Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1943 — Page 8
: Pittabergh. Bon ar Oineinmatl, a at St. Lewis (twee), games scheduled.
B88... :
de
.. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
‘
——
TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1943
Dickson Saw Paree And He Wouldn't Go Back To The Farm:
Jeff Dickson .
SPORTS ‘Ia By Eddie Ash
"he didn't mean maybe, either.”
ON the third leg of their second western trip, the Indianapolis Indians invaded Milwaukee today, home of the league-leading Brewers. The series is to open tonight under the Borchert field lights and the first night's program calls for a double attraction. The first game is to be over the scheduled regulation Innings and the second contest is to be a replay of the June 7 game at Milwaukee which was tossed out of the standings after the Indians won a protest from the league's chiefs This added attraction for Brewer monly called a replay.” . Tt will start in the fourth inning with two runs in for the Redskins gt bat and two down , The June 7 “incident fourth Farl Reid pitched the June 7 game for the Imdians but he is hot on hand to resume action tonight He is now on Uncle Sam's team. . George Jeffcoat is slated to pitch the unfinished game for the Tribe and will open on the mound with a two-run lead.
of nine
fans will not be what is comfirst half of the Stewart Hofferth occurred in the
” IN TONIGHT'S first game at Milwaukee Glen Fletcher probably will draw the Tribe mound assignment. . . . The Brewers are leading the runner-up Indians by one and one-half games. . So far this season the Indians have defeated the Brewers five times in nine clashes The Indians will have to crawl out of the hay early Thursday. A morning game is to be plaved in Milwaukee on that date and the starting time will be 10 o'clock.
” » » » ®
Fish Hound Works While Master Snoozes | THIS IS a reprint from Louis P. McNeely's column in the Douisville Times and is passed along for the benefit of fishermen who relish reading tall tales of the big outdoors. . . . Step up. McNeely. Hold your hats, vou fishermen, while we pass along a tall tale about a dog's tail which serves as a fishing pole for an angler-by-proxy at Helena Mont. According to the tale, William J. Dorrington, veteran game warden out there savs a lake at the foot of the Rocky mountains in Teton county is a fisherman's paradise, except that the giant trout lurking there all like the cool deep walter of the lake's center. No boats are available and so the giant fish enjoy their retreat unmolested.
» » »
THE OTHER DAY Dorrington made the rounds of the lake and saw a basket well filled with rainbow trout. No line or pole was in gight but a fellow was dozing under the trees. The fellow was too lazy to get up but he pointed. and Dorrington gazed in the direction his finger indicated. There, swimming in the cold water, was a dog. Dorrington swears a fish line was attached to the dog's tail and fighting to get off the hook was a three-pound trout! Furthermore the fisherman dug inte his pocket and showed this fishing license: “Name Bingo. Address Great Falls, Age 3 years. Occupation—Fish Hound.”
» ” "
Turn Wheel and Get the Facts
THE Calvert Distillers Corp., is offering something free and it Isn't bottled goods. . . . It's an interesting and handy cardboard baseball wheel, . . . A simple turn of the wheel gives you major facts about the 16 major league teams for the past six years such as name of manager leading hitter and average leading pitcher and record and club standing. . . . The figures were compiled by Sporting News. The wheel is now being distributed to fans throughout the eountry at mo cost. . . . Just write direct to Tubie Resnik, general sales manager, Calvert Distillers Corp, 405 Lexington ave, New York 17, New York.
—
Baseball Calendar
-— ———————
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION I w hel
1e 3
RESULTS YESTERDAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION xe Columbus 01h 000 Bn— 1 YY "® 552 Milwaukee 020 0M! Hsx— § 18 488 Roe, Beckman and Heath, Garagiol 156 Caldwell and Weil.
5 A483 Lowisville at Minneapolis, postpaned, Toledo and Kansas © Oy not voneh
. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia oe - oh 2 Cincinnati 030 Box— R 12
Kraws, Kimba and hs Ay Finley; Starr iy gh nd Nps.
