Priced Justly Place

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Priced Justly Place •----r——-----—— ust One Flaw In Chicago White Sox Plans For Pennant Dash SMITH WITH BIXIilMHJH Bulldoga, recently-organized Kaatern league baseball club. He formerly TIPS FROM THE EAGLES, ELKS EVEN New Haven. Conn, Mar 27. (UP) played with the old New Haven ble First Baseman —Joe Smith, catcher, la the third Prof a, and Allentown and Hartford,' Haven also in the Eaetern league. TRAINING Time « man to be signed by the New Small Stuff, « IN SPORT SERIES GAMPS Will Put White Sox Small Time Prices OF CARDS, BOWLING STATE STRAND Hy the United Press Exhibition Game Scores: Kagles and Elks in their first inter- ljABT DAY! I.AST DAY! First Division PARKER tournament In DAN club card and bowling in Buffalo By Hebe Danlcla “KEPT HUSBANDS” (I T,.) 11; St Louis (A) 10. of the divided honors last eve- year marring Brooklyn (N) 6; Toledo (AA) G. ning. The Elks acted as hosts at HENRY MC LEMORE York Mackalil By New (A) G; House of David their club rooms on West Main street Dorothy V. Joel Mct'm New York, March 27—(UP)—It is ironical that President and on Thursday evening, April 9th, Charlie White Sox should be in need of Philadelphia (A) 4; Cincinnati which Is a tentative date at present, Comiskey's Chicago <N> 0. will be the guests of the Eagles in NOW IT’S unanimous. I mean about those one, two and three dollar a first baseman, for the “Old Roman" was, in his Boston 2ndx 25; Boston (A) (i. their quarters on North Main street. capable play- at the all of use except the Garden have STARTS TOMORROW San Antonio (T) J2; Chicago (A) shows Garden, Right along, Strains Class the first baseman of his time. insisted that the matches made for this olg-’lme arena were small- Bowling ing days, greatest 10. being well balanced teams Into tlrne stuff. Now the Garden admits It by reducing the price to one, two Sending Given u real nrel wicker Manager Jersey City (I.L. S; AHheville action in the bowling contests, the GANGLAND TORN WIDE OPEN Hounding out the xta (Y will be I lit I and three bucks for a heavyweight card booked for Monday night. Will J>onle Uu«h would lie likely lo brlnit (SAA) 2. It P. O. E. representatives ran up McKnln, Garland Braxton, Vic Fra- committee on ways and meana arise and report progress. hi* White Sox Into the lirat dlvlalon Rochester the please now zier and llin venerable apltballcr, (1.1,.) 21; High J’olnt some splendid marks and are In This of the American In l»3l. 0. their friends a comfort- Dynamic Story league lied Faber. <IM,.) Al,l, THE KING'S ’OHSKH will bo out at Aintree for a gallop to-day, leading by Iiuyinu for lew. Atlanta ( Toronto able Total fall will di- (atelier* O. K. S.A.) 1; (I.L.) and all the king's men will ’avc a quid or two down on the outcome of the margin. pin Of The Underworld And It I* an o|»en eccret that the Sox 2. vide the honors after the coming lleblnd the bat the Sox have no first of the great Spring turf classics of Mcrrie England—the Grand Na- Detroit 1. clash. The Elks won seven out of worrloH, deHjdto the fact that Moc Pittsburg (N) 2; (A) tional. It. takes a thoroughbred among thoroughbreds to survive this Its Czar! l>ew ifonneca of Sun Francisco (P.C.) 4; the difficult nine games and chalked tip a total Iterg, ace catcher In 1030, baa not Chicago gruelling four-and-one-half-mlle race over most steeplechase I he Cleveland In- 3. of 4,712. the Kagles trailing with a reported. Tate, who batted (N) course