Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1950 — Page 31
dy ome
dent rry, former r his wife, o.give him
vis’ suit to ed of being » said, ‘don’t Bette called t me thrown ullivan, and.
up. Bette le cars and
she didn't ft for work | daughter, en that she
ld stop this back. But n a divorce she subconbecause I'm ht hours a
ie kept his psychoananed her di« ette told his ranted to be e and want-
out and get couldn't do rotten and
‘ney. Jerry confer with ably Friday her - current a Divorce.”
vires rs vice . wm tps i Apr. 6-In<
ary has. ace and papers en Nathan fame. the records diers known he recruited r for service and records recruited. in il War serv-
rs relate to" Shenandoah _ my of the
" Hockey League's title.
As Hellermen Drop Barons in Lid- Lifter
Local Team Continues Sensational Brand - Of Hockey in Calder Cup Series : By FRANK ANDERSON, Times Sports Writer CLEVELAND, Apr. 6—The Indianapolis Caps had an-|
other reason today for banking with Terry Sawchuk. Their
-year-old goalie's puck savings account is drawing enough) interest to buy them the Calder Cup.
Terry made 43 saves last night as the Caps bounced
the Cleveland Barons, 4-1, for a 1-0 lead in the best-of-seven series for the American |
Those are a few of the things! that caught the eye of Referee Des| Smith and Linesman Red. Duna. Others that didn't catch their eyes are bruises today. Even the fans had their inning. They littered the’ {ice with programs and waste paper several times and on one occasion a spectator’s chair found
It was the first time this “season for the Caps to beat the Barons on Cleveland ice. The shock of seeing the highly touted Barons fall sent T7121 partisan fans home sad. The Barons threw everything but the press box at the Caps, but it was no use. The
Indianapolis lines were tremen- Its former occupant had no
Of Masters
its way to the playing surface.|
RAR TR YAS
Caps To a 1
Evens Start
Possibility Grows | That Amateur May Cop 1950 Classic
AUGUSTA, Ga. Apr. 6 (UP) |The largest field in ‘the history of the 16-year-old event went to [the tee today in the classy Masters Tournament with the professional entrants in the middle {of one of their celebrated feuds. i There were 13 unruffled ama-| teurs among the field of 65 men! and veteran observers and writers: said this might be the year for an amateur to take the coveted title for the first time. The pressure is all on the pros who want to run their tournaments themselves and reach a separation agreement with the {parent Professional Golfers Asso-
The Cup That Chess:
Just Sricihior cup for Bobby as he wins the British Open in 1930.
Opener, 75-50
. third quarter pole, and leave the
Andersan in
JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS The CYO is sinking its teeth into the meat of Indianap-
olis baseball.
Rev. Richard Kavanagh and his CYO directors will’: Minneapolis’ Mikan Take history in local baseball annals next month. Scores 26; Martin May 16-will mark the first time in Indianapolis that a . Stars on Defense parochial grade school baseball league will grace the local ; diamonds. omnes feces MINNEAPOLIS, Apr. 6 (UP) haa The Minneapolis Lakers rumbled = It's kids’ stuff — only 15 terest version of i
over Anderson last night, 75 to 4nd under, but it's’a potent sw 50, to grab the opening game of ;. ection into the marrow of high! ONLY 15 BOYS showed up ine their best-of-three semifinal ject} and amateur bile Rar frequently and Harry decided to National Basketball Associatioh timate “backbone” of collegiate forego it. Sacred Heart fielded its playoff series. and professional baseball. first varsity team last year, but
this
Automatic George Mikan, the The league is being’backed by NOW hopes to work from the Lakers’ 8:foot TO:Hich “Center, the Holy Name Societies and prow" up,” intrdmurals not exsunk 26 points, 13 of them in a Men's Clubs-of the city's Catholic cluded
Cathedral hopes to play the real thing again this year, but the Irish high school will need a re placement for Pitcher Don Roeder, who was graduated.
third-period blast that withered the invading Packers, : The. Lakers led at half time, 27 to'19, scored 24 points to stretch* their margin to 51 to 34 at the
parishes. It will embrace eight teams, playing 14 games each, on a home-and-home basis. league teams include St. Catherine, St. Mark's, Our
Lady of Lourdes, Sacred Heart; - cuoner SPRAGUE, Tech's
dous and Sawchuk was sensa-
tional.
