Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1946 — Page 8

5 By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor

"The Indians came trudging home today, limping slightly but still in » fighting mood, to continue in the thick of the torrid battle for the

lead.

The second-place Tribesters are trailing league-leading St. Paul by

As midseason approaches, the Indians are in a grand spot to manufacture some valuable hay at Victory fleld. The home boys are

FIRST DIVISION

w L Pet St. Paul ......32 23 582 Indpls. .......26 21 553 2 Louisville .....28 24 538 2% Kansas City ..28 25 .528 3

home for 8 17-day 24-game stand d all seven A. A. opponents will on before the Tribesters the road again. long road journey which Milwaukee yesterday, the Indians won 10 games, lost eight and tied one,

The last two stops—at Kansas ED

from returning home in first place. They lost two and won none in Kansas City, and won one and lost two in Milwaukee—and the brief slump really hurt. In the games at Milwaukee, the Brewers won two out of the three by the home run route. In the Saturday night encounter, the Brewers won, 4 to 3, on the strength of Gene Nance's round-tripper in the eighth with one on. Nance Repeats In the first half of yesterday's double-header in Suds City, the Brewers again copped the duke, 4 to 1, when Nance blasted another er with one on in the sixth. Manuel Fernandez also homered for the Brewers in the same inning. In the second half of the Sabbath twin bill in Milwaukee, the Indians edged the Brewers, 7 to 4,

only a half a game ahead of third-place Louisville. furnish the visiting attraction at Victory field

it at 4-all in the ninth on Marvin Felderman’s home run with one on. The Tribesters rallied in the 10th and put the game out of the Brewers’ reach by tallying three times. Wayne Blackburn batted in ‘what proved to be the winning marker and then Stan Wentzel made it unanimous by smacking a homer with oné on. In yesterday's first game, Al Treichel and Wes Flowers pitched for the Indians and Al Epperly for Milwaukee. In the second tilt, Earl Reid, Bob Logan and Glen Fletcher saw action on the Tribe rubber and the Brewers also used three hurlers, The Indians were held to five hits by Epperly but they collected 17 in the nightcap. The, veteran

GB| johnny Riddle got his first homer lof the season in the sixth of the

second game. On Saturday, the tndiane outhit the Brewers, 9 to 7, while losing. Fletcher and Barrett toiled on the Tribe rubber.

Tribe Batting

Doubles—Shupe 17, Sisti 8, Wentzel 8, Bestudik 7>Drews 5, Brady 4, Turchin 3, Riddle 3, English 3, Blackburn. Stolen Bases—Wentzel 7, 8isti 7, Turchin 4, Bestudik 3, English 2, Shupe, Drews, Blackburn, Riddle.

Racing Card

Tonight—at Raceland, U. 8. highway -67,. midget cars (open competition). Tonight—at Richmond, midget cars (Consolidated Midget Racing association). Tomorrow Night—at Indianapolis Speedrome, Kitley ave. and highway 52 (C. M. R. A.). Wednesday Night—at Muncie Veldrome (C. M. R. A).

