Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1942 — Page 6

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HANS LOBERT'S Philadelphia Phils still look lowIv, futile and feeble in the National league standing of clubs, just as several yesteryears past, but on the bail field this year they're standing up and battling with a new and refreshing spirit. “There's a war link in this striking feature of the 1942 Phils’ play.” according to Bill Brandt, ths National league's demon statistician, historian and news bureau chief. Facts reveal that the Phils’ manager is probably the only tactician in baseball whose war-cry resounds on far-flung battle lines half-way across the world. . . Lobert coached baseball aS West Point for eight years before joining the Phils organization In 1934. . . . In that period there passed through “the Point” a great percentage of the officers new leading the Uniied States army forces on every In a letter to Bob Considine, columnist of the Daily Mirror, New York, Lieut. Col. Johnny Roosma, one-iime West Point biseball pitcher, yasketballer, all-round athlete, relates: “Yea-ha is the morale word which our West Point baseball team used. Hans passed it on to us It ‘Be alive, work hard, never quit, be loval and think! “When I joined ‘he—infantry, I passed it on to the regiment. Yea-ha is on the lips of every Gimlet (regimental nickname—motto: Bore, Brother, Bore) It is the word that distinguishes Gimlets from other soldiers. The word that turns defeat to victory: The word that stimulates the soldier to take another step forward and fire one more shot. “It has worked wonders and it will remain with this regiment

fran front.

leans

Hans Lobe

forever.” Uncle John received a cable from Lieut. Col. Roosma, then at Pearl Harbor. when John was appointed manager of the Phils. . . + he letter explains why. “Anvone who played for Hans loved him. He Knew the game, plaved it hard and coached it well. His big smile, personality and drive had the qualitics of leadership that are most essential in an army officer. Anyone who played for him could not fail to inherit some of these qualities. “Hans was all business on the baseball field. He taught us to ‘stay in there and fight’ until the last pitch. I venture to say that he has more of his students in this war, leading troops.than any other

coach. You can bet they'll be in there with that ‘Yea-ha' spirit.”

Five-Letter Name Pays Dividends

PATERNAL ADVICE is at the root of a lot of successful men’s When your dad tells you, he means it. . . . Take pitcher. £¢ ¢ His complete family

eer stories. . .. New York Cafes

cal Dave Koslo,

didn't go so well. He had lots of Stuff, but the Readings el Juded hind, When he won a game, the papers played up the timeiv hitting he runs for his team. . . . If he struck out the side with a batting slump by the other team. . .. the most, mere mediocrity. S. + + « Some sage words of

that scored t the bases full, they called it Dave seemed destined for failure. or at Then his father took hold of thing counsel put the finger on what was wrong. ... The ambitious young southpaw obediently edited his name as per instructions. . . . Ever ince then he has appeared in newspaper box scores and all the averages as a five-letter word instead of the whole works. . , .+ He made the headlines often and the big leagues quick. Dad knew best and he ought to. . . . Back home in Menasha, he's a printer!

Wis :

All-Star Time Is Rolling Around

MEMBERS OF the Indianapolis Indians who are tagged as bright prospects to land berths on this year's American association all-star team are Johnny McCarthy, first base; Joe Bestudik, third base; Bill Skellev, shortstop; Wayne Blackburn, outfield, and Bob Logan, Rav Poat and George Gill, pitchers. . . . Maybe others later, How the Tribesters are batting, exclusive of pitchers:

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Bestudik ... Blackburn McCarthy Skelley Galatzer Seeds Moore English McDowell Hartnett Schlueter

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Baseball at a Glance

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ¥ iui GB Milsankee . Kansas City .. 3 3 — | Toledo . 031 oot 00x— 3 Milwaukee .......° 3 1 Minneapolis al 5 hs Columbus 51 Lonisaille 3 3s (First game; 3 INDIANAPOLIS . a 3 St. Paul : 3" Louisville

St. Raul Toledo ist Martin, Smith { Lucier and Lacy.

Ist Paul .. 016 010 0O3— 35 1 | Louisville cen... 000 001 00O— 1

Swift and Andrews:

Naktenis,

!and George: Cox, Kimberlin and Ke

33 3 33 39 11

innings; BErSeient 200 3 .. 002 001 1— 4 10 and Pasek.

New York Boston Cleveland Detroit St. Louis Chica age Philadelphia Washingten

1 i" } Kansas City 1913 Columbus 20'2! Wensloff and Sears: | mire.

