Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1951 — Page 23
after China result ‘a plan g purchasers They are rerchased from reaches Hong g Hong Kong the Japanese and Industry, d,” Mr, Hale igations. We orld. Nothing certain it is
t licenses for Hale says ft our blacklist, odstuffs, and rubber, chemi oils. precision or 8, all mining, ransportation, juipment plus ' bearings etc.
as handled by ypanese ports. gh to preverd r Hong Kong the presence them. 's possible a rs. Currently han 100 .Japinfringing in okkaido. It's t some such yrder to carry ransshipment his was neg-
ind?
ly, he caused se for alarm, icers, not the efforts, after turned to the the two big
0's. organized lence. It was e New Deal's lo grow under n this growth 210 and AFL. » combination ket for labor, lesome days
ng of Walter on his home 1cidental part is not out—at gments of the ken the faith heir-apparent iency. Reuther as a his remarks cow 30 years > understand to make “redt they apparhuge Detroit ated it at 50,-
d none likely, illion of mine labor defense million apiece. a somewhat
ogy’
t to say it."
“Stas Ri atten
e is just one On the whole, e to live, but vives are not paper? system that v this system 1at paper can
cans properly th.
comer, City
HER
adays . . . a nust be up en be right . . . « « « though id so it is a ep ahead . ombined with act with hon- + + she molds she has ever h one of them » 80 I salute ld feature . . , , an apple for
Burroughs.
ch
facturer operator. ”
banking and nterstate and e. Each deals and finance, Sen. Capehart alized knowl-
and
ng necessary,” continued, “is r all the comand hearings. ible to become 1 anything in yu neglect this mmittee work. bu can get a 1¢ by playing nate TV show for magazines ntry lecturing, 8 just do not ‘tual functionate itself. In handicap. For soon list you ho is so busy riting for fees
k must be car-
your help. | my lesson gs. So far as these foreign 11 come from Indiana -— not
st
TI
FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1951
Miss Ellis
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
ins ,
Larsen Paces Yank Advance At Wimbledon
By ROBERT C. DOWSON United Press Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON, England, June 29—Left-handed Art Larsen, U. 8. singles champion from San Leandro, Cal., advanced to the quarter-finals
of the Wimbledon tennis tournament today with a 6-3, 7-5, 8-4 victory over Torsten Johannson of Sweden, while five American women scored fourth-round victories. The blond American titleholder, seeking to become the fifth straight Yank to win the British singles crown, was the only one of four remaining U. 8. men in the tournament to compete today. A crowd of 8000, including Queen Mother Mary of England, watched the match on the famed center court.
The five U. 8. women who]
scored straight-sets victories were third-seeded Doris Hart of Coral Gables, Fla.; fourth-seeded Shirley Fry of Akron, 0,; fifthseeded Beverly Baker of Santa Monica, Cal.; seventh '- seeded Nancy Chaffee of Ventura, Cal, and British-born Mrs, Rita Anderson of Los Angeles,
Negro Girl Loses
Miss Baker advanced at the; expense of Althea Gibson of New|
York, first Negro girl ever to compete at Wimbledon, 6-1, 6-3. Miss Chaffee also elminated a fellow-American as she defeated
Arvilla McGuire of Piedmont, Cal., 6-3, 6-3. Miss Hart, whipped Mrs.
Nancy Bolton of Australia, 6-4, 7-5; Miss Fry disposed of Suzanne, Schmitt of France, 6-1, 6-0, and. Mrs. Anderson beat Wendy Stork!
of England, 6-2, 8-6. Advancing to the men's singles quarter-finals along with Larsen was top-seeded Frank Sedgman of Australia, who is now the tournament favorite after yesterday's elimination of Jaroslav Drobny of Egypt BSedgman easily defeated Fausto Gardini of Italy, 6-0, 6-2, 6-1. Gardini upset Gardner Mulloy of Coral Gables, Fla., yesterday. The U. 8. victories in women’s singles put eight Americans into the round-of-16. Defending Champion Louise Brough of Beverly Hills, Cal. Mrs. Margaret Osborne DuPont of Bellevue, Del.
and Mrs. Barbara Scofield David-|
son of San Francisco had advanced previously.
