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women everywhere are saying... Lou Blue talks with some young admirers. The ex-ballplayer ran o school for prospective it’s so easy to make perfect starch players in 1938-39. The children ore (left to right): Tommie Ingraham, 13, son of Mr. ond Mrs. Samuel Ingraham; Judy, 9, ond Jeon Rosberry, 6, daughters of Mr. ond Mrs. Fred Rosberry, oil instantly in COLD water of Colesville. Bee-Bee, the Blue terrier is in foreground. From Diamonds to Furs With Lou Blue 1 (of medium *torch solution) BLUE, flashy inflelder By Ktredilk S. Biel send in a left-handed pitcher, LOUand switch-hitting artist Lou changed batting posi- ' V\ Swinging right-handed, IV \\.' of yesterday, who once poled stars Luzerne Atwell Blue tions. bases-loaded home runs from played with and against in he blasted a pitch over the either side of the plate, be- his heyday. Luzerne wasn’t leftfield fence, winning the lieves he’s come up with an- a fitting name for a ball- game, 8 to 4. other winning combination. player, he says, and Itbecame McGowan, who lives The former major league strictly “Lu” during his base- at 9005 Walden road, Silver first-sacker learned to play ball career. “However, after Spring, hasn’t changed his baseball under the shadow of it appeared so often in print mind about the feat. “The the Washington Monument. as ‘Lou,’ ”he adds, “Idecided only way you could better it,” He later starred for the De- I liked it better that way and he says, “is to have a guy do troit Tigers under the eye of changed it.” what Lou did twice.” Player- . The Washington-born ball- Paradoxically, Lou wasn’t It was 35 years ago that Lou player, youngest of 11 chil- known as a power hitter dur- blasted his still -remembered dren, took up the game in ing his 13-year major league spray switch - hitting grand - slam earnest after receiving a career. He could hits homers, one after the other. baseball scholarship to the to any field, though, his best He hung up his spikes nearly now-defunct Briarley Hall season being in 1924 when he 20 years ago, and now, at 55, Military Academy at Pooles- batted .311 for Detroit. His is raising chinchillas at his ville, Md. lifetime average in the ma- jors home near Colesville. It was the year after he was .285. played money...whon you He bought six of the ani- graduated in 1916 that he Lou for Detroit from 1921 through 1927. In starch with Niagara. Just swish Niagora in mals at $1,500 a pair several pulled the “most unusual n \ has ever 1923, he was selected on Babe '. \ starch! That’s oil! Niagara ago, and, he says, in batting feat baseball cold water... and months of Ruth’s “All-American” team years they will have known,” in the opinion gives all your woshables a beautiful finish. live or so year. multiplied the point veteran for that He was up to where against such competftion he can have a cut in this Umpire Bill McGowan. He as Judge industry. umpired the game and told Joe of multimlllion-dollar the Washington Nats, Wallie (A high-grade fur the story In a magazine arti- chinchilla the $10,000.) cle in 1937. Plpp of New York Yan- $WISH ...Niagara* mixes instont- coat sells for about was playing for Mar- kees, of the lyin cold water, and is ready to .Vir^ttfl \ breeding, accord- Lou J Chinchilla and Jim use at once I Simple. \ ing Lou, sit-back-and- tinsburg. W. Va., in the Blue £jW L to is a of Louis n|is> process. much Ridge League. It was the Bottomley the St. wait He hasn’t Cardinals. do, especially since his 71- last of the ninth In a game to Later, played year-old brother Prank takes bet Ween Martlnsburg and Lou with the Frederick, Md., when the St. Louis Browns, Chicago NRfICT... aH your cottons... -<^_ of g~*T care the animals. White Sox and briefly with shirts, Children’s clothes iron so With time on his hands, switch-hitter stepped up to easily... took just perfect. >. plate. the Brooklyn Dodgers before Vx Lou’s out to get a baseball the left of the Fred- was leading, 4 to 0, one bowing out of baseball In scouting job, preferably with erick Cautious about Back in 1924, he out away from victory. The 1933. com- Detroit. paring today’s ballplayers showed rookie second base- bases were loaded. With the with those of the past, he says: man Charlie Oehringer how count two balls and two 20 QUARTS of medium starch whaled the right- “I do know one thing, from I package Make just what to play left and right handed strikes, Lou I delivery though—you couldn’t hold you need at the time. batters in the Held. Now hander’s next over your job you were hitting Gehringer is general manager the rightfleld wall. if only .250, like so many do Tigers. In the 12th, when the op- of the today.” There were many other posing manager decided to PAGE 16-THE WASHINGTON STAR PICTORIAI MAGAZINE, NOVEMBER 2. 1992