Lo) 83 " ansas City . 3h
NATIONAL LEAGUE w
Co. 126 00 B00— 3 $1
error
MeFadden and Poland: M. W. Cooper. 3 000 000 1 000 902 P01 — 3 ny Feldman, Adams and Mancuso Lee, Errickson, Prim and MeCullou
Pet. | New York % 1 $12, 8 Sis Si (Ten Innings)
GEER
| Buteher, Brandt, Podgajny and
AMERICAN LEAGUE
to S- 2 201 02x 3
(AN Games At Night) he NAPOLIS at Milwawkee (twe ANA at Kansas City (twee), bus at St. Paul at Minneapolis,
3
NATIONAL LIAGUE Ta
Bagby
AMERICAN LEAGUE | carrasquel and Ea
CRAY TR ee) : :
a
Rb baer A a
| The husky
as
} Haslin, 3b .
000 201 2Ax— 6 11 2
O11 003 BOL 4-10 '% § 11 » Owen:
Wade — Castine: Zu hs and a ous THe
Wo— 1 8 2 Woods, H
A }| unassisted. Left
By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK. July 27.—Jeff Dickson is officially reported missing in aerial action somewhere on the continent. He's the gentleman who came out of Natchez, Miss., to serve in world war I and remained in Paris to become the “Tex Rickard of Europe.” The country boy had seen Paree and true to the prophecy of the popular post-war song they couldn't get him back to the farm. Dickson did all right over there, too. He had personality and talent as a salesman and he transplanted both qualities into success as a sports promoter, = ” » ” ” ” HE BUILT a replica of Madison Square Garden in Paris and called it* naturally enough, the Pailais des Sports. He went in for everything Rickard did, including ice hockey, but the main accent was on prize fighting. He was behind the original steam up of Primo Carmera. By this time Dickson had enlarged his scope of operations and was also promoting in London. It is interesting to note that two of Dickson's most successful promotions ran to extremes; one was Carmera who looked like something out of a horror film; the other was Sonja Henie who looked, an@ still does, like a character from Fairyland. Besides being the promoter, Dickson had a piece of Carnera. The first trip he made to this country after the other war was to check on his holdings in the Carnera outfit which by now had become Americanized and was not without its color of gangster influence.
Victor and
Timely Hits, Good Pitching Win for Tribe
| Times Special | ST. PAUL, July 27.—The Indian-| ‘apolis Indians finally backed up| good pitching with timely hitting and defeated the Saints in the series) | finale at Lexington park last night. Big John Hutchings held the {Apostles to five blows and they | failed to score after the first inning. The score was 8 to 1. | The best the second place Indians) got out of the four-game series with the seventh-place Saints was an even break, winning the second and last games. So far on the trip! the Tribe's record stands at three games won and five lost. |
Tribe Gets 13 Hits Hutchings, who lost| a 1-t0-0 heartbreaker to the Millers, last week when a Tribe error paved | the way for the lone run, was again in rare form last night and his |
mates had their batting clothes on.|
| The Indians collected 13 safeties)
off three St. Paul hurlers, Rudolph, | Relknap and Strincevich. The Redskins jumped off to a) two-run lead in ‘the first inning, | added a third marker in the sec-| ond and four in the fourth. { In the Tribe's big fourth inning rally Stewart Hofferth, rugged i catcher, belted a home run with one mate on base. The Indians batted Rudolph out of the box in that stanza. They Look Good
The Tribesters eased off after the fourth and traveled until the] ninth before scoring again. One run in that final stanza boosted their total to eight and made them look eood, something like they look at home. The teams made one error, apiece. The game closed out the Indians’ eight-game hitch ‘n the Twin Cities and they now head for Milwaukee 10 tackle the league-leading Brewers, opening there tonight in a twin bill. The Redskins are trailing the Brewers by one and one-half games. Columbus, the third pennant threat, lost to the Brewers in Milwaukee last night and are trailing the leaders by three and one-half games and the Indians by two and one-half games,
—
Pick 22 Men For Relief Tilt 3-5
NEW YORK. July 27 (U. PD). MeSpaden, a Twenty-two players from the Cleve- shot-maker, turned deadly
| at Tam O'Shanter near Chicago.