on earth. There are 32 Jumps over hedges, fences and brooks. diana and If they Kenney lof 4,375. better than taut will do Some of the Jumps are over five feet high and some of tho brooks require plnfal the .300 acaaon, The results of last tour- get Mlugglng YANKEES a Then there are turns, fields and a host evening's IT BEGINS WHERE the tlrnt airing work with the re- 1ft-foot leap. sharp ploughed Uw fourth place About 44 will face the nament were as follows: juvenated Butch Ifenllne and Frank St Petersburg, Kin, March 27.— of other obstacles to rapid progress. horses barrier, in the league of It be for to Het-back: Eagles, Hulllvan and “LITTLE CAESAR” Grube out. (UP)—The New York Yankees will ir only four them finish, won’t anything unusual, complete well be- helping Dale won four; Dunne and Kin- might break for this cruel grind a horse must not only bo a standout nag but must have Elks, Unletih Third Jiuaeinan Willie cuinp to-night, leaving Hrennnn and come an open of lin k. More often than not, a shot w.ins. The Grand National ley won one; Eagles, ENDED! Kantm In a trade the Sox will Jurkxonvllle where open their plenty long between De- goes they North and Harrington won four; Elks, McGrath fight tour attracts a crowd of 300,000 every year, drawing turfmen from pregent a good Inllcld with Chalnter* barnstorming to-morrow. won one. A that dares '* troit, Cleveland America as well as from all over the British Isles and the Continent. and I>cahy picture gangland Claacll The Yanks defeated the Ilouxe of Houlh at accond, and Luke Appling • and and Chicago. et II. was a 'ouse who originated the classic, 92 yeurs ago, Cribbagc: Kagles, Lachance challenge to expose Its secrets. at abort. David nine yesterday 5 to 0. public keeper Until »uch time to stimulate the sale of ’urf an' 'arf, stout and hot toddles In his grog shop Foley won four; Elks, Itlley and Baaed on an actual happening lU'yiioiiiM rromising. won ;»m the ForiHeca or near the race course. Those of us who arc wont to bemoan the affinity Chapman one; Euglcs, Mitchell Mel Simon, obtained from Louis- ItOUSIl TO REDS In a large Western metropolis. Home other trade, between the liquor trade and sports to-day should give this angle a bit of and Graham won two; Euglcs, Kelley vllle last month: Hmeud and — The thrill of Ik completed, the Jolley Tampa, Fla, March 27.— (UP) consideration and stop longing for the good old (lays when beer barons and Callahan won three. biggest jrour Carl Reynolds will handle the out- Kddle famous New York Pinochle: flr*t ImMirig will Itouxh, didn’t own our hockey teams, leading boxers and classy racing stubles. Eugles, Bergen and picture-going career! be lleld. Simon Is a Blow Htarter hut a Giants holdout of 1030, has been Goodson, won three; Elks, Dr God- tew Fonxcca handled k by Johnny Atwood real player once under way. Jolley purchased by the Cincinnati Beds “I’M, FIGHT IT out. on this'line if It takes ali summer,” said Eddie frey and Clearwater won one; KlkH, can hit and throw but Ih and cast It wi Ham;iuir, wun ill*i KMIII'T powerfully and will report at .Macon, Ga, Tues- Roush, the gentleman from Indiana, uh he baited his hook Dr Leonard and Cumpbell, won having the edge. Blow. Reynolds Ih rapidly develop- day morning. back Into the creek, last spring. The occasion was an ultimatum from three; Eagles, Neville and Simlster Into one of the out- to for or be So Eddie, won two. Aside from the weakness at first, ing outstanding John McOraw report spring training suspended. “THE fielders In the without a limb to stand on se he was no sat down on Flood the White Hex are a. much stronger league. JIH.WKS (you tree-sitter), Forty-live: Eagles, Captain Jeffries banks of the far the summer ofr cat- won club than the one which finished Johnny Kerry and Irving Ht Petersburg, Fla., March 27.