Senators Bombard Sunday Obituaries Staf SPORTS ???C Reds, 12-10; Olson EIGHT PAGES WASHINGTON,* D. C., APRIL 7, 1957 Double Turns Tide By BURTON HAWKINS (delivered a double and two Star Btaff Correspondent singles. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.. April1 Stone, ineffective all spring. l 6.—The Redlegs and Senators was clobbered for six runs and j Snead's 74-214 Leaves Leonard, i tested their secondary pitchers i eight hits in five innings. Bro- j today and from the 30-hit bom- dowski was slapped around for' bardment that followed Wash- four runs and five hits while ington emerged with a 12-10 vic- lasting only two innings, but tory on Karl Olson’s three-run i nevertheless he was the winner double in the seventh inning. jby courtesy of Olson’s timely Both Cincinnati and the Sen- .double Ward, Only ators accumulated 15 hits, in- The Redlegs committed three Palmer Stroke Behind cluding six extra-base blows i: errors before the 3,335 customers each, in a wild affair which also i had settled in their seats. With was cluttered by six errors. one out in the first inning. Sec Gus Bell and Ted Kluszewski I ond Baseman Johnny Templt Nine Bunched in Masters clouted homers for Cincinnati, fumbled Fitz Gerald's grounder but the eye-popper in the dis- Third Baseman Don Hoak bob tance department was Jim Lem- . bled Dick Tettlebach’s grounde As Sam's Putter Goes Bad on's mighty three-run homer off and Gross fumbled Lemon' By grounder MERREIX WHITTLESEY Don Gross in the second inning. to load the bases. Gro? Star Staff Correspondent by That blast sailed majestically forced across a run walkln AUGUSTA, Ga„ April putting Olson, but that all the Sen 6.—That secret Sam Snead over the left-centerfield fence at was was going to peddle for $25,000 Friday night ators got out wouldn’t have the 395-foot mark, going high i of it. Julio Becqur brought 25 open Augusta plat cents on the market at National Course over the 30-foot barrier. forced Tettlebach at the today. and out. Hyde Stops Redlegs Lutirell flied Sam putted so poorly that it's downright amazing he still The Senators permitted leads Lemon Loses One leads the Masters championship going into tomorrow’s final round. of 5-1 and 9-6 to evaporate but; Singles by Kluszewski, Rc He fumbled his way to a third- surged to victory on Olson’s McMillian and Robinson gav round 74 that included seven LEADERS' wind-blown, but well-kissed dou- Cincinnati a run in the secom bogeys and four three-putt CARDS ble off the leftfield wall. Dean inning, but the Senators graspei greens. For three rounds he is IN MASTERS Stone and Dick Brodowski were a 4-1 lead in the same sessioi two under par at 214. belted convincingly, bqt Dick after Jose Valdivielso walked ani A|j| *ru You can throw a blanket over ] Pur -Out 454 343 454—39 Hyde T mr!*' Sam Snead 55ft 455 545—57 held the Redlegs scoreless Stone fouled out. Singles b: the low nine players with 18 i A Pftiraer 445 465 554—;*5 in the final two innings, holes go. Snead has only a | H Ward 455 54:3 454—54 al- Jerry Snyder and FitzGerak to H. Leonard 544 54'J 445—55 though not without his moments crammed the bases and Vald> one-stroke lead, and nine play- i Ed Furgol 554 445 444—55 in Par—in 445 545 544—5fi—72 of anxiety. scored when Tettelback forcer’ ers are within four strokes i Snead 545 454 554—57—74—214 Washington, which had failed Fitz. Lemon then boomed hii one of the tightest finishes in i Palmer 445 555 444—54—H1»—2 15 Ward 4M5 555 544—57—71—215 to produce a run last night at eighth homer of the spring in the Masters’ history. Leonard 545 445 545—55—«5—215 Furgol Charlotte, employed mostly sec- the general direction of Ken- Three Tied at 215 544 545 554—57—72—216 ond-stringers in shelling tucky. Gross. Arnold Palmer and Harvie bogey big Tom Acker and Pat Scantlebury. double there was the Bell's leadoff homer in the Ward, former collegiate rivals reason he shot 75. Ford, who The Redlegs employed what may third whittled the at Wake Caro- be Senators Forest and North played with Snead, had only one their regular lineup during margin to 5-2, and it was further lina, moved into the runnerup the season but ultimately birdie in a 72. Burke had 74. reduced in the fourth when spot with Stan Leonard, a fre- a Jammed 22 players the Burgess The 218 bracket is British into doubles by Smokey and Empire production, Australia's game. Robinson, coupled The final round of the Masters will Frank with Peter Thomson and the amazing Ed FitzGerald and Lyle Lut- failure to be televised by CBS from 5 to 6 