Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1948 — Page 9

oo : Trials ng

River, red Cop

A thomabls - ghiktepale regatta ts, was up | “in trouble today

yl River wag 2 problems than 1 of chlorinated ter.

etired Bum

case, the Olympie ed on the Schuyl. une 30. And for since. the Pligrimg the East has , t the laurels from hington and Cali. ed too slow with rorite and Prince. he darkhorses. So 8 needed. Is Tiring : Rusty Callow, the owing coach; he Schuylkill, to, of that infamoy vater. Now ity idbanks, It eve future * develop. ker oarsmen, he probably makes ¥ xff-very nappy. at and to compl there arrived the copper. ‘ named Roy Couch years on the fores ked it all to rest "lorida. Now hes ‘ucial time holding T any spare shells, or coxswains the have laying about, hat Couch once y's West Side. Row. while never the

Newhouser,

. PAGE 9

cas ab BE La

Lean HR RuAnerp

In Strikeout Division Has 33 Whiffs to His Credit; Shows Good

Control in Downing Senators, 5-2 By CARL LUNDQUIST, United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, May 25—Don’t tell the American League hitters that Hal Newhouser’s fast ball is gone—they just won't believe it. The report about Hal's fast one went around the I gpring and for a time it looked as if there was some truth in it. after winning his first start, dropped four straight games for the Tigers and was batted out of the box in two others.|

But today the lean lefty,

who! got his training on the sandlot Major Leaders of . Detroit, is runner-up in the league strike out competi-| tion with 33 whiffs, three behind’ Gustine, Pittaburgh is teammate, Virgil Trucks. And Hol his control is excellent. innings pitched ‘he has walked Furie, Brooklyn .

diamonds h

only 21 batters,

Starts Slowly yesterday, winning his second:

straight game, ‘he struck ‘out six! batters and walked two as the Tigers topped Washington, 5 as eve He started out Didaggio, Yanks 10 yielding three of seven

2 at Detroit. slowly,

hits the Nats got in the first

jnning. Al

Kozar's single, Gil

Coan's triple and Mickey Ver-

non's. ‘single

Paul

gave Washington poth of its runs. Campbell "pouser enough runs in the first

gave ' New-

when he tripled with the bases

loaded.

Pat Mullin hit a Tiger —homer-in the third.

“At Tat, just about when even their most faithful followers had given up hope, the Dodgers ended

“an eight-game losing streak with

a well-earned 9-to-4 triumph over

the Reds at Brooklyn. tory pulled the Dodgers out of

The vic-

eighth place and ended the long-

est—home losing -

losing streak inthe

managerigh-regime--of Leo -Dur-

"Pitches Brilliant Game Preacher Roe, a skinny lefty

who won the last Dodger game, also against the Reds, pitched

ocher.

brilliantly,

holding Cincinnati

hitless for five innings and re-

tiring 15 batters in order.

He

struck out seven and, though he

was touched for yielded no earned runs.

eight hits All of

the Cincinnati runs came as the result of errors by Peewee}

“Reese at shortstop; almost unbelievable for

three,’

t Me Again’ and the bug bit me red--the

-

back to Orlande, lusty, om Rollins College, crew at Orlande

ave stayed out of ches’ hair, but Mrs. she had to go to ., for some shopwent along and the Florida South-

coach there, lls cost $1500 and S0- Roy thought he to wangle a handrived at the wrong

n't give Roy any amouflaged canoes

unvarnished | Pyouble by Miksis was the big blow. “The Phillies ended their losing) four games with a 6 to the Cardinals at night. That cut Hogar League lead

shipped much fara Florida. Harvard

s a lovely river—a ans shells!

RTE TY

With regular price,

Tires.

Come in |

ORNER A

“ouvert Bis

“Jackie Robinson with a. homer,|:

double and single and Eddie Miksis, who hit a base-clearing double and a single provided the main offensive impact. Billy Cox, Roe’s room mate and with whom he played at Pittsburgh last season,

also Wit a homer.

