Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1951 — Page 12

o or Bettenhausen be "Ready Tougher:

yy

'oPing Blues? te Race

Takes Milwaukee By BILL EGGERT

The Kansas City Blues, armed with the American Y00-Miler Agein

Amis biggest war clubs and dependable pitching MILWAUKEE, June 11—

, open a five-game Victory Field invasion this evening Tony Béttenhausen, Tinley th a twienight twin bill against the Indianapolis Indians. rd I1L., held the Milwaukee It's another bargain night again for the ladies, who 100-mile AAA national y will share in the free-admission game tomorrow 8t championship auto race

a8 p. m. along with men Tribe Box Scores trophy for the second straight “and children. Fira Game) {year today and also had a new ST. PAUL . track record to his credit. The Blues, leading the Kove dow e : Se \ | teague by a scant mit-game asini. 30 o vuion 3 i Snbusen, who drove the margin over Milwaukee, rancato’ 3b 10... same langer Bpecial that Lee Chere after dropping a pair Som Foton, } Wallard piloted to victory in this : esterday in Columbus while |Hoak, If (year's 500 « Mile ndianapolis "the Redskin freshened up for fk PR Speedway ‘race, averaged slightly {he series with a double-header fLomhon, o pad } : more than 90 miles per hour to Split with Bt. Paul here yes 40, % 5 8 Bi 5 To nemotiate the distance in 1 hour, terday. Columbus’ victories: put INDIANAPOLIS (8 minutes and 38.91 seconds. the Red Birds even with the Tribe AB RH A £/That's more than two minutes

n seventh place.

affell, ¢ "If the Indians can get an encore] Jilin Bh: of Royes Lint's mound showing Lot, P,. «ii 1h the second game yesterday, | rer. bo then the Blues are in for a bumpy Bue. ss .... ‘tries. Kansas City has a 4 to 3 fer" A 7 edge over the Tribsters in seven Bifmhut

games thus far this season. . Strobel Loser

| Falter grounded ol? tor aad od in 2ylo Lint was the third Redskin'si py . Burler to go the route in the antes vhaabovae Fi 0% fw ji x

under the previous record of 1 (hour, 8 mniutes and 44.60 see-

onds set in 1947 by Bill Holland, {ime yesterday

{100-mile course. | More than 25600 fans turned g out for the race at State Fair 3 park to see 12 of the 18 drivers < finish, Bettenhausen's share of ! the $18,000 purse was $4500.

Green's Second

#

Rfmaerd 2 | | ET

S.88 Joined, wh che Wigamog hore 5.5 Sn, seven-inning contest. In the open-| Suble a) Li sell {ania Sine a nals ap behind a : t.. Paul anid a ah 3 polis» Rie + on Sinof a Kir wn A larder, Da Carter, Barts Mor o '. I uhh ae rh one lgut® Jolt exfor 4 ooh 8 2 puiis—of i1éa, Cal.; Paul Russo, Hammond, even split gave Indianap- 1 25; off Pet eh Dltcher— | Ind; Rodger Ward, Los Angeles;

the series edge, 8 to 2, and! fe. "Hime ot Wt SS Mul-| Gordon Reid, Burbank, Cal.; Gene overall advantage, 4 to 3, har Game) Force, Richmond, Ind.; Mike NazT. PAUL aruk, East Meadow; N. Y.; Cliff aan Soot ‘opener gaunt 3s... AP} } 0 4 8 Griftn. Indianapolis, and ManJu John Rutherford, a cagy Bandlaton” a’: { uel Ayulo, Burbank, Cal. irighthander, who was nipping the $ Ward took an early lead when “plate corners all day to earn his i k ° § Jack McGrath, South Pasadena, _ 8ixth victory against two losses. 3 o/ Cal, who held the pole position, :] Tribe started with Fred : ! spun out of the race on the sec- - =

4 Btrobel, who wound up with his ond turn of the first lap. Green Sixth defeat against a lonesome {took the lead on the 23d mile and pctory. Btrobel's ony victory was 0 Bettenhausen moved up from hy at St. Paul. Frank Papish, un-|

