Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1946 — Page 13

. 21, 1948

183, 4 to 2, a» rts fanned 13. h a 8-8 victory ale,

21. Only three Western Amasuccessive years n, Chick Evans ard.

rr ——

3 ; !

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 2

wg Re id % >. ® :

1, 1946 :

Baseball Guild

Leader

Says Fight Just Begun’;

McKinney Is ‘G

ratified’

PITTSBURGH, Aug. 21 (U. P.).—Robert Murphy, soundly defeated

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Coercion Charged In Pirate Voting

KNOXVILLE, Tenn, Aus.

Yost Is Dead

in his first attempt to unionize a major league team, angrily declared today that “this fight has just begun” and indicated that his fledgling American Baseball guild soon would have the support of nationally

P. G. A. Match Play Begins

After Ferrier D

Of Rewriting Record Books

PORTLAND, Ore, Aug. 21 (U,

fairways get down to brass tacks today as matc the 38th annual P. G. A. golf tournament. '

(U.P.). — Tennessee : football hopes | soared yesterday when Buster

21} | he was returning to school.

phia Eagles’ camp at Saranac lake, | ireman on the L. & N.

Stephens, ace tailback of the 1044 NY, but he did not sign a contract.

Rose: bowl team, checked in from and. after looking over . his fireman's yun on the Louisville 8. the profes.

& Nashville railroad and announced

Stephens had visited the Philadel- | working this ‘Summer as sn extra

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powerful labor unions.

The Boston labor leader, organizer and sole officer of the A. B. G,,

refused to condemn the Pittsburgh Pirates players for rejecting the | guild as their bargaining agent yesterday by a*5-to-3 vote, He charged they were coerced by the unfair labor practices of the big league owners. The election results, nevertheless, struck a body blow at Murphy's unprecedented attgmpt to unionize

baseball teams along the lines | established by industrial labor movements,

19 Players Vote Only 19 of the 31 eligible Pittsburgh players voted before the polls of the Pennsylvania Labor Rela- | tions board closed after being open | nine hours, | Murphy said he would press charges of unfair labor practices against the Pittsburgh management when he released a bitter statement that “the employer has interfered

with, restrained and coerced its em- |,

ployees of their rights guaranteed under the Pennsylvania Labor Relations act.”

He blamed the setback on the "pretended fairness of the ownerdominated player - management committees.” The Pirates’ anti-guild stand was a personal victory for Pitcher Truett (Rip) Sewell, the “blooper |

ball” specialist who has opposed during the evening as the result of | When his

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the union movement from the start {and was one of the club's player delegates to the player-manage-ment conferences. Frank E. McKinney, president of the Pittsburgh Pirates, commented today that he was “gratified” by the results of yesterday's election, McKinney said: “We are gratified by the results of the election. We are sure the vote of the players indicates their confidence in the

+ + « ‘Hurry Up’ dies quietly in contrast to life,

Fielding H. Yost

i Finishing their 36 holes of qualifying yesterday, the nation's top professionals had to look to an “outsider” for one of the most brilliant | performances ever staged in P. G. A. history,

His name is Jim Ferrier, the ord Austraii hampion who! er ol ee hiten in Uncle Sam's Protested Game army and came out a much better To Be Replayed in Softball Meet ers since the days of Bobby Jones'| famous Calamity Jane, Ferrier] A protested Marion County Soft- |

golfer than he went in. + © His Putter Smokes smashed records all day long and ball association tournament game came up with these remarkable |between Bethel A. C. and Hoosier

Featuring one of the hottest putt-

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recent player major league committee meetings and that all prob-

lems between the players and the!

club owners will be adjusted to their mutual satisfaction.”

Breading Trims

Saunders’ Lead

Epoch Fades. With Veteran

ANN ARBOR, Mich, Aug. 21 (U.| P.).—An epoch In the development of football, died today with Fielding H. Yost, father of the University of Michi-|

|

The battle for driving honors in| the Consolidated Midget Racing association affair today. Sod Saunders ‘of Muncie still held the lead in the point standings after last night's eight-event program at the Indianapolis Midget Speedway,

but right on his heels was Bob |

Breading of Indianapolis. Saunders had 373% points to Breading’s 368. | Breading picked up 10 points

gan’'s modern-day athletic Jrowese. “Hurry Up” Yost died quietly,

was a nip-and- Rn Oni to his way of life, at 3: »|

|p: m., yesterday” in his home, just {off the university campus. He is| survived by his son, Fielding H.! Yost Jr, and widow, who ‘was at [his bedside.

| West Virginia mining was football's most fam ality

own, Yost Ss personat the turn of the century “point-a-minute” teams,

and all college sports, |

performances: |Yeneer will be replayed from the | First, he set a new P. G. A. qual-| Point of protest at Municipal sta- | . ifying ‘record by touring the 36 dium tonight, It's the COMBINATION that holes in 134, which is 10 under par.| The Bethels, who won, 8-7, were does it. Not just the smallest

Second, he toured the -18 holes | yesterday with a nine- under-par| 63, which tied the course record tand was the greatest individual]

round ever shot in P. G."A. competi- | fon. {J. Holliday at 8:15,

{ Third, he went the first nine holes

{in 20 strbkes—one of the finest ex- |g]

hibitions ever staged on any golf {course and another course and P.| la. A. record. Ferrier had a one-| under-par 71 on his opening round | Monday. | In carding his 63, Ferrier was {laying 20-foot putts into the cup— and with a bit more luck he could have come in with a 61. Hogan Cards 137

In second place, two strokes back lof Perrier, was E. J. (Dutch) Har-/| 'rison, the Little Rock, Ark., veteran

|

A tough, old man, born in a tough |

—- nning a 10-lap race, a 15-lap clad in the maize and blue of Mich- who came in with a 136-total. Tour-

-findl event and the 25-lap [" teature, Leroy Warriner, also - of 10-lap go-around and a 15-lap race.

of Muncie and Houston Bundy of | Dayton, O.

