Warrior Rally Nets Six Runs, Evens SeriesBy JOHN CRONLEYImports Editor!)■ You are never beaten in the game of baseball,'Proof ol the axiom was trolled, forth once more here Sunday after-uiHsn ’vta Hie Oklahoma City Indians, willi manager Tom Tatum working magic by his deft maneuvering, came winging from behind tn down Fort Worth, 9-7, and split the two-game scries.A six-run riot did the Tribal trick in the eighth inning after the Cats, behind the strong early pitching of Ray Moore, had appeared to be cinch winners with bads ot 6-0 and 7-3,A two-run single by catcher Joe Bell, on the most uuusul kind of a play provided the winning margin after a similar dutch drake by Lou. Farollu had tied the score sit 7-ali al Vicente Lopc/.’s expense.Talum Walks Here was the situation in the eighth whcu (he rare Teat poppet! up.Tatum, after drawing a walk as a piocbhilter, was stationed on Lhirdhase, Farotto was on sccond and 1herc were two men out. Bell was in to bit for Bob Leonhard.The audacious Tatum broke for the plate on one of Art Dahlc’s offerings. He had it stolen—for the winning run—but Bell was swing-v injs at a fat one. He slammed its for a ground single through the left side, TaUtm scored* and so ti i d \ Farotto with the insurance jun.That was the climax to the Warriors' steep uphill climb after Vic Alichatec and Morris Shipman had been pounded for six Fort Worth runs in the first two innings.Probably pondering whether or rot to call Ijack honorary opening day flinger Gnw Murray, Ta^um finally used 18 of his players, aU mo't sweeping clcan the bench and sending five moundsmen into action.Pillar WinnerThe last one, Vcrn Kennedy, touched it out in the ninth after the first two Cats, Bill Hunter and Gayloid Wade had singled and walked, respiv lively. But Kennedy, a game saver from way back, was poison to the next three men, who didn't get the ball out of the infield.The work of Kennedy and Me I Nee, who tossed a scorctess eighth frame, dropped the game inlo the deserving hands of Len Pillar, credited with the knockdown-dm final witnessed by 537 shivering fans.Pillar helped give the game a* **New York Yankees salvaged their exhibition finale with the Brooklyn Dodgerk this afternoon, winning 2-0 as three hurters combined to hold the Dodgers to three hits before a chilled crowd ot 5,41-1.Tom Morgan, Joe (Mrowski. and Bobby Hogue each worked three innings and each permitted one safely. ^ :The Yankees made oily four hits themselves, all against starter Carl ftrskine, who pitched six- innings. Bud Pod bit) an finished up with two perfect frames.The Yanks scored in the third no singles by pinchhilter Archie Wilson and Jackie Jensen and a long fly by Mickey Mantle. They made the second run in the fifth when Phil flimilo doubled, took third on a fielder's choice and scored as the Dodgers failed trying to get nil inning-ending double-play.The game concluded the exhibition schedule lor both teams. Brooklyn closed with a record of 20 wins against 11 losses and the Yanks showed a 21-12 mark. The Dodgers won four of the six times the clubs met.Hrkfn. (N abrhoaJN’. Y. 1.0 Kee.se ss 3 0 0 t jJensen Trwilgr.r 2bwua tut js wiiii a 'iu i^iveiaturnover in the opening day line-up?.Tuesday’s opening box.