PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY,MAY 15,1950 Jayhawkers Split With Wildcats At Manhattan By BOB LEONARD Daily Kansan Sports Editor Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawk baseball team split a two-game series with the Kansas State Wildcats at Manhattan Friday and Saturday. K.U. lost the first game 7 to 9 with Guy Mabry on the hill and won the second game 7 to 3 behind the eight-hit pitching of Carl Sandefur. The Jayhawkers will meet the Wildcats Wednesday and Thursday on the K.U. diamond, the games starting at 3 p.m. KU 7, K-State 9 Five hits, including two home runs over a short right field wall, cost Guy Mabry, slender Jayhawker righthander, six runs in the first two innings of the first baseball contest played at Manhattan. The Wildcats won 9 to 7. Eleven errors were committed in the ragged game. Mabry, after his ineffective showing in the first two innings, settled down to hurl six hit ball for the remainder of the contest. In the fourth inning, the K.U. righthander retired the Wildcats on four pitched balls. Coach Bill Hogan's Jayhawkers picked up three runs in their half of the fourth. Temple opened with a double to right and scored on Hicks' single. Marbry got a two-base hit down the leftfield foul line. De-Luna singled to score Mabry and Hicks to bring in the K.U. three-run total. The K.U. nine came to life again in the sixth when Floyd Temple singled, stole second, and came in on Mabry's single to centerfield. The Wildcats touched Mabry for two runs in the seventh. Dick Johnson doubled to right and moved to third when Schumacher grounded out. Carr hit a long fly ball to center field and Johnson came in to score after the catch. Reitemier, K-State pitcher, got on by an error and moved to second when Mabry hit Scanell with a pitched ball. He scored when R. Bremner singled to right. The throw from the outfield was to the plate and a battle royal almost started as Jayhawker catcher Ken Morrow protested the umpire's decision that the runner was safe. In the eighth, the Jayhawkers tallied three more runs to end the Kansas scoring for the day. Kansas-Kansas State Box Score: (First Game) KANSAS (7) AB R H PO A E I Cavonaugh, 2b 5 0 1 4 2 1 Koenig, ss 5 0 0 1 4 1 Temple, 3b 5 3 3 3 5 0 Ellis, lf 4 1 0 1 0 0 Hicks, rf 4 1 1 1 0 0 Mabry, p 4 2 3 0 1 0 Lamping, cf 4 0 0 2 1 0 DeLuna, b 3 0 1 9 0 0 Morrow, c 4 0 1 3 1 3 Totals 38 7 10 24 14 5 K-STATE (9) AB R H PO A E Scannell, 2b 4 1 1 6 3 0 R. Bremner, 3b 4 1 3 0 3 4 Specht, ss 5 1 2 2 2 0 D. Bremner, 1b 5 1 0 7 1 0 Hilfs, lf 4 2 0 1 1 2 Johnson, cf 5 2 4 3 0 0 Schumacher, c 2 0 1 8 0 0 Carr, rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 Reitemeier, p 4 1 0 0 2 0 Totals 37 9 12 27 12 6 Kansas 000 301 030-7 Kansas State 421 100 20x-8 RBI: B. Bremner, Specht 2, Johnson 3, Reitemeier, Hicks, Mabry, DeLuna 2. 2B: Johnson, Temple 2, Mabry. HR: Specht, Johnson, S.B. R. Bremner 2, Temple, SH; Schumacher, DP: Reitemeier to Scannell to D. Bremner, Specht to Scannell. LOB: Kansas 5, Kansas State 9. Pitching summary: BB: Mabry 4, Reitemeier 1. SO: Mabry 2, Reitemeier 8. PB: Schumacher 2. HBP: Mabry (Scannell). Earned runs Kansas 4, Kansas State 5. Umpires Roark and Jessup. Time: 2:15. Att. 750 (est.) Think Your Feet Hurt? So Did Abe Lincoln's Boston—(U.P.)-President Abraham Lincoln was the first person to direct national attention to the importance of foot care. "He said when his feet hurt he couldn't think," says the National Foot Health council. Lincoln's feet were $12\frac{1}{2}$ inches long and had so many corns and calluses he had to have a personal foot doctor, a chiropodist named Zacharie, according to the council. KU 7, K-State 3 Big Carl Sandefur, Jayhawker pitching ace, scattered eight hits over nine innings to win the second game of the series with Kansas State 7 to 3. Sandefur struck out 11 and allowed only two earned runs. The Jayhawkers looked considerably sharper than they did the previous day. Sandefur was