Ths Dodgers

a the victory in the fourth with a six run rally in which the

streak @ 2 vi Philadelphia at the e Card Nat

Winchester

8 Proof —65% Grain,

, --Suitches To Calvert Reserve: Because It's So Mellow

ATLANTIC CITY, N, J.— Ben ten, gas station owner, of 4329 Avenue, Atlantic City, peppy itched to Calvert Reserve Se 1 enon mined oes makes,

CALVERT RESERVE Blended Whiskey 4ugus ~86.8 Grain Neutral Spirits. stillers Corp., New York City

NATIONAL LEAGUE

H «20113 26 3 +21 15 10 ’ | Blainit, Phijadeiptia 3 BL. 20 3 d 281 30 , 25 18 28 AMERICAN LEAGUE GAB R NH | Boudreas. Cleveland. . 26 101 18 « |Zarilla, St. Lou . 26 97 13 3 Williams, rie 29-108-2% 3 o Kher. Detroit ..... 31114 15 41 Detroit 18.718 24

HOME RUNS to! Rattner, Cleveland 13 Williams, Red Sox 3 p

10i8auer, Reds ...... RUNS BATTED IN Williams. Red Box 35 Musial, Yanks 33 Majeski, Keltner, Cleveland 20!

Athl

Polo Grounds tonight.

game until the seventh when Al

and two of the only three hits Dubiel allowed. YESTERDAY'S STAR—Eddie Miksis of the gers, who hit a three-run double, stole ‘home, and added a single and a_ great day at second base to the 9-to-4 victory over the Reds.

Heinlein's Team Scores in Pro-Am

to carry his team to victory in

the Indiana PGA pro-am tour--jnament at Woodstock.

Dropping to second place in

Paul 8 'inéhiding

ring, all of Indianapolis.

White, Noblesville; Mark Wood,

one-hole playoff,

Hood Meets Henderson In Amateur Feature

fat

‘CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT for STATE HEA YY elu? TITLE

1,500 SEATS

COLION CHANEY

Indianapolis’ Swvasdng Contender

SID PEAKS

National 5th Ranking Sensation ALL HEAVYWEIGHT CARD—36 ROUNDS

THURSDAY

SPEEDWAY. BUS SERVICE TO AND FROM FIGHTS " NEW LOGATION

MIDGET SPEEDWAY

~ WEST 16th

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

; INDIANAPOLIS BOXING CENTER Forrest. MoKinney, Promoter

P RIcEs; $3.60 Ringuide, $2.40 Reserve, $1.50 General Tax Included : Now ON SALE at Haag's, Penna. & Wash. Sts.

Host professional for the meet: will be Fred Keesling, who also doubles as the principal of Law-

4 rence Central High Schoo

“| Amateur, Independent, | Semi-Pro. Baseball .

The Speedway A. C. wants to] schedule a practice baseball game on the Speedway Park diamond after 2 p. m. Saturday. Teams should contact J. Kelly at LI- 2323, between 8 a. m. a4 5p. m.

Capitol Oil defeated the Noblesville Merchants, 12 to 6, at Nohlesville Sunday.

Fight Results

By United Press (Velodrome) —Willie Belt- . New York, outpointed Joey “1400, ag Oey

0 ony Aniro, 147,

Youn: town, 0. (10).

TOUTE, New York, knocked out Jackie Lyons, ! 179%, Pittsburgh (5).

May 217, 8:30 P. M.

STREET

‘this

Cardipais 29 29!

to two and a half games over the Giants as they moved. into the]

Walt Dublel pitched the Phils| to victory. He had a perfect

| Schoendienst singled and then/ came home on-Btan Musial's sev-| ‘enth homer of the season. Those were the only runs for the Cards, |

Bill Heinlein parred the first extra hole of a playoff yesterday

the short playoff was a team led ks, Coffin pro, and fke Suftivin, Law-[ rence Laughlin ‘and Carl Fueh-

New Castle, and Joe Medjeski of Indianapolis. The teams were tied at 66, six under par, before the

“| Witucki,

)

| ]

LOVELY LURE—This should interest all fishermen. Pat Wil. liams holds a retractable fish lure made by Louis Eckert, Burbank, Cal. brought into play until the fish strikes the lure. Eckert took | the idea from the retractable | undercarriage used on aire planes.

Bell's One-Hitter Downs Cathedral

Washington downed Cathedral, 4-1, yesterday in high school baseball as Robert Bell turned in a one-hit pitching performance. Jim Dimitroff and Phil Frame paced the Continental attack with two |singles each. Eddie Neu's single in the second robbed the Washington pitcher of a no-hitter.