in 10 innings after Milwaukee tied

* - | five cars. ribe Box Scores Wilburn won the 15-lap race in First Gained (Second. Game 8:09.96 on the half-mile horseINDIANAPOLIS track at the speedway after it was INDIANAPOLIS BR H OA E RW OA Panam it ...... Af Rn PAS discovered that the five-eights-mile 1 2 4 0 Oiwentzel, cf ... ‘6 2 3 1 o 1|track surface was too slippery for 0 0 1 0 Oggi ss 5 1 2 3 4 1racing 9 0.1 3 0 Bestudik, rf 0 1 1 0 90 . d 138 ale tii Toni ews e $e 2.3 o| Engitah 3b 1333 s Raceland Tonight @, © reves 1 ” ¢ ’ ’ ’ 8 Reid, » 0 ? ! 1 o 0 Seven events at Raceland speedBE, P crcerrrnana e 3 7 o ojiusan p 8 238, way will provide the midget auto ’ ’ 1 l 9| Fletcher, p eo 0 0 0 Pucing thrills for fans of the In8 0 2 2 0 moun ol TF Bo 1 p|Aapolis area tanight. — a Wieczorek batted for Logan in tenth. who os h wh Ted Duncan, Al iii 33 1:85: 90 MILWAUKEE ; 3 30p honors lags week; Parks batted for Turchin in sixth. AB R H Oo A x Mike O'Halloran, Tony BettenWieczorek batted for Treichel in seventh. | Eeaksou, yd xraansre : ? : : : hausen, Henry Banks, Danny KlaRiddle batted for Flowers in ninth. | jon irn §3 * o o 1 o ofdis and other noted pilots. QualiMILWAUKEE | Nance, 3b oo 1 3 oifying starts at 7 p. m. R H O A E|Mack, 1b Y:2 12 1 0 Suakaan. ef : 9 3 ¢ : Fhiley. rf $ 1-3 1 ¢ . x water, ss 9-1 4 elderman, 1.3% §% 32 1 Soman, 1 PY Sh + 3 3 3 i100-Mile Event ce, : 1 1 0 1|Leac ¢ Y 0.0. 0 Mack. io) 0 1 "3? i Biggs. wo 1 1 1 3% Ca EV ELAND; June 10 (U. P)— ey, 10 eetz, p 0 0 1 1 ‘ofCar amilton, Fernandez, ¢ 1 1 17 1 -o0|Dickshot -4 4 0 0 ne death on, Solum, 0, was Walls, 2b ......... 3 0 0 0 6 0 Lanfranconi, o 0 o 1 ofhearde y after an accident Epperly, P .vevines 3 0.0 .3°¢0'¢ Fernandes .1 0 0 o o o|yesterday in the 100-mile midget — a. w— BRVis, Pp iiveaini:l 0 6 0 1-0 auto race at Bainbridge speedway oo % 4 62113 CR on dei Ain “—.l Totals .ii.ouiis 40 4 11 3 19 1|which was won by Duane Carter re re RS 100 003 00x— 4| Leach batted for Walls in sixth, of Fresno, Cal. Carter won the Runs batted InN 3 Dickshot batted for Scheetz in sixth, : alums atid m-Hente 3. Sitges, But. ‘Fernandes batted for Lanfranconi in|100-mile grind without making a Bucrifices— Wenzel, Nance. Lett oe ee eh a 30 ot OL 3<<% pe stop in one hour, 18 minutes, ~Indian 5s 8, 'wau B.: BASE OB) aittsnsalay’ 1 trreresass —- 5eCO; balls—Triechel 3, Flowers 1, Epperly 2 |Miwaukee L-000 001 012 o— «| 1894 Res, Btrikeouts—Triechel 17, rly 7. Hits—| Runs batted in—Bestudik 2, Riddle 2, Treichel 5 in 6 innings, Flowers 1|Felderman 3, Cookson, Blackburn, Wentzel Cornell Improved in 2. Losing Ditcher—_Prejehal Umpires—|2. Three-base hit—Biggs. Home runs— Austin and Mullen. Time 3:12. Riddle, Pelderman, Wentzel. Stolen bases| ITHACA, June 10.—Coach Ed Mc8 , Cookson, Bestudik. Sacrifice— J Cl Riddle. Double plays—-Walls to Mack. Keever says Cornell's football team Owns Rout Foe Left on bases—Indianapolis Bn Milwaukee | Will be better than the Big Red of 13. Base on balls—Off Reid Logan 1,|iast fall The Indianapolis Clowns scored Rann ncant 1, To x Burlkecuts By . s gan 2, etcher 1, Scheetz 2, a ————————————————————— in every inning but the sixth Lanfranconi 1, = Hits—Off Reid 6 in 5% Coll B b 11 rout the Chi innings, Logan § in 3%, Pletcher none in ege ase a cago American Giants§ 1, Scheetz 11 in 6, Lanfranconi none in| pchigan 9, N 6-2 in a N Amari Davis 6 in 2. Hit by pitcher—By| peoon® oie Dame 3, » & Negro can league|Scheets (Reid), Jianttungonl (English). Penn State 10, _B¥facise : game Saturday night at Victory| Winning pitcher—Logan. Losing pitcher—| Bradley Tech oe anute Field 3. field. A crowd of 3000 was on hand. Davia. a3 apites—Mullen Austin.| Great Lakes ' Illinois 4

I Time—2:33. Attendance—7192,

Vince Shupe, the Indians’ clever first sacker, found his batting eye in a big way on the long road trip, and is now back on the home field all set to continue his

rampage at the plate. The big fellow got off to an agonizing start with the bat this season and it was a difficult climb back to form. And he's now pelting the sphere at a pace over the 300 mark.

