Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1944 — Page 25

ll § 1 PRI Cos: Monarchs |] gnoer lee Hockey Season Is Indicated

3 Se by 9 » | . : . ; y J EP % . . 3 ‘ SAA YO Split Twin Bill a “ih y. ; : v i The Indianapolis American with the annual playoffs to follow. [Sunday night schedule ‘for Indian- | 9 d ; ay Shutouts were in order at Victory Hockey league home schedule for| Miller departed for New York apolis, and also indicated a prefer- | A : a field last night when the Indian-ithe 1944-45 season probably will be {today to attend a week-end meet- | ence for Thursday for the Caps’| Look them ever—ses for 3 2 apolis Clowns and Kansas City increased to 30 games, according to{ing of the league's governors, at week-day home games. yourself — each garment : : Monarchs of the Negro American|Dick Miller, general manager of which time they are expected to, Sometime after the New You ! dean: : MOSES ean roe Ge #

league clashed in a double-header|the Coliseum ice rink and the Caps.|approve a schedule. A. tentative \ 1 jo bardly be told from new . . a e Caps. ‘e meeting, Miller wi urney - NAKOMIS LAKE, RED FEATHER LAKES, Colorado (via stage, before approximately 4000 fans. |The home schedule last season {schedule has been drawn up by Canada to look for player ie / ® F A I R B A N K S L 0 A MN Cc 0.

QUT-OF-PAWN.T

MEN'S SUITS

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“train and plane—also delayed) —Up here 9000 feet above the lady on called -for 27 games. League President Maurice Podoloff.|and also to check up on former WASHINGTON ST.

top of the monument on the Circle in Indianapolis we have found the | '¢ Clowns won the first game, 14) “yo 0 no mbership was Increased | Miller requested the usual heavy Cap players. to 0, and the Monarchs annexed the recently from six clubs to seven il

3

- ideal spot for a fisherman's post-war plan,

We saw it yesterday from a forest rangers watch tower after Second, 6 to 0. The Clowns rapped © elimbing a dirt road which snaked its way through the Roosevelt out 16 hits in the first contest as

~national forest. From the tower,

Duro Davis held the visitors to four.

with the granting of a franchise to St. Louis, former member of the American Hockey association fwhich

100 miles away looms a range of | the pools and ripples despite be- [Jack Matchett held the Clowns to|last year suspended for the dura1 the Rockies, their peaks snow cov- | ing fished for years. five safeties in the second tilt. Both tion, A seven-club loop will call W ered and busy snagging the sn» games were limited to seven innings for an increase in games, Miller "¢louds which sail constantly over | THE MOUNTAIN lakes ere |PY agreement. believes. these wild ranges. are small, cold and beautiful and | ©On Sunday the Clowns and Cleve-| He predicts an earlier opening It's this snowy range that holds | to an Indiana fisherman look like |land Buckeyes are booked fo stage a next season, around Oct. 20, and | the answer to a fisherman's dream. | Perfect spots for bass and crappies. twin bill at Victory fieid, first game with the regular schedule extend-

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lit No roads or man-made trails mar | However, Coloradians look |2¢ 1:30. ing to mid-March, around the 18th, ng its primitive state. But at its foot | 8 @ bass as a Hoosier sneers at © WF ESEEEEEE EE YOU NEAR TALK ABOUT MARVELS nd fishermen can hire guides to pack | lakes is stocked continually and

them back into the wilds and | if someone dumped bass fingerthen will return at a given date | lings in the fishing areas they CCAUSE e040 0 » and lead them out again. Up on | Probably would secede from the this range there are hundreds of | union, Marvels use only fully streams which drain off the snow Flies and worms are the popu- aged, selected tobaccos. and ice and in these streams are | lar lures here with the worms No wartime skimping speckled trout that have neyer | Calching the most fish, just like on quality. seen the shadow of a man or a in Indiana. One similarity here Marvels are packed and

He hook and in Indiana is the fishin conditioned to stay fresh and leader. s the 8 an i 26.4% longer . . . b AIS) H : 5 o ICP the streams here in Red ian oD Lana we | I oy : sask for ‘beca : [4 LISTEN IN} ed “% Feather and nearby still offer ti f : tai M 3 ; phd ih Se : % : LATEST NEWS % rainbow and speckled trout in all | DauVes reier to them as Mountain 2 it : Ee 5:45 p. m. Daily In- % 5 : showers and by and large that is : Tr pee ps el DT od eg 4 # "Except Sunday lef | - ———| what they are—the sun is out, ’ s 4 4 A WIRE he x, then jt is raining and in five ’ ol= : ; { | d ) minutes the sun is out again and air . be a en ar ; you are dry—dry from the waist m- LL -~ . up only for the-only way to.fish. \ gt here is just walk into the stream hs AERA rw | and try to catch a few’before re- - odo 0 BL. Louis. » Sade Paul treating and thawing out in the : 3 : * 2 = y= i 2 : 4 Te i J poy oo b Aa Rane © on aR oi be « KBather-. dirk J i. vy w 12 n x " _ > - : Sart i : - y : : PER " ER ou 3 ww B Its: ol E A Detrett - ture reaches the 70 mark. | vA. * ip icle i couldn’t resist putting in the y . 3 ! Wash son, ‘temperature for the sake of the The FRESH Cigarette of Quality ht: | back . rge | i NATO LEAGUE boys 38 the office

