Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1950 — Page 34
“in his younger days. .
~~ winfer'’s share once, the loser's - .. . Now you know ing stride.
-Has 16
: 40 Players on 5 Pirate Roster Local Indians’ Parent Club
Pitchers in Tow
fans are in a
ers on their off-season list, the
= By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor STHE OFFICIAL 19850 roster of the Pittsburgh Pirates, p for members of the Baseball Writers’ Association
of rica, was released to the press last night. . . and
position to start speculating.
#The Indianapolis Indians’ parent Pirates have 40 play-
limit. . . . Hoosier baseball
addicts will be delighted to, know that 16 pitchers are| jnciided. . . . The Bucs are
unitkely to retain more than 12,| magbe not more than 10. + + +}
Tu Hoomer Redskips can well the Green Suit who man: use #some of ‘the castoffs-to-be. gan
Six wf the 16 are southpaws. |
+ « They'll keep three.
havf 13 infielders. . . . They won't saw gervice with the Yankees, was on his way to bigger and hol@¢more than seven. . . . Beven Giants and Dodgers . ., Moreover, better things. outfielders are on the roster. . . . ha gerved two different hitches, Swings a Deal
Twaespares there. Iwall points up to another formidable team for the Indianap-| olisglarm . . . but with one big “i{'’g. .’. That's pitching. . . They Pirates were weak in the mognpd department last year . . . and~not too hot on the infield. .. .Xhey have strengthened thelr | tnnerworks, however, with ample timer to choose from. , .. Pitching #Jemains their problem. THe Pittsburgh staff as a whole gavg up too many earned rung in 194% . . . averaging more than fous per nine Innings. . . . Manager Bill Meyer thinks this situa-
tion has been remedied. , . . So mud the better for the local Indingy.
1% conceivable that Indianapolis¥will see thé return of Jim] Walgh , . . and perhaps Royce Lint, too , . . Mel Queen is ex-| pected to stay up there , . . Elmer] Riddle 1s down for. another trial
or
The Pirates are planning to keep Forrest Main for relief ‘duty, same job he held with the 1949 Indians . . . Jess than two months away for
major league clubs . . . They swing Jiu
intofiaction. on Mar, 1. - CN A
hat stove league, Branch Rickey, general manager of the champion Brooklyn gers,
predicted "the St. Louis Cardi. nals are the boys to beat in the 1960 National League race , . . |. same as last year . . . Anent the house cleaning at Boston, | Rickey added, “With do many | new faces, tab the Braves team as the Great Unknown.” = 8-8 ! MIKE McCORMICK, former Indianapolis outfielder now with the New. York Giants, was versatile . .-He also was a capable first sacker and a sneced merchant in the field and on the-bases, . . . Mike, now 32, spent two seasons wearing the livery of tho, Indianapolis Indians . . was, sold to Cincinnati! and helped
caught the first drive a liner to his left, and on his first time at bat helted a double . ; , The
“Eng
‘Park section of Indianapolis, he’
|
Big Idea Pays After 28 Years
By FRANK ANDERSON Harold G. Engelhardt put his nest egg in two baskets—the baskets in the Dearborn gym.. The egg is hatching, too, after 28 years. A sory Foes with it, Engel. hardt,” 47, set sights on a place in amateur and independent league athletics when he was 30 years younger and 100 pounds lighter, of a Scout troop in the Brookside
But He Is To
As senior patrol leader
pe tn
Ho
played
+ «+ TheY | pastimer in the majors . .
| City performance the other
year later . . . Bill Meyer received |
+ + « Luke Bewell, then master-|
Jitters vanished, pronto. ” r a LEFTY. O'DOUL; the Man in
was a promoter,
His church
ded a Gyms cost money
Francisco baseball club,
with the Giants,
\ ” » » A WRESTLER parading under the name of Golden Superman has made his appearance in Chicago rings ... In a Windy
night he wore high button shoes + + » How about matching him with Buddy (Nature Boy) Rogers, the Fabulbus Sissy?
