Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1950 — Page 18

9

The Wright Angle—

. AAA Crown _ Race ‘Tight’

Walt Faulkner Grabs Lead As Parsons Drops to Fourth

apm —— ART WRIGHT . The hot battle for America’s auto racing crown is Wes wing to 8 elosewitlvahlgour more: championshi ot « wessgrthe. schedufle and. with at least. five contenders in _positi to win the trophy. Walt Faulkner, a newcomer to championship racing this year and known as the “Little Dynamo,” has leaped into the ledd of the national ~ or r AEE op “ te ohedar- = eck championship point standing racing from now on because of ~ with a “total of 947 points.|the cooler evenings this SEASON Johnny ‘Parsons, Glendale, Cal.,|0f the year. who has been leading the pack a. un -8 : since his win at Indianapolis, SPEEDROME once again has dropped to fourth position with closed for the season. The Little 753 points, Paul Russo is now in Hard Tops are moving over to W. second place with 848 points and 16th St. Speedway tonight. Henry Banks is in show position They're putting on a demonstra“With 780 points. “Closely crowding tion=race before the- regular-pro=-the leaders is newcomer Cecil gram of the big Stock cars. Green with 709.5 points, which! ” brought him from eighth to fifth! THE “BIG JITTERS” in auto place. racing circles now is the war. Car Next AAA championship race owners and. track operators are takes place in Springfield, IIL, watching the headlines from KoOctober 1. The season will wind rea. to gauge their plans for 1951. up with three West Coast events: Some of thé drivers—stock car Sacramento, Cal., Oct. 15° Phoenix and race car have gone into milAriz, Nov. 12; and Bay Meadows itary service, others are being (San Bruno) Cal., Nov. 26. Jim alerted for early call Lamb, secretary of the contest s & = board. governing body of .auto I{ gasoline and tire rationing and stuck it on the freshmen. racing in the U. 8. pointed out should come, of course, that that the leaders are so closely would mean the end of racing Hedden's crew, despite the score. bunched that the national champ-| “for the Wuration” fonship might be undetermined in World War IL right up to the last race of the year, future is as good as anyone's sity, ' “This is the closest stretch duel prediction. It'll be a case of in the annals of American cham- watching and waiting. pionship racing.” said Lamb. " Ten leading contenders for the) LOU AAA championship were listed owner of the by the contest board today as town follows: 11951 classic.

Pos

By

i

et, oh id just oy unleashed a - |0yard

Display Top Spirit,

undefeated season.

themselves. They tackled

“500,” is

Now working for of shape, overweight,

Points Sept 947

olis Race Car Corp.) since he partment.

3 i |sold out his stable to Anstead. } ] " u ™ as ’

CARS ee Speedway and Reading (Pa.)|

1 RAC 7 |einnati a ow 12 STOCK x. AR" PRACES

Win Cine DALE Ton ight, Motiv ioe. Speedway: Speedway; Saturday night, 8

uke Dinsmore Mauri Rose Jack MrGrata i THE “BIG ONE” *coday is the! AAA 100-Mile stock car race at fio Speed the Springfield an. ) Fairgrounds. Ye HARD TOPS Tonight, wo th St. Speedway, special race before!

6 NO MORE Wednesday night, regular oc eS re This ater- |

noon, Jungle Park, Rockville and Sun | racing at W. 16th St. The stocks Vf, oi'"KnGerson; Tuesday night, South are there tonight. Next Sunday (Bend Motor Speedway: Wednesday night, |

- |

This ater |

sal go outside, etc.

{quarterbacks can throw,

track Sunday afternoons, instead |} "Yai; Grou Eridsy

Without a Fish Final Day

Tony Hulman, U. S. Team 7th, No Catch, ‘No Points; Crews Eye Victory Toasts

By ED SOVOLA, Times Staff Writer

WEDGEPORT, Nova Scotia, Sept. caught the final day of the Seventh International Tuna Cup |Strobel the winner. matches, won the tournament today. Two fish plus a 100-point bonus

(Continued from Page 17) in Indianapolis.

series will start in Minneapolis. Fernandez's winning

~|was hit off Rookie Jim who accidently ‘“beaned”

The British Empire team, going into the finale with no |2156. catches—as did the Scandinavian and United States teams wound up second with two spectacular| takes.