Race Is Won By Chitwood

WILLIAMS GROVE, Pa. June 10 (U, P.)~Jole Chitwood, Reading, Pa. won the 30-lap A.A. A. sweepstakes feature auto race on the halfmile speedway yesterday in 14:22.08, Walter Ader, Bernardsville, N. J, was second and Ted Horn, Paterson,

AB R H HR REI Pet. N.. Js Bill Holland, Bridgeport, Sisth ......004 “ 180 33 .356 (Conn, and Tommy Hinnershits, Niocaiet "5 15 % i : 1 333 | Reading, Pa., were the others who glish. 31 85 11 25 1* 8 .204 placed in the money, Blackburn.... N Foi » n ’ ’ 351 WE q . 31 51 7 48 .280 3 moan 87 4 20 Qalay Triumphs 82.12 2 0 7 2% ROCKVILLE, Ind, June 10— 95 14 » 3 13 3 Mike Salay of South Bend won the h 3 5 0 2 .143/20-lap feature in an abbreviated big Triples—Shupe 3, Sisti 2, Turchin 2, |Car field here yesterday before some Bestudik, Brady, Drews, Blackburn, 3000 auto fans.

Cliff Griffith of Indianapolis took a special handicap race and Salay also won a 10-lap sprint.

Wilbert Winner

WINCHESTER, Ind, June 10.— Top money in the 25-lap feature on the AAA. —sanctioned auto racing program here yesterday went to Bus Wilbert of Indianapolis. He was followed across the finish line by Duke Nalon, Coast pilot, and {Johnny Shackelford of Dayton, O.

Wilburn Tops List

FT. ‘WAYNE, Ind, June 10 (TU, P.).~Jimmy Wilburn of Indianapolis today held major honors in the

auto races held yesterday on an emergency track with a field of only

2

THE INDIANAPOLIS “TIMES

> Renew Chase For 1st

Te

nearly a third completed, faced the

‘compiled the amazing percentage of the second place Yankees. 8hould they suddenly collapse, and not

leven their most pessimistic backer

thinks they will, they could break even in their remaining 106 contests and finish with a mark of .597, considerably better than the .575 winning figure of the 1945 champion Tigers, or the .578 mark of the 1944 Browns, On the othér hand, they have an excellent chance to set a new modern major league mark since their current .813 figure is exactly 50 points better than the .763 figure with which the 1906 Chicago Cubs set a pace that no club has equalled since. Run String to 10 The: Red Sox ran their current winning streak to 10 games yesterday with 7-to-1 and 11-to-6 victo-

string of 16 wins and no losses at home against western teams this year. Lefty Mickey Harris won his ninth game against one loss in the opener, while Dave Ferriss got | Mt enough batting support to offset a mediocre mound performance in gaining his 10th triumph without a loss in the after-piece. Ted Williams homered in each game to bring his total for the year to 12. Charley Keller's 13th homer came with two on in the ninth and gave the Yankees a 7-to-4 second game victory with dramatic suddenness after Cleveland took the opener, 9 to 5, on shaky New York pitching. Chicago Breaks Slump Chicago ended a nine-game losing streak at Washington, winning 8 to 1 after the Senators took the opener, 7 to 1. Mickey Haefner pitched a five-hitter for the Nats, but Ed Lopat topped that with a four-hit job for the White Sox. The Browns and A's split at Philadelphia. 8t. Louis took the opener, 6 to 2, when Vern Stephens led an 11-hit attack with a homer and friple *as Denny Galehouse pitched seven-hit ball. Phil Marchildon’s five-hitter gave the A's the nightcap, 8 to 4, Johnny Berardino's two-run homer being the most damaging blow off his pitching. The Dodgers dropped their third straight game at Chicago, 7 to 6, when Charley Gilbert came home in the 10th Les Webber's wild pitch. 1t was Chicago's seventh straight victory. The Cards lost a chance to gain

when they divided with the Phils,

his second win.

his first starting

Alpha Brazle in the second game,

before ‘weakening. The Pirates, getting good pitching for a change, topped the Giants, 2 tol and 5 to 1 at Pittsburgh. Fritz Ostermueller Kennedy in the opening duel and

Red Sox Can Just. About Win Pennant by Playing . 500 Ball

. By CARL LUNDQUIST, United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Juhe 10.—The runaway Red Sox, with their. season

only to break even in their remaining games centage than the American league flag winne "The bat happy Bostonians in winning 39 games and losing nine have

ries over Detroit, giving them a |pes

more than half a game at St. Louis

winning 9 to 1, then losing 3 to 1. Three second-inning homers by Del Rice, Terry Moore and Stan Musial accounted for five runs and gave Murray Dickson an easy start for Although he had been used 17 times in relief it was assignment. Schoolboy Rowe edged southpaw

giving up three hits in eight innings

shaded Bob

reassuring fact today that they need o finish with a higher per= s of the last two years.

