Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1946 — Page 8

| Present Pace Is

By J. E.

nless the three-a-day qualifying pace at the Speedway quickens, it] i th the whiz-wagons still will be running time trials at tel

track-scrubbing hour on race eve, Three. qualifying periods have ers—which are just half as many

Speedway officials have reserved the hours from noon to 7:30 p. m. tomorrow and also have designated next Saturday and Sunday and the following Wednesday as qualification dates. But obviously this schedule will have to.be augmented unless there's a wholesale recovery among the ailing engines in Gasoline Alley. These blank spaces in the starting array again poses the question of whether a full fleld of 33 will take southpaw Seth Klein's green flag on May 30. Maybe not. Yet an unofficial recapitulation reveals | that - some 33 cars already have operated on the raceway - under sheir own power, and another six or ‘seven have registered in the | garages or wired for reservations. | Average Speed Down The avefage speed of the first three rows of qualifiers this year is several miles below the pace set by the first nine qualifiers in 1941.

agons May Be Running

. At Track-Serubbing Time if

the first two qualifying sessions back in 1941 : |

| year more or less as a scout and |

nal Qualifying

For Sad Om AR

THE INDIAN.

Ra Bac a ack Ea

\POLIS TIMES .

Days May Be |

ul s

“TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1946 |

ecessary For 500

Continued

produced nine Memorial day start-| as gained .spots .in the lineup in » » » THE PROMISED international flavor is about to be added to the Speedway stew. Robert M. W. Arbuthnot, the English sportsman, re- | vealed yesterday that his car is due| out of surgery today and will be on | the track Thursday. | Smashed in a highway accident en route to the track, the car has been given a new rear axle donated | by an Akron firm and its other mangled parts have been reworked. Arbuthnot said he was here this |

that he planned to return next year with a faster set of wheels. Thirtytwo years old and a 14-year racing veteran, Arbuthnot is a stanch supporter of bachelorhood. He vows | that marriage and racing don't] mix, |

» = ” i THE THREE Maseratis being shipped from Italy were due in Boston today on the S. S. John Clark. They will come directly to Indian-|

In that year the average was 125.042, | as compared to 122.944 this season.) The missing miles per hour can| be lained in a couple of ways. Firsts, the brick and blacktop have grown bumps and lost the so-called | groove in half a decade. Then | there's the absence to date of the)

Jead-footed boys like Rex Mays and :

Mauri Rose, As far as the cars themselves are concerned, some have lost a little oomph and others have found | a little, Cliff Bergere’s pole-winning | Noc-Out Hose Clamp Special, for | example, was qualified nearly three miles an hour faster this time than | before the war. And the 16-cylinder | Spike Jones Special carrying Sam] Hanks rolled through the time test last Saturday more than a mile an hour faster than ‘it did when it was qualified with a sneezing engine “in 1941. On the other hand, the Boyle Maserati that Ted Horn qualified | yesterday made the: 10-mile sprint

| i

almost four miles an hour slower | than its previous average, and the same was true of the Marchese Spe- | cial, with Tony Bettenhausen up. " » n SOMEHOW A certain amount of tension always precedes a qualifi-| cation trial. The crew finally de-| cides its car is right, and it's shoved

men swarm over it and three-A officials make a final check as the captain of the team briefs the pilot. The whole procedure is a bit hard on nerves, But you never saw a more non-

surrounding Duke Dinsmore when he brought up the four-cylinder Johnston Special yesterday as a qualifying customer, The tire and three-A men naturally made their checks. But the Johnston crew didn't as much as loosen a hood strap. A sparkplug representative was assured the sparkplugs needed no inspection, and Dinsmore said he didn’t even care to be shown his speed on the usual blackboard. His 123279 clip through the four laps was fairly convincing that such an attitude may be the best. » » o TONY BETTENHAUSEN is convinced that nine is his lucky number, so he was highly pleased at winning the No. 9 spot in the race lineup on his qualifying speed of 121.860 in the eight-cylinder Marchese Special, Immediately after the successful trial, Carl and Tudi Marchese, the two brother-owners of the car, loaded it into a trailer for a trip to Milwaukee, Their mother reportedly is on her deathbed there, and they want to be near her as they make final adjustments on the automobile, » » » TED HORN’S qualifying run in the eight-cylinder Boyle Maserati was the least publicized of the season, He turned a couple of laps to warm the engine; Cotton Henning okehed its sound, and they were off to the starting stand, On his first lap, Horn accepted the green flag and some four minutes later