» » . NEW YORK, the Rig Town,
now is growing em tall, "just like enough. out in the “sti®ks” , of New York City College's Start- ®8¢. ing basketball quintet are tower- Were kids at heart camé flocking. ing lads, 6-8, 6-4, two at 6-3 and Everything was rosy, but Engel- Dearborn and has stayed there hopping
.". The hardt grew tired of the 60-40 deal. gyer since. Melting Pot caught up with the Iie rented the gym outright for home and he was satisfied provinces in rearing apple piekers. $300 {
A little feller” at 6-21
- n - HISTORY repeated in Coach Lynn Waldorf's football life . . Back in 1945 Ohlo State defeated his Northwestern eleven, 18 to 14, by a field goal in the, last
State In the Rose Bowl Monday..
nx . . . Sporting News named| as No. 1 major league man-,
ager of 1949 . . . Bucky Harris) " | won the accolade in 1947 (as YanEIGHT IN the middle of the Lo. manager) and was fired a
maaan mE Rhinoceros Africa’s Most Dangerous Animal i Pd TR er en
1
|
'mindirig the Browns, was named,
gym: s thejand Engelhardt was their boy,
for all three New York baseball games to help raise the The Bucs have four catchers./ares teams when he was a dandy money, It pad off, Pretty soon . Helthe gym was built and Engelhardt
Gym, located in the Dearborn Hotel on E. Michigan St, {tel was in receivership at the time, {Tt was 1922 and Warren G. HardIng was in the White House, It {was a period of normalcy and pers |fectly normal for 20-year-old Engelhardt to swing a deal to rent the gym on Sundays on a 60-40 basis.
. Members basketballs and pay for the privil-
{he left. The year .s a bit hazy (0 different. Then his thoughts. turn,
last \j ee ‘|workers and Engelhardt returned CASEY STENGEL'S friends|'!0 ihe Spring training 18. "o 4vising him to beware the
He promoted basketball and
Next stop was the Dearborn The ho-
The lease worked out well Hoosiers likeu to shoot
The kids and the men who gym.
a month in 1927, Back Home, Again
Engelhardt breezed along at the Dearborn for some years. Then months.
Basketball takes
him,
He tried thie Satred Soar softPiil and his Munjcipal Sta-| ear. t BERR. roms Thpva’s- mas ol
’ EXE : gym pear - . eS HE nto. classrooms for Mexican rail spring and that takes -time. For, ction. ' Engelhar Dearborn. Durjig the war between the two sports.
years he worked at Eucas-Harold, Then it's fall
had turned the Dearborn gym into for more. basketball. classrootus for its technicians).
The war over he returned to locker “boy,” Hubert Hamacker, gets a medal of some kind.
Harold Englehardt, operator of the Dearborn Gym independent league basketball teams. There's a good reason, too. out these trophies and medals to teams competing in the city tournament which opens Feb. I5 in the
up Engel {jon There's a league in hardt's time in fall and winter every day. But in the spring 1it's/loops play through the week and hardt? the American Legion on Sunday. ball.
again. The kids There's method in the madness.) \as supervisor of re¢reation (RCA and the independents come back weak teams play weak teams, It keeps strong squads meet strong squads. loose blouses. Why? Because it's point of
. About 900 games are
action | The Bush-Callahan |
(eg
|Engelhardt and his 75-year-old It evens things up and everybody better from a spectator’s
iN H “H Ee os The’ Holiday Tourney is quarter: to : dt time Is only a bridge ,.; of the way and the boys cart-| their arms get tired. ¢ ed away trophies by the carload.| Girls’ basketball is. ok, too. But |liers. He has Jim Corbett stab-ij5na) theory that the champion Engelhardt wishes the fair sex bing Louis silly and Bob Fitz-/ gould not draw big money if would wear jerseys instead of simmons shaking him up good. shown too often. s After which Dempsey takes OVEr defending two months after he: and merely bats his brains out. peat Jim Braddock in '37. The YOU next year he defended three times, more for your money than most pro then on it was never less
view.”