"Tall in the
Saddle’
KING OF THE HIGH BANK IRACKS YEAR OLD TROY RUTTIMAN, WALL BE OUT TO TAKE THE NATIONAL 100 LAP MIDOET! AUTO CROWN TONIGHT AT THE 16 STREET)
i
Today's Sportrait—
Barney Ross Asks Radio
Time to Box Dope Menace
By SCOTT BAILLIE United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, June 29-—Bar-ney Ross, a greater world ‘champion now than When he held the welterweight and lightweight crowns, today asked for an hour a day on the radio so he could tell the public how to. fight the .narcoties menace. “I can answers 200 questions an hour and will do it as a public service,” the chainsmoking Ross sald. “Anything parents or kids want to know I'll tell em. I've got the time if the stations have.”
" = = ROSS ENDURED the horrors of drug addiction three years after returning from Guadalcanal, a Marine hero. There he earned the Silver Star by holding off waves of Japanese all one night while guarding some wounded buddies. He also stopped some shrapnel and already had malaria. He got the craving for morphine after wellmeaning medics gave him too much in the hospital. “It began to set in when I was on the transport going home,” Barney said. “If I didn’t get morphine I'd start aching all over my body.” Then came weird, lonely nights when he would avoid his wife .and friends and sneak off.
GIANT - KILLER — Hamilton" Richardson, 17-year-old sensation from Baton Rouge, La. reached the fourth round of the Wimbledon tennis tournament by dowhing defending Budge
Patty and Vladimir Petrovi of |
Yugoslavia.
Horseshoes
Details for the 1851 State pitching tourney will be discussed at meeting Sunday at 2 p. m. in Dorner Park, Ind. Group 1
lison No. 3 8. Tire a Xo wis am nsley Mis. . §iison No. 6 R. Mod ory Poi s bay
Pho Fae
Allison No.
Horseshoe
ankfort,
Grous 3
Jets cas Mechanics’ Laundry | .. Allison No. 4 Allison No. §
Ladies League Smith's Grocery Allison N
vatone hare his
un = ” “I JUST had to get away by
myself,” he said. “T'd often slip
into the movies and fall into a |
kind of a doze.”
_He shocked the fight mob late | in 1946 by surrendering to the | and | U.S. Public | Health Service Hospital at Lex- |
government authorities
going into the
ington, Ky. Four months later he came out cured after the toughest fight of his career. - = n ” “BUT YOU'VE got to have the will to get over the habit or you'll never make it,” Ross
emphasized. “Basically, the cure is in the mind.” Barney, prematurely gray
but as straight as a string despite his ordeal, doesn’t think too much of the current, boxing talent. : “Ray Robinson's the best” he said. “I hear he might fight Rocky Graziano in September. If he does, Rocky will have trouble getting through the second round.” Ross beat Tony Canzoneri
twice in 1933, winning the light- |
the | n | Women's
weight crown from him first bout and retaining the second. Yet he rates Tony as the toughest fighter he ever met. = = 5 “HE WAS the toughest—and one of the greatest,” Ross said. “But listen, what I'm thinking .about now is these kids. We've got to keep punching that lousy
dope racket around until it is |
out for good. If we don't, it will creep right up again behind us.” And Barney Ross made as if to throw one of his artistic left hooks.
"| All-Star Voting
Ends
Tonight; Bums, Bosox Lead
By United Press CHICAGO, June 29 — Out of!
about 400 major league baseball] {players, the race for the starting teams in the annual all-star game, July 10 had narrowed down to! 24 men today with the polls due!
a to close at midnight.
The league-leading Brooklyn] Dodgers appeared a sure bet to dominate the National League's lineup as at least three of their| candidates practically nailed down| their starting assignments.
Over in thé American League|, the Boston Red Sox were the most powerful contenders, with two apparent victors and two players still in the running. The Philadelphia Phillies and|} New York Yankees, pennant-win-
Lane Radio
Golf Tipoff . . . No. 4—
5 Iron Calls for More
Control Than
By LOUISE SUGGS
U. 8. Champion 1947, British Champion 1948, U. 8. Open Champion 1949.
The No. 5 iron, called the mashie in the days before the matched sets, is the basic club in the bag.