th

{trouble that bothered all the | Hamilton, who won the P.G. | French drivers throughout the dan-|in 1944, was winner of -the Char-| gerous, exciting race . . ito | agreed that the taking of the Grand | Masters’ tourney. He is eighth on {Prix by Villoresi of the Maserati |

to the starting line. Firestone tire

chalant garage family than that/about with all that work in your |

apolis on a bonded express car, The quality of Italian racing ep- |

- Casters Plan Tourney Next.Sunday |

Wilbur Brooks gets in a little practice with his fl yrod while other members of the committee in charge | of the L. Strauss & Co. bait casting tournament wat ch his performance at the Riverside park state fish hatcheries, where the tourney will be held Sunday. Grouped around the platform (left to right) are Ollie Baus, C. W. Flynn, Al Westbrook, Rex Edwards and Harry Sutphin.

gines is borne out in a United Press “The recent revival of international motor racing in the Grand E GC 1] happened to Italy militarily in the | 3 last few years, she is still a dom-| NEW YORK, May 21 (U.P).— “Not only did the Italians , , . mer P.G.A. champions, accepted invitations today to compete in the but they proved during the race ment at Winged Foot Country club, at these were more dependable. |bringing ‘the number of entries

Title Scrap

Fox Seeking

PHILADELPHIA, May 21 (U. P.). —Blackjack Billy Fox, having] evaded defeat by scoring his 39th] straight knockout, was negotiating| today for a title fight with light heavyweight champion Gus Lesne-| vich in July.

dispatch today from Paris, which = 4 "The. recon Bob Hamilton Prix de Nice showed French sports fans . . . that whatever may have inating (figure in automobile speed Bob Hamilton, formerly of Evanscontests. . | ville, Ind., and ‘Vig Ghezzi, two forhave faster machines—they drove | both Maseratis and Alfa Romeos— | $10,000 Goodall round-robin tournaHardly any of the engine and body | to 10. A

. occurred |lotte, N.C., open. tournament this)

the Italians. Most observers|season and finished third in the]

team. was not only a personal tri- total of $4075 in prizes. umph but one for the Italian motor | = Ghezzi, consistently in the money | industry also.” {during the winter golf tour, has] 2m =» {collected $3981 this season for! YOU WOULDN'T have thought ninth place among the game's Joe Lencki had two cars torn down leading money’ winners. He cap-| when he came, all grins, to the tured the P/G A. title in 1941. starting stand yesterday afternoon.| Already entered in the Goodall Behind him he carried one of those event, which will be held in| model gasoline-engine racers. Mamaroneck, N.Y, May 30 to “I'm ready to qualify,” he told June 2, are Byron Nelson, Ben Ho- | AAA officials. “Since I couldn't 82n, Sam Snead, Jimmy Demaret, get either of the big cars ready, 1 Herman Keiser, Lloyd Mangrum, | decided to run the pup. And it has! Harold McSpaden and Dick Burton, (been clocked at 120 on a tenth. ! British open champion. {mile track.” | “How can you

COLLEGE BASEBALL Purdue 6, Miami 4. Butler th, Zadaen Poitponed) : 9 “" Great es aval aining Station garage somebody asked. Are | rthwestern University 0 (called after you just an executive down there?”

|seven Innings, rain). . “No;” Lencki shot back. | James Millikin 5, Illinois Wesleyan 0, night shift.”

find time to gad|

“I'm the | Army 5. Fordham 1 Wake Forest 4, North Carolina 1, ' Princeton 1-3, Cornell 0-0.

