Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1943 — Page 17
—— a ‘
a
samee. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1943 '
Satchel Feet’ Will Be Happy to See the Yanks.
SPORTS...
"By Eddie Ash
ously as a fighter. Even the most standard alibis had to be invented for his telling. We don't know where our boys might come upon “Satch.” He wasn't a citizen here and he had to go back when the war started, For some reason they wanted to talk with him in France first wher he started his fantastic fighting career, but later Mussolini summoned him and the last we seem to remember hearing about him is that \
he was doing some wrestling over there, Aside from his tennis we never heard much of Mussolini as a sportsman or a sports enthusiast. He did come down off hiz balcony some years ago to watch Gene Sarazen shoot a round of golf. This was when Sarazen was on tour with Hagen or Kirkwood or one of those fellows,
AT ANY RATE the situation being what it is, it does not seem probable that Benito will have much time for tennis this summer.
Ah, the pity of it all Our boys are moving through Sicily and presently they will cross the Messina strait into the Italian mainland and somewhere along the line they may come across a large, toothy giant, 6 feet 53{ inches tall, weighing 260 or thereabouts. At first blush the experience is liable to be frightening. But they needn't be alarmed. It would turn out to be our old pal Primo Carnera, and there won't be an ounce of harm in him, Indeed. no one will be happier to see our boys than “Old Satchel Feet”; he will grin that horribly friendly 2rin of his and ery: "What's the mat? Why vou wait so long?” “Satchel Feet" was a freak out of his native sequals and because he looked like something out of a bad dream Leon See, the French promoter, decided he ought to become a prize fighter There never was a human who was less endowed by instinet to throw angry punches than this cheerfully moronic peasant. But in due course he was fetched over here and maneuvered into the heavy-
By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK. July 20.—There are other considerations much more appealing, of course, and because of this little attention is likely to be paid to the effect the bombing of Rome will have on sports in Italy, particularly tennis. The greatest tennis player in Italy admits it himself. And with good reason. never been beaten. Over here we had successively Bill Tilden. Ellsworth Vines and Don Budge, but in “Benito the Brilliant” Italy had a combination of all three with a touch of Superman and La Guardia besides, Benito's name never appeared in the world rankings, he never
is Benito Mussolini. He The records show he has
IN ADDITION to pitching in his regular turn, Jim Trexler, the Indians’ ace, probably will he used in the
utfield in Some games on the club's western trip which played in the Davis Cup matches. He never toured with Cash and pens in Minneapolis tomorrow. . . . When not pitching, Carry Pyle, Such things were too mundane for his idealistic nature. [rexler is slated to play right field against righthanded | ® OR ay Yr » wirlers. ; | STILL IT MUST have griped Signor Virginio Gayda, the month. It is N " oh ha : piece of Italy, that Benito's genius was not recognized by tennis erities 1s Manager Bush's plan to use Trexler as a part time outfielder | when fancy moved them to a discussion of the great players of all time. ‘0 fill in for Willard Pike, who is disabled with a cracked bone in We have received only hearsay reports of Benito's game. His 1s right hand. . , . The tall slugger was struck by a fast pitched backhand shot is supposed to be his best. This may explain why weight championship following a build-up tour that was a classic ball in last Saturday night's game in the first stanza and was he was so triumphant over prostrate France. both for its brazenness and disregard for scrupulousness, forced out of plav. We have been told, too, that one of the first things Benito did . 4 : 4 9 Trexler is one the best hitting pitchers in baseball and when he came into power was to enact a law demanding the death NOBODY WAS MORE astonished thal “Satch” when he discovered has consented to take a turn in the outfield now and then until
” » » on ” J WHEN THE MATCH was over Mussolini autographed Sarazen's score card and the Westchester caddie who graw up to be a champion used to carry it around with him as a prized possession; but that was back in the days when a number of intellectuals who should have know. better were also going off the deep end for the fat father of fascism, Mr. Arthur Brisbane was calling him the Teddy Roosevelt of this generation and the lady novelists were describing the incredible tenderness and gentleness of this man of iron, who had “the es of a saint.” Who was Sarazen not to be impressed? We were impressed ourself as the years went by and nobody ever beat him at tennis. It didn't occur to us that like so many other devotees of the sport he had to wind up a bum,
of
He Says! Brighter for | Dodgers Today
By PAUL SCHEFFELS
United Press Staff Correspondent
diced comment of a political enemy. country must go through. It's a certainty he never took himself seriand walloped a home run and two singles. | 2 The injured Pike departed with the Indians today and said | Th C Id } $ h +h 1 # Atterbury Is Yer Out, Outlook Seems They Couldn't Match the 1s 4 team and will be available for regular duty. | | D S f Di k C . ! . * * Skipper Bush sizes up the trip as a tough one and the players | A 1 V t m | ay core oO 1C M C reqry are eager to give him “all they've got.” | 1C 1 | | CHICAGO. July 20.—The war has brought big time golf an entire \ | new crop of top-flight amateur performers. veteran observers agreed.y
Play Two with Millers Tomorrow
THE INDIANS are 2 double-header the Millers under park lights tomorrow night.
