Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1945 — Page 16

Tribe Inva

Wallace Turns Back the Millers In Series Finale as Indians

Chalk Up 11 Runs on 13 Hits

MINNEAPOLIS, Aug.

dropped the five-game series to the Millers, three games to two, they moved on td St. Paul today still holding a two-game lead over the

runnerup Milwaukee Brewers,

The Redskins are booked for five tilts in four days with the Saints! at Lexington park and hope to annex at least three out of

They have downed the Apostles 10 times in 17 clashes this season. The Tribesters mauled the Millers, 11 to 3, under the lights at Nicollet park last night in the series finale. It was the last clash between the clubs in regular season competition and the Indians finished shead, 12 games to 10. Jim Wallace, although hampered by poor control, victimized the Millers and chalked up his 14th triumph of the campaign against only three setbacks. The Redskins pounded the ball hard and timely and tallied their 11 runs on 13 hits. The Millers obtained 10 safeties off Wallace. Joe Mack paced the Tribe at bat with a single, double and home rin and two runs batted in. He

A. A. Stars

LEW FLICK. Milwaukee Left|Won last year's event under the | BUFFALO, Aug. 21

21.—Although

des St. Paul

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES =

Clinging To Two-Game League Lead

-

TUESDAY, AUG. 21, 1945

In Title Game

the Indianapolis Indians

b

the set. |

Hurls First

No-Hit Game

| The initial no-hit performance of | the annual metropolitan area soft-! ball tournament, being played at Municipal stadium, was turned in by Duke Duncan, Lockfield Garden Pals club pitcher, last night. The Lockfield aggregation, a colored team and one of the tourney favorites, won over National Starch, 7-0. It was their second tournament victory. Hal Mahaney of Kingan Knights outpitched John O'Gara of Lukas-

Leah Parker, outfielder for Curtiss-Wright, will be in the lineup tonight at 8:30. when the propellermakers meet the PepsiCola girls in the finals of the Marion county girls softball tourney at Speedway stadium.

Bill Heinlein Begins Defense

Of Open Title

By ROY J. FORREST United Press Staff Correspondent

ANDERSON, Ind., Aug. 21.—Lanky Bill Heinlein of Noblesville held an uncertain grip on the Indiana state open golf chr mpionship today. The champ, also holder of the Hoosier P. G. A. crown, teed off in a three-day, 72-hole medal tournament at Grandview . Country club

this morning, facing the toughest sort of professional competition, George Shafer, host pro, took the favorite's position on the first day of medal play because of brilliant preliminary rounds. He was third in the 1944 tournament behind

To Join Pros

Best Two-Year

By CARL LUNDQUIST United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 21.—~The Hal Newhouser “Express” was exactly on schedule today, winging along | toward the best two-year record for| any major league pitcher since! Dizzy Dean's peak years of 1934 and 1935. Newhouser, the American league's most valuable player last season, finished with 29 victories and nine losses for the Tigers. This year, . (with Detroit favored to win the pennant he has won 20 and lost seven to daté which co-incidentally is the identical record he possessed on Aug. 21, 1944, Yesterday, he won his fifth shutout of the year, a 4 to 0 job on the (visiting Athletics, who were humbled twice, Les

Boris (Babe) Dimancheff, former Washington high school, Butler and Purdue grid star, is

|Newhouser ‘Express’ Is Rolling Toward

Record Since Dean Era

was reduced to six-and-a-half games when the Giants beat their ace, Hank Wyse, 9-to-3, at New York. It was the second straight y defeat for Wyse, league-leading pitcher with a record of 18-8. Jimmy Foxx, who won his first game as a major league pitcher Sunday, came back: yesterday to give give the Phils their. fourth straight win with a homer and a single which- topped Cincinnati, 4-to-3. Foxx replaced Vance Dinges at first hase when Dinges suffered a broken collarbone. Pittsburgh took advantage of seven Brooklyn errors to win, 11-to-1. Babe Dahlgren and Pete Coscarart hit Pittsburgh homers and 17-year-old Tom Brown got one for the Dodgers, which incidentally was

Major Leaders

NATIONAL LEAGUE G AB 120 106 108

Holmes, Boston .. Cavarretta, Chi. . Rosen, Brooklyn. . Hack, Chicago.... 115 Ott, New York.... 110

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Cuccinello, Chicago 92 Case, Washington 02 Stephens, St. Louis 108 Estallela, Phila. .. 93 Boudreau, Clev 97

HOME RUNS Holmes. Braves... 24 | Adams, Cards 18 Workman, Braves 19 | Stephens, Browns 18 Ott, Giants ..... 18] RUN SBATTED IN Walker, Dodgers. 98 Holmes, Braves. .

