Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1949 — Page 26

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* On the loose

rlin Bros,

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Wolf, catcher

ren will ve! ing the Baturday game,

Pat Stewart of

___aim J from

‘ninth-seeded Anne Dry, sald the

CALEND

LEAGUE STANDINGS - AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww. t

310

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+

GAMES TODAY

Mjapeapals a a AT of a .. Paul (night), { ame So eduled)

ICAN LAGUR { Night Games) ago

be Louis, sland.

Pls » ork al

NATIONAL LEAGUE nati al Boston night),

ant "Pou at New. York (night) a —

". more pleasing . to your taste

ee

tomorrow

Music Co, is furansportation to the

Camp-| Co are on sale at L. Strauss

d}} Mrs. C. H. Edwards, medalist,

Mrs. William Hoffman, 7 and 8,

will be William WarOlsen. The team to Indianapolis follow-

1 PELPHIA, Aug. 25--| Officers Indianapolis was| writers and Sportscasters Assoc ation today canceled a meeting

a B. | roledo

i

MeCall, i {son Malley and Yvars : | # | Philadelphia “hicako

5 000 000 —. | Fowler and Astroth: Gumpert, Surkont

Brookivn 1) New Yor oh at Philadelphia (2, afternoon Adkins,

Definitely smoother.

WHISKEY 86 PROOF. 659% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS,

Newcombe, Roe Hatten Bear Load

M Sweet Fighte He Packs Too Much Stuff . For Game, Aging Belloise-

NEW YORK, Aug. 35 (UP)— its place radiated an eye-

Frank (Moose) Muehlheuser, ex-Colgate field stalwart, will be luge! the pigskin for the New ork Bulldogs hers Saturday when the new Gotham entry in the National Foot. bell League meets the Chicago Bears in an exhibition game at Butler Bowl. Indianapolis PAL Clubs will ben. efit from all the game's profits, Kickoff time is 2:30 p. m. Tick-

$Co, + oo Mrs. Edwards Captures Meridian Hills Title

won the club golf championship at Meridian Hills by defeating

yesterday. Other flight winners: Championship consolation, Mrs. "Clair Knox, first flight, Mrs. Ben| Olsen, (consolation) Mrs. Boris Meditch; second flight, Mrs. Roscoe Powell, (consolation) Mrs, {Charles Harrison; third flight, Mrs. Notria Talbert, (consolation) Mrs, Gordon Batman,

{But it takes some careful re-

{fourth straight and put them

games in a row and edging upward only one game out of first place, he seemed confident that the club's pitching woes were gone. : Shotton did not need to make much of a case for Newcombe. With a 12-6 record, the burly Don was noted as the most dependable

tossed the Dodgers to a 8-t0-0 win over the Cards yesterday. He rapped in three of the runs himself with an eighth-inning bases-| loaded double. Likewise, it was easy to heap laurels on Roe, who hoisted the Dodgers up from the depths of despair with ap eight-hit 4-3 lacing of the Cards Tuesday night, Hatten Lost Tough One

flection to place Hatten on the list of Brooklyn saviors. He was the chap who jost the ball game to the Cards Tuesday afternoon, a loss which was the Dodgers’

three games out of first place. * However, the record is deceiving. Hatten has been pitching good ball irght along. Even that loss to the Cards was a tough one, helped along by two Brooklyn miscues as much as by the hits lefty Joe allowed. Both Roe and Newcombe pitched victories in the three-game Cardinal series with only two days of rest. Il they can stand such pressure, and if Hatten stays in there, the Dodgers will

as those Cards. Dodgers the Cards battling so for the flag, there's. little time to heed the defending champion Boston Braves. But the Beantowners were in there plugging yesterday with Warren Spahn's fifth

of the Indiana Sports-

dere for-Saturday and gathering would be re‘scheduled during the winter at a date to be announced latér.

p> 3

RESULTS YESTERDAY

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION 012 010 000 4

i

(Kansas City vevna 000 . Sloat and Ginsberg) h and Mouk (11 Innings) 001 000 4id bl 010 010 000 00

Madison,

* As Columbus .... St. Paul WW Crimisn and Pusselman; Anderson, Calderone | Louisville . B. Minneapolis » > J. Robinson and

ie 3 W. Robin

AMERICAN LEAGUE 100 020-8 11 wo

n "ph Chambers, Sewell.

