Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1941 — Page 35
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FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1941 Irish Seniors Meet Leahy’s 1941 Gridders
NOTRE DAME, Ind, May 9.—A new Notre Dame coaching staff will unveil new Notre Dame football to public gaze for the first 1orrow in Notre Dame The Irish varsity of 1941 1 graduating stars of headed by Capt. Moose) Piepul, rated by many rts the greatest fullback
A
)40 team
» Dame history
ach Frank Leahy and his Ed McKeever, Bill Cerney, 1v Druze, and Joe McArdle— squad of nearly six teams been hard at work, with interimposed by the weather March 15. The Oid s have not trained as strenthe varsity, but to their must be said that they harder getting ready spring game than any ing am in recent years. Piepul has been directing his 1 drills almost daily for a month The savvy the rs acquired in three years of competition will offset to a extent the work done by & Co. with varsity is not too well satisfied work accomplished this “Our offense has not proged a bit t about what we used at vear, This is simpcause we have been too busy > about any innovations.”
since
irked
tine fe
the
‘alleop ast
t Leahy used last year, how-|
represents Not1
a big change from Dame used last year, will see many maneuvers
f new to the
Irish
Amateurs
C. Y. 0. JUNIOR SOFTBALL May 10, 10 a. m, Cathedral. of Are vs. Holy Cross, Lourdes,
Saturday, Ki, Catherine vs. wt Joar Eacred Heart vs.
Bt. Philipevs., Bye, C. Y. 0. CADET SOFTBALL
May 10, 9:30 a. m. 1.
Saturday, Division No. St. Catherine vs, Holy Rosary vs. Little Flower, Holy Cross vs. St. Philip, St. Francis vs. Lourdes, Division No, 2. Kt
Holy Name,
Joan of Arc vs. Holy Angels, Sacred Heart, St. John, Holy Trinity, Sunday, May 11—10:30 A, M,
St. Catherine vs. Shamrocks at Garfield. Crusaders vs, St. Roch at Willard. Cathedral vs. Holy Trinity at Holy Rosary vs. St. Philip at Brookside. Lourdes vs. Bye.
Assumption 1
vs, Patrick vs Cathedral vs.
SOFTBALL
One more Sunday School senior goftball team 1s needed to fill a 161d Sunday School League playing at the Speedway Stadium Monday evenings. If interested, get in touch with Henry Miller, 310 N. or call RI, 1331.
Illinois St, All. C. F. B. softball players and those wishing to tryout report to the corner of E. Merrill and S. Alabama St Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock. For games write to Har- | old Shulke, 630 E. McCarty St.
Louie's Market would like to chedule games with strong out of town teams. Write J. Priola, 1456 Bates St. Call MA. 7185.
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The Goldsmith Secos softball team desires night road games with teams within a radius of 50 miles. For games write Max Goldsmith, 535 S. Illinois St. Call LI. 1612.
Mitchell A. C. seeks games on a home-and-home basis. The club il! play home games at Stout Stadium on Sundays and road games on week days. Address A. J. Thatcher, 711 Buchanan St.
The eighth-grade team of School 20 scored an 8-6 victory over Keystone Boys team.
Wants Tiger Berth
MUSKSGON, May 9 (NEA) — Johnny McHale, University of Notre Dame's No. 2 center last fall, is playing first base for Muskegon of the Michigan State League. Property of Detroit, McHale is expected to be sent to Beaumont of the Texas League. The 19-year-old Irish lad’s boyhood ambition was to play with
the Tigers M.
AUTO RAC
Sunday, May 11--2 P, 5 Events—25-Lap Feature Champion Dirt-Track Pilots Fastest Cars I'rom 5 States Fair Grounds
GREENFIELD, IND.
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Riverside. |
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problems. . . . Everything
By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Service Sports Editor CLEVELAND, May 9.—The grass is still wet, but in Cleveland the Indians can’t miss, First of a three-poi program for immediate development of the
lake front launched by Mayor Edward Blythin is completion of new traffic handling facilities before the World Series. When the New Yorks checked in, they read an open letter by a baseball what was in store for them. When the Tribe's winning streak was halted at 11 games, the same {scribe started his lead with “The [thing that had to happen happened. The Indians lost a ball game.” | Clevelanders, perennial enthusi- | asts in the spring, appear to have | it this trip. The Redskins are hustling like 25 Pepper Martins,
Take the Close Ones
They are copping the close ones, which is the mark of the pennant winner. Jeff Heath, the muddled mauler of the past two campaigns, is belting the ball at a better than .400 clip. Ken Keltner, who slumped to .254 in 1940, is hitting .320. Hal Trosky sports a .370 figure. Gerald Walker, brought in as additional punch, wasn’t missed when he pulled a shoulder muscle, The wigwam has the magnificent Bob Feller, iron clad insurance against a protracted losing streak, and Mel Harder, usually a blank until late June, obtained a flying start. Roger Peckinpaugh has giltedge left-hand pitching in .big Al Milnar and chubby Al Smith.