Olmo, Dodgers... 97 | Cavarreta, Cubs.. Adam, Cardinals. 95

342 3 333

.333 316 .308 307 .306

a

game. George Binks hit a bases full

Heinlein. Harter Has 67

Indianapolis, came in for his share of backing after shooting a 3-under-

event. State Amateur Champ Paul Sparks of Indianapolis had a 68.

Harold to give the meatmen a 4-0 decision. Mahaney allowed three hits, while O'Gara was touched for five. It was the first tournament appearance of the Knights, who

Beisler Named As Bisons’ Coach

{Frank Beisler,

hard-checking de-|

Plelder—Smacked out four hits, to|Dame of Metal Auto Parts.

gignal Brewers welcome home for| : Boss Bill Veeck against Toledo as|Gliminated Milwaukee won, 5 to 2.

JOHNNY OSTROWSKI, Kansas City Third Baseman--Drove in three runs to lead Blues attack with a homer as Kansas City defeated Cofumbus, 4 to 0.

FRED WALTERS, Louisville Catcher—Batted in four runs in as

International lory Bearing walloped Service Products, 22-0, in six innings. A, A; T:45—Allison Tool vs. Eli Lilly; 9:00—Meeker Music vs. U. S.

perimental.

In other games, Link-Belt Bearing |fense player, will succeed Manager Detrola. | Arthiir Chapman as playing coach | {seventh seeded team 5-2, and Mal- lof the Buffalo Bisons hockey team | His appointment was

{this year.

{announced by Chapman, who was Tonight's tourney schedule fol- shifted to the managerial berth follows: 6:30 Bethel A. C. vs. Kingan|lowing the resignation of Eddie

i Shore.

Beisler left the Bison lineup after Tires: 10:15—Moose vs. Allison Ex-|the team won the 1942-43 American

| Hockey league championship.

Shafer’s four-man team won the

of SN. 63, three strokes over the course

(U. Pp.) —|record. He had scored a 64 Sun-

day. Heinlein took a 66, and his team,

An amateur, Charles Harter of

par 67 yesterday in the pro-amateur

preliminary with a best-ball score Shafer's medal card was

slated to join the Boston Yanks of the National professional football league later this week when the squad starts drills at St. John’s prep school, Danvers, Mass.

Racer Introduces

‘Jeep’ Midget Car Three years of idleness for midget

| racing drivers throughout Indiana {and its neighboring states merely

Mueller beating them 4 to 1 with a four-hitter in (the second game. He was the first {major league pitcher to hit the 20(Victory mark this season and un- | {less he cracks up in the waning | weeks, should come close to his 1944 | total.

homer in the opener as Rookie Pete Center suffered his first defeat in seven games, an 11-hit attack, which reached a crescendo in the fourth inning when four runs scored, beat Indian ace Stove Gromek in the second game,

The Yankees made four runs in the ninth to top Chicago's ace night-game pitcher, Earl Caldwell, 4 to 1. Three singles which scored two runs and a homer by Bud Metheny which scored two more, did {the damage. Walt Dubiel was the |winner, though lifted for a pinch

First Since Grove If he goes beyond 25 victories, he will be the first American league pitcher to do the job two years in {a row since the regime of Robert {Moses Groves of the A's in 1932. |Grove had a threelyear-span above

the longest hit at Ebbets fleld this season. It landed in the upper grandstand in left field. Elwyn Roe won his 10th game, scattering eight hits.

Phillies Acquire Portland Shortstop

PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 21 (U. P.). —William H. Clepper, general man~ ager of the Portland Beavers, has disclosed that Johnny O'Neil, ace shortstop of the club, has been sold {to the Philadelphia Phillies of the

lincluding Sparks and Harter, had| a best-ball of 62 to tie for second | place with an Anderson foursome |

|

‘led by Professional Howard Widener, another threat. Among the top amateurs were

Jasper, Nick Garbacz of South Bend, and 41943 State Open Champion Mike Stefanchik of Gary.

many times at bat to lead Colonels’ assault that smothered St. Paul, 12

to 6.

