Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1940 — Page 6

Tl Hit Him So Hoard He'll’ Says Joe Savoldi of T he. Angel

By LEO DAUGHERTY

Mr. Joe Savoldi was in town today on a business mission which requires him to pin to the mat the inflated shoulders of the : French monstrosity called (for billboard and publicity purposes) “The Angel.” . > - Mr. Savoldi was determined to accomplish that task in the Coliseum tonight, with a minimum of grunts and groans, and in a terrific hurry because “I gotta get back to that home of mine in Bridgman, Mich. (a $56,000 investment) and cut the grass.” Joe, the old Notre Dame fullback, who played on the-last team Knute Rockne coached and on two teams which brought national championships to the Irish campus, outlined his plan of battle between figuring his percentage and selecting a movie to which to take his wife.

‘Crippled’ Miss Links Ladies W

Mrs. Ochiltree Is an Early Third With an 85; . Mary Gorham Takes Second on an 83 |

By J. E. O'BRIEN | | of Meridian Hills, who toured the

Dorothy Ellis land course with a bad ankl early finishers in the 18-hole en’s city golf tournament.

Her total, one under perfect women’s figures, was the result of proficient wood and iron work and was expected

to stand up against the assau

Another commendable total was turned in my Mary Gorham, who shet an 83 over her home course. She played in the same threesome | with Miss Ellis. Another victim of ankle trouble! was Mrs. Harriett Randall Ochiltree, defending champion, who suffered a severed artery last night in a kitchen mishap. Harriett Gets an 85 Although she whipped the entire 5675 yards, Mrs. Ochiltree came home with an 85, which assured her, a spot in the championship flight. | 37 She showed the same proficiency with wood shots that won her the '} title last year but had difficulty in playing her approaches. Several times on the first nine her, approaches missed the green. 2nd! she fired an iron shot into a on the 18th. Miss Ellis, who pulled an ankle muscle when she stepped in a hole at’ Meridan - Hills recently, was _ seldom in trouble. Her only Shi ness-—if you tould call it that—was her putts. On the first nine she] missed three to take a 38 and she had similar difficulties coming in. One of the bright spots of her game was her deuce on the 153-yard 8th hole. On this one she holed out a! chip shot that was several yards off! the green.

i Deuces on the 11th and 15th holes

were largely: responsible for Miss Gorham’s 41 on~the incoming nine. Although she was in trouble several times she recovered nicely to gain a place among the leaders. Although dark clouds hung over the Highland course all morning, luck was with the ladies and rain did not fall. The weather was especially favorable to those girls susceptible to freckles fore8lte sun was out only at intervals.

Schedule Upheld

In spite of the early starting time, few of the women were tardy at the first tee and tourney officials reported that play was proceeding in “apple pie” order. Mrs. W. L. Brant, the official starter, said the field probably would total 97. Although four women dropped out this morning, three others signed .and deposited their association dues at the tee. Winter rules, which allowed the women to miove fairway shots six inches with the club head, were in effect. Stymies were not to be played, although word got back to the official tent that several pitch-and-putt parties were attempting to hoist green shots over balls lying in the route to the hole. A bulletin hurriedly was posted to inform late starters of this concession.

He is the first man in this country to wrestle “The Angel” two falls out of three. Joe and “The Angel,” who was smoking a huge stogie after the manner of Tony Galento, the beer barrel which walks, met in the office of Mr. Lloyd Carter, the impressario of tonight's extravaganza in the roped and resined square. “Ye gawds, 'what a man,” said Mr. Savoldi, stroking his thinning jet black hair. “And what a chin. What a target. I'll give him the old drop kick I'll hit him so hard [that he won't come to until after the war is over and while they're giving him the smelling salts I'll be mowing the law or back home and maybe taking myself a dip in my. Private pool. ”» At-this point Joseph went [into an exhibit of how he'll put the peculiarly constructed “Angel” to sleep. “It’s different from a. flying tackle,” Joe explained while fingering

Ellis Leads ith an 80

Highe, fired a brilliant 80 to lead qualifying round of the won-

| I

It of late siariors. |

The Leaders

Women’s Par

2 I

| Miss Ellis Miss Gorham

Mrs. Ochiltree ......