, Is a "prize" fellow in the eyes of the city's Englehardt will soon be passing
Feb. 6 the Indiana AAU secIt was like coming Played during the season from tionals will open in the Dearborn. September through March. Now| The winners gets an all-expense lit’s a seven-night a week opera- trip to the finals in Denver, Colo.|
He Likes Kids
What about the man,” Engel-| He doesn’t play hasket-| Never did. He's bothered {by asthma. He likes kids, but] He,
{Only
NEW YORK, Jan. T—It fish, or palooka
The bomber used to do pretty well in the ring. Never {lost once as champion, the
"|nim for the 12th time. .
It may go on for years. sv = tL The customary practice is to send Dempsey out for a quick, | slashing job of destruction in eight point bold face. Occasion-
is a shift to light face italic. I believe this style was followed when Nat Fleischer, who is known as Mr. Boxing, had Dempsey get up off the floor and go on to win by a knockout” in what ‘was undoubtedly
the most violent literary sham-
in Print Mo azines Foll 3 Pa winin ‘Bouts’ With Old Timers |, ERNE
And I must remember to askithe records Louis was Dempsey what he gets. for these heavyweight in h isto sensational triumphs. There was champion 10 years and defended a time when he was strictly .a/the title some 25 times, a performs $1 million gate man. In fact, foriance non» of his predecessors ever his second fight with Tunney he/came close to matching. But the in an epochal $2,658,660 sheer weight of numbers leaves gate. This was, by the way, sup- Tunney unimpressed. Me too. posed to be his swan song. But he’s had four or five with Louis gtter he won the title from Brad. in the past month, and I under- 4ock were mostly with second, stand Readers Digest wants to third and even fourth raters. Ale book the match next, then quick.| most any slap-happy pugilist (Ed,
ally for dramatic effect there
turns out Joe Louis is a hame
after all. Every time you pick up a magas |zine these days you find he's been knocked out. It is astound. ot how he stands up under em tak two meas to stop him. And the old timers try to tell you how game Joe Grimm
all the
NEVERTHELESS, if you go by the best ry. "Was
Who'd he beat? , .. “His fights
|Note: for pug) who came along took a chance with him and gambled to win on a fluke punch, |But who knows what would have {happened had a real contender faced him.” | Tunney ‘wil; to add as a foot. note that a change in promotional ‘habits contributed to Louis’ record. Before the Bomber came lalong ihe heavyweight champion seldom defended more than once |a year. Dempsey won his in 1919 land defended only five times up to 1928 when he lost to Tunney,
;
ahwon: ABT vedi
resentative bul have three lea, The
organizs sible for the id tivities ‘Associ employees whe to sponsor soc tivities, | The three les day night RC/ Beech - Grove, night men’s at
the Thursday i Pritchett-Hunt.
. Leag (The Wednes oldest of the this league a president; Jack ident, and Fra tary-treasurer, Officers of t
‘are Charlie He
Crouch, secre Shampay, trea Jack Clark, Hornaday, vice Taylor, secrets prise the office: evening league All of the lea on a handica) upon the bowle
e. At the pres vision team ithe. Wednesda while Jack Cc sesi are stagi individual av with respective 185. Marta. Rc Leading the
J
shoot : “baskets
Hm, that figures
til "GENE TUN} - “Tduction of it in
Admittedly, Tunney gives
wart tno sees And Hunter Must Expect the Worst From It
two years later,
s = Zo BURT SHOTTON, Brooklyn. |
| manager, thinks Carl Erskine,
| his Anderson, Ind, pitcher, will | be the spring surprise of 1050 | + + + The Hoosler hurjér won 18 | games and lost five last season. | Ten of the victories for Ft. | Worth, eight fpr the Dodgers | + ++» His job xt Brooklyn was | mainly in relief roles, ‘
A. a FRANC}S POWERS,
Chicago, !
