Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1949 — Page 12

of “Iron Duke” day with 132.

got around better

hour, most speed they wouldn't feel

That's why most “geared-up”

4

retaining places.

passed the speeds fastest starters.

far. The slowest car ~ fleld last * year

wiseacres predict, enough this year.

Pa 335E Ai py i§38

: E

Hi Sse

8

at Mack Hellings, Offenhauser,

5 125 MPH Looks Like Minimum Time To Qualify for Remaining 13 Berths

The big question at the Indianapolis Speedway foday was whether 125 miles per hour would be the minimum speed to qualify ~ for starting positions in the 500-Mile Race. Predictions of “the fastest field ever” gained support yesterday with the breath-taking average of 132.900 miles per hour turned in by Johnny Parsons with bis Walsh Kurtis-Kraft, The Californian’s galt was only a shade under that

miles per hour in his Novi Mobil Special. The other five Sunday qualifiers

per hour. Some 30, 000 persons attended the time trials. With 20 cars having completed time trials the first two days and the slowest at 124.939 miles per

than 125 miles per hour. Cars ‘Geared’ Up

for resumption of qualifications Saturday, Only 13 [garage next oor, » places remain to be filled for the . 8 33-car starting field, With 65 cars on the “active” entry Mat, _ 45 are probable bidders for the

The early qualifiers have sur-

speed of the 20 fastest qualifiers for the 1948 race was 124.151 miles per hour by “Doc” Williams in the Clarke Auto Supply 8peclal, Six of the 20 fastest last year were slower than Henry Ranks 124.039, this year’s low so

Mauro's 121.790 in the Marion means Alfa Special. That speed,

Hits 183.235 : Parson's lightning ride opened 7 Jouterdays qualifications. astest lap was the second —— po did the two and one-half miles © at’133.235 miles per hour, Nalon's so» | second lap was 132.256 but his { others were fast enough to keep “ him in front of Parsons. Railbirds called the Parsons run “one of the prettiest” of the

of being “squeezed out” faster speeds, as he was last year, for he turned his first lap 130.265 miles per

was 128.260 miles per hour; Duke

stunt driver and three-time AAA Eastern race car champion, averaged 126.863 miles per hour in his Ervin Wolfe Special.

By ART WRIGHT

Nalon, who position Satur-

Speedway Crews Change Fuel

Novi Mechanic Has Speed Answer

“RADIO” GARDNER, the Novi Mobil team mechanic with the fast quip, cation all figured out: “Shucks, those ‘go fast bugs’ just crawled through the wall from the Novi garage to Parsons’

than 125 miles

veterans say safe with less

cars are being

MANY OF the race crews are busy readjusting their engine combinations for a change in «fuel after qualification, Some who have and will qualify on alcohol (in the car tank) expect to run the race on gasoline and other formula, While alcohol Increases the speed, gasoline gives the greater mileage and cuts down pit stops. . » »

THE QUALIFY Y-on-alcohol, race-on-gasoline plan is proving to be a “headache” for Karl Twining, veteran engineer of the Champion Spark Plug Co. It more plugs are changed the|s + « more than ever before because more crews are doing it. . » ~ THE “GOOD LUCK” rabbit was on the straightaway again yesterday. The rabbit has made its appearance more often this year . . . a good omen, the drive ers say.

of last year's The slowest

in the starting was Johnny

won't be fast

» JIMMY JACKSON, who isn't superstitious about wearing green, was giving Joie Chitwood, stunt-man-race driver, “the needle” about Chitwood’s new sports coat. “It's green,” Jackson insists. "It isn't,” retaliated Chitwood, who later said he was going to check a downtown store “and sell the darn thing” if it turns out to be green. Chitwood doesn't want to take any chances because in adiT, | dition to his activity at the Speedaay at

ay and Thursday nights at .ue™W. 16th 8t. Midget ay.