Other Scores

Mrs. M. | Mrs. Jer eg "Cadick s. William Mooney |: Ben Olsen

s. C. A. Jaqua Mrs S. Dale |

Hurlburt Vi Bike Race

George Hurlburt of Buffalo, N.Y, held the Wagner Memorial Bicycle Trophy today as the result of his victory over 49 other riders in the 38-mile race yesterday on the East Side. The winner’s time was 1 hour 1 40 minutes 30 seconds. Here is how the nine other fastest i cyclists finished: Jim Tolle, Indi‘anapolis; Johnny Weber, i kee; Johnny Van Diest, Cleveland; iMarino Guerra, Detroit; |Bruce | Burgess, Indianapolis; Dick Verba, | Cleveland; Bob Ragsdale, Indianapolis; Chris Finkenkeller, St. Louis, and Oscar Kreuger, Milwaukee.

Major Leaders

LEADING BATTERS National League

I

Danning, New York.. 45 Walker, Brooklyn ... 38 Moore, New York ... 4 May. Philadelphia .. 38 Nicholson, Chicago .. 42 American league Radcliff, St. Louis .. Cramer. .. 47

ton = McCosky. Detroit . Williams, Boston HOME RUNS I1tize, Cardinals 13 90hns son. Foxx, 6 Kuhe!, White

RUNS BATTED IN I | Foxx. Red Sox . 55|Mize Cardinals Danning, Giants 44!Trosky, Clev land & Walker, Senators. 42] RUNS po

Williams, Red Sox 47/Boudreau, In Case, Senators .. 44(Fo oxx, Red So Moses, Athletics . 42! HITS ’ Cramer, Red Sox 75/Lewis, Serato Wright, ‘White 88x T3 Appl ling, W x Radcliff. Browns 73|F ‘mick, Reds Walker. Senators 70 Finney, Red So

lang 42 .41

..68 .68 68 ..68

Baseball at a Glance

and recommending a work of Dale Carnegie who knows all about “How to Win Friends and Influence People.” See, I crouch on the floor, then I leap and fly through the, air, feet forward and my feet smack ’em right on the chin. “The smack breaks my fall and I twist around and jump on his shoulders and plant them against the canvas. It's a blitzkieg.” And Mr. Joe was sorry he'd used the word because he has no comment on the war other than “It cost me a buck. Last time I'm here we get into an argument at the Ancient Order of Hibernians and I bet a Jewish lawyer a stone’that if Italy enters the war it will be on the side

of the Allies.

“We gave the stakes to Jim Kirby. Jim meets me Saturday and of

course he’s gotta say, ‘Joe, I had to pay off the bet, you lost.’ ”

“The Angel” came ‘in from the

black “stogle and Mr. Savoldi, taking another gander at his foe, whispered torhim in a combination of French and Italian that “That's a fine chin| you have for my dropkick target.” Joe, who admits that the wrestling game has been prétty good pay and that his business as a wine, beer and soft drinks distributor has added nicely to his bankroll, would like to annihilate the French invader as one of his swan songs to tite groan and grunt game. Mr. Savoldi wants to be Attorney Salvoldi. - He studied law while drop kicking for Notre Dame and wants to return summer school under the golden mastery of Blackstone. However, he would advise the young man who wants to be fit physically and financially to take up wrestling. “Give me an hour a day with even a skinny kid and I'll put 20 to 30

next room tp flick the ashes off that

pounds on him,” said the dropkick-

Dorothy. Beats Par—and Her Ankle

filwau- |

Dorothy Ellis . .