Indians Score Early

points. In three days fishing the |

navian team, fish of the day.. —itsetf—in-—sixth—plage with —185/ points. Hard luck dogged U. 8. Fisher- and found it hard to believe that paw Johnny Van Cuyk. men, who did not have a strike the fishing could have been so during the three-day tournament. pad.

caught the third 1946 tournament, there were 48/;,. throwin. His team found strikes.

Veteran fishermen-on-the dock groring Wells and Coogan;

Last year, 72 fish were landed on tournament was to begin. 116 strikes. ——————— Aussies Hook One - Up until noon, teams of the ermen. ~ British Empire, United States and Scandinavia were without fish.| Shertly thereafter, John Kelly, 1,465 Yarmouth Sunday night. Sydney, Australia, hooked on to Many fishing. parties, team mem-|

Prior hart popped foul to first base. to that time, eight and nine fish

Season Nears End

first out,

ice for the Empire. Every pound j,k again, this time not under retired the side. .

counted. the stfess of competition. Unless an “unusual run of tuna B After Tipton lined deep to Ge.

—eseemed—to--he sale 10 take NE ye forfheomifig banquet: Judging] — Anderson. < match even though it had 1862 ¢r,m the talk on the dock, spirits,

ment, The U. 8. team won lastigeventh place American Foie, Mr Asmussens-boat-ran-up-the-ed hair sve yellow flag and the Scandinavian = Which reminds me, as my beard team was assured of not being gets tangled up in the typewriter

Isnuff-out the threat: Good Catch By Gearhart

the water which had been kick- the brush, - - ing up for several days. euw—— About an hour and a half before the close of the matches T. J. Wheeler, Toronto, Canada,

Signed. for | Bout LL TORONTO, Sept. 16 (UP)— . Alan McFater, promising Toronto I fishing close to the boat of Tony Ji ghtweight, was signed today to

Hulman, Terre Haute, and Dr, meet Young Junior from Spring on t ; Jeon. Storz, Worcester, Mass. "field, Mass, in a 10-round bout

tagged the last fish of the day

hat

handed catch. After Fitz Gerald beat out hit to deep short to open

Tony Hulman said the bluefin which later proved to be the largest taken during the tournament, swam between his bait and the Britishers. This wasn't the year for the Americans. T. J. Wheeler was fighting his fish when the gun ended the 1950" miatch. Unless the - fish was of A unusual proportions, everyone on 4 4 the 21 fishing boats, knew the Chileans were the winners. In the tally on the dock, after Wheeler's fish weighed in at 707, the Chile team sent up a shout that could have gone up earlier. | - Chile and the British Empire split the 200 bonus for the most fish caught during the tournament. That gave the Chilean ° team 1962 point. The British Empire accumulated 1614 points. Jorge Prado, Sao Paulo, Brazil, with his lone 590“pounder, gave his country 649 points. Brazil, Cuba, Argertina, and Chile, split 50 points -each| the first day, each country with

Saint's first hit.

pop to Gutteridge.

pla

the third out.

McCall Loses Control

| 4 |

{Dan Ozark, batting for Van Cuyk.

accounted for a ‘513-pound tuna plus 50 bonus points for a total © + of 563 points. = Argentine was fifth with 343 L Xo, Arturo Lin¢aliofs ‘Buenos

nandez

#, sandro to end the rally.

al Eh ll | Alberts Rinker got a swell for toy es of 12 eatfich. ,

?

un tne

y fi- rn

Yesterday the upperclassmen mixed a 33-7

just like me downs gave a good account of | — B like backs can run (in varying de- Varsity Center Don Rodick lost

Your guess on auto racing's demons and outspirited the var-|8rees from slow to swift),

[players. Most of them are eager. . This aftughoon. #unk's| They gnake mistakes like missing (blocks, calling the wrong plays, friday night, Cin-| twisting inside when they should|

Indians Sweep Playoff

the stock cars move into the Gc "aH, ursday | fr f. ¥ pisie, Bosnen 12 RRA er 10s om a

finals, the finals series will open But if the Millers win, the next

© smash lover the 315-foot left field barrier

the Tribe's Monty Basgall last Thursday night Indianapolis. Romano 16.—Chile, with no fish/was the losing hurler and Fred]