Just One Run
Joe Heving allowed only one run in his first 12 innings as a relief worker, Clint Brown was unscored on in seven and a fraction. The line through the center of the diamond is as sound as the Chase National Bank. Rolly Hemsley and Gene Desautels are skillful catchers. Lou Boudreau, the natural leader who sparks the outfit, and Ray Mack really are something to write home about as a second basing combination, i Roy Weatherly covers center field like a circus tent.
No Secret Meetings President Alva Bradley no longer
his manager and men. There are no secret meetings . no player talk of taking the law into their own hands. The mutineers of 1940 complained that Oscar Vitt gave them the jitters, and perhaps they were right. Anyway, the tenseness, irritableness and surliness disappeared with Old Ostracized Oscar the pop-off.
All is tranquil and serene under
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All Sweetness and Light
ES
Cleveland is sweetness and light now.
Cleveland's Mayor Is Making Plans for the World Series
the pleasant and fatherly Peckinpaugh. Peck’'s Bad Boys are Willing Williams now. There's many a slip between the notorious front-runner of May and the bunting, but the way the Injuns are going Cleveland scarcely can be [blamed for estimating the autumn gate.
Golfing Lass fo Meet Veterans
MEMPHIS, Tenn, May 9 (U. P.). —Four determined players—a sen-
sational lass of 17 and three veterans—matched strokes in the semifinal round of the Southern Women's golf tournament today. A starfing field of 79 had been slashed to four, and of five pretournament favorites only one remained in competition. She was { Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page of Chapel (Hill, N. C., and her opponent today Iwas a mighty little miss from Lithia Springs, Ga., youthful Louise Suggs. | Mrs. Page and Miss Suggs were | competitors in the North and South | tournament, and Mrs. Page defeated her then by a wide margin. But by no means was the Carolina star a topheavy favorite today. | Mrs. Dan Chandler of Dallas came (in for greater consideration as a title contender today as result of a [sparkling sub-par quarter-final round in which she knocked Lexington’s famed Marion Miley out of the contest, 2 and 1. She took the first nine holes in the quarter-finals in 36—two below par—and appeared ‘headed straight for a new course record when she won the match on the 17th hole and shoved her clubs back into the bag. All she needed for a record 73—four under par— was a par four on the final hole.
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(Continued From Page 32)
arrivals are Ralph Hepburn, Al Putnam and George Conners. . .. Joe Thorne’s six-cylinder is en route. . . . Wilbur Shaw and Chet Miller, Boyle teammates, maintain they have only one driving suit between them. . . . The veteran Deacon Litz was a track visitor and hinted he may accept a fast steed. The Deacon claims he has lost no weight. . . . Frank Brisko tdok his six-cylinder Zollner Piston Pin Special to the bricks for the first time yésterday. He was carbureting and trying new gears. { He didn't try for any quick ones. «++ The wind and rain got in the hair of the Bowes crew. Otherwise Rex Mays might have given the boys something to shoot at. Rex is asking Bud Winfield for just a little more zip on the stretches. And he’ll probably get it. . . . Al Miller was caught on one lap in his rear-engined buggy at better than 115 per... .
= ” ” The rain is wrecking what Coach Cotton Henning of the Boyle team thought was a good training program for the week. Yesterday he hoped tg have both Chet Miller and George Connors on the track in the eight and four-cylinder jobs, respectively. But things got wet before Miller's practice session was over, and Connors didn't get on the track. Cotton was reserving today for Wilbur Shaw and the Maserati, but now he’ll have to bring both Miller and Connors back to complete their workouts. The eight-cylinder Miller-motored
operate has been given a larger fuel tank, and it's Cotton’s hope that the buggy will go 500 miles with only one pit stop. “For the last few years a second pit stop has moved us back to fourth place,” Cotton pointed out. “I think we can gain a place or two if Chet can go with only one.”
~ ” ” Incidentally, Mr. Henning has a story to tell of the new Maserati motor in Champion Wilbur Shaw's No. 2. It seems that when Mr. Henning was in Italy buying the original motor, Sig. Maserati asked him what he needed in the way of spare parts. “Oh, throw in a couple of pistons, some valves and a few odds and ends,” Cotton replied. “That will be plenty.” At which Sig. Maserati was much perturbed. Why, nobody would think of taking a car all the way to America with just those few replacements. As a matter of fact, Mr. Henning should have two motors. So. Mr. Henning inquired what Sig. Maserati would take for a duplicate and he was told “$3500.” The price convinced Mr. Henning he didn’t need another motor. But Sig. Maserati was a good businessman and so there was some dickering, interspersed with a cable to boss Mike Boyle, and the deal was closed. For two years this -second motor has sat in the Boyle garage while Wilbur won two races with the first. There have been offers for it, but Mr. Beyle wouldn't sell. Although the first motor still is in A-1 shape, Mr. Henning couldn't resist the temptation to try the sec- | ond. And although both are of the | same specifications, this one may be just a wee bit faster.
