Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1943 — Page 12

SPORTS

IT IS SAID there will be no change in the navy's 1942 football plan of letting officers play with pre-flight arid teams this fall. The information is that the navy is more anxious to occupy the big-time grid picture than last year and is already making plans for organizing powerful squads. Coach Bernie Bierman gone from Iowa Citv but reports irom there indicate that pre-flight school stili is football minded and in a big way. , , . They say that Don Faurot, formerly of Miswill take over the head coaching reins to assure the fliers “big league” tutoring again. Some time ago it was reported that the pre-flighters would turn most of the football playing over to the cadets because of the public criticism aimed at the navy for using college graduates, professionals, officers and others on their teams in 1942, Now it looks like it will be no different this vear. . .. The navy apparently aims to field as many pre-flight grid powerhouses as possible,

is

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= » » »

SPORTS social item: job shop printers is upcoming. affair and is to be played Sunday, July 23, on Riverside diamond 1 at 10 a. m . Winning team to receive one keg of beer . . Bi Seddon is to master-mind the newspaper nine and Glenn Munshower is to furnish the brain work for the jobmen.

» » The annual ball game between newspaper . It will be a “breakfast”

and

Wakefield Product of Back Yard

DICK WAKEFIELD, Detroit's voung swatsmith, started plaving ball when he was 6 or 7 vears old. relates Mrs. Howard Wakefield of Chicago, mother of the Tiger star. . . . In an article in Sporting News she said: “His dad (a former major league catcher) was always taking him out in our back yard and teaching him how to swing a baf, just how he should stand up there at the plate, and when he should to knock the cover off the ball,” said Mrs. Wakefield. “When Dick got a little older, Mr. Wakefield was confronted with a tough problem of not having enough space in the back yard. You see, our other three boys were getting that training too, 2nd with four kids swinging around, there wasn't room enough to duck. Mr. Wakefield chopped down a tree and tore down the garage and kept on training his sons in the enlarged area.”

try

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1943 |

Tribe Lead Whittled; Brewers, Birds Gain

——————

dias Divide With Millers:

Trexler Loses 3

| |

Times Special

MINNEAPOLIS, July 22—If the Indianapolis Indians are going to | stay ahead of the Milwaukee Brewfers and Columbus Red Birds they'll have to do more hitting than in the double-header staged here last night | and which they split’ with the | ; Millers. | | The Redskins won the first tilt, i to 3, on seven safeties and lost the [second by the same score. In the {second contest thev were held to | six biows. | Both Milwaukee and Columbus

Gremlins

| won their games last night and now | 8

[the Tribe's league lead has been | {whittled to ': game over the Brewlers and 2': over the Red Birds. It really is a “hoss™ race now. | Jim Trexler’s pitching streak was] snapped at 11 straight when Millers nosed him out in last night's second fracas. His record now stands at 13 victories against only | two defeats

| Trexler Is Wild | ‘The Tribe's ace southpaw was wild and his support was none too good. | the Indians committing three errors. | | Trexler issued seven walks and hit | {one batsman. He fanned six and allowed seven hits. George Diehl was the Tribe's | winning pitcher in the first game. | | He relieved George Jeffcoat in the

| {

| struggle in the 10th on Blackburn's | iwalk and singles by Moore and | | English. In the third of the series under { the lights tonight Johnny Hutchings |1s slated to hurl for the Bn men | land Lefty Lefebvre for the Millers. In last night's first game, sched- | {uled for seven innings by agreement,

the | §

Got Him

Art Snow, Chicago, troubled with golf gremlins as he started play in the all-American amateur championship at Tam O'Shanter | (seventh and the Indians won the| golf club, Chicago, counted |7 on the second hole when he got

caught in the water hazard. Final = = =

score: |20.