defeat Greensburg, 12-2, at Greensburg. Redskin pitcher Bob

-{8cheib hit - a two-run- homer {in The winning team; besides}

Heinlein, was composed of Pete

'the fifth “and his" battery mate; [Jimmy Muncie, collected three! doubles in the high-powered hitting attack. . In the Ben

county Davis

vis collected 10 hits,

‘High School Standings

ALL GAMES Won

Busey Nomed Head of

State V-5 Association {- ‘Anderson High School's letic director, David Busey, has been elected chairman of the

state's V-5 Association cf Amer-

wife The group’ merades rormer|

ntembers .of the Navy's physical training and education department. . Vice chairmén are Glen He meson, Wabash - College - coach, and Bob Primer of sa Bend. Board members include Chili Cochran, Indiana University; ‘Mel Taube, Purdue:. John Druze, Notre Dame; Bernie assistant coach of the Chicago Rockets; Dick ‘Tiernan, Roy =. Kelley,

Howe Military

|Anderson’s Peck Is Picked for: All-Stars .

Richard Peck, captain of the 1947-48 Anderson pasketball

| team, has been chosen No. 6 on! | the Indiana All-Star cage squad

which will face off against the best - Kentucky has to offer| June 18 in the Coliseum. Peck received the sixth high-| est number of votes in a poll of the state's leading sportswriters and newscasters. He was chosen

as a ‘defense man.

sk.

DIAMOND

LOANS

# WE BUY DIAMONDS # WOLF SUSSMAN

239 W. WASHINGTON ST Mui Established 48 Yea

TRUSSES

~~ b=

USED TIRES

ALL SIZES Fully Guaranteed GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE

627 N. DELAWARE Blley 1436

ha Tr

AKRON SURGICAL

HOUSE, INC

| Harmon, pro-wheo. won

The hooks are not |

~|down Johnny Palmer in 18, five

Manual pounded out 14 hits to gar

trimmed Beech Grove, 7-3, on the| Beech Grove diamond. Ben Da-!|

ath-|

School and Cloyd Julian, Wash-|’ THON HIE SFHo0T track “doach.

better than those of his brothers.

boomed into the finals of the 30th annual! PGA tourney

Turnesa at Norwood Hills yesterday with an extra-length, 37-hole, 1-up semifinals victory over Claude the Mamaroneck, N.Y,

pionship in one ot the only two tourneys he entered this year. Thus Mike equalled the mark’ hung up by his brothers, reaching the finals of the PGA, and also earned the right to play one of the greatest stars of golf, Hogan. Ben, who won the ¢rown for the first time in 1946, downed Jimmy Demaret of Ojai, Cal, 2 and 1,'in his

‘| yesterday.

Hogan was favored by’ most| of the gentry for today's scrap, and with a lot of reason. The| Texas belter stands right up among the top money winners in third place. Turnesa won the Westchester, N. Y., PGA championship and Westchester Open this year, but he's not in the same league with Hogan. Hogan qualified for the grind (with a 06 ‘and a 72 on his two | medal play rounds of the par-71 course. Then in match play he went one over par before hy edged Jock Hutchinson Jr. one up in 23 holes, three under to

under to whip Gene Sar in 36, five under to drop Chick Harbert, ‘and he was eight under] in 35 against Demaret. Little Mike, who came to the tourney so sure he'd go home early that he ran out of both socks and golf balls, qualified with a 71 and a 73. Then he outlasted all of ‘his opponents, going two under par to defeat Charles Sheppard 1 up, one under to beat Zell Eaton 1 up in 21, eight under to trip Al Smith in 34, four under to beat Johnny Bulla 6 and 5, and twd under yesterday to oust All in all, Mike has been 17 unbider par for his 141 holes of match play, and Hogan 20 -under142. But Hogan has been more erratic, and whether-he-would- bei able to play his best game against Mike's determined, tight-lipped assault was questionable. In 1946, Hogan walloped Demaret, 10 and 9, in the semifinals and went on to win the title; from Porky Oliver. But yester-

STunesa Meets Hogan in PGA Final Round

- Third Member of Golfing Family Bests

‘Master’ Harmon in Neighborhood Battle “OUST. LOUIS, "May ‘25 (UP)=-The third “of the ‘seven golfing Turnesas, 39-year-old Mike, made his bid today for the crown denied two other members of the family, Joe and Jim. And Mike's chances against little Ben Hogan looked little|

semi-final matchia

forione-fall-or-

Demaret was 2 and 1, and he had trouble at that. { Turnesa - defeated Harmon mainly through determination.) Fach won two holes of the first 18 to go to lunch even. But then Harmon, ~ masterful player, turned on the heat, and he was 2 up on the White Plains, N. Y,,/ entrant after 28 holes. The] match halved then until the 34th, but Harmon three-putted the par| 4 hole to give Turnesa a break. On the 35th, Harmon drove into “rap and Turnesa squared the match. They halved the 36th, and] on the 37th, the same hole Turnesa birdied twice earlier in the day, he came through-with an-|

other 3 to win. Hogan: held the edge over) Demaret most of the day. He was

3 up through most of the first 18, and early in the afternoon round] went 4 up. But Demaret stiffened, | was 2 down after 27 and got even {after 30. They alternated win-! ning the next two holes, “but| Hogan took the 33d and 34th with| birdies. and they halved the 35th| as the play ended. Today's winner was due the $3500 first prize, while the loser earned $1500 runnerup money.

