Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1942 — Page 7

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1042

D. Morey Qualifies for Match Play With Fourth-Place 146

SOUTH BEND, June 24 (U, P. began match play today of two 18-

).—A thinned field of 64 qualifiers hole rounds over the wooded Chain

©’ Lakes course in a four-day grind that will trim the field to 16 by tonight and end Saturday with the two finalists firing away for the 1942 National Intercollegiate Golf championship.

For the second successive year, State university, 1941 titlist and

medal winner, paced the qualify-}

Earl (Red) Stewart of Louisiana |

| BS

ing field in the championship race, | i

finishing the two-day 36-hole trial] yesterday with a 141 total to re-| tain medal honors.

Waives Medal Honors

Louisiana State, backed up by Btewart's performance, tied Stanford for the team championship, both squads listing aggregate scores of 500—the combined totals of the four lowest scores of individual team members Stanford, Pacific Coast conference leader, was defending champion in the intercollegiate team play-off. The record-scarred Stewart, who plans to enlist in the army at the windup of the tourney, waived medalist honors, however, to Dick] Haskell of Northwestern. i

Haskell wrapped up the first day’s| low score with a two-under-par 69, added a 73 in the second round, and | « finished one stroke behind Stewart with a 142 qualified.

Record Will Stand

Tourney officials said, however that despite the gesture, Stewart's 71-70—141, which dropped his 1941 qualifying record by one stroke, will | stand as the new medalist mark. Capt. Burleigh Jacobs of the Uni-| versity of Wisconsin turned in a 72-73—145 card to tie Eddie John-| ston, Baltimore university and East| Soh star, for third place honors. T1-T4—145. Nine players grabbed off the fourth-place spot with 146-stroke| qualifiers, with the rest of the field; trailing in up to the 155-stroke deadline. Three of the major threats failed to get in under the wire. Jim MeCarthy of Illinois, Big Ten champion, went cold with a 136; Dick Holmes of Oberlin, Ohio Conference titlist, au-revoired with a 161, and Dick Witzleh, Bradley Tech. eliminated himself with a 164 card.

Six Hoosiers Qualify

Six Hoosiers qualified for the match play, including Dale Morey of Martinsville and I. 8S. U, who turned in a 72-74—146 card, and Wade Knipp of Purdue with 77- S75 152. Four Notre Dame men to qual- | ify were William Wilson, 151; Bill Fisher, 152; Willis Moorhead, 154, and Paul Malloy, 155. Pacific Coast Champion Frank McCann of Stanford nosed into the field with 154, while John Leidy,| University of Michigan captain, | withdrew to return to school after; firing a 153 qualifier. Bob Eckis Jr., Colgate star, declared ineligible after qualifying with a 148 when his status as a/ freshman was protested. Trailing Stanford and L. S. U. in| team standings were, respectively: Northwestern, 597; Washington, | 604; Yale, 605; Minnesota, 608; Ohio State, 610; Notre Dame, 612; Michigan 614; Navy, 615; Michigan | State, 825; Wisconsin, 634; Holy | Cross, 641, and Bradley Tech, 697.

Farm Hand Stars

GREAT LAKES, Ill, June 24— Frank Baumholtz, starring in center field for the Great Lakes Naval . Training station team, is the property of the Cincinnati Reds.

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= THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Earl Stewart Retains Collegiate Golf Medalist Honors

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PAGE 7

Bundy Beats Midget King At Speedrome

Huston Bundy of Dayton, O, broke Lucky Purnell’s reign as the | midget king at the Indianapolis Speedrome last night when he beat | the Birmingham, Ala, flash by half a length in the 50-lap feature. Bundy roared into the lead on the first lap and repeatedly stood off challenges as Purnell remained within striking distance throughout the race. The winner's time was 13:00.3. Harry Hart of Kansas City finished third. Tony Bettenhauser failed to arrive for the race, and Red Keel, another local favorite, was out with engine trouble after the preliminaries.

Elimination Winners

Purnell salvaged some glory from the evening's program by copping first place in the 15-lap class B feature in 4:056 after passing Al Momonee of Toledo on the 10th round. Bundy, Bus Wilbert, Floyd Gilfong and Curly Runyan were the winners in the 10-lap elimination contests. : Tonight members of the armed forces stationed in Marion county will be the guests of the Speedrome management at a special six-event program, No tickets will be sold at the gate and the purse for the drive ers has been donated by the five member tracks of the Consolidated All soldiers, sailors and

a = Imarines will be admitted without

BERRA

Stewart . . . waives honor

Card Arranged

Two former Golden Gloves stand-| Herb Brown of Indianapolis, Lewis of Muncie, have been matched for the four-round opener on the professional mitt bill to be staged Friday night at the outdoor Sports Arena. They will replace the Allan-May-‘nard heavyweight go and mark the only change in the card, which originally was scheduled for last Fri{day night and postponed because of rain.

