MAY 20,1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MOY 29, 248 PAGE SEVEN Tigers Combine Timely Hitting With Kansas Errors to Win Doubleheader By BOB MOORE (Daily Kansan Sports Writer) The Missouri Tigers combined timely hitting with several Kansas micsus to subdue K.U.'s diamond performers, 7 to 5 and 8 to 4, in a doubleheader here Saturday. These losses in the season finale cost Kansas a chance of finishing second in the conference standings and also of attaining a .500 win-loss record in this year's play. The final tabulation shows four victories and six defeats. In the first game, Kansas struck quickly to score five runs in the first two innings of play. Four of these counters came in a big second inning, but from then on, the Jayhawker attack was held in check by the Black and Gold's tight defensive play... After scoring three times in the first frame, the Missourians got a single marker in the third and punched across three more tallies in the sixth innning to gain a hard-fought victory. The Jayhawker scoring in the second contest was confined to the second and third innings, two runs being stored in each. The latter inning was featured by "Red" Hogan's long double high on the right field embankment. The Tiger's big barrage in this game included a 4-run third stanza which proved enough to win. Both teams hit the ball hard, but fast and adept fielding in the Missouri outer garden staved off the Kansas attack. Centerfielder Bill "Red" Hogan's play stood out both at bat and in the field. Shortstop Milford Pritchard made several sensational plays in the first game. In the third inning, he went far to his left for Moran's hard smash and made a back-hand flip to second for a force play. Scoring in the first game: His absence from the second game because of injury greatly hindered the Crismon and Blue chances. Scoring in the first. In the top half of the first inning, Missouri garnered three runs on three hits, including two doubles. In the home half of the initial frame, Kansas scored once when Pritchard singled and scored on Hogan's single to center. In the next inning, the Jayhawkers countered four times on four safeties. Tom Saffell pulled to deep short, Charlie Putz was hit by a pitched ball, and Verle Anderson singled to center to fill the bases. After fielding Pritchard's grounder, the Missouri third-baseman threw wild past second base allowing Saffell and Putz to score. Bud French drew life on a fielder's choice as Anderson was thrown out at home plate Pritchard and French scored on "Curly" Hayden's single. Missouri scored a singleton in the third on Feldman's single and Spinks' triple, and three counters in the sixth on four singles, two of which were bunts. Scoring in the second game: Missouri scored once in the second stanza when Eichelberger singled, stole second, and scored on a passed ball. Pitcher Ray Ocamb misjudged the catcher's throw to the plate. In the Kansas half of the same inning, t the Jayhawkers scored twice on two hits. Hogan singled to center but was forced at second by Hayden. After Dale Morrow had walked, Putz scored Hayden and Morrow with a double to left field The big Missouri third frame was topped off by Constantino's three-run triple. Constantino later scored Sports Equipment Fishing Tackle Bicycle Supplies Games and Toys Wheel Goods Model Supplies KIRKPATRICK SPORT SHOP 715 MASS. PHONE 1018 on Spinks' hit past Ocamb. In the same inning for KU., French singled and scored on Hogan's double to right field. After Hayden had singled him to third, Hogan stole home to conclude the Kansas scoring. The Tigers scored lone runs in the fourth, sixth, and seventh stanzas. In the fourth, Bus Entsinger scored on Wackerle's double. Wackerle singled and scored on Feldman's single in the sixth. Missouri's last run came on doubles by Eichelberger and Constantino. game. Kansas AB R H Anderson, rf 4 0 1 Pritchard, ss 4 2 1 French, 1 b 4 1 1 Hogan, cf 4 0 2 Hayden, lf 3 0 2 Morrow, 3b 2 0 0 White, 2b 3 0 0 Saffell, p 4 1 2 Putz, c 2 1 0 Bertuzzi, 3b 1 0 0 K. Anderson, 2b 1 0 0 First game. SEH anod9 Totals ... 32 5 9 Missouri ... AB R H Wackerle, 3b ... 3 1 1 Feldman, ss ... 4 0 1 Moon, 3b ... 4 1 1 Hook, If ... 3 1 0 Spinks, rf ... 4 1 3 Jenkins, cf ... 2 0 0 Reshkin, 1b ... 3 0 1 Reed, c ... 3 0 0 Fehr, p ... 3 1 2 Eichelberger, cf ... 