Worst for 25 Years Tiww, the Slanehaatar Auction S ^ ^AD/0 USERS! L T
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Table of Contents
Table of Contents Letter to collector and introduction to catalog ........................................................................................ 4 Auction Rules ............................................................................................................................................... 5 Clean Sweep All Sports Affordable Autograph/Memorabilia Auction Day One Wednesday December 11 Lots 1 - 804 Baseball Autographs ..................................................................................................................................... 6-43 Signed Cards ................................................................................................................................................... 6-9 Signed Photos.................................................................................................................................. 11-13, 24-31 Signed Cachets ............................................................................................................................................ 13-15 Signed Documents ..................................................................................................................................... 15-17 Signed 3x5s & Related ................................................................................................................................ 18-21 Signed Yearbooks & Programs ................................................................................................................. 21-23 Single Signed Baseballs ............................................................................................................................ -
Kentucky, St. Louis Choices As Big Tourney Starts
• 1 1% St. as fretting jsp0f * Louis Choices Starts D. C., March 12, 1949—A—9 Kentucky, Washington, Saturday, Big Tourney Wildcat Quint Hoping Detroit's Houtteman Golf Balls w in, Lose, or Draw HSlp FINISH IS FORECAST—Steve Pay Pro's Way By FRANCIS STANN To Avenge Its Lone Better, but Remains Belloise of Star Staff Correspondent the Bronx stands Out of Court Defeat Billikens over J. T. Ross of San Jose, On List By the Associated Press Two Platoons for Eddie by Calif., after knocking him Danger SUFFOLK, Va.. Mar. 12.—Leo ly tht Associated Press tht Associated ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Mar. 12.—Eddie Dyer, a drawling, down in the second frame of By Pres* R. Mallory, a golf professional NEW YORK. Mar. 12.—Unless Texan who favor football over al- LAKELAND, Fla,. Mar. 12.— from Bridgeport. Conn., found he amiable may secretly baseball, their scheduled 10-round fea- somebody stubs a toe along the Young Art hardluck didn't have to though he manages the St. Louis Cardinals, was holding court in | Houtteman, enough money pay way, the National Invitation bas- ture boxing bout at New York's of the Detroit Tiger his $50 fine $4.25 costs he the Rcdbirds' clubhouse when the two-platoon system made famous | guy pitching plus was ket ball tournament which opens staff, to be his assessed when he was by Michigan and other famed Madison Square Garden last ; appeared winning charged with Army, grid teams, at Madison Garden Square today ; fight for life today. speeding 70 miles an hour over was brought up. -
Coast-To-Coast Sleeping Car Service
fitting Jgporfs Power With Bat D. Hoists to 1946 Evans C., -A—10 Nats’ 1 Washington, Tuesday, April 9, No. Catching Post at Last Win, Lose or Draw Al, Rated Above Early, No Dodger Job Seen for Owen, FRANCIS E. STANN Homers to Phil Shutout By Stop Who Dodges Mexican League Burton Howkins walked, gave the Phillies their first Cards Seem Best Bets to Win a Pennant By By th« Associated Press I The day after the catcher said he run and they picked up another in Star Staff Correspondent SAN ANTONIO, Tex., April 9 was with the The four ball clubs that trained in Florida seemed the fourth when going Mexican League, best-looking S. Rollie Hemsley to CHARLESTON, C„ April 9- A1 Mickey Owen, roving Dodger catch- said: "Owen will never be the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and Detroit, Tigers of the homered with two out. Rickey play American Evans, who has been playing under- er, was headed back toward Brook- with the Brooklyn club If League and the St. Louis Cardinals of the National. But not The Nats were making a strong again. study to Jake Early for so long that lyn today after a short flirtation he doesn’t decide to to one is without a weakness. bid to tie the the go Mexico he game in ninth despaired of stepping into a 'with the Mexican Baseball Legue. he will either be .sold or traded. He The Yankees apparently lack pitching. The when Cecil Travis singled to center starting role, suddenly finds him- Saying he expected to rejoin the will not be for a nickel more Red Sox and Tigers have weak infields. -