Pin Season Is Wrapped Up,

By BERNARD HARMON The 1945-46 bowling season may have terminated with the completion of the various league schedules, but there is plenty of activity {still in store for local feminine pastimers, First of all they are going to decide the winner of the team championship of their recent city tournament, It's not going to be decided jon any bowling alley, but in a meeting of the executive: committee of the Indianapolis Women's Bowling S———————— association in the Lincoln Hotel Sunday afternoon at 3:30. | At the termination of their city meet, Hoosier Coal and Oil Co. was declared champion on the basis of (its 2601 series. But the use of {an alleged ineligible bowler in the team's lineup brought about a meeting of the women's executive committee, which through a vote of 29-1, disqualified the Coal quintet. The Hoosiers, who claimed to!

members of unsanctioned loops. In the meantime the tourney prize awards, along with prize funds of several leagues, are being held up awaiting a deeision. While the “legal” battle is being waged, the women. will be looking forward to a pair of tournaments that will put them back into action on the mapleways. The first annual Spéedway classic, a scratch singls tourney, will be

{have had the “go sign” on the al-| conducted at the Parkway alleys |leged violator, appealed their case| june 1.2.

to the Women's International Bowl- Mid-Western {ing congress, and asked for a de- | cision in the national body's recent {annual meeting, But now it is right back in the laps of the local ‘executive board. Frances Snyder, association secre(tary, received a letter from national headquarters yesterday advising her to re-open the case and give the!

cities will bring to the city some of the nation's top ranking women bowlers. It has been announced by the tournament management that one | squad is being formed to roll next Sunday at 8:30 p, m., oné week prior to the meet's official opening. This squad was added to accom-

But Title Still Is in Doubt

Entrants’ from many!

Unbeaten Fox, 20-year-old Phila-/ delphia Negro, stretched his sensa- | tional kayo string to 39 last night) by knocking out rugged Ossie (Bull-|

Martin-Knox Top |

Wrestling Bill

Wayne Martin, a junior heavy- | weight, will attempt to outmaneuver the “unbeatable” Buddy Knox| in tonight's wrestling headliner at!

the Armory. Knox, who is seeking his eighth consecutive Armory victory and is out of Tulsa, has tossed such for-

midable opponents as Steve Nenoff,

Farmer Jones, Rene La Belle and Same of the idle Cardinals in the

dog) Harris of Pittsburgh at 57 sec-| Ali Pasha,

onds of the 10th round before 9937 fans in Convention hall.

much harder puncher.

Denson Signed

On ‘Star’ Bill

A third 10-round feature has been added to the all-star pro mitt program on tap for May 29 at the fairgrounds Coliseum with the signing of Johnny Denson, 195-pound Indianapolis puncher and fermer state | heavyweight titleholder, and Clay(ton Worlds, 194, of Chicago. | Matchmaker Lloyd Carter is set now with the three “top tens” and only prelim spots on the big card {remain to be filled. Worlds and Denson will be meet-! ing for the third time when they clash here on race eve. Worlds | racked up a shade decision over {the tall Hoosier at St. Paul about | three months ago. They collided again recently at the Armory and battled to a 10<round draw. The other 10 rounders will pit Abel Cestac, 225-pound South

|

American heavyweight, against Jack A Nelson Marks and K. Cowan of .In- ference, which has yet to play its

(Buddy) Walker of Columbus, O., in the main feature, and Willard Reed. 195-pound Indiana state heavyweight champion, against Clarence Brown, of Detroit. Cathedral Posts Another Victory Paul O'Connell held ‘the Sacred Heart high school nine to one hit and struck out 12 as Cathedral turned in an easy 13-1 victory at Riverside “park ¢ vesterday. Jim Doyle paced the winner's nine-hit attack with a double and single. It was Cathedral's fourth victory in five starts,

ar tin July, G AB R H Pct. AL coca y=} | er iar ip——— Musial, St Louis .....26 103 21 40 383) y Walker, Brooklyn .. 5 . Bat Cham Sold y Cavaretta, Chicago ....26 94 25 35 372) L arons cquire | Reese, Brooklyn +g oN 3 32 3% MILWAUKEE, May 21. —Lew 1 : { Herman, Brooklyn ... ; Flick, outfielder, the American as- Pittsburgh Goalie AMERICAN LEAGUE, . sociation’s 1945 batting champion,| CLEVELAND, May 21 (U. P.).— vernon, Washingtan ..23 95 19 3 20 last night was sold by Milwaukee The Cléveland Barons of the Lodigiani, Chicago 19 J a 2 388 to Little Rock of the Southern! American Hockey league today pur- | Pesky, Boston . 31 132 3 “ 371 . . | nit association. He batted .374 last chased Goalie Roger Bessette and | APPnE. NE RUNS year, His average this year was 259. two high-scoring right wingers {rom | pizaggio, Yanks 8 Mize, Giants i or the Pittsburgh Hornets. | Keiler, —¥anks 7-Keitner, Indians = 6