^cores will be minus such old familiar names as Joe DiMaggio, Sam Cbapm3U, Lou Boudreau, Bobby Dnerr and Hal Newhouser. In their places you1)! find the likes of Ed Mathews, Dick Hall, Bobby Del Greco, Jim Rivera and Leo Thomas, Only 83 ot last year's Hi starters will he in the same lineups.The most drastic shakeups were in the houses of the St. Louis Browns, Pittsburgh Pirates and Boston Braves. The Kogers Uornsby»KiU Veeck team at St. Louis swept out most of the old furniture that chittcred up the collar. Branch Hickey's latest crop of rookie wander* is aboutnine wunu svuus cnamjtf nuuBraves field.The “Experts” pick Cleveland and Brooklyn as the World Scries opponents in tight finishes with the New York Yankees and Giants. Most of them expect a two-club race m each league. There is a scattering cf support for Detroit, Chicago and Boston in the American and St. Louis, Philadelphia and Boston in the National, One writer pieked the revamped Brownies to win it all.ANi10 10 O.Ccrv i C Cox 3b 3 0 0 1 2;RIhuIo H. Mrtfn 3b I 0 0 1 0 Manll- ri Snider cl 2 0 0 2 0 Hauer cf William? cl 1 0 0 2 0 3bC.ini«anlU c2Ul QXaxey 3b Walker c 1 0 0 Q D Wood I in k 1*u 3 0 0 1 Mite litShu ha If 0 0 Q 1 OittO?* lb _Uo4ce.s 1h 3 a 1 r, liOitenvan 2bFurillu rr 2 0 0 3 OfSllvera caSrhoi 3 0 1 0 U 1 0 0 2 0 11143 2 Q (l 1 0TJ1E DAILYT 6 6 n o__°KLAHOMAN_1 S n 11 TftOHB^TAPMt 14, 1052.TWENTYurtu*u*S number of jniuritt left the managers still struggling with their lineups in the final exhibition games. Monte Irvin’s broken ankle forced manager Leo Duroeher to make over his Giant outfield,, buying Bob Elliott from Boston and movingBosox SqueezeBraves, 2-13OU303Dfl?0\ 0 0 \ o3 0 0 2 7 30 130—LB HUrtttatuArchie Wilson, Yank pmch-hlller for pilcher Tom Morgan, starts a slirfe for home as Jte scores from third on jljicfccy Mantle's fly toleftficld in the third umintj of Sunday's Yankcz-Uodgcr game, Dodger caichcr Roy Co marietta JaKes the Kitie throw from Andy Pafko while Gil McDouguhi (12) of the Yanks awaits his turn at baLDebut of Dallas Wall Is Leading Negro Successful At Greensboro** , GREENSBOHO, N, C-, April 13DALLAS, April 13— Itf—Davc Hoskins, the first Negro ever to play —Arthur Wall jr., unattached in the Texas league, had a shaky but succcs.'inl debut Sunday as he Professional playing out of Honcs-anrf his Dallas Eagle mates beat Tulsa, 4-2. The Kagtes thus swept the cr,nic home with a four-opening scries with Ihc Oiteri. undcr-par 07 Sunday to slip intoThe tall righthander was in trouble much of the time but cxtri-!£e tead of the $10,000cated himself without damage in all except the third and fourth in- r_l Gr Grcensunro Open golf nings. In each of those frames, 1he Oilers got two hits and one run. 1 Only one of their two runs was earned.Fourteen Oilers were lefi stranded on the liases. They got eighthits offMissions Grab Two From BudsSAN ANTONIO, April The San Antonio Missions pushed across runs in the final inning twice Sunday to sweep a double-header from the Houston Buffs, 2-1 and 3-2.Goat of the (winbill was the new complexion when he took over