§

incinnati 4 42 S63 Boston ttsburgh 30 41 540 Phila’phia w York 48 31 44 Breeckiyn

4 GAMES TODAY i AMERICAN ASSOCIATION 1 ANAPOLIS at Minneapolis (night).

FE i ® 8 wan! ( Ye foro 4

WL Louis 095 TeiChieage en- A

Jim ks,

» AMERICAN LEAGUE Sra at cchedvins.

«

NATIONAL NAL LEAGUE Chicags at Dreshila dna). St. Lows at Only games fe

RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

J ig (First Game; 7 Tmaings: Agreement) HIE. uwaan onsen 20% 44 ist Pai ; Pe and McDonnell; ¥ Webs — Pad.

(Second Game) arian . as HO 800-5 9 2 318 x11 12 Diehl and Wallen: A, Buker, | : Warring and Castro,

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i

pie er. pnts aussie Bese

fra Game; ? Innings; Agr gd eo 206 62 & ©

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pap city re ” 000 —i Burkhart and Crumbs. Pepper

Morgan. 3 Bess “ Game) . 201

macchia mb and Schultz; Caldwell, Hendrickson, Farmer and East wwoed,

AMERICAN LEAGUE Hn Game) juTh ladeiphia Fasesvsn pe Mi 12 » 5 0 200 901-3 15 3 Barris and Mayes; Lepat and Tresh.

®esanvas

NATIONAL LEaduR is . . 208 101 108% n 3

004 000 0004 Sewell, cine

Birincenier’ _ Oiicage rt Paissiphia, posiponed, », .

Only games "seheduled.

cKechnie Injured f In Fall at Game,

§ SYRACUSE, N.Y, Aug. 3 (U.P), Bill McKechnie, manager of the . Cincinnati Reds, was reported rest“dng comfortably in a hospital here today, McKechnie suffered head Ae d hand injuries in a fall at the d 4 3 SByracuse Chiefs’ stadium following ] an exhibition between the Reds and athe International league team yesrday.

Elkhart Races

GOSHEN, Ind, Aug. 3 (U. P.).— Marie at Law captured three * straight heats yesterday to win the 'R:2¢ pace at the opening racing vent of the Elkhart county fair. ER a Fone . ; ; j : v > ‘Earl's Ringleaders also won three Em ——— " - a TE Aa : LER Sik Jronsecutive heats for a victory in

He builds Curtiss Commandos — and the letter was [rom his son, who [lies And it closed by saying: “I wonder how many people at home realize what them. It told of 3,000,000 miles of flight each day by pilots of the ATC this all adds up to — the millions of trained flyers and ground men in the E E E ¥ alone—of shuttling state officials, military cargo and wounded men between services, American bases all over the world, and the priceless skills of the Lé the four corners of the earth—of a trans-ocean flight every hour of the day people who build airplanes . . . It is ane of the few dividends this war can : ‘Sleanlecs : and night, to meet the traffic demands of war. pay, if the people only realize it!”

“If the people only realize it!” Realize, for instance, that in the dering of jobs for the flyers who come back — the waste of the international aviation agreements — of our national policy of time it takes you to read this page, 2,000 miles will be flown by training and the faith of millions — the loss of a power more effec- security — of the distribution of surplus military aircraft and the the planes of the Air Transport Command alone! tive than any statesmen’s blueprints to break down localism, pro- degree of regulation or encouragement for the airlines of the

Realize that the vast énergy of American aviation resulting from mote trade, and bring the nations of the world closer together in United States. this war can bé the greatest instrumentality of world peace ever understanding. The solution of these problems depends upon all of us in ) created by the skills and the planning of men. But many problems must first be solved if those skills are to be America, not alone upon those of us who build airpower. Realize that billions of dollars and thousands of man-years of one of the truly great peacetime legacies of this war — problems } : training have been invested in those skills . . . that failure to use that call for straight thinking and action both ouside as well as in Look 10 the Sky, America! 4 | them wisely and well, after this war is won, will mean the squan- the aviation industry: Problems of recony ersion and finance, of