Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 July 1941 — Page 7
WEDNESD AY, JULY
30, 1941
Says Joe Williams
Neither Team Can Produce Any Finishers
By DAN DANIEL Pinch-hitting for Joe Williams) NEW YORK, July 30.— Though the 27-year-old Joe Louis has been classified as 3-A by a Chicago draft board. those close to him say that the United States were dragged into this war, the heavyweight Fi champion of the world would enif once again we came and Louis hose to stay out of it, he merely i be adhering to precedent. tensive digging into the dusty s of the ancient prize ring he gilt-edged history of the e modern era discloses the very beginnings of pugilin this country, cur heavyht leaders have been no true les of Mars, no members of nethean race. In fact, there ce that in times of nauble some of our direct ie of Paris, of Troy, De like the devil in the other ction ¢
if
L
However,
to Armageddon
snal
S
> rants naants,
s = = SINCE THE REVOLUTION, we har four, the 1812, Mexican, Civil, Spanish - American and World wars Not one of the nobles of the roped square who guring those five struggles were ized as our No. the uniform of your Uncle Nawsiree, Mr. Louis, if
you chose to remain out of it, you |. would be doing nothing that has
not been done before True, we have had a lot of scrappers who before their rise in the professional ring were in our national service — Tunney, Sailor Tom Sharkey, Jack-Tar Jack Sharkey, Marine George La Blanche, Sailor Burke, 1d Soldier Bartfield hi them. 4 THEY HAVE done better of thing over in re Len Harvey and Tommy Farr head \a small army of boxers in active service, and its national forces in the past dehost of gunners, sapbombardiers, bandsmen and
an al
BUT with that England. whe
SOTrt
veloped a pers, the like The first Ame: take a Sam
ican heavvweight runout powder Tom Molineaux. the Virginia Negro, who ined in England while the States was beating John two straight in the war of
leader to
Tvl n= on Uncle was
United Rull 1812 » 2 5 THE MEXICAN WAR broke the United States was the proud possessor of its first official heavyweight champion — Tom Hyer, whose father Jacob had been a bare knuckle bravo before him. While the lads under Zack Taylor and Win Scott were winning Resaca De La Palma and storming Mexico City, Tom Hyer was running a saloon on Broadway, between victories over such smelly plug-uglies as Cot mtry McCloskey and Yankee Sullivan =
WHEN
“red
=
THE PRIZE PHONY and trou-ble-dodger was the much-written-about John C. Heenan, our heavyweight champion of Civil War davs. John was the polished gent with the handlebar mustachioes and gold toothpick who married Ada Menken of the stage and lived to drive trotters against Commodore Vanderbilt on the loomingdale Road. While North battled South, Heenan chose to dally in Eng- | land. where he had gone in 1869 his brawl with Tom Savers. When the United States into the World War, its heavyweight champion was gigantic | Jess Willard, The Kansan stayed | at hb me and nobody made 8 squaw The records said he was 33 veats of age in 1919 but it was suspected Jess was a lot older. He had a family, too—and, besides, even though he was the titleholder. nobody paid much attention to him
=
"
fry 101
r S.
= ® =
HEAVYWEIGHT WHO attention during the World War was Jack Dempsey, who was to take the title from Willard at Toledo on July 4, 1919 There is strong evidence that Dempsey wanted to go to war— that he even went to the Great
THE
drew all the
Lakes Naval Training Station to | Detroit
enlist and was stopped by wiseguy advisers They told young Jack be a sucker” They predicted the var would be over in a few months. You know the rest of the sto Dempsey listened to evil counsel, reportediv went into shipbuilding, had his picture | ¥ taken as a riveter wearing patent leather shoes and got into a peck “of trouble he never would have experienced but for listening to those who were making money out of him,
ry
Advertisement
Memorrhoids— Get Relief Now
Millions of sufferers in the last 36
vears have found a way to get quick relief from the itching and smarting of pites. They use a delightful coeling, soothing and astringent formula—Peterson’s Ointment. No wonder one sufferer write, “The itching and smarting stopped, and I slept all night. Peterson's Ointment is marvelous.” 33c a box, all druggists, | g0e in tube with applicator. Money back if not delighted.
AUTO DIAMOND
LOANS
ERA BR aE EEE RATNER
CXate)
¥M MONTHS 10
Wolf Sussman, Ine.