Allison, P. R. Mallory

also scored three markers. Artie Parks also walloped a homer and a single, scored one run and batted in two. Other Indians who slammed out a pair of blows were Bob Dill, Stan Wentzel and Wallace. The Tribe southpaw hit a single and a double and scored one run to help his own cause. The Millers had 11 runners stranded, the Indians only six. Splurge in Seventh The contest was fairly close until the seventh when the Tribesters put it in the sack by splurging for four markers. That made it 9 to 8 in Indianapolis’ favor and eliminated the Millers who were held runless by Wallace after the fourth stanza. Of the Millers’ 10 hits only two were good for extra bases, both doubles by Cicero and Webb. Webb and Albertson worked on the Minneapolis mound. Wentzel robbed the Millers of at least two runs in the fifth when he raced to the fence in right center and made a gloved hand catch on Blazo’s drive for the third out and two Miller runners were stranded. Wallace also completed a great play in the third which choked off a Miller rally. : The Tribe lefty caught a runner at the plate by a fancy throw after covering first on an infield hit and the play held the Millers to a single run in that round despite the fact they collected three singles and a walk. 8

Box Score

INDIANAPOLIS

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Totals

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Lehrman Nowak Ficc.ute 3b ... Barna, Cicero, Morgan,

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3 1071 . 030 020 420-11

Totals . INDIANAPOLIS .... Minneapolis 001 200 000 3 Runs batted in—Dill 2, Mack 2, English 2. Parks 2, Wentzel, Detote, Barna, Males, Webb, wo-base hits—Wallace, Mack, Webb, Cicero. Home runs—Parks, Mack. Double plays—Geraghty to Willkie to Mack, Lehrman to Morgan. Left on bases ~Indianapolis 6. Minneapolis 11. Base on balls—Wallace 5, Webb 2, Albertson 1. Btrikeouts—Wallace 3, Webb 3, Albertson 2 Hits—Off Webb, 12 in 7 innings, Albertson, 1 in 2. Losing pitcher—Webb. Balk--Wal-Jac Umpires—Rudolph and Peters. Time

BOWLING MEETINGS

TONIGHT, 6:30—Marott Shoe women at Pritchett’s. X. 7:00=~Dezelan Dezelan alleys YONIGHT. 7:30—Tuesday night ladies at West Side alleys. TONIGHT, 8:00—Pennsylvania Recreation at Pennsylvania alleys TOMORROW, 7:30 P. M.—Ladies Handiod at Dezelan alleys. TOMORROW, 7:30 P. M.—Thursday night Moonlite ladies at home of Vivian Par-

Industrial at

sons, 2501 N. La Salle st THURSDAY, 7:30 P. M.—Pritchett mixed league at Pritchett alleys: (Openings for two men’ teams. League to bowl Thursdays at 8:30.) THURSDAY, 8:00 P. M.—8t. Catherine's al Si, Catherine's church hall THURSDAY, 8 P. M. Roberson Coal ladies captaing at West Side alleys FRIDAY, 17:30 P. M.—Central ladies at Central alleys. (League to bowl Thurs day nights at 8:30.) FRIDAY ~ Indianapolis Classic at Fox Steak House. SATURDAY, 7:30 P, M.—Dezelan mixed at Dezelan alleys, (Openings for three

teams.) — ns H,.. MONEY! A For Any

Worthy Purpose ug"

General Insurance

Tomorrow for League First Spot

With first place in the Manufac-|vious clashes. stake. Allison's and P. R Mallory | ® 3-0 victory in the third meeting

No. 2. When the Mallory as Allison was swamping Lukas-lof Art Cooke, Joe Lease, Ralph

loop schedule with records of 11

Nines to Clash

They won two 3-2 turers amateur baseball league at { decisions, while Mallory turned in

| However, Frank Baird's boys have will clash at 6 o'clock tOMOITOW heen going like a house afire of late afternoon qn Riverside diamond and with one of the finest pitching {staffs in amateur ranks, they have aggregation {more than an even chance to nab won twice over Atkins Saws Sunday, (the top spot. Baird has his choice

