Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1946 — Page 10

» i ta y J —

aan - of -, » a

¥ PGES SPORTS ROUNDUP

DOIN WHAT COMES NATURALLY! Notre Dame 33, Pittsburgh,

"= 8 =» v _RAH, RAH, RAH! And we don't mean oysters. . . . The whoopla leading up to the football “Battle of the Century,” 1946 version, has

Or Newhouser

Scripps-Howar ST. LOUIS, Oct. 7.—On the ra

'|already have heard about Rudy York's home run which decided the i (opening world series game in the 10th inning yesterday, I take the risk

of discussing briefly another subject

{| around here, namely: Is this Joe DiMaggio’s last year with the Yankees?

By JOE WILLIAMS

and Wakefield

d Staff Writer ther wild assumption that you may

which appears to be of high interest

Series Gossip Bu Our Joe Says Mebbe, but It Won't Be for Joe Di Maggio

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

zzes: Will

.

Boston Trade

H

a

"iN

: MONDAY, OCT, 7, 1946 Williams? vv illlams: igh, Low, Inside or Qutside—

What Pitch Did York Sock?

By OSCAR FRALEY, Unite Press Sports Writer

8T. LOUIS, Oct. 7.—Fearless Fraley ain't no Agatha Christie, nate urally, but equipped with microscope and rubber-soled shoes he: was attempting today to unravel the whodunit intricacies of the “grea world series mystery.” What, the puzzled populace would like to know, was the pitch which Howie Pollet served up to Rudy York when the big Indian belted its brains out for yesterday's winning

home run?

Sherlock Holmes, the chap with

¢)

: MONDA Cadet At St:

&oll [

NEW YO! Tornado, all among thé un ing for Army They'll cl: streak, now three years. Scoring” hee if not on the

Inside Curve,

the hat which faced both ways, the Fat Man, the Thin Man, the Falcon, Arsene Lupin, Monsieur

{| Is Ted Williams through with the Red 86x? “Considering the importance i|of these two gentlemen to their ilclubs and communities, these are

won its second feating Iowa,

|| startling questions. Yet they are

being asked all over town.

with the Red Sox it is different and Manager Joe Cronin had this in niind when he made a trade for

Poirot, Charley Chan or the local

homicide squ

ad never tackled such

‘Rajah’ Says

By ROGERS HORNSBY

was lacing Co liberal use of

The reason is that reports, origi-| him. Pitchers who make a habit of a problem as this one. And it be- Former Big o Star more than nating in the East, have had Di-|walking Willlams to get to York gins to look exceedingly doubtful ST. LOUIS su : Cornell held be answered in Maggio and others going to the Red|must sooner or later come to grief. whether all of them working over- def . Oct. T.—There is ne and it was a that tussle when Lujack Sox in exchange for Williams, also| This didn’t happen to Pollet yes- time in a group could solve this detense gu pet a home run . . by Glenn Dav Army's fabulous Four Furies (back-|other reports sending Williams to|terday. On the contrary, it worked whatwuzit. oop BR pe Rudy, York's ference. field) and Notre Dame's: post-war|the Tigers for Newhouser and|for him twice, once in the third, Pollet’s Version of = i e Sullimale was Alabama h Mobile Pillbox line collide on the| Wakefield. ® again in the eighth. There was no Evervone 1h the’ ball park: had. aba well a20ke J ngs which can ruin with South C Yankee stadium greensward. Al-| Apparently all these reports are occasion to walk Williams to get to : y Pp 2 < aC game Notre Dame's though the article was written be-|without foundation. I can’ definitely| York in the pay-off 10th, for Wil- {ea E % he f different version of just what kind We oh rew him a slow curve unimpressive state the Yankees have no intention|liams had previously fouled out, J of a pitch it was and there were| >o0 W ch let York get a good passed the Iri:

fore halfback Shorty McWilliams resigned from West Point it is packed with potent paragraphs comparing the rival elevens. . " » FOUR o’'CLOCK SHADOW . . But Butler made it in the waning sec-

of trading DiMaggio and are not at all interested in Williams. And George Trautman, general manager of the Tigers, told me: “Nobody has suggested a Willlams deal to us. In any case, we would not be interested

chasing an outside curve. But the simple fact that York followed immediately with a home run into the left field bleachers was resounding proof of what can happen when he gets hold of one he likes. ‘Maybe

Coffin Captures

Shortstop Johnny Pesky pats Rudy York (left) on the cheek in Red Sox dressing room after York hit

a homer in the 10th inning to win the opening game of the world series between the Boston Red Sox and St. Louis Cardinals at St. Louis. Outfielder Dom DiMaggio is at right. Sox won, 3-2.