Coach Ott Heller did not dress Caps’ 39-year-old chief gave youth a chance by
for the game. The C
suiting up Max Quackenbush, It
was the first plavoff game Heller
has missed and the first in which Quackenbush saw action, Sew Up Game The Caps sewed up the game with a three-goal outburst in the second period. Gerry Reid put a score in at 2:33 of that stanza ‘with an assist by Baron defense-
man Tom Williams’ skate. Then the Morrisons, Rod and Don, teamed up at 8:22 for another
score, the puck going in off [ Rod's stick. THe Caps third "goat was pre:
ceded by the Barons’ only score
of the evening. Center Tod Sloan cheered the home fans with a goal at 9:41 on an assist by Bob Dawes, But
at 18: 41 when he amined in Pat Lundy's rebound. That made it 3-1 and the Caps breathed easier. The Caps added the fourth goal coup de grace in the third period.
Al Dewsbury of the Le Lut forte SEANTEY “Cup “iif “the helped renigineer “the niagnificent’ Bob’ pa fifth. Later, he pon-
further use for it, though. He was ciation. Their political troubles ejected by the ushers. have not contributed to the shaipNext Saturday Night ening of their game. That's Chaptér 1 of the Cleve-
Have Hunch on Little land Story. More will follow here Saturday night. Coach Ott On the other hand, the smart Heller of the Caps expects ‘the money boys who: collect here in Barons to throw the book at us: force every April have a hot Saturday.” But, Ott, how c¢an hunch--they believe that Lawson
the Barons have anything left to Little, 38-year-old veteran and a throw? member of the rebel group, can The score allowed by Sawchuk slip in and pick up the marbles. maintained his one-goal per game Little has played his top game average in, the play-offs. The recently and has taken off much Caps now have 24 goals in five of the excess weight that contests, while their opponents bothered him the last. few years have five. Sawchuk being young Little was the “boy wonder” in is impressionable. There's maybe the thirties when he won both thé a reason for this un-Baronable British and American amateur stinginess in. goal matters. A titles for two years running. - Scottish bagpipe band played dur- The « alifornian’s feats in those ingthe ‘intermisstons and the in- days were the Closest dpproXimafluence might have been con- tion to the grand slam record of tagious. - Bobby Jones who retired —as well Today Heller and some of, the he might—after winning the two Caps are swinging over to Detroit amateur titles plus thesU. 8S. and to see the parent Red Wings and British ‘Opens in 1930. Jones r the Toronto Maple Leafs battle it founded the Masters Tournament,
Tip Gave Bob Title
1921 as his _gbb year. Today,” 29 years later Long Jim Barnes, “Young man,” said Jim, ly. It's easy to score when you are Praving well’ . Bob filed that sage adv ice along with a thousand other things he had learned. At the time he was thinking of the herrific nine he scored on the fifth ‘hole when he seemed to be overtaking Barnes.
national league. They'll be looking Augusta National Course and has dered t for some big-league plays , to been the guiding spirit of throw at the Barons Saturday. affdir, the only tournament that on the eighth hole at St. Louis President Clarence Campbell 8ives the outstanding figures of Country Club when -he was iy and Maurice Podoloff of the Na- 80lf a lifetime invitation to com- yp on Willie Hunter in the U.
wisdom of gambling
Lundy took a Dewsbury pass at tional and American Hockey Lea- Pete. Amateur. The shot failed and Bob the red line and went all the gues, “respectively. were present Rebels Adopt a Name finally lost to the transplapted way in with it. : for the game last night. Podoloff’s Englishman.