» # nn . IN. COMPARING the Novi Mobil cars’ and the Lou Moore onetwo winners of the Blue Pratt|Crown team, here are important mechanical specifications: The Novi engines turn 8000 revolutions per minute . . . their super. chargers turn 40,000 rpm's. The Moore éngines turn 5500 revolu-

tions per minute . . , and there are no superchargers; It means, ~/some say, that there's more the two/chance for the Novis to “blow in thejup” because of the 8000 rpm , Who| strain. The other side of the picWAS | ture is that “Bud” Winfield, enHorn in| gineer on the Novi team, will tell standing, you that he’s built them to stand per _hour.|the strain,

» # » DRIVERS ARE receiving many invitations to pre-race parties and testimonials, The latest is the r hour. third annual get-together of the Automotive Booster Club at the Marott Hotel at 6 p. m, next Friday. The organization is made up of automotive parts manufacturer's agents and factory representatives. Some 40 drivers have been invited, also Wilbur Shaw and other Speedway officials and Tommy Milton, chief steward, and other AAA officials, ©

in the Don Lee clocked at

Norm Olson

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First Game)

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“stuart arfisgm ogovin, Tet ow. Overmas, and binson. Riebe: Garver lar, Losing _pitel pitcher, Stuart, . Rosse PEr AREA 101 001 : ‘ eineion | Tebbetts; Hudson, rol? an Evans. ae oitcher, Huon (First Gam ) JERE poas’ ni Modat Huds hod whisr, EoAE Shr oihoe en 4” {Cleveland

B, oe "000 000 4 0 ., [Chicago 3

Gromek, ‘and oo U

: |Gettel and Wheeler. Losing vite |

wea me AMERICAN No games schedule

RICAN 8:

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GAMES

same achedul NAL LEAGUE (No games amon: 1

RESULTS YESTERDAY

nore Las, Sk Wake and TR gen.

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(First Game-10 Innings) Gionse 11+ 000 301 f~ § 18 whit Ba a

ASSOCIATION

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at, end of 3rd. Major League ‘Leaders

By United Press NATIONAL LEAGUE

Sal HH

AMERICAN LEAGUE

1 os

phens, Sox 8 Kokos, Khe. Browns ‘ 3 £4 t 4 "as i

Lr

| raham, Browns RUNS BATTED IN

Foe. = iar of

Qualifies for

has Parsons’ fast qualifi-| 5

Lap Lap Lap "1 wassssinnes 1:08.90

Lap

Lap

|

A strong gust of wind ont Ralph P Pratt and the Belanger Special into a spin on the otinwast turn during the first lap of his time trial yesterday. Undaunted by his “infield trip," Pratt climbed

Photos by John Spicklemire, Times Staff Photographer.

A good job well done are the sentiments of mechanics Harry Stephens, lev dacobs an and Wil.

liam Sparks (left to right) as they sons Qualified * "+ 132.900 mph in

How 6 Lars Qualified Sunday

JOHNNY PARSON

(Kurtis Kraft Special)

Tint 1 cesevnenees 1:07.62 T crenennsesse 120755 8 ciiseenaces 110184 4 Senicevenee 1018 Totals .... 4:30.88

MYRON FOHR (Marchese Special) Time 1 siebsnansne 1:00.09 2 ieeensanans 1:00.74 3 8800s bv ens 1:00.48 4 aveineinses 1:00.11 Totals .... 4:87.40

MACK HELLINGS

(Don Lee Special) Time

2 cisceieennes 1:10.34 8 seeereennes 1:10.49 4 licence 1:00.95 , Totals .... 4:40.60

DUKE DINSMORE (Norm Olsen Special)

0 Time 1 diassenness 1110.78 2 siete 111082 . 8 .iseeeinnes 1:10.30 & iiianenyee 111040 Totals .... 4:41.80

JOIE CHITWOOD (Wolfe Special)

Time 1 sassanasees 1110.88 2 saaeenaness 1210.76 8 serasvennas 111098 4 ciresnnness 121146 Totals .... 4:43.77

RALPH PRATT

‘500 After

back in and qualified the car at 125.764.

Back to Garage for Rest After 132.900 MPH Run

8

138.097 188.2385 182.665 182.606 182.900

MPH 180.265 129.051 120.571 180.227 120.176

MPH 128.155 127.950 127.678 128.683 128.260

127.1565 127.986 128.023 127.841 127.750

push the Kurtis-Kraft Special badk the 500 fire fiat yesterday.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Wind Sends Car Into Spin.