Buffs1 sccoudbaseman, Earl in Hie second and stopped (he Fc j Weaver, who commilled errors inlinei cold unlit permitling iboth of the final innings, lone run off him in the seventh, ^ ~ ,For 5-i innings he was folvcd for! Omcr Tolson rnccd all the warbut two blows, both coming in the!front firstbase on George Kress' fcvcnllj. !single when Weaver let Van Har-From the third thrn^ilt;;h Uie’rington’s throw roll through his , ^}^ar pitched hittess baling \0 u'm opener.while facing the minimum of a I . - ..A*-,*** Weavers error in the sevenththe nightcap permittedhits off Hoskins, three of them doubles.The Enale?, meanwhile, collected nine hits. They scored once in the second inning and three times in the fifth. Firstbascman Allen Maul led the hitting assault with two doubles and two runs batted in, After the game, Hoskins declared I hat he wasn't nervous, He simply was not so sharp as he had been in his two brilliant exhbitionappearances for the Eagles against the Boston Red Sox and the FortWorth Cats.lAbrms it loot GST. Mrnn 5 0 0 0 n o11 nIks 2b-s* 3 0 0 3 2iaWI!son 1 1 L 0 0 ■Krsbine n 3 0 0 0 1'OaUroMfSkl p 0 D 0 0 0Pcrfbeliaa p 1 0 0 I C b-BrD'An 1 C 0 n oUtorJe p 0 0 0 0 0Tctal5 2J032nI TdU!«. 2 427 14 a.-Slnatcd lor T. MorRi^i la JnU I. Gruuadrd wu ior Oslrow.iM in filh.Brooklyn .................... 000 000 000 0New York ..................001 010 00lt;-2E^snvwa, KlU-ManUe. Woodling. 2b-['ampnntrlla. Rixculo. SB—SnlHcr, DP—Coleman, niz^uio atA Sihc. Lelt-BTOokTyn -U Ktw YfK* 7. IlU-ErsWnt 3, Morgan 1. HO—ec.iklne 1. IfoJfUc 1. |IO —Kr?klr.c 4 in $ LnntnSi; Potibellan 9 m 2: NlorRsn l In 3; Ostrowskl 1 Jn 3; Itoaue 1 -in 3. Tt »T.it EK1-Kr»kite 2'2. Winner— T. Morgan. Loser-Krskinc- U- Hurley IlDbb lt;X). PlilclIL (N). T-l:51. A-WliPhils 14, Athlclics 5PHILADELPHIA, April 13-MV-The Philadelphia Phillies swept their two-game city series with 1he Philadelphia Athletics Sunday, combining good pitching with limely hitting for a one-sided 14-5 victory-The Phils slammed three A’s hurlers for 15 hits, including a three-run homer by Del Ennis in Ihc third inning that put the Phils in front to stay.The A*s helped the Phils make it easy by eommiting seven errors.rhlla. (A) ^xTioairMl*. lt;N) abrhojt Joo5t 55 3 0 0 2 3]lTamn^r « .S 2 1 2 4 Llllrrft ss I I 1 0 l Ashbum cf 4 1110 Kaln ID J 2 l 7 llMayo cl 1 0 0 I 0 5121 o:W. Jones 3b i \ i I i ■10 2 1 Oii-ohrkc 3b 110 0 2Chiefs to Field Most Seasoned Sooner Outfitv h a4 C 0 i 2 Kno^lurh cf 3 1 u L 03 110 5tournament hy one stroke.His 20G total was one shot lower than fhnt of Sammy Snead, White Sulphur Springs, \V. Va.r a four-time winner here, whose staling 66 as the day’s lowest round.Two strokes behind Wall at 203 goiiig into Monday's final round were Dave Douglas, Newark, Del., and Bobby Locke of Johannesburg,South Africa.Ed 4‘PorkyM Oliver, Lemoni, III., the 36-hole leader, needed 7* to drop into a fifth place tie at 209 with Skee Riegcl of Tulsa.Wall, former Duke university star who last week scorcd his 31st holc-in*one nt Durham while practicing for this tournament, posted 34-33 against the 35*20 par of the Star mount Forest Country club course.In seventh place at 210 came S1'*.