”
$10,000 Open
CHICAGO. July 27 (U. PMA (Jug) MeSpaden of Merion, Pa, as a professional golfer. MeSpaden gained his greatest t
Miss. unger par White a 72. regulation tance with aggregates of 282 under par.
Yl for the round and 72-hole tournament dis-
six
{packed inte the 18th and final { hole. MeSpaden and White teed off on the 18th all even. Both had lpood drives. MesSpaden put his seeond shot on the green, 20 feet to the right of the pin. White was on the back slope of the carpet, i3 happy = go- 1 ueky serious
land Indians and New York Yan- as he lined up the putt—a stroke |
kees were chosen today for the war which meant the difference between relief double-header between the the winner's share of $2000 and the “Yanklands,” managed by Babe runner-up cut of $1400. He stroked Ruth, and the North Carolina pre- the ball deftly, flight team. of the green. The contest will follow a regular- the tip of the cup, hesitated molv scheduled game between the In- mentarily and then dropped out dians and Yankees tomorrow: lof sight for a birdie three. White The men selected were: | CLEVELAND: Oris Hockett, of; was MocSpaden’s. Russ Peters, ss; Hank Edwards, rf 3 Storyv-Book Club Jeff Heath, If; Mickey Rocco, 1b; Ken Keltner, 3b: Ray Mack, 2b: The putter with which MeSpaden Gene Desautels and George Susce, hit the “pay off” shot is the stnry- ; Ray Poat and Pete Cénter, p hi club of his bag. ° ‘NEW YORK: Roy Weatherly. ef: | MoeSpaden's high rating in pro|George Stirnweiss, ss; Bud Metheny, fessional circles seven or eight rf; Charley Keller, If; Nick Etten, years ago was due to his uncanny 1b; Bill Johnson, 3b: Oscar Grimes, putting. ‘Then mysteriously he lost 2b; Ken Sears and Rollie Hemsley, his touch. ¢; Tommy Byrne and Marvin “I dont know what happened.” Breuer, p. he said, "but I couldn't putt at all. | A player from each club was se- So I began experimenting with lected for all positions except pitch various types of putters. I finally er and catcher, for which two rm. found this one around my pro shep inations from each club were made Where somebody discarded it. I
Ruth will have Yankee Coach Art loaded lead into it to make it ex-|
| Fleteher and Cleveland Coach Del tremely heavy and it brought my Baker as his assistants. putting touch back. It means money
in the bank now.” While 90 per cent of the big time | golfers use steel-shafted blade putters, MoeSpadens “pet” is an old | wood-shafted one, with a that has been doctored to own special require-
| Tribe Box Score
INDIANAPOLIS suit “Jugs”
! AB R Fusthbutn. Wola ments.
English, of .......00 | Nsorgan,
head”
Montgomery, Jack Are Rematched
MeNaik, 2b Fairly, ss Hutchings,
= pw wr By SF or 8F ow JE rr FOI SOS aN
E 0 0! ° 0 0 1 0 0 0
4 3 4 3 5 4 5 4 4
} Sw We SISOS
GY | wp GY pr BF pw
i
| or | ~ “1 p- | ed
| \ | Promoter Mike
ing a current champion and the
Blanchard, ss other a former champion.
sig :
| soos wmassaney | GSD re SDS
| Strincevich, p
| TORS ....... 0. a Rebel batted for Belknap in eighth.