Mat Card Moves Outdoors Tonight

Wrestling moves outdoors A

the Sports Arena. The three-tiit bill will be headlined by a heavyweight clash be-!

Louis, and Bobby Managoff, 235, of Chicago, who will. clash for two. falls out of three. with a 90-minute time limit, The - semi-windup, slated for,

Buddy - Rogers from Camden, Diego. A catchweights clash pairing Lefty Pacer, 200-pound Cleveland | veteran, and newcomer Billy Darnell, 215-pound Philadel ,~witl openthe action at] 8:30 o'clock. It's also for one fall

day the best he could do against

or 30 minutes.

Robin Hood, 147, South Side rec ogni sso eddie rer are et ho Community Center, will meet Lawrence Central +4 3 581 Bob Henderson, 147, Louisville, (groad Ripple ‘Ss 3 mg in the five-round feature of the A aige eee 1.3 +10 » amateur card at the South Side Howe . 8 3 687 Motor Armory tomorrow night. [Southport ........ +9 3 84] Other bouts will match Bob Decatty Cownehip ot + heel Roberts, 135, South Side, and|Crispus Attucks +. 4 3 is Charley Krenshaw, Louisville;| eech Grove ..... Tas cams Gene Luckett, 112, South Side, |athedral .. . .......... 3a au - and Charley Van Roy, Jackson's Haren Sevtral one 8 000] {1 Gym, and Harry Dunn, 160, and Crrr-oAugs Lost Pet Dudley Young, Lexington, Ky, A eg ¥ Wilhington ees : } 3 Lam Coaches Plan Annual vy 31 am Golf Tournament Crispus Attucks. SI ie Members of the Marion County [Sacred Heart 3 000 Coaches Association - will - hold . COUNTY “Gas Lost ‘Pet their annual™ golf tournament Southpo Bis eseeive wr 1 a3 Saturday at 8 a.m. over the In-|i urence Central. iooi 8 2 114 dian Lake course, “All coaches in Ben Davi oh «3 z +600 the Marion County area are eligi pecater Central Ln ° 3 ooo ble. fo participate. | Warren Central ves Tr 4 000

yo { Richmond: Ratph Kifer, Lyne) gy

Follow this 15-Point Phillips 66 Check List FOR HAPPY SUMMER DRIVING!

>

eigenen

night with the first open-air mat | card of the. summer season in|

tween Lou. Thesz, 238, of St.

“30 minutes, will pit; NJ. against Cherry Vititna, San

is yours when

you include Schenley

in your plans... because Schenley is more mellow,

definitely

\ finer.

>

XA

i 5 SCHENLEY Zr it

"Bam Pre-War Quality Blended Whiskey 86 proof. 65% grain neutral spirits. © 1948, Schenley Distifers Corp, N.Y. 6.

= by the ton

Though you may: never sec the coal aboard this train, it puts money in

your pocket, no matter what your job. Coal helps make tools for grow-

ing larger, better crops: “And these crops bring better prices because of coal. For it creates the power that multiplies the worker's productive capacity, enabling him to produce more, earn more and spend more. Coal energizes the production of American plenty, and it drives the trains ‘bringing that plenty to your community. . , . Last year the Illinois Central hauled 461,508 cars of coal—the most in its peacetime

history—to help produce and deliver to you the best of everything.

WHAT YOU WANT WHEN YOU WANT IT

When you shop for a lipstick or a lawnmower, a suit or a box of strawberries, your local mer chant usually has what you want when you want it. Products from 100 or 2,000 miles away are as handy as though they were made two LT “blocks from your home. Bringing them to you is the 1llinois Central's No. 1 job. By doing it ' well, we intend to earn your continued friend.

ship and patronage.

ILLINOIS CENTRAL ~ RAILROAD

oF MID-AMERICA .

Min wy 3 hs A

W. A. Jounston "President

MAIN LINE,