Speedway Lineup

sirous of cancelling the draft transfer, the Tribe management forked over $7500 for the return of the hurler. Malloy won one and lost one with the Browns this spring.

a Pittsburgh Pirate farm, like Indianapo

trek to Toledo and Columbus, they are sporting a .600 percentage in the league standings.

games behind leading St. Paul now and but one game behind second-place Milwaukee.

home stay under the lights tomorrow and they'll

Pitcher Released

Help Put Indians in AA Top Spot

By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor

Tril e Here Li

Tribe Box Scores

by Browns ‘May

the Redskins ( . beginn! look In the event Malloy performs aivision 1a beet ing ls up to last year's form, he is a polis only a fivedead cinch to bolster the Tribe’s|o,me dericit, jsagging mound start, Be eal Twin Bill Is games 1948 as Redskins head Colum annexed the pennant. The veteran a ie a a righthander had but seven de-i¢p, frst tilt, 9 'to 6, by blasting feats and led the league inii3 pits and the Red Birds anPp! . . {nexed the second contest, 5 to 4. Caught In Draft The * nightcap, scheduled for

May 15. But the Indians keptithe Tribe mound in the opener against three Columbus hurlers.

1 It also was announced at Vic-|

lis. Although the Indians lost three

Four Games Behind The third-placers are only four

The Tribesters begin their third

be here

seven innings, lasted nine before ia decision was reached.

series, three games to one, but tory Field that Bill Plate, rookiei/the two defeats in two starts at outfielder, and John Hahn, rookie R! pitcher, were released yesterday to Albany of the Eastern League, |in the first tilt at Columbus yesterday were Coach Don Gutteridge, subbing at second base for Jack Cassini, who was inin five starts in their abbreviated |jured in the Friday game at Toledo, and Catcher Earl Turner. .

Toledo hurt their record. Ww Big guns in the Indians’ attack

and home smacked a single and two triples. Culley Rikard also collected two doubles.

Jim Walsh lasted the route on

With both clubs fighting des-

perately in the second fracas, thes Tribesters used up three hurlers and : the Indians were outhit in the nightcap, nine to seven.

Red Birds five. The

The Indians won the Columbus

They Blast the Ball Gutteridge hit a single, triple run and Turner

Jim Walsh survived a late-in-

Sieiner, 2 McGal

Laos, 3 OO Howerton, ning Columbus’drive as the Birds|g.sen: 14 scored two runs in the eighth and three in the ninth.

Ara! Peters singled for Gants

Turner singled for Johnson Te ou an Sinaia

ef

5 € ave Osta, S8 ... tanceu, p

» &

through May 29. The fourth-| In the second game, the Birds Fs 5 place Minneapols Millers willitallied ihree times in the third |Lozap .....0%. furnish the visiting attraction. [frame after the Indians regis-|priens The Victory Field schedule for|tered one. In the top of the sixth, gant» the, week, Jueluding next Bungay: the Redskins Splurged for three Totus 3 OmorTow, nneapoli s;imarkers but the Birds countered] {38% . announced Wednesday, Minneapolis; Thurs-|with one to tie the game. Wie pas Asnounced as heiting for Rated day, Kansas City; Friday (ladies’| In the last of the ninth, with {fsan, sing ed for Brooms sixth, night), Kansas City; Saturday, Forrest Main pitching for the In-i Pusselman tiled “out Bor ryant in St. Paul; Sunday (afternoon|dians, Mel McGaha led off with|*" (Scheduled 7 Innings) double header), St. Paul. a single, Don Lang sacrificed |JNDIANAPOLIS .......... "00! po 4 While the Indians are perform-|and Bill Howerton broke up the "Batted fn Katia) * Lat ing in their own pasture, the first-\game by lining out a single,|Tuo base bits. 8a of Jog Ror place Saints and the runnerup|scoring McGaha. Johnson was|Howerion, Home Puna : Bho ase Brewers will be on the road. |the Tribe's starting hurler in the|Left o: rs , bases aR. to the garage after Johnny Par- | The American Association's finale. hue f if Johnson Mok EE ETL Boudreau Banks on Warm [feiss oh Poi gation § le