Lewis one of the punching lightweights ever to ad!vance to pro ranks from the amateur field and twice was selected | to membership on the Chicago | simon-pure boxing team in the ane

is

{nual inter-city rivalry between the

Windy City and New York. Lewis Chicago in

1941. Brown won his Golden Gloves

(spurs in the Gary region and also

fought in the Tournament of Champions at Chicago. Bud Cottey, local jweight, and Johnny Wade of Wheel-! ing, W. Va., will clash in the ten-

main event. In the six-

per, will square off against Holly Upchurch of Muncie. Other sixes will pit Arnold Deer, welter, against Izzy Schwartz of Co-

lumbus, O., and lightweight Alonzo | O, against Billy!

Wills, Dayton, Reed of Indianapolis.

2 ~ Softball Notes

Allison Patrol leads the Northern In. defeat as well as victory,

ai ana A. S. A. State league today by virue of its 5-<to-4 1l-inning victory last | s ight over Anderson Eagles at Speedway tadium. Logan men and allowed five hits. Garage defeated Omar Baking Co. in the preliminary game.

for

Kinnet fanned 14 Anderson bats10 to 4,

Speedway A, vs. BE. C. Atki 5 Allison Patrol vs. Ft 9—Marmon-Herrington vs.

I 8 A Holy Trinity lost its first Senior C. Y. O. league game last night, losing to Holy | Cross Greens, 14 to 9, at Stout stadium.

Other scoces: 8: v Shoe Blues, T. Catherine, 9; Philip's, 6.

Last night's Night 3 actery

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Holy Rosary, Qt St.

league re-

U. 8. Tires, 4; St ewatis Warner, 2. International Harvester, 8. Eli Lilly, Kingan A. A., 11; P. R. Mallory, 5 Tonight's Bush-Feezle Major league ! schedule for Softball stadium: 7:00—Hoosier Veneer vs. Hillsdale Nursery. 5 : B. Paint vs. Fountain Square |

vern . 8

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C. vs. J. D. Adams.

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Giants Going

Nowhere Fast

Pro Mitt Show |

By JACK GUENTHER United rress Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, June 24—The New | York Giants, who have spent so much time in the dog house that they still are inclined to nibble at biscuits, respond to loud whistles {and growl at cats, are suddenly | finding themselves happy parties to the prize paradox of the season. The Giants are winning new friends as fast—or faster— than they are losing games. They are win= ning these friends, and effecting reconciljiations with hundreds of old but estranged ones, in defiance of all the rules, regulations and traditions. One of baseball's oldest maxims is that only a team whose fortunes are rising can lure the crowds to the park. Well, the Giants are still going nowhere fast, but there are customers on hand to watch them.

Mize

Team Is Attractive

Today, things are changing at the {| Polo Grounds. Actually, the team isn’t appreciably improved over 1941. Today, New York is fourth in the National league standings, 12's games behind ‘Dem Bums’, the Dodgers. A year ago the Giants were third, only nine games off the pace. But today the team is attractive, both to the eye and to the ear. | The Giants began their decline in public favor when the Dodgers started their dizzy rise. John Mec|Graw's boys had fallen away one {by one. Col. Will Terry, whatever his merits, was not a popular leadjer with either the players or the fans. Members of the old guard, who once cheered their favorites in fell away, too. | Now one of the last of the MeGraw boys is finding the way back. is little Mel Ott, who has been a Giant almost all his life.

Tonight's War Stamp league schedule Ott hasn't been able to transform

his elub into a pennant threat be|cause he is only a manager, not a magician. He has no pitching and he admits the fact. But he has (hitting, and hitting is the order of | the day. | Power Is Factor

| While Ott’'s personal appeal has {proven enough to fire the sparks {in the old-timers who remember (the Giants when, it is another face (tor which has excited the younge sters. That facoor is power—big, (raw lumps of power personified by { Long ‘Jawn’ Mize, Willard Marshall {and yes, even Dutch Leiber. They ‘hit the long, Yankee type of ball, {and things are no longer dull. { Mize's presence in the line- “up [Dae proven a tremendous uplift to the fans and to the players. He is {no 400 percentage hitter, Long | Jawn isn’t, but he is a 400-foot hit- | ter. He came to the Giants suffer ling from a sore shoulder—yet he ‘heads the league in batting in runs. Perhaps should smack a few of the ‘other boys on the collar-bone and | improve them,

Rattling Hits

With Marshal, Lieber and Ott in {the game, the Giant attack is a ‘high-voltage proposition. The hits don’t rattle off fast enough to com« pete with a castanet, but when they do rattle they are something to ‘watch. Where Ott, General Manager Terry or Owner Horace Stoneham will find new pitching material is a puzzle which does not come equipped with a solution. But if | they can find it, the fans will adopt ‘an old Brooklyn slogan: “Just wait ‘till next year.”