Traveling Pin

Carpenter Scores

about as many different descrip-

tions as you held up the

would get ife*a. burglar ladies’ aid society an-

nual meeting.

Pollet, you

would suppose, should

swing at the pitch. If you're going to throw a change-up ball, it should be kept outside where a hitter has to waste his power reaching for it, But in analyzing the game, it wasn’t so much that pitch to York that beat the Red Birds as their

over Pittsburg the rip-roarin no excuse as | rate Oklahom to 6, bringing string started

onds by a close shave.in the gloam-|if Newhouser and Wakefield, one or |the Cardinal shift was applied to know. Howie, the chief victim,| oo Dastsrunting - In The lon i week BS LEI emma [is wanes, Best tet 0 Mideet Race |store, | ve Cod J whe mores “x on S Ball M L St Tf I Midge Ra ‘ "| baseball for Enos Slaughter to t ’ 2 Ar / , ry Wabash on the short end. What's behind these reports? Are Both clubs reeled: under the im- oop qr S ing how many people didn't and stretch his triple into a home Fave

- ~ » TOUCHDOWNS FEW FOR OLD PURDUE . . Scarcity of materials extends to rivets, too. . . and the situation is blue for this week, too.

the Red Sox getting ready to divorce themselves from their problem

child? Are the reports mere trial

balloons? Could be. But if my information is correct DiMaggio stays

pact of leering luck. It is not too unfair to the Cardinals to say Tex Hughson should have had a shutout in regulation time. If Bobby Doerr

produced a total of 282 to give Coffin victory in the Indianapolis Public Links association's first annual best. ball golf tourney yesterday at

Four low-shooting two-man teams | By BERNARD HARMON

A local traveling bowling league, the first in the city since 1933, opened its season at the Indiana

Swede Carpenter of Indianapolis outdrove 13 other starters in the 50-lap feature race yesterday at the Indianapolis Midget Speedway to win in the time of 15 minutes 1.2

think Howie

knew what it was—

which isn’t too peculiar because if he knew what it was he never should have thrown it,

Chunky Joe Garagiola,

Pollet’s

Pesky, way out in left center for t. relay, fumbled the throw. To m mind Slaughter could have come all the way and that was the tying run,

run, He was at third when or if) 4

With-a terri 9 than 57 eered by

landry and Texas was a hi its Southwest

' "2 8 with the Yankees; Newhouser and ; alleys yesterday with a quartet of catcher, thought it should have| Remember there we COMEBACK MAN OF THE wakefield with the Tigers. . .. And | second hadn't bobbled a double) pleasant Run. |600 totals resulting. seconds. been ‘a curve which refused to|the time ol the Er En Oklafioms, } WEEK . . After spending 14 days in|williams? Who knows? play ball in the sixth the N. L.[ Other totals were: South Grove| po. Shaw with 631, Jack Hunt| Frank Tillman of Alexandria was|peng, ting Hughson, so they should have Texas A, and a gloomhouse, Indiana's Bo Moa yn champions wouldn't have had their ii Pleasant Bun 22, Sarah Shank|wity 618, Paul Moore with 610 and |second, Fred Wilfong of Greenfield, york Thinks Otherwise forced a break their way. I thought 10 to 7, meets lin is back on the sun porch of a big§| Appearing in his first world series [first run, and if Dom DiMaggio, |287 and Riverside 295. Frank Stumpf with 607 were the top| third, and Rex Easton of Spring- : : i 4 due, beaten by Dpe : Victorious Coffin . team scores p op York took exception to this and Mike Gonzales slowed Slaughter at Notre Dam

white house on victory lane . . From

game, Williams, a left-handed hitter,

their center fielder, had not lost a

soloists. The new loop will move

field, 111, fourth. Carpenter lapped

down too soon.