1 100 100 11x— i

NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE

Philadelphia 000 110 000— 5 1 | Clevelan ion L211 200 10x— T 1

GB | Brooklyn i St. Louis 3 Cincinnati New York

Chicago Pittsburgh Bost Philadelphia 12 Detroit chasis RE tw eStny Judd and Conroy; YESTERDAY Tebbetts.

RESULTS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION New. York 010 310 010— 6 1 St. kouis ... 100 010 030— 3 ¥

3 1 . Donald, Murphy and Rosar; worth and Hayes. “and * Geen ie Spindel.

9: 212! _ R. Harris, Christopher and Swift; Ba 3 *| Heving and Denning. » 3

Boston 2— 2

Trout, Cai

(First Sane Milwaukee Toledo Lanfranconi Parmelee and Keller,

aay *

4 0 Kimberlin,

1.

Washington at Chicage, postponed.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Olsen, Fleming and Hernandez:

Cincinnati New York 022 030 %0x— T

Derringer, Shoun, Thompson and manne: Lohrman and Danning. Pittsburgh 000 000— 2 Brooklyn ..........(. 200 040 00x— 6

Klinger, 3uning and Lopez; French and Ow

St. Louis at Boston, pestponed.

GAMES TODAY

MERIC AN ASSOC: oy

All Games a Nigh Minneapolis at INDIANA dL1s Kansas City at Columbus. Milwaukee at Toledo (two). Only games scheduled.

AMERICAN LEAGUE Reston at berolt,

Shington t Chica Phitad phia “at Cleveland. New York at St. Louis,

(8

NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis at Boston (two). Cincinnati at New York (twill Chicage at Philadeinhia (night Only games schedu

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Warren King, football and track star who

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Wood and Walters.

$4 2° 2 1

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Hoerst, Johnson, Nahem, Hughes and Livingston.

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GARDEN CITY, N. Y., June 24— former Dartmouth

has

been coaching here, has been com-

Agpanin ™ “I BLUE POINT 255isx SR ae se ey Gin 3 Baas

Poat Fireballs Millers to Win Seventh Game

3d of Series Tonight For the Ladies

Picking up ground gradually, but firmly, (he Indianapolis Redskins are meving back into the American association's elite despite the fact they are in sixth place. The league race is tightening up and it so happens that the Indians are only seven games behind leading Kansas City and rapping at the door of the first division just one and a half games away. A winning streak in the A. A. gots vou somewhere and the Tribesters have extended theirs to four straight and five victories in seven starts in the curren home stand. The Redskins made it two in a row over the third-place Minneapolis Millers last night, 4 to 2, and the third of the series is to be played at Victory field tonight at 8:30. It is a special “ladies’ night” at the Tribe park and the veteran Chief Hcgsett is slated to oppose young Don Schoenborn on the mound.

Poat Uses Fire Ball

Skipper Gabby Hartnett handed the Millers a dose of Ray Poat last night and the tall, young righthander cut loose with blistering speed and with no sign of tiring in the late innings. As a matter of fact, Poat struck] out the last three Millers in the; ninth, and all lefthand hitters— Claude Linton, Hub Walker and Frank Danneker. He simply breezed the ball by them as they swung and missed. All told, Poat rolled up seven strikeouts, issued three walks and held the Millers to five hits. After the sixth they didn't get one safe ana were retired in order seventh, eighth and ninth. He

Indians

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES °

Knocking at Door of First Division

1

Fo

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1942

It looks like Whirlaway is in a pensive mood. thinking over his chances of winning more Aqueduct races. the sixth there, Monday, with Jockey G. Woolf up.

A Study in Thought

He's probably He won

Freshman Flop’ Lou Novikoff Turns Into ‘Super Sophomore’

By PAUL SCHEFFELS United Press Staff Correspondent

To See Bettina

major contribution to a military fu

in the feature of an all-star

200 Gunners In Trapshoot

NEW CASTLE, June 24 (U.P) .—

pected Thursday for the opening of the 48th annual Indiana state trap-| shoot at the New Castle Gun club, officials of the meet reported today. All class champions have indicated they will return to defend their 1941 titles in the four-day event. Herschel Cheek, Clinton artist rated one of the world’s finest trapshooters, will defend both his state singles crown and all round championship. Cheek broke 198 out of 200 in the main event and 150 successively in the shoot-off last year to top Dr. Harold Adkins of Indianapolis by one target for the title. Grand Champions

