Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1951 — Page 27

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v 13, 1951

Hi ) ay of July. Yosi, at be publicly ovened

75 to 1550 Tons, Size les, F.O.B, Seymour, Section J or plant

1425 to 1500 Tons, regates, F.O.B, LexSR 203, Section B or ’ 4

25 to 900 Tons, Size s, FOB. Austin, deSections E & F or

"1550 to_ 1625 Tons, regate, F.O.B, CortR 258." ection D

12025 to 2100 Tons, gates. F.O.B. Vienna, Section G or vlant

00 to 350 Tons, Size B. Kirklin, delivered ’2 or plant vicinity

0 38 i Tons. 8ize ulberry. deSoh or plant 75 Se 425 Tons. Size B. Winamac, deBa G or plant vie

1400 to 1600 Tons, gates, for F.O.B. Up22. Sections L y thereof. 2800 to 2076 gregates, FOB. M 155. Sections D & E1

reof. 375 to 4525 Tons, Size es. F.O.B, Freetown, jection F, SR 58. Secly thereof. Necessary labor, mt jcellaneous equipment operating signal sysado installation indisection of US 30 & LaPorte County Necessary labor mie miscellaneous equip=plete operating sigected with the Erle rsection of Calumet 1key Street in Ham-

Necessary labor, micellaneous equipment operating signal incted with the existlTackson Street at 9th erson, Indiana, Quantity of Internacellaneous Hardware est Market St. In-

5000 Board Feet of hed and delivered to Madison. Indiana. 1500 Lineal Feet of nished and delivered

itted upon standard VAY COMMISSION ADDEN, Chairman, PUBLIC HEARING nmission of Indiana : . he joint application Sidney, ‘Ohio. seller, Sidney. Ohio, pur- | of the sale and ate No. 3791-A, 1,

ven that the Publis f Indiana will con-

in this cause in imission, #1 State Ind, 9:00 A. M, 1gust 1, 1951, 1 is requested VICE COMMISSION J. ATWOOD, CI jv 1%

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FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1951

BRETT

.

DiMaggio Pride Hurt Most of All

NEW YORK, July 13—Within

the past several days written

it has been In spectacular type, and in allegedly highly revealing phrases, that Joe Di Maggio and Casey Stengel are not on Speaking terms. We further are informed that with the greatest ball player of his time and the manager of the Champions of the World reportedly snubbing each other, dissension has reared ugly noggin among the Bombers, Even if the rumor of a ClipperCasey vendetta were based on fact, to mar the Yankees’ make it three straight. players stand squarely him, Some acerbity between DiMaggio and Stengel developed ast season. Joe unquestionably became roiled when Casey tried to donvert him into a first baseman Giuseppe hardly was in a cheerful mood when, for a few davs Johnny Mize appgared in his No 4 niche in the batting ord However, Stengel quic kly abandoned his attempt to make an infielder out of the Clipper, and he also admitted error in the matter of the cleanup incumbency. It is unlikely that either incident left a sore.

its

effort Stengel’s behind

u 5 n STENGEIL HAS permitted DiMaggio to manage himself. Joe benches himself, Joe puts himself back in the linup. Casey appreciates that nobody knows as mel about J, P. DiMaggio as , himself. Had there been between Stengel and the pilot would have seppe out of the No. 4 ago. But Ole C risked criti‘ecism on that score rather than force the outfielder ta submit to what might have been humiliation. As Stengel pointed’ out in Detroit on Tuesday, he named Joe on the All-Star team even though Gus Zernial, home run leader of the American Leagué. was entitled to the place on the score of current performance, and position in the national poll.

bad blood DiMaggio, lifted Giuspot long

any

ase

If, as Joe was reported to have told an interviewer from Washington after the All-Star game, “I

have a bad press in New York,” the answer must he that no player ever received kindlier treatment from the baseball represented city. » =n =»

“JUST WHAT is the inside on - the DiMaggio situation? Well, for|

one thing, he is washing up. I

was convinced a few weeks ago, $ after having had a long talk with

him, that he planned to return for part-time service in 1952. But

after all this dissension talk, he!

may decide to call it a career at the close of this season. Until this year, DiMaggio's legs held up. Now they bother him. He never should be asked to play a doubleheader. Joe's greatest resentment is toward father time. DiMaggio is a man of tremendous pride. He is

like a once famous beauty who, gazing on the indelible lines in her face, cries into her cosmetic and curses the calendar, Joe is a man of many moods. One day he will sit at his locker all alone, inviting no jcompany. Another day he will seek conversation. Joe is at his best when Joe is around. He is crazy about the boy. I hate to think of. the day when I will have to tell him he has no baseball talent,” he revealed to me. ‘But you should see that Kid swim ” ”n n IF"DIMAGGIO is less talkative

than ever, the reasons are understandable. He is nearing the great tragedy of baseball, in

which a man is finished at 37. DiMaggio needs Joe Page back on the Yankees, ‘to with him after a game and commiserate and glory with him as Giuseppe's tempo varies, Page, with Kansas City, says he is nearing the Bronx again. In the meantime, the Yankees face the fight of their lives on this third western tour and it will take a lot more than Casey talking to Joe to keep them in the thick of thé brawl.