Skidding Indians Pause Here, it Slide on to Kansas City

Their Chio invasion marked down as a complete washout, the Indianapolis Indians paused here briefly today before beginning their vic‘tory hunt in the West. | The Trize, dcep.in sixth place in the American Association, will open goasdipel Ab orcs 1 1 against the league- leading Kansas City ‘Blues tomorrow. After the series Trosky, Cleveland 4|Greenbers. “Tigers ii! with the Blues, the locals will take on Milwaukee, Minneapolis and St.

Paul in that order.

A double loss to Toledo’s Mud Hens yesterday ran the Indians’ Red Bar-'

string of losses to nine. rett worked six innigs during the

but one of these was a home run by

Landrum, which scored three rung and eventually lead to Toledo’s 4-2 victory. The Indians already had built up, a 2-0 victory before the payoff homer. base wallop into the right center-

me and complete his|:

er. “It’s swell business, but I believe I've been in it I enough.” Mr. Savoldi’s groan and grunt ca‘reer is nearing an end, of his own choosing, after a rather liar start. He was playing football on ‘the West Coast when Ed (Strangler) Lewis and Billy Sandow saw him. They liked his 208 ‘pounds and his . They invited him into the ring. Next day, Mr. Savoldi stayed five minutes (invitational) with Mr. Lewis, who had thrown’ everything but Hitler. Then he trained six months-and did his dropae under the arc lights for He’s groaned the world over, every country in rope and the Fiji Islands, New Zealand, South Africa, India and where not, all in major league style. And he'd like to end it all by putting “The Angel” into a snooze (comfortable or otherwise) and get back to cutting the grass at home; -

Gotham Has A Hangover

~ Dodgers, Giants, Yanks ‘All Get Beaten

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent

NEW YORK, June 17.— Don’t look now but Father Knickerbocker’s three major league ball clubs—the Dodgers, Giants and Yankees— woke up today with one of the worst Monday morning hangovers on record. All three

(were trying to figure out].

what fell on them.

The Reds landed a one-two punch on the Dodgers before 30,005 heartsick Brooklyn fans, 1-0 and 5-2. The Pirates clipped the Giants’ eight-game winning streak abruptly with a double trimming, 5-0 and 5-3, ‘before 34,282 at the Polo Grounds. But the blow that hurt the most of all was the Browns’ twin triumph over the “World Champion Yankees out in St. Louis, 12-6 and 6-5.

Pitchers Chill Dodgers

- Bill McKechnie stopped the Dodgers with a double dose of pitching poison—Paul - Derringer and Jim Turner. Derringer had his hands full, dueling with Whit Wyatt until the ninth before Lonnie Frey's homer, which stuck cn top of the right field fence in a little triangle by the scoreboard, gave him the only run he needed. Frey’s homer anc Lombardi’s infield hit were the only two hits off Wyatt. Derringer allowed six hits, two each in the eighth and ninth, but when the chips were down Big Paul had it. He fanned Pete Coscarart for the

.| final out with runners on third and second in the ninth. Turner went

the route to win his third game, allowing eight hits. The Reds tapped Curt Davis, making his first start for the Dodgers, for 10 hits. Only runs off Turner were suc-

“What a puss,”

Times Photo.

says Joe Savoldi (left) to “The Angel.”

Blues Are Blue, Poor Old East’

Lose Twice

By UNITED PRESS Mainly because of pitcher trouble, the Kansas City Blues bogged down yesterday before the last place St. Paul Saints and lost a double-head-er, 4 to 7 and 1 to 2. The upset left the Blues only a game to spare in the American Association lead. Al Moran started off badly in the first game and Art Herring, the St. Paul hurler, rapped one of his pitches over the left field fence with two on board. The Blues never recovered from that fourth inning. The Saints scored their two runs in the nightcap in the first and third innings and Kansas City could never catch up. Tom Earley allowed the Blues five hits and he and his mates got as many off the hurling of Don Hendrickson and Johm Lin-| dell. ; After three straight days of losses, the second-place Minneapolis Millers smacked Milwaukee, 14 to 8 and 7 to 4. The Millers lambasted four Milwaukee pitchers for 21 hits, among them two doubles and three home runs. Fabian Gaffke homered in the last inning of the second game with two aboard to break a 4-4 tie. The Louisville Colonels took a double-header, 5 to 3 and 9 to 0, from the Columbus Red Birds. Frank Melton had the first game sewed up in the ninth with two out when Dixie Walker misjudged a fly in the sun. Williams, who hit it, was on second before: the ball was

POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. June

the Poughkeepsie rowing regatta.