TTT | game.

» 1/when they lost a 3 to 2 night 010 311-- 5 10 0 game to the Washington Senators ‘in Cleveland. Mickey Harris got! : ¥ trom Joe Haynes. Martin and homered for Cleveland. i 200-010 101— 8 10 1! 100 161 010-4 3 0 the Athletics a 5 to 0 decision po "1 Ww 3 lloise. over the Wilts Sux In the uiyl Robinson, present world welterweight champion, said he would ’ After Steve's. handlers half-| 0 5 2

210 30 Gumbert and Me-|

straight victory, a 6 to 5 decision a ninth-inning Pirate rally, : Giants Beat Cubs ; Wes Westrum’s two homers and one by Sid Gordon gave the {Giants a 5 to 3 win over the Cubs {in the only other National League

{climbed to Within two games of] -

{the leading New York Yankees {in the American League when the | Yanks dropped a 13 to 2 decision {to Detroit. Three Yankee pitchers! | allowed a total of 13 walks, Then there were Vic Wertz's two homers to add more damage. | The third-place Cleveland Indians failed to gain on the Yanks

‘frown was gone and

man on the staff even before he.

| cided to call it a night. Unlike Lesnevich in similar circumstances |

Y Aug. 25—They've been saying for some

. -

is getting to be a fad around here. ; Pappy guy, sent his regrets to Eazard Charles, the NBA heavyweight champion, from his corner two weeks ago. Nobody ever hurt in the corners between rounds. Robinson's welterweight title was not at stake. The difference In weight was not as wide as it is when a welterweight goes in there against a t. Robinson scaled | at 153%, Belloise at 158. At 153% Robinson was sharp, strong and savage. By winning so emphatically he qualified to meet the winner of the impending La Motta-Cerdan brawl for the middleweight championship. .

- » sn THE CROWD that gathered under the lights in Yankee Stadium ast night saw Robinson at what is very likely his absolute peak. They saw a fighter who-has patently worked hard to perfect his fighting weapons. « There isn’t anything he can't do and do superiatively well. He is what you'd cajl a finished fighter in the truest sense. ‘He can hit. box, block and feint—the latter a rarity in the ring these days. His footwork is excellent and he has ring cunning. There can’t be the slightest doubt but that he'll give an oxcellent account of himself in the middleweight division. Indeed, he should dominate it, ;

> » . - ~ BELLOISE went as far as he could on what he had which wasn't much, and it would be nice if the matchmakers got away from the old pappy guys for a change. Belloise gave the addicts a better run for it than did Lesnevich. He fought with resolution and gallantry up to the very end and when he landed squarely he hurt and shook Sugar Ray. And once—in the fourth--he made Robinson quit and back away. This was the old guy's best round and it was packed with violent action. First Robinson had him in distress with a raking fire that shifted from stomach pit to jaw tip. He absorbed what seemed an endless volley of blows, but he heid his ground and kept. punching back and suddenly you saw Robinson break and go into a fast retreat before an opponent who was outclassed in every-

This was a great round in a great fight and the crowd, warmed by the old guy's heroic stand, swung over to his side and tried to root him home. But it had been obvious from the start that Robinson had much too much for him and that his only chance to win was to get over an especially destructive whack, which is no easy assignment against an elusive, fast-moving fighter. i. Too much was expected of what Bellolse calls his Sunday punch. Perhaps it does not function at its best on a Wednesday.

