Tuesday, December 31, 2019

June 9, 1943

Rockford Register-Republic

Rockford Peaches Share Second Place in Girls' Pro League

Meet Kenosha Again Tonight

11-8 Win Over Comets Moves Rockford Team Into Tie With Racine


STANDINGS
W L Pct.
South Bend ....... 6 5 .545
Rockford ........... 6 6 .500
Racine .............. 4 4 .500
Kenosha ........... 4 5 .444
RESULTS TUESDAY
Rockford 11, Kenosha 8
South Bend at Racine, postponed
GAMES TONIGHT
Kenosha at Rockford
South Bend at Racine

By Dick Day
(Register-Republic Sports Editor)


Now sharing second place with Racine in the All-American Girls professional softball league, Rockford's Peaches tonight renew hostilities at the 15th avenue stadium here with the Kenosha Comets, whom they licked, 11-8, last night in a free-hitting contest, which from the standpoint of all-around performance and flights of oratory, ranked as the best offering presented on the local field since the league produced its Rockford opener last week-end.

Rockford has now won six games for a .500 average, an identical percentage to that posted by Racine on the strength of 4 wins and 4 losses. Racine's game with South Bend at Racine was postponed last night.

Meanwhile the Rockford girls and their Kenosha guests were putting on a rousing exhibition that included 25 hits, five of them for extra bases, and several displays of elocution. As a result of one of the debates, Rockford Manager Eddie Stumpf and his third baseman, Mildred Warwick, watched the last two and two-thirds innings from the aisle leading to the dressing rooms.

Umpire Wins This One

Mildred thought that she had put the ball on Pitcher Elise Harney as the latter stampeded into third, and so did Stumpf. Umpire Charles Ullenberg couldn't see it that way, though, and in a few seconds he was surrounded by a bevy of chattering girls. As usual the umpire won the decision, and the discussion ended with Kenosha scoring three runs in that inning, the seventh.

Those three runs, however, failed to balance the 11 runs that the Peaches had plucked prior to the seventh. Outfielder Lillian Jackson opened the Rockford scoring by getting hit by a pitched ball in the first and coming home on Betty Jane Fritz's single to left. In the third the Rockford girls picked up a cluster of three runs as the result of a pair of triples by Eileen Burmeister and Warwick, coupled with a double by Gladys Davis and a sacrifice by Ethel McCreary.

The fourth was a tough inning for Kenosha's Harney, for the Peaches touched her for five hits and stole a couple of bases to garner five runs. Two more runs in the fifth saw the end of the Rockford scoring for the evening.

Comets Score 3 in First

Rockford's Marjorie Peters had her own troubles, too. Kenosha touched her for four hits, one a triple by Mickey Mickelsen, in the first inning and collected three runs. The Comets went scoreless from then on until the aforementioned seventh, however, when they netted another trio of runs. In the ninth, with a pinchhitter operating for Pitcher Harney, they collected four more singles and two runs, but Peters put a period to the rally by marking Mabel Halle hit to Fritz in short right field for the out that ended the game.

Determined on holding the advantage that last night's win gained for his team in the league standings, Stumpf was believed likely to lead off tonight against Kenosha with his Canadian star, Olive Little. If Olive, who won a 5-4 decision from South Bend on Monday, is not ready to go Josephine Skokan, the slow ball artist from Chicago is likely to get the call.

Manager Josh Billings of Kenosha probably will nominate either Catherine Bennett or Helen Nicol to do the Comets hurling.