— the Wabash away and spent angling eight; Elks, Captain Cavanaugh ISuHh Infield fish and ills difference with Mr McGraw was on the matter of won seven. seventh !«xl year, especially In tip- Iglve capable reserves, (UI*)—Charlie Wilson, who started crapples. while and Klch- and, In the light of Mr Roush, the catfish tamer, and Corri- box. Ted Lyons, who pitched 2'J F'otherglll. Klnlutor with the Rochester Intrnatlonal salary developments, Itummy: Elks, LaVnllcy rodt constitute the outfield substi- acted rather bull-headed. Eddie wound up by getting no salary at all. gan, won three; Eagles, Deeley and GANGSTER’S LAST PARADE” complete last year, again will league club In at year, has i>roveil the tutes. This spring the fishing was poor, so Eddie began ungling for his Job back. M. Corrigan won two. head the staff with i’at Caraway, hlg flop of the Boston Braves camp. That's Just what he has got, too—his Job back. Hack in Cincinnati. The The Elks committee In charge of southpaw, second In command. Cara- Wilson’s work at third base has been Giants sold him to the Reds yesterday. The fishing will be excellent in the arrangements are: It. L. Pala- way. his first season of major league KANSAS CITY 2600 ASKS a big disappointment nnd next week Cincinnati, for that's down where the Wurz.burger flows and the herring tine, V. Horton Warner and John competition last year, finished with INSl UANCi; FOIl CLIORATKA will And likely him enroute to — — are so plentiful they do not travel In schools but In universities. Hoully. The Eagles committee In- STARRING an earned run average second Kansas City.—Kansas City insur- Rochester.
Recommended publications
  • Soviet Union Gets Backfire of Fallout from Big Bomb
    MONDAY, OOTOBBR IS, ISSt A Tenfo DrUj Net PiMg Ron iUanrlisBteF lEtr^nittg Iferalb For the Week Ended Thfi WsBtkw OeCeber 21,1881 Foraenat ef D, E. Wsnlhn The pootetr committee for the ~ The ways and means, S t Worry • ! little 'Ihaater of Manchester will Camillua and membership commit­ PTSO W m Meet AboutTown meet tonight at 8 at the home of tee o f the OiUld o f Otir Lady o f S t 13,400 Fair and eeal tsnighf 'la n r'lh Mary 'B<^am , . 85 Am ott Dr. Bartholomew’a parish will meet to­ Wednesday Night Member ot the Audit SO*. Witoiaaday tomMy m t s a i H m IitfMU Jmnu of Pra(u« Posters will be sketched and morrow .at 8:15 pjn. at the rec­ Sllpploy w Irritotiofi? Bureau of Olrcnlntion niUder. High In tia. lUntlww Cbrcio will moot toni(tat at painted for "Bom Testerday" to tory, 741 B. Middle Tpke. Barnard Junior High School’* S at tlw home of Mrs. rredeilok iw presented at Bowers S ^ool uSmsiSviat, Mancheiter-—^A City of'Village Charm BatTStt M Bower* S t Mrs. James Nov. 2, 8 and 4, T he Holy Family Mothers car­ PTSO open house will be held ... r . Barrjr wUl serrs as ee-hosteaa d s will meet at the home of Mrs. Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. at the VOL. LXXXL NO. 20 (SIXTEEN PAGES) Robert Brannlck, 18 Hemlock St., aehool. ' rwaarkable Mue c4 Mded eossfert MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESI^Y, OCTOBER 24, 1961 (OIsMslfied Advertistaig-ou Fag* 14) Ths Garden Club will meet to­ The Past Chiefs’ .Daughter's Wednesday at 8 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • 1St Connection Between Baseball and Opera