. = = £ ® = =» ; THERE WAS no protest from the crowd when Belloise de-

he had come home on his shield. He had given it all he had. It is | not too far from the facts to say that Robinson knocked jim out times, first in the third when the bell saved him, again in the when the bell. once more saved him and, finally, in the seventh when, helpless and insensible on the floor, the bell count of five but this time it meant more than a

t was typical of the type of fighter he is—the dogged

rn

Fas

| s Muff A

— — ———

The series in St. Paul was the

won two and lost one in Minneapolis, split the four-game set in Kansas City and won two and lost one in Milwaukee.

Win 52, Lose 36

rt DOW

Mel Hoderlein hit two doubles and a single for the Colonels and Ray Dandridge also hit a homer for Minneapolis. It took 11 innings to do it but the Columbus Red Birds sue ceeded in edging the pacesetting Saints, 3 to 2, on the latter's home grounds, Bill Howerton got two doubles

~!for the Birds and Hank Schens

hit a pair for St. Paul. Crimian Holds 'Em The Columbus runs were batted

Mal- iin by Howerton, Don Lang and Mike “held the league leaders to eight tend- hits in the 11 rounds and fanned

Natisin. Johnny Crimian

six. Morris Martin, southpaw, worked the route for the Apostles. A last-inning run by the Blues gave them a 5-to-4 win over To« lledo in Kansas City. A homer by ‘Joe Colling, Kansas City, tied the score in the eighth. The Mud Hens held a four-run lead in the top. of the fifth before the Blues got under way. -

Minneapolis, won 15, lost 7; Kan-| sas City, won 13, lost 9; Milwau-| jege, won 13, lest 9. At home, the ins won only 23 from the A western teams and dropped 21. Fob pitthel Time—3: oT Indians failed to hit in soce—se in . the clutch out at Borchert Field last night and the Brewers won, Indians at Bat 5 to 2, despite the fact the AB R H RBISB Pet Tribesters collected 12 hits. But gan" *'* HR" 6.3m Norman Roy, Milwaukee right-igays " » = » 3 in bander, rolled up 12 strikeouts Pernandes .... 836 92 18 190 13 1c and 11 Redskins were left/Cossini . ..... “0 Th 18 ®0 14 208 stranded on base. : Dallessandro San nlm As a matter of fact, the Indi (pra =~ Han i.um ans were helpless in the scoring BU + a oot - " Bum {department . for eight Mr Wm 3 a pin They finally tallied in the ninth Conwar oR when Nanny Fernandez batted in|=ut® .... non 80. WO Tuna. : Susterides i112 24 2 15 6 am Belated Rally a ig Mis—Penapdey 32, Fleming 3 In that stanza, Clyde Kluttz 18. Conwar 18. Beard batted for Johnny Hutchings and Kuss &. Outerides +. samerarrs © singled and Ted Beard walked. hits—Beard 11 andi 1 Jack Cassini stole second after Fernandes 6. Seals 8. Conway 8 Kalin 3, forcing Beard, and a single by Tin % Peters 3 Gutteridge 3. Gana. Fernandez brought in the run- i 19, Conway 13.

ners. Nanny now has 120 runs Kalin 11, Turner 1i. Fleming 10. Beard 5

{batted in and still leads the!Ganss « Cassini 3. * Gutteridge 3. Scala 32.

league in that department.

Tribe Manager Al Lopez used Pitching 17 players trying to salvage the wu WL game but his boys were Not cOn- Queen ......19 Toerems 3 necting when hits meant runs. dutchings ... 4 Malle . .... 4 1 For example, in the seventh in- Main 8 Oiiinger ........3 4 . ining the Indians got three hits Mur ......... 8 WRiddle ........ ° 3

dnd a walk without scoring. |

I courage and the desperate will to win even when he must have known In his heart that he couldn’t--that the blow was a counter to his own

lead. Robinson had beaten him to the punch. It wasn't fast enough and the chances are there wasn't any power behind it. But at | least the old guy, already reeling and grievously hurt, threw it. | There was one bullet left and he fired it. How was he to know it was a blank? . This was Robiiason’s finest performance in a New York ring | and very likely in any ring. i weight championship juust mean a great dent from:the start that he would not be content with the decision, He wanted s knockout. And to achieve “RORY NE Wad te take chances and this he proceeded to do. For three rounds he took all sorts of liberties with Belloise who, remember, came into the ring rated an exceedingly dangerous puncher.