BOXSCORE
Kenosha (8) Rockford (11)
AB R H O A AB R H O A
Ja'son cf 4 1 1 2 0 Jack'n lf 4 3 2 3 0
Ruhnke ss 2 1 0 1 2 Bur'r cf-ss 3 2 2 1 1
Mick'n rf 5 1 2 1 0 Sawyer cf 0 0 0 1 0
Koehn 3b 4 0 1 2 1 War'ck 3b 4 1 2 3 1
Halle lf 5 0 1 1 0 Davis ss-3b 4 2 1 3 3
Lester 2b 4 0 1 2 0 Fritz rf 4 1 2 1 0
O'Hara 1b 4 2 2 9 1 M'Cre'y 1b 4 0 2 10 0
West'an c 4 1 1 5 2 Wuet'h 2b 4 0 1 2 3
Harney p 3 1 2 1 3 Green c 3 0 0 2 0
Hunter x 1 1 1 0 0 Peters p 4 2 1 1 2
Totals 36 8 12 24 9 Totals 34 11 13 27 10
x - batted for Harney in 9th.
Score By Innings
Kenosha ..................... 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 - 8
Rockford ..................... 1 0 3 5 2 0 0 0 x - 11
Summary
Errors - Koehn 2; Westerman, Harney, McCreary, 2.
Two base hits - Davis, McCreary.
Three base hits - Mickelson, Burmeister, Warwick.
Left on bases - Kenosha,3 ; Rockford, 7.
Struck out - by Peters, 1; by Harney, 4.
Baes on balls - Peters, 1; Harney, 4.
Double plays - Wuetrich (unassisted: Lester to Koehn;
Peters to Warwick.
Stolen bases - Jackson, Warwick, Wuetrich, Peters.
Sacrifice hits - Jameson, Ruhnke, Burmeister, Fritz, McCreary.

Thursday, December 26, 2019

June 8, 1943

Rockford Register-Republic

Kenosha Comets Open Series at 15th Avenue Stadium Tonight

Rockford and S. Bend Divide

Rockford Girls Lose Windup After Taking Opening Game, 5-4

By Dick Day
(Register-Republic Sports Editor)


Unable to lift themselves above the .500 level in the percentage column since their recent four-game winning streak was snapped just before their return to the home ball yard, Rockford's Peaches make another bid to regain lost ground tonight when they open a series with Josh Billing's Comets from Kenosha at the 15th avenue stadium here.

Winners of five out of eleven games and down towards the bottom of the standings in the All-American Girls softball league, the Rockford Peaches hope to use the Kenosha series as a stepping stone to front rank position. They won two out of three from Kenosha in an appearance there last week and, due to the tightness of the league race, are only one game out of first place right now.

They might have been even nearer the top today but for a bad second inning last night in the windup of a double-header here with South Bend. The Rockford girls won the opener, 5-4, but after yielding 5 runs to the Blue Sox in the second canto of the afterpiece, never recovered their poise and ended up on the short end of a 12-2 count.

Outfield Star

The green-clad Comets are likely to give the Peaches some trouble with their comeback plans tonight, too, for Billings, the old Cleveland and Detroit catcher and former farm manager for the Giants, has assembled a slick aggregation at Kenosha.

One of the real "stars" of the Comet lineup is the smallest girl in the league, Center Fielder Shirley Jameson of Maywood, daughter of Tuffy Jameson, former Western league and St. Louis Browns hired hand. Shirley already is rated as the best outfielder in the league, size notwithstanding.

Ann Hartnett of Chicago is one of the league's top third base guardians, and in Elsie Harney of Jacksonville, the Comets have a fast-ball pitcher of real merit.

Peters Starts Tonight

Eddie Stumpf, the Rockford manager, will lead off with one of his topflight twirlers tonight when the Kenosha series starts, having given the nod today to Marjorie Peters. The Peaches, however, will be without the services of one of their regular outfielders, Dorothy Kamenshek. Dotty left for her home in Cincinnati today to get her high school diploma and will rejoin the team at South Bend on Saturday. Stumpf also announced the release of Rella Swamp, infielder from Milwaukee.

The opening game of last night's twin bill with South Bend gave Olive Little, the Canadian pitcher, a chance to make her debut to home town fans in style, and she set the Blue Sox down with a pair of hits.

The Rockford girls scored twice in the opening frame, Betty Jane Fritz slashing a single to right field to bring home Eileen Burmeister and Mildred Warwick. They picked up another in the third inning, Gladys Davis scoring on Fritz's infield out, after having been given free passage to first and advanced by means of a walk and a stolen base.