at Alabama

leaden gray to ruddy gold, that i8|swinging against Howard Pollet, a|simple fly ball in the sun, they Were: Walt, Chapman-Mike ‘Pollak| i, +10 west Side alleys next Sunday. |2ll but Tillman and Wilfong. the pitcher's analysis by pointing nen in the eighth, when the . . Looks like another link on the|jeft-handed pitcher, was just an-|wouldn’t have had their second run 66, Buck Hatfield-Harold Cork 70,| 7he pennsylvania, Illinois and| Ten-lap races went to Carpenter, out that it was a fast ball down | Cards went ahead. there was no U. C: L A i old oaken bucket for the Hoosiers, [other ball player, with one hit, a|in the eighth; and two is all‘they Reese Berry-Ollie Hollingsworth 71,|centra) alleys have announced ra-|Wilfong, Kip Young of Muncie, Till-|the middle. The only fact about |reason for Garagiola to try for volving sectior come mid-November. single, and two passes in five trips |got. and Chet Baker-Les Crews 75. dio broadcast of the world’s series|Man and Wally Hostetler of Indi-| ... “\ : vel wae tbat 1 |ihird on "he" Tit: that . scored Na 4. a8 # to the plate. The Red Sox had nn » Fritz Souder.won the Indianapo-|y,,14 pe put on the public address |anapolis. Wich 78 Va: cera YA: a be “Whitey” Kurowski. He was out all Columbia's 2

BACK TO THE BARN . . Prior to the start of the Western conference football campaign, Wisconsin and Minnesota were listed as “dark-

three scoring innings; Williams figured in none of ‘them. When there was a runner on Pollet gave

him nothing inviting to swing at;

shows that the Cardinals’ third

The other side of the picture |1i8 Country club's men’s golf title |over the week-end when he scored (a 3-and-1 victory over Bob Bowen base coach, old Mike Gonzales, cost |i, the 36-hole final match.

systems of the three establishments, allowing fans to enjoy their bowling and the series ‘games at the same time.

Several accidents marred the program, with Joe DeCenzo of Indianapolis being treated at Methodist hospital for oil burns he received

liked it, very much. Equally positive and not to be out-talked, of course, was Jerome Herman (Dizzy) Dean, who “flang”

{the way and the Cards were out {of the inning with only one run | where Garagiola, if he stayed on | second, would be in scoring posi

put the week the Yale bowl put Coach Hq minded Yale ]

horses” in the title nd , wo at all other times he pitched to|them a run in the third when he| Posting identical 67's, Carl Van- BOWLINGRAMS Gene (Newt) ‘Btiner |SUFIDE 3 spin in practice. No other |a few baseballs himself right from | tion for the next hitter. The game test. Yale's se were left at the post Saturday Phim and nothing explosive happened. | held Enos Slaughter at third on divier and Tony Brisnik shared top pCleaned” the tough 7-8-9 spilt in the drivers were injured seriously dur-|that very same spot. Ole Diz came | was too close all the way to settle a 6 to 6 first | Big Nine ipangurals. The Cardinals shifted their de-|the latter's triple. Johnny Pesky, Honots in She “Danikers Jsnitieay He fit his second ball between’ the '1.3/iNg the afternoon. out ‘and insisted that York Was| for one run if you didn't have to. 27 to 6. {fense against him to the right side [tourney a peedway. Her 0an’'s|to mow down the rare setup. . . , At right, to a certain extent. Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times In the Big BUT THIS IS OCTOBER . . The| (70 RC" fo he mad Cleve. |i¢ Red Sox shortstop, fumbled the 25 yas pest in the gross division. |ing (iis season, it wouldn't bg. surprising “Yeh, it was fast,” Dean drawled,| snd The Chicago Daily News, Inc. Northwestern

Red. Sox ina

high relay. Slaughter could have is land formula, . {high relay Ig

; et ; 1 Kurowski came off | 00.0: easily but Gonzales made |

third and played between first and |. 0 mistake of holding him on be- | Caps Beat Wings

second. Marion moved from mid- | fore the play had been completed, |

Cardinals defeated the training camp series in Florida th spring, winning three out of five games. 2

to hear of him offering a challenge to some of these touted bowling proprietors “+ + . Which reminds us, when is the Beam-Crosier affair coming off? Jack Hunt, rolling in the Fox-Hunt last week, fired his first ball into the pocket and saw the 4-7 looking at him as h

“But it was high and inside.” Yet, Al Simmons, the bucketfoot guy who once drove quite a few homers for the A's, among others,

1llinois in the with unexpec twice-beaten, defeated Mini

Goshen Race Goes To Bettenhausen

Heinlein Holds

— —

one down, Pinky Higgins, the Red

ague and are also sharing the

title match yesterday.