|

deal to him. It was evi-

Some of Robinson's leads were from center field, &5 the-say-—- -pitohers- Xk 5 ing goes, a crudity which the ring stylist looks upon with utter [Majloy, Chet Johnson, Forrest! A0LUEK: distaste but if one happens to land just right you get the jack pot. | Main and Johnny Hutchings. Mal-| | Meanwhile you run the risk of getting your brains knocked out. |loy was the loser. He pitched REG. — is ——geven-nit bait and TA .

s 8 = rt IN CLOSE, at long range, hitting to the head or to the body, | Robinson was Belloise’s master 90 per cent of the time. And when he got his man going in the seventh and time was on his side—it hadn't been in the third or the sixth-—he showed he's an expert, ruthless finisher. In sum, a mighty sweet fighter is Sugar,

Robinson Earns His Shot

{x

credit for the win with relief help Bob Kennedy |

Dick Fowler's five-hitter gave,

{other American Lea ame. ! di {pe willing to give up his 147-

| pound crown for a chance at the | 160-pound diadem now worn by Jake La Motta. [ Sugar Ray-—sleek, slender Har{lem Negio —astablishsd himself {as a middleweight contender last inight by stopping veteran Bel{loise of the Bronx at the end {the seventh round in theif Fan {brawl that attracted 28812 an his best in every round to knock f= gross of $120,860 at Yankee out Steve. At the beginnihg of the | Stadium, : second, for example, Sugar Ray | Matchmaker Al Weill of the usned out of his corner and tried {International Boxing Club sald io catch Steve “cold” with a

Clowns to Battle

and Malone. Losing pitcher. Gumpert New York RR 000 030 2 10 0 B. Detroit 005 010 4x13 ¥ © | Byrne, Sanford, Marshall and Silvera, 10 Niacthos: Houtteman and Swift Losing a) 114 | plicher, Byrne. 1312 Washington .. 200 100 000~ 3 # 1 713 Cleveland .. 000 001 100-3 1 0 parr, a nes ol Barly: Gazeta i \ ge AD egan Pinning pitoher, | Marris. Losing Pitcher, Garcia he Indianapolis Clowns will (Only Games Scheduled) baftle the HomesteathGrays, 1048 i IN ¢ . - 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE {Negro world champiofis,” at Vie LADUE .......... 000 003 303 § 9 1|tory Field tonight at 8:30. Bosto Oly 810 0

The. Clowns will start Andy

Cullough: Spahn- and Livi Losing | y pitcher, Chambers rion - * Porter, who leads the Negro St. Louis 000 000 300 0 8 1lAmerican League hurlers, with {Brookiyn 01 101 Wx

Martina and Caraglola: Ne»

d Campanella

Rraxle, combe an Brasie . 000 001 020-3 1 001 200 tix 8 13 Chipman and MHurgess |and Wesitua) Losing pitcher, Adkins. i (Only Games Scheduled)

| Chicago

THREE FEATHERS The Princely Whiskey

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SU QLen Pigg behind the plate. Roy Lusing pitcher, Partlow, - outstanding southpaw, |

¢ May toe the rubber for the Grays. ¢ An important three-game Negro | American League series will be played beginning Saturday night with the Chicago American Giants battling the Cleveland Buckeyes here. They'll play a doubleheader Sunday beginning ‘at 6:45 p. m.