| ISSO S5S ms | sos SS
a wre | SESSSwsISSSST
Champion Beau Jack of Atlanta,
Runs Batted In-—Blackburn, | Morgan 2 HoRerth 3, Heslin. Home Run | afferth. tehings. Double! | asin to MeNair to Morgan, Moore | n, Schultz to Bla Dre on Bases—Indiana Base on Balls—Huteh a . Strikeouts
ho Tr S TF 3 R ON ny Armstrong, former triple titlen 1
holder, in a 10-round contest at
3,8 BOI Grouinte. AVE: 1:
14. Mon.gomery won the crown from Jack at Madison Square
| Garden about two months ago. In the other mateh, Pvt. Ray
we is | 1 Paul 4
Harold (Jug) McSpaden (left), Merion, Pa., called on his putter yesterday to cop the $10,000 all
Greenwood, Miss., by one stroke in an 18-hol: playoff after the twe had ted with 282 each at the end of the regulation 72-hole route. =
‘Junk Pile' Putter Captures
to the loftiest peak of his 16-year carrer Sox. $10000 all-American open by defeating
They had tied over the |
All the drama of the play-off was
playing the slope] It rolled steadily to!
“hammer
1 NEW YORK, July 27 (U. P)— | Jacobs today | brought an end to a two-month metropolitan boxing drought by | scheduling two bouts—one involve |
Lightweight Ruler Bob Mont- | gomery of Fhiladelphia will de« | fend his title against Former |
=| Ga. at the Polo Grounds on Sept.
(Sugar) Robinson will meet Henry |
Dickson made America conscious of Carnera by matching him with Young Stribling. This was the first American the Italian freak met. It was obviously a deal with both sides participating, a deal which would not stand close moral examination. Two meetings were arranged. Stribling won the first in London on a foul, Carnera the second in Paris on a foul. In this way neither side was hurt and Carnera was ready to cross the Atlantic. Hadn't he met one of our name boxers and broken even?
Carnera’s debut in America, a month later, was a garish thing. He came into the ring wearing a green felt cap with an enormous visor, a matching knee-length robe and hideously yellow shoes. The mob had exhumed Big Bov Peterson for him. Everybody on Broadway knew Peterson was to swoon gracefully to the mat at the first menacing gesture. At the last minute even Peterson's manager, Mike Collins, declined to be publicly identified with the tarce. He sent word he had wrenched his ankle and would be unable to appear in the corner, Peterson went out in one heat, = » = THEY BEGAN the fantastic cross-country sucker tour with Camera toppling over setups week after week. There wasn't a single break in the contunity until Carnera, back in the East dropped a 10-round decision fo Jimmy Maloney in Boston. How that happened still remains a mystery. Mavbe the handeuffs didn't ft. The testimony is conflicting, but Dickson always insisted he
=” ” »
Culberson Is yd Elevated in Sox Lineup
| By PAUL SCHEFFELS | United Press Staff Correspondent | NEW YORK, July 27.-A healthy minor league batting average is the shortest road to major league success for a freshman performer, give an extra cheer today for Outfielder Ray Culberson of the Boston Red Sox, who bridged the gap with a virtual powder-puff record.
Runnerup
EN
The 28-vear-old left fielder came
to the Sox this summer from Louisiville as a “better than chattel in a deal
Jack MeBride to the Colonels. Me-
Bride was a fielding flop and the Sox figured that Culberson, despite 217 average, could save games
his by his fielding. Now Culberson—elevated
prises.
as son has
a pair of homers, home 25 runs. bases and belted four different occasions in 51 games,
Munerief Halts Sox
Bob Munerief halted the Sox with American Open golf tournament He defeated Buck White (right), belted Boston, 7-1. and Culberson collected one of the blows, a double. and stole a base. George MceQuinn’s three-run triple highlighted a four-run St. Louis third inning against Yank Terry that sewed up the decision for the Browns. McQuinn crossed the plate on Mike Chartak's single. Southpaw Jake Wade wilted the Yankees with three hits, but issued eight passes to hand the New York-
for McSpaden
“junk pile” putter setters scored twice without a hit riumph yesterday when he won the on four passes, an error and a pair “Buck” White of Greenweod, of long flys. Hank Zuber, who held
with his third victory. Athletics Nose Tigers Cleveland
Softball Schedule Tonight Softball Stadinm
BUSH-FEEZLE FACTORY LEAGUE
Kingan A. A International
romped to a
of Jim Bagby.