Rio Grande 28,

a" : . - {a surprising lapse on the part of} 284; e ded that h P Li k Ti ] RUDY YORK IS ‘SLIPPING’ Facts Figures |an elder statesman In Exhibition paarin, 10 Wall pin GOSHEN, N. Y,, Oct. 7 (U. PJ. a re oe ro Links litle Nora who smacked I ' sudden! bbled and fel ing th i - 145 ‘ “ » that The ¥e telow 375-foot homer| ST. LOUIS, Oct. 7 (U. P).— . = 2 | DETROIT, Oct. 7 (U. P..—The No. 7. along. Jack's teammates 8 og | Tony Bettenhausen of Chicago re-|(ime and it was a curve, “but low.” | LEESBURG, Ind, Oct. 7 (U. P), a Eo Lous yr Pork ard fgures or the firs oii Perhaps the most decisive break | noi iv Red Wings hockey team |-and line SONVISEISg him Jie Taq snc Seived as Sieoige Bison eters) And Hear Mr. Cronin —Bill Heinlein, Noblesville’s pitche seri 3 | . : ant] : dering foot. : ro or his victory over : i i : terday prepped for the big show |of the world series: : jcame in the ninth and. ib went |iook a 5-to-4 whipping from its “Two teammates on the No. 4 team of yop. Ee OE hss AA Ay Manager Joe Cronin of the Red Sho} arlish Ril ws King of Indians a as a member of the Milwaukee Attendance ............. 36,218| against the Cardinals. At the.time |r. ==. 0 he Indianapolis Capi-| follow the Jeader ipriast weeks seo. |100-mile national championship Sox, now known as “Jovial Joe” on Press rat i a Y i dine 3 Indiana 21, Minr Brewers some years ago. . . . Only | Total receipts ........... $156,646.00 | they led, 2-1, and looked the part | ; tans | {ion. Sparks ind Dasls, the two bowlers. | oto race at Good Time track yes- the basis of that one pitch, thought | The tobacco-chewing defending Notre Dame 33, diffgrence is that he used to beat |Players’ share 79,889.46 | op al tne TH A i last night before 3656 fans hag identicsl sores or the three games Bh race yes they all—and the ball—were champion trimmed Floyd Hamblen lllinois 43, Purd “is ties WHYAB1 of certain winners. hen, Ww ATV E i Fe He a Togd : ore is|terday. i ir 36- Butler 13, Indi the Indianapolis Indians by belt- | Leagues and clubs shares 53,259.64 |at Olympia stadium. ra tiadersnip in" the Indian | “CER con the nine-man|STEWY: of Tipton, 3 and 2, in thelr 56-hole Bowing Green |

ing the horsehide high and far

Commissioner’s share ...

The Capitals trailed, 4 to 2, in one ago Tho Tod oie Msi Sn

race in one hour, 17 minutes and

“It was a screwball,” Joe said. “I

And, just as he did all through

bash 22, Frar

23,496.90 / y ah the third period when Center Pat|are tied with Bowes Sealfast in the ClasLundy and Right Wing Tony Licari|® came through with goals to tie the

plarville (O.) 1 nois Normal fiance 10.) 17, Indiana “B"” 14,

saw it just as plain as anything

away at the Tribe park's 380-foot Sox third baseman, hit an inofand liked to swallowed my tobacco.”

mark over the top of the score- short to within 10 paces of second.|fensive roller to Slats Marion at