effective in the clutches and K.U. made only one error during the entire contest. Sandefur got in trouble in the second when he hit Dave Bremner, Wildcat first baseman, with a pitched ball. Bremner moved to second on a passed ball. Dick Hilts, K-State leftfielder, slammed the second ball pitched to him over the rightfield fence for a home run and the Wildcats led 2 to 0. Dick Johnson walked. Dale Carroll followed with a single, Johnson going to second. A passed ball advanced both runners into scoring position with none away. Sandefur, who won his sixth game of the year against one defeat, retired the side by striking out catcher Keith Thayer and second baseman Tim Scannell and getting pitcher Duane Holder to ground out short to first. In the fourth, Coach Hogan's Jayhawkers pushed across three runs on three singles, a walk, and a fly ball. Frank Koenig led off with a single and moved to second on Floyd Temple's sacrifice. Carl Ellis walked and Walter Hicks singled sharply on the ground into rightfield loading the bases. Guy Mabry singled between third and short on the ground into left-field with Koenig and Ellis scoring and Hicks moving to third base. Hicks scored after tagging up on Lou DeLuna's long fly to center for the third K.U. run. The Jayhawkers scored two more runs in the fifth. Sandefur walked and moved to second on Jim Cavonaugh's sacrifice hit. Koenig drove the pitcher home with a triple to left-center field. With two away, Ellis singled into left scoring Koenig and sent K-State pitcher Holder to the showers. Sophomore righthander, Jim Iverson, pitched the next two and one third innings for the Wildcats allowing no hits and pitching to only eight batters. The Jayhawkers scored two run in the eighth inning off the third Aggie pitcher, Gene Kubicki. The runs were obtained on three singles, a walk, and a two-run single by Sandefur. Sandefur retired the Wildcats in order in the fifth, sixth, and eighth innings. In the seventh, he walked Cliff Schumacher, who batted for Thayer, but got Perk Reitemeier, batting for Iverson, to hit into a fast double-play, second to short to first. In the ninth, the Wildcats scored an unearned run. Hilts opened the inning with a single to rightfield. Schumacher struck out for the first out. Reitemeier then grounded to DeLuna who threw to Koenig forcing Fitzgerald with Hils scoring from third. Scannell lined to Mabry in centerfield to end the game. Johnson reached first on an infield single and Sandefur filled the bases by hitting pinch hitter Lyndall Fitzgerald with a pitched ball. Kansas-Kansas State Box Score: (Second Game) KANSAS (7) AB R H PO A E 0 Cavonaugh, 2b 4 0 0 1 3 0 Koenig, ss 4 2 2 3 4 0 Temple, 3b 4 0 0 0 1 0 Ellis, lf 4 2 3 1 0 0 Hicks, rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 Mabry, cf 4 1 2 3 0 0 DeLuna, 1b 3 0 0 8 1 0 Morrow, c 2 0 0 11 1 0 Sandefur, p 3 1 1 0 2 0 Totals 32 7 9 27 11 1 K-STATE (3) AB R H PO A E Scannell, 2b 5 0 0 1 0 1 R. Bremner, 3b 4 0 0 1 3 Specht, ss 4 0 0 0 3 D. Bremner, 1b 3 1 1 12 0 Hilts, lf 4 2 2 3 0 Johnson, cf 3 0 2 4 0 Carr, rf 3 0 1 0 0 Kubicki, p 0 0 0 0 0 Pine, p 0 0 0 0 0 Fitzgerald 0 0 0 0 0 Thayer, c 2 0 1 3 0 Schumacher, c 1 0 3 1 0 Holden, p 2 0 1 0 4 Iverson, p 0 0 0 0 0 Reitmeier,rf 2 0 0 0 0 Lamping ran for Koenig as a courtesy runner in 7th. Totals 33 3 8 27 14 0 Fitzgerald hit by pitch for Pine in 90h Kansas 000 320 020—7 Kansas State 020 001 01—3 RBI: Koenig, Ellis, Mobry 2, DeLuna, Sandefur 2, Hilts 2, Reitemeier, 2B: Ellis, 3B: Koenig, HR: Hilts, SB: Ellis, SH: Cavonaugh, Temple, Morrow, DP: Cavonaugh to Koenig to DeLuna, LD奥劳, Kansas 7, Kansas State 7, Pitching summary; BB: Sandefur 2, Holder 3, Kubicki 1, Pine 1, SO: Sandefur 11, Holder 2, Iverson 1, Kubicki 1, Pine 1, Hits and Runs off: Holder 5 and 5 in 4-2-3 innings, Iverson 0 and 0 in 2 in 1-3 innings, Kubicki 3 and 2 in 1 inning, Pine 1 and 0 in 1 inning. Earned runs off: Sandefur 2, Holder 5, Kubicki 2, HBP: Sandefur (D. Bremner, Fitzgerald), Iverson (Koenig). PB: Murphy 3, Thayer 1. Losing pitcher. Holder, Umpires: Jesup and Wildcatski. Time: 2:25. Att, 700 (est.) Didn't Know The Right Combination Chicago (U.P.)