He Qiuck-kicked this one to this cor-| ner for 4 laugh in the pro and con|
the, Reds defeat the Detroit Tigers arguments over the two-platoon,
in {he 1940 World Series. . . . The Systém in football: Shortly before curiosity, or stupidity—whatever their motivation, the fact Giants picked him up as a free th# Notre Dame-Southérn Metho- : dist game a couple of priests were|"*" ; - : - _. Look at the record. taking a constitutional along a rhino will all too frequently wildly charge anything which
. +. . He got Into three World Se-, Dallas boulevard when a young
agent recently. . . . He's a “lucky” player. .
|
ries. with the Reds, the Braves of fellow rushed up and gasped. "Are 1948 and the Dodgers of 1049, . . . ¢ither of you fathers chaplain of That adds up to three slices of the Notre Dame team?® l
the ‘post-season melon . . . the share twice. why: the Glants signed him “for a ga luck charm.” : "rn . AS A World Series freshman in 1940, Mike McCormick, 2%; had a severe case of Jit: ters on the Cincinnati bench | beforé the opening game . . . Sweating and shaking as he lgoked out at the huge crowd, Mike sald, “I hope they hurry | and get this game under way. | I'm trembling now but Fll be all right once the action starts, provided I catch the first ball ht my way"... Well, Mike |
“Give Cheer for Rose Poly,
“Offense or defense,” demanded
one of the padres without break-
* ® » THE New York® Giants are
. banking upon Jack Harshman
first sacker next + « He Is the slugger,
as regular season. .
i who with Minneapolis last fall,
neglected to touch third base during ‘s Miller rally in the first round playoffs. . . . The blunder paved the way for an Indianapolis victory In the series. , . . Bit for that boner, | the Indians probably never | would have got around to ad- | vancing to the Junior World | Series, : ‘ {
They Need a Victory
Engineers Have Two Chances to Break Ice This Week in Conference Games
+
Let's give a root for Rose Poly this next week.
The Engineers from Terre Haute are the only college basketball reached Nairobi, 1 began to bom- we would pay a reward to any : 1 ; bard-Col: AJ Maenab—our great man who could-lead-us-to-& sult- goo again? ~My enthusiasni was that a thino keeps right on going; ina row-and are scheduled twice next week in -Hooster College friend and.- companion on. the. able rhino trophy. wie 4 : Conference tilts; at Manchester Tuesday and at home next Saturday ensuing safari—with questions as| After waiting several
team inthe state that has fatled
agenst Anderson College. Fdsewhere in the state next
to win a game: They've lost six"
This Week's State,
week, Butler opens {ts Mid-Amer- Big 10 Cage Schedule
ican Conference schedule playing Miami in Oxford, 0. Tuesday and meeting. Western Reserve of Cleveland in the Fieldhouse next Saturday night. The’ Bulldogs were rudnerup in the conference race lastiseason, one game behind Cincingmti. i: TU Faces Michigan the Big Ten race starts its wenkly Monday and Saturday, schedule. Indiana will be at Michig tomorrow and at Iowa Saturday. Purdue goes against the defending champion, Illinois, to-| morrow fn Champaign and at: Minnesota next Saturday. { Locally, basketball fans can| get a lopk at Hanover College's)
high-scoring Andy Taff when the|
Panthers invade University
Carroll in Cleveland Friday and| masting- Canisius College in Buffalo, WN. ¥Y., Saturday. {
Gorgeous Gussie Wins |
India, May 7 mark set by Keith Carter of Pur. colonel would agree with this be- yi,
(Oe esiruds (Gorgeous Gus-
ini
TOMORROW from thet trip and others in the appeared in camp with word that Nad set di Mich % . ’ w Purdue. of tino past he had become well ac-% large rhino had been seen a P search of either a big lion or fdians State ot Valparaiso quainted with the character of mile away upon a ridge. headed ®l8¢ 3
innesota vs. Northwestern’ in Chicaxo Stadium Michigan State at Detroit Ohio State at Ohio State vs
diym ri-State at Tiffin TUESDAY Butler at Miami. O anterbury at Franklin vanaville at Southern llinow anover at Indiana Central ose Poly
Jetro DePaul In Chicago Sta
{my tap on the next to last day]
|ground- to the adventure.
jcaused me to most of all want to
Huge Beast Is Afraid of Nothing and Will Charge Blindly Into Any Opposition
Hunting a rhinoceros In darkest Africa might well come under the heading of dangerous occupations. Just how dangerous this big game sport can be is described here in the third of a series of articles written exclusively for The Times by W. J. Holliday Jr., sales promotion manager of W. J. Holliday & Co., local steel firm. Jack and his father recently spent six weeks on safari in East Africa and the following story is one of their many experiences.