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By JIM HEYROCK Times Sports Writer

ANDERSON, July 13-—Jack Ramsay just wanted to qualify, play a little golf and have some fun when he left his job pfinting plant in Tipton last Monday and came te the 51st Indiana amateur tournament at the Anderson Country Club here. But it seems Jack started winning when match play started and he can't stop. After yesterday's two rounds he found himself one of the four players remaining out of the 64 who started in the championship flight Wednesday. Jack was a little more embarrassed than pleased at the spot he was in today. | ” ” ” said thesglender 29-year-old Army I just wanted to play a little.golf

” » un “I DON'T BELONG here," veteran, “I'm not that good. and have fun.” But facts were facts and today Jack found himself facing one of the nation's leading amateur golfers, Dale Morey of Martinsville, in the first match of the 36-hole semifinals. Jack, who served in France with the Quartermaster Corps during the war, may not be the best player in the world, but yesterday he dumped Richmond's Gene Coulter, the bespectacled Big Ten golf champion from Purdue University, 1 up.

Morey, Hare 2-Up After

"BULLETIN ANDERSON, July 13—Dale "Morey and John Hare were both two-up over their respective opponents after nine holes of their semifinal Indiana Amateur Championship golf match. Both were one under par at 35. By JIM HEYROCK

limes Svorts Writer

ANDERSON, July 13—Dale AAU, the bouts are for the bene- bounced him 5 and 4. Morey of Martinsville and John fit of the Grotto's charity pro-! Lees was one down at the halfare Jr. were 1 up over their gram. : way mark against Rancher Bill respective opponents after six Ringside spectators last night Burns of Kirkland, Wash. but holes in the semifinals of the included Harry Hainsworth, as- banged out a birdie and seven State wingteur golf tourney : John Hare Fred Burnside Dale Morey Jack Ramsay istant to. the president of the pars on the back nine te win ere this morning. National AAU, and Dr. Don Bow- and 1. Morey won the fifth hole | co ers, state AAU president, The, None of the four ever had when his opponent, Jack Ram- Evida Resu ts Y ester ay bouts were handled by the Indi- reached semifinal play before. say of Tipton lost his drive in y e Misery mac S THIRD ROUND ana AAU Officials’ Xssociation. |Vranesic, who had came the a swamp. Hare took a 1 up Tames lanapolis, TKO'd closest, was the happiest man on

lead over Fred Burnside of Speedway on No. 6 when Burnside muffed a six-foot putt. Ramsay won the second hole

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___

WHEN THE scores were posted on the board yesterday by tournament officials the chief question was: Who is this fellow Ramsay who has knocked off one of the big tournament favorites? : This is who.Jack Ramsay is. He owns a job printing shop in Tipton. plays the municipal course there, is married and has two daughters, 5 and 3, and he's as baffled as anybody how he got to the semifinals : “I had 157 and if there had been @a-playoff on that last dav of qualifying for a place in the championship flight 1 don't think

~.d would have played,” explains Jack.