Wins Support Wayne Timberman, Indianapolis pro, won support to repeat his open victory in 1940 by carding a 65 and leading a foursome to a best-ball 63 yesterday. Timberman was hitting his iron shots crisply. Another former tournament champion, veteran John Watson of South .| Bend, was on hand for another try for the crown. He did not participate in the pro-amateur event! yesterday. The field of some 95 golfers play 18-hole rounds today and tomorrow and wind up with two rounds on Thursday, to complete the tourna-

{has

intensified their interest in the game, officials of the Indianapolis Speedrome believe, General

Manager Ted Everroade announced | National had a 28-12 record in 1935|win over the Red Sox which they

this morning that 15 drivers already have completed registration for Fri. day night's opening card.

and “Swede” Carpenter who fin-

ished one-two in the 1942 cham- | three-hit shutout to win the opener, |Howie Pollet left for military servpionship standings, there will pe!7 to 0, and Alex Carrasquel essayed{ic in 1943 when he blanked

half a dozen new comers. First “war-product” racer will be

| 35 wins, with a 25-10 record in 1932,

{31-4 in 1931, and 28-5 in 1930. Dean with the Cardinals in the]

and -a 30-7 mark in 1934, |

The Washington Senators re-! | mained a game and a half behind

former Open Champion Bill Reed of| In addition td “Lucky” Purnel} | the Tigers by winning two at Cleve- (became the first St. Louis pitcher to

land. Marino Pieretti pitched a

|another fine starting role with a |6-to-0 seven-hitter in the second

| sewed up with a seven-run rally in

Bill Brereton’s newly built job. The! San Diego, Cal, driver has rebuilt a regular four-cylinder jeep motor and local fans are anxious to see just how much speed the West coast pilot will be able to get out of the widely publicized G. I. crea- | i tion. | Another state welterweight title | Other early entries included Al collision, with the same principals! Momenee of Toledo, O.; Henry crossing gloves, will feature boxing Schlosser of Cincinnati, O. and|action at the outdoor Sports Arena | Don Turner of Lexington, Ky. Other | Thursday night when Bob Simmons | Hoosiers who have completed regis- and Sparky Reynelds, top-ranking| tration requirements are Bob Breed- | local welters, square off in a 12-!

Reynolds Earns Return Match On Showing in First Title Scrap

ing, LeRoy Warriner, Bob Wilson,

hitter in the big ninth, The Browns continued their “hot streak” ‘at St. Louis with a 10-to-6

[National league in exchange for five players. O'Neil, considered one of the best shortstops in the Pacific Coast league, will remain with the Beavers until the end of the season before reporting back east in the spring.

the second.

Ken Burkhardt, Cardinal roskie]

mmm

000 P00 00000000

hurl three straight shutouts since | the ® Braves at Boston, 2-to-0.

Chicago's lead in the National

Although other title aspirants are

the commission as one of the outstanding logical contenders and the rugged little 143-pounder earned

clamoring for a shot at Simmons, | IIs Reynolds has been designated by d ®

Harold, both teams wound up their Gatti and Carl Rearick for mound {duty, while Clif Ayres will rely on

victories and four defeats.

his ace, Wilson Owen.

ment.

Roy Lyden, Les Adair and Charles Polk.

ther chance after his showing in| rounder. wot janoL 2 | Simmons was recognized by the | the first of a series of title battles

. |in all weight divisions being planned! thletic Ss a us y W. N. (Newt) Ringer, secretary

{state commission

fe eng

Hoosier kingpin of the 147-pound

and Fox - Hunt |

If past records meant anything, the Allison nine would be conceded an edge in tomorrow's encounter, for they hold a 2-1 margin over their East side opponents in pre-

With many fans eying the Mal-

the game will give them an opportunity to verify or reverse their convictions. —B. H.