p.m. Luttrell's snare Hoak’s Henry Cotton, senior player of trell each contributed a double easy pop fly, produced two runs today. The progrom will be carried by and two singles to the Senators' Washington's WTOP-9. the tournament at 50. Cotton attack, Cincinnati shoved into a 6-5 has had 11 birdies and an eagle while Olson slugged an advantage in the earlier thumped fifth after quent visitor from Canada, all in three rounds, and is 23 strokes double and Snyders wide throw enabled across a total of four runs. at 215. Leonard, last player on better than his third-round Wally Post to reach first. Johnny the course, standing last year. He's 73-73-72, The muscular Kluszewski. who Temple sneaked in without previously forced him, but Kluszew- fanfare with the day s low round, but his scoring has been far less had appeared pitiful ski cleared the rightfleld in his attempts play fence a 68 consistent than his totals. to despite A walk to Becquer, an ailing hip, supplied Luttrell’s Palmer, who could be the Only rour sub-par rounds a double single and Clint Courtney's pinch and a single in addition to his youngest Masters champion at were posted today, a day that a stayed from morning homer, while Frank Robinson See SENATORS, Page C-3 27, moved into contention with cloudless * back-to-back birdie-eagle on the until night but was windy jjCSffig? '¦ ' \ ~ , ’• 1 14th and 15th holes for a 69. enough to make many of the Ward. National Amateur cham- holes treacherous. About 12,000 pion the last two years, became turned out despite the absence , i|MTrflnir^”^ mm l Jl 1 the only contestant with two sub- ol Ben Hogan, Cary Middlecoff. ' y *» v ••.. - not WIN, LOSE OR > sIHBwf i/ vaF WtsX par rounds as he posted a second and the other 62 who did 71 for his 215. survive the cut in the field. Ho- Ed Furgol faltered slightly on , gan spent the day riding In a By FRANCIS STANN the last seven holes and is alone i goli car with Cliff Roberts, tour- DRAW SNEAD BEGINS SCRAMBLING—Sam Snead, who the next three holes. He kept spraying tee shots at 216 after a 72. He had a chance • namei.t chairman. started yesterday's third round of the Masters with and three-putted four holes. “I was hitting water to shoot something in the 60s Snead Laughs It Off a on after he turned in 35 and con- birdie, hits out of the rough the second fairway and fighting squirrels all day," he said at the finish. Snead, as is customary, was the at Augusta National Course. Sam, who wound up —AP Wirepnoto. quered the mean 10th hole with story, whether lie s playing good a The Dog Has His with a 74 for a 214 and a one-stroke lead, bogeyed spectacular birdie three. or bad. Today he played badly, Niche Demaret Loses Gamble but, surprisingly enough, TAMPA, FLA., APRIL con- 6.—The thoroughbred horse is king j A solid threesome at 217 in- ducted another hilarious press of beasts in Florida but the dog has a niche in the State’s cludes Jimmy Demaret, the conference, delayed by a 20- - champion; sporting economy, too. The dog is lean, mean and, even three time Jack mmute session on the practice Infatuation Burke, the defending champion; Wins Feature green measured by years, Morrow Runs putting as as he fin- man not long for this world. Greyhounds Ditmar Pitches soon and Doug Ford, the leading : round. usually start racing before they are 2 years old. At age money lsheb his the winner of 1857. Burke, Sam, racing Demaret for tne of 4 years or so, when their pari-mutuel usefulness ends, first-round with Thurs- At Laurel by Six Lengths leader honor of becoming the first four- day’s they usually meet up with men who stick needles into their Century only sub-par round, finally time winner of the Masters, had 9.3 in B. Route Yanks By JOSEPH KELLY weighted System, as hides. The merciful way, it’s called. Bolar went off made a birdie on the 17th today- a two-stroke lead at the half- Star Racing Editor at $15.20 $2. With going It is not considered politic to stress the disposal for the after 21 holes without one way mark When he rolled in a of the Infatuation, from Harry Isaacs’ favored Gay Warbler, at 3-to-l, gambled lost; sleek, quivering who Demaret and on 20-footer for a birdie thiee on animals chase stuffed white rabbits on Brookfield Farms, threw sheer finishing fourth, place tickets on the 11th where he dumped a rails, placed Relays Tigers, stress Top nor is much on how greyhounds are Texas speed at her eight rivals in the the victor were w’orth $7.40 and on Page 2, 5-3 second shot in the water.
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