Score Two in Fifth

Warwick singled and Davis walked to open the fifth and both scored on Lois Florreich's error in handling Ethel McCreary's tap. South Bend scored one run in the fifth without benefit of a hit, and three more in the sixth with the aid of two hits, a walk, a hit batsman and a passed ball. The first game was a seven-inning affair.

The South Bend team batted around in the second inning of the afterpiece when a pair of hits and four Rockford errors gave them a total of five runs. Rockford got one run back in the second frame, Davis again scoring, this time on McCreary's infield out. A walk two infield singles and a couple of rollers gave South Bend three more runs in the third inning. Davis scored again for Rockford in the fourth on Fritz's fly to right field after having reached first by the error route, but South Bend pushed two more runs across in the fifth and tallied one more in the eighth before quitting for the evening.

Clara Cook, the Rockford southpaw, was relieved in the ninth after having yielded six hits and being made the victim of bobbies behind her. Doris Barr, the South Bend southpaw, went the route.

Tonight's game starts at 7:30. Last night's box scores:


FIRST GAME
South Bend (4) Rockford (5)
AB R H AB R H
Wilson lf 4 0 0 Jackson lf 4 0 1
Stefani 2b 3 0 0 Burmeister 2b 3 1 1
Floreich 3b 4 0 0 Warwick 3b 2 2 1
Hageman 1b 2 1 0 Kamenshek cf 2 0 0
D'Angelo cf 3 1 1 Fritz rf 3 0 1
MacLean c 2 2 0 McCreary 3 0 0
Jochum lf 3 0 1 Green c 3 0 0
Schroeder ss 1 0 0 Little p 3 0 0
McPadden p 2 0 0
Coben p 0 0 0
Barr x 1 0 0
Totals 25 4 2 Totals 25 5 4
x - batted for McPadden in 6th.
Score By Innings
South Bend ................. 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 - 4
Rockford ..................... 2 0 1   0 2 0   x - 5
Summary
Errors: Floreich 2, Davis 1.
Stolen bases - Stefani, Schroeder 2, McPadden, Jackson,
Davis, Fritz.
Struck out by Little 7.
Bases on balls - Little 3, McPadden 6.
Hits off-McPadden 4.
Umpires - Ullenberg and Porter.
Double plays: Floerreich to Stefani, Tronnier to Hagemann,
D'Angelo to Schroeder, Davis to McCreary.
Stolen base: Hageman.
Hits off Coben 7 in 7 2-3 innings.
Umpires: Ellenberg and Porter.


SECOND GAME
South Bend (12) Rockford (2)
AB R H AB R H
Jochum lf 5 0 0 Jackson lf 4 0 1
Stefani 2b 5 1 0 Burmeister c 1 0 0
Floreich 3b 5 0 0 Green c 2 0 0
Hageman 1b 4 0 1 Nelson c 1 0 0
D'Angelo cf 4 3 3 Warwick 3b 4 0 0
Baker c 5 2 2 Davis ss 3 2 2
Barr p 4 3 0 Kamenshek cf-1b 3 0 1
Schroeder ss 5 2 1 Fritz rf 4 0 0
Tronnier rf 5 1 0 McCreary 1b 3 0 1
Sawyer cf 1 0 0
Wuetrich 2b 4 0 1
Cook p 3 0 0
Skokan p 1 0 1
Totals 42 12 7 Totals 34 2 6
Score By Innings
South Bend ................. 0 5 3 0 3 0 0 1 0 - 12
Rockford ..................... 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 - 2
Summary
Errors: Rockford 6, South Bend 1.
Two base hits - Baker, Schroeder.
Left on base - by South Bend, 5; by Rockford, 6.
Hit by pitcher - Cook 1.
Bases on balls - Cook 2, Barr 3.
Struck out - Cook 2, Skokan 1, Barr 3.
Hits - Cook 5 in 8 innings.

June 7, 1943

Rockford Register-Republic

Rockford Peaches to Meet South Bend in Twin Bill Tonight

Kenosha Club Here Tuesday

Rockford Girls Ready To Offer New Bid for Leadership of League

By Dick Day
(Register-Republic Sports Editor)

Rockford's Peaches who made their bow to softball fans here Saturday night and then bowed to the weatherman Sunday, will set out tonight in a new pursuit of the first place banner in the new All-American Girls Professional Softball league.