.813 to take an eight-game lead over

Johnny Lanning came on in the second when Ken Heitzelman was hit in the face with a line drive, pitching . six-hit shutout ball the rest of the way to gain the victory. Pitcher Johnny Sain had a big day all around, holding the Reds to seven hits and driving in five runs with a triple and three singles as the Braves beat the Reds at Cincinnati, 14 to 3. Ewell Blackwell took the sting off that defeat by pitching his second straight shutout, winning 1 to 0 in a fine ‘duel with Art Johnson.

The Manufacturers league was a long time in getting under way for its 1946 season, but Billy Layton | started it off with a bang for the P. R. Mallory entry when he beat out a throw from shortstop to ot ¢ om base safely in the opener against the Union Printers. The first baseman is Merle Olin.

a8. Major Leaders By UNITED PRESS @ AMERICAN LEAGUE G AB R H Av Vernon, Wash. . 42 189 33 66 .30] Williams, Boston oo 49 174 47 60 345 ky, Boston ...... 48 208 47 70 .337 DiMaggio, Bn oh ... 42 188 22 61 3M NATIONAL LEAGUE Walker, Brooklyn . + 49 164 25 60 366 Hopp, Boston .. 136 27 47 .346 Buhle, Philadelphia. 3 138 17 47 341 St. Louis .. 47 183 35 62 .339 Musial. Pittsburgh. 40 40 148 21 40 331 HOME RU RUNS

Keller, Yanks....13|DiMaggio, Yanks.. Greenberg, Tigers. 12| Mize, Giants Williams, R. Sox..12|

RUNS BATTED IN Red Sox..47/Slaughter, Cards. .43/ Keller, Yankees.. ..40|

.38 .38

Doerr, Williams, R. Sox. York, Red Sox PITCHING Ferriss, R. Sox.10-0/Herring, Dodgers 4-0 Higbe, Dodgers.. 4-0/Johnson, Red Sox 4-0

Ruffing, Yanks.. 4-0,Kush, Cubs 4-0

Outdoor Boxing

Starts Thursday

The outdoor boxing season will get under way Thursday night at the open air Sports Arena, corner of North and Pennsylvania streets, when Matchmaker - Lloyd Carter's Hercules Athletic club will stage a five-scrap mitt bill. The main event is all set with Johnny Denson, Indianapolis] heavyweight, linked to face Al Patterson, of Pittsburgh, over the 10Tound route. Patterson is a big

inches in his ring socks.

Carsonia and Al Johnson, local middles, for action on the card and is seeking an opponent for Kenny Vint, promising Kokomo middle-

here.

Two Centers

NEW YORK, June 10. (U. P)—

tracts, Tiger Warrington of Au-| burn and Russell Morrow .of Ten-| nessee.

RY ay Ter Riviera Netters Win losers’ courts yesterday in the first

of a series of /Interciug, tennis | matches.

Barney Ross Says Joe Louis

: Coffin Golfers Cling to Lead

over South Grove in Tyndall cup competition following the second round over the week-end. points are as follows: South Grove 30, Sarah Shank 27, terday. Pleasant Run 17%; and Riverside 13.| | their way to a 17-1 victory over Medal honors for the round, played | Broad Ripple Merchants, but the

at Riverside, were shared by Buck | poliables had to play bh eads-up ball Hatfield of Coffin, Bob Salge of to eke out a Fn over odo South Grove and: Art Smith of | social lub Sarah Shank, all of whom posted 75's.

tourney Paul Roell, with a 77. |guson’s 67 was best in the handicap | | division.

Coffin today held a 1% -point lead

Team Coffin 31%,

» n 9

Yesterday was a busy one at

In the foursome

Addison Coddington

In the blind par event, the winner

was Frank Moorman, with 78. Gross | honors in a 4vo- -ball mixed fou weight who has won two straight| Some tburney went to Dr. Leer and Mrs. Lou Bola, with 78, while Bert|team Bruder and Mrs. Lyle Gant took|Butch Isenberg connected for a net laurels with 89-24—65.

® ® "® Ed Juniper, shooting from scratch,

#

Mike Sullivan fy Joe Sabotis

with 81's were Harold Cork-Don

The Riviera Club scored a 4-2 Kittredge and Charles Brockmanvictory over Meridian Hills on the John See an

= n = Honors in the monthly R. C. at Pleasant Run went to George Fer-|

x = = The winner of the Krause Me-

Opens League

Soc

Roosevelt Drug

Nines Win Fifth Straight

MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1048

Play With: Safety

and Kingan

By BERNARD HARMON Local amateur baseball loops finally got in a full week-end pre

gram, After a delay of five weeks, Saturday and yesterday's ideal weather found the Municipal and City]

loops playing all their games.