Longson Tops |Angott Is Held

Arena Show To 10-Round Draw

The “Wild Bill” Longson-Ray! PITTSBURGH, Aug. 21 (U. P.)— Eckert heavyweight mat title bout| The comeback hopes of former {Lightweight Champion Sammy Anlast esda, ecau fi po puss J SL : oy Jao were dimmed today after he

2 Iwas held to a draw by youngster night at outdoor Sports Arena. |Gene Burton of New York in a 10It is an all-heavyweight program, 4 bout at Forbes field.

of three bouts with action to begin] . 4 { Burton was the aggressor all the Stim whe Flows mall » Banat way, giving Angott a steady ration ny and Ralph Gar Of >%lof left hooks and jabs. Angott’s Louis meet in a one-fall tussle. The! i bg ne Iall. 1 comeback in the last four rounds ) |saved him from defeat. Burton Orleans and Rudy Strongberg of | weighed 139, Angott 142.

Milwaukee. —— i ———————— 12000 Are Invited

Eckert, who is from California, Mo., is rated near the top in| To Enter Tourney PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 21 (U, P)

heavyweight circles and is expected | to extend Longson in tonight's tus- | sle which is for two falls out of] three. “Wild Bill” is from Salt | Lake City.

chased for the show a week ago Portland open golf tournament.

will be good for tonight's bouts, 'DiMag In Hospital

(U. P.).—S. Sgt. Joe Diamaggio was| {awaiting today the okay of army | medicos to leave a convalescent hos-

teur golfers.

{stomach ailment,

the New York Yankees. telub,

Baseball Calendar

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | Louisville ..

Pet. | St. Paul 608 592 Coffman, Kelly and Narron.

INDIANAPOLIS Milwaukee Louisville St. Paul Minneapolis Toledo ‘ | Columbus .e . | Kansas City ......

565 _- 481 | Toledo 461 [Milwaukee 100 000 31x— 5 15 457 Pavlick, Knierim and Crandall; 415 and Padden, A13

Cardon

AMERICAN LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE . 020 310 000— 6 11

| Boston Pet. | St. Louis 580 O'Neill, Barrett, Hausmann and Steiner .566 Holm, Shirley, Zoldak, Mancuso, Schultz,

527

Detroit Washington {Chicago | Cleveland S18 !St. Louis vars. BY 518 | Washington New York ST veal 5 500 | Cleveland 000 000 000— 0 3 Boston 465 Pieretti and Ferrell; Philadelphia .321 Desautels,

“(First Game)

Jus. (Second Game) NATIONAL LEAGUE : w

Washington . 001 400 100 6 Cleveland 000 000 000 0 7 Carrasquel and Evans; Gromek, Salve son and Hayes.

11 Pet. ? 655 Hob A563 S38 | 513 Philadelphia 454 Detroit 390% Bowles and Rosar; 206 Ards.

Chicago St. Louis Brooklyn New York Pittshargh Boston Cincinnati

Philadelphia

(First Game) . 000 000 00 0 100 000 03x 4 ! Newhouser and Rich

» i

(Second Game) Philadelphia 000 100 000 1 Detroit 10 100 Dix 4 Flores and George; Mueller and Swift,

| SCHEDULE TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | INDIANAPOLIS at St. Paul (night), | Louisville at Minneapolis (night). | Toledo at Kansas City (might) { Columbus at Milwaukee (2, night).

New York .... . 000 000 DM 4 10 Chicago . 001 600 000 1 11 Dublel, Turner and Drescher; Caldwel and Tresh.

AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Chicago (2). “ Boston at St. Louis (2, night), Philadelphia at Detroit (2). Washington at Cleveland.

Cincinnati Philadelphia . Kennedy and Andrews.

Lakeman; Schanz

“ ¥Chieago “|New York .. “ Wyse, Erickson Lourbardi, Klutts

NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago at New York, St. Louis at Beston, Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. . Cincinnati at Philadelphia (night),

RESULTS YESTERDAY _ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus poesia 000 000 000 0 3 0 Kansas City '..... 000 002 20x— 4 10 © Brock, Lowery, Strommem and Bucha; Orphal and Crompton.

Pittsburgh .. Brooklyn . . Roe and Lopez; tonio, Sandlock.

St. Louis ...,... Boston ......... Burkhardt and and Masi.