Ww wasn
LRN
2 4
SN |
ESTABLISHED (0 YEARS
| OPPOSITE STATEHOCSE—LI-StS
that |
1 punchers |
Marine Gene |
got |
! “not to |
By PAUL SCHEFFELS United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK; July 30.— There's an adage in major] league baseball that “Pitching wins pennants in the National League” but it apparently
13 Bases on Balls Wins For Detroit Over Yanks
jor the Brooklyn Dodgers win the 1941 flag.
Neither team has a pitching staff {that can put two nine-inning pitch|ers on the line for two consecutive days. The Cards iead the league by two {games, They have six regulars [hitting .300 or better and two bench- | warmers over that figure. They ‘have speed to burn and a darn good manager in Billy Southworth. |But their pitching staff has stag(gered so under the pace that 27) [hurlers have gone to the mound iin their last nine games. It's much the same with Brookiyn. Leo Durocher is one of the! {hustlingest, trigger-quick managers in baseball. He has a erackerjack| {infield and a phenomenal young | Le in Pete Reiser. But 28 hurl-| ers have trudged to the box in the Dodgers’ last nine games. The pitchers of both elubs were | |but to a severe strain in yesterday's deadlock which lasted three | [hours and 31 minutes and went 12] innings. St. Louis spotted Brooklyn a 8-1 {lead as late as the sixth inning but (burst loose with six runs to go (fr ont. Terry Moore's two run single Johnny Hopp's
{7-7
second triple and] Johnny Mize's eighth homer fea- | tured the spree. Brooklyn, with] | Durocher back at short, refused to| lquit and tied the score in the ninth! fon Wasdell's single, a walk i | Medwick's single. The Cards loaded the bases in {the 12th with only one out. But! Hugh Casev bore down and caught | pinch-runner Eddie Lake at the plate on Walker Cooper's bunt and got pinch-batter Coaker Triplett | on a pop-out.
Pirates Still Coming
Pittsburgh continued its headlong pace by downing the Boston Braves | 3-3, for victory No. 10 in 11 stats | and No. 20 in 26 games The game, was called at the end of the sev enth | because of rain. Cincinnati walloped the New York Giants, 7-4. The Reds sent! 11 men to the plate in a five-run [fifth inning that gave Gene Thompson, who relieved Elmer Rid-| dle in the fourth, his second vie- | tory of the year and first since June 1. The Chicago Cubs trounced the Philadelphia Phillies, 12-4. The! Bruins slammed four pitchers for 14 hits including homers by Stan! Hack, Babe Dahlgren and Bill Nicholson.
Tigers Beat Yanks
In the American Ireague, the De-| troit Tigers collected only seven hits but received 13 bases on balls to score a 8-3 triumph over the New York Yankees. Barney MeCosky, with two doubles and three walks was the leading Detroit basegtter. Red Rolfe hit his seventh and Joe DiMaggio hit his 24th homer of the vear for the Yankees. Cleveland cut the Yankees’ lead {to 10: games by defeating the Washington Senators. 5-1. as the | veteran Al Smith allowed nine hits. | Luke Appling tripled Taft Wright | jacross with the winning run as the! {Chicago White Sox blanked the Philadelphia Athletics, 1-0. St. Louis defeated the Boston Red! | Sox for the sixth straight time this! | year, 3-2.
won't turn out that way if) |either the St. Louis Cardinals|
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -
Pitching Won't Win for Dodgers and Cardinals
Puffing and Ready
Rufus the Hed
NME HE THROWS THE BALLITS
- EVERY
A CASE oF NOT SEEING RED.
FRING MORE GAMES A YEAR IN HELPING NEW YORK FOUR
70 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS . . ... HES BACK ON THE PACE AND SO ARE THE YANKS. PX.
"WON 20 OR CONSECUTIVE
Study the Form--Attention Didn't Upset Whirlaway
By HARRY
NEA Service Sports Editor
30. —They talked and wrote about turning in a startling upset when he
SARASOTA SPRINGS, Attention, an unsung outsider, ended Whirlaway's remarkable strir Arlington Park. Nothing could be farther from the truth. | The bulk of the folks out West | neglected to study the form. Had | théy done this, Attention might not have paid $21 for $2 even though so many considered Whirlaway invincible, Attention, a bay son of Equi-poise-Fizzaz, she by Bubbling Over, was cut out to be a fine horse. Mrs. Parker Corning’s colt repelled Whirlaway in three out of four trips as 2-year-olds when the little dark chestnut had his wild and woolly habit of running wide. Max Hirsch thought more of Attention last winter than he did of the King Ranch’s Dispose, winner of the Flamingto at Hialeah, and Arnold Hanger’s Harvard Square. That is why Attention was kept out of the winter wars, and allowed to fill out naturally in the health-giving sun of the old Fair Grounds at Columbia, S. C. 8 4 4
TRAINER HIRSCH conserved Attention's energy for the Ken- | tucky Derby, The Preakness and Belmont Stakes. Whirlaway easily might have had trouble earlier had not Attention developed foot trouble, which kept him out of the triple. Hirsch says he went to the post for the Classic lame.