= ”

Hoosier Golfers Advance i in All-American Tournament

Al Smith Hurls Cleveland to 7-0 Victory

By PAUL SHEFFELS United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 22. — Steve O'Neill is doing a good enough job of managing the Detroit Tigers | these days without singling him out | for any additional praise. But | every time Al Smith wins a game [for Cleveland, credit must go to the | |cheery, talented pilot of the Bens | gals. Smith, by his own admission, was | washed up in 1939 when the Phillies | shuffled him off to Buffalo because | of a sore left arm. He packed his bags to go home and look for another job in any business but base- [ ball. | Fortunately, he telephoned O'Neill, | then manager of the Bisons, of his | intentions. In half an hour of art-| less argument, Bucky changed | Smith's mind and brought him to Buffalo, where one of the game's! [most singular careers was reborn.

| | Another Respectable Total |

| | | |

Smith won 16 and lost only two] that year for the International league squad, came to Cleveland the | following season and has been a de- | | pendable member of the staff ever | (since, despite his 34 years, He won | {37 games in three campangns for | the Tribe and is well on his way to | janother respectable total of tri- | umphs this year. Smith unwrapped o.ae of the sea- | son’s best games yesterday by beat|ing the A's, 7-0, for his ninth win. | He pitched to only 29 batters, al- | (lowing two hits, and drove in three | Iruns with a triple, double and sin- | |gle to spark the Indians’ 11-hit as- | sault. The Browns started off their in- | | vasion of the East with a decided | Striking out 15 batsmen bang, beating the leading Yankees,|his teammates drove in four

while runs.

A Long Rest

RAR

Place in Industrial League

Whirlaway, the world's greatest money winner, is shown here at the Calumet farm, Lexington, Ky., where he has been returned after the end of a brilliant racing career.

By TOMMY DEVINE

i the riv rer Fav \ | als were forced to travel three United Press Stalt Cotreswondent 1-0,

{extra rounds. The Indians tallied [two markers in the fourth, one in! {the seventh and one in the 10th. {The Millers scored one in the fifth {and two in the seventh. | Mickey Haslin batted In two of the Tribe's runs and English sent the victory marker home. Haslin and Moore got two safeties apiece Moore and Blackburn hit

Softball Schedule

Tonight

BUSH-FEEZLE MANUFACTURERS LEAGUE Softball Stadium

J. D. Adams vs. E. C. Atkins. Indiana Gear vs, Curtiss-wright U. 8. Tires vs, Kingan A. A,

SMITH-HASSLER CAPITOL CITY LEAGUE Speedway Stadium

Polk Milk vs, Marmon-Herrington Canada Dry vs. Allison Gauge Electronic Laboratories vs. LukasHarold.

Mel Ott Picks ‘All-Poison’ Team

MEL OTT. manager of the New York Giants has come up with a new kind of an “ail” team—an “all-poison” club, composed of men who have bullied and badgered his woe-laden Giants at every given opportunity, When thev play given a shot in the arm,” that good all the time.” In the infield. Mel put Hack at third, and Musial, Billy Nicholson

in 10 innings as Steve Sundra|Hal Mahaney hurled the Meta! Auto| 22.—The only phase of the three-decker all-Amer- ‘and Al Hollingsworth defeated | Parts softball team into undisputed | which doesn't require a disciple of REinstein|Charlie Wensloff in a brilliant |possession of first place in the] when Byron Nelson of Toledo, O.. teed off pitching duel. Sundra and Wens- |Bush-Feezle Industrial league at] loff were gripped in a scoreless tie !Sofiball stadium last night with a at the end of nine innings but the 4-0 victory over Motor Armory. (Continued on Page 13) | The Allison Red Rings and Capeplanted Texan rated as the title- lhart-Packard, both of which were | favorite a field of 200 started, es SER TT |iied with Metal Auto for first place, doubles play in the 72-hole medal test, suftered defeat. R. C. A. pounded “1 Nelson won the all-American out a 9-7 decision over the Red Baseball Calendar Rings while Capehart fell before ————— the Kingan Knights, 4-1, RESULTS YESTERDAY | The results leit Kingan, Cavehart

CHICAGO, July ican golf tournaments to figure out began today in the £10.000 open. It was not even necessary any member of the “Pi R Square”

to have a speaking acquaintance with some guvs seem to have been { family to determine that the trans-|

You just know they cant be

against us, said Ott, Billy Herman shortstop. He in the

Elbie Fletcher at first, Eddie Miller at and Vince DiMaggio

second, Stan placed Stan outfield. “The battery comes easy,” said Ott, that's all. We can never get Cooper out and we've only Pollet once.”