Cheek also won the Grand American champion of champions race at Vandalia, O., in 1939. E. L. Hawkins of Ft. Wayne, who won the doubles title last year with 92 out of 100, also will shoot to re{tain his title. Hawkins took the international dqubles championship in 1940. Other defending champions ex-

NEW YORK. June 24.—A colorful baseball player is variously de- pected to shoot for their second

to draw fans to the box-office.

fanned Ab Wright three times. It was Poat’s fifth consecutive] victory and he has won seven and lost four—and that makes him the | team’s mound leader in percentage. |

OQOutfielder Drops Ball

Ray was opposed by Bill Lefebvre, | southpaw. who was touched for] eight hits after holding the Indians] without a blow for three innings. After one out in the fourth Rabbit McDowell singled, advanced on an out and scored when Frank Stasey dropped Johnny McCarthy's fly in left center. The Millers countered with two runs in the fifth on Frank Trechock’s double, an error by Joe Bestudik on Lefebvre's bunt, Stasey's| long fly and Huck Geary's triple. In the sixth the Redskins stepped) out in fNiont again by scoring two markers on a single by Wayne | Blackburn, McDowell's sacrifice] and singles by Gil Engiish, McCarthy and Bestudik. And in the seventh the Indians scored their fourth marker when Norman Schlueter beat out a bunt and raced all the way to third when Lefebvre threw the ball wide to first; then Schlueter scored after the catch on Blackburn's fly to left. Early in the game three John Laws surrounded Manager Hartnett tn the Tribe coaching line and “pinched” him on the charge of stealing second base in the second half of Sunday's double-header. The “theft” by the veteran skipper furnished a big laugh all around. (E. A).

Use Rangers to Eject Players

DURHAM, N. C, June 24 (U. P.) —Judge W. G. Bramham, president of the National Association of Professional Baseball leagues, has suspended Manager Grove Seitz of the West Texas-New Mexico league Clovis club 90 playing dys for an assault on Umpire Red Norman during a game at Lubbock, Tex. on: May 31. The umpire’s report revealed that his chest protector and mask were torn off by Seitz. The attack followed a dispute over a decision in which Seitz had been ordered out of the game by the umpire. The manager was finally removed ‘rom the field by two Texas rangers. League President Milton Price had already fined Seitz $50 for his actions.

Ben Smith Elected NIGA president

SOUTH BEND, June 2¢ (U. P). Ben Smith of the University of Michigan was elected president of the Intercollegiate Golf Association of America yesterday, succeeding John Holmstrom Jr, captain of the University of Illinois team. Burt Abrahams of Northwestern succeeded William I. Wilson of Notre Dame as secretary-treasurer.

Major Leaders

AMERICAN LEAGUE

G .. 80 225 31 58 213 28

‘ 242 38 nce, ‘Washington . 82 38 ckey, New York .. 39 132

NATIONAL LEAGUE G AB . 32 206 § J 56 2MF 2}/ IT 133 17 43 9 45 147 19 46 3 43 132 2 1

Gordon, New York n

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Dhara, Lamanno, Cimetnmaii - Owen, rooklyn HOME RUNS Willams, Red Sox 18! Dette, Red ork, Tigers

. Hc ii, Mize, Gi Giants .. AS agit, Deag Fanks. HH

Tire & Battery gi

Call LI-6789 for instant Road Service Daily and Sunday from 6:30 a.m to 10:30 p. mi

¢| clinched it with three unearned 358

Such a player is Lou Novikoff, the freshman flop who this seasoniand E. O. Jackson, | has turned into the super sophomore. i ball pitcher to become the minors’ | made baseball history| Pittsburgh Pirates in a twilight the 100 target; | by becoming one of the biggest busts| game at Ebbets field that drew 15,- | of all time last season when he tried! 049 fans.

top slugger,

[to play left field for the Chicago

|Cubs. But just as his trail through

the minors and his one joust with the majors was marked with sensationalism, so is his current comeback. Found Timing Again

Lou has been lambasting the ball so regularly during the past few weeks that it appears he has once again found the timing that helped him become the leading batter in every minor league he's played in. Conceivably, he might now become {one of the game's greatest hitters. Novikoff's naivete and oral originality has made him the most popular player on the Cubs at Wrigley field. But it was his bat that brought him fame in the Three-I league, Texas league, Pacific Coast league, and American association. He made a record almost without compare in the minors, yet he failed in 1941. Novikoff batted only 241 in 62 games before being sent

Novikoff . . . graduates

to Milwaukee, where he again found the range and wound up leading the league with .370. Novikoff himself believes his recent, renaissance is due to a return of confidence. But whatever the reason, he's belting the ball with the aplomb of a regular. He started

off slowly again this year and only |},

his popularity’ with Wrigley field fans kept Manager Jimmy Wilson from benching him for good, but he hit his real stride during the past three weeks.