Ripple Nine Wins

|of any wrestler in the junior heavy- | weight division. two falls out of three.

Martin, a rugged and speedy

a : | |grappler and a favorite with Indi- | | Fox scaled 167'4 pounds to Ossie's/anapolis fans, is from Hollywood, | He list of Toney Wihue’s with 81166, was taller and rangier and a Cal. He has one of the best records

The bout is for|

Indio Yaqui, Mexico, opposes Joe

Kajot, Montreal, in the opener and | Buck Lipscomb, Indianapolis, meets| {Jackie the semi-windup.

Nichols, Portland, Me, ‘in

| jeur Golf Teams Play Tie

NOBLESVILLE, Ind. May 21. — In a field of 144 players, teams led | by professionals Floyd Hamblen, Tipton, and Tommy Vaughn, In-| dianapolis’ Pleasant Run, shared] shared first and second place prizes| in a pro-amateur golf event staged | at Forest park course here vesterday after tying with best balls of 66, six under par. Hamblen's amateur partners were Warren McGaughey and W.! E.- Jackson of Crawfordsville, C.| Dickerson of Lapel and B. Funk,!

In Flag Race

, | Sox,

|

| Ken Keltner

{homer to account for all the Yankee

Senators Gain

More Respect

{ { | | NEW YORK, May¥#21 (U. P.).— | No one in Washington was getting {out of nylons or butter lines to | queue up for rid series seats today, yet the pi®8pects for the Senators getting into the big autumn show are a lot better than at this time a year ago. | That may seem strange in view jot the expected domination of the {American league race by the Red Yankees and perhaps the | Tigers. But right now the Senators are playlng the best ball in the {league with eight victories in their last: 10 games and what is more |important—they are doing it on the | road. | Currently, they are in fourth |place, a game and a half behind | Detroit and six and a half games |behind the leading Red Sox.

Lag at Start | The Senators lagged at the start of this season because’ pitching, their strongest department a year {ago, wasn't consistent. Now they |are ‘getting winning performances from at least ‘four moundsmen, { Roger Wolff, Walt Masterson, John | Niggeling; and Emi] (Dutch) Leonard.

"Hen Slugger

Jerry Witte, first sacker, is Toledo’s top hitter. . . . He’s belted 11 homers and is batting .358. ...

The big fellow is in town with the Mud Hens to oppose the Indians at Victory field tonight.

Four Sandlot Games Billed

The Twilight amateur baseball loop will swing into its second evening of activity on Riverside park

|

| Leonard, backed by 10-hit support, topped the White Sox at

Chicago, 10 to 2, yesterday for his | |fourth straight victory without a| Cutting capers in the Sunday City

loss.

of the

ninth, delivered the one that counted, a smash over the right field wall that produced a 4-to-3 victory. Etten also got a second inning

runs off Steve Gromek, who won his second game. It was Cleveland's first victory over the visiting Yanks since Bob Feller stopped them with a no-hitter, Dodgers Gain Second

The Dodgers moved within a half

National league with a 4-to-3 night victory over Cincinnati at Brooklyn. It was achieved-on little Vic Lombardi’s steady six-hit pitching, a homer by first baseman Ed Stevens, and some shaky fielding by! the Reds which set up the other Dodger tallies, It was Lombardi's

Indians, draw with De Wolf News in their drawing inspiration from successive | Twilight opener last week, is slated | homers by Nick Etten and Bil to face the St. Roch nine on dia- | American association in club bate

|

Dickey in the Yankee half of the Mond No. 1. | |

diamonds tomorrow night with a four-game schedule. Eagles Lodge, the team that is

league, but could do no better than

The Roch’s came into prominence | in last week's lid-lifter, when Joe Buergler turned in .a no-hit per- | formance against the Union Print-| ers.