Officiating Spotty The typewriter can take of the scoring details, but only
care C aps.
The rebel players,including the attendance Wat a £004 sign fo leading player of the year and The AML chief Tas been defending champion of this tourfollowing the winners in his play- efending p
A Brilliant Student At this time Bob was going to
> G i *h, living two lives a board can tell the bone-crunch- off travels. nament, Sam Snead, adopted a Georgia Tech, avd ving 100 Inve or ing story of the defensive tactics name yesterday. They call them- —a student an g 8 employed by both teams. The Summary selves the Professional Golfers golfer. It should be noted that boards knew it because they Cleveland (1) Indianapolis (1) Players’ Association. The PGA, Bob was a brilliant scholar at served ‘as springboards for the Bower G_ sawchuk with Horton Smith doing the dip- Tech and later at Harvard. frequent dives into mayhem. Caps Sproyt ro Dew Pind lomatic work, still regards them - His intelligence helped him and Barons bounced off the walls 5 Rw D Moreseon as the “board of governors” much withstand the “Jones Cult,” a like a toad with the hiccups, 8 LW Podolsky a¥the National Democratic Party group of hometown fans who held Penalties were called. Penalties! wi A Sate, Se eal the States’ Righters ‘“Dixie- Jones could do “no , rong. were missed. The officiating was ah, Kelly. Dawe ats. Throughout his career, Bob was spotty and the game sometimes bute “Swat jis foures—Rasjan, Quacken: © rvbody is being very tact- the object 'of a strange ‘idolatry, Sotiaizat, Land Gl Haidy ; ard. . got out of control. “Officials Smith, sieree: Duan, lines. ful in this squabble and both sides even by hard-headed veterans
A blow-by-blow description of
the first period shows what the statistics don’t: Dewsbury Bobby Carse drew two minutes
each at 10:45 for roughing: Saw- Sa¥chuk
chuk drew two minutes at 17:43 for slashing Fred Thurier. Gordon Haidy. newly-returned by Detroit,
served Sawchuk’'s time. Dews- ng, Sprout ‘cross: checking), veterans of this dizzy opera- hurt him half as much as did berry was unrepentant, because “Period Scoring—s. Indianapolis, HOM: Which, sometimes can mean Gene Sarazen at Skokie when he went in again at 14:48 of the jundy, (Dewst Viiotadd- oh eoplties—Tay. ‘winning or losing a fortune on a Gene came roaring in with a 68 third period for cross-checking : « —Saves by, J Perc re single putt, predict confidentially to overtake Bob by one stroke! jgawe hy a
with Danny With Danu¥ Son.
ma
B
hope to keep it in the family./who ran the august United States core by Periaas—. _4 George Schneiter, bounced by the Golf Association. But Bob man-
INDIANAPOLIS
(Lundy, Reid
itripping), Dewsbury
41 1333 that everything will be worked for. the U.S. Open.
More Rookies Brought Up For Stanley Cup Play All-Stars Edge
By United Press
More rookies were ready to National Hockey League Stanley the fifth games at Montreal and
The é anadiens kept apple-cheeked Gerry McNeil in the nets for
their last-ditch battle against the Manager Jack Adams of, Detrol
Hinkle Denies Purdue Rumors
“I have absolutely not been contacted by anyone about the Purdue job. Neither have I applied for the job, nor even con-
‘sidered it.
“Sooner or later they get my
“natne on every job: Everything's
3
tine with me at Butler. Until something -is-said-to-me, PH-make no investigating.” That's Butler's Tony Hinkle speaking. His name was linked to that vacant Purdue basketball job last night by a Chicago sports
‘Keys
—out satisfactorily soon: Tr T re zen two ‘months older), these two were" strangely contrasted. {Gene was the little, skinny excaddy of Italian extraction. Bob - Jones was polished and cultured. Sarazen, 10 yéars later, was the only player other than Jones ever to win the British and U. 8. Opens in the same year.