the Manufacturers’ league started

Roosevelt Pharmacy and Kingan Reliables, undefeated co-leader in the Municipal league, chalked up their fifth consecutive victories yes:

The Roosevelts smashed

Ted Fenwick’s pharmacy nine lost

| no time in getting off to a big start

with an eight-run second inning, Four home runs featured the big

Highland, with three events on the inning, George Coffman getting two links schedule. tournament a gross 298 earned top | fett one each as the team paraded honors for a combination including 11 batters to the plate. Dick McCreary 70, Dr. Harry Leer| fellow, tipping the scales at 210/71 John McGuire 77 and Bob Smith | pounds and standing six feet, five 80. A combination of Bill Kingdon, | the initial inning on a pair of hits | Jack Collins,

Carter also has signed Pedro) {and Paul Browning won net honors | { with a 268.

and Louie Buergler and Don Mof-

Armour Yields Lead Armour gat a runner around in

{and a walk and they held the 1-0 |lead until the Reliables came through with three singles and a sacrifice ‘hit good for two sixth-

r-| inning tallies.

The remaining runs for each resulted from home-runs.

round-tripper in the eighth for Kingan and George Blackburn, {pasted one for the Social club in

The Brooklyn Dodgers of the All-iproduced a 72 that was good for|the ninth. America Football conference today | {both gross and net honors in the | Sacks Auto Parts journeyed to signed two centers to 1946 con-|bankers handicap at Pleasant Run. | pendleton and came home on the

|short end of a 5-4 score. The Reformatory nine decided the issue in

|produced an 80 to lead 24 twosomes seventh when singles by Wile in the Scotch one-ball partnership Ine 2 y

tourney yesterday at Speedway. Tied |

|and Berela accounted for their fifth

In the remaining Municipal tilt, |DeWolf News won a nip-and-tuck | affair from Leonard Cleaners, 10-8. The Cleaners assembled a four-run lead in the first three innings, but the Newsmen came back to score three times each in the fourth and fifth, and a pair in the sixth to take over a commanding lead.

Triples Galore

By JOHN P.

Must Win in Hurry, or Else—

CARMICHAEL

Chicago Daily News Sports Editor

Cornell 6:0, Pennsylvania’ 4-4.

GREENWOOD LAKE, N. J, J rounds .

In those words Barney Ross,

weight history. merely was looking facts in the face from his viewpoint. “I've been through it,” he said. “I was three years younger than

finished me. I was in good shape. . at least I thought I was, “But I had no idea of how my legs had worn out. They wére gone. . + . and there's nothing you can do about it.”

LEAGUE STANDING | 5 lin time . . . and nobody else wil,”| Mike Mehalakis, a newcomer {7-2 lead over Blue Ribbon Ice 3 a (Second Game) (First Game) POIAD. ,svkssininins 005 000 110— 7 14 4, . : " from San Francisco, has been | Cream in the first three innings AMERICAN ASSOCIATION 8 aisville ie 3 208 90 3 l 1 Detroit “e .. 000 000 010— 1 9 3 Minneapolis . =. pl00 135 02x12 10 1 Not Banking on it ¥ ’ and went on to win easily, 10-6 . — | Boston 000 032 20x— 7 11 1 ones, ewlin, aviic and 088, 3 y St. Paul ” 2% os Minneap's 24 no Pe LT Diets And Dapper. | and Wi Bridges ‘and Richards: Harris Schoenborn, Oates and Wheeler However, Billy isn't banking on paired with Indio Yaqui for the| y, (no Manufacturers’ Saturday . agner . : y Ram tlie’ 13 34 Apoivaukee 2 10 43) ’ (Second Game) Louisville ....... oan 030 03211 20 1 | Louis falling to pieces unannounced. | SUPPOrting bout: on the Soto tilts, P. R. Mallory seorid its Jecond; Kan, Ci 3" ga (First Game) Detroit denen 001 100 112— 6 10 1|8t._ Paul 102 000 032— 6 11 1 ' wrestling show tomorrow night at|shutout victory of the week over - ty 28 28 .528 Toledo 28 31 426 Toledo ,........... 000 100 000—1 7 1| 230 300 03x—11 14 1| Pudd, Toolson and Walters, Sherer,| He figures hell have to cut him § | ha Minneapolis 000 002 20x— 4 © 0 Hatchinson, Benton Gorsica and Teb- | Coffman and Dantonio down gradually and this he's pre- Sports arena.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