But today, as the oarsmen from

EDDIE'S ON HIS VACATION

Eddie Ash, sports editor of The Times, began a two-week loafing session today. His column will be resumed in two weeks.

Parker Opens Title Bid

RIVER FOREST, Ill, June 17 (U. P.) —Frankie Parker of Pasadena,

. she gives the ladies something to shoot at.

Jess Newman's hefty four-|{West, c

{Sc ott, rf .. field bleachers in the second sent Biohifon ‘ss

cessive homers by Coscarart and Durocher with two out in the eighth. Joe Medwick was impotent with one hit in both games. The double loss brought the Dodgers back into a virtual tie with the Reds for first place, although Brooklyn stayed on top by .014 points because a difference in the number of games played.

Terry’s Aces Beaten

Bill Terry’s two aces, Carl Hubbell and Harry Gumbert, bowed as the Pirates licked the Giants twice to celebrate Frankie Frisch Day at the Polo Grounds. Max Butcher, who was married on Friday, tossed a two-hitter at the Giants in the opener while Truett Sewell did tie honors in the nightcap. The Giants dropped back to third place, two games behind the Dodgers and Reds. The Cardinals kept their record under Billy Southworth at 1.000 per cent by winning a double-header from the Phillies, 9-3 and 3-1, for their fourth straight. A 14-hit attack led by Stu Martin's three hits featured the opener while Lon Warneke went the distance and allowed only four hits to cop the nightcap. The Bees and Cubs split. Eddie Miller, the shortstop the Cubs failed

Box Scores

-— om ww

(First Game) - INDIANAPOLIS

R ~letzer, pal Gienyars,

Newman, Lang, 3b

recovered and Nonnenkamp’s double put the game in extra innings. The second game was a cinch for the Colonels behind Bud Parmeless brilliant pitching. .

Ex-Grid Stars Get Police Promotions

EVANSTON, Jun 17 (NEA). — William Calderwood and Wes Brown, former Northwestern athletes, have been made sergeants on the Evanston police force. Calderwood, star halfback on the 1927-28 football teams, is juvenile probation officer. Brown, former national collegiate wrestling champion, is assistant director of the accident prevention bureau.

Berkeley,

Cal, opens his bid for a second con-

seéeutive National Clay Courts Tennis Championship ‘today against Arthur Marx, Beverly, Cal. Although he is defending champion, Parker was seeded second to Bobby Riggs, king of the American courts. Riggs breezed through. his first-round match yesterday against

Tom Brown Jr., San Francisco.

Don McNeill, Oklahoma City, seeded third, opposes Edward Alloo, Cal, and Bryan Grant Jr, the Georgia mite who has won

the clay courts title three times, meets Robert Harmon of Berkeley.

Mary Hardwick of England, one of the leading threats to Alice Marble in the women’s division, meets

Louise-Hofmeister, Oak Park, “11, in a first-round match.

Is Conceded.

A Chance to Win This One

By HENRY SUPER United Press Staff Correspondent

17.—The “poor old East” today at

last was .conceded a better than even chance to win the varsity event of

Ever since 1921, when California and Washington began taking this Poughkeepsie business seriously, the Eastern schools have taken it on the chin as often as Joe Louis’ opponents.

eight colleges relaxed in preparation for tomorrow’s 43d annual boat ride down the Hudson River, the advance

guard of an expected crowd of 20>

000 was referring to the boys from the Pacific Coast as “the poor old West.”