July
‘Baseball At
a Glance
AMERICAN Jsso
{ Tanieahetis & | Colum L Suite | Kansas City _. INDLAN Sis Toledo St. Paul Milwankee
TR Bit i 3 4H 33% 1H 310 3 491 33 490 39 423 |} 308
FURS SOT SN
Se L tat E
New York ... | Cleveland Roston
87
—
1) 19
T=
83 ha
20%
dr 0 33%
3%
23
| St. tii 55 Radian wa vA 5 i 82 13 30
8
TODAY'S SCHEDULE
AMERICAN aca HON RE i xe DIANA of | voids Mere 8 3 ky ison le. mele > “ on a vi
32 a .
naan:
Bn ie i | Cincinnati ‘3 ‘New York i
| Chicags 10 deliphia
IG FIO FW 13 DWS -— wo
953
Cleveirhd Ne fn (hi Jes At Ene ji
St. gy a at Boston,
| pa Li se
ati hh tH. probit Al Cincinnati” (high
Major Leaders
| Kansas City
| pein,
| EhiedSphia
3 hake Lownie
AMERICAN LEAGUE AB HE Niven 8 iB IR Be. 33
Caen Ha
i
} Non $a 8 4 i i ee & Tow i i i ® | Y ow tet Y wR er, Yan Bia RR pt ti, 08 Reo RUNES BASED wn
Been RR
§
‘Dro Is Out for
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Toledo LhllAliii BUD 200 00— 3 0 Columbus . 000 100 pon— i n 3
Biscan and indel: Briumbeloe, » Barrett and Heath. BRhE
{ City
Milwadvkee . 020 010 05 — 8 10
108 300 Px—13 11
3 1} ie and Todd: Adri-
Moran, tH Robinson, Barlota.
en
sla, Dobe ricksbn an
. 201 092 si6-4y {6 3 . BEL 00 Bet — 7 12 0 Tan seher, Kline and R RoRensherker and B, Ren)
Rinheapotic Lei
Keller.
Sa. : Schivet “r
AMERICAN LEAGUE
aa th And Turner: Marchildon and Wag-
010 2 "He oon S00 3
ign and Ferrell; “rh
po Leh TCEdigc 000 vk or 3
and Sullivan: Doral
Detroit es . Sars suger, Ro Bll, and Rosar,
210— 8 3 00 — 3
1 i
Anderson,
grieneeeine 203 000 000— 3 Sateen m=
Chace,
witb
Sm nd TT he Cait in le
and Early.
NATIONAL or Agu E Elie 2 000 Bob— 4 14 3 Cesteleeiiiet nn 301 BAx—12 14 ©
Beck, Grissom, erst nd gar Rivington, Lee, Krenn and Me- \
41 tunings; Cal Called Rain)
. 002 100 0— 3 8 DAY 001 0— 3 13 | LaManna and Berres: Santvan Rinker and ov |
Fin eriete
Javery, Hutchin (BERR Lopes.
(12 Innings; Called Darkness) ol kivn 103 001 000— 1 18 | ne Pours wot or i 000 B00— YT 9 2
Wa eh yr Mop we Cooper
The Season Times Special BERNE, Ind, July 30-—Bob Dro, “| former Indiana University basketball and baseball ace, who suffered & fractured right shoulder while) Playing outfield for Grand Rapids
\
n the Michigan State League, is
GRAYSON
1g in the $40,000 Classic Stakes at
Attention didnt come to hand until, with 122 pounds on his back, he beat older horses at Empire a week before he trimmed Whirlaway. Under stout restraint all the wav, he took the lead entering the final quarter and drew away to win the mile and a furlong test by three lengths. It was that performance that prompted Hirsch to send him after Whirlaway,
2
Amateur Notes
No Gridiron St A Better Recor
LCS ANGELES, July 30 (N. E.
whose sudden and untimely death s
Detroit Climbs In Typo Test
Attention shifted from the Washington nine to the Detroit team today in the Union Printers’ international baseball tournament at Riverside Park as the Motor City squad took undisputed first place by defeating New York, 12 to T.