WL Pel. | “ (Second Game) fra Boston 3 9 813 Clevel P ( am NATIONAL LEAGUE Kansas City 000 000 000 0 1 s New York 33 19 351 Low 1 ou plete i + 104 81 10a 8 12 of (First Game) Mazar and Malone; Vaughkn, Madchen ledge that nobody who has fought ot Sonora, Mex, Dis Leen rere S31 C 16:30 348 ) Johnson, Gibson, nd { Philadelphia ....... 200 000 100-1 7 i209 Mvera : ? Detroit 25 24 510 Philadipha 14 29 ane divin” BArheIon, ARrathy Mand |v. Louis 50 100 00x— 9 13 0 meets Joe a second time ‘ever went the | jear glate. Reports on: Mehalakis | Whee Judd, Humphries, R ple and Seminick, AMERICAN LEAGUE route, let alone won. rate him a formidable opponent. It FATIORAL LEAGU Spindel; R wi a AGUE pe pindel; Dickson and Rice, Detroit Jesdenas 200 bl o20-- 4 14 2 The memory of that punch on the|is a one-fall tussle opening the . ; .e : il ? Brodin 3 - n 7 638 Boston a 2% phe {olumbus ciirraase 000 000 013— 3 4 1) (Second Game) piiewhouser, White Manders. C Ca ne chin in the 13th round of their first | a,4 at 8:30. v | » sas Ci — | chards, son, 1 p d { Chicago 23 19 nd Miabaren 3 3 As! Griffore. "Goodall, Clemenson” and Ma: [Br Toul... 1% 000 000 010 1 8 4 : n, Kiinger and Wagner. |meeting is something which Bllly| “rag.teamers headline the proCincinnati 21 21 500 Philadipha 16 28 264 100 Drews and Dresche Rowe, Karl, Raffensberger and Semin: Cleveland 020 000 000— 2 7 o|l00KS back upon with a helpless| gram, The match sends Gordon | A Soi (Second Game, Eight Innings) ick; Brazle and Garagiola. New or abd Hay 1,9 shall, 18d smile, Hessell of Chicago and Jackie . 0 BR rai ——— es; Arsha a “ » 3 INTEERATIONAL MRAGUE nt Kansas City 322 001 08-13 14 1 PTC uy Gumpert and Dickey, Robin I saw it start,” he admitted. “I| Nichols, Portland, Me., against Jim | Monireat ' 58 18 @0kiButtale 2 3 ‘was | Horasickinns! Honomer INCE: Valenzuela, Boston i 901 00% 018-14 11 08k. Louis. .seorieees. 2 000 000 3 § 3|°°F. Jv coming. ,, and there 1 was.|Spancer, Boston, and Tony Ross, 5 Sat Rechanter HE 3 AMERICAN IL L Ban and Masi; Shoun, re. Fox, Pre, macchi Ei pg 1 Was "6100 far. 10 block it. 3 wai Portland, Ore. It 1s for two falls r a - ’ wy na Jersey City 13 31 .205 (First avn BUIpo 434 LAmENRO. cuso, Heit; Powier and Roser. and Man-|trapped. Couldn't move. All Ilout of three, or 90 minutes, and wy ULE mopay Chicago tre 000001 000 1 8 0 Horry) — Soiid do was try to steel myself t0|promises to produce an unusual +h SCHEDULE 1gton 2 01x— 7 18 3 rst Game) 8 ‘ae t.” AMERICAN ASSOCIATION To nen alingworth Perme and | aOMEh SCT 000 100 00e— 1 5 0|GIICAEO icin toa soo gy 1" On ) Sa § a SOUR 98 Metta, es $a ’ Loutevitl st INDIANAPOLIS (8:30 sine; 4nd Evans. .(™ johnston ‘and "Hofferth; Binoxwell Soe witha ey ‘and a Dickey, he He's Irritable — . P Paul at Minneapolis Sicago .... 000 050 030 8 18 1 Beetles, tn yonng, Seryootough, #24 Cuerr Right now the only thing Conn BASEBALL EN neapolis (night), Washington’. \ 0"! 000 000 100— 1 4 (Second Game) needs is a sedative. He's restless, Ram at Seheied *e (night). | Lobat and Dickey; Leonard, Wilson i mew wrx. Tim Gamer, Origen iin ueis 004 000 101— 6 12 3|{rritable, fidgety by turns. He VICTORY FIELD me ! Kennedy snd. Coops 3) Jad 3 3 Wetove. Papish, ‘Gaidwell and Fernandes | hates this watchful waiting. When T i ht 8:30 p M AMERICAN 1 rnp Qlevelang ,.. TUM Game) i 231 ‘3iLOPes ¥ 454 Coopers’ Guefiiuiir asd Jreshi. W. Kennedy, Pleretti, Torres and) \p,55er Johnny Ray started fool on g y . 1m ht), New York ......... 2 . ———— ' ? . i ER ia ( on t), ac i rricg and ile sha ev Souk (Second a ~~ tin NANONSL LEAGUE ing around his fighter the: other|] INDIANAPOLIS vs. Louisville ’ ade, - ew Yor Saran re a “ "| : : a yrne and Robinson, Niar-| giv, (hn °° og 30 000-1 3 3! Brookiyn 000 000 000-0 3 | day, Billy snarled to “cut it out. TONITE 1S LADIES NITE : (Second Game) ce Shrinks and Tome, Heintzel Chicago... $10 100, box... 3 1 0/Johnny persisted in unleashing a| For Reservations or Information AL LEAGUE i To a —-132 ue, Yoguiay (10 1a ls wy lotr Te ipman and McCulough 34d-|few “polite” jabs to the stomach. Call RI-ley 4488 ] ‘ cpp nn ing \ n — ! Cheater qa Kipiaulgs une Hu 200 400 1— 7 16 3 | Santon 13 3 20d hy A oy ried In rhe , Chicago .. 002 000 400 1— 1 10 3 | Cincinnati’ . 310 000 00x— 4 9 o Jackie who was buried in a paper. P CARRIER (night) (First Game) ARSmbATE Herring. Hatten, eam " e. Kohatanty, Wallace and Masi; | “Throw him out, Jack,” he rasped. AUTO TOP C E Anderson, Padget! mit ush em- | Heusser a manno, BL anys SL in 001 000 s n ’ ing, Erickson, Wyse and McCullough. Tom O20. 061 § 10 ’ Without a word the brother put! For Boat or Ladders Galehouse ‘and ‘Hels. Suvage, Harris, seeps Fiji as ss 3 000 000 3 # 1{down the paper, grabbed Ray by | $6 9 Fagan and Rows, De Bautels - RESULTS SATURDAY nd Cooper; Stfincevien 4nd Car the pants and collar and gave him . tous... Betond Some) Rn AMERICAN ASSOCIATION —— {the bum's rush into exterior day- BLUE POIN AUTO Rein pn 303 006 813 1 iy A ass, - 0 200 S01 3 8iBhiiadelphis . ....... 300 4 soa § 1 4 light, Whereupon Billy went to work. Dela SURLY + Fannin, an er, Barrett and Brad je vis| Hughes, Hoerst, ana Joe 2a Bis | Copyright, 1948, by The Indianapolis Times ware, Madison and and Rossr, and Fern inden. ¥i Pyle. DOV] pairots an O'Day on and The Chicago Daily News, Ine.

