Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1948 — Page 11
E28 10 | oNDAY, JUNE 25
aillion-acre ranch, y winners, turkeys, ——— Th
ke up in the Biyy
y. : up the day by sham. big banquet hall of ; anchhouse, a r ombination beach. cowboys. at down and ate ing for the occasion ween us, we didn't the dust from oy aces. We were top went at it Texas
sn’'t Mysterious rgs entertain wel, mysterious, fantastis
heir immense ranch §
er, mysterious place ' whispered up and ast. or beef cattle, race. ail, they go into i d scientifically, like’ earch of an Indiang illion acres are open ters during hunting they have to do is r to the ranch, tel} 1ey want to hunt for, 8 arranged, a guide ty and believe me, it long to get the limit, oot a gun at all. The ly black with quail. during hunting sea. deer jump out from he road.
° * Nines in * 1y Action hedule for American or baseball games: eech Grove at River.
and Big Four vs, t Riverside No. 6.
8 schedule: Memorial; \
Ragsdale at Brook cton at Broad Ripple hodius No. 2; KenWatkins at Riverside ton vs. Broad Ripple rerside No. 5; Speed.’ pole at Riverside No,
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par oremen's City Golf Championship Club today.
Miss O'Neal was out in 41-and came in with a one under par 38 to better the defending champion, Miss Dorothy Ellis of Meridian
who shot an 87. O'Neal
Hills, in the same
and Ellis played
ursome. ® Rounding out the foursome were Mrs. Bud Herrick, Highjand, who carded a 93 and Mrs, Nick Hatfield of Hillcrest who also shot a 93. par Out.... 455 354 43437 par In..... 535 553 4453976 O'Neal Out. 454 455 545—41 O'Neal In...545 543 435—38—179 Shoots Nine in Par Over the 18 hole distance, Miss o'N~2] paired nine holes, and had three birdies. Her score established her as the favorite to take the tournament. The Rollins College graduate h won two prévious city championships. Miss Ellis required only 13 utts on her outgoing nine, - but she ran into trouble” with her wood and approach shots, On the seventh hole she topped her second shot and lost the ball in a small stream. She wound up with a seven after taking a penalty stroke. She had another seven on the ninth hole when her iron shot landed in a trap to the right of the green. Her blast out was short and she took two putts. 16 to Qualify The low 16 qualifiers today
were to comprise the champion-|
ship flight for match play that
Defending Champion, Ellis, Second With 87
Qualifying Score Puts Rollins College Grad In Position of Meet Favorite for 2d Time
Miss Alice O'Neal of the Woodstock Country Club shot a: three 79 for low medal honors in the quali
EGGERT
round of at the Highland Golf and Country
Welterweights Fight Tonight
Robinson Makes Weight Limit CHICAGO, June 28 (UP)—Ray (Sugar) Robinson and Bernard Docusen were set to square off tonight in Comiskey Park for: their twice-postponed 15-round welterweight title match. | “Promoters today said a heavy! training schedule and rigid diet had pared enough weight from! Robinson to allow him to make! the 147-pound weight limit. But some observers believed Robinson might be weakened by the diet. The champion was at least four pounds over the maximum last Monday when the bout with the New Orleans battler was called off because of ‘“unfavorable weather.” He barely made
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
eal Shoots 79 In City Golf Tourney
TEE TIME — Dorothy Ellis, defending champion of the Women's City Golf
tourney, takes a practice swing before teeing off this morning at Highland. The
rest of the foursome, looking on, includes Alice O'Neal, last years’ runner-up, Mrs. Nick Hatfield and Mrs. Rick Harrick.
the limit June 17 when bad
ment, Last Welter Fight
Robinson announced Friday
last.as a welterweight because of| {weight difficulties. He stood to lose at least his| $5000 weight guarantee and pos-
gets under way tomorrow. Com-|giply the title if, he fails to make
petition in minor flights also will begin tomorrow and continue through Friday. v Ellis and O'Neal were finalists
two years in the semi-finals. Al-
times in city and state tournaments with Ellis winning five.
Mathias Is Youngest
Decathlon Winner.