FIRST ROW No. Driver Qual. Speed | 54 Duke Nalon Novi. Mobil Special 132.989 5 Rex Mays Novi Mobif Special 129.552 33 Jack McGrath City of Tacoma Special 128.884 A SECOND ROW 1 Bill Holland Blue Crown Spark Plug Special 128.678 84 Duane Carter Belanger Special 128.288 22. George Connor Blue Crown Spark Plug Speclal- 128.228 THIRD ROW ; SA 61 Jimmy Jackson Howard Keck Special 128.028 26 George Lynch Auto Shippers Special 127.828 98 Johnny Mantz Agajanian Special 127.786 FOURTH ROW 3 Mauri Rose Blue Crown Spark Plug Special 127.759 14 Hal Cole Grancor Special 127.168 65 Doc Williams Sarafoff ‘Special 125.161 FIFTH ROW 36 Bill Cantrell Faegol Twin Coach Special 125.022 21 Henry Banks Federal Engineering Special 124.939 12 Johnny Parsons Kurtis Kraft Special 132.900 SIXTH ROW 2 Myron Fohr Marchese Special 129.776 8 Mack Hellings Don Lee Special 128.260 29 Duke Dinsmore Norm Olsen Special 127.750 : SEVENTH ROW 7" Joie Chitwood Wolfe Special - 126.863 34 Ralph Pratt Belanger Special 125.764

Hope It's "His

Seen as Challenge to

The young man who choked day when he nudged “Duke” Nalo

Johnny Parsons isn’t alone

MPH

121.083 '©

127.181] 127.244

miles per 125.345 i he had been “pushed.”

(Belanger Special)

Time oe lil 1 rasse sree 1211.91 8 saasesnsiene 1311.68 4

CRE RR

sesanasss 1:10.25

Totals rues $! 46.25

MPH

126. 033| day the pole position was out of

125.156 reach, 125.558 cause the fastest qualifier the 125.764 first day gets the coveted spot.

1. 764 |

Wrestling Shifts

To Sports Arena

Pro wrestling will shift from cause he won the 100-mile title the Armory to the open afr Sports|

Arena tomorrow night.

their list of possible winners. They feel Parsons could have| 4| bettered ‘Duke” Nalon's 132.939 hour pole position speed And that speed might have been better than his 132.900 miles per hour if he had made the run for pole position on Saturday. Sun-

regardless of speed be-

Leads Track Standing | Parsons weeks ago placed him-| |self In top spot among the na{tion's National Championship |drivers. He leads the Champion[ship standing with 200 points -be-

Test Run Gives Parsons Californian’s 132.900 Qualifying Speed

feels that this might be his year to win the “500

forecasters have added the 30-year-old Van Nuys, Cal,

| Goacher, who held the pole posi-

Year" in 500

Nalon in Pole Spot

back tears of excitement yesterp's pole position qualifying speed

in that opinion, Plenty of the speedster

Ayulo Captures 30-Lap Event

After closely trailing Potsy

tion, Manuel Ayulo of Los Angeles moved to the front on the 13th lap to win the 30-lap fea-

Speedway. His time was 8:42.96.

race at Arlington Downs, Tex.

f the same Kurtis-Kraft Special

The top attraction pits Billy| he qualified yesterday.

Pl DR, xvryeveres = Darnell, of Philadelphia against| TODAY cola, | § Sagar ioe Fo {Jack O'Brien, the OCIATION Blicher. Baer |Death Valley.” The semi-windup ode : RufadgIbRe Resanve 01-001 31 Jo send Don Lee, former Van-| LEAL: nt ion on Trnkle An |derbilt University piteher, Simmons. a“ * star,

against Cherry Vallina, of|py and confident. He didn

Ibe it will be my year to win the|

three - letter| |he was modest. He was just hapy-|

San Diego, while the Trét eventiedmitiing tears welled in his eyes

pairs junior heavyweights, phe: | George Overhulse, of Amarillo, nriged—that's all.” {Tex.,, meeting Tom Bradley, of |

3d §| Detroit, Performers in the semi. sh and Ah eae {windup and top bout are heavy-

| weights.

4 1/Solunar Table

A ly Lasink| Me roggy Let a0 1T—Tomorrow . B40 3:8 18~Wednesday .. 10:30 4:40 19-Thursday . . 11: 5:28 i Rriday Yanks 8 ! I-30 urday .... 1 20 8 | -Junday iaivad 1: ! | 93 onday 2:08 8:18

H

Probble Pitchers

i RE

2

pr DOO ®aaaooen

i § Aa a + w Eo 23335383

g 8

theses)

Sassi 3

with! (at the end of the qualifying run.

| “I was just happy—and sur-|

Respect for the proved greats of the speed sport--and the com-

|permost with Parsons. Misses Ted Horn When He won the Arlington | DOWIE Century his comment was: [The only regret I have is that]

|Enca, Champion Horn was fatally injured last fall in a race at DuQuoin, Ill,

a driver at Indianapolis. year he failed to get in the race when the engine of his Granatelll

ashington entry “blew up.”