Harris, Gibson and Castino, | 2 Wheeler

Lefebvre | Detts, Ferriss anf McGah.

Week-End Baseball Results, Handings and Schedules

Columbus

. or Billy Conn any time after that. early, he's liable to fight himself out trying. ... !”

self on record for the most talked-of title battle in modern heavy-

Louis (29) when Henry Armstrong

..000 100 101— 3 7 1]

une 10.—“It’ll be Joe Louis in three|

once a champion himself, put him-

at it. He was pouring over the] papers in his dressing-room, finding | out what the experts think of him. “Sometimes you agree, sometimes | you don’t,” he said, “but there's | one story I think is right. . he pointed to a yarn that “considered Joe's legs standing the strain. “I don’t care what anybody says,” declared Billy, “you can’t go past 30. in this racket and have everything you once did. I won't have it

pared to do, even in the full knowl

If Joe doesn't get Bill| 11th

Lake Shore during the week-end. In Sentiment had no place in Barney's diagnosis, he [Lodrsome OD with a #4 | | George and Pauline Beeson had a That's the way Conn also looks 45 for blind par honors, while in the Saturday Bob Burton produced a {45 for low gross honors.

morial handicap tourney at South |Grove will be determined in a

|playoff next week-end. Bob Butler

{and Bill Chapman ended in a dead{lock yesterday, with a pair of 67's.

The losers had the tying run on base in the ninth inning, but Raleigh Miller, the third DeWolf pitcher of the afternoon, stemmed

2 = = the rally when he forced the hardThree tournaments marked the hitting Johnny Simoh to roll weakly anniversary celebration atito third.~

nine-hole, two-ball - mixed the winners were

the

“Screwy Louie” tourney on

2 wnt New Wrestler

To Apear on Show Tomorrow

Yaqui, an Indian grappler out

Union Printers, 9-0. The East-Sider: had handed the losers a 22-0 drub-

in the Saturday loop by connecting

Joe Lease two. Stewart-Warner kept pace witk Mallory in taking the measure oe Allison’s, 8-3. The winners got away to a two-run lead in the initia inning and never were headed.

last night, Eli Lilly won over Fussy’ All-Stars of Greenwood, 1-2. naries, Brownsburg won a 10-innin affair from Speedway V. PF. W., 13.1¢ and Harry A. Kokomo, 8-1.

outs for the winners, ‘The open dates in June and July. Irvin Thompson, Route 3, Box $870.

