree of the year in Chicago. trsEZEsasssiissa AMERICAN LEAGUE. CHICAGO (At Phtpadelphia) 123456789 R.K.E.

1 0 8 0 0 5 0 00 14 17 2 PHILADELPHIA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 03 3 2 3 BattertM: Chlrairo Cnmuer. ra anil Lollar; 1'hlladrlphla Kch and Ai-troth. Night Game. Cleveland (Garcia) at Washington (Marrero). (Open date for other clubs).

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Night Game. New York (Gomez) at St. Louis (Raschi), 8 o'clock. Postponed Game.

Brooklyn at Milwaukee, cold weather. (Open date for other clubs). Dykes to 'Bench' Self In Hope It'll Snap Orioles Out of Slump BOSTON, May 3 (AP) Manager Jimmy Dykes of the Baltimore Orioles has tried Just about everything to snap his team out of an extended batting slump which has produced jusf 30 runs in 14 games. But the rotund skipper has one more gimmick up his sleeve. While sitting out the postponement of a doubleheader here yes- terday, Dykes said he intends to "bench" himself when the Orioles play the New Y'ork Yankees in New York Tuesday.

He told Coach Tom Oliver to take over the third base coaching duties. "Nobody seems to want to talk to me over there any more," Dykes said. "I just want to see if the club's mad at me." Then he added seriously: "Maybe it'll change our luck if I sit In the dugout." Happy Oriole. BALTIMORE (AP) Happy is the word for George J. Diering III, 15.

He was chosen as the batboy for the Orioles, Baltimore's new team in the American League, after a contest in which 250 boys were entered. MTtlUM 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS CORPORATION. PEEKSKILL, 10 aoe What Does It Mean-In A Whiskey? READ THIS IT MAY CHANGE YOUR WHISKEY-BUYING HABITS 0YERNIGHTI As great a slugger as Gehrig was for the Yankees' Murderers'' Row of yesteryear, Ruth was greater, more colorful. And even the 1932 day when Larrupin' Lou became only the third player in major league history to hit four homers in one game, he lest the headlines to the death of the famed John Mc-Graw. Because Stan Musial was sensational yesterday, Rookie Alston's efforts were engufled despite the fact he hammered four hits in the first game, including an inside-the-park homer, and a three-run double in the second contest He's had seven for 10 since Bilko was cut from the first-base competition and Jablonski, a fine hitter, in-ferentially included in it.

And now, Tall Tom was ribbed, he'd know how Gehrig felt hitting behind Ruth. Alston, sharing a mirror with the smiling Musial as both shaved, grinned and giggled. "Man," he said, "every time I watch Stan hit, I'm ashamed to take a bat up to the plate." In tonight's game at 8 o'clock, Vic (1-0) Raschi will pitch for the Cardinals and Righthander Ruben (1-2) Gomez for the Giants. No Day for Pitchers. Twelve homers were hit In the doubleheader, eight by the Cardinals.

In addition to Musial's five and Alston's one, Jablonski and Wally Moon homered for the Kedbirds and Whitey Lockman, Wes Westrum, Monte Irvin and Bobby Hofman for the Giants. Hofman highlighted the eight-run fourth inning that won the second game for New York. Of the eight hits and two walks that benefited the Giants that decisive frame, the big blow was the St. Louisan's three -run pinch homer which put them ahead, 5 to 4, and pinned defeat on Reliefer Royce Lint. Don Mueller, another St.

Louisan, was lost in the shuffle of Musial's mightiest day, too, even though he had six hits that hEf'OND CAME. it 1UHK. AH. R. II.

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with at lrat one hit. PITCHING. W. L. W.

Prpskn a Haddlx 2 3 llaohl 1 0 Deal 0 1 Bratlj. 1 Lint 1 1 Staler 1 1 brought his average to .381. Mueller, whese second-game "5 for 5" included a double and triple, was the last previous player incidentally to belt five homers in two consecutive games, but not a doubleheader. He did it on Sept. 1-2, 1951.