{shook their heads in little groups, |Haugstad was derricked for south-|

T After walking Fitz Gerald to] a 207-pound bluefin and broke the bers among them, will try their open the second frame, Van Cuyk|

Victory toasts from the Alton] rt in_the Saints’ half of the sec-| ~rame through Soldiers Rip, Chile ys Sharp trophy Will be" drunk “Btiond. McCall fanned Aberson and’

The Saints got their first runblanked out. A squall kicked up something ought to be done about per on base in their third. After yw, gave way to southpaw Frank Antonello popped to Wells, Mc-| papich. Call walked Brancato, but. Van

Curk was called out on strikes ;. ;., Limmer 1 “ang Cassini flied short to Gear- r lined into a. triple O

who made a running One- 3,,nleq Pendleton at first and

the,

and disappeared over the horizon, at Toronto, Sept. 26. + teridge, McCall and Wells. fighting warily a most precious ST. PAUL came up with its fish. Rodeo Winner first threat in the fourth after Not the Year, Says Tony two were out. Eric Tipton lined

a single through the box for the Aberson drew a walk but the Saints died on the path as Anderson hit an easy

I The Tribesters made it 3 to 0 in ithe fifth on bases on balls to Kalin land Dallessandro and a bobble by Cassini on an attempted, double

y. Dallesgandro was forced on Fer'nandez’s tap to third but Cassini |{threw wild to first, allowing Kalin ito score. Gearhart singled to left ‘but Fitz Gerald flied to right for

McCall got himself into a hea {of trouble after the Saints came {to bat in the fifth. His wildness] lgave up walks to Antonello an Brancato, and a wild pitch put| for | /the runners on Second and third. forced Brancato at second and McCall gave way to Forrest Pendleton grounded for the game‘Main who walked pinch hitter ending out.

{Cassini hit a high bounder to Main, scoring Antonello. pendie- yy

ed to a delayed double play, Fer- whipped Hammond, to Gutteridge to Fitz ballers today in the Veterans of Gerald. Limmer -flied to Dalles- Foreign Wars national tourna- | Edson Bahr took over the St. 18-year-old | Paul pitching in the sixth. Wells| University of Tennessee student, | {rapped out his second hit after r|huried a one-hitter forthe Fara-|] Iwo_wers Out And was sCHAndSd!fur's, He 2nd 4 WOhiIeY Sune

prite ad Coogan grounded to Cassini. a Hammond batter yagled | The Sainfs evened the SPOT Rte wim two out in the’ ninth.

Fal {Fob ie Heddests s Butler freshmen haven't fried the classpassing grades on the gridiron. The Jory when Halfback Bob Wolfla (far left) to Halfback Don Kelly at. dark jersey).

Butler Varsity Gridders Roll Over Frosh, 33-7, to Start Season Right

Score Hinted Deceiving as Youngsters

Hard-Driving Play

By FRANK ANDERSON Butler's varsity football team is one-tenth of the way to an 800d

paste in the Bow

But the men of Tony Hinkle weren't much better than Pop

The frosh boys in the varsity hand-

THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES

Frosh Make Passing Grades i in Football Subjects

a to the Frosh two from where

3

SUNDAY, SEPT. 17, 1950

down by Vira Halfback Konnie Ben Johnson ig ed to defend, but e action took place in the third period of yes-

Kelly caught it and was King (27). Varsity Ful

it was too late

terday’s Froih-Vanity battle in the Bowl.

Only 158 Watch Chisox Beat A's

Then Norman Ellenberger kicked,

Race Thursday

and the eyes of a fair i horsemen will} be nd

{a-veritable classic.

'Hoofbeats—

Little Brown i

—Purse-in-Excess of $58,000 Expected for 3-Year-Old Pate

‘By GEORGE M. GAHAGAN ON, THURSDAY of this week the minds of many—

ey ave ie my Hk: Er It will be the racing of the Little Brown Jug, a harness race which in the course of a very few years has become

| 104s, ‘and it was worth $35,000 the event ap- i, round numbers. Last year it |pears to be a close contest, |roncnid Jos 000, Ri Hey say it well shy awa re 8-year, | ind one a lid When| Anyhow, it will be a big day for | Quilla . Hanover won the 3-y ear- Delaware—perhaps the biggest | old pacing futurity here at the that any county fair has Fair, there were many who be-| | achieved in connection with the lieved the race gave an accurate {harness sport. forecast for “The Jug,” and pos-|

sibly it did. “But, the big event over int ‘Cardinals Di im.