Clouted Homer Yesterday

In 51 games, Lou has been up 174 times officially. He's scored 18 runs and collected 48 hits, including six doubles, two triples and three homers. He has driven in 23 runs and stolen two bases. His batting average now is .276, a mark far from the league lead, but it represents an increase of .017 points over the last three weeks, and 0.33 points over the past seven games.

Novikoff clouted a homer and pe

single yesterday to lead the Cubs to an 8-4 win over the Philadelphia Phils, & triumph that carried Chicago into fifth place. Shut out for the first six innings, the Phils almost tied the score in the seventh with four runs, but the Cubs

runs off Tommy Hughes in the ninth. Phil Cavaretta belted two doubles and a single for Chicago. Brooklyn increased its National

59 league lead to eight games by hamSohne out a 6-2 ii over the

[BASEBALL

TONIGHT, 8:30

SPECIAL LADIES’ NIGHT

INOINAPOLS vs. NNNERPOLS

Novikoff, who rose from a soft-

The loss dropped Pittsburgh to sixth place. The Dodgers made nine hits good for two big innings, scoring two in the first and four in the fifth. Joe Medwick doubled to knock in two runs and sent his streak of safe hitting to 26 consecutive games. Larry French doled out five hits over the last seven innings, after replacing Whit Wyatt, to win his sixth straight without a defeat. Reds Blanked

The New York Giants climbed to within two games of third by blanking Cincinnati, 7-0. Bill Lohrman pitched a four-hitter to gain his third in a row over the Reds. The Boston Red Sox clouted three homers to defeat the Detroit Tigers, 6-2, as Oscar Judd held the Bengals to eight hits for his sixth victory. Ted Williams, Jim Tabor and Judd hit home runs off Dizzy Trout. It was Williams’ 16th. An early base-hit barrage, which included three four-baggers, gained Cleveland a 7-5 triumph over ‘the Philadelphia Athletics. Oris Hockett, Les Fleming and Ken Keltner hit the homers off Bob Harris. Jim Bagby started for the Tribe and pitched his eighth victory although he was removed for Joe Heving in the eighth. The New York Yankees won their second victory in seven starts, defeating the Browns, 6-5 in a night game played before a crowd of 15,751 at St. Louis. The Yankees pummeled Al Hollingsworth for 14 hits but scored the winning run en a queer play. A double and single put two men on with nohe out. Atley Donald fouled to Frank Hayes and Rizzuto was caught off first hy hy his quick throw to Second Baseman Don’ Gutteridge. Buddy Rosar, who had doubled, beat the throw home for the winning run.

Tribe Box Score

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Blackburn, McDowell, English, If. McCarthy. Bestudik, 3b Moore, cf Skelley. Schlueter, Poat,

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Minneapolis 00 020 000— 2 INDIANAPOLIS 000 102 10x— 4 Runs batted a ase: Geaty. English, Bestudik, Blackburn. Two-b hit—Tre-Three-base hitGeary.

k out—by Poat

Struc and

v 3. Umpires—Parker 1:40.

Wiethe. Time—

Bierman Father

NEW YORK, June 24—Carroll Bierman, who rode Valdina Orphan to victory in the Dwyer Handicap at Aqueduct, is the father of a fivepound son. Mrs. Bierman is doing well.

CIGARETTE

BURNS

REWOVEN LIKE NEW

fined in the major leagues as an eccentric, a fence-busting hitter, a successive titles are D. C. Rogers,

in the | Sensatiohal fielder or one having various other attributes calculated Logansport, handicap event;

Ruth Knuth, Indianapolis, women's event, Elizabethtown, i state junior class.

Opening events Thursday include |

the 16-yard event; the 50-target handicap and 50 pairs of doubles. The winner of the state singles | championship will represent Indi{ana in the champions of champions race at the Grand American clay target meet at Vandalia, O,, the last week in August.

