The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 01, 1949, Image 3
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Socey Hits-tiomer
Joe Grogan In Good Form As
Chiefs Wallop Fort Jackson
'la* wild
and wooly came. i
>rman Chandler was too much
Nonnan
lor the
ing them 11 to 1
town Athletics.
14 to f tMftiad the
Livingston who
win.
. in *<** *onn, more boots by the invaders.
Tumdjy night, letting down the t The line score: m
SSZ f ort J J>ck *» WO 000 100-1* 6
hits with Soldier bobbles tp win and Scarborough -
6 l \ . I Orangeburg lost to Hartsville
In only one inning did Grugan Tuesday night by a score of 5 to
permit the visitors to become dan-, 4 with' Byrd j ‘
gerous that being the seventh I f*™®- ~
when three singles permitted the 4 to 0
lone Jackson tally to score. Just Beach 7 to L
to prove that he was master of the
evening, Grugan struck out the
three men to face him in the
X-
Wild
—
beat
rge-
Hartsville
r of Dale
his second
Gama
A wild heave by Bucky Seif.
Camden twirler, in an attempted
's
ysr jbms ««»«»
SSSMIJM
,?.tS Id
fCILS
R0SBOROUGH-
marshall
f Byrd pitching a superb
Georgetown beat Kingstree
and Lake City beat Myrtle
Thursday Night Gamas
One of the best ball games of
lamoen twiner, in an attempted
pickoff following Terry Tripp’s
triple In the bottom of the ninth
Georgetown
i Friday ni
nden Chiefs
eighth and added a fourth victim the current season, featuring a
in the ninth. The next two were brilliant pitching performance by
easy infield outs. Grugan posted a Arch Sztorc and some sensational
total or seven strikeouts. defensive play on the part of his
Ken Knight, a former Chief, support, was offered last Thurs-
posted the score that averted a night at Legion stadium when
whitewash for the Red Devils. In- the Chiefs edged out the Lake City
cidentally, Knight was the only Truckers 2 to 0.
visitor to get beyond second base. 1 Hitting honors went to Sear-
Camden started scoring in the b ?™ ugh - who drove the ball out
second when Fouts got a lift on an °* P*^ in the fifth inning to
error by Knight. He stole second sco !'® “j? Chiefs first run. In the
and scored on Bernal’s drive to ^ ** con * "^er was
left. listed when singles by Bladkmon,
In the third inning, with one St T J t f x A Tucker scored a run.
down, Socey poled the ball over , 80 was , 1116 Cam den de-
the left field barrier with Johnson fens ? ^ hat on ® Trucker
ahead of him on the path. It i unn * t { ie
looked like more scores Were due ^H£? 1 t* Ioore ’ w ^°
for the round when the Chiefs got ? 0, i b ! ed l J? ^ flfth ‘ Three, spark-
runners on second and third, but double plays were chalked up
Bei'nal flied to right retiring the m Jr e J?* 111 ®-
side. Two more runs were added The “ ne
in the fourth after two were down L**® City __ 000 000 000—0 7 1
when hits by Johnson and Black-. Camden — 000 110 OOx—2 9 0
mon were sandwiched with two I In other Thursday games Myrtle
^Jackson errors. The Chiefs added Beach’s White Caps, under the
their sixth run in the fifth on management of Ted Patoskey,
singles by Bernal and Grugan and took their third in a row, outscor
three and tw
respectively. Hugh Co
Chiefs with two for
inning gave Georgetown the run
that won the Friday night game
from the Camden Chiefs 2 to 1.
Both teams scored in the third
inning with other innings being a
series of hurling duels between
Seif and Surlee Terry and Moore
paced the winning Athletics with
two for three and two for four
ox led the
four.
Camden 001 000 000—1 6 3
Georgetown _ 001 000 001—2 7 2
Seif and Scarborough; Surles
Lew and Smith.
Other Friday Games
Hartsville bounded back from
a series of defeats to down Myrtle
Beach 13 to 3. Lake City handed
the Orangeburg Braves a 5 to 3
defeat at Orangeburg. Cathey
ield the Braves to nine hits, while
i’agan and Martin were nicked
or 12 by the Truckers. Manager
C. K. Ousts was thrown out of
the game for arguing over a called
strike. Kingstree defeated Fort
Jackson 9 to 6 when the Royals
>ounded the slants of Steve Bo-
and of the Soldiers for 15 blows.
'Charley Ripple went the route for
the Royals and gave up 11 hits.
Hugh Cox Leads
Chronicle Classified Ads Get Results
e in
While playing the best
the league in the field the
Chiefs are not hitting as the
batting averages published below
reveal. Only three men on the
teem are hitting over .300, nearly
all of them having gone into a
slump.
The batting averages through
Tuesday night’s game follow:
AB H
Cox, H. __
CORD BREAKING
W&sa
A
,0
HJBppjj
S'
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Monday's Games
A home run by Jim Pinkerton,
tingstree third baseman, scoring
Homer Coker ahead of him,
proved the undoing of the Cam
den Chiefs Monday night as they
lost their 16th game of the sea
son by one run, the score in) this
game being 3 to 2.
The Chiefs had several oppor
tunities during the night to win
the game but inability to hit in
the pinches kept them from scor
ing each time.
Livingston in the box for Kings
tree pitched a beautiful game and
Miller Shealy also hurled well so
that the game really was a pitch
er’s battle. Each pitcher yielded
six hits.
Homer Coker of the Kingstree
Royals was the leading hitter of
the night, getting a triple, a double
and a single out of five times at
bat and accounting for three of the
six hits the visitors got.
Socey was the only Chief to hit
for extra bases, he getting a two-
base hit
The line score;
Kingstree 000 001 020—3 6
Camden 000 001 010—2 6
Livingston and McCorkle;
Shealy, Hutchinson and Scar
borough.
In the
league
Hartsville defeated the Lake City
Truckers at Lake City 6 to 5.
Mexico outranks all other coun
tries in the production of silver.
Compulsory social security was
established in Peru in 1936.
Denver, Colo, is the financial
and commercial cpnter of the
iocky mountain area.
t
Mora Sports on Pogo 9
e only other game in the
Monday, the Sonocos
Fou
Scarborough
Tucker
Blackmon _
ohnston
ackson
Jemal
Cox, J.
Shealy
* Srugan 12
iutchinson 13
Sztorc 7
Seif 8
Scarborough has hit five home
runs; Socey four; Blackmon three;
Jemal two; Johnston one; Tucker
wo; J. Cox one. Scarborough has
lit two three-baggers. Fouts leads
in two-base knocks with 10.
SI.00 Down
S1.00 Week
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Elkridge Adds
To His Winnings
. Elkridge, Kent Miller’s l
I gelding, who ranks as “King of
the ’Chasers,” who has salted
lawny more sugar than any steep-
lechaser in history, added anoth
er $10,000 to his bank roll last
Thursday at Delaware Park at
I Wilmington, Dels., when-he won
the Georgetown Steeplechase and
raiaad his all-time earning record
I close to $200,000.
It was the 99th start for the
r going 11-year-old
fit was Pat Smith wick,
la brother of the famous Mikae
Smith wick, who won the same
•take last year with Adaptive
and who was making .hi* second
ride on the famous Miliar bona
[this year.
On June 9, Elkridge won
the Meadowbrook Steep]
Handicap at Belmont Park, N. Y
with the same Pat Smithwick up. I
This was another $10,000 purse si-1
fair.
ASK FOR
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