punishment for anyone who beat him at tennis. Conceivably this he had won the world's championship. We suppose he took it as a quaint could explain his lasting invincibility but, more likely, it is the preju- American custom. something all large, able-bodied visitors te this Pike recovers In vesterday's exhibition game with the soldier nine at Camp Atterbury Trexler played center field for the Indians | en a : = he hoped to be back in action after a rest of four or five days. . . . The ailing Gil English, infielder-outfielder, also left town with the By TOMMY DEVINE Of I di United Press Staff Correspondent naians ! | today as the field in the all-America amateur tournament started the CAMP ATTERBURY, Ind. July | inal half of its 36-hole qualifying journey at the Tam O'Shanter
to open the journev in
with the Nicollet
The trip calls for the Tribesters to play 16 games in 12 days. One postponement is to Be plaved off. at Minneapolis, and the unfinished game of June 7 at Milwaukee is to be completed. . That was the game in which the Indians won a protest on the Brewers On the western swing. the Indians are to play four games in Minneapolis, four in St. Paul, four in Milwaukee and four in Kansas City, . . . The July 28 game in Milwaukee is to be a “break-
20.—Playing before a crowd of ap-
proximately 2000 service men, the
Indianapolis Camp Atterbury soldier nine in an exhibition game here yesterday, 4 to 1. | Jim Trexler, pitcher, who played center field. paced the American
association leader's attack with a
Indians defeated the!
{
NEW YORK, July 20. — The Brooklyn Dodgers appear much too old and slow to be geared to a fast
dash in the National league stretch | places
Country club.
The second portion of the preliminary test provided another dawns
the 262 confor the 64 match play
to-dusk battle for testants scrambling available for
| to overtake the St. Louis Cardinals, | starting tomorrow.
but today the outlook brighter for the Flatbushers than it has in weeks.
seemed |
Experts rate the all-American amateur as the country's top tournament since the United States its an-
Golf association cancelled 3 nual classic for the duration, Yet, & there are few familiar “name stars” romveting. Of the 64 players who qualified for the last national amateur tour-
eS STA SRA SL TOR The minor “revolution” among the Dodger personnel several days ago seems to have pulled the team together sufficiently enough to bring about a general competitive up-! swing which, combined with some recent hard luck suffered by the Cardinals, has put Brooklyn in a particularly good spot to pick up lost ground. The Dodgers are 3% games behind the Red Birds. The Cardinals struck a sudden! tartar in Pittsburgh and dropped four of five games, a slump that helped boost Brooklyn morale, Besides, St. Louis. already riddled by the draft, got an additional jolt when Southpaw Pitcher Howie Pollet left. The club will be definitely ‘hurt if Lefthander Harry Brecheen is summoned, for Ernie White is suffering from bursitis and will he on the shelf for some time,
home run and two singles. Ed Mor- | » » = » » » FOR THE TIME being the leading Indians have quit worrving ebout the second place Brewers and the Brewers have quit worrying about the Indians. . . . Both are now watching the surging Columbus Red Birds who have horned in on the American associa- a : tions close race by winning 16 of their last 23 games. . Indiana Stores Dick McCreary, Indpls. 36-36-72 Walter Knoll, 8, Bend ., 37-3774 Dale Morey, Martinsville 38-377) , 37-39-76 41-36-77 39-39-78 39-41-=R0
Illinois to Have Summer Basket Classic
DOXIE MOORE. the man behing the north-south Illinois state hich school basketball game at the University of Illinois, Aug. 21, will arrive there Aug. 1 to direct preparations . Moore will work in conjunction with C. W. Lyon, Illinois business manager, who will ticket Ernest Eveland, coach of the state champions, will coach the southern stars and coach of Moline, Ill, state runner-up, the northerners
Pete Joneson, Gary .. R. Christoffel, Valparaiso N. Garbacz, South Bend Clark Esple, Indianapolis Mike Stefanchik, Hobart 42-39-81 J. Kovach, South Bend. . 42-39-81 D. Tavior, W. Lafavette 45-37-82 | Bob Ponsot, Ft. Wayne, 42-42-.R4 Vaughan Js Sparkplug | Glen Miller, Ft. Wayne . 42-43-85 | Don Brewer, Indianapolis 45-43-88