BLOOMFIELD, N. J, June 28 (UP) — Seventeen-year-old Bob Mathias of Tulare, Cal, High School won the National A. A. U. decathlon championship and has been picked for the U. 8. Olympie team along with Irv Mondschein of the'sNew York Pioneer Club and Floyd Simmons of tte Los Angeles A, C. Mathias thus became the
youngest decathlon winner infthe Way in Saturday's finals at
the history of the National A: A. U, as he thwarted Mondschein’'s ambition to be the first
man to win the title four times.{Women's Golf
Mondschein, 23 years old, won in 1944, 46, and ’47.
ys
(Ra SS
had been the faverite drink of the patrons of the High land House, Mt. Adams, for ten years when this picture * was made in 1881,
t's Still
\
HE FLAVOR that
the grade at weighing-in ceremonies today, since the Illinois
casional showers. Promoters said!
'night in case it rains.
Berg Gives Check | To Aid Golf
| CHICAGO, June 28 (UP) — Little Patty Berop returned to Minneapolis today without the $500 prize she won for beating Mrs. Babe Didrickson Zaharias in a thrilling extra-hole battle for the Women’s Western Golf cham- | pionship. Miss Berg won, one-up, on the 37th hole after trailing most of
the 8kycrest Country Club, 8he immediately - offered her winner's check to the Western Association “to
that tonight's fight will be his|
map steam oer | yes Lines Fit Red Sox Rapid Rise
Reach Rare June Day
Athletics Stay in Top Ranks of Flag Chasers
By CARL LUNDQUIST, United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, June 28—Not that it matters at this late date, {Athletic Commission threatened but the Red Sox were convinced today that James Russell Lowell, | to vacate the title in that event.| Who was a Bostonian himself, knew what he was doing when he in the 1946 and 1947 tourneys| The weather outlook was for Wrote just 100 years ago in 1848—“What is so rare as a day in and were opponents the previousicloudy weather with with oc-| June; then if ever come perfect days.” Lowell's lines in the vision of Sir Launfal, penned in the pretogether, they have clashed eight|the fight would go tomorrow Ted Williams’ era, are highly ap-
plicable to Joe McCarthy's Marauders, who won 17 games and lost but five and moved from seventh to fourth place in the American League standings this month. Now rated by Bucky Harris of the World Champion Yankees as the team to beat, the Red Sox moved to within five games of first place yesterday when they won 2-to-0 and 6-to-3 decisions at St. Louis. Joe Dobson's two-| hit pitching gave him his ninth] victory in the opener, but the Red Sox were more enthusiastic about the fact that Dave Ferriss turned in his first route-going of the season in the second Ferris, who scattered eight hits, indicated his arm was sound again and if that is true he could
game. and only one Tiger got to third.
s Only 5 Games Behind,
succumb to that decent second
arranged for them, rose instead
place by topping the White Sox,| 6 to 5 and 6 tot 2. oskey was the hitting star in both games. Yankee Experiment A highly encouraging experiment was conducted by Yankee Manager Harris at Detroit in which he gave Tommy Byrne a long-awaited chance as a starter and the lefty responded with a two-hit, 7 to 0 victory. He walked eight, but bore down splendidly
Washington retarded the Cleveland Indians, topping them 5 to 2
further interest in ‘the game of golf among young women.” v
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be a major factor in McCarthy's pennant plans. The Athletics, who just won't
‘Ibeating the Dodgers, 8 to 4, at
with a late attack that sent Gene Bearden out with his third defeat |against six victories, but Cleve-| {land countered with a 4 to 1 second game victory as 8am Zol+ dak won his second straight since coming to Cleveland from the Browns.