Washington aided the Detroit cause by banging a 13-to-1 victory over the previously undefeated Boston nine. Teams still in the Washington, Detroit, New York, Boston, Chicago which drew a third-round bye and St. Louis which yesterday eliminated the Twin City team, 8 {o 3. George Mosedale, making his first start since an appendectomy three weeks ago, turned in a five- hit, 11strike outs performance as Washington topped the Bostons while Detroit coasted to victory with seven runs in the first frame and St. Louis blasted out 14 hits to gain its an
running are
. 000 000 010—1 5 i ton 120 133 30*—13 15 gehingion Blackstock and Santo, Lally; ne Courhat, Nosedaie p .. 020 200 210-7 10 Detroit 710 300 01-12 13 Zaner, Scarff Sagat and Dever, Gor am; Seddon gl Ega & Louis Yo1 212 100— 8 1 4 Minneapolis-St. Paul 000 100 020— 3 Dandridge and Bruns; Huuck, Room, Rice and Jandl, Ryan.
- gon
Harmon's Nuno
Leads Them All
CHICAGO, July 30 (U. P). Tommy Harmon, Michigan halfback, and Augie Lio, Georgetown guard, engaged in a nip-and-tuck popularity battle today as final votes were tabulated to select a College All-Star football squad. A heavy influx of late balloting lifted Lio’s total to 1,162493 votes and slashed Harmon's individual lead to 27,169. George Franck, Minnesota, halfback, was third with 1,024 473. All three are assured starting positions on the squad of 60 players which plays the Chicago Bears, professional champions, Aug. 28. Final results of the poll will be announced tonight. The leaders: Ends—Rankin, Purdue, 819.856; Rucinski, Indiana, 807,527; Severin, North Carolina, 633,- | 083. Tackles Drahos, Cornell, 852,107; Pannell, Texas Aggies, 731.454; Uremovich, Indiana, 703972. Guards—Lio; O'Boyle, Tulane, 961 - 218; I.okane, Northwestern, 912.826. Centers — Mucha, Washington, 041.322; Gladchuk, Boston College, 806,473; Hall, Warrensburg (Mo.,| 856.307. Quarterbacks — Evashevski, Michigan, 953,418; Paffrath, Minnesota, 919.854; Schulte, Rockhurst, 872617. Fullbacks—Paskvan, Wisconsin, 807536; Piepul, Notre Dame, 754.208; Kimbrough, Texas Aggies, 731.214. Halfbacks—Harmon, 1,180, | 662; Franck; Gallarneau, Stanford, | 836,294.
BASEBALL
Glenns Valley will practice Frdiay at] 3:30. p. m, They will play Martinsville | Sunday. r games in August and Sep tember write Paul Mellvain, 703 Orange St. | call MA. 8961, @ Beech Grove Reds want game for gn as, 3 Beech Grove, on Ben Kelley, Write R. R. N , Box 838, InSahonle.
0
SOFTBALL
Stevens Funeral Home has access to a diamond every dav and would like to schedule games. Write M. Dragan, 720 N
| Warman
STOUT STADIUM
Schedule for Em-Roe Civie League tonight: n., Wayne Park vs. Bridgeport, Labor Temple vs. Riverside
Softball
, > City Sanitation ve. Richardson “Market. The Castleton Merchants wish to schedule Sunday and night games, Call BE. 3172 or write Wesley Russell, R. No. e team will play Kay Jewelry Saturday night.
SOFTBALL STADIUM
Results in last night's games: J; 8. CC, 3: BEB. C. Atkins, 0, Mallory, 4: J.D. Adams, 3 Tonight's games in the Lilly League: : 00—Serviee vs
Factory
Manufacturing. 8:00 Engineering vs, Shipping. 9:00 Research vs. Paper ackage,
SPEEDWAY STADIUM
Schedule for tonight's games the Smith-Hassler Majestic League: 8:30—-Union Trust vs, Book walters RallGreathouse
in
7:30 —Kiefer-Stewart ve, Seven U 8:30 Domont Plant vs. Banner- Bitehill 9:30 —Mitchell-S8cott vs. George J
DeRee Scores Tk’O Over Ernst Brock
Clarence DeRee of Keystone playgrounds won on a jechnical knockout over Ernst Brock of Washington Park in the feature bout of the
(amateur boxing card at Keystone
playgrounds last night. The boxing shows are sponsored by the city and Marion County WPA recreational departments. In the other bouts, Bill Evans defeated Bartley Whited, Eddie Allen defeated Howard Evans, Ted Haynes defeated Bill Reed, Fred Johnson defeated Don Jones, Clyde Spaulding defeated Don MeCloud, Bill Henry defeated Ed Wesling, Earl Paul defeated Earl Alderson and Jud Haggerty defeated Harry Williams.