. { Oddly enough, Arky Vaughan, Mackinac Cu | Brooklyn third baseman and one 1 {of the leading figures in the rebel- nament at Omaha, Neb, in 1941, ov =k { lion, has been the sparkplug of the only five are in the field here. MACRINAC ISLAND, Mich; | Dodgers’ resurgence. | The holdovers from a brighter July 20 (U. P.).—The Mackinac cup, Vaughan now holds a 12-game | golfing era are: Art Doering, Chi- | ¢mblematic of victory in the annual ‘hitting string, longest stretch com-|cago; Steve Kovach, Tarentum, Pa.; Chicago ig Mackin Islan. yah piled by a Brooklyn performer this|Earl Christiansen, Miami, Fla.; Bob ace. Was stowed today in the |season. Six of the games came be- Cochran, St. Louis, and Wilford lockers of the Gloriant, speedy "QY fore the difference of opinion with | Wehrle, St. Louis, Mo. class sloop flying the colors of the Manager Leo Durocher and six fol- | Couldn't Match McCreary Racine, Wis, Yacht club, ot lowed the settlement In one of the closest finishes . : { That quintet ranked well up the 36-vear history ' | He staged one of the best of- ie" 9-year nsiory of the event, fensive performances in his lengthy| "008 the first.day scorers. but the Gloriant, sailed by Tony HerrJ msive 1 es In his Inky | ecouid not match the game of Ri
ch man, tacked across Foam . or : : | ; an, t ss the finish line career during the series just con lard McCreary Jr. of Indianapolis,| 37 seconds ahead of Falcon II. an-
eluded at Boston, Where the DodR- | who fired the only par round of the other “Q" class boat after 53 Fora on au on o* ree _ rhe SY to bounce ito the lead, hours’ sailing. The Gloriant also lin 17 trips iL Sn re, McCreary, 26-year-old sales execu- won the event in 1939. : 3 ? |tive of a baking company, put to-| William J. Lawrie of the South
and a triple. : Ark p gether consistent nines of 36-36 for Shore. Milwaukee, Yacht club. twice’ ; a Mackinac winner, sailed the cutter
have sales
Paris Roger Potter
charge of m Dick McCreary
Clariant Wins 4
school
Dee Moore Turns Up With Phils
DEE MOORE, former Indianapolis catcher, has moved from the Brooklyn Dodgers to the Philadelphia Fhiliies . + The Phils obtained the rugged utility player for the National league waiver price of $7300 . Moore is versatile on the diamond and is a fair third sacker as well as a fair catcher, when in shape. When Moore was with Indianapolis a few years ago his batting fell off and he was released . Brooklyn obtained him last fall from New Orleans of the Southern association,
has totaled 107 hits to lead his aggregate of 72
feammat illy pb y : ; fichts NE ily Herman bY one and While McCreary was pacing the Lassie to victory in the eruising di | ¥riee \ , back, his advantage was a slender vision. The Lassie finished almost {for the league lead. He has scored y ; Hi (one-stroke margin. Deadlocked- an hour behind the Yawl Tahuna 70 runs and stolen 12 bases, » ; ’ | with 73s were Frank Kovack of Chi- sailed by John T. Snite of the ChiLongest of Year cago, Frank Perpich of Waukegan, cago Yacht club but being smaller The sudden pickup in the majors| Ill... Bill Chambers, a sailor sta- was given a larger time allowance. ‘wasn’t limited to the Dodgers, for | tioned at Great Lakes naval train- - the New York Yankees pulled away ing station: the reliable Cochran to a five and one-half game margin and Frank Hayes, Chicago. in the American league on the crest! John Lenzini of Highland Park,
comeback trail toward another shot at
toda
last
N egro Stars at
of an eight-game winning streak— Ill.: Herman Miller, Grand Rapids, . . |their longest of the vear—and the Mich, and Jack Coyle Jr, Spring- Victory Field
Ill, foliowed with rounds)
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL LEAGUE
SOFTBALL The Beech Grove juniors took™ hoth ends of a twilight doubleheader from the Finch Park juniors yesterday at Finch park, 7-2 and | 54, The teams will play another | double bill Thursday at Beced
-—Rob Montgomery, champion from Philadelphia. ruled
GAMES TODAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ne games scheduled,
Ne falls
Grove,
Play GOLF af | LAKE SHORE
COUNTRY CLUB
4100 Carson Ave.—QA, 3231
Greens Fees Weekdays, 65¢ Sat, Sun, and Holidays, $1.10
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NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (night), Only game scheduled.