Faster Than the Bull
TIJUANA, Mex., May 9—Bob de la Vega, in charge of gates at Agua Caliente race track, claims to hold a record that few bull fighters can match. In an amateur fight here with a dehorned bull, de la Vega stood his ground bravely until the animal charged. He took one look at 1200 pounds of beef rushing at him and his career ended then and there. He dropped his red cape and outran el toro to the fence.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Abd
THERE MUST BE an affinity between fishermen and fish. Fish are hard to catch. So are fishermen. We've been on the trail of a fisherman all week. Undoubtedly he was on the trail of a fish. That could go on —the fish on the trail of a minnow, the minnow on the search for a bug, and the bug hunting us with his stinger
Boyle Special that Chet Miller will|’
.
——— ms aa Ss
cocked. This fisherman is a very special sort of angler. He makes his own flies, we were told. That in itself is not so unusual, but the gentleman in question, we were told in a whisper, hauls his fly-tying equipment down to the edge «of a Stream, sits there a while watching the trout feed and then slips back from the stream and craftily fashions a reasonable facsimile of the fishes’ favorite dish for the day. A « You can see why we were anxfous to have a little talk with this unusual fisherman. What he does with flies manufactured on the spot, we were told, is criminal when considered from the fish's viewpoint. We thought that if we could run down this fly-tying angler we could pass on a little information that might play havoc with fish—the big ones. We tried a few experimental casts over the telephone. After about three tries we got a rise. The gentleman is a very busy person but his secretary got him on the line, As we explained what we had heard about him, his eyes must have widened in amazement and then crinkled at the corners, because right in the middle of our discourse he let out a guffaw. “Somebody has been telling you a fish story,” he said, “Nobody can do that to fish.” But then he admitted that maybe he did take along a little fly-tying material on fishing trips. And maybe he did have a little “luck” with the lures he fashioned then. So he promised to talk to us in person before the week was out. After that we kept his secretary annoyed with phone calls, He was either working some place or out of town. Once in front of a 10-cent store goldfish department we thought we spied our man, watching the little rose-colored carp intently, his fingers working busily with feathers and hackle. But he got away before we could speak to him. Just as soon as we corner him, we'll let you know.
8 Day-Dream at Hatchery
IF YOU DON'T CARE for trout fishing, and a lot of Indianapolis people don’t, you could take the family out to the Riverside Fish
Earl Hoff
Hatchery this Sunday, and while the wife keeps the kids from falling into the breeding ponds, do
ih i mi. Spb Cen
Cathedral, Tech Nines Triumph
Local high school pitchers seem to thrive on cool, rainy weather, Jack Meyer of Cathedral avenged an earlier defeat for his team when he set the Broad Ripple hitters down with one single to gain a 4-to-1 victory. Hits by Tom Broden, Emmert Behr and Jim Dilger provided a two-run Irish lead in the opening inning and a double from Ott Hurrle’s bat followed by. singles from Meyer and Al Obergfell provided two more runs in the fourth,
in the Rockets’ only run. Behind the hitless four-inning relief pitching of Joe Maloof the Tech High School nine came from behind to defeat Plainfield, 4 to 3. Sylvester Lux started on the hill
a little day-dreaming. If you look intently you can see the big fellows pairing off and Standing guard over wooden, V-shaped nest boxes. Any day now they will begin to spawn and the Conservation Department boys will start conversing in astronomical figures. ” » » The department annually produces 20,000,000 little fellows. course the infant mortality is high among fish, but a large number grow to fingerling size and take their chances in Hoosier
are always hungry. The 534 club operated ponds in
production. four years they have produced about 11,000,000 fingerlings to be released in Indiana watérs.
Send in the Info -
THE CONSERVATION DEPARTMENT is anxious that you send in scales from your catches with a little information about where the fish were caught and something about the size. By studying these scales the department can tell whether the fish in certain lakes are getting proper food and whether they are healthy and hefty enough.
Bowling
Entries in the 1050 scratch classic opening at the West Side alleys tomorrow reached 77 last night, assuring the winning squad of at least $200. Deadline for entries is 1 o'clock tomdrrow afternoon, Forty registrations have been made for the mixed doubles tournament starting at } o'clock tomorrow afternoon.
Last night's leading bowlers:
Dietman, Related Foods.........c0v... George Godwin, Elks.......... “eavenss h Ted Frazier, Alpha. . Livingston, Related FoodsS.....o000000. Carroll eg Alpha....... sesnsanes 608 Madon Jenkins, Builders
Angott vs. Marquart CLEVELAND, May 9 (U, P).— Sammy Angott, National Boxing Association lightweight champion, and Billy Marquart, clever Mon{real boxer, were signed today for
{a 10-round non-title bout here May 119.
the state also are about to go into | In the last three or |
for the Green and White but was | relieved with two on and none out {in the fourth by Maloof. Plain(field was leading, 3 to 2, at the
ey
PAGE 93
time. Maloof halted the scoring threat with three strikeouts. Bill Watson's triple," a hase on balls, a fielder’'s choice and a passed ball gave Tech the two more runs and the victory. :
First Fencing Loss
CHICAGO, May 9 (NEA).—Uni# versity of Chicago's fencing
Big Ten champion, lost its firs dual meet since 1936 to Notre Dam
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