Glenn Oatman Tops Amateurs

KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 24 (U. P.).—Led by medalist Glenn Oatman of Kansas City, 32 amateur golfers teed off today in the annual Trans-Mississippi tournament. The narrow fairways and the slow, muggy greens of the Blue Hills course caused qualifying scores to soar. Oatman sparked the qualifiers with a one-under-par 72. He was first off the tee and took every advantage of the freshness of the course to win the medal. Following with 73's were Johnny Goodman, Omaha, three-time winner of the Trans-Mississippi crown and former National Open and amateur champion; Irl Oliver of Kansas City and the defending titleholder, Frank Stranahan of Teledo. Goodman carried a large percentage of the gallery but the experts and the gamblers kept an eye on Stranahan. Goodman is competing in his first tournament of the year while Stranahan already has numerous 1942 playoffs behind him.

CHICAGO, June 24 (U. P)— The women's western open golf tournament moves into the second round at the Elmhurst Countiy

ciub today with the medalist, Eleanor Dudley of Chicago, already eliminated. Marjorie Row, junior at Michigan State college, came from behind in the last few holes to defeat Miss Dudley 1-up in their first round match yesterday. 'Fhree down at the start af the 13th hole, Miss Row took the 13th, 14th, halved the next two and then tied the match on the 17th hole. Miss Dudley missed the green on the short 18th and took a bogey

A field of 200 gun enthusiasts is ex-/

23,574 Fans Pay $100,000

Beat Bobo

In 10 Rounds at Cleveland

‘Beacon Buster’ Staves Off 5th Round Rush To Win; Lem Franklin Kayoed in" 1st

CLEVELAND, June 24 (U. P.).—Boxing made what may be its last

nd here last night when a crowd of

23,574 paid approximately $100,000 to see Melio Bettina of Beacon, N. Y.,, pound out a 10-round decision over Harry Bobo oi Pittsburgh “bomber for MacArthur” program at Cleve-

land stadium.

Bettina, who beat Bobo in a match several months ago, was battered to the canvas in the fifth round for a nine-count, but came back in the late rounds to score a close win over the Pittsburgh Sunday school teacher. It was his 133d straight victory as a heavy- | weight. Bettina Fast and Smart

|" Too fast and too smart for Bobo, | Bettina pummeled him with hard | rights to the head and lefts to the | body that had the Pittsburger | bleeding from nose and mouth | throughout the fight. The United | Press score sheet gave Bettina seven | rounds, with the giant Negro taking only the sécond, fifth and seventh.

Bettina won the first round by a narrow margin, but Bobo, using his right almost exclusively, took the second. Bobo brought the crowd to its feet in the fifth with a clublike right to the head that slowed up Bettina. Then he sent the former light-heavyweight king to the canvas with rights and lefts to the body.

Franklin Kayoed

At the count of nine, Bettina got up and hung on the ropes to stave off Bobo's rush until the bell. Melio came back strong in the sixth and in the final two rounds both fighters tried for a knockout. Both rounds went to Bettina as his better aimed and timed punches halted Bobo. Bobo weighed 211 to Bettina's 187. Anton Christoforidis, 169, Cleveland, outsmarted and outfought { Johnny Colan, 175%, New York, to take an easy 10-round decision in their return match. Christoforidis beat Colan in Chicago last month. Sergt. Joe Muscato of Buffalo gave | Cleveland's Lem Franklin a terrific! one-round beating to score a technical knockout to win in 1:58. Franklin weighed 202 and Muscato 175%. .

Big Army Show Full of Thrills

Movie thrillers recently created by Lucky Teter and his Hell Drivers! will highlight the automobile and| motorcycle stunting portion of the mammoth army benefit show July 4 and 5 at the Indiana State Fairgrounds. Lucky Teter, world's champion Fair each year, said his automobile test drivers would present their complete 28-event program in person in addition to the many other features for the “Cavalcade of Thrills.” Teter was named director of the gala army benefit show by Col. Walter S. Drysdale, Indiana state chairman of Army Emergency Relief, Inc. The show will run three hours.

will compete for prizes. Sky thrillers and circus acts will present daredevils on the high trapeze. Advance ticket reservations are being received at army relief show headquarters, 130 Monument Circle, and reservations are being accepted by telephone at LI-2000.