Delaware is to be raced often] Dodgers’ er

half-mile track, changes the form of contenders| (Continued from Page 17) which have been racing on thei, ; ,,4 the score for the Dodgers

large ovals. Form has been OVer-| iy, his 97th homer in the eighth,

Just now,

Three Philadelphia Errors Counted

(Continued from Page 17)

Nelson Fox and Keliner's throwing error. Three more counted in the next inning on two walks, a sacrifice’ and Gus Niarhos' two-run single.

the point and the varsity decided to buckle down. | Capt. Tim Crawforth, looking! and thinking straight, masterminded the Varsity down

Fullback Ben Johnson crashed over. Dick Bidstrup's kick split the uprights and it was 7-7. While all this was going on!

three {or four linemen can block and

several ball carriers can traverse Picked up a bad gash Spirit may play a large part = =. an two yards without|right eye. Weidekamp stayed on|

in Butler's football fortunes this|sympling. Punting is about onthe MOORE. SRR car season. Some of Hinkle’s mena par with last year’s. back in seem to have lost their zest for . getting ready for the the game. Some of them are out] doggedly | Bill Anstead, of IRC (Indianap- slow and thick in the thinking de-| at

Pop's freshmen won the game, as far as spirit is concerned. They | raced off the field at top speed! substitution time. They! | strained and stretched for that

That applies to SOME varsity! extra yard. They unleashed a well-thought-out attack and only,

bogged down because of few practice sessions and the over-| anxiousness of the young. The frosh scored first. Nobles-

| This year's varsity can do bet-|ville's Don Kelly, a back with a Vere contagious because Ron Hal-|} | ter than its critics think. The purpose, threw 40 vards to Ft. the| | Wayne Central's John Woznick.

*

3-all jn their half of the sixth. Tipton and Aberson singled. Anderson sacrificed and Antonello walked, filling the bases. Brancato flied to Gearhart in short right centerfield and Tipton ,| was given an error because his throw-in was 30 feet wide of the plate. Main settled down then to retire the side. Tribe Regained Lead | The Indians regained the lead

The contest lasted 3 hours 5 in the seventh as Clem Labine gave the Chileans a 1962 total. Ininutes and the attendance was|took over the St. Paul pitching.

[After one was out, Dallessandro slashed a long double off the

Wells singled to left and Coo-| len Senter field wall and scored the box in the/on Fernandez's single to center. William H. Wahl, Copenhagen, Americans didn't even come close fii a os a to] Denmark, captain of the Scandi-|to a fish. On the last day of the sp..q Coogan went to nd ont

The Saints were held scoreless in their half of the seventh. Tipton | was called out on strikes -and|

Kalin lined a single to left, Limmer was erased at second in and a doubleplay.

After = Gutteridge and Maia | grounded out to open the eighth,

Dallessandro bounced to Van Wells slapped out his third single. The famous Rip had been cyyk, whose throw to second was Coogan, “however, There were eight strikes in three cleared of the giant Tuna by the gropped by Pendleton. Fernandez first. It was Well's seventh hit in days, and eight fish were landed. hyrricane two days before the hit into a double play and Gear-|17 times at bat in the playoff.

grounded to

| The Saints failed to score in

McCall sent the saints down in their eighth. “a day were taken by fewer fish- ‘order in the bottom half of ~the: first with Tribe Leftfielder Kalin top of the ninth. Dallessandro backing against the wall to pull] {singled to left and Royce Lint The last steamer of the year gown Cassini's line drive for the ran for him. Fernandez popped to

—Kalin-flied-deep-to-center-in-the:

|Labine and Gearhart flied to left. Ted Beard went into right field [for the Indians, replacing Dalles|sandro as the Saints went to bat

ar- | {in the bottom of the ninth.