The day's time-table: Lights were turned at 4:15, ninth in ning of the first game. The Cardinals tied for first place at 5:30 as the Reds lost to the Phil lies. Rain fell at 5:45, prompt ing an 18-minute delay in the fourth inning of the second game. The sun reappeared at 6:20, but the Cardinals fell out of first place at 7:58. Eight in 16; 50 in Musial now has had eight homers In just 16 games.

When he hit his career high of 39 in 1948, he didn't get No. 8 until the Cards' twenty-ninth contest. The list of players who have hit three home runs in a game is extremely long Johnny Mize did it six times but only six players in history ever hit four homers in a game. They were Bobby Lowe, 1894; Ed Dela- hanty, 1896; Gehrig, 1932; Chuck Klein, 1936 (10 innings); Pat Seerey, 1948 (11 innings), and UU Hodges, 1950. The record of four home runs in a doubleheader broken by Musial's five had been shared by Gus Zernial, Ralph Kiner, Bill Nicholson, Jim Tabor, Jimmy Foxx and Earl Averill.

Horace Stoneham, president of the Giants; his son, Pete, and Scout Tom Sheehan of the Giants watched the double-header and were as much im pressed with improvements at Busch Stadium as were Leo Du rocher and his players. B. Campy to Have Surgery at Once MILWAUKEE, May 3 (UP) Catcher Roy Campanella of the Brottttlyn Dodgers, both ered since spring training by a chipped bone in his left wrist, will fly to Brooklyn this afternoon to undergo an operation in Brooklyn tomorrow. The operation probably will keep Campanella out of the Dod ger lineup for nearly four weeks. Campanella.

the National League's Most Valuable Player in 1951 and 1953. said he made the decision himself. He was X-rayed in Cincinnati last Thursday and advised by doctors that he could continue playing despite the chipped wrist bone. "I was just kidding myself all along," Campanella said today. "I thouRtit It would get better, but I never had anything like this that bothered me so long." Before his decision to undergo an operation, Campanella facpd benching for the first time in his career because his hitting had dropped off.

ST.LOUIS POST-DISPATEH How They Stand NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games L. Pet. Win. Lose B'h'd.

6 .600 .625 .563 Club. W. Phila. 9 St. L.

Bklyn, Cinn. N.y. Chi. Pitts. Milw.

7 7 8 8 7 12 9 563 .588 .529 ,563 .588 .529 556 .579 .526 529 .556 .500 462 .500 .429 368 .400 .350 357 .400 .333 1 2 4 3V AMERICAN LEAGUE, Games Club. W. L. Pet. Win.

Lose B'h'd. Chi. 11 6 .647 .667 .611 Det. Clev. Phila.

N.Y. Wash. Bait. Bost. 5 .643 .667 .600 6 .600 .625 .563 6 .571 .600 .533 9 .438 .471 .412 9 .400 .438 .375 9 .357 .400 .333 9 .308 .357 .286 1 l'4 34 4 41,4 5 Yesterday's Results.

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Cardinals 10-7, New York 6-9. Chicago 5-10, Pittsburgh 3-18 (second game called end eighth, darkness). Philadelphia 4, Cincinnati 3 (second game, rain). Brooklyn at Milwaukee (rain).

AMERICAN LEAGUE. Chicago 4-1, Philadelphia 0-2. New York 12-0, Detroit 4-4 (second game called end fifth, darkness). Cleveland 6-6, Washington 4-3 (second game 10 innings). Baltimore at Boston (2, rain).

Saturday's Results. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Cardinals 5, Pittsburgh 4 (10 innings). Chicago 4, New York 3. Philadelphia 4, Milwaukee 3 (10 innings).

Cincinnati 7, Brooklyn 8 (11 innings). AMERICAN LEAGUE. Philadelphia 2, Baltimore 1 (10 innings). Chicago 3. Boston 0.

Detroit 6, Washington 1. Cleveland 10, New Y'ork 2. Tuesday Schedule. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Philadelphia at St.

Louis, 8 p.m. New Y'ork at Cincinnati, 8 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 9 p.m. Brooklyn at Chicago, 1:30 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Chicago at Washington, 7:30 p.m. Cleveland at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Baltimore at New York. 1 p.m. Detroit at Boston, 1 p.m.