AGUE (No games sched

, Softball Notes

hedule. TPAL STADIUM rye 1

CSN A A UNG RBI 500 Pn Soh SA a abs

The first time he saw the speedway was in 1946. That year he was a spectator Parsons started driving in 1940 in Los Angeles at the wheel of a He drove his first big car

A says he isn't supersti-

Wi Tm +» “I'm just careful.”

The battle for second spot also | was a close one with Mel Hansen

at month. He was at the wheel finally taking Kenny Eaton just

(five laps from the finish. Goacher,

“Sure, I feel good about it” | | who had the fastest time trial of “Demon of | Parsons said after his run, “may-| [the day, 16.96, took fourth place. The semi-final event was won {by Jack McGrath, who qualified The way he sald it, you knew Saturday for the 500-Mile Race Memorial Day... The trophy dash 't mind was won by Eaton with Goacher

ture event yesterday afternoon at the West 16th Street Midget

And 2-to-0 Shufouts

banking on warm weather to pull

Boudreau blames most of the

ly handicapping the pitchers. But there was nothing wrong with either of the White Sox hurlers, Bill Wight and Al Gettel, a couple of New York Yankee castoffs, who pitched 10-to-0 and 2-to-0 shutouts over the Indians. Gets Three Singles Wight, a stylish lefty, pitched five-hit ball in the opener and Gettel, a right-hander, gave up just four in the second encounter. Rookie Gordie Goldsberry was the hitting star, getting three singles and a stolen base in the opener and a two-run homer that accounted for all the scoring off Steve Gromek in the second game. Bob Feller was batted out of the box in two innings in the opener and suffered his second defeat. The hustling White Sox, with! five rookies in their starting line-| up, drew the largest baseball crowd in the history of the city, 53,325 fans, to yesterday's two games. The Athletics won two astonishing games from the Yankees, coming from behind each time, for an 8-to-7 11-inning victory in the opener and a 7-to-8 curfewshortened six-inning decision in the nightcap. Roof Falls In

Allie Raynolds was °breezing along with a 6-to-0 lead in the second game when the roof fell in and the A's made all seven runs in the final inning. Elmer Valo, who started the winning inning with a single, also finished it with another single that scored the tying and deciding

Spell to Pull Out of Slump

Bill Wright and Al Gettel Pitch 10-to-0

By CARL. LUNDQUIST, United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, May 16—Cleveland Manager Lou Boudreau is

doldrums and it can’t come too soon after the “zero” afternoon they spent Sunday in Chicago's Comiskey Park. §€ club’s woes on the fact that the 1 early season-games have been played in wet or chilly weather, main-|°

and double, runs. The Giants won their 10th game against two defeats in a|™*® fine home stand, defeating the Phils, T to 3 as Montia Kennedy pitched seven-hit ball.

runs with two out in the ninth on singles by Del Rice and Red

Chuck Diering to defeat the

Over Cleveland

his world champions out of the

driving

. The Cardinals put over two

Schoendienst and a double hy

Pirates, 4 to 3 at Pittsburgh. Johnny Wyrostek hit a two-run homer in the ninth then delivered a game-breaking single in the 10th in a 6-to-5 victory over the Cubs at Cincinnati but Chicago came back to win the second game, 8 to 5.

Earl Torgeson

Faces Operation

BOSTON, May 16 (UP)—First Baseman Earl Torgeson of the Boston Braves today prepared to enter the hospital for an operation on the left shoulder he injured in a game against Brooklyn Saturday night. Dr. Joseph .H. S8hortel said Torgeson will be lost. to the Braves “for the best part of a couple of months.” The Braves cannot make room for another player on the roster by placing Torgeson on the disabled list. Only two players per club are permitted on the list, and {the Braves already have Outfielder Jeff Heath and First Baseman Ray Sanders out. Left Fielder Marv Rickert,

runs. He got four hits for the game. Hal Newhouser won his fourth game of the season when the| Tigers exploded for six runs in the seventh inning, four on a homer by Vic Wertz, in a 9-to-3 victory over the Browns at St. Louis. But the Browns had all the bombs in the second game, winning it 12 to 4 as Ned Garver preezed to an easy victory behind the home run hitting of Dick Kokos, Sherman Lollar and Stan Spence.

be hing and oY an

| Heat winners were Goacher,

e Red Sox % ot one of their af the deason|

from Joe i oe i held the

| Eddie Haddad, Roy Newman and Senators to four hits for a 3-to-0

Lyle Dickey.

victory in Washington. Dom

The West 16th St. plant will| DiMaggio” got three hits to set)

petition he'll have May 30-—1i8 up-+switch to night racing next Sunday with time trials at 6:30 and

the first heat race at 8:30 p. m.