*; X—iS7'?9: CnWiier*; fibi-ciaris 3iinline- R.srrt.- x* Zcrriial 2- Cabal!ero, .fores* Asbhnrn,Julius 13orosj Southern Pines, N. 3. Knnii j. niiizjk j. so-Mchni-Sj|rt it7v»mial _ ________ __f\, Clark Tf 5 I) 1 3 01Ennis If, Zb 3 1 1 1 fl miehcK 3b 4 0 0 1 rf 2 0 0 0 □!1 0 0 2 4)Mchfll50n rf 2 1 1 1 lj 10 0 1 0-M. Clark If 3 t 0 2 0| 3 0 14 liKyan 2b 2 2 110 10 0 0 lirahallro 2b 2 1 I 2 0 ioio o.W'aiikus lb 2 i a a o ft 0 0 0 LiV. Jo^cs lb 2 0 2 2 0oioo a!Ri:rtro5s c s l n s o 10Q 1 Ol.Mrjcr p .10 0 0 2 c D-mvtn 1 I 1 o 0lllirllik V! 2 0 2 0 1I Drews p 1 0 0 0 1,S-:rler lb KrU 22 Tinton c Hooper T a-Thom as Martin p b-Mait'Sk! bowler pdozen battersTribe Gefs 10 HitsThe Tatums wound up with}0inning of Jack O'Donnell, who had doubled,Tl c - I hght c,[ thcm camr in;to move to third, O’Donnell then 1hc last t h r -e e rounds as thcyjr„rr„,pushed across alt nine runs after!on Hesters fly toC., Johnny Bu!la, Verona, Pa., and Jin Fcrrier from San Francisco.Wall is in his third year as a professional. The slim, soft-spoken Pennsylvanian has $710 in officialbeing helpless a ^ a i n n t Moore’sjlcftlicW to win the nightcap, speed and screwball for five frames, illusion atr h « a‘?ainAr»i^n!lt;i hn 0. or that distance Moore was^VJf- 3 0 0 -1 » « * *»=ithe complete master with his two-hitter but his old control difficul- sNr ties eausht up with himTain. ab t Kd aiillillxa Kirby 3b 3 111 U Dundy 2b GrA^ias ss 4 0 o 1 2-Knoblurh Trcin^n if 5 0 12 0 Cullirts rf VwX lb 5 0 3 7 O.HuUOn rf 3 0 0 2 0 Fontana rf 5 0 12 O Maul Jb 4 12 15 3 iVHfrrcr 2b 2 1 1 3 2!Creel If 3 0 0 3 0 Sanicka cf 4 0 15 0-Perry 5^ 3 0 0 2 1 I^andiilh c 2 0 fl 3 O’Ayiu-ard c lt;10 24 0 7ic«r r 3 0 0 0 3 Ho$klnx p -11202 a ll^/bc 0 P 0 0 O’,Curley lt;OOOOl VB-a^crjrr 10 0 0 0.Totals 3o49271”) PGA winnings so far this year, bSrars? for * 5 ankMinrd n ih. [Last vear he won only $39.KS8*-:; .-©BSfc?!1**1 « p« was a sixth-E- KnohUurh. nni-4\yi«:arrt, Trcir.^n,iplace tie at Jacksonville, tla., lastCuIlinF. 7«Uil 2. 2B—TiorK 2. 2. Ki(- 1by. SH —KnoKj«eblt; Por*^n, S—Sherry, ll*-York I.rtt-Tulsa U,Dallas 8. Un-Zic5cr 4. KosVEr.s 7. SO -Scsfer l, ittfias l, Curley 1. un-Zf«.«er 8 in 7 inning; CutTw 1 in 3,.Ziescr lt;Kulxor,. Loser-Zieser. llt;—Sleea-ttrace. Mateaky, C»p??. T-2:L4.Talali 35 5 9 2H6I Tolala 4114 15 2712 for ICcor^r Sn 41^. b-Walked for Madia in 7^b. c-Singled C^r Meyer i\ 45h.Fhilailolphla lt;N)..........113 23J OOx-14PWUAelplsla ......... 201 ttd 200- sK—Uitrhc-xki llooprr-, M-irlin 2.o-v. 3R-Asftbum. liU-Knn^. DP-l^LUh-rac'*r Sudcr and Ka!n: Matilfi. Tipton pnrt Fain; Sudor. 3oo^t an3 Kami Sldzillt;K 11am► ncr arid Wnlkus. I^n- rhlMlclp^ia \A) 0r lJhi!^ielpb1a (M 7. BB-Meyer 2. RWiik f, ilooker 2, Martin 2. SO-^^ci'e^ 1, Few-!er 1. Uic^zik 2. lretvs |. HO-Jloopcr 5 In 3 inninc?: Martin S in 2;Ey LEW JOHNSON(Oiily Oklahnman Spcrls Wrilcr)CHICKASHA, April 13-Tochni-callv, Chickasha1s entry in the Sooner State league will be studded with rookies but actually manager 3Uy Taylor will field one of the most seasoned clubs in the loop when action flares Thursday.The root of this double talk is I he seven Mexicans on the 13-man