‘Solunar Table

Most anglers know that fish

J have a favorite time during the

day and night when they feed and when they play. The Solunar Tables, compiled for The Times by John Alden Knight, designate these times in lan effort to tell the fisherman the. best time to wet his line,

Cann her Sinjor Miner Musor | h Referée Eddie] The ac #0 exciting in| duty Chassis, both Fibre and Br ay sos 1a py 4 ian Tom pr the Sou avery, hay that the a _—7 el q¢ Maple Rollers, Above Prices Plus Fi j¢—Tomorrow... 480 13 TiS LA him. Joseph reached “five” whin qn their feet and yelling half the| ; iA Tires M tod wictal Ta ~Mondey 4H ig 1h 13 the bell rang, ending the round. time, - ; SIDEWALK SKATES Additional hes ~ Wednesday . 11 sm 1) (e——— - . A 7 Dubie Baw Bel : : Coun. o> tu hu 1» Be in Swing for the Bowling Season | EEESETRCNEHIVING ESET | Auto Baby Seat Fight Rowe BOWLING SHIRTS | [EErebpreeys | meme qaxeann Ea Wiel Harner. 10 Bll % RAGLAN SLEEVES IETS EH EA ” Ch iat, Re * 2 POCKETS O5 | EEEUTETECE | coi. $139). $14 * 7 COLORS . > t n' We Do Lettering UP a y AUTO EM-ROE ©o™ |Z | BLUE POINT suey 4 BIG STORES G00DS AUTO WASH DELAWARE, MADISON AND RAY STS. iE FARRIS 0 209 W. Washington be LI. 3446. Adhd : i Diantr of Parking SpactasNo Collgested Fratfic ion VAGINA RYE UT Open Dally, 7 A. M. to 8:30 P, M—Sunday, 8 A. M. 10.6 9, M,

The chance to fight for the middie- '

i

{for Pitcher Bob Malloy, followed | with singles, ; GR

Josey Seals singled to center, Brownstein Stag Coach got ambitious and was trapped! CHICAGO, Aug. ss by the alert Roy on the mound. Brownstein, San 35 I Scala took too long a lead with/the Chicago Stags pro basketball

Lettermen Back

Times St Serviee RENSSELAE Aug. 25--The 1949 football season will open here Sunday for St. Joseph College with Coach Dick Scharf calls ing out 44 candidates. Twenty answering the first call. will be returning lettermen,

school classes start Sept. 19. The Pumas will open the season Sept. 17 in a night game at the University of Louisville, {meet Ball State at Muncie on {Sept. 24 and face Eastern Iili'nois here in the first home game,

i

{Oet. 1.

Horseshoe Results

the count 3-2 on the hitter {team for three ) ler. ] years, has been RCA Victor meets Allison No. 12 P Fans With Bases Full | [named head coach, President| ir san or] init ib te drools Earl Turner was retired for the John Barbaro announced today. Brookside. Mat night. 316 L

first out and Jack Conway and! Dom Dallessandro, pinch hitter

Royce Lint ran for Dallessandro. Beard walked, filling the bases, but Cassini fanned for the third out’ } “Four-Tribe

two runs. until lifted for a pinch, Sal hitter in the seventh.’ i

Malloy was tagged for & two-|] DUPLI COLOR TOUCH UP

At Middleweight Diadem

By JACK CUDDY, United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Aug. 25 (UP)—Sugar Ray Robinson, the best allround fighter in any circuit division, today was slated tentatively for a winter shot at the middleweight championship as a reward his thrilling seven-round technical knockout victory over Steve

dragged him to his corner, he was in so helpless a condition that Manager Eddie Walker notified the referee Steve was unable to continue. Belloise, square-shouldered and hairy-bodied, forced the fighting in nearly every round. And Robinson, 28, was doing