16:52 seconds, finishing a half-lap| over the favored Horn, of Patterson,

the qualifying round and earlief matches, Heinlein shot sub-par gol

ic. Johnny Beam threw

sc e into the luncheon meeting of the {+4

bowling pro-

board. . . . A five-foot deficit be- |Schoendienst, the second baseman, - 1 Tu ¢ ; , But no matt i tween then and now. . .. Yeh, he's [played a tight second base, much short and the ball took a capri-| wo "ToL Ti ites later, Rod| Diese were. quietly listening to Mitton |: #2 Who holds the season's point- er to Whom YOu ge was six under regulation figures vane i ' ’ cious skip on what is the worst : . : aymer's talk on the American high | scoring leadershi talked about that final delivery you 4 St. Joseph's 7, “ ” closer to the bag than he normally |; Morrison scored the wining goal for | : } 8 g Pp. ; for the 34 holes he needed to pole slipping. 8 e IY [infield in baseball and trickled school bowling conrgess, when Beam, just eet eget got a different answer, It ran Hamblen also . 8 doe. d th : ~|the Capitals on an assist by Licari. [returned from a tri New York, ar- . 3 ish-off Hamblen. blen » s. An e center fielder moved p y : h OTHE through Mr. Shortstop’s legs for a = rived in the hallway. Johnny grabbed . the range from high to low and|,,4er par—by two strokes : UNHAPPIEST MAN . . , The fover to help the right fielder play (single. On any other diamond it|y « SA the knob of a locked door leading to the Stranahan Is Victor inside to outside. To make any- un par WO § . Alabama 14. So bleacherite who caught York's right. [would have been a casual ot. a(Linton Race Pilot open. gave ita vigorous shaking. The Om F't. Worth Links [body right it would had to have Albion ‘18. “Pils series homer is & buddy of catcher | Thus the Cardinals literally played [single followed, a strikeout (which 3 § rfartied "crowd thought a. wall had caved . been a medicine ball. Th BIG 4 MOTOR OIL Avealachul | : g ! : in, but when Johnny sneaked in through . . e only ! Arkansas 34, Te Joe Garagiola of the Cardinals! ...|without a third baseman and prac- should have retired. the side), then (Wins at Franklin the “right” door, everyone reiaxed and FT. WORTH, Tex., Oct. 7 (U. P). thing which wasn’t mentioned was|| 3.GALLON $ ; AbEmn 26, Fun Phil Waterman of Celina, O. a tically without a center fielder. It|another single and the game was| FRANKLIN, Ind, Oct. euloon |e Mesng conuinged OE) ~ |—Frank Stranahan, young Toledo |Fiank Merriwell's “fadeaway.” ERALED CAN 1.29 Augustane ¢IiL) former member of the Ft. Knox, all looked very cockeyed and, as it|tjeq. ~ | Hubble of Linton made a clean|gy piummer Link-Belt sparkplug, added the Ft. Worth In-| prom where Old Fearless sat, wandsaee : Bates 35, Trini Ky., team, on which Garagiola also [turned out, it was. The Cardinals * on [sweep during yesterday's dirt track | Vie, Ogden, National Coal Co. Mixed.. 631|vitational title to his growing list| however, it looked suspiciously like BLUE POINT sve i lg 22. played, had only to raise his right |could have maintained their rou-| Pollet caine within one’ pitch of |racing program, winhing the 20-1ap| Tom Connelly, Pleasant Run Mixed 603] today, beating the nation’s top pro- |g home run ball. That much alone || peiaware, Madison BLL Boston’ Canige 3 hand to catch the ball . . . Hejtine defensive setup and handled | inning his first world series game. | feature, the four-car handicap event| OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (MEN) | fessional golfers for the third time lis clear—and well corroborated. Buffalo 28, Rens said, “this is one souvenir I could | Williams—that is, the Williams of "he eoudt Was 2 and. 2 when 'T ‘land the first 10-lap sprint. Roy Posner, Buh. RL 5% in two years. | — Fre————— have gotten aldfig’ Withott. I wish yesterday—just as handily. But it NcEr a en TOM |" He also had the day's fastest|verie Cox Foeal Bik xed... 3%3| Handsome Frank, 1946 Western | CIAL TRAIN Cr I had been playing lel; A wouldn't have been as showy, nor|“c ride with two away, singled qualifying time of 27.81 seconds. Bd nal S68 | amateur titlist, fired a 14-under-par | FOOTBALL SPE STAINLES e Cardinals. York would have would it have had the suggestion home the tying run in the ninth. | Cliff Griffith of Indianapolis fin-|Claude Burleson, Indians Recn ..... 56¢| 270 in the 72-hole Ft. Worth tour- | ; ; been out.” of deep managerial plotting. |At no time did the A. L. cham- |ished- second "and Jack Martin of|Boy ¥napp. Uptown Mixed (8:30)... 59 ney to finish two strokes ahead of NOTRE DAME 1Sailope 8 = = "x = * }oions 100k. overpowerin _ | Chicago was third in the feature.|H. Noffke, Uptown Mixed (6:00)... . . 549 blond Jim Ferrier of Chicago, the Vs. GOOD LITTLE MAN. . . . Murry| Rudy York was booed out of De-|n matter of fact Yo 3 be AS Grifth. already assured of the ni ines CY, 0 Mud... .- #iliop pro RAUP TILE x ) act, orks omer ’ . r atterson, t Antlers Rec . 