    Baseball & Opera (compiled by Mark Schubin, this version posted 2014 April 14) 1849 : 1 st connection between baseball and opera: Fans of American actor Edwin Forrest, who is playing Macbeth in New York, hire thugs from among ballplayers at Elysian Fields in Hoboken, New Jersey (1 st famous ball field) to disrupt performances of British actor William Macready, also playing Macbeth in New York at what had been Astor Opera House. Deadly riot ensues; Macready is rescued by ex-Astor Opera House impresario Edward Fry, who later (1880) invents electronic home entertainment (and probably headphones) by listening to live opera by phone. 1852: Opera-house exclusivity dispute with composer’s niece Johanna Wagner forms legal basis of baseball’s reserve clause. 1870 : Tony Pastor’s Opera House baseball team is covered by The New York Times (they won). 1875 : San Francisco Chronicle reports on that city’s opera-house baseball team. 1879 : Pirate King role created for Signor Brocolini, who, as John Clark, played first base for the Detroit Base Ball Club. 1881 : Dartmouth College opera group performs to raise money for college’s baseball team. 1884 : Three telegraph operators, James U. Rust, E. W. Morgan, and A. H. Stewart, present live games remotely. One sends plays from ballpark, second receives and announces, third moves cards with players’ names around backdrop. Starting in Nashville’s 900-seat Masonic Theater, they soon move to 2,500-seat Grand Opera House, beginning half-century of remote baseball game viewing at opera houses (also Augusta, GA Grand Opera House starting 1885). 1885 : The Black Hussar is probably 1 st opera with baseball mentioned in its libretto (in “Read the answer in the stars”).
    [Show full text]
  • Win, Lose Or Draw Dropped Shoddy Fielding Again Harmful by WALTER R
    gening J%fai FRIDAY, JULY 30, ---—-4 Redskins Face Much Tribe to 4th Win, Lose or Draw Dropped Shoddy Fielding Again Harmful By WALTER R. McCALLUM, Revision; Big Offer By Yankees; Cards As Chisox Take Third in Row Star Staff Correspondent. me Nats’ tumbling act, threaten- a payoff hit after Alex Kampouris ing to deposit them in seventh place had doubled off the left field barrier Redskins Travel Distance to Be Made to Leemans With at Long Ignored Split Phils any moment, is putting a terrific with one out and the Nats trailing, SAN DIEGO, Calif., July 30.—The lurid sign said: “The Jap will By WALTER McCALLUM, By the Associated Press. dent in Griffith Stadium attendance, 5-3. strike if not alert.” Skeleton hands clutched a Star Staff Correspondent. with San Diego is falling bomb After cuddling happily with the Washington’s three worst night Ellis Clary looped a single to short with the of the sun. "Join SAN 30.—A game crowds of the season left emblazoned spreading rays rising the air- DIEGO, Calif., July Chicago White Sox and Detroit sitting field, shifting Kampouris to lot of new faces are to be seen in on raid warning system,” read the sign. going Tigers in second place, the Cleveland proceedings during the last third, and Alex scored after George Sailors and bedded in sun-tanned in Redskin uniform this four nights. Case fiied to marines, eyes deep faces, stopped year. Indians today found themselves un- Wally Moses. Vernon walked “San Coach Arthur then shot a as they saw the sign, then on, grinning.