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RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION games scheduled.
NATIONAL LEAGUE rames scheduled.
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Tennis Finals
Are Today
Jack Sunderland meets Bill Boyer today in the finals of the junior division of the Central Indiana juniors and boys tennis tournament, The winner will qualify for the
145 Games in 40
Frankie, an older and wiser Crosetti now, played 145 games in 1940 when Detroit nosed out the Yankees. But 1941 was a different story. Another undersized Italian or vider. confident their sport will survive boy, Scooter Rizzuto, had come Into| “ppg congo) which will last four| the winter—if they can obtain the Yankee fold and Orosetti| , oc win jneiude tryouts fer the, necessary players. |watched this youngster with the fire | go kivn Dodgers. S |
land dash of the old Crosetti take | Other baseball men who wil! he | SANE the job that had been his all those .¢ tha cchool include Branch Rickey | | (0) A N S SETAE Jr, head of the Brooklyn farm MAMONDS L'WAT CHI
golden years. The club won the system: Ted McGrew, Indianapolis, | LOTHING OR
LN ER
gan, first sacker, ccllected a double | and single. | | Sgt. Jerry Steiner, former Butler university athletic star, obtained a| double and single for Atterbury. Ted Schneider went the route on; the Atterbury mound and got two hits, He held the leaguers to eight! & hits and fanned five. Chief Hogsett pitched four in-| nings for the Indians and Bob: Logan finished. They allowed 10 hits Trexler belted a two-run homer In the first inning and the Indians scored a second pair of markers in the third stanza. The soldiers scored their lone run | 5 & & fs & & in the first round on Steiners| THE TWO Hlinois prep squads will report Aug. 16 to Soule in mie out and Bill Be bezin practice on the floor of George Huff gymnasium . The passage : 22 on 00 ‘ 2 o a 14h a 11 be ¢ 1iy C ) cke 1 A i 0 \ tt nry f - 1 game will be the climax of a basketball clinic conducted by the A. Loken snd Snircter BUhioIde: Illinois high school coaches association, Aug. 18-21, for which Dick and Res i Raxter of Peoria is making arrangements, _— ! » $182,000 in | Bonds Sold i | NEW YORK, July 20 (U. P)— Performance points of the three! metropolitan baseball teams—the | Giants, Yankees and Dodgers—sold ‘more than $182,000 in war bonds ; — during the past week, figures of the Valo of Philadelphia is caught trying to score by Catcher Sew York baseball bond league Dickey in the first inning of the game between the New York Beau Jack Is Notch Along i aay, Chane went to Arky Yankees and the Philadelphia Athletics. Umpire Grieve is calling | Vaughan, Brooklyn Dodgers’ veter-! the play. The Yanks won, 5 to 4. k i N / Aft T K O ‘an third baseman, who brought ome Qc rai er » " * $40,000 into the government cotfers. . | | Outfielder Dixie Walker of the ( tt Ww Pp i | PHILADELPHIA. July 20 (U.P) Beau Jack. former Atlanta, Ga..' Dodgers continued to set the popu- rose L as a eppery uy, ghoe shine bev and disciple of perpetual motion, was a notch along the larity pace with a total of 995 points . ‘ Titleholder Bob Montgomery ' against 872 for Mel Ott, manager B f H ( / k d w th N Y of the Giants. Dolph Camilli of u e IC e / ® . prize pupils of Murricare Henry Armstrong, slashed hic way to Brooklyn ranked third with 418, nd technical knockout over Johnny Hutchinson of Philadelphia Ernie Lombardi of the Giants) By OSCAR FRALEY at Shibe park night before a - eee | ftirth, With 399, and Billy Herman) United Press Stat Correspondent ANS mf SR pT Fate ira swee- of the Dodgers fifth, with 233. NEW YORK, July 20.