535 . | Dickson, Cardinal righthander, does | troit last season because he wasn't|was their only extra-base knock Midwest Dirt Track Racing associa- Sohn Roedre. Cathedral High School . 8 A ————————————————— SOUTH BEND, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 512 Odd Felloy that Win) leans pitching sn hi ¥rosking the ball out of the park.| ’ [tion championship, will receive his ah ay Ty po da ‘| Bob’s Cousin | Going Returning oS pounds. . . . He's light and lithe. s wasn't wholly his fault. With 8a | trophy during next Sunday's race|audarey Suiter, Pleasant Run Mixed . 515 | I}. Lv. Indianapolis 7:30 A. M. Lv. South Bend 6:40 P. M. : . . Dickson is a war veteran with {runners on they wouldn't pitch toi { program at Jungle Park: Maybell McNaught, National Coal Mix. 511] CHICAGO, Oct. 7—Hal Man-| In Coaches Round Trip Fares — In Pullmans HOOSIE overseas service. . . . He was a jeep |hum; they could afford to bait him | Box Score meee OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (WOMEN) |ders, who was knocked out by the ~ (Plug Tax) $ LINO , . . Martha Willis, Link-Belt ............ 499 | Phillies i i ; | driver vith the Bi division in with bad balls or walk him. There AOSTON Sheridan Wins HB bl L03 ao Plies in hs. hrs Sark <n Tn $6.50 For Information and Reservations 10.10 Europe an months for|wasn’t much else in the Tiger] Co, AB R.H O A E, : Dorothy Mitchell, Ft. Sq. Mixed (6:00) 463 | mound for the Cubs, 1s a -Call City Ticket Office—RI ley 9331 Table Lamps Uncle Sam. batting order to be alarmed about. |McBride. if 5.0 1 1. 0 11 Sheridan scored a 13-10 victory | Joan Baer pO emer Mixed | 433,10 Of Bob Feller, Cleveland ace. His : Rayon Pleat ——————————————————— eee ee ei I Pusky’ 28 co o o 1 1 over Douglas Park in an independ- Dorothy Huser, C Y. O. Mixed . .. 444 | mother is a sister of Bob's mother. “PE M MN S Y : VA N i A RA I L R 0 A D 211 EB h | jR Maggio, ot 3 8 2 1 1 0 ent football game yesterday By ET et eed 431 Hal formerly was with Detroit. ep ——— & Was eavy outs |IKOss, Ackles. [uk rT gh 53% — ar ! K | Ld 121 31 ol i Gutteridge 0 1 n n 0 ni M lohnson, p 1 0 0 0 2 0! eef on Mat H. Wagner, ¢ 3 0 n h ] n On Pro Card | Russell. 3b 1 0 1 oO 0.0 | | Hughson Pp 2 0 0 0 1 n {| Supporting the tag-team feature Pattee, 1 0 0.1 0 0 ‘ Matchmaker Lloyd Carter of the | on the Armory wrestlin | Totals 38 3 9 30 1 2 J 3 $ g card to-! LA 2 2 Hercules Athletic club has an- 4 ) | Gutteridge ran for Higgins in ninth, morrow night will be a bout be-| ST. LOUIS The Rest nounced the addition of two heavye whi weight brawls for the five-scrap pro tween Tony Ross of Portland, Ore., | schoendienst, 2b AB = 2 9 A | 7 any arrlir mitt bill to be staged at the Armory|and Ken Ackles of Hollywood, Cal. |MuSisi fb 008 © 1 13 0 0 » next Briday Bi |. nan Ackles is a favorite here, having | kirowsk. Ji ocrnees. 4 : } §8 0| ; 2 ” ¥ giola, © +e... 4 0 nr 2 Jeo hy 5 demonstrated speed and skill in|\iikey 3 © $33 4.8 ol Dom » “hanging up several importan }.0 0 0 80 S., and Allabs Suinll, Elwood Jeary. triumphs. Ross also has looked |Pollet, p .......e... i000 0 0 4 elghl-round | o504 in his Indianapolis ap-| Total 2 7 3 ol semi-windup, and will pit Lee Car-| noo. 000 Wirt Sit SR 12 ter, Indianapolis heavyweight, and Armory fans ate looking SER Te Touts i005 000 001 010 o=3| Bob Jackson, a newcomer from Chi- | Runs batted in—Higgins, Musial, Gara-| . - y 3 to more than the usual amount of |giola, McBride, York, Two-base hits—Mu- | ; cago, in a five-round mill, action in the tag-team tussle It | Sia, Jaragiols, Fhiee-hase hit—Slaugh- il - x * er. ome run - ork, Sto ase — | by Both Tommy Byron and Al John matches Rehe LaBelle of Toronto | Schioendienst. "sacrifices Marion, Dore | ; son, Indianapolis products who will| gq Billy Tt i Earned runs-—Boston, 3: St.’ Louis, 2. Left . clash for the state light-heavy- y om of Indianapolis|on bases—Boston, 10; $t. Louis, ase merica, 3 y against Steve Nenoft of Toledo and |on balls—Off Pollet 4 (Doerr, Williams 2 op * JI n 3 weight championship in the fea- ; . Hughson); Hughson 2 (Slaughter, Walker) ond Ay Whitey Whittler, the “mad mat-|8trikeouts—By Hughson 5 (Kurowski ra / / i tured 10-round attraction, are plan-| man” from Wood River. Il. | Moore, Walker, Garagiola, Pollet): Pollef 3 . ning heavy workouts this week at|Nenoff, a Russian gra ler and] Ne a} ae. Degen, Tariw)) Jetiwn s 9 their respective trainin te ; ; Dp.er, | Pitching summary—Hugh 7 hits, &: i ———————— Ane quar 5 | Whittler ieatiive icky and AgEres- | runs in B Roh Ee nt 5 ne # ——— | sive tactics, It's Whitey’s. first local unin 2 it pitcher—By Pollet . = | (York), ghson Kurowski), w , ¥ Cathedral Boosters | pout a——— pitsha’Jjonmsen. J Int iy Your dealer's playing fair with his £ To Meet Tonight 'W . —— bard (AL) 1b, Barlick (NL) 3b. JBerry : i arriors to (AL) 3b. Attendance—36,218, Time—2:30 i