It’s a strange situation that exe ists today in this sleepy river town that wakes up once a year for what they like to call the blue ribbon classic of American rowing. - Year after year the prerace talk has centered on the great schools from the Pacific Coast which have won 10 times since 1921 and finished second nine times. Many times before, the East has come up with some classy crews only fo wind up in the wake of the Westerners—as in 1934, 1936 and last year when the West finished first and second. But this year the East thinks it has a couple of extra classy crews in undefeated Cornell and oncebeaten Columbia; and in Navy and Syracuse, which are labeled the darkest of all dark horses in the history of this event. California won the race last year in the record time of 18 minutes, 123/5 seconds—the third straight year the record had been shattered. Washington was a close second and on the basis of that performance, the Western crews must be the logical favorites. But the “talk the West down” movement is based on the fact that both invading eights will be paced by sophomore strokes and both lost many men from last year’s shells. The betting odds favor Washing ton at 7-5 even though the Huskies will swing up to the stake boat with a shell filled with one senior, two juniors and five sophomores. Cali fornia and Cornell are bracketed at 2-1, ‘Columbia and Syracuse at 8-1, vy and Princeton 10-1, and isconsin 15-1.

TRADITIONALLY AMERICAN

5

RE

Ink

eo

Imm

COMNHO MIO mT coconwoor mm HOMNOHNHONOP ocooxoococoool

COCO OCOHO MD

the Hoosiers off ahead, and an-|Bafret other run was added in the fourth |French, p when Benny Zientara scored from| munis third as Dick West hit into a double! gin patted for Barrett in seventh.

to buy, won the opener for the Bees, 5-4, with an 11th inning single which Galan juggled to allow a runner to count from first. An eight-

AMERICAN LEAGUE

G.B. (First Game

1 | 000 031— 6 11 © . Louis | .. : os 310 40x—12 13 1

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Ww. . 37 34

nN -

Kansas City ... Minnea oi

ve. 2 g «25 91% 23 10% . 23 20 i 15

NATIONAL LEAGUE ie Ww. x Pct. Brooklyn ..cccccoe0e 32 .681 Cincinnati ...ce0c.. 34 , +667 EK cceosones .638 519 cose .396 gh .378 Philadelphia . .348 BOStON ccccoecirenne . 1 341

GAMES TODAY

AMERICAN BEEocaTIoN Toledo at St. Paul (night). Only game eT

AMERICAN LEAGUE No games scheduled.

NATIONAL LEAGUE i at Boston (2). : Louis » Xroakl n. Chica at New York. Ginclanati at Philadelphia.

RESULTS YESTERDAY

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (First Game)

0 7 Cincinnati Melton,

Hughson, Flowers and Lewis; Breechen and Cooper. (Second Game)

. Parmelee and Lacy: Dickson, Curlee and “ Tichacek. :

(First Game) ae 061 500—14 2 102 030— 8 16 od Denning;

aes Kline and (Second von

100 003 3—7 10 0 000 030 002—5 11 0 New York ott 000 00185 15 2

{ T. her and Denning; a gels. Marrow and Garbark. (First Game)

t. Paul sevens ansas Olty .... ip 8 Schleuter; Moran, a fad ic

and Ri (Second "Game) st. Paul Kansas C

| . 2 {io J 2 Br N

1 3 Fittshursh 0) Ni York Marrow, Makosky, ankins.

. 010 32 010—7 8 2 000 011 020—4 0 Carnett

City . 101 000 o-2 3 1 and Schleuter; Le Lin ack and Bidate Hentrieuses,

Ruffing, Sandra Hilde) and and Dickey; i Kennedy and Swit

(Second Game)

New_York St.. Louis

Breuer, Busso, Murphy and Rosar; Bildill, Coftinn, Trotter and Susce, Swift.