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

“Pollet and Walker Cooper,

praten 11-1, and R. C: A,

Electronic Labora Major league gamey J

Ay J | Louisville ! co irtiss- Wright St. Paul —

Schupp, Johnson

NATIONAL LEAGUE and Blaemire,

| CHICAGO, July 22 (U. P.).— |New York Clark Espie, Indianapolis, ad- |peometon vanced to the third round in the | Chicago all-American amateur golf tour- Cleveland ney here today by defeating F. Boston , NY | Philadelphi Ayres Bombeck, Kansas City, Mo., | aeiphia 1 up in 20 holes. The match was halted by darkness last night and was finished before the regular | | INDIANAPOLIS Mi lis, rounds started this morning. | Louivitte ax St Fat Neary .

Toledo at Milwaukee. Columbus at Kansas City (two).

(First Game) 3roo . 000 100 f0— 1 8 38 Cincinnati 020 511 0Ix=11 13 © Higbe, Allen, Melton and Bragan; Riddle and Mueller, (Second Game) | OL 030 400— 9 9 0 300 040 M0 5 10 0 Melton and Owen; Starr, Heusser and Lakeman,

Philadciphia Pittshurgh | Conger, and Lopez.

GAMES TODAY

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (All Games at Night)

Brooklyn

Brooklyn .. Cincinnati Head, Webber, Shoun,

Cal.; Leonard Dodson of Kansas | City; Johnny Bulla of Chicago; | “Chick” Harbert, the rising young | Battle Creek, Mich, star; the {| Turnesa brothers. Joe and Mike; | Harry Cooper of Minneapolis, Minn; and “old guard’ standard bearers) like Walter Hagen of Detroit and | = + |Gene Sarazen, Brookfield center. | (Second Game) | Conn. INS una R01 YS A distinct title-threat was born in] ‘“" ns R the qualifier when Orville White, 0 Winston-Salem, N. C., came through | o with a sterling 70 to top the preliminary test and win a prize of $150.

NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia at Pittshurgh (two), Boston at Chicago (two), Rrookivn at Cincinnati (night). New York at St. Louis (night),

. MOL N01 e— 2 KX 001 022 4ix—in 11

2 oam bad | ny Dietz and Livingston; Ringer, Tou

Tribe Box Scores

Boston Chicago

N01 000 000 | ne 210 Mx— 4

AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Loui tN York. Chicago at Boston. Andrews and Klute; Cleveland at Philadelphia (night). Cullough. Detroit at Washington (two, twilight (and Rig

1! R 0 Bithorn and Me-

AMERICAN LEAGUE

(First Game) | Chicage OLE 000 N00

Set Plans for i ol BE

(First Game) INDIANAPOLIS | ABR R . 4

o

E 0 Riackburn 0 Moore, cf 0 English, rf 0 Morgan, 1b 0 Hofferth, ¢ 0 Haslin, 3b 0 Vaughn, 2b .. 0 Fairly, ss O:Trexier. Pp .........

Biackburn the Moore, cf { English, rf Morgan. 1b Hofferth, ¢ ......u.

and Tresh; Brown Parte (Second Game) . 203 300 000— R 102 001 020— 8 and Tresh;

Hughson,

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Old Grad's Dismay | Chicagn

Haslin, 3b ......... Contemplate the dismay of the | vatghr., a cere old grad at the homecoming game |Jeffcoat, for a university in the vicinity of | Diehl Boston. There was a day up there when the Cabots spoke only to the Lodges and the Lodges spoke only} to God. io practice of keeping the old school’s] jpannsker, Ib coin positions—end to end and quarter-| wright, rf .......... | back to fullback—in the same fam-| DH, SS i é ily from generation to generation. SL

Trechock, S$ ........ Then came the war. The navy [ora reaeuien assigned men to the universities for Scheetz. p .......... specialized training. Many of these | yettiere men are from the fleet, the open| shirt collar kind who laid aside coal miners’ picks and pitchforks to enlist. Now, for a while, they'll go to college and. while there, have time for football. The schools recognize this blow