Play Cleaners | Kingan Reliables, turned back by P. R. Mallory in their initial midweek test last Wednesday, but winner of three consecutive Municipal tilts, clashes with Leonard Cleaners on diamond No. 2. The Clean- |

|

fifth victory. The Cubs made it two out of three over the Braves at Boston, | winning, 6 to 4, as Claude. Passeau |

| |

| pitched as well as he needed to and!

chipped in with a two-run homer | in the second that sent rival pitcher Morton Cooper out in defeat. {

Yesterday's “Star — Pitcher Claude Passeau of the Cubs, who | hit a homer and single and |

STANDINGS { W L Pet. P. R. Mallory +.cansvevensss 1 0 1.000) 8t. C'S vviiirsrneansisis 1_0 1000 VB Tires ....covovnvnnvnas 1-00 .000 | DeWolf News .. 0 0 .000 Eagles Lodge .... oo 0 .000 | Union Printers .. 9 1} 000 | Kingan Reliables ........... 1 .000 | | ers, who are having a tough time |

winning games, dropped a 3-2 deci-| sion to U. 8. Tires in their Twilight | appearance. De Wolf News plays Union Printers on diamond No. 3, and one of | the two teams should emerge with | its initial Wednesday victory. It's just the opposite on diamond No. 4

| where P. R. Mallory faces U. S.|

Tires. One of these aggregations may taste its first twilight defeat, |

{On Hard Foe—|

Indians Take |

Toledo's Here |

By EDDIE ASH Times Sports Editor

The Indianapolis Indians resume action on the home front tonight || after remaining idle yesterday as the result of an open date in their | schedule. | But the third-place Redskins | didn't lose any ground while taking a vacation. The second-place St, | Paul Saints split even in a double« } header at Milwaukee and firste | place Louisville was rained out. J The Indians are two games bee | hind the Colonels and Saints and only one-half game ahead of fourth- f place Toledo. Toledo is to furnish the visiting attraction at Victory | field tonight in the opener of a two-game series. The Mud Hens, like the Indians, also were idle yesterday. Game Is Sponsored The contest tonight is the first benefit attraction of the new sea son. The event is being sponsored by the Daughters ‘of Isabella and this charity organization will share in the receipts. The pass list is suspended for the night. Thus far this season the Mud Héns have edged the Indians three times in five clashes and Toledo Manager Don Gutteridge is doing all right in his first season at the helm. He has assembled an age gressive outfit that can hit the ball and the Hens are leading the

2

ting. The Hens also top the circuit in home runs, mainly because they picked up an amazing slugger in Jerry Witte, tall and powerful firss sacker who has walloped 11 round trippers in 30 games. He's also toting a batting average of .358.

Task for Tribe

Gutteridge also has some speed on his club and the Hens are only topped by Louisville and Kansas City in stolen bases. It all adds up to the fact thag the Indians will have to be at their best to turn back the pastimers from the banks of the Maumee in the series starting at 8:30 tonight. Either Glen Fletcher or Rex Cecil will get Manager Bill Bure well’s call to face the Mud Heng on the rubber and Skipper Gutteridge is expected to assign go southpaw, either Earl Jones or Clarence Iott. Tott is a strikeout artist, although wild, while Jones is the more seasoned and is built along rugged lines. The Indians’ current home stand continues through Friday, after which the home boys will hit the | road again for a long spell by play=-

pitched a seven-hit, 6-to-4 victory | All games, scheduled for seven ing all the way around the circuit,

over the Braves. :

innings, will be started at 5:30,

Plans Abandoned for 1946

Grid Loop in Association

CHICAGO, May 21 Rivalry between the 25-year-old National "football league and its]

league football for the 1946 season, but that they might do business!

Ken Foster and B. McKee, all of {new All-America rival today shifted [in 1947,

Indianapolis.

to the American association, which |

The conference was adjourned

Saints Score Shutout

In an A. A. double-header 14 Milwaukee last night, Al Sherer held the Brewers to four hits in the opener as the Saints won, 5-0, The Saints got all their runs in the first three innings. Catcher John Dantonio slammed a homer in the

(U, P).— to think about operating minor | second.