Johnny 8ain, the Arkansas squirrel-shooter, won his ninth game and his sixth in his last seven starts at Boston, holding Pjttsburgh to eight scattered hits in a 9 to 1 rout. The Cardinals stuck within half a game of the leading Braves by
Brooklyn as Marty Marion and Stan Musial hit homers. Musial’s was his 17th. Al Brazle, with relief help from Ted Wilks, was credited with his fifth victory. Reds Nose Giants
The Reds nosed out the Giants, 4 to 3 at New York in a game officially protested by Manager Mel Ott, who charged that fill-in third baseman Danny Litwhiler threw his glove at a smash by Walker Cooper in the eighth, which would have, under the rules, given Cooper an automatic three base hit. After a wrangle in which” even umpires Beans Reardon and Jocko Conlan began shouting at each other, Cooper was waved back to first. The Reds won it for Ewell Blackwell with four straight) singles, two hy pinch-hitters Babe; Young .and Augie Galan, after two were out in the eighth. It was Blackwell's fourth win. The second game was rained out. The Cubs defeated the Phils, 6 to 2 behind Russ Meyer's seven hit pitching, but Rookie Robin Roberts squared accounts with a 7 to 4 triumph in the nightcap, the second straight victory for the $25,000 bonus hurler since he joined the club two weeks ago.
Amateur Baseball
Huddy Moore's homerun in the sth inning with one man aboard ve the Capitol Oil an 8-7 victory over the Allison Jets yesterday afternoon in the game
Wiedemann's Bohemian Brend Bears BN.F, §50-Year Award
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played at Decatur Central High School.
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Williams, 4 Boudreau, Cleveland
Zarilla, St. Louis Lindell, New York.. NATIONAL LEAGUE Musial, St. Louis P hicago 55 208 34 7 Ashburn, Philadelphia 61 253 41 87 344 Gordon, New 83
Leading Batsmen
RUNS BATTED IN
Williams, R. So: DiMaggio,
x i anks. 65 oy Cleveland 52 Sauer, Red wary BB
division burial the experts have|, to within a hair's width of first|Ashburn, Ph
Barney Mc- Kiner, Pirates .. DiMaggio, Yanks 18,
Major Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE
... 62 242 55 08 1 348
405
York . 53 183 41 60 .328
69 Stephens, R. Sox 8
59! Kiner, Pirates 3
RUNS
Williams, R. Sox 59|DiMaggio, R. Box ¢9/Junior Baseball team yesterday Musial, Cardinals 55/Sauer, Reds...... Ly Kiner, Pirates... 51}
HITS
usial, Cardinals 98 Boudreau, Cleve.. 83 Williams, R. Box ilies 87]
90| Gustine, Pirates.. 78
HOME RUNS
. 22 Musial, Cardinals 17 19! Keltner, Cleveland 17
| Moore, Genzer Win Ripple Tourney
The summer season’s first bowl{ing tourney, the Broad Ripple { Doubles, closed down last night! lat the Ripple Bowl. Winners of the featured prize, a $200 deluxe deep freeze unit, were Bgnnie Moore and Leon Genzer “who scored a 1164 actual count, added {a 193 handicap, and totaled 1357 pins. Bonnie tallied a 5068 and Genzer came through with a 658. | In the handicap division of the {tournament Barbara Logan and! {Thomas Fisher scored a 1063 {actual, were gifted with 279 pins, and totaled 1342 woods for a first-place tie with Geneva Cox {and Robert Bryson who, oddly
enough, had the same scoring *
‘set-up. Pat Striebeck and Dave| |Yaver scored a 1216-74—1200 for third. | In the actual division Miss, Striebeck and Yaver came through |
lon their 1216 total. Pat “carried”
Dave, who scored a 546, with a total of 670. Miss Striebeck’'s three - game!
tally also took first place in the
(singles. Her games were 204! 199 and 267.
100-Meter Swim Won by Wilson
Negotiating the 100-meter distance in breast stroke in 1:28.9,| Jeanne Wilson, Chicago, former Purdue University swimmer, yes-|
G AB R H Pet terday dethroned defending jo a! 4 387 champion Nancy Merkle Lees,| York... 40 113 » 57 3 Portland, Ore., at the Women's - 41 19% 39 5 3% National Swimming and Diving!
[tournament, at San Diego, Cal, | | Top competitors from the two-| {day meet were to leave today for Detroit to participate in the women’s Olympic swimming tryouts,
Big Four Trimuphs
| The Big Four American Legion
(defeated the Columbus, Ind., Le{gion team, 7 to 3, at Columbus as | Pitcher Claude Neeley scattered ‘eight hits for the winners. Yesterday's line score: Big Four 000 001 101 4-716 3
| Columba .. 200 0-3 8 2 | p Neeley and “Adams, Hayes; Lind and a
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