siiuad. While all are first or second-year performers in United States professional ranks, most of them have had considerable experience in the Mexican league.Taylor, one of five new managers in the class .D league, hopes this edge, in espcncncc will get his club off to a flying stsri in the pennant race.One of the Mexican prospects, 30-year-old thirdbascmau Manuel Lazano, is playing his first year in the States, but is a veteran of eight campaigns of Mexican baseball. La/.auo is a steady rookie, Taylor grinned. “Ho isn’t a flashy player, but he’.s good, consistent fielder and hits a long hall.”The Chiefs enjoyed a highly-successful training camp at the Del Rio, Texas, layout of million* a ire Arturo Gorualcs, who purchased the Chickasha franchise last winter. The Chiefs, v.ho won six straight exhibitions al one strclch, are one ot four clubs in the expanding Gonzales chain, lie is also trying lo buy the San Antonio franchise in the Texas league.BOSTON, A p r i 113—t^—Rookie eenterfielder Faye Thruneberry broke up a 1-1 pitching duel with a seventh - inning homer Into the righUield stands to give Ihs Eos ton Red Sox a 2-1 victory over the Boston Braves 111 the final game of the city series. The game was played before 3,3U hardy souls who braved the 40 degree weather.Veteran Kay Scarborough and las: year's most valuable minor league player Gene Conley both hurled scoreless ball for five innings with Scarborough allowing only one hit and Conley two safeties.In the Sox sixth, Johnny Pesky reached first as Billy Keed, Braves new sccondbaseman, brtftted his easy roller, Ted Williams, with his only hit of the dayt singled Pesky to third and big Walt Dropo shot a single to center to score Pesky with an unearned run.r,vers tor a monui witft a Drok-cn thumb, manager Red Rnlfe had to two-platoon his outfield in left and center.The armed services snatched Don Ncweombe from Brooklyn, Lloyd Mcrriman from Cincinnati and others. Ted Williams of thB Red Sox and Gerry Coleman oi the Yanks are due lo rcjiorl lr the marines .May 2.With a break from the wcalhcr-man, who was most balky over the weekend, Ihc majors shoulddraw some 250,000 for Ihe eight opener?. There will be no special preview opener a I Washington or Cincinnati this season.Here is the opening day program and probable pitchers with 3051 wofl'lirct records.AMERICAN LEAGUEBoston at Washington—Parnell (1R-11) vs. Porterfield (9-8).New York at Philadelphia-Itaschi (21-10) vs. Shantz (1810), Cleveland at Chicago—Wynn (20-13) vs. Pierce (15-14).St. Loves al Detroit—Garver (20-12) or Fillett (6-14) vs. liout-teman (00).NATIONAL LEAGUEPhiladelphia at New York— Roberts (21-15) vs. Maglie lt;23 G), Brooklyn at Boston—Roe, (22 3) vs. Spahn (22-14}. •Pittsburgh at St. Ilt;cuis (night' Dickson (20-16) vs. Staley (19 li) or Chambers (1-112).Chicago at Cincinnati—Rust (11-12) VS- Blackwell (16-15).fUi i1c«a-Slstl 10 10 O’Peaky 3b Jrthroo cf A D 1 7 0 Davati Ih Toj*csoq lb 4 Q *1 6 I l?ordc»r\ \[ 3 0 0 2 0 Wilson f □ 0 0 D 0 Marshall rr 3 0 D l 0 M sifters 3b 3 0 D 1 3t^n lt;TJ *1 r |wi a I Bailooi f.4) abr {to % 2b. 3 112 0|7r0ftbCry rf 4 1 2 2 03 10 11 IQ (21 Winiamif If 2 Q I 1 0 Lenhardl ir l 0 0 C J V .Slphens al 3 0 0 3 2 Plersall ss 1 lt;1 0 l 1 Dr-oyo lb 20 1 K 1tOOpOr c 2 0 0Z OjCernerl L! 1 0 0 3 0 Si, Claire e; I 0 D 4 0 Goodtnau 2b 3 0 0 I 3-Cvisick iS 20 I) 2 3 U?cl0 2b 100 12 Conley v 2 0 0 1 0. Vollr5rr rf 4 0 13 0 Tharp a u 1 U 0 I 0 Scrbro’i^h P 2 0 0 1 0M'Dermot p i o o g oNjarhos OSiUe c2 0 0 2 0 10 0 1Totals 32 IB 2? 