LOUISVILLE, Apr. 6 — Notre Parade for Sweetser New York Rangers tonight. while Dame's Kevin O'Shea connected The 1922 Amateur, which Bob t rushed up..three-reserves. from. On. a. driving layup inthe -final-figured he could --win-~at- the’ Omaha in the U. S. League to 30 seconds of an overtime session Country Club in Boston's haughty replace three ailing: Red Wing to give the touring College All- Brookline, instead was a parade regulars. Star basketball team a 68 to 66 of glory for a young Yale stu- | - The Wings were all square with Victory over the colorful Harlem dent, Jess Sweetser. Jess gave Bob Toronto at two victories apiece Globetrotters here last night. the worst licking of his life to in their four-out-of-seven elimi- The twisting shot gave the All- that point, 8 and 7, in the third nation while the erratic Rangers Americans a stalemate in the round. This came a week after ed Montreal three to one. series of four games. They led Bob's first Walker Cup play, in Montreal Vet Out most of the way, running the which he beat loger Wethered, -McNeil took over the goal tend- OUD! to 30 to 12 at one time. It famed British champion, 3 and 2. ing ‘chores in Montreal Tuesday “28 35 to 25 at the halftime. Then came 1923, and the first night on the heels of an announce-| A belated rally by the uncan- breaking of the ice. To this day ment by Bill Durnan, six- “time nily-clever Globetrotters, led by Bob doesn’t think he deserved the Vezina trophy. winner. that eo Marques Haynes, knotted -the:Open at Inwood. but he did win it" was out of the playoffs. oe game in the final seconds at 60- He sdys he played mediocre golf, Canucks’ veteran keeper of the all, near-capacity crowd of 6800 yet his halfway 71-73 was seeond indicated he had retired for west the game. only to-Jock Hutchison. He had good this spring. Bob Lavoy, Western Kentucky's a 76 the third round. and wasn’t Paul Meger, Buffalo's winner Star. will join the All-Stars today proud of" it until his 220 total of the Rookie of the Year award II Kansas City for the remainder showed him leading his nearest in the American Hockey League. of the 17-game tour. rival, wee Bobby Cruickshank, by
Trotters, 68-66
Times Special
try a veteran's job today as the Cup semifinal playoffs moved int Detroit.
By LAWRENCE ROBINSON, Returning from England empty-handed,
this on an a out drive over the trees -
} ‘Both of the same age (Sara-
Golf's Greatest Slammer—
1921 Was Jones’ But Barnes' Advice Aided
‘Scoring Well When Swinging Badly,’
Ebb Year -
Inspiration Times Special Writer
Bob Jones remembers
he first recalls some advice he got from who won the U. ington: by- the widest margin ever recorded. “championship golf congists of scoring well when you are swinging bad- -
S. Open at Columbia CC, Wash-
far in front with three holes to go, and a 4-4-4 finish, even par, would have cinched the title. Instead; he finished 5-5-6, and even
then Cruicky had to score a birdie i 3 on the tough final hole to tie Black.f-c
him at 296. = Playoff ‘Thrilling | “The PIEVOTT was nip and tuck Bob leading -most. of the yet coming to the final hole, with its water hazard, all even. Cruickshank had to play safe short of the water in two. Bob
sliced into the rough but had a good lie with a shot of 200 yards to .the greén. Bob smacked a No. 2 iron to the green. Cruickshank, unnerved, ended up with a 6. Jones’ par 4 won him his first championship. To this day he doesn’t remember hitting that No. 2. Losing to ‘Max Marston at Flossmor in the U.S. Amateur was somehow anticlimactic after Bob, as usual, won the Medal in a playpff against Chick (Evans). Now they were saying Jones was ‘a better medal than match player. but Bob didn't mind. He says he had learned to play against par, not any opponent, and he felt some -day he would come through. He did, the very
inext year,
.