Defending fing Champ Is Defeated
Times Special LEESBURG, Ind, July 30—Just as a new champion came out of the men’s and women's state golf tournament, so a new junior Indiana Women's Golf Association queen will be crowned this week, for again the defending champion has fallen. Barbara Sanders of the West Lafayette Country Club yesterday (eliminated defending champion Joan Brown, tournament medalist from the Kokomo Country Club, 4 and 2. Matches today hring together Miss Sanders and Louise Daviss of Tippecanoe Lake Country Club and Bleanor Allen, Fort Wayne Country Club and Suzanne Pulliam of the Ulen Country Club. Today's winners will clash for the title tomorrow,
|
Pack the Park
Honors Indians
Seven members of the Indianapolis baseball club who had their training on American Legion junior baseball teams will be honored at the “Pack the Park” festivities at Perry Stadium Aug. 7 The seven and the posts on which they got their starts are: Bennie Zientara, age 41, second baseman, Post 083, Chicago; Joe Bestudik, age 24 third baseman, Post 32, Springfield, Ill; Wayne Ambler, age 25, shortstop, Jenkinstown, Pa. Post 248, Glenside, Pa, and Ben Wade, age 19, pticher, N. C. The others are Al Lakeman, age 22, catcher, Bentlev Post, Cincine nati; Edward Shokes, age 21, first baseman, Palmetto Post 112, Charleston, 8. C, and Larry Ingo, age 20, infielder, Coney Post, Chicago.
Softball Deadline
SHELBYVILLE, Ind, July 30.— Entries for the 10th annual Indie ana Recreation Association softball tournament will close Aug, 1.
NO FANTASTIC (
356665566664 JLAIM
S — Just Good 3
Stylish, Serviceable OUT-OF-PAWN
Men's SUITS
You'll be surprised how much style and quality you ean get for so little, We make no ftantastie elnt 0 for our
fd tl
te when new
h
Others a Ey and $8
ein ii din
used his knowledge to greater adv
The defending champions from |
RNS
Post 09, Morehead, |
rategist Had d Than Jones
A)—Npop one knew more football and antage than Hward Harding Jones, hocked the sports world. Howard Jones became a head coach the year he was graduated from Yale—1908, and made the profession his life work. No gridiron strategist has a finer record over such a long stretch. He was highly successful wherever he went. Still he was the most under-pub-licized of all famous tacticians. While of the old school, Jones kept pace with the times, yet to the last his system was predicated on power. He believed in “getting thar fustest, with the mostest men.” On an off tackle play, his interference looked like the Russian army in great haste.
Rock Used Boxing Technique Knute Rockne's theory was to box, check or sideswipe a defender just long enough to permit the ballcarrier to slip through.
Glenn S. Warner blocked out defenders . . double teamed them when it was necessary. Jones knocked them down and ran right over them. The secret of Jones’ success was thoroughness. He drilled his own lines, realizing that was where games were won.
With Every
Like Rockne, he figured every play was a scoring one provided | everybody carried out his assign- | ment. One fall he diagrammed | |every play his Southern California {varsity was to run, and allowed them to be pwblished widely. “I don't cage if the other fellows {know what is coming,” he explained. “The play can't be stopped if my i boys do their jobs well.” Jones had opposite ideas on the quarterback carrying the ball Many coaches do not permit the signal-caller to lug the trouble at all on the theory that his head should be clear at all times. Other systems, such as that of Carl G. Snavely at Cornell, demand that the quarterback be a superlative blocker. Fewer Carriers—Fewer Tumbles For years, Jones’ quarterbacks did practically all the carrying. Jones, the theorist, figured that no one should lay hands on the ballcarrier, and there were times when they didn't too often. That is why Jones turned out so many AllAmerica quarterbacks—Aubrey Devine of Iowa and Morton Kaer, Gaius Shaver, Orville Mohler and Cotton Warburton of Southern California, to name a handful. Another Jones theory was the fewer carriers the fewer fumbles, There were some in Southern California who suspected that Jones outlived his usefulness, yet two vears ago he had one of the finest of his teams. In 1938 and '39, he beat Ohio State and Notre Dame with passes.