Naylor Hits Homer

Eaf “Naylor, player-coach, tied’ Ht-up-for-the-Saints—in the ninth

The Tribe threatened again in| with a booming home run that points with the posstply of Pick haven't. been dampened to the ihe third inning after Coogan landed on the roller rink beyond ing up another 200, for catchingextent that a good time isn’t an-|jineq to- left field. Kalin walked. left centerfield. Main was taken the most fish during the tourna- ticipated. Even members of the pallessandro fouled to Brancato out for John Hutching. Cassini. eam and Fernandez - was safe when greeted John with a sharp hit years match with-a total of 8391 pmshed from the dock to cut week-| 'Van.Cuyk bobbled his easy tap. Earough the box and Paap nit old beards and Smooth out crinkl-! Gearhart flied out to center to! was safe on a sacrifice fielder's

choice when Hutchings tried vain: ly to nail Cassini at second. That was all for Hutchings,

|play.

| threw to Fernandez to catch Cas-

2 sini off second base.

ald singled to center. Gutteridg:

out to kill the threat. Jim Romano had taken over

took

three.

11th and was forced by Beard,

over the 315-foot left field wall, scoring Beard ahead of himself,

p Gearhart fanned and Fitz Gerald

grounded out.

Romano, - fanned. Cassin

‘Hammond Ousted VFW Tourney

EF on» fish. ton forced Cassini at : : In fourth place was Cuba. Brancato scoring, and Ozark was CHICAGO, Sept, 186 (UP)-—A Pedro P. Kohly, Havana, Cuba, nailed at the plate which amount- Co ncord, Tenn, YEW Jean n ase-

| ment, winning 4 to 0. John Hufstetler,

Gearhart!

The rally was stopped abruptly

He lined to Coogan who

Then as the Tribesters came to fourth, Van Cuyk fanned Gut-\,.. "ve 10th it started to rain. |

The rain stopped and Fitz Ger-

sacrificed and Culley Rikard, batting for Papish, was walked purposely. Wells and Coogan popped

the Saint's pitching at the start of the 10th. Then Fred Strobel over the ‘Tribe hurling in the bottom of the 10th. Tipton lashed out his third hit of the game _ but Strobel retired the next

Kalin singled in the top of the

who attempted to sacrifice. Then — Fernandez smacked a home run

In the home 11th, Brancato d singled and Harry Taylor, batting

Sam Chapman's error enabled Niarhos to reach third from

a tooth (not his wi ), and where he scored on an infield!

{veteran Halfback Lou Weidekamp over his;

Philadelphia

HE:

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NOma=nS00 QF - H He : 3

bench the rest of the game, renner ooking like an Apache Indian Valor at wey a hangover. | Pain, 1b Renner Scores {chek 2b Varsity got the knack of scoring in the first period and carried Rinker. the skill over into the other three Xeiiner> quarters. Halfback Jack Renner’ s| Totals plunge from the two picked up TD| No. 2 and Crawforth was the big Chicago

{wheel on score No. 3. The Blue passed k. Joost. Two

jcaptain tossed 40 yards to End| Fox lam succeeded him on the mound Robinson; i tehcock to

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+

Bob Runyan. Crawforth’s efforts Th Joost to H cock to Yuin, 2.

and pitched to End John Schues-| —Philadelphi a 5 Chica 80 3. er on balls ler for. TD No. 4. The play COV=/Kellner 2, Pierce re nine fd ered 60 yards, 40 of them in the Flerce (10-16). Loains 3 pitcher—Kellner air. | Time—1:55. Attendance—1568. Renner wound up the parade with a quick-opening dash from

the three. Jack also added the Cleveland Tops point. Varsity 33, Frosh 7.

Mr. Hinkle Ah get lots of play Senators, 3-1 - ay. lout of Ends Schuesler, Jim Crum-| CLEVELAND, Sept. 16 (UP)— ley and Fred Fisher and Runyan./Al Rosen belted his 35th home|. Tackle is ri Ja {run of the campaign and Bob, m Cross an n wyer| ¥ flashed briefly. Mo Senankermani’ pitched a five-hitter here and Bidstrup are competent; they today as the Cleveland Indians] had to be to cope with tackles like won their last 1950 game with] the frosh team's Ossie Montague, Washington, 5 to 1. The Indians! a 230-pounder from Muncie Cen- finished with a 15-T edge. | tral. t Scawiortn, Hallam, Jac May. Lo. aked wp bia fuse sect hugh showed passing talent at fet fri o¥vith two on against quarterback. Mayhugh's gang gangalio Consuegra, the losing] were really moving in Jack's time pitcher. at the thinking post. But the No Washington 1 quarterback on the field was Fred Davis of the freshmen, a Yost.3 [transfer from Georgia Tech. Davis Noren.ct will be the Bulldogs’ pride and: joy Serien id next Year. Michels.2b Sparkles