The lead vanished from their reach over the week-end, partially as the result of a 5-2 setback at the hands of South Bend, but the Peaches have a double-header on tap with those Blue Sox from the Indiana city tonight at the 15th avenue stadium, and a twin killing would go a long way towards remedying the situation.

The Rockford and South Bend teams had a double bill scheduled for Sunday, but the condition of the grounds made it impossible to play even after the rain stopped. Consequently, the two teams agreed on a double-header for tonight to wind up the series. The first game will start at 7 p.m.

Tomorrow Josh Billings and his Kenosha Comets will be in town and will play a night game.

Little, Cook to Pitch

Eddie Stumpf, the Rockford manager, announced today that he will start Olive Little and Clara Cook on the mound in tonight's games. Both won their last appearances at Kenosha. Little, a right-hander has a good fast ball. Cook is a southpaw.

South Bend probably will use Sunny Berger in one of the games. Sunny is the girl who broke up a promising Rockford rally Saturday night with a double-play ball when the Peaches had the bases loaded.

Customers who braved the weather for a glimpse of the girls in the opener Saturday got an excellent idea of the class of ball that is being played in this new league. The girls are fast and though they'll need a few more games in which to polish up their defense, lack little in the way of offensive ability right now.

Speed Intrigues Fans

Despite the lengthening of the base paths five feet beyond the usual softball limit, speed still remains a major feature of this game and the customers were intrigued by it.

The Blue Sox bunched their hits in two innings to ring up their victory over the Peaches Saturday, taking the lead on two runs in the sixth and never being headed thereafter.

Muriel Coben started on the mound for South Bend and tied up in a pitching duel for five innings with Marjorie Peters of Rockford. In the eighth, however, the South Bend girl weakened and had the bases loaded when Sunny Berger was rushed to the rescue. One run had scored and Rockford had only one out when the relief hurler pitched her double-play ball to break up the rally.

Games scheduled for Kenosha between the home team and Racine were rained out yesterday, but in Saturday's game Kenosha improved its standing in the league with a 5-3 decision over the Racine Belles.


Wednesday, December 25, 2019

June 6, 1943

Rockford Morning Star

Girls' Softball Teams Make Hit With Local Fans In Opening Game

By Lou Johnson


"Come on, honey, come on!" may not be exactly what Rockford ball fans are accustomed to hearing the third baseman yell to the pitcher in moments of stress on the diamond, but this was no ordinary ball game. The Rockford Peaches made their first home appearance last night at the 15th avenue stadium, playing their ninth game in the All-American Girls' Softball league. The crowd, which had turned out for the unusual sports event seemed a little uneasy about the whole thing at first, but it wasn't long before the usual cries of "Atta stuff", "East out!", and "Kill the ump!" were being shouted with all the lung power customary to a big league game.

It was a colorful sight as the girls trotted out on the field to open the game, for the Rockford Peaches were attired in the short sport dresses of a bright peach color and their caps, belts, and socks were of red, while the opposing South Bend team was garbed in two shades of blue. The two teams met and crossed neatly at home plate and then jogged on about the diamond in opposite directions, coming in at home plate in a V-formation for the playing of the Star Spangled Banner. Mayor C. Henry Bloom braved the field of women to toss the first ball, and the game was on!

Keep Up Steady Chatter

Last night's game proved that a woman's far-famed ability to chatter over a bridge table isn't limited to a card-playing afternoon. The rapid-fire chatter seems to be one of the most important adjuncts of feminine softball, judging by excited yells of encouragement which rang through the air perpetually during the game. (Don't misconstrue this as a criticism - their playing is good, too.)

The yells and calls weren't only directed toward the morale of fellow-players, however - the umpire came in for his share, and don't think for a moment that when a lady batter has what she deems an unfair strike called on here, she accepts it meekly. Our best actresses on the legitimate stage could take lessons from these girls when it comes to facial expressions of disdain, disgust and frustration.