any Citvelana : : 0 ! Ee PGA as tournament manager, is aged to keep his feet on the irst eriod Scoring-—None, Penalties —Dewshury jroughing), Carse (roughing), On hand as the dissidant players ground. n 3 k iHiashing. served by Haidy S106 representative. The PGA ac-, The. year 1922 started badly 6 Of Ng a Reid "unassisted, 3.33 2, Indiana ig knowledges that it hopes to get for Bob, when he had to underMorrison ) orrison . veland. Sloan (Dawes) 41: 4, Indianapolis, Some ) “helpful suggestions” from go an operation for varicose Dewsbury 18:41 Penalties—Reicle Schneiter veins in his legs. But that didn't
“Look, son, let me you to a cigar you tie to. And you
always fresh, too.”
ti
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6136 partisan fans confident of Christ The King, Cathedral, lcoach, has a different pitching victory. Little Flower and St. Joan of ov on his mind. Veteran Brian Held to 6, Arc. y
Heavy demands by more young-
Slater Martin, little Laker : : guard. held Frank Brian, Ander- Sters playing the diamond sport ' moved the CYO into action. son's high scoring ace. to six . . nts 4 reat defensi hi Players will compete from -the noints in a gre: pfensive e 3 a ba mag velensive exh parochial grade schools and: iniy . ~~» clude freshmen in the high e first quarter ended in a 7-7 schools. A participant cannot
deadlock. The Lakers didn't get have reached the age of 15 before a field goal until with more than Jan. 1 of this vear to become elinine minutes of the stanza gone, gible. ' : Mikan hooked one in. a x = Anderson meanwhile tried to go THAT'S A convenient age limit. into a’ stall in an effort to bring 1t bridges.the gap of the sproutthe Lakers out of their defensive ing freshman lad who might find position but after more than four himself wanting to do something minutes of futile trying. they had athletic in his initial high school to abandon their tactics. days. So his thoughts in spring The two teams play.a second lightly. turn to- baseball game tonight at Anderson. The loop runs through July 11 and the actual total number of
Anderson 50 Minneapolis
ff A tx 1t pt participants will reach 160, av2 } Poll att ¢.4 4 0 - eraging 20 boys to each team. 1 &Mixanc {10 3. About two-thirds of the way 3 2 Mating 2 1 2 through the league play, plans are 0 2 Carlson 3 205 8 1G _3.0.0.underway to. stage. an. All-Star i Y is TY IT game. The leader of the loop will t 0: I 0 1 compete against an All-Star team Total 814 22 Tots 8 19 18 selected from the seven other \ 8 w ? 4 Anderson > 1650 8que ids. Minnewpolis 24-75 Free ae rows , Mis ssed 2 Mik ar Pe 2: LEAGU E AL AY Li AYS will be Marcin 3. Grant 2. Hassel tery " Tuesday and Friday at 5:45 p. m.
Through the kindness and generosity of the City Recreation Derpartment, it's hoped that diamonds at Garfield, Riverside, Brookside and 49th and Arsenal will be accessible. Some teams mdy use the new baseball facilities being prepared at the CYO
Snowed Under RACINE, O,, Apr. 6 (UP) —A baseball game between Racine , High School and Middleport had to be called
yesterday because of — all Stadium across from . Victory si. Joseph's at Purdue (iwo- game series things—a snowstorm Field. Re 10! Conta Bear TIPS va T d The baseball diamond on W. |B Pennsylvania 4. Middleport was eaqing ! 16th St. is adjacent to the CYO Middle ‘Teanessee State 12, Vanderbilt 1, in the fourth ‘inning With | football practice field. Cathe- yi a rp manth 1
the only rum scored when
the umpire lost a pop fly in “ the snowfall and couldn't
| dral and Sacred Heart wouldn't | be the sole baseball benefactors ! among the high schools. But be sure whether it had it's an opportune moment for been caught fairly. "He | Coach Harry Caskey’s baseball ruled it had been, but calied | Spartans. the game, which will be re- |