Alex Carrasquel for 12 hits.
§ ewart-Warner ve U 8 Tires Harvester, P. R. Mallory ve. El
vs
Liny
Set Softball Meet Aug. 15
home the run that gave the Athe
in a night game. Johnny Welaj | opened the frame with a double and
to set the stage for Estalella. In the National league, the Card- | inals racked up their ninth straight, | 6-3. over the Braves. Mort Cooper held the Braves to five hits—all in
ment will open here Aug. 15, offt- victory. Cooper retired 22 men in cers of the Marion County Softball order after the first two innings. association announced today fol-| Rav Mueller belted two home runs
steak house.
| All games will be played at gq morning game. entries will close Aug. 7. Winners off Jack Kraus and the second off | in both divisions of the tourney will Newt Kimball. Ray advance to regional play along with phillies to seven hits. state champions in Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, Kentucky and In. DiMaggio Hits Two diana. Ar kv Vaughan's
William Woodruff,
Vinee Disent
commissioner. the men's division will be played at Maggio’s
The final game in victory over the Pirates. 1ith homer
finalists will meet at Speedway. Pre- Brooklyn tied it in the sixth, liminary tilts in both divisions will Maggio drummed out another fours be divided between the two sadia.
Tonights schedule at Speedway tying run in the ninth. stadium: ¥9:30—Brownsburg D. X. A. C vs. Light Metal; Mens Shop vs, Polk Milk.
Brewers Get Kimball vent tos. PHILADELPHIA, July 27 (U. P).! — — Right-handed Pitcher Newt Kim. YESTERDAY'S STAR—M or ball has been sold to Milwaukee of Cooper. who won his lth ctor the American association, the Phila- | delphia Phillies announced today. 8-3. He won (wo and lost five after com-
ing to the Phillies Sg. the Dodg- Hoosier ‘Eliminated ers earlier this seaso In Tennis Tourney
Depth Eres Over the Count
NEW YORK .--Max Hirsch, trainer of Depth Charge, offers to bet $10,000 that the two-year-old can beat Count Fleet or any other horse at three furlongs or a half mile. Depth Charge, a half brother of the great Count, is a son of Bold Venture, out of Quickly, dam of the Count. John D. Herts sold Depth Charge as a weanling to Robert Kleberg before the Count had an opportunity to demonstrate his class. Clockers claim he runs the first furlong from a standing start in less than 11 seconds.
Cubs, 4-3.
the third handed Bill his
Lee
division field into the second roun of the annual western and boys | tennis tournament today. Oliver scored an easy 6-1, 6-2 | triumph over Gerhard Kalfoken, Elkhart, Ind, yesterday as seventh- | seeded Billy Windham of Orlando, | Fla. +» won by Tinnell of Holland. Mich.
Volleyball Tourney
Teams from eight playgrounds ‘operated by the city recreation department will compete in a volleyball tournament at Willard park | tomorrow night at 6 o'clock. The entry list consists of Willard, Eagle, | Spring, School No.
|School No. 175, Golden Hill and
so
nothing” which returned
to the third spot in the Red Sox lineup— is one of Boston's pleasantest sur He is the club's leading hitter with an average of .300, which | also ranks him 11th in the majors. Although he has never hit as much 300 at any time before, Culberslammed out 63 hits, including 12 doubles, three triples and while driving He has stolen six hits on two
three hits vesterday as the Browns
default from Jack!