12100- 1 1 lDx- 2Totals 29 I 3 24 7 a-Singled for Rceil in ninth.Braves .....................00JSox ...................0(0Y*- RcciTi Hevan» Matbews. RUI-Rropo^ Tluoneberry, Tor£C50n. lin-nirore'bprry. SO -Tftroneberry. DP—Goodman, V, 5lo* THen5 and Dropo: Piersall. Le?ctt arid Ctr-ntrl. Left-»raves 2, Rclt;l Sox 8* BB -ton Icy 2r McIermott 1. S0-tDnlry 3, Wilson 3, Scarborough 2. HO-Conley -I 5rv 6: Vrilxon 2 in 2; Searborouch 2 3u 7; Me-Derir.ai; 1 isv 2. JttEU-Ccnlcy l-o, Wil-I.1, ScArborou2h l-o. McDermolt 0-0. Wt*—Conley, dinner—Scarborou#h. I-05cr “WlCsnn. li — Criitver Scc.vju anJ Daffy. T-l:4, A-3A31.Connor 5igns AgainCHICAGO, April 13—ttv-Tacklc George Connor, former Notre-Dame all Amcnean, has .signed fori his fifth seasnn with the profession-.Three lt;‘nesv,r managers wil be making I heir debuts and twlt; more—Holmes at Boston am Phil Cavarretta with the Chicagi Cubs—will be starting their firs full seasons. Of the “new” man agers, Boudreau at Boston am Hornsby at St. Louis are jus moving to new fields. Eddi Stanky, St. Louis Cardinal Skir per, will be starting on n hram new career as playcr-managci Stanky has much the sam club that Marty Marion bai last year. The Cards count o; kit pitchers like* Vinegar ben-Alizell and Willard Schmidt an the full season work ot WallWestlake and Billy Johnson \improve on last year's thin place finish,Durocber's Giants were set with the same club, minus Stai ky, until Irvin was injured. The Mays got his draft call and Ui entire outfield was upset. Eilio(Canllcrttd Pact 2U 'Colanan 110 VOW wijji i0STOP SMOKING?then tryiC^TOBAK-O-STOP5.1:a‘i Chicago Bears.AT TOUR NEA3E51t^eiUned la help YOU curb the u-bicro hiijt , . P ett brittle of TOOAK-0-i.ror loxy »n.d i tt booitkly rjtbrlti you, Nifr, ncm-hjbii. Cflrm* inr. «,K (p osr. ^**4 by tbDT-5ndr.only *4.9*VEAZEYrSyearPlaying in the next-to last three-;Sports Af Beaumont 3.1 n o k3•t a2 lc lb 4 02 H OHesKt rf 'lt;rr 3 0 0 2 SToI*on ct in til a If 3 0 10 O.Krr« Ifsixth, when the Trihi- took advrn- $'-?}/* 2lt;* * lt;3 uopK ?s tage of four walks so iihinje bsck 1’01^ p.*2}*iJ*UUM rinlo the Tunniri^ with Ihrro ri^t I Total* 30162*19’ To:*llt; r. _ ., . 5 . , . rcc fun*. QplC VjL whc,^ ^ir.nins rvn scviclt;l.LdCa uam nac a big innm?. ihr ooo icoclt;m-iio----HI mil-mi COO 1» CpOI-27TSlKTlr,yiUs”SY/^2R^±^li*rswdsc!I ~iWrialcy ficW SuRda'. 5 , . V ,u,,c,1 URC Wilnac a big irk mg, the i ronton Texans all hut wrapping it up with-.83 ArXznU;?f—Rookie F.d Baehmann's tweith-JJJgJnnirg pinch single drove Bobby 0 2 0;Wilkins home from second Sunday 3S033 and enabled the Shreveport sports ^2 fa Vi ^ T10$e ^ Beaumont Rouh-j ncck.5, 4-3, for their sccond straight; victory.Rfiinmgnt Abthfl A’Phxe^epoiimr.snc?: MarLs 9 Jn 3; FOw^r 1 in 2:XfO'cr S m \\ V In 3; IVtews 2 Vft 2.P» and KR-Hocrper Martin S-o. Fowler* mAVl rii Id n3i;u« r,i|ijr 0-0. M«cr 3 3, Rid*:* 21, Drc^s 00. Win-) JH-year Old na?lVP Otner-^feyer. lJ05er--Hoow'r. U-Gorman. 