|

Cleveland Al 4

0 3

Dente.ss | Keller.c

Other frosh who sparkled in- Chsusra.p cluded Kelly, a real comer; Roy Simap Jacobs, a driving fullback from §ooiiison Washington and the Tryon AllTotals 31 524 9! Totals 30 827 6 the racic em sock ‘em school, and _ BS broisdd STH Bln 00. e roc ‘Halfback George England, a pile- Washington 900-000 100 1 driving transfer from Purdue. | grrors—None. Runs batted in Rosen 3. Mr. Hinkle’s athletes will make Stewart, & omen. THO-Dase Ra—Daby, | out all right. They won't have £0] Double plays Yost to Michaels to Vernon: | play many ieams as tough as| i mmeieton Left. on I ashington| jbl Iveshmen, cTheyll be ready s, ra 3.1 3 Feller 18 "Bulk "outs By Sima; if the KEvansville-impersonating } runs. 3 hit in 3 innings: Sima 3 runs. 3 frosh don’t cripple them in scrim. hits in 1 inning. Wild "_gima. Win-

teh. iteher—Peller (14-11). Losing pitcher | mage next week. etre (Toh Umpi ey, Mo-

res—Hur McKinley. Time 1:51. Attendance | ’ ' Cliff Fannin turned in one of his

Times Specisi best performances of the season KALAMAZOO, Mich., Sept. 16— t5qay- when he stopped the Bos-| Wabash's Little Giants scored in {on Red Sox on five hits to give every quarter to open their 1950 the St. Louis Browns a 5-2 vic-| college... football... campaign... bY. tery. inthe final meeting. of the! trimming Kalamazoo, 27 to 0, two clubs this season. here tonight. The triumph gave the Browns Wabash - recovered a host the _ series, two games to one, fumble on its own five yard line was only the Browns’ third for the locals’ deepest penetration win in the 22 games nlayed this f the game. Then the visitors! season with the Reg Sox.

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‘Brownies Stop | ‘Red Sox, 5 to 2

ST. LOUIS, Sept. 16 (UP)—

marched 75 yards for the first’ “Boston -Louls- - period score. Dan McLaren of NL od } Neen ABT AA Indianapislis skirted the flank for Gooamn. 3 $ } } 2/Coleman cf ii $ 0 37 yards, setting up a touchdown stephns.ss 4 0 0 5Kokoslt ~~ 472 3 pass to Ken Beasley. Brosols” 4 88 SAT 113 Jack Hickman converted .the feriiia; rf 3 3 : SUnton.as : 3 } ) first of his three placements. | Wht 110 0OFanninp 4.101 "In the second, Indianapolis’ Ted Sat Sap 3 0 3 8 Steeg reversed his field for 54 Md Dormi-p ° 00 3

Rp : yards and a TD. John Price 5. 3 181 olan, Bin “v n

made a first dowr on the Kala- wrt singied for Rosar mazoo 31. and three plays later Ca rresipeecisane Bob Mace went around left end’ ule

000 0: 900-3 © 000 1 01x—5

he thi Error- ue ans bested ) jn-Kokos| p i annin for 14 yards to score in the third Doerr, paZAr his “stem "Kokos mars. frame. runs—Doerr,

hi Wabash made its final tally in Barina, Wood. Table piars_Sie hens to

ast .0 0 0 o— o' Un Fmt ‘Huboard and Rom-

—ICE HOCKEY

Season Ticket Locations Now Available To aid you in avoiding long ticket lines, last-minute disappointment ond to help you make sure of the same choice

seats at each gome. You can be a season ticket holder at oll Coliseum events by making a small, good, safe invest-

ment. ACT TODAY. DON'T PELAY!