Philadelphia | Cleveland

Yavghan, Caster and Hayes:

Hemsl (Second Game)

Fhiladelnhia . 200 (01 000—3 8 Cleveland 000 400, 00x—1 9

Babich and Hayes; Milnar and Pytlak.

oor 100 hE 4.2 Feller and

100 002 631—7 10 1 012 030 02x—8 16 3

Chase and Ferrell; Bridges, McTebbetts

(First Game; 12 Innings)

000 000 012 001—4 6 © 000 020 100 000—3 8

Grove, Bagby and Desautels; Lyons and resh.

Eo Kain and

(Second Game)

IS REIL Ses 34% 121 100—14 3 1 i.... 200 300 000— 5 :

Boston Chicago

Appleton and Turner.’ :

NATIONAL LEAGUE

(First Game) St. Louis 020 011 050-— Philadelphia . 010 020 o00—3 34 i McGee, Russell and Padgett, —~ Hig- | be, Pearson and Warren. (Second Game)

001 001 001—3 7 1 . 000 000 100—1 4 2

Warneke and Owen: Blanton, |and Atwood. ton, Pearson

(First Game

Brooklyn 200 01 000 0 001-1 § ’ Derringer and Lomb ne Phelps. ar

(Second dame) 210 001 010—5 10 0 000 000 020—2 8 1 Kim-

Wyatt Sh

$incinnasl ookly

and Hershberger;

"Tarn ball and Phelps Davis,

(First Galle

Butcher and Lopez; Hubbell, pl and Danning.

: “ Second Game) Pittsburgh

Sewell, Heintzelman and vis; - "Ibert and Danning. Bavist

Gum-

: ; (First Game) Chicago 020 000 020 00—4 6 5 Boston 001:000 201 01—5 10 1

Lee, Raffensberger, Page Hart: ; Sullivan. Coffman. Posed anda Bes:

001 008 000—9 10 4 001 000 000—1 5 1

Passeau and Todd; Fette, Barnicle, Coflman and Berres.

Chicago Boston

Sw

play.

Wilson and Desautels; Knott, i ig

20 101519 24 000 000—0

Zientara previously had walked and gone to third on Mack's two-bagger. Barrett was derricked in the seventh for a pinch-hitter, and Don French replaced him. The final Hen run was scored in the same inning, thanks to a Toledo single and Mack's shoestring catch.

The Mud Hens won the second | Indianapolis do

contest, 2 to 1, after the Indians had taken a one-run lead in the first frame. LeGrant Scott and Newman singled, with Scott romping home on Wirkkala’s wild pitch

to Mack.

Nalon Sets Record

. {Galatzer, cf .

Duke Nalon . . . he broke a crank shaft in the '500° here.

LANGHORNE, Pa., June 17 (U. P.).—A new 100-mile auto racing mark was listed today for Langhorne Speedway following Chicago Duke Nalon’s winning performance in 1 hour 4 minutes 474 sec= onds,

costly misjudgment of a|

TOLEDO

Dwyer, of Byrnes, cf

Lucadello, 2b Christman, Landrum, 3b Taylor, 1b Payton, ¢ .. Gill,

Totals

wl ~ocommmooco® al 0 Ot = O09 0 3! orornanwn~0 et ®| mmovowoocod =| coomoococoot

010 100 000— 2 Tole 000 300 10x— 4

Runs Batted In—N:wman, Landrum 3, ‘Winegarner. Two-Base Hits—Mack, Dwyer, Winegarner. Home Runs—Newman, Landrum. Sacrifices—Dwyer, Byrnes. Double Plays—Lucadello to Christman to Taylor 2, Christman to Taylor. Left on Bases—Indianapolis 6, Toledo 8. Base on Balls— Off Barrett 4, French 1, Gill 3. Struck Out—By French 1, Gill 1. Hits—Off Barrett 4 in 6 innings, French 3 in 2. Losin Pitcher—Barrett. SNpRes=Conities an

Weafer. Time—1:44.