persuaded Sonja Henie to add ballet routine. He claims to have had the gorgeous costume she uses in the dance of the dving swan <esigned especially for her. The known fact is she wore it for the first time in his Paris arena and under his promotion. ” ” » » WE MET DICKSON first in 1936. By this time we had shaken the last touch of Mississippi red clay from his feet and was thoroughly Parisian even to expansive gestures. He took us on a tour of his Palais des Sports. “Just like the garden, We agreed. “Except for this slight difference,” he added. Then he blew a whistle and curtains of latticed rope dropped from the top of four sides of the arena, obscuring all but the ringside seats. “The French are excitable. Sometimes they yocks. The curtains protect the nicer people, the big monev.” Later Dickson took us on a tour of the city. We passed a large automobile factory. There was much human activity in front. Men and women carried placards from which streamed red ribbons. “A sit down strike.” explained Dickson. “This country’s going to hell.” He didn’t mean maybe, either,
touches to her ice skating
» ”
eh” he beamed.
thrown knives and the people who pay
Beau Jack Has Two Ambitions And Both Concern Fighting
{
Was swollen almost beyond recoge
By OSCAR FRALEY
United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 27.-—Beau Jack, the little Jaw-Ja shoeshine boy who parlayed a pair of iron.fists into a $100,000 bankroll, explained today that he has two ambitions to satisfy before the snow flies—and both have to do with fighting. First, he wants to regain the lightweight championship of the world, Secondly, he wants to get into a far bigger battle—as a private in Uncle Sam’s army. “And I'm gonna do my best to | do both.” promised the kinky-haired Hey, Ya Bum : kid who only three years ago earned his first purse—$3-—for winning a PORTLAND, Ore. July 27 six=-man battle roval at the Augusta, (U. P).=If Benito Mussolini Ga., national golf course. “If every- has any scrap left in ham, he thing goes right I should do it by can get a job—-though probthe end of October.” ably a temporary one--here, The Battling Beau is training as- Joe Waterman, Portland siduously for both objectives, Un- fight promoter, offered today to match him for a bout with Tony Galento—if Il Duce ean find a second,
LaBelle Tops
dee, who trained Joe Louis and John Outdoor Card
Henry Lewis, he is polishing his ringeraft constantly. To whip the Rene La Belle, French-Canadian grappler from Toronto, tops
illiteracy which originally kept him | out of the army, the one-time locker room attendant has hired a tutor to night's outdoor mat card at Sports Arena where an added attraction is the first local appearance for
teach him the three R's. “The Phantom,” a masked matman,
Won 49 of 36 Beau is the boy who first went to Meeting La Belle in the main event for two falls out of three
the ring wars mid-way in 1940 and will be Gil La «Gross of Boston.
since then has won 49 out of 56 fights, 29 by knockouts. He reached La Gross came close to beating Ali Pasha here last week and is ex-
the high point of his brief boxing career in Madison Square Garden last Dee 18 by knocking out Tippy Larkin for recognition in New York as lightweight king. Then came two victories over the veteran Fritzie pected to give a good account of himself against the popular Le | Belle. ® Buddy Knox, rugged wrestler, will test “The Phantom” in the semi-windup. It is for one fall.
Zivic and a decision over Henry Armstrong. He was a happy little colored lad Matchmaker Lloyd Carter reports that the masked matman has been (drawing big crowds in other cities
to=
after each of the victories as he sat in the crowded dressing room at the Garden, receiving the congratulations of his admirers. But he was a sorry spectacle the night | of May 21, the night Bob Montgomery hammered him around the ring | to take away that championship | Beau had prized so highly. His face |
nition, a balloon-like hand rested | 2nd he has been seeking his serve
carried Harold ers a 5-3 decision over the White | The American league pace=
(to throng the dressing room of the | by one stroke in an 18-hole play-off. MoeSpaden had a one- (he Sox to four blows. was credited | |doesn’t do much talking. 7-3 tri- vowed that night to get Montgom- | umph over the Senators in a night ery in the ring again and win back game behind the five-hit pitching the title.