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Travers Derby May Decide 3-Year-Old Title

By HARRY GRAYSON Times Special Writer NEW YORK, June 24—Valdina Orphan made his early foot last in the Dwyer handicap to make it a three-way race for the 3-year-old championship. They're right back where they started in the Kentucky Derby when they finished in this order: Shut Out, Alsab and Valdina Orphan. The title may not be decided until the mile-and-a-quarter Travers, the midsummer derby, is contested at Saratoga in August, when the three will meet at scale weight, provided all are sound. The next important number at| equal tonnage is the Arlington clas- | sic in Chicago next month. Alsab is already on the ground after having been fired for a blind splint, which forced upon Al Sabath’s bargain basement bay the rest so many claimed he needed. Valdina Orphan won the Derby Trial and Dwyer.

Shut Out captured the Blue Grass stakes, Derby and Belmont stakes. Alsab bagged the Preakness and Withers Mile. But these colts trimming each other does not mean they are a medioere lot. Valdina Orphin, coming off three straight victories in New England, ran the mile-and-a-quarter Dwyer in 2:01 2-5, cutting one-and-three-fifths seconds off the Aqueduct track record established by William Woodward's Isolator two years ago.

Bad Luck

After copping ' the Blue Grass stakes at Keeneland By running Col. BE. R.: Bradley's: Bless Me: into the - ground, Shut Out won the Derby the hard way. The son of Equipoise was the victim of bad racing luck in the Preakness, but bounced back to whip Alsab in the mile-and=a<half Belmont stakes in 2:29 1-5 You have to go back. to War

| Admiral’s 2:28 3=5 to top Shut Out’s

performance in the Belmont, and the Admiral equaled the time of his illustrious sire, Man o’ War. Blue Larkspur took the Belmont in 2:32 4-5; Gallant Fox in 2:31 3-5; Twenty’ Grand, Johnstown and Bimelech in 2:29 3-5, and Whirlaway in 2:31. The track record—2:282-5—was established by the ill-fated Sotteado, but he lugged no more than 112 pounds. Shut Out and the others packed 126. Alsab ran the fastest Preakness in history and turned in a remarkable Withers Mile. Shut Out spotted Validan Orphan 10 pounds, but did get a 10-pound licking. Two-and-a-half pounds at a mile-and-a-quarter is a length. Emerson F. Woodward's bay prevailed by two lengths as the Greentree standard bearer sprawled on a bit in the final furlong, when it appeared that he would look the Texas-owned steed in the eye.

WANTS CROWNS TO MAKE GUN

THIS MONTH, Champagne Velvet’s allow. ance of crowns set by government order (with which we cheerfully comply) will provide thousands of pounds of metal for Uncle Sam . . .

and, welcome!

THE THOUSANDS of pounds of C.V. crown metal — saved in one month alone — can make over 6,000 Rifles . . . or about 28,000 Steel Helmets . . . or close to 40 Jeeps . . . Reason aplenty, you'll say, to drink your beer the war. time way « + . in the 32 oz. Champagne Velvet

quart.

THAT'S WHY we say to you: “Share a Quart and Save a Crown”. . . Make one crown do the wotk of more than two . . . one crown for you=1 and 2/3 crowns for Uncle Sam!

SHARE A QUART x SAVE A CROWN

Golf

Mrs. Emory Lukenbill, Mrs, J, O. Mogg, Mrs. Herbert Wilson and Lou Feeney combined for a net 354 yesterday to win the pro-ladies golf tournament at Hillcrest Country club. A 355 score by Mrs. Fritz Morris, Mrs. Maurice Johnston, Mrs, Massie Miller and Wayne Timberman won second place. Timberman and Wally Nelson tied at 76 for low gross honors.

Mrs. F. A. Fletcher won the flag tournament for women members of the Riverside Golf club yesterday. Second place was won by Mrs. V. R. Rupp at the 17th green, Mrs. Octavia Landers was third.

The spring handicap golf tournament at the Woodstock club yesterday was won by Mrs. Herman Wolff, who heat Mrs. John Jameson 1 up. Second-flight winner was Ann Davis with a 1 up decision over Mrs. Orland Church.

Roller Skating Tourney Starts.

ELIZABETH, N. J, June 24 (U. P.) —Championship events in the United States national roller skate ing tournament begin today after two days of elimination competition. Eleven states are represented by the 200 contestants for speed, figure and dance skating national U. S. amateur titles. Among the titleholders who have qualified and will defend their crowns are Walter Bickmeyer Jr. 11-year-old 1940-41 junior figure skating champion from New York, and Jean White, 1941-42 New York state senior women’s figure skating champion. Juvenile figure skating and dance skating will open today’s competi= tion. Speed skating for senior men and women, junior boys and girls and intermediate boys and girls fol

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