+ The slope of its face is just about halfway between the No. 1 iron, once the driving iron, and the No, 9, or niblick. I would advise the average player to take a square stance at address to Insure a straight trajectory. The No. 5 iron is sensitive both to body and hand action, which means, of course, your gripping of the club must be sound. 2 ” oy
THE BALL should be played *
on a line just inside the heel of the left foot. For my part, I play it about on the center -line between my feet, mainly because I have developed it along those lines. Playing it forward of center enables vou to get the ball in the air, since you will be hitting the ball at the start of the upswing. But be careful not to
discusses the No. 8 iran.)
ners in their leagues last season,
Distance
play it too far forward or your clubhead will have lost its speed and” top power by the time it comes in contact, ” ” n GUARD against overswinging with the No. 5 iron. Keep in mind that that type shot must have more control than distance. Too much backswing will mar the accuracy of the shot. I believe a good way to combat the tendency to overswing is to go back only as far as the left arm will extend comfort ably. Try various positions at the top of the swing, and the one where the left arm feels least taut is the proper amount of backswing you should take.
- o ”
AN. IMPORTANT factor in ‘the No. 5 iron shot is not to try for too much distance. Play the shot within its distance range, get a good loft and watch the strokes you save. |
(Tomorrow: Betty Mackinnon
La
Izales,
-jrefunds; -but nobody
|were running second-fiddle to the {powerful Dodgers and Red Sox.
| The leaders:
AMERICAN LEAGUE First Base — Ferris Fain. Philadelphia, 1,031,863; Eddie Robinson, Chicago, 1,007,1429; Luke Easter, Cleveland, 426,102. Second Base—Nelson Fox, Chicago, 1. 126,454; Bobby Doerr, Boston, 924,106; Gerry Coleman, New York, 426,571. Third Base—George Kell, Detroit, 1,062,{384; Vern Stephens, Bostoft, 1,033. 151: Al Rosen, Cleveland, 529,204. sp aartstop—Phil Rizzuto, New Yor k, 1! 8,756; Chico Carrasquel, Chicago, 1,021.293; Eddie Joost, Philadelphia, 368.414. Right Field—Vic. Wertz, Detroit, 1,029, 266: Billy Goodman, Boston, 1,007,155; Ray (Coleman, St. Louis, 516,402. ng Sager Pield—Dom DiMaggio, Boston, 1.4.488; Jim Busby, Ciigaso, 933, 104; fis Doby. Cleveland, 382 Left Fieid—Ted Williams, Boston, {604; Orestes Minoso, Chicago, {Gus Zernial, Philadelphia, 353,713. Catcher—Yogi Berra, New York, 1,053.173: Jim Hegan, Cleveland. 1.037868, Biil Masi, Chic
1,016,285
137 “Ralph Kine ttsburan. 986 114; ; urgh, % 3 Eddie Waitkus. Philadelphia, 408, 5. yo eon nd ase—Jackie Ro 02 632; Red choend} enst,
943, ah: “Eddie § ney New York, 403, aa Thir ll Nott Ha 1,042 i 14, Willie Jones, Phil lade 769,52
Wally Westlake, St. Shortstop—Alivn Ly * Se ork, 1,034,862; Peewee Reese, Brooklyn, 1,022,616; Granny Hamner, Philadelphia, 438,049. Del Ennis, Phi adeinhia, . ank Baumhotls, Chic 009,506; Carl Furillo, Brooklyn, 124, 30. Center Field — Richie Ashburn, Philaqe nla 1,061,105: Duke Snider, Brooklyn,
St, 138,419; Dick Sisler, Philadelphia, 803, 256 Sid Gordon, Boston. 382,021. Catcher -~ Roy Campanella, Brookis: | 1,040,032; Walker Cooper, Boston, 903,126 Wes Westrum, New York, 599, 403.
Pro Net Tourney Cut by Illness
FOREST HILLS, N, Y., June
29 (UP)-—The trouble-ridden Na-| tional Professional Tennis cham-| pionships is expected to run into!
more difficulty today when offers the customers just one
match-—-Jack Kramer vs. Welby|
Van Horn, . Promoter Bobby Riggs may have to offer the spectators a refund if they don’t like the show| —a8 he did yesterday when sickness reduced the program to one match. That situation came about when Kramer begged off in his scheduled match against Pancho Segura ‘because of sacroiliac troublé, and Frank Parker, with 102 temperature, dropped out of | 4 match against Pancho Gon- ® -
In the only match played, Se-|
gura beat Promoter Riggs, 6-0, 8-6, 6-1. Riggs made pe offer of tbok him up.