Dorothy Ellis vs. Kirby Today

four while Miss Row took a par and won the match. Throughout the match Miss Dudley appeared far off of the form which she exhibited Monday in leading the qualifiers with even par All other favoritgs survived the first round. Betty Jameson, San Antonio, Tex., twice national champion; Dorothy Kirby, Atlanta, Ga, and Jeanne Cline, Bloomington, Ill, all won decisive victories. Pairings today send Miss Row against Mrs. Frank Mayer, Chicago; Miss Jameson against Mary Agnes Wall, Menominee, Mich.; Miss Kirby against Dorothy Ellis, Indianapolis, and Miss Cline against Betty

Brown, Texarkana, Ark.

708°

Billiard-Baker

Pvt. Phil Greenberger, 8 former Indiana three - cushion billiard champion from Indianapolis, Is stationed with the 10th technical squadron at Lowry field, Colorado. The former L. Strauss & Co. salesman is learning to be an army cook.

daredevil and feature of the State,

Champion cowboys and cowgirls

Brown Pins

Little Wolf

Orville Brown, Wallace, Kas., de~ feated Chief Little ® Wolf, New Mexico Indian heavyweight, in the main event of the weekly mat show staged at the outdoor Sports Rrens last night. Little Wolf looked like a sure winner while taking the first fall in only five-minutes with his pet “Indian deathlock” hold, but Brown turned the tables on the Navajo redman with the same hold in nine minutes. The Kansan went on to win the third session with a cradle hold after 32 minutes of rough action. Vic Holbrook was the winner in the one-fall semi-windup by pinning Lee Henning in 26 minutes with a grapevine. The opener was annexed by Dorv Roche, who made Rudy LaDitzi give up to an “octupus” hold in 16 minutes. Sam Murbarger, of the Indiana Athletic commission, announced that Little Wolf has drawn a 30-day [suspension for ‘unsportsmanlike” er after leaving the ring.

H oosiers In Tennis Race

NEW ORLEANS, June 24 (U, P.)., |—The race for doubles honors in the 58th National Intercollegiate | Tennis championships appeared to Ibe strictly a two-team affair be{tween Stanford and Notre Dame as | play continued today. The two Stanford teams—whose fellow Californians have taken the intercollegiate doubles title 15 times during the last 20 years—won two linitial rounds, as did Notre Dame. Stanford's team_of Ted Schroeder and Larry Dee played a gruelling two hours before subduing Jack Rodgers and Ray Gladman of Rice, 6-4, 13-11, yesterday. But Jim Wade and Emery Neale won handily over Michigan State’s Frank Bee= man and Herbert Hoover, 6-3, 6-0,

Jake Pulls Upset

Olen Parks and James Ford of Notre Dame beat Elston Wyatt and | Hardy Fowler of Navy, 7-5, 4-6, 6-3, and their teammates, Dan Canale and Bob Faught, conquered Erie Pratt and Bill Culver, Kalamazoo college, 6-2, 6-2. Other doubles results—Ear]l Bartlett and Lou Schopfér, Tulane, beat Sterling Lord and Ralph Hart, Grinnell, 6-4, 1-6, 6-4; John Hick= man and Walter Driver, Texas, beat Seymour Greenberg and Robert Jake of Northwestern, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5. Jake pulled an upset in the singles by defeating Hickman in the second round match, 2-6, 9-7, 6-2. Hickman is 1942 Southwestern singles champion. Greenberg, who won the National Clay Courts title at St. Louis Monday emerged from the second round of the singles with a 6-2, 6-2 victory

{ | | | | | |

western Louisiana Institute. Other singles results—Bill Reedy of Southern California beat Joe Ball, Texas, 6-1, 6-4; Driver beat Canale 4-6, 7-5, 6-1, and Pratt beat Fowler, 1-6, 6-3, 6-1.

Tilden Gets Berth

LOS ANGELES, June 24.—Bill Tilden has been appointed tennis

pro at the Town House here.

ry

/

Vr

"Cool Evening... Warm Friends..Good Time STRAIGHT-AGING..ALL-GRAIN..GOOD BEER!

Your own front yard i is world for an evening's and neighbors! Relax w the decks for tomorrow.

one of the best spots ig the et4ogether with your friends en the day is over it clears

Gr Tone 20.

La &

ITY BEER

100% STRAIGHT-AGED

COPYRIGHT 1942. FALLS CITY BREWING CO. INC. + LOUISVILLE, KY,

over Vincent Destefano of South-r

a, AA