Robinson would get a title shot| streaming right for the head. He at the winner of the champion-| ised the blow, and Steve counship bout between La Motta and tered with a smashing left hook Marcel Cerdan of Morocco, sched-i 15 the chin that sent Robinson uled for the Polo Grounds here reeling half way across the-ring Sept. 28. Welll said he would like 140 the ropes. s to toss Robinson and the Sept. 28 winner into Madison Square Gar-' weathered a head battering in the den “some time during the win-|g.st minute and then staggered | ter.” Sugar Ray with & hooking attack | Belloise. ‘30 and nearly bald, to the head. He chafed Robinsoh provided Robinson with such stiff about the ring for two full min- | sumpatition last night that It utes, {seemed in the fourth and fifth) Steve also had a slight edge in

{rounds he might turn in an up- the fifth, despite Robinson's rally — =

Steve had gone into the ring near the end. However,

| set. | an underdog at 3 to 1. | But near the end of the seventh “out on his feet” in the third and round, Robinson exploded such a sixth rounds as a yesult of the | terrific left hook on Steve's chin punishment he received from that the Bronx Italian plummet- Robinson's savage “lifting bar. {ted backward to the canvas and rages” of rapid fire hooks to body | tay there with blood streaming and head.

Belloise was nearly

In the fourth round Belloise|

run homer by Al Aucoin in the oo third stanza. The homer followed 1 a single by Roy Hartsfield. Aucoin w had hit only four homers all season until he smacked that one. | co? Two More in Eighth | . The Brewers were held runless| £

{from the third until the seventh when they worked on Johnson! and Main for their third marker.! {In. the eighth the Brewers in-| creased their run total to five by {scoring twice. ° | Nick Etten singled and Paul {Burris grounded to Fernandez, whose throw to second for a force was wide and both runners were safe. Johnny Logan walked, filling the bases and Etten scored after the catch on Roy's fly. Then Hartsfield singled, scoring Burris, | That was ail, but it was enough. Roy has won 11 games against

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Pint but three defeats. He has won Can Cc seven in a row. i . Johnson's Camu, ping, * Champion Show Horse | “wih poushing muss........ ... 09% . . Simons Wax ‘Will Be Retired IS WHS, arssnirissnne 38 | LOUISVILLE, Aug. 25 (UP)—} ®Glaner ror sesnseacsssessssers 998 Oakhill Chief, world five-gaited §} simoniz Liquid 59 | championship show horse, will be CHABEE . .v.ivounesnvinsstnines 936

{retired in a ‘formal ceremony at J] SfcAleers Liquid Wax Polish; 59¢ the Kentucky State Fair horse } Wiki Lif servasresiavareaes show here Sept. 17, Horse Show INI Vn me 39%¢

Manager Tom Clore sajd today. The retirement is being made at the request of the owner and in accordance with the rules of the American Horse Show Association, the horse cannot enter the show at which his retirement ceremonies are held. Oakhill Chief is owned by Mrs, Jean McLean Davis, Portsmouth, Va.

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a-day practice sessions will ok gin Monday and continue until

Fie

Chick Yarbro stilts

CHICAGO, Favorites Peg Sigel faced f today as the Golf Associati pionship- adva ter-finals. Miss Kirk, | who was meds witha three ur with Dorothy competitor fro was state chai Miss Ellis’ quarter-final over Sue Land on the 20th hol Jars placed oosiep tri of Miss Fis school teaéher.

QR _ EEG M Em 81 el, 1 HR EY a lor

Western tourn: former ace, M

San Mateo, Cs : 6 551

fore her mar with a 74, was Kirk for Polly Riley, up for the ¢érown last y Lindsay, Deca per bracket st Bauer, Los An Agnes Hall, M the lower brac Miss Kirk 1 Detroit, 3 dnd

Miss McPhee ! Both Alice | nent, Bever . D., complet par 76, but th

"triumphed wh

final hole ‘wi Hanson's six.

Perks’ Go Wins Broa

Dick Pérks Steak dinners, Solomon's gc Broadmoor C night followi umph' in a si tourney on th terday afternt Perks won with a T-und followed by 1 PB and Bolon onors wend | 69 and Rh: placed second