Totals

etna 33 8 8 a

~

{fourth to second place. 7 ! It then was a neck-and-neck

ful tarts chase between Green and BetMatas Bis Jan ais g tenhausen until Bettenhausen ibloe for one of tonight's games. grabbed the lead for keeps on ie record Is 2-1. Gut is the 85th mile, indecided on his second a Among the top drivers who Be Blues bly will go with 5 p/falled to qualify were Johnnie Brn Ih pooper and Tom Mor. Tt 1. Soy nde “olf ot for of yl i oh ‘Parsons, Van Nuys, Cal, winner gon (1.1), ri for Hipion lof the 1950 Indianapolis 500- : Bagh (Seen rnin o— g miler; Bob Ball, Phoenix, Ariz; Disputed Home R I 300 32 3= 3 Fred : te

Fred Agabashian, Albany, Cal,

The Tribe's only run contribu- land Myron Fohr, Milwaukee.

tion in the yesterday were

SI THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

THE SON SHINES—After Tony Bettenhausen drove the 100-mile classic at Milwaukee in record

Po y. another Bettenhausen got a free ride. Tony lifts son, Gary, in his arms after cracking 1 Who averaged 87.3 mph over the_ Bill Holland's 100-mile record in the Rex Mays Memorial. 9

OLD 99 WINS 100-<Tony Bettenhausen of Tinkley Park, IIl., copured the Rex Mays Memorial 100-mile race in record time with Old 99, the famous the 500-Mile classic victory Memorial Day. Bettenhausen, shown ceming around the north turn af the State Fair Park track, averaged 90.2 miles an hour § in the 100-mile classic at Milwaukee yesterday.

| |

langer Special that carried Lee Wallard to

home runs by Earl Turner and |! Tom Batfell. Turner's wis a dis-

ted oddity in the third inning. ® He. a oan would have Dn 4 double to right centerfield but

i White's Right In Stock Feature

Hershel White captured the 25- the two semifinal events. ~1ap feature event at the West winners were Warriner,

night, warding off a last-minute lof Muncie. threat by Jimmy Warriner, White, of Indianapolis,

the « It took players and umpies 0 minutes to And the horse. | b hide. An

Saints’ Manager Clay Hopper fom aati protested the ball was ‘out of ue Ke {:Blayet-reach. Bastell nabbed nin {fhe He 4 rst 1051 home run in the eighth Anny Fo Fernandes eT 3 3 over the vr It ght fel field wall, (Taman hampers | 3

eo and Antonel- | loyd Gearhart ... 4 10 gg plated three St. BS a Nemandfo 18 EH

of the way. Engine trouble forced hurt. 8 | Brooks from the race. |

33% /on White but it was too late.

Heat & admoor

, On the second heat Bob vis grabbed gins flipped on the back stretch 4 ithe lead from Butch Brooks on land skidded along some 30 yards {the 18th lap and held it the restion his top but crawled out un-

Two girls were taken to the 373) Once Warriner got out of the Methodist Hospital for examing-| 2¢Fipack he started closing the gap tion during the same race as 4 {White's car threw a wheel and| " Warriner placed second and rolled into the stands. Miss Wilma 1

ome oar 8 rnandex 10, Kalin 8, a“ oe it Pirgs ur 2. Btevens Ey ie {gall sher Bins ndro. Pan

i hits—Fernan 3 arson, Gearhart, DAI16S4 rs

odo. Pitcher — final (entries, the largest yet. (Kansas ¢ Fal To at otanarorss a are Aint, Fain Kryhoskl, ne

AMERICAN LEAGUE No games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE No games scheduled.