    [Show full text]
  • 1999-00 NCAA Men's Baseball Championships
    Bsball_M (99-00) 11/28/00 8:32 AM Page 14 14 DIVISION I Ba s e b a l l DIVISION I 2000 Championship Hi g h l i g h t s Tigers End Dream Season with Fifth Title: LSU catcher Brad Cresse drilled a single to left field off of Stanford’s Justin Wayne in the bottom of the ninth, plating Ryan Theriot from second base, giving the Tigers a 6-5 win and their fifth College World Series championship since 1991. Cresse was mired in a miserable College World Series before his final at-bat. The senior was 1- for-12 in the CWS prior to his game-winning single. Trey Hodges pitched four scoreless innings for his second win of the tournament. Hodges, who Brad Cresse overcame a slump at the plate to retired 10 of the 11 batters he faced, also picked up a save and was selected as the most out- drive in the title-winning run for LSU June 17. standing player of the College World Series. The catcher’s single to left field scored team - mate Ryan Theriot, giving LSU a 6-5 win over Wayne gave up four hits and four runs in relief of starter Jason Young. Wayne started the fifth St a n f o r d . inning and seven of his first nine outs were strikeouts, four looking. The Tigers’ normally strong offensive game seemed to be silent. But LSU (52-17) tied it in the eighth inning with two home runs, setting up Cresse’s dramatics.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2017 Gsc Baseball Record Book
    THE 2017 GSC BASEBALL RECORD BOOK GSC Contact Information MAILING ADDRESS Gulf South Conference 2101 Providence Park; Suite 200 Birmingham, AL 35242 PHONE NUMBER -- FAX NUMBER (205) 991-9880 (205) 437-0505 GSC WEBSITE -- www.gscsports.org FACEBOOK -- The Gulf South Conference TWITTER -- @GulfSouth INSTAGRAM -- @gscsports GSC Staff COMMISSIONER Matt Wilson Delta State Statesmen E-mail: [email protected] 2016 GSC Tournament Champions CHAIR OF THE PRESIDENTS Dr. Bill LaForge, Delta State ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER FOR COMPLIANCE Andrea Anderson TABLE OF CONTENTS E-mail: [email protected] GSC Baseball History........................................................................................................ 1-38 Annual and All-Time Standings ............................................................................... 1-7 ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER FOR CHAMPIONSHIPS AND COMMUNICATIONS Inside The GSC Tournament ................................................................................ 8-10 Michael Anderson GSC in the NCAA Division II Tournament ............................................................11-16 E-mail: [email protected] All-Time GSC Major League Baseball Draft Picks .............................................. 17-20 All-Time All-GSC Teams ...................................................................................... 21-30 DIRECTOR OF ENGAGEMENT All-Time GSC All-Academic Teams ..................................................................... 31-32 Michael Stagno GSC Among Past NCAA Statistical
    [Show full text]
  • 1962 Minnesota Twins Media Guide
    MINNESOTA TWINS METROPOLITAN STADIUM - BLOOMINGTON, MINNESOTA /eepreieniin the AMERICAN LEAGUE __flfl I/ic Upper l?ic/we1 The Name... The name of this baseball club is Minnesota Twins. It is unique, as the only major league baseball team named after a state instead of a city. The reason unlike all other teams, this one represents more than one city. It, in fact, represents a state and a region, Minnesota and the Upper Midwest, in the American League. A survey last year drama- tized the vastness of the Minnesota Twins market with the revelation that up to 47 per cent of the fans at weekend games came from beyond the metropolitan area surrounding the stadium. The nickname, Twins, is in honor of the two largest cities in the Upper Midwest, the Twin Cities of Minne- apolis and St. Paul. The Place... The home stadium of the Twins is Metropolitan Stadium, located in Bloomington, the fourth largest city in the state of Minnesota. Bloomington's popu- lation is in excess of 50,000. Bloomington is in Hen- nepin County and the stadium is approximately 10 miles from the hearts of Minneapolis (Hennepin County) and St. Paul (Ramsey County). Bloomington has no common boundary with either of the Twin Cities. Club Records Because of the transfer of the old Washington Senators to Minnesota in October, 1960, and the creation of a completely new franchise in the Na- tion's Capital, there has been some confusion over the listing of All-Time Club records. In this booklet, All-Time Club records include those of the Wash- ington American League Baseball Club from 1901 through 1960, and those of the 1961 Minnesota Twins, a continuation of the Washington American League Baseball Club.