(Second Game) INDIANAPOLIS

Zientara, 2b on Scott, rf 52 oe

ek, Rienerdoon, Sharp, p Totals 2 xOne out when winning run scored.

TOLEDO

OOOOH M OOM ‘owocoro-1war0 ‘moowooroaod #! syvessrassy

a

Byrnes, cf Christman, Winegarner, 1f Lucadello, 2... Landrum,” 3b ..

or

coooawo owned

o0ceOmmoocccod orocoonormmoonil | OHOOMMHOONWOHOD cooccococcoccool

Totals

Criscola ran for Dwyer in seventh. Whitney batter for or in seventh. Steinbacher ran for itney in seventh. Spindel batted for WiSEERA in seventh.

Indianapolis sesenssnnnes “see oledo

Runs Batted .In—Wirkkala, Byrnes. TwoBase Hit—Dwyer. Sacrifices—Richardson, sek, Payton. Doubl Flontars a Mack, Land to Lucadello. ft on Bases Indians 6, + Base Jalls—Off Wirkkal, A Struck Sout—B y

: 00 000 0— aheasanes sesetussnnans 200 010 1— 2:

run rally gave the Cubs the afterpiece, 9-1, behind Passeau’s five-hit pitching. After seven straight thrashings from . the Yankees, the Browns turned on the Bronx Bombers and stunned them twice. The Browns knocked Red Ruffing out of the box in the opener, for hig sixth defeat, Vernon Kennedy was rapped for 11 hits but had a long lead to work behind. Laab’s double, Grace's single, Lary’s sacrifice and Radcliff’s double drove in two runs in the ninth to take the second game.

Red Sox Win 6th’ Straight

The Red Sox ran their winning streak to six straight by thumping the White Sox twice, 4-3 (12 iri nings) and 14-5. Ted Williams’ seventh homer won the opener after Eric McNair’s error with two out in the ninth had permitted the Sox to tie the score. Jack Wilson pitched and batted Boston to,victory in the nightcap, getting four hits, including two homers. Joe Cronin also hit two homers and Jimmy Foxx got No. 16. Cleveland grabbed both games from the Athletics, 4-2 and 4-3. Bob Feller won his ninth victory in the opener, allowing only three hits, but he had a tough adversary in Porter Vaughan, a 21-year-old rookie from the University of Richmond, who gave up only two hits in seven innings before giving way to a pinchhitter. Al Milnar hung up his ninth victory in “the nightcap, besting Johnny Babich. The A’s made eight errors in the two games. Barney McCorky’s eighth inning single drove in two runs which enabled the Tigers to nose out the Senators, 8-7, and hold second Place by .007 over Cleveland.

Advertisement

CNEURITIS

2101s PAIN IN FEW MINUTES Newsies Ni

| minutes, |

used by t

Sh Wirkkala 3. t cherie: Wirkkala (Galatzer). Genshlea. Time—=

39.0 pires—Weafer |

Elephants and clowns were "old stuff” when Julius Caesar staged bis open-air free-for-all circus some 2,000 years ago. The art of brewing was practiced at least 2,000 years before thas. But the "big top” and scientific cally produced beerare traditionally American.

The tradition behind Wiedemann's Fine Beer extends back for four generations. The original formula is still in force. The same fine ingredients are chosen from the world’s richest sources. The flavor is enhanced by slow and careful aging. Whether you buy Wiedemann’s on draught or in bottles, you will invariably find the same sparkling

Wiedemann's by name, at the best places everywhere.

BREWED BY THE GED. WIEDEMANN BREWING CO. INC., NEWPORT, KY.

Goomioht 17, he 65. Wndaman Beowiiy Cow Inc.

DISTRIBUTED BY.

=e 12025 MARTINDALE

brilliance, . rich bouquet and satisfying flavor. Call for

“SPECIAL BREW BOHEMIAN

DE au BEER ,

-

IEDEFIERNS / BEELER Bobomion

.

THE CAPITAL CITY SUPPLY CO. _

_PHONE camo |