The Indians smacked paring himself, brushing ¢ff more Early Wynn, Mickey Haefner and of the rough edges with two straight
letics a 2-1 triumph over the Tigers bo
Jo Jo White was purposely passed do it
The annual county softball tourna- the first two innings—for his 14th |
‘missed his birdie bid and the title lowing a meeting last night at Fox's and drove in a total of six runs as ‘which shouted that he intended to the Reds routed the Phillies, 8-2, in roll over one objective and into the | Each of Mueller's Other regardless of Montgomery and |
Speedway and Softball stadia and homers came with two on, the first the three R's,
Starr held the, DePauw Prepares For Wabash Meet |
10th<inning | association homer with the bases loaded pro- p ~Thirty-five cadets of the Depresident, will serve as tournament vided the Dodgers with a 10-6. the Paratory school prepared today for
Softball stadium while the girl Pirates off to a quick, 5-2 lead, but a special track meet with Wabash | Di- college here Aug. 21.
bagger to send his mates ahead daily workouts are Cadet Leroy Lar. again but Augie Galan drove in the gura of Gary, who has been clocked
The Giants snapped a seven-game Cadet Elvin Klein of Chicago, who 8:30—Sam’s josing streak at the expense of the specializes in the high jump and A three-run spree in pole vault,
as the Cards whipped the Braves, |
(won a split decision over Tony | Costa of Woonsocket, R. I, in a 10=|
10, Coleman, 3
in an ice bucket and tears trickled | ices for several weeks. Carter says down his dusky cheeks as the fajr hat “The Phantom” does not reweather followers passed his door | veal his identity. Opening the three-bout junior new champion. | heavyweight program at 8:30 will be Babe Kasaboski of Montreal and A Polite Lad “Count” Zoopie a newcomer to local Beau is a silent, polite lad who |Mn8s. He is a former European But he grappler,
—
Montreal Trims Orioles Twice
By UNITED PRESS Montreal trimmed Baltimore, 4-1 and 4-3, and Syracuse slammed Rochester, 4-2, in the only games played in the International league last night. Wes Flowers halted the Orioles with five hits as Montreal racked [up three runs in the sixth inning jof the first game, Bill Swift hom=ered for the only Baltimore run. Al Sherer turned back the Orioles with eight safeties in the nightcap (as the Royals shoved over the wine ning run on Carl Barnhart's 10th inning homer. Syracuse coupled seven hits with two errors to whip Rochester as Mil [Howell pitched a five-hitter,
Quietly he has been pre-
knockout triumphs. Now he feels
Bobby Estalella’s double with two he's ready for their September reon and none out in the ninth sent match. {
ve made a mistake by frving to Montgomery.” admits Chick hercules Wergeles, the Besu's midget manager. “But we won't this time. We're going out there like we always did--throwing from the outfield-—-and we'll be surprised if Montgomery wins a round. Won't we kid?” The Beau only smiled, refusing to make such a brash prediction. But {there was a look in his eve which | said more than words, a glance
A A——
‘Set ‘Qualifications
Qualifications to determine flights for the Speedway Golf club cham- | pionship will get underway July 31 and continue until Aug. 8, Al Rickenbacker, © course manager, Aan nounced today.
BICYCLES
PRE-WAR MODELS Large Stock of Styles, Types and Colors. Sold with ration certificates only
$32.95 to $39.95 BLUE POINT PEuAwARE
& MADISON
YY CR
DIAMONDS Ean E REI YI ANY THING OF VAL 9
RL. 4 EY TE
L WASHINGTON
GREENCASTLE, Ind. July 27 (U.
university naval flight pre-
Among those participating In
at 1099 for the 100 yard dash, and
———— a —
Wilson Wins Close
Decision Over Costa | PROVIDENCE, R. I. July 27 (U.| P.) .—Jackie Wilson of Pittsburgh, former featherweight champion, |
YUH KW
MH
round bout before a crowd of m2
KALAMAZOO, Mich, July 27 (U. last night. P.).—Second seeded Charlie Oliver (of Perth Amboy, N. J, led the junior rapier-like left jab to subdue Costa.
Wilson relied almost solely on al
He opened a cut over his oppon=ent’s eye that required two stitches in the ninth round.
Wolf Sussman Ty
LS bR ey
Satahl tah ad
vs ows
YOUR PIPE
No matter CRANES
4
A