Marathon Winner

i YONKERS, N. Y., May 16 (UP) | Warre | the great Ted Horn wasn't in the| Victor Dyrgall of New York won | the 26-mile National AAU Marathon championship yesterday in the Dodgers.

the batting pace. Wins 4th Game | Vern Bickford, who is becom|ing a top-flight pitcher to go {along with

game, for the Braves.

hours 38 minutes 48.9 seconds. have won five in a row, swept

This is Parsons’ second year as| yonn Keller of Boston was second t and Louls White of Boston third. lyn

thelr Qitee-gans set with Brook-

ESSE RADIO CO.

140 W. NEW TORE Li-s3te

Johnny Sain and n Spahn, won his fourth A Dbril-

liant four-hit, 4-to-0 shut out over The Braves, who

Russell got a homer)

originally a first baseman, re-

— | Ki in . three! “Yom t

Tribe Batting

house~ wives, held first place in the doubles event of the Women's Ine ternational Bowling Congress to~

of their nearest competitors. Mrs. Svododa rolled a 639 and Mrs, Elyasevich carded a 590 to give them the fifth highest score rolled since the tournament started in 1918,

Dempsey and Mrs. Eleanore Koepke—rolled an even 1200 to. take second place in the event. There were no other majoe changes in the 5 In the lineup of le: of leaders,

Schroeder, Fal Falkenburg Win Tennis Crown

—Davis Cup star Ted

Falkenburg were a little weary of tennis today, and it was easy | to understand. It took them five hours to beat Richard (Pancho) Gonzales and Hugh Stewart yesterday for the

pionship.

The scores were 6-4, 19-17. it

Places Torgeson at first,

‘McCall Optioned

WASHINGTON, May 16 (UP)! —8outhpaw John (Windy) MecCall was optioned to Seattle of the Pacific Coast League by the Boston Red Sox today, who cut their squad to 27 players, two over the limit permitted after midnight, May 18. McCall won nine and lost 12 for the Louisville Colonels of the American Associa-~

REGULAR | GENUINE GASOLINE ETHYL

122° 23° 9 | BLUE POINT A720,

Delaware, Madison & Ray Sts.

tion last year.

«5 € @

(>

Tat] EAL your

ntertaining

iE

Chicagoans Lead WIBC Doubles

COLUMBUS, 0., May 18 (UP) —Mrs. Estelle Svododa and Mrs, Ann Elyasevich, Chicago

day with a 1229-29 points ahead |

A few hours later, a pair of | Detroit women — Mrs, Gladys |

LOS ANGELES, May 16 (UP) Schroeder | and Wimbledon champion Bob |

Southern California doubles chame |

ler's great field that cay plate and ki being tied up Earl Btege extra-base bl triple. The O in the Munici dianapolis Ar sociation. Y Sunday leagy third week o The DeWo

‘Excavators. ) - Score The ‘winner on nine hit clubbed out : scoreless unt when. Bought rugged teams in two runs. Four more Excavators

Dugdale was a shut-out u the Tavern'’s seventh. Comes The Vesta the first, one last one in Linde Air

. Kennedy Tar

Big Six Leaj eased by Sa 6; the Eagles 10 to 10, a ~trounced the 9 to 2. The Linde hind to sco eighth and 1 + The Athletic only two T ‘inning. ip In the Cit “Printers sla Farm nine t The clubs g quits after s

Capitol ol

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Com For ¢

By GI Winn Wood she pomplete sw Your bu stance, wh Just how ¥ dividual. The grea! exceptionall nickname, “He won P! Ninf 1916-19, “the British Ope: If the fe gether you The weig uted equall balls of the

Reach fo the extent fortable. 1

- Jose. yourd,

The hand Keep the ground as | Release t the hands top of the s Professic from a ful a three-qu