    [Show full text]
  • 1961 Minnesota Twins Media Guide
    MINNESOTA TWINS BASEBALL CLUB METROPOLITAN STADIUM HOME OF MINNESOTA TWINS /EprP.1n/inf/ /I , AMERICAN LEAGUE _j1,, i'; , Upp er /'ZIweoi Year of the Great Confluence For the big-league starved fans of the Upper Midwest, the Big Day came on October 26, 1 9 d6a0t,e of the transfer of the American League Senators from Washington to the Minneapolis and St. Paul territory, and the merger of three proud baseball traditions. For their new fans to gloat about, the renamed Minnesota Twins brought with them three pennants won in Washington, in 1924, '25 and '33, and a world championship in 1924. Now, their new boosters could claim a share of such Senator greats as Clark C. (Old Fox) Griffith, Wolter (Big Train) Johnson, Joe Cronin, Lean (Goose) Goslin, Clyde (Deerfoot) Milan, Ed Delahanty, James (Mickey) Vernon, Roy Sievers, and others. Reciprocally, the Twins could now absorb the glories of 18 American Asso- ciation pennants - nine won by St. Paul and nine by Minneapolis - in 59 seasons. They could be reminded of the tremendous pennant burst by St. Paul in 1920, with the Saints winning 115, losing only 49, posting a .701 percentage, and running away from Joe McCarthy's second-place Louisville Colonels by 28 1/2 games. Mike Kelley, the American Association's grand old man, managed that one and four other Saints flag winners before buying the Minneapolis club and putting together three more championship combinations. The pattern for winning boll in St. Paul was set early, in the first year of minor league ball, in fact.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Seattle Mariners
    2019 SEATTLE MARINERS STATISTICS GI PINCH HIT PLAYER AVG G AB R H TB 2B 3B HR RBI SH SF HP BB IBB SO SB CS DP E SLG OBP AB H HR RBI +Adams,A .000 29 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 0 0 0 0 Beckham,T .237 88 304 39 72 140 21 1 15 47 0 0 3 21 0 102 1 3 7 14 .461 .293 3 2 1 2 +Bishop,B .107 27 56 3 6 6 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 3 0 21 0 0 0 0 .107 .153 0 0 0 0 # Broxton,K .174 66 155 19 27 48 3 0 6 14 1 2 1 16 0 82 6 5 4 3 .310 .253 0 0 0 0 SEA .115 29 52 5 6 12 0 0 2 5 0 2 1 8 0 33 2 4 0 1 .231 .238 0 0 0 0 Bruce,J .212 47 165 27 35 88 11 0 14 28 0 2 1 16 0 53 1 0 1 4 .533 .283 2 1 0 1 +Carasiti,M .000 11 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 0 0 0 0 +Court,R .208 12 24 1 5 9 1 0 1 5 0 0 0 1 0 11 0 0 0 1 .375 .240 2 0 0 0 Crawford,J .226 93 345 43 78 128 21 4 7 46 3 3 2 43 0 83 5 3 4 12 .371 .313 0 0 0 0 +Dunn,J .000 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 0 0 0 0 # Encarnacio,E .244 109 418 81 102 222 18 0 34 86 0 3 7 58 1 103 0 1 4 2 .531 .344 1 0 0 0 SEA .241 65 241 48 58 128 7 0 21 49 0 3 4 41 0 55 0 1 3 2 .531 .356 1 0 0 0 +Fraley,J .150 12 40 3 6 8 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 14 0 0 0 1 .200 .171 2 0 0 0 Freitas,D .000 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .250 0 0 0 0 Gonzales,M .200 34 5 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 .400 .200 0 0 0 0 Gordon,D .275 117 393 36 108 141 12 6 3 34 3 6 1 18 1 61 22 5 8 10 .359 .304 3 1 0 0 Haniger,M .220 63 246 46 54 114 13 1 15 32 0 2 5 30 1 81 4 0 3 1 .463 .314 0 0 0 0 Healy,R .237 47 169 24 40 77 16 0 7 26 0 4 1 13 0 40 0 0 1 9 .456 .289 0 0 0 0 Hernandez,F .000 15 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    [Show full text]
  • Kit Young's Sale #137