By JACK HOLLIDAY JR. RHINOCEROS HAVE been known to charge into cars and even trains. Whether it be courage, rage, blindness,
ing for.
remains that unlike many of the big game in Africa the
sound -asleep.
~the ‘current Col! sided
T WAS Mike Ja to break with the promo
He had Louis
of the literary matchmakers but/than four. And in ‘41 it was
Louis would surely have to. be, On, sure, you'll find bums in
a superman to go against Corbett and Fitzsimmons and then hope to succeed against Dempsey
| |
{proached to within 26 yards of in the record.
to camp. And then we heard the he was remarkably large. crashing of brush and much| I decided to take movies of ney just put the two of them in| snorting—he had somehow be- them because they were a beautl- the ring, let it go a little more came aware of us and been ful rust color from having rolled than a round and counted Louis aroused from his nap. We turned in some red dust a short distance out, Simple, direct, emphatic. {and saw him-head down hill sev-ifrom their sleeping I leral hundred yards from us. We handed my .470 Rigby double-|
quarters.
|airplane 12,000 feet up en route
|Dempsey’s record, teo, but my point is that Lou'' record does not — or should not — command
|finally located the big fellow/came upon two rhinos sound who, you are led to believe, just more respect simply because he We were ablé to asleep under a mesquite-like tree. sits around with his gloves onifought a greater number of bums, 'approach him undetected; but Taking care to remain down wind waiting for the Bomber to tire Max Schmeling and Billy Conn tafter viewing him carefully from the sleeping beauties; mov- himself out. Under these circum- wer: the best men Louis faced. - ithrough the binoculars, I realized ing stealthily through the foliage, stances who couldn’t beat ‘Louis? Conn wasn't even a full flowered that he was not what I was hop- the white hunter, native, and I ap- I'm surprised Dempsey keeps it light heavyweight.
I saw Max {Baer stop Schmeling and BSteva
_ lour quarry. We examined them | There is more quantity than Hamas out cuff him decisively, RATHER than waste more time carefully and concluded that nei- ;,4}ity in the Tunney production. | in this area and since it was im-/ther was worth shooting for a1 eq it better when he tried Nazi, but not great. {possible to take any movies due|trophy; however, the guide pointed out for the first time in an to the thick brush, we retreated out that although the nearest 50 yards or so and started back rhino’s horn had been worn sho
Aside to Tunney: My friend, don’t you go around betting that Jack Johnson didn't have Tommy
{from Houston to New York last gp. rns on the floor. Put him down
summer, On this occasion Tun-
. ” . WHAT HAPPENED was
intrudes into his domain. And often such. inhospitable stopped to watch—and it's lucky barreled rifle to the African and . o so wo" ldn't take
behavior is completely un- we
provoked . . .
impressions acquired from read- You. Although a rhino weighs
tons, he can easily outrun a man. in the African wilds —I know, J change
during our safari in the summer are killed had several encounters with the Africa. us. rhino, and I almost had one in .8 2 » DURING our safari
close call with a charging rhino, eros. I had best give you a brief back- approached with the shooting for a trophy or for the Being a novice at big game purpose of obtaining movies. Of hunting in Africa, my enthusiasm those six, three charged us. All ~-untempered by experience three had to be killed:
Our first encounter with the
after h
did.
for gtatistics prove that more natives anq ignore our presence. by charging rhinos this old fellow was. just looking of 1948 the members of our party than by eny other animal In gor trouble. He kept coming at later he was on his feet facing us. At 50 yards my guide urged At this point my African guide|
1 hit the rhino in became panicky, dropped my gun, p This' { UP)—An alert Michigan defense;
baffled Iowa tonight and helped night.