—He was a little Italian boy from San Francrowd of 16278 fans promotional diferenc2t an sgree ’ : : : wt 5 @ RAVAN J ’ : | | cisco, a kid with eves as big saucers who was awed by “Murderer’s Row The knockout was the second ment had not brea reached. a hy : 1932 sred bv Jack in the txo bouts McCov and 2Ziviz fought a 10- | when they brought him up to the New York Yankees in 1932. ey he Yost the crown to Bob round draw on Dee 12 1941 in the | The men of “"Murderer's Row” even then were baseball legends— Mont merv in New York May 21. last bout for the Detrait battler be- Ruth, Gehrig, Lazzeri, Dickey, Pipgras. Pennock. Gomez, Ruffing, Hoag, BRSeing O iaiat ok bah cb 1 Foy ent inte the service Iie Coombs and Sewell. And the kid from the coast, Frank Peter Joseph 4 It also furnished him 2 measure of fore he went ia hE Sorurce ox Crosetti. trembled at the thought i ——— [unusually tight race in the junior field, revenge. for Hutchinson is a stable- has fought ceveral times since. His hy a beard, : bs circuit seems to have narrowed of 74. cat nk MF OIMErY ro record includes only six 8d-| of his own audacity in even at- pact year was a repetition , ; * Two of the three reat Negr mate of Montgomery. p ; : 1 a en a : > wi : . in , down to a battle for the remaining Morey Shoots 75 o gro Referee I'v Kurcher halted the verse decisions in more than 0 | tempting to play with them. | Frankie was used only sparingly. first division berths . baseball stars the Pittsburgh Pirates bout aiter 2:01 of the sixth when! bouts ———| Then the kid clicked. He didn't Except for one game, he sat help- ive teams-VWachingl it Dale Morey, Martinsville, Ind. gongidereq trying out last year will Ta K or ‘Hutchinson Weeding from 2Zivie fought Jake Lamotia in his |swing the heavy bat that made most Jess and humiliated on the bench Tye Sa! Le as lng on. pero ' former Louisiana State university jo pepe in the lineup of the crack’ » Ar sas mouth and left eve. The last two bouts, lesing an unpopular w pet Of those Yankees famous, but he as the young St. Louis Cardinals Chicago, St. Louis ene Cleveland — star and Indiana emateur cham- |New york Cubans of the Negro NaBS Nr Bad ried decision in ‘he first and winning a| INDIANAPOLIR ..... 39% was a peppery guy, with a knack for romped over his team to win the are embroiled in a struggle for the pion, was the outstanding “name” yonorjencue in their ea with th Georgia Negro had looseq 2 torried o \ £3 Milwaukee 4 38% | : : ; [runner-up positions with only five pers the seven brack= pin. rgame e Blast of leather almost at the start, Split verdict in the 15-round second) Columbus 333 place hitting and {world championship. , h deviates rea er Among the seven brack- Birmingham Black Barons, firsts wit n for a knockout in the | bout. Ee a1 [® Smooth fielder This year, the Yanks were fee | SUNS Separating She Seconidep ace |eted with 75s. half winners of the Negro American swinging dO ns i ily and | Toarner ‘162 /who rapidly be- Junries as a bunch of guys named Senators from the sixth-place In-| Christiansen and Doering were |eague, tonight at Victory fleld. TS A UNU Rane, windmill | St. Paul vasreuis 8 4M came one of the Joe. Most of the stars had gone dians. Only Boston and Philadel- among the 76-shooters, while Ko-| rhev are Dave (Impo) B | yangier oppobent, Hie wihGn | Kansas City “5S ice, i i |phia can be counted out in the, ; i 8 mpo) Barnhill, loping won the first two rounds most important {into the service, including Risauto, B {vack and Werhle finished with 78. pitcher, and Horacio Martinez gf margins as Hutchinson ree ou defensive cogs in but still the kid from Frisco—a!American league. |Wehrle was the major disappoint- shortstop. Martinez will start at a ait rend gamely but Pet. (the Yankee ma- veteran now—was held in the dug-| In the National, Chicago, Phila-|ment of the round as he figured as| short and Barnhill may be called in couldn't match punches. | Biookivn sa/chine. With Cro- out