Weaks night radius

softball team want state teams at miles of

Market

W. H. Weaks, 511 8. Cole st.

softball stadium last night,

Stokely Foods of Greenwood, .9 to 8.

In the other headline attraction th Electronic Laboratories defeated ‘Pulley of Columbus, 5 to 3. Hollywoo Tavern edged out the Bast

league game.

Litwhiler Goes To Boston Braves

join his new team mates, the Bos Louis Cardinals. day, making the fifth player in ad

dition to Manger Billy Southworth

tained from St. Louis in the pas two seasons.

In the City league, Eagles lodge remained undefeated as they [chalked up their fifth victory, gain-|

Railways. Hop Howard, veteran of the winners, limited the Railways to | five hits and struck out 12, holding them scoreless until the ninth inning, Prospect Tavern remained in the runnerup position in the league standings, walloping Christamore, 14-1, behind the four-hit pitching of Tuck Bottom. Printers Again Blanked

ing a 7-1 decision over Indianapolis |

In the third City league afTair,| {| Ferris Food Markets got off to a |

Your Smooth- and/or Repairable

TRUCK iid

There er alwa s bi ble ruck

;

ay stock of nearly all’ new ind » ® a

Let us TRADE yoIs SMOOTH OR REPAIRABLE now en your truck for mew gio and we wil ALLOW you full ceiling price on your sound easings.

apping plant and we will be elp you solve your

tire problems.

bing in the Wednesday Twiligh' | league, and got off to a good star |

for 16 hits as Harold Miller ane limited the losers

Sharp Ford girls defeats 7H

Decatur Central Lions blanked the Va; = Camp Hardware baseball team yesterday | 14-0, with Shanklin registering 19 strike © Lions hav =

In the feature game at Beech Grov § the Crysta Flash team of Shelbyville nosed out th °

Reeve

Side Mer chants, 2 to 9, in an Bm-Roe Independen

|

—AUTO

| TUESDAY NIGHT, JUNE 11 Gates Open 6:30—Race 8:30

SANCTIONING BY C. M. R. A.

U.S. ROAD 52—KITLEY AVENUE (6600 East)

Free Parking—General Admission 85¢, Tax Paid

RACES—

RACE

TONITE,

QUALIFYING 1 ’n.

New Management . TRACK COMPLETELY RENOVATED FOR NEW THRILLS

HIGHWAY 67, BETWEEN MoCORDSVILLE and FORTVILLE

“SEE THE NATION'S GREATEST MIDOET DRIVERS , , , © RACING HIOH-SPEED OFFENHAUSER CARS”

New Track .

LAND

JUNE 10

M. — RACES 8:30

a

In a State league game at Municipa In prelimi =

Indianspetis Thursday and Saturday excluded. rit’ §

PITTSBURGH, June 10 (U. P).— © Danny Litwhiler, veteran Nationa § league outfielder, was expected t ©

‘ton Braves here today where he wil | find some old friends from the St ©

Liftwhiler was purchased by th ° Braves fronmi the Cardinals yester |

the Boston club owners have ob |

Lea

i A

» J Get In touch with y ", our Michigan ||

| TRIMBLE CORNERS

Michigan & West Sts. RI-1504 |

ty ils ¥ Aa J

MONDA’ BUSINESS~

ON:

Federal Tr % tices ( -> * By ¥ WASHINC 32-year-old fe of improving | if Congress, al funds ' e basi

series of

FIC eorner cand lotteries with devise a code which all sin be subject- to +~FT0 official of fair pract pourage indust to police the ducing need f #ention. The move to procedure sta at a conferen fpissioners an - Recently tl songress to vo tional $857,00¢ permit the hi ployeus to pu on. Only | “PTO official “he in full sw fund is approv More than 1 have been pu FTC sanction life but only are regarded ing present o ,- Some are 2 have been m Supreme cour the New Deal of price-fixing +» All of the initiated by | .The commissi start the actio trade groups. . Two other n ‘by PTC in a its procedure. =a Simpler = One is elimi taining previc cepts but lack significance. the FTC's re its earlier fin label bearing Ace” was mis] The other it Janguage of F . Commission

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