Play Franklin Township

present quota of WIEDEMANN'S FINE BEER—just ask for your fair share

Cathedral high school Boosters

club will hold its monthly meeting Eyes Examined

Jomght Bie. Caihaeral high SS Vaughn Woods’ Waren) and hool . entral high school gridders play | ' Pictures of the first game of the | host ‘to Franklin lh tomor- | Glasses Fitted and he'll have an easier job keep-

ing Jor the locals against Elder |row afternoon to open “the week's | = nenal pi? be shown | schedule for prep teams of the area. | i gether With B Dim Spica The Warriors will be bidding for Highlig a Es ootball their second victory against a team| - Seuon. ine eeting will | which has dropped three decisions, | ollow pictorial presentation. won one and tied another.

: Friends and alumni of Cathedral ————————— igh school are invited to attend | Rebels Win, 5-1 | : DALLAS, Tex., Oct. 7 (U, P).—

his meeting. Tie at Reformatory |cmeiee vor veo, three

consecutive wins over. the Atlanta PENDLETON, Ind, Oct. 7.—The| Crackers in 1946 Dixie baseball sePendleton Regulars and Trusties| ries yesterday by trouncing the

battled to a scoreless tie yesterday) Southern Association pennant wing on Reformatory gridiron. ners, 5-1, before 11,000 fans. >

DR. DAVID TAVEL

OFTOMETRIST 116 W. Wash. St, Claypool Hotel Bldg,

ing your pantry shelves stocked.

WIEDEMANN S %%scc BEER

BREWED BY THE GEO. WIEDEMANN BREWING CO, INC, NEWPORT, KY,

WANTED

8 | vi IN LOAN! +0 Copyright, The Gan. Wiedemann Soha nn : ol ANS ! BUY | | “ao ohne SE THE CAPITOL CITY SUPPLY CO., INC. | | [| McGinty Sales lbp yi ae} 214 E. ST. CLAIR ST. % ik PHONE RI1-8591-8592 | : - Miohed & i Ri ERATE 3 - | a ‘ A a 58 - i ; | - : ” ; i li ‘