1 Vrrrlcrirk unil ^uidc tho Scan, DJicOll Napp. T-2:23. A-2-I61.Chiefs from the jeeondbase Mot. A veteran of nine years in baseball, he played with Shreveport of the Texas league in 1910 before being tapped for four years of army duty by Untie Sam. The Irim skipper has never hit below .25 ar.d belted a rousing .3D0 with Sherman-Denison of the class B Big State league in 194$.Chisox 8, Cubs 6. CHICAGO, April 13——Com-un-1 some Sunday, he came in a lialfjbining seven hits with eight walks hour after Snead apparently had land three errors, the Chicago sewed -up ihe three quarter lead,,White Sox outstumbled the (lh{. Snead commented before his parlcago Cubs, 10^f in the first halfiJttAnurr vmms? lt;ll , ■ , * ,jblistering round thit I feel likciof an exhibition duubleheadcratSF:CON’D GMIEutiTfin j'Pn Antnlo abr hot U225 Srh^fimzi 2b 4 1 I 3 4^ .Shcfrrr 3b^ 1 tr0 2 3 n Hanrock 3b * -n 2 F 0 IteslFt rf 3 0 10 2 To!.lt;rtn rfM n !1 A tfFarotto had a lig day iL bat lin in three itraight sintflc.? after! grounding out. Frank Kcllertlooked like his old slugging self a$;H«rin?in it i 2 1 3 0 o’D-^mi iu the. firslbas-eman collected a doublejwrn/ib * and sngie and two RBls in thre official trips.Of the losers'Wayne Belardi cadi had two. as batted across!In Fort Worth'; mng a little bit pcncd. There werelt;C«nUimc4 on rj|ttircrjn SH H 1 JKopw ss, lt;-i 6 5 2 5 0 McAfee lbSaMtcla ID 3 0 1 It 0 Klliott If Garrirai If 50 H 0;ttrown rf ¥ SmlTh 3b 4 0 0 1 4;Ackcn 3bHell 2b 0 12 2 tszekt\y lt;f GTtn^ras rf 4 2 2 2 0 Gorcla 2J»II .Smith e 2 0 2 7 O.T^incston c 4 I 0 1 1 BJidcmt p inn) v 3 o o o 2 jD3%-ifS D Q 0 d 0 O.a-WilVlM 0 1 0 0 o»ab r b « . 5 0 3 2 5 J SfiOHl 5 113 0 r I I 1 Pi 3 0 0 3 -I J ,4 a a * O’.1 o i s 4:Sedgman Easily Wins Monte Carlo Crown■h [.ron0 0 0 0 0 IriloV UMONTH CARLO.4 117 0 4 0 103 4 0 14 0 3 1110 3O1O0Total* 35 I3T 27 iJ tolals a Walked U ihvrd. io ^ ' VSinslKl lor KTippsJrin in eichtb. -----r Ji s- ---- - -......-t April 1^—.T — Chlcaifo lt;A ..............OH 120 410-10»k MW** fi!;* Wnien singles final of the In-;Ro^^ h iroicombr. AWcii. jefr! hernstmnal tennis tournament Sim-! :Totals 3»3Ui;Uj ToUl. a-Ran for Lisincston in Itih. bSlnKtclt;l far McAfee In 121b,Kapiton p o o o o 0; cress at this stage of the game,bfienujr 1110 0 ml A* mrA p o o o o o TaIor said.lie is particularly high on out- j fitter Robert Esposito, lyear-old Italian rookie from Brooklyn | and pitchers Hoyle (iill and Art ! tlurrclO- iE s p o s i I o. 6‘2r 200-poundcr? : sssings from the right side of the platter, He has shown power galore in exhibition sames and ca:\ also play ^hirdhase his high-5chocl position,Gill is a rookie southpaw from Lo$ Angeles who carries 200 founds on his 5-11 frame. TheCCetiUmcd on Tare 21. Column 4)NOW!BIGGESTTRADE-IN ALLOWANCE IN TOWNFOP YOUR OLD TIRESOur liberal trade-in allowance will more than make the down payment. Sec us today-FOUR NEW TIRES—ONLY $2,40 WEEKLYFIRESTONE NEW TREAD TIRES 8,95 EXCHANGE(600-16)FIRESTONE STORES5th Hudson