me to shoot. we ‘were {he shoulder, and he turned and and dashed off behind us. {of the trek. But before I describe in Kenya - Colony for over six disappeared in the dense under- noise and motion brought the, {the circumstances of this all-too- weeks—we saw at least 24 rhinoc-| growth. Mindful of the African rhino into a full charge. My white the Wolverines to a 68 to 48 =o 0" 1c Hanover mans Of this number, six were Jaw" which requires hunters to hunter fired into the ground in| victory over the Hawkeyes in the ged 45 to 47 lead. Andy Taff idea of ‘make every effort to track down front of the onrushing beast, but opening Big 10 basketball test ©. 2 points and John Fira ali wounded animals, we set off once again such methods failed to for both teams. : ’ After a half hour distract the rhino. { Like a freight train rumbling performance by Iowa Guard Bo 1'down a track, he came on-~yours Clifton, - the: Wolverines nudged; movies every step ahead with six minutes gone and
threshing brush, weicaught up with him. fired. hitting him in the shoulder truly taking
1
optimistically ob-|
But
im.
through the thorny
= NO SOONER
x Three hundred yards set about adjusting my Bell &| of the intruder, and In the next from us hie stopped, got our wind, Howell turret lens camera on a [instant he is apt to come thunder- reversed his course, and started tripod. Such statements are not ing through the brush directly at in our direction.
My guide
shoot a rhino. Here is An animal couifare’ (as the-rhine ts known again. He ran about 15 yards, of the way. In an instant
which has earned the singular i, the Swahili Janguage) occurred stopped reputation of being the most un- ne afternoon shortly after we predictably - dangerous beast In.paq4 moved camp farther north now
Africa. The rhino offers a chal- toward the shore of the Tana lenge t6 the courage and resource- river. f - fulness of any hunter seeking the, This country was supposed to. ultimate in big game hunting. pe overrun with rhinos. As soon and he - -. .
AS SOON as my father and I word out to the local natives that
: days-— to whether or not a rhino would during which time I searched for! charge without provocation. rhinos and shot a bush-buck. a The colonel had just returned kongoni. and a few crocodiles—
from a five-month safari. and one of the chief's young hunters Nairobi
the unpredictable rhino. He was toward the river. My father and of the opinion that with a rhino Sandy—as Col. Mcnab is known every hunter should always ex- to his many friends—started off pect the worst from any situation. and soon came upon a ‘cow and Events proved the wisdom of this per calf. respectful attitude s & =
The rhinoceros has no natural THEY HAD no Intention of
*'weB\EDIY HS Among, ‘he animal world shooting”"a female and decided to The gu QePaul at Notre Dame —only the elephant and the ., , craph the pair at close ® sign
auw at Wabash Valparaiso at 81. Joe WumiBiy . all State at Indiana State ranklin at Earl TW FRIDAY Rokeane at Bt. Joe otre me at John Carroll kson, Mich, at Condordia Arquette at a n_Btate i SATURDA Western Reserve at Bulle 1 giana Central at Anchester
n In Purdue af Minoes a nderson at ly faster Tilinols at Bi State ry >
Piast Carter's Swim Mark Recognized
LAFAYETTE, Ind, Jan. T (UP) —-A breast . stroke swimming
due University was official in the
;tbooks of the International Feder-
i
Amateur Swimming to58.5 for ann
oe 30 lim ny harm. quarters. They stalked to within This fact, coupled with his natural 10 op yards and began Photo: characteristics, results in his be. 5 2PNINE. Ama suddenly turn and in an instant she was
ing utterly fearless. Like the nh \ & 1 shot j elephant; the rhino has notorious. CIATEINE. everal shots were
ly poor eyesight. This "being the case, he will charge blindly at anything which he becomes aware
lessly spotted
to get
her to deflect her course. | took a
Nothing doing! On she came—
[And yet, at mid-day he often tance of only 10 feet. Luckily his| |snoozes so soundly that a hunter shot sidetracked the old gal, and ican on occas'ons approach to she disappeared into the brush. |withtn a few yards of his tank- An hour's search found her lying {ke form. Usually it is the ever- dead several hundred yards away.
scent 0
|present tick bird which warns him. Our hext experience with a! DISAPPOINTED and con
fof impending danger by YING charging rhino occurred in the cerned
from his back, making a shrill sume area. We received word of Wis left in which to fulfill my
chatter. a rhino's presence not far from ambitio
land myself-—and 1 believe the through the heavy brush for an “and a half, my guide and I.