By David Raglin Brad Ausmus
Vol. 29, No. 11 Tigers Fans Who Always Care December 2013 BRAD AUSMUS IS THE TIGERS’ CHOICE – By David Raglin Brad Ausmus, the Tigers’ choice to replace Jim Leyland as manager after Leyland retired, may have been somewhat of a surprise, but Tigers fans should be familiar with him from his two stints as a catcher for the team in the late 1990s/early 2000s. The Tigers interviewed four men for the job. One was Leyland’s longtime hitting coach, Lloyd McClendon. He was the only one who was with the 2013 Tigers and the only one with managerial experience, with the 2001-05 Pittsburgh Pirates. Two other candidates had minor league managerial experience, major league coaching experience, and ties to Dave Dombrowski. Tim Wallach had been a player with the Montreal Expos when Dombrowski was general manager, and is the third base coach for the Dodgers. Rich Renteria played for Dombrowski’s Florida Marlins and was a Padres coach before recently being named manager of the Chicago Cubs. (They also approached Hall of Fame shortstop Barry Larkin, who played for the Reds and for the University of Michigan, but he turned down the chance to interview. They had an unnamed candidate in mind but never asked permission to talk to him.) Ausmus has no minor league or major league field experience as a coach or manager and Dombrowski said they had previously met only briefly. So, why is Brad Ausmus it? He won the job because he came with many good references and wowed Dombrowski and the Tigers during his interview. -
Loy Smalley Hits for the Cycle and Drives in Foul?
WRIGLEY FIELD: THE FRIENDLY CONFINES AT CLARK AND ADDISON Classic in New York and was named the game's Most Paul Dobkowski, who accompanied Will to Valuable Player after driving in three runs with a New York, spent 1951 with Lubbock in the West LOY SMALLEY HITS FOR single and a double. He was selected to represent Texas-New Mexico League, batting .271. He was THE CYCLE AND DRIVES IN FOUL?, the Windy City after excelling at J. Sterling Morton then drafted into the military, and resumed his High School in Cicero, Illinois. His double in the minor-league career in 1954. He batted .324 with 19 JUNE 28, 1950 sixth inning scored the first two runs for the US All- homers and 95 RBIs for the Artesia Numexers in the Stars. His bases-loaded single in the seventh inning Class-C Longhorn League. In 1957, he was with El CHICAGO CUBS 15, ST. LOUIS CARDINALS 3 plated two more and tied the game at 5-5. The tie was Paso in the Class-B Southwestern League, where he By c7Vlike tuber broken when the next batter, Ralph Felton, drove in clubbed 13 homers and batted .326 in 77 games. The two runs with a single. team was dropped from the league on July 17,8 and There wasn't much in the way of big money in Dobkowski elected to return to Chicago rather than those days, and the offers received by Will were join the Corpus Christi squad in the Class-B Big in the range of s6,000 to s8,000. -
2019 Texas League Media Guide (.Pdf)
2 3 TEXAS LEAGUE MEDIA GUIDE ADVERTISERS AMI . .88 BairFind . .4 Frost Bank . .2 HBK CPA’s & Consultants . .3 HIBU . .89 Minor League Baseball . .9 Rawlings . .90 4 TEXAS LEAGUE OFFICIALS, MANAGERS AND UMPIRES THE TEXAS LEAGUE OF PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL CLUBS 505 Main St #250. • Fort Worth, TX 76201 (682) 316-5400 Web Site: www.texasleague.com Email: [email protected] PRESIDENT .................................................................................................. Tim Purpura VICE PRESIDENT .....................................................................................Monty Hoppel SECRETARY .............................................................................................Andy Milovich ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT....................................................Jessica McClasky LEAGUE STATISTICIAN ..............................Major League Baseball Advanced Media UMPIRES Andrew Barrett, Isaias Barba, Michael Carroll, Darius Ghani, Jeffery Gorman, Luis Hernandez, Jose Matamoros, Tyler Olson, , Justin Robinson, Andrew Stukel, Kyle Wallace, Brian Walsh LEAGUE DIRECTORS D.G. Elmore, Amarillo; Russ Meeks, Arkansas; Ken Schrom, Corpus Christi; Chuck Greenberg, Frisco; E. Miles Prentice, Midland; Jon Dandes, Northwest Arkansas; Matt Gifford, Springfield; Mike Melega, Tulsa. FIELD MANAGERS – NORTH DIVISION Arkansas....................................................................................................... Mitch Canham Northwest Arkansas .................................................................................. -
Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1946-10-16
GOOD MORNING, IOWA CITYI Considerable cloudiness and scattered showers to day. Somewhat cooler tonight with the low tem owaJll perature about 40. Cloudy and warmer tomorrow. No. 19-~P News and Wirephoto Iowa City. Iowa. Wednesday. Oct. IS. 1945-Five Cents · '':-. -n· .' r .... ill Ir, * "* '* * * * * * * ow ~ards Clip Boston, 4-3, For Crimes Against Humanity No.2 Nazi OIl Takes Poison · " • 110 Win World Series In Jail Cell ST. LOUIS (JP)-An almost un By GAYLE TALBOT Culberson, Boston center fielder, "' believable piece of base running and had plenty of time to nail the 10 Others of 'Hitler ... bY Enos (Country) Slaughter and raced all the way home from first flying "Country," but for' some slout·hearted relief pitching by base with the winning run in the inexplicable reason he "froze" and ~ang' Go to Death Hant (The Cat) Brecheen in the eighth inning on a Simple line held the ball just long enough to On Nuernberg Scaffold nin~ inning enabled the St. Louis drive into centerfield by Harry enable Slaughter to slide in under , Cardinals to pull out a thrilling 4 Walker on which any runner ex the throw. ' to 3 victory yesterday in thc cept a Cardinal would have pulled As exciting a championship N ERNBERG , Wednesday = deGtding game of the World Series. up at third. play-off as perhaps evcr was ,(AP) - Hermann Goering, the Slaughter, catching the Boston Johnny Pesky, Red Sox sbort fought out ended some 10 minutes o. 2 man of the dead Nazi 1'e Red Sox completely by surprise, stop, took the relay from Legn later as Brccheen quelled a last gime, cheated the noo c by tak· ditch Boston rally and retired the ing poison ill his prison cell last J. -
Saturday, October 27, 2018
THE 114TH WORLD SERIES LOS ANGELES DODGERS VS. BOstON RED SOX SatURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2018 WORLD SERIES GAME 4 - PREGAME NOTES DODGER StaDIUM, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 2018 WORLD SERIES RESULTS GAME (DATE) RESULT WINNING PITCHER LOSING PITCHER SAVE ATTENDANCE Gm. 1 - Tues., Oct. 23rd BOS 8, LAD 4 Barnes Kershaw — 38,454 Gm. 2 - Wed., Oct. 24th BOS 4, LAD 2 Price Ryu Kimbrel 38,644 Gm. 3 - Fri., Oct. 26th LAD 3, BOS 2 Wood Eovaldi — 53,114 2018 WORLD SERIES SCHEDULE GAME DAY/DATE SITE FIRST PITCH (ET/SITE) TV/RADIO 4 Saturday, October 27th Dodger Stadium 8:09 p.m. ET/5:09 p.m. PT FOX/ESPN Radio 5 Sunday, October 28th Dodger Stadium 8:15 p.m. ET/5:15 p.m. PT FOX/ESPN Radio Monday, October 29th OFF DAY 6* Tuesday, October 30th Fenway Park 8:09 p.m. ET FOX/ESPN Radio 7* Wednesday, October 31st Fenway Park 8:10 p.m. ET FOX/ESPN Radio *If Necessary SERIES AT 2-1 DODGERS AT 1-2 This is the 90th time in World Series history that the Fall Classic has stood • This marks the 12th time that the Dodgers have trailed the Fall at 2-1 after three games. It is the fifth consecutive World Series to sit at Classic, 1-2. The Dodgers also trailed the World Series, 1-2, in 2-1, and it is the 15th time in the last 19 Series (beginning 2000) it has 1916, 1941, 1947, 1949, 1953, 1955, 1965, 1974, 1977, 1981 and occurred. 2017. -
When Baseball Went to War with Contributions from Todd Anton, Gary Bedingfield, Frank Ce- Resi, Bill Nowlin, Bill Swank and Many Others