—What three bandits didn't know about cash registers made Harry Block, 52, a happy man. Block and his sister-in-law, Mrs. Evelyn Pillar, 40, stood hopefully silent while one of the bandits thumped a key on the register in Block's store. The register failed to open and the bandits left empty-handed. Block explained that the register opens only when two or more keys are pressed. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed . . . 75c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed . . 79c CASH AND CARRY ONLY BE FIT FOR FINALS — Our Home-Cooked Meals will get you in "A 1" condition. Cube Steaks ___70c Pork Chops ___75c CLOSED Pork Tenderloin ___75c Hamburger Steak ___65c FRIDAY and 2----4:30 Sunday Game Notes SHAVER'S 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles south U.S. 59 Call 785-K-2 In the first game: The K-State crowd applauded Frank Koenig on his attempt to stop Dick Johnson's line drive in the fifth . . . a K.U. miscue occurred when DeLuna pulled in almost into the plate for a possible bunt by Bremner, and the Aggie third baseman immediately hit safely to rightfield leaving first base uncovered . . . K-State fielder Dick Johnson made an excellent catch of DeLuna's line drive in the seventh . . . a small scale war almost started when Aggie pitcher Perk Reitmeier came in from third on a single to right by R. Bremner and K.U. catches Ken Morrow thought he had tagged the runner out. Coach Hogan was immediately on the scene arguing in Morrow's behalf. As the K-State players ran out of the dugout they were met by K.U. players Bill Mace, Lou DeLuna, George Voss, Floyd Temple and Carl Ellis who ran in from leftfield. Umpire Roark did a great deal of listening, but after the Jayhawkers had had their say, he motioned them away—the run was in and it counted . . . the short rightfield fence, which measures 264 feet at the foul line, cost Mabry two easy outs at home . . . Coach Hogan left the ball park mumbling, "It's going to be different tomorrow" . . . and it was . . . In the second game: in the fifth inning, after the plate umpire had called several pitches by Sandefur as balls which had let two men get on base, the third Aggie batter Hank specht was up. Sandefur pitched what catcher Kern Morrow thought were two good strikes to Specht, but the umpire called them balls. Red Morrow called time. He held up the ball in his hand and said: "Do you want to send him down now or have him (Sandefur) pitch the other balls?" . . . K-State president Milton Eisenhower was deeply concerned when Frank Koenig was knocked unconscious by a pitched ball . . . Koenig returned to the game when it was K.U.'s time at the field . . . Mr. Eisenhower sat in the press box during both games. Plumber Invents Sanitary Hot Dog Danville. Va. (U.P.)—The hot dog has gone modern. He invented a device to keep the weiners sanitary. On the handle of his patented fork is a button on a spring. On the spring is a lever. Clyde Brady, a Danville plumber, got tired of seeing restaurant men dislodge weiners from the fork by the finger method. Just press the button and within being touched by anybody's finger the weiner is gently nudged off the fork into the waiting bun. Need Relaxation? Why not spend that free hour playing Snooker on the best tables available amidst a pleasant atmosphere? - Snooker - Pool - Pop, Candy and Cigarettes Brunswick Recreation 714 Mass. "Moth Proofing Is Expensive," she said ... "Quality Outstanding" "Except at the LAW- RENCE Cleaners." Your wool clothes too will be treated with U-SANO Moth Proofing free of charge if they are cleaned at LAWRENCE CLEANERS during the moth season. Your clothes will be guaranteed safe from moths until they are cleaned again in the fall. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Call 383 1001 N.H.