2 1 1 Walk, 3b ... 1 0 0 AT THE HOSPITAL Second game: Kansas AB R H V. Anderson, rf 4 0 0 Pritchard, ss 1 0 0 French, 1b 4 1 1 Hogan, cf 4 1 2 Hayden, if 4 1 1 Morrow, 3b 1 1 0 White, 2b 3 0 2 Putz, c 3 0 2 Ocamb, p 3 0 0 K. Anderson, ss 2 0 0 Bertuzzi, ss 1 0 0 Totals ... 30 4 Missouri ... AB R Wackerle, 3b ... 4 1 Feldman, ss ... 4 1 Moran, 2b ... 4 1 Eichelberger, cf ... 4 3 Constantino, lf ... 4 1 Spinks, rf ... 4 0 Reshkin, 1b ... 4 0 Entsminger, c ... 3 1 Etoek, p ... 2 0 Totals ... 33 8 11 Get in Shape for Finals No Admissions Friday Dismissed Friday Robert J. Wunderlich, PT 10. Robert Rosenfield, 1301 West Campus. With Our - Unfinished Book Cases - Fluorescent Desk Lamps - Student Desks Eveyln Heinen, 1131 Kentucky. Virginia Rhoads, 1134 Mississippi. Valdah Harkness, 1134 Mississippi. George Johnson, Battenfeld. Virginia Larsen, 1345 West Cam- - Smoke Stands 2102 STARLING FURNITURE CO. 928 MASS. Admitted Saturday Bolivar Marquez, 1233 Oread. Kenneth Dicker, 1121 Ohio. Dismissed Saturday Kenneth Perry, 1245 Oread. Norma Lea Jones, 1246 Oread. Jean Geppelt, Corbin. Robert Light, 1025 West Hills. Louis Krupp, PT-7. Donald Pomeroy, 1025 West Hills. John Newman, 1127 Ohio. Thomas Watkins, 1641 West Ninth. Admitted Sunday Edmond Marks, Carruth. Arthur Hoffman. 1408 Tennessee. Marie Shafer. 1396 Tennessee. William McDonald. 1408 Tennessee. Dismissed Sunday Dorothy Norris, 1845 Illinois. Robert Day, PT-9. Bolivar Marquez, 1233 Oread. Kenneth G. Dicker, 1121 Ohio. Got An Old, Worn-Out Street Car Around? Just Give This California Collector the Word Hollywood. (UP) — If you're tired of waiting for a street car, see George Bothwell. He has just about cornered the market. Bothwell, of Tarzana, Calif., collects streetcars. Although his hobby involves a rather heavy initial outlay, it brings handsome returns when a movie studio is in need of some odd vehicle. It was thanks to one of Bothwell's odd vehicles that actress Myrna Loy had her first ride in a horse-drawn car. The scene was in the Jack Skirball-Bruce Manning production at Universal, "So Goes My Love," Don Amache did not invent the streetcar. In this picture he invents a gun. The horse-drawn streetcar was a part of an 1869 Greenwich village street scene, constructed on stage 12 of the Universal lot. It's the biggest stage on the lot, which gave art director Lionel Banks many of lee- Banks went to work creating fronts of buildings, stores and tenements. The street railway running through the set stopped him only for a moment. Then he contrived a way to laur 300 feet of tracks about the stage, It was Bothwell who provided the streetcar for the tracks, saving Universal what might have been a nationwide search. The trolley, which he bought from the Los Angeles street railway company years ago, was one of more than a hundred parked in a huge barn on his ranch. "Isn't that cute!" exclaimed Miss Loy as she hopped in the car. "Do you pay the driver or do you feed the horses?" she gigged. Skirrall said he'd paid for the driver, the horses and the streetcar and let's have no more delay in returning all three. Miss Loy jogged down the studio street six times before the take was perfect. She was a little ruffled when she got out. "Next time," she said, "I'll take the train." Tetanus antitoxin, used to prevent lockjaw, is an antibody obtained from the blood of horses; unless renewed it gives the human body, only 10 days' protection. Flavor Memory With Reality It'll soon be over, those four years at K.U. Busy years they were, with heartaches, disappointments, and triumphs. Long years as you looked forward, short as you look back. Years that will be filled with memories, years that you will recall as the happiest of your life. But don't depend upon memory alone. Ease the twinge of home-sickness you know you're going to feel, with a daily visit from old K.U. itself. A visit made possible by your copy of The Kansan. You'll be surprised how much it will mean to you and how you'll enjoy that satisfying rendezvous with an old friend. And now your senior days here on K.U. campus are drawing short, you realize that with you will go memories, memories that you can recall when next fall the campus swarms again with your friends—and you aren't here to be with them. Subscribe Now . . . $4.50 a Year Plus State Tax The Daily Kansan