Gary Bedingfield’s Baseball Volume 3, Issue 17 in Wartime Baseball January 2009 www.baseballinwartime.com [email protected] in Wartime www.baseballinwartime.com Former Minor Leaguers’ Airplane Wreckage Found elcome to the third year of [email protected] Minor Leaguers ’ Airplane Wreckage publication for the Baseball in Wartime Discovered After 64 Years Newsletter. If you have W On May 25, 1944, Technical Sergeant John Regan was the radio operator/gunner on been with us since the beginning then thank you for your support. If you’re a Consolidated B-24J Liberator “Zoot Chute” that was bound for Chabua, India. The new subscriber, then welcome aboard last radio contact was made 30 minutes east of its destination. It was never heard and I hope you enjoy the ride! from again. One year later the crew of 10 were officially declared dead and due to the mountainous terrain where the plane was lost, it was believed that if the plane Over the coming year the aim of the were located, it would be impossible to recover the remains. newsletter will be to continue bringing you the obscure and unknown side of On October 26, 2008, 64 years after “Zoot Chute” disappeared, it was discovered by WWII baseball, combined with a healthy aviation archaeologist Clayton Kuhles. Kuhles, of Prescott, Arizona, conducts regular portion of stories regarding the big expeditions to Burma, India, Bangladesh and China to locate and document missing- names in the game. in-action (MIA) allied aircraft lost in that area during World War II. He discovered the Until now, the content of the newsletter B-24 at over 11,000 feet elevation on a rugged mountain north of Damroh. -
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 -
The BG News March 8, 1979
Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 3-8-1979 The BG News March 8, 1979 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News March 8, 1979" (1979). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3594. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3594 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. wmmm M wmmmmmm ByCy_k_Letoe SGA the inhumanity of the low wages statement. However .debate on whether "some of the laughing and kidding must be voted upon twice by the entire f ~ Staff Reporter and poor living conditions the migrants to support FLOC's efforts was not around was disgusting." senate and at two consectuive SGA face when they work in Northwestern closed as some SGA members and In other action, SGA voted to ap- meetings no less than two weeks apart. After heated and emotional debate, Ohio's tomato fields, which supply the officials argued that they did not know prove new election procedures read the None of these conditions were met the Student Government Association Campbell's and Libby canneries. enough about the issue or wanted to first time last night. SGA then tabled The election changes then are not (SGA) last night narrowly approved a Jim Lemay, SGA senator protect scholarships and monies given the election changes, adjourned the applicable for the upcoming SGA resolution supporting the efforts ofthe representing Kohl and Roger's dor- the University. -
Wounded in Combat
Wounded in Combat Baseball in Wartime Newsletter Vol. 10 No. 46 January 2018 Wounded in Combat As many of you are aware, my website, Baseball’s Greatest Sacrifice, is dedicated to ballplayers who lost their lives while in military service. During decades of research on this topic I frequently came upon incredible stories of the heroism and bravery shown by “battlefield ballplayers” who often displayed little concern for their own safety in helping to win the war against Germany and Japan. Some of these stories have been included on my Baseball in Wartime website. Others have remained with me over the years, as I pondered the best way to ensure these stories were told. Finally, these press clippings, interviews and scraps of information are coming together as a brand-new section on Baseball’s Greatest Sacrifice – Wounded in Combat. There are some familiar names among the biographies included in this section of the website. Bert Shepard – as seen on the cover of this newsletter – lost a leg flying P-38s over Germany. Lou Brissie and Morrie Martin suffered harrowing leg wounds on the battlefield. Hall of Famers Warren Spahn and Hoyt Wilhelm sustained battlefield wounds and Yankees player/manager Hank Bauer was hit by shrapnel in the Pacific. But you will find the names of players you’re not so familiar with. Big leaguers like Jack Knott, Bob Savage and Skippy Roberge. Forgotten minor leaguers such as Angelo DeLucia, Chester Sheets, Carl Petroziello and Alvin Kluttz, brother of big league catcher, Clyde. This newsletter contains a small selection of biographies from Wounded in Combat as well as a list of all players that have, so far, been included on the website.