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| Heinlein Shoots 73 1 i

Sandlot Series —| White, making a competitive | |

Grove, Maltzberger Ryba and Partee. 3 comeback after a four-year lay-off | Tt was decided by vote of team | | enforced by illness, had a modest 37 | managers at the Indianapolis Ama- | o on the outgoing nine, but then | teur Baseball association meeting] 1ichot a sizzling 33 on the back side | last night at city hall that teams | St. Louis .... 35 ol for his two under par total. | gaining first and second places in|" ‘sypare: BREW ye vas | o| Johnny Palmer, 23-year- -old | (each of the three I. A. B. A. leagues off and Dickey. o Badin, N. Y, shotmaker and the | would be eligible to compete in the! petroit vee Gh h=—3 % 1) o/ veteran John Rogers of Denver, | series for the city sandlot cham-| ashingten Gori vig a a 0 tied for second place with 71's and | pionship. This is the same system! candini, Haetner and Early. gh o split a prize of $100. Bill Heinlein, used in the title series last year. | a" (Continued on Page 13) The 0 and 8 team, Big Six league |

Riviera Will Go

I last ina with R. Cc. A. nl was | To Louisville Trexler Y, Carpenter 6. Struck out ol

awarded the game by forfeit. A. won the contest, 7 to 3, Wi it rexler %, EN rc, Carpenter 5. Umpires—Gordon| a team of 15 from the Riviera "club will go to Louisville tomorrow

of an ineligible layer was charged. and Boyer. Time 1:33. to participate in a meet of junior

The complete game program was| set for the annual Amateur day! : * | and open races at the Lakeside club Tribe Batting pool, Bdu Sawin, swimming coach, AB

event to be held at Victory field | Sunday when the Rhodius Pals and! Brookside Capitols, junior nines, | were matched to meet in the cur. tain raiser at 12:30 p. m. Gold Medal Beer, defending city champion and leader this season in| | said today. the Municipal league. is to meet the | H Pct! The meet. an A. A. U. program, 40 and 8 club at 1:30 o'clock, and | 16 375! will begin at 7 p. m. tomorrow, E. C. Atkins, Manufacturers’ league | 182 235/ Included in the team that will 300 323 make the trip are Mary Ann Walts | 263 304 and Patsy Brogan, who will enter 288 292| the women's national junior 100201 273 | meter breaststroke event, and Bob 302 273 Brogan and Tom Gastineau, who 170 241 | will compete in both the men’s na242 223

: 100 210 008— 3 11 Philadelphia 000 000 D— 0 2 Smith and Rosar; "Flores and Swift, oe Innings) . 000 000 M0 1 1

Cleveland

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ci 3518 MINNEAPOLIS

Totals

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34 MINNE APOLIS

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Totals {

53 3 Q

3b . bd) 3 YP Liisi 1 | Decarlo, 1b 0 | Trechock, o!Dill, ef . o | Johnson, 0 Rolandson, 0 | Blazo, ¢ ¢ | Carpenter,

E Clifton, 1 | Pofahl, 0 Vosmik, 0 | Wright,

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Clifton. 3b

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0 - - 0 Totals . g Y 2% 0 INDIANAPOLIS

Minneapolis . . 012 001 00x--4|

Runs batted in—Haslin, Fairly, Clifton, | | Vosmik, Wright, Blazo. Two-base hits— | i Blackburn, Fairly. Home run—Wright | | Stolen base—Trechock Double plays— | LFairly to Vaughn to Morgan; Pofahl to! 4 Trechock to Decarlo; Decarlo un3 assisted). Left on bases—Indianapolis, | . Minneapolis. 9. Hit by PR | tPofahl) Base on balls-

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Clevelanders Sport Beards

PHILADELPHIA, July 22 (U. P).—Lou Boudreau, manager of the Cleveland Indians, and three of his coaches today sported six day-old beards and solemnly | vowed not to shave until the ! team’s current winning streak was ended. Boudreau and Coaches Burt | Shotton, Del Baker and George | Susce have not looked at a razor since last Saturday. They picked up more well-earned whiskers vesterday as Pitcher Al Smith shot his screwball past the Philadelphia Athletics in a two-hit game which the Indians won 7-0.