Three Brewer pitchers, Ewald Pyle, Wendell Davis and Jack Christensen, gave up 10 hits. In the tight afterpiece the Brew-

Vaughn was supported by Ama- oddly enough is a baseball league. with the idea of meeting again eg edged out the Saints, 3-2, with Officials of the All-America con- in the late fall and establishing a {oe Brewer runs coming in the

teurs Harold Cork, Don Anderson,

dianapolis'and Don Ross and B. J. Nuce of Anderson.

Columbus to Have Night Horse Races

COLUMBUS, Ind., May 21.—Night | the Bartholomew county fairground

track here this week with a four-| night stand beginning Thursday. |

first season, conferred with Associ-

view to setting up a long-range farm system in the form of a |Louisville. | strong midwest minor football] Before heading for home, the league. American association _ also con-

(strong minor league football circuit |thirq fifth and sixth. The Saints |in - Association cities—Minneapolis, |c,)jected their two runs, one in the {ation executives yesterday with a St. Paul, Milwaukee, Kansas City, i1irq and one in the sixth, on five | Toledo, Columbus, Indianapolis and |.attered hits.

Lloyd Dietz started on the mound for St. Paul but was relieved in the sixth by Avitus Himsl. Pitching

Out -of an- all-afternoon huddle ducted some baseball business. It ¢,. tne Brews were Epperly and running races will be introduced at came a joint statement by James voted to raise the player limit from ROSS.

All-America conference and ‘Roy Hamey,

president, in which

H. Crowley, commissioner, Association

20 to 22, thus giving club owners) an opportunity to retain excess| talent resulting from the return of’

Clarence Howe is superintendent in both agreed that it was too late many players from military service. |

charge of the races. | The local fair association recently placed a temporary ban on auto-|

| Major Leaders |

mobile racing at the track and is |

reserving horses until after the annual fair]

the oval exclusively for |

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Williams, Red Sox 7

£9 | By UNITED PRESS { i

Raceland Track | Opening Deferred

Reopening of Raceland midget speedway, scheduled for tomorrow! night, has been postponed. Robert McCabe of Muncie, who | took over the lease after Dick Miller | {and Lou Moore withdrew

front-line cars to provide close com- | petition necessitated the postpone- | ment. “We will not reopen Raceland until we can assure the public of the best in cars and drivers,” Mc-

. from | 400 | Raceland, said lack of sufficient]

—BASEBALL

VICTORY FIELD

Tonight 8:30 P. M.

Indianapolis vs. Toledo

DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA NIGHT For Reservations or Information Call Rl-ley 4488