RESU LTS YESTERDAY [Cain Losing Pitcher—Coleman. H AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | Run—Kryhoski ame) NATIONAL LEAGUE

390 1% § 1 Louis ...is. iui 3

00 111 0 and ‘Kath Early 17); McDonald | as ton and Beher rth, Bree echeen and D. Rice;

(Second Game | (#) and Mie inneapolis .......... 01 ~ 8 7 0 Losing pitcher,

official pa ust and Jim Faust, 185. iavile ws 000 3, 19 Mueller. Second and third places in the Orie. Hy: Atkins, Coty’ {3 and [papas Tg

Other winners were Dr. John W. . 8 8 Emhardt and Alice Emhardt, low FRANK KALIN'S two hits In gross 184, father-daughter; Mrs. : the first game give the Tribe fiy- (John W. Emhardt and Alice Em- _ chaser 13 bingles in his last 27harat low gross 180, mothertrips. Meariwhile, Third daughter; Mrs, Robert McKee and Minneapolis Rasy Fernandes, who went for|Ronert McKee Jr. low gross 184, “04! Bie aouar, in the opuner. got ma othitdon. Low net winners in : " the father-so oup ‘were his seventh hit in 46 oficial Fry gy Ba at bat. 8 8»

| Philadelphia 000 113 000 Detroit . 006 020 01x-—9 1 Coleman, Shantz (3), Zoldak (6), leab (1) and Astroth; Cain, Stuart

Spahn,

rst Gams)

econd Ga

TUR“ 156, and Tom Connelly Br, and|® sod Manppllo MOTAR: Cimianl WORE HO, B \

{Tom Connelly Je., 157. Kansas City "BE 8 £2 ya i> Ry Th hs * : artes! : I

{ Prizes will be awarded Thurs- oly 8 and | © Bal

«8 =» S4v,ouring & Danquat at 7 p.m. 5 Betaiod

8 feDeriatt |

dein fe at

Sin rien a adeiphia (2),

satire - Tpke

Sk fi satire’ gol fist,

Fubiter to third Pao "pan se, Eri Thoion an . Dan 2 Solunar Tables. 0 led. Ozark was an, tebe ol _¥hen he was hit TE i

short-

NATION and Marchio IONAL CHAMPIONSHIP

HOT RODS AUTO RACING TUESDAY NITE

7—BIG EVENTS—50 LAP FEATURE 18 FAST CARS STARTING IN MAIN EVENT

rend rn TR - INDIANAPOLIS SPEEDROME

i. wi on U. 8. 52 at Kitley Ave. (Eastside Track) .

MOTHS, ETC, Rid of Them—Quaranteed JARTS — GALLONS an Rxperionced

5 Ku(61,

| Trout (8) and Robinson. Wihning Pitcher

ome

8%3 9 0 Spahn, Chipman Home run—

father-son low gross group were Kansas city ......, i) Ww. Wh htt uy g io TIPTON, St. Paul lett von by Bill Hoyt and Bob Hoyt, | Jones and p 2 oid o88 363 a | oan" sig 8) ghlend rye ‘ina in i

8 Sule a Winnine Par, Skog: |

£ BILL ANTONELLO, Saint third at Butler, Bemus .....} i | 3! | aN Lo a BE Homey LT = : Tribe Foie. Ho a nas Horseshoe Notes ra: Hoot, Sodan NY na. ghd LR wii Whe red ued for the oe | Five horaeshos pitching contests ¥olid® 1 1 Hue fate heh th - ‘will be held tomorrow night in el and Unser: (Second Hh SR a an po MEA

Pom Dalles 3a Bud Moneymaker, also of Indi-| Clark, 20, 1132 Carrollton Ave. | in the sécofd Inning. kos: Pe 1%i|anapolis was third. Time foriand Miss Barbara Kessler, 16, of | nel gi ed two more Boren pt rose 100 the event was 8:11.24, [Whitestown, ‘were treated for i 'th and the Saints Jon 3h i ey : a8 "Brooks and Wayne Hawley took! cuts and bruises, and released. d Strobel from the mound as oo . sixth wit) 1n a | Cham- okie 1 1 andre 3 ng his 20th relief per. Sr03 3 1 Land Sard 3 koe oe ol Rid) | [ y Tribe's Paul Pettit, Tee- hart eT I i | ! 4 through the final inning IR x Fisher a Call, ME fhe \[| Paul scoreless. b Al wi: NL