35 HOME GAMES

‘Season Opener—incianali vs. Indpls.—0cl. 19

fr For Reservations or information wid Write or Call INDIANAPOLIS oust son, TA-458S

Kalamazoo .

i

doa

Aland pacers annually headed inig,

0, 1! 1!

eoreven... ool 000 003— 3/place of the noted Horse Review |

: bus—perhaps forever.

®-lof a mere county fair—though it|

2 vored the events with entry lists |

0 which were of a record-breaking , FITor_Yvars, Runs batted In_Jeflcont

Dente big event, which he planned for|—"%*

| WITH A DEFEAT

0 extent -that they made -him a 9 sort of equine hero. 3 that

hi to to the fourth, Bob Holstein scoring; ‘Drape. Ltt on Boston 3. i Louts on an end-around from. the seven. cut—By Masterson sans, Panu 3 r Li Kalamazoo made its only first Hits and ru runs_-O tasterson | and " down late in the last quarter. | innings” (no Ihone out in Sth). Kinder 1 and Wabash ........ 7 7 8 7=27 58 Le ae (8-8),

toe (paid) —3897.

turned more than a few times by transfers from the large to 8 Los Broskiza_ "the small tracks—and vice versa. glavano.ds' : Ee : | od . n Musial, 1b wn HOWEVER, it is the idea here Slaugbir rt not to present any sort of prophesy, but to give a line or two lanent a race and how it came about. Delaware, O., is not a , metropolis. It is only a few miles Bragie.p J away from Columbus, where for, | {many years some of the greatest | harness meetings of the time were L332 given. It.seemed. then as if all] ld a ae ven Cuyk-in

{9th {the many lovers of the trotters |" own walked for Hermanskl a 9th. Louis

OOOURONRO~=LNG

nider., cf iodges.1 Purillo.r Morgan 3b

Howertn.cf Diering, ctf

CD Da COSNODD rem Pr-eUBBNS Lan

| BUS ADL 4. wind | comooooneo~0omm

Abram

Totals 33 92716 Totals 32 | Miksis sacrificed for i.embo 38

4 COCO OWWO INSU ol cowsco~aro~soced>

for the Columbus meetings, and|Brooklen 0111111000000

R batted 1d in a number of years as much as|p June AEC 1negnides ar. B Gla no,

Hodges, Rice

base hits—D. Rice Hodges, three weeks of sports were held | base mr Home. runs—Snider, D. Rice. there, these = at two different Sacrifices 1 ey, Miksis. , Slaug usher, Reese. TE periods—usually in August and Musial Pan Shoat fenst to rion to yn 8. Base on balls—Off Staley 3, ‘wilk: I again in September. LB 1, Erskine 4 oar t-—By ale It was then annually the racing 2. Wilks 1

Futurity, and the $10,000 Hoster | 3 aa aig > Jn J ‘Erikiiie, da and 4 in Stake was always a prize that | nine, Wild piteh cl gained the attention of the lead- | 74 Ski BE

Robb, _Pii ing horsemen with fast trotters. | Time2:20; attendance 13,486.

Those days are gone for Colum- Cubs Top Giants

HOWEVER, on the foundation | Behind Schmitz

NEW YORK, Se 16 (UP)— \was a fair of progressive WAYS jonnny Schmitz on his first land with excellent patronage— game since June 25th today when came the renaissance of the har- jo pitched the seventh-place Chiness sport in the Columbus area. cag, Cubs to a 6 to 4 victoryover

—Vancuyk.

|To a pair of sportsmen there, it the fourth-place New York Giants,

Seems fair to give i It was Schmitz’ 10th triumph of ansformation. ‘the year and closed out the seaas—and is—Joe Neville, a keen, son's series between the two clubs ‘hustling sportsman, who believed with the Giants winning 17 out of his county exhibition had the es-.22 contests. 'sentials for a major presentation. | Chisago "The other fellow was and is—| Hank Thomson. aan 3p I remember when Hank was us-| Ward.1 1h ing up all of his spare time with | Bajerif his printshop in Delaware, and 3svatskie just where he and Joe joined) Ter ger 2 the |¢orces in the sports arena is not | here known. However, for some {years the meeting there was given (a real flair with a bunch of earlyA closers, with $5000 purses. They |went over with a bang. Not only] /did the people come out in great | numbers, but the horsemen fa-|

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Spencer Rufer Totals 31 52713] Totals Rigney flied out for Mueller in 6th. Maguire flied out for Kramer in 7th. Rufer struck out for Spencer in Sth.