FOR ALL

| |

’ Acquired with Bessette were Bob RUNS BATTED IN he was finished. local board h ity Mniate many local bowlers who | Walt nd Wendell Jamieson. The | Doerr. Red Sox 31 DiMaggio. Yanks 25 Cabe said. The loud speaker was silent, and . a Ro ROY SF OPROrRinity 10 will be at the National meet ®n Broad Ripple posted its fifth vie-| on a Dope bable fore. | Williams, R. Sox 30| York, Red Box 24| __ me items ’ : d the alleged infraction of Kansas City ’ onal | purchase of Bessette probably ~| Holmes, Braves 26 the Boyle crew didn't allow the ip, ansas City the following week- ¢ starts by defeating the the rules. : ad Ory In Six starts by S ed the retirement or, trad-| PITCHING ; grapevine time fo spread the word Sg f th Ayrshir 21: oul Jeservabions on. fhe spe Marfual baseball team yesterday, 4 ed es I oral soatie | Harris, Red Sox 7-0 Beggs, Reds 4-0 SANDERS TIRE CO. | WAYS * TO * BUY-— through the pits. fries tog , e fAvishire gol clal squad call WA-9977, to 1, on the Redskins’ field. Bili Foes Teno | Lanier, Cards 6-0 Leonard, Sen. 4-0) yw, 4rq the only tire deater in indian. || CASH, CHARGE, BUDGET Horn, incidentally, did the un- | 4 gn, JAdotie: alleged Vio=| Broad Ripple Bowl is also plan- Kidney held the South siders to SArvey 12 CN | Ferris, Red Sox 5-0 Apolis that guarantees used tires. Our | 1 by taki is | ‘ator of the ineligibility rule, will ning to entertain a host of keg- ; usual by ng his first and third also | , , 4} three hits, 5 oH Dali 4 Sund TIRE (of 0] laps at identical speeds of 124.206 also be aired by the board. Bowlers lerettes in a doubles meet, booked ; s pen 24 Hours Daily and Sundays A . » i . (involved are said to have been for June 1, 2,8 and 9 ase q q en qar 152 McLean Place TA-0746 | TI 1 . - — : AMATEURS Between 21st & 22d on N. [(llineis LER) |B 1d: . H 4 if y . LEAGUE STANDINGS lac pag. (BUCON Amel 0 oy yi mem ' 0 ey uaq | Ie or 500-Mile Classic poe Init a games of the Bush.Caliapsn AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Milwaukes pis Su Juss, dont ve aclory so all league ax schedule y | n r 3 v, t intel gt tonigk he NV. L. Pet WwW. L. Pet Dietz, Himsl an Pp ' First R yy Riki Jpener, 3 ‘Tires ingle wih] Louis 19 12 613 Minn c 18 18 Au and Heath. lire — 1 a is n § 9 600 Kan. 4 I S—————— CLIFF BERG ] a | Bey at A rs Mailory A Ww SkDPLS 1 12 356 Mil. 11 17 .393 Columbus at Louisville, postponed, wet SERE PAUL RUSSO | SAM HANKS | ces Naval Ordnance al 9.40. League Toledo . 18 14 ,533 Col 11 19 .367 | grounds, Y a | [1 (Noc-Out Hose Clamp Special) | (Fageol Twin Coach Special) (8 officials are Arnold Preas president; ud | AMERICAN LEAGUE me gaa —— oh Special Spike Jones Special) ' Carver, vice president, and Carl C. Calla-| (Only g Ew "J = | Lap Time MPH Lap Time MPH La Th han, secietary-treasurer W. L. Pet L. Pet. | A 3 LE : 1 1:11.01 126.743 1 1:10.67 127 352 1 P 1 Hs rH Tad he Em. | Botten 25 1 181 Bt Louls i 18 41 AMERICAN LEAGUE dy AUD “hy ALD 49. Three es are schedule n the Em-| Now York 20 12 .625 Cleve BS " " 2 1:11.14 126.511 2 1:10.97 126.814 2 1:12.17 126 15 Roe Civic league at the Beech Grove Detroit 18 13 .581| Chicago 9 19 .321 | Washington . 032 se 03-19 it : . 3 1:11.75 125.436. 3 £10 26. 112, 124.706 siadium tonight, H. P, Wasosn & Co. plays | wash, 16 13 .562| Phila. 9 22 .200 | Chicago aud Bary’ ia " 4 1:10.75 127. 3 1:10.66 127.3713 1:12.96 123.694 Arthur Jordan Conservatory at 71: Wi, NATIONAL LEAGUE rR en i : : = n : «10 208 4 1:13.00 f [H. Block Co. meets Chrysler Airiemp a ’ Total—4:44.65 { hoy 123.288 4 1:12.47 124.189| 3.15 and Paper Package Co. clashes with Ww. L. Pct WwW. L. Pet. m— 05 003. 