ve up LEAGUE STANDINGS (Second | . until the Seventh frame as Biolgn besse-8emint 8. Beard 3. Kalin. AMERICAN AspgomATION | Betafina 1 0 op m-81 0 08 coasted to : CVIBMORY | es pene id 3 4 « GB.| Bearborough a are uverRgainst two longer. ; Er STE ba Sor ihre its Ja the scent an BIS aie Washington A 000 18 ¢ 8 one more in- the fourth Ang LA ER Se ) Suired the side In i 4 ’ AG only gion Te BH Ti Ege r four frames. onor S in S 38. Washington ..... , jor C16 bog wi nd Gr, ire, ve up sevén hits in five Er . 4 hE pos 5 LT pe £ | two Tribe runs in (First Wm # fourth and two. more in the Family Tourney i i New York ......... big Ll ! fit Le wr 4 : Bat and Bere | 2 and gt 8 Fg . a8. and Dom Dalles-| Dr. J. B. Walker and son, Jim, iNew york TL 2 ind; ve double plated two In won the father-son division with ee ids; Kramer S00 Bi i dd i “the fourth. Mel Rue's double a low gross of 152 yesterday in APE 2 Sa fora (8) ‘ar singles by Saffell and Dal-/the annual Indianapolis Golf As- 15 Gumpert’ (8) 4nd x bag, Winning Bie he ito were worth two more sociation’s family golf tourna- : 3° Home Run-—Ber fifth. Second Baseman ment at Pleasant Run, ——— (First Game) nny Merson clubbed a line] A combination father-son, Saves a man Detheroc 0 40 ae ai i i home run over the left field father-daughter, mother-son and Milwaukee at tons Oyler. # Hooper (8). Scheib 54" als. feels. , Hutchinson (4) and a frisky wind in the mother-daughter tourney drew 73 Minpeapo ay Tide, bus, bere. {rn he, Pitener—Hutehi ems o8for the Tribe's rts,

513 0 1

Golfing Notes

In the mixed two-ball golf tourhey at | yesterday, Dick Hele Berngisin tool Money-|with a 79

16th Street Midget Speedway last maker, Hawley and John Arnolq Xana eaph

| Amateur Baseball

eth low gross onors |

By Wa, brie diamond No. 1 at 5:30 p. m, today. Ow net win 89-10-81.

___ifry-outs are welcome.

rm « « « another reason you'll have 6 TIMES as much

The Press Box—

Rowing Sport Uses ‘500’ Plan

By JIM HEYROCK SHADES OF THE Indianapolis Speedway’s 500-Mile Race, where officials keep smilingly quiet about crowd fig« | ures, seem to have settled over the sport of crew racing. But the Intercollegiate Rowing Association, which is staging its 40th annual regatta Saturday at Marietta, O,,

‘and the 20,000 residents of the historic little community on

the Ohio, learned their lesson] last year about giving crowd

|figures—the hard way.

This will be the second tunning| lof the nationally famous IRA re-

much as 100,000. Stories were that housing facilities were sold out for hundreds of miles around the regatta site. }

People wouldn't have places to

{gatta since it was moved from sleep, There wouldn't be enough { Poughkeepsie, N. Y., on the Hud- food. The town would be overs (son. And as the citizenry of Mar-|ryn, trampled.

| fetta added the

final touches to|

Result—on the day of the

a year of preparation as I Vaca- races, the increase in the popula-

[tioned there last week, they were tion was hardly noticable.

Res-

uttering little prayers that thi8|tayrants, which had stocked up |year's running would be nothing on perishable foods to a point

like last year's. | Thirteen crews are entered in this year's regatta—Boston | U, California, Columbia, Cornell, MIT, Navy, Pennsylvania, | | Princeton, Stanford, Syracuse, Washington, Wisconsin and Marietta. And they started arriving last week just as they did a year ago—Columbia first. i The crews were in

{where they couldn't use up their {supply in A year, were stuck, {Church and lodge organizations, [stocked with food and drink, {didn’t make a single sale during the day. It was a sad place the {day after the race—-a day for bargains, » “

” THIS YEAR the committes,

last year headed by Frank L. Christy, pres-

{and the regatta fever was run- ident of the Marietta Chamber ..