Chicago |New York

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IT WAS IN 1944 that the idea { Thomson. Ward of the Jug was sprung. And just 92 ba its 3 Jones 3. then it actually didn’t have that] = Schmitz Su Jones 0 8.4

ns—Oft § (title. Joe, with the keenness that neon us In Tthi: Kr, er 1 and marks a genuinely big guy when $5e0ceT (Pafko): Schmitz (Dark, {he wants to start a thing off, [Winning Ditches Be Bits (10-14). Losin |right, unveiled the idea of the Goetz and Dascoli. Time-—3205. Attendance

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Twent: nine wome of Champi The c¢ of match p Meridian H ~The field whom are ¢ club or cou day afterno ships at Coff were decided. 1st The two r lard Reed fro

Chuck Hess first-round oj Reed, forr weight hoxin golf title yes Rud Stromos came eligible ney hy. winn ingsworth, 6 Hess two

. Ing qualifier f

lie Links tou anapolis, Slated to the men are South Grove, Lefthanded paired agains Shore Countr Knox and M 11 a. m. and |

follow at 11:0

There are t drawn byes {i the tournam man of Spee in the men's Nelson of Hig champion, dre

Full

Seeded No. John Hare Jr. University st semifinalist i

THE 1! one tournan Bayside Lin gave the bc holed out h colorful affa

_ at Leewood

three-year-old pacers. As to al name, he left it to the populace, or

whatever part of it cared to think Purdue Varsity

ofa fitting cognomen for the Swamps Frosh It perhaps is not too strange LAFAYETTE, Ind, Sept. 16 that the name “Little Brown Jug! (UP)—Purdue’s regulars, aided: was the one selected, for back in|PY ‘& promising crop of Sapho, the old days, when a bike sulky | Toe: swamped i806 na tule TT never been considered, and! [free Re Se befote more — {you and: 1 nursed handle-bar Rug a fans. E justashes, a Jace the Drew | Veteran halfback Mike Mac“cioli scored two of the seven |ing stars-on the major circuit. ;. .hdowns for the “Whites,” the |He came from Ohio and Wasifirgt on a 19-yard dash and the {trained and raced by Steve Phil- other on a 53-yard pass from lips, an uncle of the present fa- soph quarterback Dale Samuels.

mous starting judge of the same - See EM-ROE for

name. It came to a point where | Elastic Waist

the Buckeye boys rallied in great (GYM PANTS... *1%

to reach a track where Little

force, whenever it was possible {Brown Jug way Tasing.

Reh then, he still upheld the glory

of the Buckeye State to such an Jj Basketball Style

PANTS, All Colors #1

GYM SHOES . . $35 SWEAT SOX . . . 48¢

EM-ROE

SPORTING GOODS €O. 209 W. Wash. Li-3444

It got so, in one general election, steadfast partisans deserted their party leaders’ and wrote in Old {Jug’s name on the ballot. A few, of them even hinted that he oughg to be pensioned. Well, the name caught on, any-' (how, and the sturdy receptacle ‘which, it is claimed, usually held! | something of strength for its owner, became an apt piece in| publicity for the Delaware race. | | The event was first raced in!

“Aholein the head?”

ee —————— NG

EC A EIN gi

Ar

of the first ing. Observers r never touched straight from without even bounce,

~ Was Al ups

his first atter didn't-show- it ing four shot hole landed on Al, who is ne Sleepy Hollow 8 six {ron to 1 tournament, I - a ” COLLINS -w fire an ace in | ment, which is all. In 1933, f the event, Jac side, N. Y., he five-attempts. In 1937 Frar N.Y. thought in the bag wt shot early in in the week A} ford, N.Y., he running. for

“hen he score

to throw the

‘lock. In 1941

scored holes-i line’ ace this | sixth in the 18 event... ” WHAT ARI making a ho the late Jack handicapper ir it was about 1 compiled over WT & 8 tou how close Do! ling made his odds stood at Figuring th matter of aritl was the 60,2: history of th vide this figur ber of aces Ss the odds—979! A ——

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