| played later. [tive varsity team this ‘Season. In-
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Righthandeér Gene Nash, a promising fast-baller, has been having arm and shoulder. trouble. The “doc” says it may be bursitis. Gene's been warming up well in the Tech gym and may be used sparingly on the mound later. The Tech mentor may use him in the infield in the opening games to test his flipper. Tech has a veteran team and a mound staff that could give the Big Green the NCC crown it lost to Anderson last year. Nash won six and lost two last : year; Lefty Harris ‘racked up, four of five and Bill Shannon won all- three starts in 1949, in cluding “pulling the Logansport game out of the fire. Nash is the $64 question mark. Shannon and Harris are juniors. Shannon, a right-hander, looks like a comer. Tech won eight of nine league games last year white Afiderson won nine of 10. Anderson dropped Nash and Tech, 3 to 1, for the plificher.,
DeVoe Advances Times Special HAMILTON, Bermuda, Apr. 6 ~Charles De Voe of Indianapolis won a 6-1, 6-1 decision over Malcolm Goslin of Bermuda to advance in the Coral Beach tennis tournament now in progress here,
College Baseball
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: } donned Canadien spangles for his All Americans (68) Globetrotters (46) three strokes ] writer attending the meeting of second playoff game and was Dam: out fo iu fg it of Bob's most poignant memory the NCAA in Chicago. He said joined by teammate Toni Johnson. Combs. 0 i 7 {of that championship, perhaps, Hink had the “Inside track.” Johnson was hustled into town france 5 3 0 4 was his last-round finish. He was But Hink doesn't say that yesterday after news that Calum hen « 8 2 3 3 .he isn’t Interested in the job. “I MacKay would be out of tonight's B 0 000 s So alabrese g 1 3 19.1 72 couldn’t say uniess I investi- game with an injured leg. Overtong 1 0 0 Cumbrind.z 070 1 gated,” he aids. & Two Rookies Dress . gone T1.2 time-tested... ERX sublet : Pacific Coa i re a Geary -Plamonden... cand.-Bert: THis rag gg Signy ra wld iscomiors of Rheu: a irsc e two other Canadien trotters 3s all rans 0 Aione- oR “WINTER- nb ar amraciric oast eagve . farm hands who have seen action y F** (Thr ows Missed —Dumbrot. Artzin 3, with: ovale Formate Diets wath (Results Yesterday) Rehfel 2. O'Shea 2, Reeves, Calabrese, relief or maney back! 100 for $2.00 San Prancisco 4, Sacramento 3, ever Since Defenseman Kenny Sutton iY ontnse m4 J. Wilton. Tatum 4 WIND NE, RUG © San Dieg y » Polyso 10. Los Angeles 8 ed ram, Bardon was carried off the .ace SE elaware St. Indianavoins 4. ina mly games scheduled.) with "a dislocated shoulder last Or h he - . Saturday, also dressed. n the Ice Ladies’ and | Now Bicycle Riding Jack Adam's surprise package AHL PLAY- -OFF STANDINGS Men's FELT | 1 from Omaha consisted of For- Series D (Calder Cup Championship— Is a Lot of Fun, Try It! wards Lary and John Wilson ot of Seven) ENO HATS | NDIANAPOLI ! " Cleaned— SPORT MODEL brothers, d Defenseman Mar-| {INDIANAPOLIS : 5 nee el Pronovost. They replaced the! RESULTS LAST NIGHT Do se BICYCLES ’59 50 injured Gordie HoWe, Jim Peters "INDIANAPOLIS +. Cleveland } SHOES nd Pete ‘Baba d I Repaired r . a ndo. P pa —_—— r Has two-wheel hand-operated ° Basketball DRY brakes. A regular speedster! NBA rLAY-OFF STANDINGS Cleaning OF TUE (Semifinal) « : Minneapolis on Lost While Y Wait While You §i 12¢ BOYS’ DE LUXE _ $59 50 | Anderson 1.70 le You Wait or ou Shop MODELS 97: rr PALACE SALON 3 FOR 35¢
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