    Page 1 KIT YOUNG’S SALE #137 BAZOOKA BASEBALL Bazooka cards are among the toughest issues of the 1960’s. These full color cards were featured on boxes of Bazooka bubble gum. We recently picked up a nice grouping – most all cards are clean and really well cut. Many Hall of Famers and Hometown Heroes are offered here. Only one of each available. First time in a few years we’ve offered a big grouping. 1959 Bob Turley 1960 Yogi Berra Yankees 1961 Rocky Colavito Tigers 1963 Don Drysdale Dodgers 1966 Mickey Mantle Yankees 1964 Roberto Clemente Pirates 1965 Juan Marichal Giants Yankees VG 65.00 NR-MT 65.00 EX-MT 39.00 EX-MT 379.00 NR-MT 195.00 EX-MT 60.00 EX-MT 245.00 1959 BAZOOKA 1962 BAZOOKA 1964 BAZOOKA STAMPS Jim Davenport Giants .................................EX-MT $195.00 Mickey Mantle Yankees ...................... EX+/EX-MT $375.00 Juan Marichal Giants ....................................EX-MT $25.00 Roy McMillan Reds.......................................NR-MT 245.00 Johnny Romano Indians ...............................VG-EX 160.00 EX-MT @ $9.50 each: Hinton – Senators, O’Toole – Reds, Duke Snider Dodgers ...................................EX-MT 895.00 Dick Stuart Pirates ....................................VG/VG-EX 25.00 Rollins - Twins Bob Turley Yankees ......................................EX-MT 245.00 1963 BAZOOKA 1965 BAZOOKA 1960 BAZOOKA 2 Bob Rodgers Angels ............................ VG-EX/EX $10.00 2 Larry Jackson Cubs ...................................EX-MT $19.00 4 Hank Aaron Braves..................................NR-MT $195.00 4 Norm Siebern A’s .........................................EX-MT 15.00 3 Chuck Hinton Indians ..................................EX-MT 19.00 8 Yogi Berra Yankees ...........................................VG 65.00 8 Dick Farrell Colt .45s ...................
    [Show full text]
  • National@ Pastime
    ================~~==- THE --============== National @ Pastime A REVIEW OF BASEBALL HISTORY Iftime is a river, justwhere are we now Fifty years from now some of our SABR members of to­ as we float with the current? Where day will write the history of 1991, as they look backfrom the TNPII have we been? Where may we begoing vantage point of 2041. How will we and our world look to on this journey? their grandchildren, who will read those histories? What I thought itwould be fun to take readings ofour position stories will they cover-RickeyHenderson and Nolan Ryan? by looking at where ourgame, and by extension, our coun­ Jose Canseco and Cecil Fielder?TheTwins and the Braves? try, and our world were one, two, three, and more Toronto's 4 million fans? Whatthings do we take for granted generations ago. that they will find quaint? Whatkind ofgame will the fans of Mark Twain once wrote that biography is a matter of that future world be seeing? What kind of world, beyond placing lamps atintervals along a person's life. He meantthat sports, will they live in? no biographercan completely illuminate the entire story. But It's to today's young people, the historians of tomorrow, ifwe use his metaphor and place lamps at 25-year intervals and to theirchildren and grandchildren thatwe dedicate this in the biography ofbaseball, we can perhaps more dramati­ issue-fromthe SABR members of1991 to the SABR mem­ cally see our progress, which we sometimes lose sight ofin bers of 2041-with prayers that you will read it in a world a day-by-day or year-by-year narrative history.