But He Had the Material
Doyle Nave completed a fifth consecutive pass into the coffin jcorner to repel unbeaten and unscored-on Duke shortly before {the gun ended the Rose Bowl battle
Foot of Sail
Jorie, 50-foot cutter, is an eye-filling picture sweeping by Diamond Head to finish second to Escapade in the trans-Pacific race to Honolulu, Owner Brooks Gifford of Pasadena is master-navigator.
Mrs. Mathews Is (ity Tennis Queen
City tennis has a new queen of the courts today and she gained the title in her first attempt. The No. 1 ranking player of the Chicago Town and Tennis Club before taking up residence here last January, Mrs. R. H. G. Mathews gained a similar position in the local field yesterday when she defeated Florence Wolff in the finals of the women's singles, 6-4, 6-3. The only matches played in the men's singles brought victories to Vie Kingdon and Roger Downs. Kingdon took Andy Bicket, 4-6, 6-0, 6-4, in an extra-set battle and Downs defeated Earl Otey, 6-1, 6-1. Play in the men's doubles found Hall and MecCleod defeating Brooks and Brown, 7-5, 6-2; Linne and Mayberry defeating Nonwieller and Jones, 6-2, 6-0; Otey and Sunderland winning by default from Beeler and Dalzall; Clegg and Tackitt de-
of Jan. 1, 1940. Remarkable material had a way of following Jones around. From Ted Coy at Yale to Amby
|Schindler and Grenny Lansdell at
Southern California, Jones {blessed with an abundance talent. And he would be the first to tell {vou that a coach can't win without it. No more than a passing attack | can be successful without being | combined with a sound running | game.
was of
feating Glavin and Foltzenogle, 6-1, 6-3; Neidhammer and Toombs defeating Devoe and Devoe; Bosant and Gisler winning by default, and Rucklehaus and Whittaker defeating Mathews and Pierson, 6-2, 6-4.
Old Timer Dies
NASHUA, N. H, July 30 (U, P).| Michael (Smiling Mickey) Welch,
82, oldtime baseball star and one of | only 12 major league pitchers who won more than 300 games, a hospital here today.
died at
But PER of a
CHANGE OFF AND
A BETTER BEER
2025 MARTINDALE AVE,
Don't Monkey With
THE CAPITOL CITY SU
. a ‘EXPERIENCE... always {| EY
@ a Buzz Saw!
Fortunately most of us have proper respect for a buzz saw.
if we haven't . . . EXIENCE teaches a whale lot in a hurry!
“A GUD BEER IN 1887"
Bowling Notes
Two bowling leagues will hold ore ganization meetings tomorrow night at the Parkway Recreation Alleys. The Wiles and Johnson League will meet at 7:45 o'clock, and the Parkway Recreation League ab 8 o'clock.
The Marott Shoe Ladies Bowling League will hold a business meeting at Pritchett's alleys at 8:30 p. m, Thursday. '
Simmons vs. Smith
PHILADELPHIA, July 30 (U.P), —Al Simmons, veteran Philadelphia Athletics’ outfielder, came to blows yesterday with Edgar Smith as the Chicago White Sox hurler handed the A's a 1-0 shutout, Simmons, last man up in the ninth, riled Smith with several choice remarks concerning Edgar's pitching ability as Al flied out to end the game. Teammates sepe arated them after several blows wera thrown.
CIGARETTE
BURNS
REWOVEN LIKE NEW
BURNS FINISHED
Oudiona Hbaring (6
528 Tllinois Bldg. LI. 9674
counts!”
“A GREAT BEER IN '4(”
TRY ...
EVERY YEAR DISTRIBUTED BY
FP LY
IT HAS TAKEN 54 YEARS TO BREW A BEER WITH THIS FAMED FLAVOR
FEO achieve the famed Berghoft flavor we, of course, employ every aid to fine brewing. We use only select, top-quality ingredients . scientifically control every stage of the brewing . beyond usual limits, and brew with the most modern equipment. But these alone could not create the fine brew you enjoy today . . they not guided by the matchless knowledge we haev gained in 54 years of continuously brewing Berghoff Beer. Few can equal our years of continuous brewing experience. through these long years of striving for improvement, we have achieved a wholesome, satisfying flavor found in no other beer!
. . extend aging
» were
Try Berghoff . .. and see how,
in Bottle , . . Ga® and on Draught. Nee tels , . . Restauranip soa Clubs, . . Tae erne , « , Package Riores,
SINCE 1887
CO. Inc.
_ PHONE CH. 2620-2591