3 10.0! TONIGHT MAY 21 126.471 | Total—4:45.30 126.183 Total—4:48.55 124.762 | Veterans Administration at 9:20. St. Louis 17 9 .654 Cinn. 13 12.520 | New pork trarsari 330 008 00-3 13-8 ' ’ [3 (ain, an, uignty a2 ih-Callahes Briiyn 17 19 830 New York a 3 433 Cigveland Marshall ""wWade, Gettel, Zuber i City league openers at Municipal, rel! chicago 15 11 577] Pitts, dy { ‘ ag lek nd Hayes, "Hegan. | 3 ty —Sec — Machi yver Insley Manufacturing, 13 538 Phila. 6 19 .240 | and Dickey; Gromek a | ond Row 8-6: Deane g Lornaterr pre Boaton 19 he Ah neduled ) | HAL COLE JIM | Only games scheduled MMY JACKSON LOUIS DURANT | Capital Paper, 5-1, and Lincoln Chiroprac- Ee . (Only 8 . ; i (Don Lee Special) | (Jackso tors noséd, pout Mitchel-8cott, 9-8 SCHEDULE TODAY os a | 45 Cars Have Signed Entry Blanks Lap ; Time MPH | Lap R Special (Alfa Romeo Special) ———————————————— AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ,. NATIONAL LEAGUE : Big Parade of All Cars—8:15 * me MPH | Lap Time MPH . ol INDIANAPOLIS (8:30 p.%h.). Ciocinnatl .......... 100 010 010— 3 6 4 : . 1:14.68 ) . : { h Toledo At du + Ky 110 200 00x-- 4 17 1 . . . » . . . : 1:14.52 im 110 130.64311 1:13.56 , 118.111} Fig t Results Gs at LO drt |B Waiters, Hetki and Lamanno; Lombardi f First Race 8:30 and Will Continue in Rapid Fire : 1:14.94 120.006 | 3 1:15.03 119.592 2 1:15.41 119.348 | By UNITED PRESS Minneapolis at Kansas City (night), |and Anderson, i LE No events will be run with less than 8 cars. 14 Cars in 1:14.05 121.540 ie 120.563 3 1:15.50 119.203 PHILADELPHIA Blackjack - Billy Fox AMERICAN LEAGUE CRICRED oi vriseiars 330 000 001 6 11 1 25-Lap Feature. This new streamlined racing program ella 350 Al SS Hons 4 bor Liie12 18234 | 167} pERliadeiphia, knocked out il Boston aj Detroit. Boston .1J 0c 200 00 Livingston; will bring to you roeing every minute at the Speedrome xR) : ' 58 | : y } | olal—5:02. 13.93) NEWARK, N. J.-Maxis Shapiro, 133%, Philadelphia at St. Louis (night). Cooper, Wright, Posedel and Hofferth, tonight and every Tues ay Night. i ; «Third Row | Now York, outpointed Frankie Leta, 137'a,| Only games scheduled. (Only games scheduled.) ; . DUKE DINSMORE TONY DETTENBAUSEN. | ron trim Aun. Farer it NATIONAL LEAGUE — —— Gates Open, 6:30—Race, 8:30 sh N 3 aron erry, klyn. x : (Johnston Special) | Washington, knocked out Bes Bee’ Wash- ey M ig York. | Sealed Beam Fog SANCTIONING BY C. M. R. A. Spe (Marchese Special) | ington, 158, Washington (9), 8t. Louis at Philadelphia, i d Driving Lights | ~~ MPH [Lap Time MPH | Lap Time MPH | CINCINNATI Willie Russell, (134, Co-| Only games scheduled. ah Hy g E : KITLEY AVENUE 66 E t © 124.2061 1:13.37 12 1 lumbus, ©, knocked out Art Price, 135, | : pee ; (} Universal Bracket $3 29 U. S. ROAD 52 ( 00 as ) 2237482 1133 2.666, 1 1:13.72 122.084 | Detroit’ (4). - RESULTS YESTERDAY 5 ven most vars ie... nL . 206(3 rim el aR | os tie srupiee Tour maria 3h! . AMERICAN AssoviATiON | BLUE POINT ure Free Parking—General Admission > | san bpd 13.90 - . Blue Island, Nl, (2), y : : i - ’ oh ; : ta TI2B9 12344) 4 IAM © 12028] PITTSBURGH: iar Charter. 111. Slides 0 300 Mo 03 oI] Drleare. Madison and Top ik : 85¢c Tax Paid . y Total—4:52.02 123.279 Total—4:55.42 121.860 Sineinthatl, Sulpointed Archie Moore, iM,| Sherer and Dantonio; Pyle, Davis, | elaware, : . . a ‘ 0 Je ristensen an eath, " Eo Liiiohe : ’ ~ \ . : 7 iw > wii : EY ¥ . = ~ al . ’ .i . iv ; : 8

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