The crowd that eagerly watched the feminine diamond stars was made up of all types of baseball fans, including a number of family groups, some service men, lots of small boys (who divided their time between dropping peanut shucks on the locks of young girls sitting in front of them, and boasting about the devious means used to get in free), a groups of WAACs, and many others. The crowd was predominantly male, but whether that was because the players were women, or if it denoted greater interest in softball on the part of men, I wouldn't be able to judge.

Enthusiasm Grows

Early in the game a gentleman seated in front of me who was having a grand time heckling South Bend's catcher and calling her a "bum," remarked in a condescending manner, "Aw, those girls can't play like fellas," at which his feminine companion immediately rose to the defense of her sex, stating defiantly, "They can too! They just haven't had time to get started yet!"

As the game continued, the playing improved and the enthusiasm of the crowd grew in an amazingly non-partisan manner. A good catch in right field was loudly applauded no matter which side was responsible, and a heart-breaking error brought fourth a unanimous disappointed "Oh!" from the grandstand. By the close of the game, the general consensus seemed to be that the girls were not only a novelty on the sports horizon, but they really had something to offer in the way of good softball entertainment.

South Bend won, 5 to 2.

Rockford Morning Star

South Bend Defeats Rockford Girls By 5 To 2 Score
Bunch Hits In Two Innings To Win Opener
Teams To Play Twin Bill Today At Stadium

Bunching hits in two innings the South Bend, Ind., Blue Sox defeated the Rockford Peaches 5 to 2 last night at the high school stadium in the official league opening for this city in the All-American Girls softball league. In spite of threatening weather and the chilly breeze the turnout of fans was considered good.

This afternoon the same two teams clash in a doubleheader at the stadium with the first game being scheduled to start at 2 o'clock. The second half of the twin bill is expected to get underway about 3:30 o'clock.

Last night's win gives South Bend a four to two edge over the Peaches in the games played between the two teams so far, dropping Rockford below a .500 percentage with four wins and five defeats. Today Manager Stumpf expects to toss his best hurlers at the visitors in the hopes of taking both ends of today's bargain bill to even the standings between the two teams.

Muriel Coben started on the mound for South Bend and five innings hurled hitless ball. In the sixth however Rockford broke through for three hits and a run. Marjorie Peters, Rockford's pitcher, kept out of trouble for five innings, although being nicked for four blows. But in the sixth the visitors crashed through with two runs after two were out. Hageman doubled and counted on D'Angelo's two-baser. Two errors allowed D'Angelo to register. With one out in the eighth two hits, a stolen base and an infield out gave South Bend two more runs. They counted their last tally in the ninth on a walk, two infield outs and a hit.

In the sixth Burmeister, Warwick and Davis singled to score Rockford's first marker. In the eighth hits by Warwick, Davis and Kamenshek counted the other run.

At Kenosha last night the Kenosha Belles defeated the league-leading Racine team 5 to 3.


BOXSCORE
South Bend (5) Rockford (2)
AB R H O A AB R H O A
Wilson lf 4 0 2 0 0 Burm'er lf 5 1 1 5 0
Stef'ni 2b 5 0 0 3 4 Wuet'h 2b 3 0 0 1 0
Floer'h 3b 4 1 1 1 3 Wa'w'k 3b 4 1 2 2 5
Hage-n 1b 4 2 2 10 0 Davis ss 4 0 2 3 4
D'An'o cf 4 1 1 4 1 Kame'k cf 4 0 1 1 0
Baker c 4 0 0 5 0 Fritz rf 4 0 0 1 0
Schro'r ss 3 1 0 2 0 M'Cre'y 1b 4 1 0 10 0
Tron'r rf 4 0 0 1 1 Green c 4 0 1 4 0
Coben p 3 0 2 1 0 Jacks'n x 1 0 0 0 0
Berger p 1 0 0 0 1 Peters p 4 0 1 1 3
Totals 37 5 8 27 10 Totals 37 2 9 27 12
x - batted for Green in 9th.
Score By Innings
South Bend ................. 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 1 - 5
Rockford ..................... 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 - 2
Errors: Warwick 2, Baker 3, Schroeder, Coben.
Three base hits: Warwick.
Two base hits: Hageman, D'Angelo.
Passed ball: Green.
Walks: Coben 1, Peters 1.
Struckout by Coben 2, Berger 1, Peters 2.
Double plays: Floerreich to Stefani, Tronnier to Hagemann,
D'Angelo to Schroeder, Davis to McCreary.
Stolen base: Hageman.
Hits off Coben 7 in 7 2-3 innings.
Umpires: Ellenberg and Porter.