for the league esctters. | . Yak 'eagu? PRrEERLs {crown in 1941 with an aggiegate of | . \ : soaked cours y and the Red Rings in a three-way 1t0 Bet ore than ohe blow in the Soaked course to defeat Clavton| oui AMERICAN ASSOCIATION I night's finale off Lou Carpenter. He |Haeiner of Spartanburg, N. C, in | Milwaukee 2 ahs and Garagiola; Reis, Tineup and Auto has won six and lost two | Radio shutout 2| Glenn ; : tories in Girls’ Haslin batted in one apiece, the! into professional goif ranks most of Louisville -— | : | third scored on an error. {the game’s “big name” stars . aul 002 100 000 3 & is back to challenge | Andrews, / S f n single, Fairly’s double and a wild | Nelson again. St. Louis 000 000 000— 0 4 1 | Ho Hum! Hagg ees De eat Agai a Other top-fligh ntenders w . ] 8 ; iy i y / - throw by Jimmy Pofahl, Miller | t op-flight contenders who Whitehead, Peterson. Hanning and Hay.| CAMBRIDGE, Mass, July 22 ‘Experts in every city have une aneitat; worth; Gassaway ana Heit, Chicago - By OSCAR FRALEY second on a walk and two singles. |Detroit; Former National Open ? Sin UBER Press Stall Correspuiten) In the third stanza the Redskins Titlist Ralph Gudahl of San Diego, New York . a 3 (First Game) | wouldn't be “at all surprised” if | can’t be of the best, either, be ¥ | : C Nev: York . 000 000 100— 1 9 0 : tas Sch cause of the tremendous hospital= Gil Dodds, Boston divinity stud W. hallowed college escutcheon is due for a wordy barrage when athletics|{n the Miller third Clifton reached! Sug &n Coop cn Somes OL directors of 75 colleges gather here next week. [third base on a single and Black-| ceive, my training cannot be all | chives day. it should.” a Melton, Sayles, Feldman, Mungo, East| lan ancuso; rist, Dickson and W. legiate athletics for the soldiers-to-; which Ab Wright walloped a home| PRE. be. The navy was in favor of such run. But very suddenly the schools find —Herman Besse, left-handed hurl. when the Millers tallied what breve | themselves — particularly in the er who joined the Philadeiphia'to be the winning run on Roland A a Tread : 6:00x16 Consider the predicament of the duction in St. Louis next Wednes- down going after the infield roller tradition-bound university where to dav. Besse, married but childless, and Rolandson scored all the way rowed stroke on the Mavflower., Many of them wouldn't play against | halevon days. But now, thanks CERTIFICATES ONLY y avy bo : y to the navy, thev are going to have CALLING FOR GRADE varsity 5.50x117 Pe 10-26 5.50x16 "oe [040 GOODYEAR TIRES—ALL SIZES AT REDUCED ’ PRICES AC PLUGS ... 5%

Two Hits By Fairly [278 and repeated last year when he Carl Fairly was the lone Indian scored a brilliant 67 over a wateria tie for second place with five vie-| 92 Columb . 000 100 110— 3 Dang ol {connected for a single and a doubie. an 18-hole play-off. | Solumbns Kansas City 200 000 100— 1 1 ol tories and three defeats each. Metal Crown Cola, |Of the Tribe's three runs, Fairly and] While the war has cut heavily sfirmeapsiic _Walloped _Royal at Speedway last night. ATE Kansas City 000 210 02x— 3 9 a Navy’ S « Ve 12 Program T reat | The Indians tallied two markers present. Heafner, now a sergeant ind Dove: Weiland | y' {in the second inning on Hofferth's|in the army, I Sanctit of Old School Ti Braekivm | Milwaukee £21 0 0ox— 7 14» . shurg 0 y second sacker. The Millers scored | were exempted from yesterday's Ny (U. P.).—Gunder Hagg, the Swed- | der-estimated Dodds’ capabilities,” } one marker in their half of the|qualifier include Jimmy Demaret of Chica = m— i As : aE Hi Philadelphia NATIONAL LEAGUE ish runner, said today that he | Hagg said. “My own condition | NEW YORK. July 22.—The sanctity of the old school tie is threat- scored one tally on English’s single. | AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 020 000 10x— 3 3 ———— A Al LEAGUE « Lk x -ag 1 bhas : - ented today by the navy's V-12 progiam and the impending blot on the Morgan's walk and Haslin’s single. | pet. | Fischer, Adams and Lombardi; Munger dent. beat Bint in their wile race | i 9 Ye SGHOR Denia, jon. y Lk : ‘© ‘| der the flood o ions - S18! at Harvard stadium this Satur3| New York . 190 032 000— 6 10 2 Schools designated tc train the future tars considered themselves burn’s muff of the grounder. A long 300 | St. Louis . 310 190 00x—14 19 © fortunate recently when the army banned participation in intercol- fly put Clifton over the plate, after! + | Cooper, O'Dea. a program and there was much . Besse to Report | The score remained deadlocked at | WAR joicing in the sailor-made schools.’ PHIALDELPHIA, July 22 (U. P.. 3-all until the last of the sixth] Straight Line Stop-on-a-Dime austere Ivy league—in the position Athletics during their recent West- son's single, Vaughn's’ error and of having the bear by the tail. ern trip. will report fer armv in- Clifton’s infield hit. Fairly fell! admittance in former vears was with the team only 21 days.* (from second. S 1 3 had te have an ancestor who the “hol polloi.' ‘the lads from the] other side of the tracks, in those SOLD WITH RATION to play on the same team with J them—when thev can make 1 TIRES 5.25-5.50x18 Q.63 6.25-6.50x16 | 3-83 7.00x16 . . . | 799 PRE-WAR MODELS Regular 65c Blue Point Plugs CHAMPION... 63¢c In Sets.