Roman of Indianapolis being hospitalized with leg burns as the result of a spin. His legs were scalded

| by hot water from a broken radiator | hose,

During the consolation race Bus Hodson had to flee his midget cari when it caught fire in front of the main stands. Others in spins were

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igan, were invincible.

Yost, who had been ailing from 68-69—137 for third place in the the annugh city amateur baseball | Indianapolis, was the winner of a8 heart condition for the last few qualifying round. retired from the university| Other 10-lap victors were Red Keel staff in 1941 after 40 years as either lean Bill Heinlein of Noblesville,

| years,

head footbdll coach or athletic di{rector. He was 75 on April 30, a day

A series of spins and mishaps the state of Michigan set aside as | anapolis, with marked the program, with Charley “Fielding Harris Yost” day in ap- Smith, also of Indianapolis, with

| preciation for what he had done

| for sports at the state university and throughout the nation. Yost’'s all-time coaching record was 164 victories, 29 defeats and 10, tie games. He was named athletic | director in 1921, yielding his coach- | {ing duties in 1926. Tad Wieman succeeded him for two years, then

Fritz Crisler,

Field Narrows In Teen-age Meet

Eight survivors fought it out two-by-two today in the second round jof match play in » City Recrea[tion aepueress shits’ Preen-age-golt {tournament at Pleasant Run.

Harry Kipke for nine and Rein

nament favorite Ben Hogan carded

The only Hoosier to qualify was | who h a T4-70—144 for the 36 | holes. Wayne Timberman of Indi151, and Marion

156, failed to make the select fleld.

Rogers Easily

Takes Feature

Buddy Rogers, 224, billed as the | Stippich- and Clif Ayers, vice presi-

‘Atomic Blond” from Camden, N.|

, lived up to his {gyance notices

at the butdoor Sports. Arena I Average Scere

night by decisively thumping Buddy before a

near-capacity cro®d of wrestling

Knox, of Tulsa, Okla.

| addicts.

| Outweighed at 206 pounds, Knox Host the first Sail Almost: before it

rted-when a series of

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inning, and will be out to retain | “B" Battery -- but BOTH! ab ed Yovsighe when the seventh | That's why the Acousticon 5 played. he winners of the | “8uper-Power"” UNIPAC

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Other Youre | | games:

Municipal--7, Holy Cross Men's club vs “R"” CQell—is being hailed by kely Foods, 9:30, National Starch | Roosevelt Inn hard of hearing everywhere as | Beech Grove—7, Moose Lodge va. JDaech |

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Schedule Draft Draft Slated Tonight

Drawing up of the i of

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pointed. The election will ro. | ably be held next week. All teams expecting to enter the | city title meet must have repre- | sentatives present at tonight's gath- { ering, scheduled to open at 8: { Present officers of the association | are Del Giffin, president; Larry,

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AGOUSTICON

515

Dick Kennedy led the advance in-| kicks and a cradie hold scored for : . 5 r

[to the second round’ yesterday with | Rogers after 20 seconds of the Ye

|a 3 and 1 victory over Robert Roch-| ford. Other victors were John Mahan, Bob Buchanan, Claremce Long. | {Ralph Weber, Charles Butler, Jack {Royse and George Tanner,

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| opening session. The “Flying Tul-|, san” struggled gamely but superior | speed and power spelled another) fall and the matéh for Rogers when {the Camden flash used another cradle to score at the 28-minute mark. In other bouts Ray Villmer, St. Louis heavyweight, defeated Fred Blassie, of Memphis, Tenn. in a fast, rough encounter and Heavyweights Don McIntyre, Springfield, Mo, and Frank Marconi, of Salem, O,, tussied to a 30-minute draw.

Fight Results

NEWARK, N. J -—-Tony Riccio, 150%, Bayonne, N. J., outpointed George (Sonny) Horne, 160'4, Niles, O. (10),

SALEM, Mass. —Tony Costa, 128, Woon socket, R. I. outpointed Bobby English, 126, Fall River, Mass. (10), NEW YORK (Croke Park) -— k Palermo, 138, New York, ontpoinied Billy Strauss, 138, Paterson, N. J. (8 NEW YORK (Dexter rk) Simiy Carollo, 198, Corona, N. Y., outpointed Charley O'Brien, 175, Tampa, Fla. (8). NEW YORK (MacArthur Stadium)—Billy Graham, 139, New York, outpointed Vic Costa, 147, New York (8). NEW YORK (Queensboro Arena)-—Patsy Giovanelli, 139%, Brooklyn, outpointed Ruby Garcia, 1374, Puerto Rico (8), UNION OITY, N. J-—Joe Curcio, 154 New: N. J, stopped Mike Bulick, 147, New. York (10).

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We've been standing in line for materials, too «

M...cucsias are still hard to get. With you, it's sugar and shirts and many other things. With us, it's copper and lead and brass and textiles—and many other things. A few months ago it looked as if the + 4 supply situation might be getting better. | Recently, however, shortages of the materials necessary for the production of telephone equipment have been more critical than during the war. Even so, you can depend on this— We're moving just as fast as we can, and

as supplies improve we'll get going full tilt.