Saturday, December 21, 2019

June 5, 1943

Rockford Morning Star

Girls' Softball Team To Open Home Season Tonight

Rockford To Tangle With Indiana Nine

To Seek Revenge For Three Defeats At South Bend

By Harry D. Milne
Morning Star Sports Editor

Rockford's entry in the All-American Girls Softball league will officially open the league season in Rockford this evening at the high school stadium when the Rockford Peaches tangle with the South Bend, Ind., team. The game is slated to start at 7:30 p.m.

Appropriate ceremonies will be held at the stadium with the flag raising and with the players and fans singing the "Star-Spangled Banner." The two teams of girl softball stars, attired in their natty uniforms, will march out onto the field and will form a big victory "V."

To Throw First Ball

The game will get underway with Mayor Henry Bloom tossing over - he hopes - the first ball to Ken Sells, president of the league. Tonight's game, as will all league games, will be nine innings with the girls playing under men's hardball rules and with nine players on each team.

C. Henry Bloom
Manager Eddie Stumpf indicated that he will start either Olive Little of Poplar Point, Canada, or Marjorie Peters of West Allis, Wis., on the mound. Little hurled two good games at South Bend, winning her second one, while Peters has also turned in some fine performances on the mound. Two games will be played Sunday evening with South Bend.

Dorothy Green of Boston, who reported to the team Thursday at Kenosha, will probably be behind the bat. Miss Green caught from the fourth inning on Thursday night and looked good. The Rockford team has been weak in the catching department regarding stolen bases but Green possesses a fine throwing arm and pilfering of bases by the opposition appears to be headed for disaster with her behind the bat.

Tonight's Lineup

The remainder of the Peaches tonight will probably see Lillian Jackson, Nashville, Tenn., in left field; Lorraine Wuethrick, Milwaukee, at second base; Mildred Warwick, Regina, Canada, at third base; Gladys Davis, Toronto, Canada, at shortstop; Dorothy Kamenshek, Cincinnati, center field; Betty Jane Fritz, Oshkosh, right field; Ethel McCreary, Regina, Canada, first base.

South Bend plays here tonight, Sunday night and Monday with Kenosha following the Blue Sox team of Indiana for four games June 8, 9, 10, 11. Following the Kenosha series the Rockford team leaves for South Bend for four games in three days. June 12, 13, 14, then going to Racine for its first encounter with the Belles, who are currently leading the league with three wins and one defeat through Thursday night. Rockford plays four games there in three days, ending the series June 18.

Rockford lost its first three starts with South Bend but came back to win the next two and the Peaches are anxious to take three out of four here from the Blue Sox to have the edge in the two series.

Kenosha Beats Rockford 15 To 5

(Special to The Morning Star)

KENOSHA, Wis., June 4 - The four game winning streak of Rockford's Peaches in the All-American Girls softball league was terminated here tonight when the Kenosha Comets snapped out of a three-game losing mood to salvage the final game of the series, 15 to 5.

Sixteen base hits rattled off the bats of the Comets who drove Oravets to the showers with four runs and one in the first, continuing the assault all through the game on Clara Cook. Elsie Harney of the Comets was nicked for 14 hits with Davis and Kamenshek each collecting three for Rockford.

Kenosha batted around in the first inning for 6 runs, added four in the second, one in the third and seventh and three in the eighth. Rockford, meanwhile, had one marker in the first, two in the third and one each in the fourth and seventh frames.

Ella Burmeister rapped a triple and scored four of Rockford's five runs.