|. It is the opinion of my father camp After snagging our way|After traveling a mile or so we,
{Hef—that it is usually during the ___ afternoon siesta that the rhinoe- FOR PERFECT TIME, Why Not Try One of |
F.C BONNETS
|eros—upon being -aWwakened-be-|comes his most formidable self. | *Ucensed Export Walchmakers
1 think that he resents such rude’ interruption. ‘Rising awkwardly
really had reason to feel provoked , .
jas we had made camp. We sent... By as I tried’ to eject the cartridge I found that the gun/any visible effect. had jammed—what if I'd had. to standard ‘How tempered BY éxperiénce. My third and last meeting wi
Mr. Quifaro occurred the day before we broke camp to return to!
minutes later he returned, breath-
CARLISLE DELUXE $1 59 . BALLOON TIRES, Sise 20x81238 GOODYEAR & U S. CHAIN ¢ 98 {
VE
, and turned toward us. 2.8 »
THIS "tough customer of automatic,
. ‘he charged.
again. The bullet broke his neck, trampling the
realized
that
self - preservation
a punch, and Dempsey could, a point Tunney, surprisingly,
with the first punch in the first round, like the one you tried to get over against Dempsey in Philadelphia that night. And in ithe 14th the big Negro had him {down for eight. It wa the police, ‘not the referee, who stopped the {fight. Better consult the old [colonel about such matters in the future.
ws x wen = Michigan Thumps
his mind along the Way ..4 rnino maised his head and blearily stared at us. A second
'ing thrilling accounts of hunting Petween two and two and a half gerved that he would probably photograph them than the near-
lowa, 66 to 46
ANN ARBOR, Mich. Jan,
Despite a brilliant
J néver were behind. Clifton was far and away the
Individual Dick Piper bagged 26 for the
‘Hanover Barrage Beats Manchester
"Times State Service HANOVER, Jan. 7~— Hanover outscored Manchester in a field goal barrage to win an 88 to 74 college basketball game here to-
The game was tied seven times
with 26, led the winners, while losers. It was the fifth victory in 11 games for the winners. Manches“ter has a 4-5 mark. 5
came first. Putting the camera Hawkeye star, combining smooth Manover 1) | Manshester 3D) 1 reached for my floor play with a 25-point scoring Tatts . 10 3 3 Jackson.t $ 3-2 rifle and jumped to one side. In total. Don elniosh. . Wh Gelssler.c 31 § McKee.t 194 I fired that split second the rhino was) n sh, who Scotts 3 Jrruths camera and tripod BPAY malched the tangy Cf Sms 9.8 immmr. | $4 eath him.. As he went by me] unters, Orrill.e | Maupin. fell abo aids from I red into his shoulder, without teamed with Center Leo Vander, une io or 13 ; +t Now it is Kuy in outstanding rebound ‘work: Raviingss 0 0 o operating procedure and defensive agressiveness for gGythries 2 0.3
. My. white hunter and I
out early in the morning though
suitable rhino.
ide went out scouting for, of either species. Twent
exclaiming a rhino about a half mile
away, taking a nap. We were off |CAMera. with high hopes that at last we n Alm, however. to COBVIeE HRY} v ‘were going to have an opportunity skeptical reader o e authen-| fired into the ground in’front of po Wo ticity of this account. le I'm not from Missouri — but| i
asworthwhile trophy. circuitous route in order]
last been seen napping. He wag would gone, having probably caught the Africa and see if the rhinos dis- { position hasn't improved any.
f the native, ss * =
over how little tigne there.
n, we started for camp.
BICYCLE TIRES |
i ! } |
~ AUTO. SUPPLY
We took: tack. with us twp of our own men and again; my shot foll local native to act as guide, stant later, breaking his neck Umpire, Hour after hour we struggled with the 500-grain bullet. through the heavy underbrush be- rhing fell exactly nine f neath the searing sun with never front.of us. a sign or tracerof lion or rhino.
we decided to rest. episode was About oon We decided failed to remain on automatic.]