An City Net Meet
L114. - |
binson, Brook- :
it)
Now Patty, Babe Go After
Cooper Upset; \
Hamilton Wins
PGA Match
By STEVE SNIDER + United Press Sports Writer
OAKMONT, Pa., June 29 Denny Shute of Akron, O., 47-year-old former champion, scored the first major upset of the PGA golf champion-
ship today when he whipped’ comedalist Pete Cooper of White Plains, N. Y., 3 and 2, Shute, winner for two consecutive years in 1936-37, had only 19 putts for 16 holes as he mastered his younger foe, who yesterday had tied Claude Harmon of Mamaroneck, N. Y., and Lloyd Mangrum of Chicago for medal honors at 142,
Wins Second
Shute won the second with a par when Cooper hit Denny's ball and knocked it closer to the hole, but Cooper evened the match at the third where Shute threeputted. They stayed even through
{ ithe turn with one over par 38's.
They were even again to the 14th where Shute's 10-foot birdie putt put’ him one up. A stymie put him two up on the 15th and he won the 16th to close out the match as Cooper caught a trap with his tee shot. Denny was
leven par for the 16 holes played.
Other early starting matches ran close to form, with Big Jim
F {Ferrier of San Francisco leading the way with a 3 and 2 victory ® over Sam Bernardi of Ft,
Sheridan, TIL Three under par for the distance, the hard-hitting Australjan born star went three up on Bernardi at the end of the first
§ nine holes, picked up the 10th
with a par four but lost the 13th and was three up again.
Bulla Wins
i match.
vantage to the finish.
defeated Ray Hill, Houston, Tex. 2 and 1.
Laurels in Eastern Open
By United Press cent lickings, Eastern Open golfiton Ga. tournament opened today with| pat O'Sullivan, Defending Champion Patty Bergifrom Orange, Conn.
‘list of 1951 achievements.
{from Minneapolis, is playing some| lof the best golf of her career and !it has paid off, too. She leads iwomen golfers with a 1951 total {so far of $11,200. However, she'll be running into|gand Hills Open. \plenty of competition in the field, The 18-hole a day grind will] {of 46 professionals and amateurs mark the pro bow of Beverly lin the three-day, 54-hole medal Hanson, national amateur cham-| |classic over the 6387-yard Berk- pion from Indio, Cal. {shire Country Club course. { Her keenest rival Moneybags laurels,
marsh, Pa., last Saturday. Prior to that triumph, Miss! Berg had won the cross-coun
for Miss for-sport ranks early this week, Mrs. Babe making her eligible for the $3500]
{Didrickson Zaharias, will be oniin Eastern Open prize money. The|and again at the 12th, Pavella) ipicked up the 13th and 15th and *|that was his margin.
hand to seek Tevenge for two re-| winner will get $1000.
i . * Entries Close Allen Will Join Campbell at BU Butler University will claim The Times 1950-51 Athlete of the Year in Marion County this fall. Ben Davis’ Kenneth Gaton Allen Jr., winner of the county's most coveted high school athletic - character award for the last year, will enroll at the Fairview campus in September, Manual's Jim Nyers, winner of the Athlete of the Year award among the top city athletes this year, will go to An- | derson® College. Enrollment of Allen at Butler will give the | Blue and White a second Times Athlete of the Year winner. Dick Campbell, winner of the city award for 1949-50 at Broad
Entries close today at 6 p. m. for the city tennis tournament that will start tomorrow on the Fall Creek courts. Jimmy McClure, tournament chairman, said that all'late entries must be delivered to 1718 Central Ave. or telephone TA12579. Boys, girls and junior ‘players ‘imust have their entries in for the! Central Indiana Tennis Association's qualification tourney by Monday at 6 p. m. The tourney Iwill start Monday at Fall Creek. The city and qualification tour-
neys are scheduled to play next Ripple will be a sophomore “in
READING, Pa. June 29—The togted Louise Suggs of Carroll-
The 24-|
knocked over Bobby
and so will" the lof Pittsburgh. The little veteran
‘who had been giving Champio
(and 3. Both went out in par 37's bu
Picard Wins | Henry Picard of Cleveland,
| another former PGA king, won| |Weathervane tournament and the four of the last seven holes from | Frank Commisso of Brighton {Station, N. Y,, for a 4 and 2 vicf tory. They were all square at the
[turn in two over par 39's. Mike
[ing Johnny Palmer of Badin, N. {C., 2 and 1. All even at the turn
3 Softball Yoams
In State Tourney DECATUR, June 20 (UP)
compete here July 20-22 for the iright to represent’ Indiana in the! national VFW softball tourney at: Des Moines, Ia., late this sum-
mer,
Russell Loutzenheiser, South Bend, state VFW Athletic officer, said 11 district winners plus the host Decatur club and defending champion Indianapolis Post 908 probably will be entered. He said the winner will compete in the na-| {tional tourney Aug. 7-11.