BOXSCORE
Rockford (5) Kenosha (15)
AB R H O A AB R H O A
Jack'n lf 4 0 2 1 0 Jam'n cf 4 1 2 4 0
Swamp lf 0 0 0 0 0 Ruhnke ss 6 2 3 5 2
B'ter 2b-c 5 4 2 3 0 Mikck'en rf 4 3 2 1 0
War'k 3b 6 1 0 2 2 Koehn 3b 5 1 0 2 1
Davis ss 5 0 3 3 1 O'Hara 1b 4 2 1 7 0
Kam'ak cf 5 0 3 0 0 Lester 2b 3 2 2 1 3
Fritz rf 6 0 1 1 0 Holle lf 5 1 2 1 0
McC'y 1b 5 0 2 8 0 West'n c 5 2 3 5 0
Green c 3 0 0 5 1 Harney p 5 1 1 1 3
W'ich 2b 1 0 0 0 0
O'vets p 0 0 0 0 0
Cook p 5 0 1 1 1
Peters x 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 45 5 14 24 5 Totals 41 15 16 27 9
x - batted for Green in 6th. Hit by pitched ball
Score By Innings
Rockford ................. 1 0 2   1 0 0   1 0 0 -  5
Kenosha .................. 6 4 1   0 0 0   1 3 x - 15
Errors: Burmeister, Davis, Ruhnke 2, O'Hara.
Three base hits: Ruhnke, Harney, Burmeister
Two base hits: Ruhnke
First on balls off Harney, 4: Oravets 2, Little 2.
Struckout by Harney 3, Little 5.
Double plays - Fritz, Davis. Umpires - Gembler, Green




Thursday, December 19, 2019

June 2, 1943

Rockford Register Republic

Night Game Saturday to Open Softball Team's Home Stand


Opening day ceremonies in the traditional baseball style were being arranged today for the first home game that Rockford's entry in the All-American Girls softball league will play Saturday at the 15th avenue stadium here.

Originally booked as an afternoon contest, the game today was rescheduled as a night affair. Mayor C. Henry Bloom will be invited to toss the opening pitch at 7:30 p.m.

Music, a flag raising ceremony and the introduction of the players to the fans are other features of the opening night program.

Meanwhile, today, as Melvin Shaffer, business manager of the Rockford team, was arranging details of the ceremonies. Eddie Stumpf, field manager, had his squad at Kenosha, Wis., for the opening of a three-game series there today. Stumpf has just about made up his mind as to the personnel of the lineup he will display here in Saturday's opener, indicating that he will start as his pitcher either Olive Little or Marjorie Peters. 

Miss Peters pitched four-hit ball last night as Rockford wound up its series at South Bend with a 2-1 decision. Rockford won two and lost three in the visit to South Bend.

The victory gave Miss Peters some solace for her 13-inning defeat in the opener at the hands of Margaret Berger, hurler for the South Bend Blue Sox, who again opposed her yesterday. 

Shortstop Terrie Davis, who handled ten chances at shortstop without a flaw, scored the winning run for the Rockford Peaches. She opened the sixth inning with a single, went to third on Dot Kamenshek's single to deep right field, and scored on an infield out.

While Rockford is at Kenosha, Racine, Wis., will open a three-game series with South Bend tonight.

After concluding their own series at Kenosha, the Peaches will come back to Rockford for their first home appearance on Saturday and on Sunday will play the season's first double-header. The first game will start at 2 p.m.

TIME OUT

By RICK DAY

The Rockford team's first home run in the All-American Girls softball league won't go into the record book. Lillian Jackson, the rightfielder from Nashville, hit one at South Bend ... but neglected to touch second on the way around and the umpires wouldn't count it.

Manager Eddie Stumpf, in a telephone conversation from South Bend yesterday, said the girls were nervous in their first three games, but began to steady themselves in the fourth. They won that one.

Attendance at South Bend has encouraged league officials to hope for the best. Despite holiday attractions there, a thousand fans turned out the first day, Sunday, and 1,200 were in the stands the second. The weather was anything but pleasant, either.

<b>June 13, 1943</b>

Rockford Morning Star Rockford Peaches Attract 3,500 Baseball Fans in Seven Games Here By Harry D. Milne Morning Star Sports Editor Although...