[ning high. It was one of the most|of Commerce,

‘quickly changes

completely staffed sporting eventsithe subject when talks drift to |of the year with newsmen, news- crowd figures.

reels and cameramen from alll

{parts of the country.

The observation traim,”

The town wants everything to go perfectly this year, They want

which [to keep the regatta, rowing’s big-

{followed ‘the races, was sold out gest annual extravaganza, on the {and all crews had put in plenty | beautiful Ohio.

{of practice hours.

Last year the Washington Huse

| And then it happened—a ter-| kies “swept the river,” winning rific rainstorm broke the night|all three races.

before the races causing the Mus-| |kingum river to rise and dump|

drift wood and debris broad Ohio. { s =n =

HISTORIC MARIETTA Cole

into the|legeé will have a crew in the June (lor Varsity race of the big event,

{There'll be three races in all—

AT RACE TIME the river was Freshmen, JV and Varsity.

{filled with drift. Those who had |

“Don’t think we can win,” says

slaved to bring the regatta to | pint- sized Bill Wiant, who cdach-

Marietta were heartbroken.

The es the crew as a sideline to his IRA officials, some of whom had|

{fought leaving Poughkeepsie, agency. “but we'll give the local

business of running an insurance

(were not pleased. The Varsity people something to cheer for.”

race was shortened from three|

{to two miles.

The hometown crew hasn't {done well this season. They have

And then there was the matter | {yet to taste victory in five out

lot the crowd, where the Marietta ings. {committee might have taken a

[lesson from the 500-Mile Race of-|Wiant, who was coxwain of the

“They won't train” shrugs

{ficials and those who run the Marietta Sey n 1934,

Kentucky Derby. In advanced publicity readers were given the Impression the

The Richardson Rubber, amateur base! little to s mil and | all team, will practice at Brookside Park! wa was'iy 3 4 panies

about the expected e¢rowd.

| Speculative figures soared to a

2 WE HOPE THE town puts it over this year. The committee has worked hard over the past year, And we're just a little prejudiced ~Marietta is the old hometown.

electric power by 1955 as you had in 1940!

@® This company has already made three times as much electric power available to those we serve as they had in 1940. And our 190 mil. lion dollar expansion program continues! The mammoth new Wabash River Station, now under construction north of Terre Haute on the Wabash River, will add 200,000 kilowatts to your electric system by the end of 1953, and another 200,000 during the following year . . . making the company’s total generating capability over six #imes as great as it was on the eve of World War II

.

In addition to this new generating station; we are building a huge 230,000-volt transmis: sion line to carry electricity from the station to strategically located substations so it can finally be delivered throughout the company’s 69-county service area—to farms, homes, busi.

nesses and industries whose electric power

fieeds all are continuing to increase as they keep increasing their vital contri. butions to our nation’s production needs.

PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF INDIANR. INC. Good, Los- Oe Blt Sots 898 Gots i 9 Gets tn

John in the op the Coun even par

Hard winner o today wa went one annual tc

Davi spectacul: opening | tourney. David w: Club cour; most of the teed off th The 33-y¢ his féurson 1 and finis} four, On N into a tree and still w chipped out in 20 feet out for a bi » He misse when his s chip, dropp He had a 1 on the thi respectively Dick Sta David last Hills cham} rugged day at the end ¢ The othe foursome, I lin and W anon, wer over, respec

Not Lau

NEW off the managed f Bring cessive sm could have game of t yesterday.

And the

theni to do for what loc game of th suddenly “team of de clock and running a .} What hap membered f though som friends of 1 left the par} team’s beau had burst in

Thr The White three big spi two were ou 11 to 7, for header. Yai Lopat won t seven hits, ; cision again: Rogovin, wi blows. The split 1 games in frc on another which they | pected, to du fort when without the Chicago m

Peni Sed

PHILA squabble b National C the Attorne

The su General J, ] Athletic Murray, ir

NCAA Pr Willett at Sp Willett sali comment on discussed it officers and counsel, but ment sometir The NCAA from good st announced | would go al televise its season in de television pl adopted by t pealed for a pension but °

“Gp

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