    [Show full text]
  • Kit Young's Sale #133
    Page 1 KIT YOUNG’S SALE #133 BRAND NEW PSA GRADED CARDS We bought a huge collection of high grade 1950’s cards right here in our backyard in a community called Fairbanks Ranch (part of Rancho Santa Fe, founded by the legendary Douglas Fairbanks & Mary Pickford). Call to order or reserve – one of each available. One of each available 1955 Topps #50 1957 Topps #35 1941 Play Ball #71 1954 Topps #128 Mickey Mantle/Yogi Berra 1957 Topps #20 Jackie Robinson Frank Robinson rookie Joe DiMaggio PSA 4 VG-EX Hank Aaron rookie PSA 8 NM/MT $2695.00 Hank Aaron PSA 6 EX-MT $420.00 PSA 8 NM/MT $1895.00 $1595.00 PSA 5.5 EX+ $2750.00 PSA 7 NM $575.00 PSA 7 NM $525.00 1958 Topps #5 1958 Topps #5 1958 Topps #418 1958 Topps #47 1958 Topps #47 1958 Topps #150 Willie Mays Willie Mays Mickey Mantle/Hank Aaron Roger Maris rookie Roger Maris rookie Mickey Mantle PSA 8 NM/MT $3150.00 PSA 7.5 NM+ $1650.00 PSA 6 EX-MT $275.00 PSA 8 NM/MT $1695.00 PSA 6 EX-MT $340.00 PSA 4 VG-EX $299.00 (a beauty!) (extremely sharp, just o/c) Unless noted, all cards following have great #166 Dodgers Team.................................................PSA 7 NM 189.00 #166 Dodgers Team....................................................PSA 5 EX 85.00 centering, very sharp corners – beauties! #213 Tigers Team........................................................PSA 5 EX 24.00 #226 Giants Team......................................................PSA 7 NM 85.00 1963 ROSAN JOHN F. KENNEDY #236 A’s Team............................................................PSA 7 NM 45.00 1955 Bowman
    [Show full text]
  • Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter
    PSA/DNA Full LOA PSA/DNA Pre-Certified Not Reviewed The Jack Smalling Collection Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter Cap Anson HOF Letter 7 Al Reach Letter Deacon White HOF Cut 8 Nicholas Young Letter 1872 Jack Remsen Letter 1874 Billy Barnie Letter Tommy Bond Cut Morgan Bulkeley HOF Cut 9 Jack Chapman Letter 1875 Fred Goldsmith Cut 1876 Foghorn Bradley Cut 1877 Jack Gleason Cut 1878 Phil Powers Letter 1879 Hick Carpenter Cut Barney Gilligan Cut Jack Glasscock Index Horace Phillips Letter 1880 Frank Bancroft Letter Ned Hanlon HOF Letter 7 Arlie Latham Index Mickey Welch HOF Index 9 Art Whitney Cut 1882 Bill Gleason Cut Jake Seymour Letter Ren Wylie Cut 1883 Cal Broughton Cut Bob Emslie Cut John Humphries Cut Joe Mulvey Letter Jim Mutrie Cut Walter Prince Cut Dupee Shaw Cut Billy Sunday Index 1884 Ed Andrews Letter Al Atkinson Index Charley Bassett Letter Frank Foreman Index Joe Gunson Cut John Kirby Letter Tom Lynch Cut Al Maul Cut Abner Powell Index Gus Schmeltz Letter Phenomenal Smith Cut Chief Zimmer Cut 1885 John Tener Cut 1886 Dan Dugdale Letter Connie Mack HOF Index Joe Murphy Cut Wilbert Robinson HOF Cut 8 Billy Shindle Cut Mike Smith Cut Farmer Vaughn Letter 1887 Jocko Fields Cut Joseph Herr Cut Jack O'Connor Cut Frank Scheibeck Cut George Tebeau Letter Gus Weyhing Cut 1888 Hugh Duffy HOF Index Frank Dwyer Cut Dummy Hoy Index Mike Kilroy Cut Phil Knell Cut Bob Leadley Letter Pete McShannic Cut Scott Stratton Letter 1889 George Bausewine Index Jack Doyle Index Jesse Duryea Cut Hank Gastright Letter
    [Show full text]