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Totals .... 33 5 Johnson watted for Pofahl in 10th. Lefebvre batted for Scheetz in 10th, Wonson ran for Lefebvre in 10th. Decarlo batted for Clifton in 10th. INDIANAPOLIS . 000 200 106 1 Minneapolis 000 010 200 0— Runs batted ~—Haslin 2, English,

to the morale of the old guard. The Rolandson, 2. Two-base , hits—Moore, Blackburn, Dill Stolen bases—Clifton,

shock of having a guy named | pojandson, Trechoek. Sacrifices—Hofferth, Czheryvvsko from Scranton in at 2 Double Plays—_Rairly to Morgan, Sheets le to Clifton to Pofa te Clifton eft on | — quarterback in place of Lodge. | pcos maianapolis 7. Minneapolis 4. Base So the program for the annual on balls—off Jeffcoat 3. Diehl 1, Scheetz 5. | v : ; ¢ «« | Struck out—By Jeffcoat 1, Diehi 2, Sheetz convention of athletic directors, | pe Ce tecoat 4 ih 6% innings: | sponsored by the central office for Diehl 1 in 323. Winning pitcher—Diehl. | eastern intercollegiate athletics, Umpires—Bover and Gordon. Time—1:30.] lists the following question for discussion:

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field under the name of ‘Camp Kingsbridge’ or ‘Ft. Kingsbridge, rather than ‘Kingsbridge college’ or| The Bears collected eight hits off Vaughn ‘University of Kingsbridge,’ and Bill Voiselle, mixing them with McNair should the same insignia and other|seven errors and six walks, to awards be granted to team mem-| trounce the Jersey City Giants, 7-4, pers in wartime as in ordinary | yesterday in a swing-shift morning Goes Under Knife PITTSBURGH, July 22 (U. P).— Cal Bolster, president of the East-

seasons?” \gamme that drew only 910 fans to| Asa Bushnell who directs the! Newark central office, is one of those Who| Frank Hiller gave up eight blows ern association of intercollegiate refuse to be intimidated. The to Jersey City, winning his seventh football officials, was scheduled to quiet-spoken Bushnell is “in favor game that drew only 910 fans to undergo an operation today in of all normal procedure,” working Steiner and Nap Reyes hit homers Mercy hospital. on the theory that the lad who is! for the Giants with the bases bare. NS willing to “die for dear old Rutgers”) Bill Trotter blanked the Buffalo) IL 0 :Y 3

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leader, will play Allison, second in| the Manuiacturers loop at 4 o'clock. | 236 toinal junior 100-meter backstroke 202 {and 150-meter individual medley.

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In N. D. Club Play Lewis, Sue Gastineau, June and

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should be vecognized, whether his Bisons with four hits, pitching | blood is blue cr red. The majority Rochester to a 1-0 triumph in a| probably will rule, so the odds are night game. It was the only other that the old school tie will dangle contest scheduled in the Internafrom many an open shirt collar tional league. pe nr liguss t goal pores are torn Wings vin- |

J. BE. McMannamon was third high Roe St State

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