Additional Sports
{Week and finish next Saturday. the fall
Pages 24-25
From there through the 16th
they clung right at par, enabling the ex-champ to close out the
Bob Hamilton of Evansville, finals by 1Ind., winner in 1944, was carried Donna Knox, 1 up. Mrs. Fulmer, won to the 18th green by Max Evansiformer physical education teacher ciation, of Detroit before pulling out a one after her first Indianapolis crown, up victory. One down at the turn,came through yesterday when the Hamilton shot into the lead when Evans bogeyed the 10th and 11thiMrs. Paul Dye holes and held his slim ad-
Johnny Bulla, long-hitting star from Verona, Pa. ousted Walter {Ambo, Overland, Mo, 5 and 4, and Milon Marusic, Albany, N. Y.,
Jackson Bradley of Chicago|tion. Cruickshank
{Chandler Harper pre-tournament the amateur 168308, drubbed Wee Bobby, 4 tween Mrs. Fulmer and Mrs. ore ald
wants an-} favored to add it to her lavish {other chance to prove she can {best Miss Berg. Patty defeated Cruickshank had putter trouble] Miss Berg, the chunky veteran {Miss O'Sullivan 2-up to win the| on the route in and faded quickly.
Women’s Western Open at White-|
Pavella of Pittsburgh |year-old links lassie quit the play- turned in another upset by down-
Thirteen teams are expected to
Defeats ® Link 1 1-Up in Meet F
BULLETIN Miss Dorothy Ellis won her seventh golf cham today at the C defeating Mrs. CO. Richard Fulmer, 1
in their 18-hole match at the Country Tt for the 31st women’s city golf champions Playing both Spectacular and rages g
Mrs. Fulmer, co- " in the qualifying round, chad a medal score of 39, one over
women's par at the turn while six-time city winder Miss Ellis was
near the first green chipped 40 feet over a bunker into the cup. | They halved No. 2 and Mrs. even. {Fulmer missed a chance to even the score on No, 3 when a threefoot putt went askew. She missed putt an 18-incher on No. 4 as they halved with bogey 4s, Mrs. Fulmer, relaxed under the championship pressure and more 2) concerned about her house which ig) batted it in fof & she says “looks like it has been nro Dye, who had been stirred by a stick,” evened the exceptionally well ae match on No. 5 when Miss Ellis round, missed the t
missed a five-foot. putt. “Mrs, Fulmer 3 it was no 230 Watch accident by winning No, 18 with a A chip shot, almost identical birdie three on a 10-foot % putt to Miss Ellis’ on No. 1, put Mrs. Fulmer 1 up after No. 6 when the co-medalist clipped 30 feet of from a trap-edge ‘into the cup. She went 2 up on No. 7 when Miss Ellis overshot the green and Mrs, Fulmer saved her lead on No. when she dropped a six-foot putt, the first one of any conse all t oxmately OE A gallery of ap ] watched HA halve No. 9. " jorie up. It ended v Miss Ellis, seeking her seventh NO. 18.
links title, yesterday gained the! Mrs. Ww. c. Whipple stopping 17-year-old |Hills, last year's Indianapolis
pressure was test, to trip .. 2 up. : Well-Played
»| Both matches yesterday as gl 3B Hi They = well-played and and were ; it was one of the tightest semi-| eae "13 OE the Wott [fais nien’s tournament,
The nip-and-tuck battle be-{ Matich
our tim times winner of the of the city Git; Bhan
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men’s singles; Pat Stewart, wom-| en’s singles; Wayne Burns and Jim Birr, men’s doubles; Louanna| {Early and Ralph Burns, mixed doubles,
Defending champions in the! .. You Name It!
city tournament are Ralph Burns, | (WE HAVE IT!)
Popped Again
WORCESTER, Mass., June 29 | (UP)—A black eye accidentally ! administered by Mrs. Mildred | (Babe). Didrickson Zaharias, { famed woman athlete, won a i superior civil court werdict of $717 yesterday for a Worcester man. Paul R. Peterson told the jury | that two years ago in Boston | he was watching Mrs. Zaharias | hit three tennis balls simul- | | | | | 1
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