as other youngsters received delphia, Boston and [ew York are the pre-tournament favorite. if the big bats of the Black Barons: RR Se i Armor Fittsbuten agsetti at shortstop, their chance. Somehow the club almost certain tenants of the sec-| world Heavyweight Champion get to Rodalfo Fernandez, scheduled | Sneinnatt t50/ that machine be- stepped in front in the Americanjond division, while the battle for| oe Louis found pars harder to gain starting hurler, who scored a victory Montgomery Rules | Philadelphia Milcame a jugger- league race only to find its ad-|the remaining slots will be between |than ring knockouts, and ended up over the Brooklvn Dodi i the The bewhiskered Ali Pasha from | Reston R vantage slashed to a game and a'Pittsburgh and Cincinnati. gers 'n lhe 2-1 Favorite | India takes on Gil La Cross of To-| New York ena The Sho half on nly 3 | [Hn nol » ie he pn ae Spring of 1942 i Cuba, Birmingham : IFdin Takes on | C 3 e-play combina- uly J. {first hole and an eight on the 15th. wil] start either Lefty McKinnies or WASHINGTON, July 20 (U. P)./ledo in main.go action on the 'tion of Crosetti, Frank Crosetti | Called Back to Short Softball Schedul |On the latter hole he knocked four johnny Markham on the mound lightweight three-bout outdoor wrestling card rel Lazzeri and Gehrig paced the Bronx It was then that Crosetti was 0 a cheaule straight tee shots out of bounds. | : . Yonik at Sore Bene i we Washington 331 Bombers to the first of seven pen- eatied back SOPisteD. 30a Tonight —i E li has been using his “cobra” | petroit S19 o : little Ital- {performance since then has revived | g 2 to 1 favorite to defeat Frankie hold to success since first coming | Thieags Hua Yeats whith eign hue win memories of the boy with the sau- Softball Stadium Pi hi (; "le istrict of Columbia welter- into this territory last fall. He is a! Cleveland AN if . cer rves who became part of a le BUSH-FEEZLE im 1C0O ets Wills, District of u3¢ He played 116 games in his first : a fan in their 10-round front line junior heavyweight and | Besten aban “ave! os : : gend in 1932. Since he came back. FACTORY LEAGUE weight champion, in their 10-round Philadelphia A135 vear and was in the thick of it as . dr stadium Meets a speedy and skilled grappler \ the club has won 13 of 16 games U. 8. Tires ve. PR. Mallory nen-title bout at Griffith stadium {the Yanks won four straight to take : " , | c ve. Bl Liv } - a eet in La Cross The match is for two including the last seven in a row Kingan A. A i Li y tonight | |the 1932 world series. ! . . Stewart-Warner vs, International . Montgomery will operate out of three, { to boost its lead to five and one Harvester, Nandicap of seven pounds as Wills Opening the show at 8:30 will be Then followed three bleak years half games. BALTIMORE, Md. July 20 (U. : in in at 145 or lose a for- John Mauldin of Atlanta and Ralph jas the club came apart at hh Only Crosetti and Dickey remain | P).—The Maryland Racing comoiry $500 Frankie Thomas, man. Garibaldi of St. Louis. They are {seams, but when it hit its stride qf those swashbuckling Yankees of MH cke Lea ve mission has granted Pimlico race cer of the champion, said he would heavies and meet for one fall again Crosetti was still at Shor. old—those hard-hitling, hanpy-go- 0 y 9 track permission for a 30-day fall the penalty if Wills goes The semi-windup is a junior] There were new names then— yi icky guys from “Murderer's Row. M A d d T meeting, with all four of the state's! on outice over 145.” heavyweight tussle of one fall and | Maggio, Selkirk and Rolfe—and for | 1 ky ny ho be md much | ay @0MS [major tracks sharing the profits. Wills, whose chief weapon is a bits Buddy Knox of Akron against Jour Susighs years they Sy | onger a ha rhe ie from J TORONTO. July 20 (U. P.).