Had it worked properly, I would have a complete record of the that he had Thino's charge, even to the moment of his crashing into the I have enough evidence;
after -he has-made his charge; tn/that he will not-do an about Sunrunwes.f face and charge again. Of iat I'm afraid that this rhino had Gutowskit failed to read the script, for, al-|Wisniewshic severely wounded, he Merrie hirled around to renew his at-|Dovies hunter fired| Totals owed ‘an in-|
My white
The ‘disappointing part of t
to take advantage of the wind, after this little tete-a-tete maybe| 1
of by scent or sound—and these until my father was forced to I ou 1 LE and half an hour later we came|l ought to remain In Indiana. 1 (W) 1 Keller. 3-3 two senses are highly developed. shoot her in the chest at a dis-|, 'u,. (not where the rhino had But I don't feel that way and bo fie 0 declhioned Levies, 15.
TABLE TENNIS TABLES
2050 .. $4950
$ Nave Your Unfinished Table Duinied and Striped By Exports For
ow 36%
Everything for the Game JIMMY MoCLURE _. Table Tennis Co. 1718 Control Ave.
wt a Wisconsin Defeats ns IU Grapplers, 17-9
y had | & that my camera Bad| 5 MINGTON, Jan. T—In-| diana University's wrestling team! was handed a 17 to 9 setback by, | Wisconsin in its first dual meet|
actually like to' revisit
Michigan.
Towa (48)
Michigan (86) ivi TT gr ee
| Skala t
Vandr uy
CWB Dr covremiad |
1 5 0 0 3 0 Caisbeek.c 4 Clifton.g 0 . 3
3 3 3 1 25 18 18 Totals Halftime score: Michigan 35, L ficials— Referee, Halé Slauson Rainey Meyer, Chicago
AI De D+ BBE
owa 321 Illinots
Times State Service
of the season here this afternoon Indiana won three decisions Summary:
—Miller 1 {stoned nder, h picuzsa ow decisioned . "
Art ar, 8-8 | ostanga (W) decisioned Brabender,
ons & nchiousa Primes 8d y Peterson on Rinttan,
Tota — 3910 33 Total
3 } Free throws missed—Hanover 12, Mane
Iehester § | Offitials~—Jery Steiner, A. J. Thatcher,
SHS-DC In Mat Meet
| Shortridge will travel to Dee
15 16 14 catur Central for a dual wrest.
ling meet Monday originally scheduled for next Tuesday. The meet will begin at 7:30 p. m. The | Blue Devils were defeated 34 to 6 at Crawfordsville last week,
i TONITE CAPS
Custom Tailored A Ea
MADE FOR ANY CAR
MINIT CAR WASH
A fair journeyman fighter, the"
TWIT Pfr Halftite score--Hanover 48. Mum hestey
isin
~ Lompourid - i the rest of the day night loop and the Matri: ing second an spectively. In the Tues en leaders are
Ander In Ov
Score | Before
ANDERS during an ove here tonight ii At the en The score was hit 278 per cer Leading scc was Chuck H in seven field § throws for 17 Anderson (82) : . 1g t RSmitht 1 Rutgereit.f Harris,
8 ' :
Totals 27 8 » Halftime BScoren . Free Throws Mis $ Grubb 2, Arms ergus: 2
on 2. Officials—Hensel
OSU Se To Rout
COLUMBUS Dead eye Dick foul shot afte night to set a scoring record Hlinois, 83 to battle before 5 The big 6 f« showed no ill with the victo: Bowl grid clu eight field go: throws for 23 | His free th sounded broke team mark. set the Bucks bea 53. }
Obie State (9 tg ft
Schnittker,{ 7 Jacobs. f 2 Donham.{ 5 8 lemington.t 1 0 ES 4d Armstrong.6 1 0 Browp.g } 2 Karaffa.g 60 BirKholder.s 3 3 Aves 0 Totals J 2
Jisitime score’ Pree throws mise 1’ Donham 4 .
strong, . Br B underiace 4, Bea ot fe Looper Diehl. Rorthwester Neese Tal In Bowling Merritt Nae
took the lead ip the sixth singles bowl ment at the W night. Neese totale lowed by Ber Louisville. M
‘Louisville was
had 1632 and hundred seven
participate ir tournament. will compete |
HAINE SEI