Shotput Record. Duke University shotputter riiirham T.uch hnldu the At- lantic Coast Conference indoor and outdoor records for that event I Sweetest Music The Man Can Plunk Proof is the "strength" of whiskey.The Proof of a whiskey is double its "alcoholic content." Most leading blends are no more than 86 Proof. Fleischmann's is 90 Proof. This extra Proof gives you more flavor, more enjoyment in every sip! Proof determines the amount of tax collected by the U. S.

Government on whiskey. Fleischmann's, being full 90 Proof, pays $1.03 more The Pirates racked up eight runs in the first inning to defeat the Cubs, 18-10, after losing, 5-3, while the Phillies edged the Redlegs, 4-3. In the American League the White Sox blanked the Athletics, 4-0, behind Don Johnson's two-hit pitching, then lost, 2-1, while Cleveland won a pair from Washington, 6-4, 6-3, to make it six triumphs in a row. The Yankees outpounded Detroit, ir-4, then lost 4-0 in five innings. Pittsburgh hammered seven pitchers for 18 hits, including homers by Frank Thomas and Bob Skinner, in its winning game.

Thomas also hit three doubles and had seven consecutive hits in the two contests. Hank Sauer smashed three homers for Chicago, giving him eight for the year and a tie with Musial for the major league lead. In the opener, Lefty Paul Min-ner scattered nine hits for his second win for the Cubs. Jerry Lynch homered for the Pirates. In the second game Ernie Banks and Bob Talbot also hit homers for the Cubs.

Willie Jones doubled home what proved to be the winning run for the Phillies in the sev-. enth after Del Ennis had hit for the circuit in the sixth. Bob Miller pitched four-hit relief ball for five innings for the win. The second game was rained out. Brooklyn's game at Milwaukee also was rained out.

In the American League Lefty Bill Hoeft pitched one-hit ball for the Tigers in the nightcap halted by darkness at New York, yielding only a double to Andy Carey with two out In the fifth. Ray Boone hit a Detroit homer. In the opener the Yankees made their most hits of any game this year, 13, and doubled their previous high in runs with the even dozen achieved on a six-run third-inning rally when 12 men went to bat and four more runs in the sixth. Allie Reynolds pitched two-hit relief ball for his first victory. Wally Westlake hit a three-run double in the tenth to give Cleveland its second victory, Art Houtteman pitching a six-hitter, after Rookie Ray Narleski won his first big league victory in the opener in relief of Bobby Feller.

Johnson pitched the third straight shutout for the White Sox in the opener in which Bill Wilson and Al Carrasquel hit homers. In the second game Elmer Valo singled home the winning run for Philadelphia with a pinch-hit after Bill Renna singled and moved to second on a sacrifice. Baltimore's doubleheader at Boston was prevented by rain. 'Opening Scramble. The first race at the Churchill Downs spring meeting in 1899 was appropriately named "Open per case in taxes than 86 Proof blends.

Yet, you pay less for Fleischmann's than for many lower Proof brands Fleischmann's believes in giving you the highest quality at the most reasonable price possible. No wonder Fleischmann's is the best blended whiskey value in America today! (FIRST r.AMF..) tOHK. A. 1 4 II (1 II I William 2b 4 Dark nt 4 ThimiiHitn 4 Irvin l( Milfllpr rf 4 Maya cf 3 lirkman 1 1 4 4 AMIIVM HKARN (I PUKOVK cfliifman I AH. K.

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llearn 8-3 1-3, 1'trk-one 11-2-3. Slaley 7-ft. Mrarle 2-4, ii lit Antonelli 6-R, Hearn 4-4. Stales Hrarle 1-1. Braile (I -01.

llearn Dnnaielii. Rallantant, Barliik, Warnekr. h. 48m. Trabert Gains Victory.

BLOOMINGTOX, Mav 3 'AP) Tony Trabert, national tennis champion, won his final collegiate tennis match with little difficulty, but his Cincinnati team lost to Indiana, 7-2. Trabert was the master all the way as he defeated Bob Martin, In-idiana's No. 1 player, 6-0, 6-2. 0 1 I I I II II i II 11 i ij I i BLENDED WHISKEY SO PROOF TH miSCHMANN DISTILLING ing bcramble..

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