— Earlier plans called for a 12-day aus left. finished an 11-day Pierre De Glane of Montreal. before them. During this period, explains: GS. io five therm re valamd ang (SESSION at Pimlico, with the reGan ind at Baltimore in the the kid from Frisco was at his peak. something to remember us by. | Two new teams—Cleveland and |, .p,0 1g gays distributed among gy Ei his nr and his . . He set a record for shortstops’| And, somehow, you know they Buffalo—may be added to the 1943 | 0 "0 "iodo 100 el and Bowie s ) sg - e : - , . pest, Shape he would have no Ch rl Oh r double plays in 1938—the year Las-| will National Hockey league roster to The pleasure driving ban led offi handlers said he unariie ve veri fell by the wayside—and day when an “unofficial” confer1 king the weight i ) 3 : __ |clals to grant the full 30 days to trots oe who won the titi) ‘ was the leading shortfielder in the Is ence is held to discuss the future (po i.0 cil 0 Le reached from on vs . league in 1939, when the beloved Dod ¢ 0 en of the sport. B : ck. tapered off a ‘wo- H ; F > ) Pp . altimore by streetcar. em ean va en Oaks Country cavy avol ite Gehrig took himself out of the line- Al Sutphin of Cleveland and Arrangements for the meeting— week gr > Maryland With a up after playing more consecutive Eddie Shore of ‘Buffalo will sit | pom Oct. 8 to Nov. 13—will be club in nearby ry ' ELIZABETH, N. J, July 20 (U. games than any man in baseball noo ere down with Ed Bickle of Toronto, |}... dled by the Maryland Jockey light workout. P.).—Charlie Olier, national inter- history. Art Ross of Boston and Jim Norris |...) which operates Pimlico ‘ : Sun—— | scholastic tennis champion from George Sisler, former St. Louis | of Detroit to iron out details ob- : P : - Zivic Signs to Perth Amboy, N. J, ruled a heavy ; ; .| structing admittance of the two 1. favorite to defeat 16-year-old Ed Brown: Just Susendu any Sve of) clubs VATE Meet McCo Ray of Taft. Tex. In the final of the baseball's leading figures, opens a| . I! po ee y | first annual more. invitation basen! SS] 8 We Indianep- | IE ough A en have PITTSBURGH, July 20 (U. P.).— St olis Indians’ baseball field July 23,| to receive a go-ahead from the iu Fritzie Zivic of Pittsburgh, one of Singles tournament today. FOR PIPE PERFE CTION inl the best box-office attractions in Oliver top-seeded, won over third- } 1 = the ring today, has signed for a ranked Gene Garrett of San Diego, More men smoke CRANE'S PRIVATE 10-round welterweight bout with Cal, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4, yesterday while MIXTURE every day for just one reason— Young Kid McCoy of Detroit at fourth-seeded Ray ousted Joseph they like its mild, cool, fragrant Forbes “sid ohh Aug. 9 Scheerer of West Orange, N. J. national tournament at Kalama- smoking satisfaction. Its VALUE is I wos reported ‘nese last night 6-4, 8-3. . zco, Mich, next month, PROVED in every good pipe. It that Zivic has also “agreed to meet Should Oliver triumph it will bring; Harry Helft defeated Bob Le costs so little to try it—why not Lightweicht Champion Bob Mon:- him his fourth crown of the sea-| Compte, 6-4, 6-3, yesterday to win pennant, and Crosetti huddled on see what your pipe says when you gomery in Philadelphia on Aug. 25. son. He holds the national inter-| the boys’ turney. He will play [the bench throughout a victorious chief Dodger scout: Wid Matthews,| ii Make. CRANE . PRIYA Mix. in the Kalamazoo tournament. |world series as the newcomer han-| former Indianapolis star, and Mike b rivate " Indian- [died the spot between second and Ke of the ‘Brooklyn | FAIRBANKS
‘« match, promoted by Herma: scholastic title, Taft intercholastic Payio>: has been under discussi sional, Se county. Junior All the boys are from
(On i
for Hoosier boys 15 years of age Canadian government, they are NOW:AT YOUR DEALERS