ROOFING LY & SIDING

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——

lory boys as possible city champions,

.| Bobby Jones’

{timing wasn't as sharp as usual. A

|—Two thousand professional and amateur golfers have been invited | It is announced that tickets pur- (lO enter the second annual $14,333

Robert A. Hudson, sponsor of the event, said that entry blanks had {been mailed to 1500 members of the | Professional Golfers’ association as ST. PETERSBURG, Fla, Aug. 21 well as to a select group of 50 ama-

Many of the nation's golf great will participate in the west’s richest | pital, where he is recovering from a tournament, which will be played so he can rejoin|Sept. 27 to 30 at the Portland Golf

. 602 621.0112 20 O 002 040 000— 6 9 3 Callahan, Simonds and Walters; Weaver,

100 100 600 2 11 1

2 071 200 00x—10 9 1

. 020 041 000— 7 8&8 ©

Center and Hayes,

o| Was three over par with a makeshift

100 000 020 8 8 2 010 000 021— 4 9 1 and

000 100 020-~ 3 8 0 coo 008 001 50x— 9 14 2 and Gillespie; Mungo and « 301 110 005-11 12 }

Seats, Herring and An-

coves 100 010 000-2 8 1 000 000 1 O'Dea; Wright, Singleton

CHICAGO, Aug. 21 (U. P)—A| freckle-face young lady from | hometown, Louise | Suggs of Atlanta (Ga.), was the same kind of a threat in the Wom. | en's Western amateur gold tourna-| ment today as the “Old Master” | used to be two decades ago when | he started his sensational winning | streak. The strength of Jones’ game was | his driver and putter, “Calamity Jane.” And Miss Suggs’ mastery of those two clubs is what makes the 21-year-old Georgia miss such an outstanding threat as the open-

The only Indianapolis entrant to qualify in the Women’s Western amateur was City Champion Alice O'Neal who posted an 86 yesterday, Miss O'Neal was due

to oppose Phyllis Otto of Atlantic, Ia, in today’s first round of match play.

ing round of match play in the Women's Western amateur gets under way over the Knollwood club course. Miss Suggs, duration Southern amateur queen, is an odd-on favorite to eliminate Rena Nelson of Chicago. in her match today on the basis of the record-shattering 73 she fired yesterday, giving her medal honors among the 32 who qualified.

Sets New Record

Miss Suggs’ blistering 38-35 round set a new all-time qualifying mark for the tou and

set a new course record for the tough, 6700-yard Knollwood layout. Both previous records were 74s. It was one of the greatest 18hole scores in feminine amateur tigolf records and it left such bigname stars as Defending Champion Dorothy Germain of * Philadelphia and Mrs. Babe Didrikson Zaharias of Los Angeles far in the lurch. |All well-known _ players, however,

Louise Suggs Sets Record In Qualifying for Western

crowned | | |

|

of the state body. | Matchmaker Lloyd Carter of the Hercules Athletic club is planning a strong supporting cast which will include four additional bouts and already has signed Leroy Scales, promising young Chicago middleweight, to battle Arnold Deer of Indianapolis, in one of two sixround scraps on the bill. Carter]

|also has arranged a featherweight!

tilt which will pit Perk Glenn of! Muncie against Rocky Protaine, | local feather, who will be making his first start here. ! An opening four-rounder sends! Mike McKessick against Al Jackson | of Chicago. They are welters.

| |

NTTLLS al

PITTSBURGH~Gene Burton, York, drew with Sammy Washington, Pa. (10)

139, Angott,

New 142

WEST SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — George Henry, 153, New Bedford, Mass, out-| pointed Cocoa Kid, 185, New Haven, | Conn. (10) |

168, | 16313,

NEW YORK -— Georgie Kochan, Akron, O., stopped Joe Reddick, Paterson, N. J. (4).

WASHINGTON — Willie Joyce, 13614, | Gary, Ind, outpointed Morris Reif, 144, Brooklyn (10). {

qualified. Miss German, bidding for her | 2| third consecutive title, posted a| 38-40—78 to take fourth place behind two veteran Iowans, Ann! ?| Casey of Mason City and Phyllis! -|Otto of Atlantic, who tied for segond with 76s. | | Mrs. Zaharias slipped to an 80! 1lto tie for fifth with Jean Hopkins! -{of Cleveland, O. “The Babe,” | Women’s Western Open champion |

+ {the past two seasons and heavy, fa6 0!

(vorite to win her first W. W. G, A. {amateur title in this tournament, 1| collection of borrowed clubs, She lost her set last week and her failure to master an unfamiliar putter damaged her play yesterday. Miss Suggs was just the opposite, stroking a putter which wouldn't miss. , 8he covered the first nine

enc ics tt

AH

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Practice Called

Terre Haute Wins

Terre Haute won the Class A division of the state junior baseball | tourney yesterday at Riverside, beating the Brookside Spartans, 11- | 3. Class B and C titles will be de-|

division three weeks ago when he! | Pennsylvania st. “punch bowl.” The {saw Sparky winning by a slight] birdies and a hogie for a 35, four the nod by a shade. one-putted each of the holes she| Proved the margin of victory. Tom | 2 ® | . By Mrs. Swiggett Is Film Player It was announced last night by |tional Football league are in for a sociation, that Gene Holmes, presi- Halfback Bob Waterfield, late of | the Rams and. professionally Mrs. June Swiggett, vice president. motion picture, “The Outlaw.” known in pin circles and is secretary pointed by Mrs. Swiggett in the near To Re-Enter League enter the National Basketball All former Kautsky players, and [Chicago (1). sky Athletic club, 535 8. Illinois teams here every week, besides the | * 1 " cided next “Saturday. diate installation

hammered out a 10-round split ver-| dict over Reynolds at the North | (milling was so close that one judge! in even-par 38 and then came blaz- | Margin while the other judge and ing in on the back nine with five [veferee Dick Patton gave Simmons under, It was her putter which| A Tally by the newly shattered the records because she|Ccampion in the final two sessions birdied, capping her spree by sink- | “€€Per, who manages the challenger, | ing a 10-footer on the 18th {asked for a rematch at 12 rounds) . {and believes his mauler will turn] T . the tables over the longer route. npin Post Taken griggers wire —| enpin Fost Laken Gridader's Wife | CLEVELAND, Aug. 21 (U, P).— {The Cleveland Rams of the NaFrances Snyder, secretary of the(large dose of glamour whether Indianapolis Women’s Bowling as-|they’re aware of it or not. dent of th U. C. L. A, plans to bring his wife! e O € organization, had re-|east with him when he reports to| signed and has been succeeded by W. is known as Jane Russell, the Miss Holmes, in resigning, ex-|Willowy heroine of Howard Hughes’| plained that her employment would | cause her absence from the city. Mrs, Swiggett, her successor, is well N S " FIGHT RESULTS of Ernest Johnson Coal Co. league. A new vice president will be apfuture. Local Team Plans The Indianapolis Kautsky’s professional basketball team will releague after being out of the cir- erp 167. Detret| y ’ as i‘ etrold, cuit for five years, ei OO EO ry Tal, fa Duo any other new players desiring try- | outs are requested to write Kaut-! st., call LI-1612 or phone Frank | FURNACES Kautsky at GA-0982 during the The Kautsky management aims to bring one or two National league Renaissance, Harlem Globe Trot- | : ters and other prominent teams, | NO PRIORITY You can get those famous Wil. liamson Furnaces now. Imme36 W. 10th St. LI-4438

DeWolf News will practice to-| morrow at 6 p. m, at Garfield Park. |

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Crutches, Invalid Walkers end Posture Beds

. Can Be Rented at

: Convenient Terms Tires loaned FREE ‘SPEEDROME | B:3 XTX IST v and State Road 52 | RI-3407 0 AON ON IL 0 A | 5 Diamonds, Watches, Cameras, : : LOANS ON EVERYTHING! we The CHICAGO %. ine. BUSINESS DIRECTORY ind Boll ERE CASE CLOTHES 115 E: Ohio St. —Fr. 1184 215 N. Senate Ave. Open 9 to 9 PEARSON'S 128 N. Penn. LL 5513 B A ND INSTRUMENTS RECORDS ® SHEET MUSIO RE-WEAVING or WORN SPOTS LEON TAILORING CO. 235 Mass, Ave, ' the Middle ot

Kitiey Ave. (6400 East) | Delaware at North St. Musical Instruments Oldest Loan ra E. WASHINGTON ST mma 18" 21> 24 INDIANA MUSIC CO. FURNITURE o PIANOS of MOTH HOLES-—~BURNS the First Block

DIAMONDS, WATCHES ~ JEWELRY, CAMERAS, ETC.

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