Noble Redskins One Day Early i= © oni

Times Special

but Mor ot it back with a v MBIT - y To SET a ; decisione las [ was always Bde rey RS at putt on the COLUMBUS, 0., July 13—Today is Friday the 13th, hitter Hatry Fisher and a double Dale Morey, Martinsville, ‘de- degiioned Willam Elasee = is. Ko'd never a bride. This is the fourth 551-vard No. 3 hole. They but the Indianapolis Indians aren't too perturbed. It's a by Merson tallied the final Red- fontod | E. E. Mullins, ‘Bloomington, Mike McIntosh Indianabolic de. time I've been in the’ quarterNe bi a : 7 : skin run in the ninth. and 2 oi a eee 3 rst ti ‘ve ev halved No. 4 and No. 6. cinch the day can’t be worse than Thursday the 12th. Bs : Jack Ramsay, Tipton, defeated | o|RnR0S, but the fist lime I've ever - Tl Redski rived her ; Te About the only thing the Red- . Kaperak. Terre Hagte, 1. , (won, ; ? I'he Redskins arrived here today for a four-game set skins could glow over was Ed c'8 aperak, lofre taute, Ae as- A slim dark-haired amateur with the Columbus Red Birds. o ening tonight. They were Stevens’ consecutive game hitting up. , re = Indian- who comes from a golfing family . Faulkner Joins shuddering 3 p; : streak. Ed ran the string to 27 Dr. Wood. Hall, Michigan City, |! of five brothers, Vranesic had over a Six-error performance that cost them aj | night with two infield sin. defeated Walter Chapman, Indian- ot fia Coloralo. seats. ube 6-3 defeat last night in Toy —m—mm— ~ sles apolis, 1 up, 21 holes. Close Call links title, and was runnerup in y ledo liner and dropped the ball twice 3: 5 Sa ; La Gene Coulter, Richmond, de- the city and state open meets, d ei pee way S : Pit ] F k Papish had I his haste to throw. That Fly Be ne Yacians fesion Oscar Melson, Anderson, -—- LOS ANGELES, July 13 but reaching the semifinals here Itcher rran apisn had loaded the bases. play singles nt & omor-: § and 4. (UP)—Tennis Star Richard Was his highest. honor. good cause to moan. His fielders! Papish breathed easier after! on’ A doubleheader Sunda¥] John Hare, Indianapolis, de- (Pancho) nzales e ~~ t n ; i Wy : will wind up the series. Then feated Jim Balch, Indianapolis. 3 ancho) Gonzales escaped inlet him down . . . but good. getting Ed Mordarski on a foul ; . : ch TROIANIPOYS, | > B A R ki en e in Frank hurled six-hit ball, whichlout to third. That left only Alex POR teams . yan jan 2. jury today when he and two Braves Assign Rookie is usus W og : Sn ane s p the Indians] 3 ; ian: is | cOmbpanic a a s usually enough to win. A hor- DeLaGarza, a .260 hitter. The Sangpols tonal =the C = red Burnside, Indianapolis, de- companions were threatened by To Evcinsville Club Fa Sti Serv rible sixth-inning showing put'runners began to move as the °PeD 2 long Be cated Bill Link, Ft. Wayne, 1 an ex-convict whose revolver HOMER. N. Y. July 13 (UP ow : YW the lid on the Tribe. Papish al-|count reached 3-2. Then 1 i up. : OMER ., July 13 (UP)— SALEM, . : : en bang : eYeREE Tn fail ¢ ‘e whe o 35 | ALEM July 13—Walt Faulk- =. 4 only one hit in that night- DeLaGarza’s bat socked a hit past Tribe Box Score _ QUARTERFINALS illed to fire when he pressed |john ER a a 19-year-old ner. the little record - buster marish sixth, but three errors was |Shortstop Dick Cole, to, score all INDIAN PR" 0 a ® Morey defeated Hall, 1 up the trigger twice. outfielder who plays for the of this year's Indianapolis more'than he could take. hapds. The throw to the plate] $7 1% § § Mare defeated Holmes, 7 and 6. _ Police later arrested Harry Homer Braves semi-pro baseball 500-Mile Race will be one 6f the In light of what the Tribe has from the outfield. got through 2 5 ).- 6 y ° Ramsay defeated Coulter, 1 up. FE Johnson Jr, 33 released team, yesterday signed a 1952 top’ drivers of the star-studdeq Deen doing lately, -the sixth was Catcher Jim Mangan for the third 40 3 0° 0 Burnside defeated Dye, 1 up, 20 June 5 from San Quentin after contract with the Boston Braves ; ; surprising. ' Here's wha’ hoppened: Pobble of the frame. Man der. wees d 8 1 3 8 ingles. serving time for grand theft. of the National League - field who will race on the Salem a Seer la 1 1B - — Ynfeal Covington, who has been hitPapish walked Don Lund with Start Off Well } 2 Gonzales and two compan- : ; 3 Speedway Sunday afternoon. one out. Then Red McQuillen ; ° 9 Junior Baseball fons were accosted by Johnson [UNE better than .400, will report Pre - race dope pounced to third. Nanny Fernan- DeLaGarza wasn't content to 3 0 8 or Baseba as they left a cafe today to Evantome Ind., of the Threed places Faulkner,qez’ bid for a force-out at second SIP at that. He socked in his vas aes! Lrs YESTERDAY Gonzales, who won the Na- Class og of Lawrenberg. N. c OY Ruttman was ruined when his high throw fourth run in the eighth and that . AB. IR AE ots 0 ig evhounds 1. tional Amateur tennis title a 8 Tesld Rn A NE Duane Car- Pulled Johnny Merson off the bag. W2s enough to win. yi 33 Edd 3 Merchants 4. Fores. Manos [€W years ago before turning "ug - ib ) 14 ( ! 1 ores an Ww ? Ral. Papish Joins Act It appeared that the Tribe was find en. 1 310 9 3 Tarkington C Leasue-bouglas Park 16] Professional, -and his compan- | Additional Sports e going to give Red Bird Pitc her Emu Holi 1 3.3 5 3 St, Andrews 3. ions grabbed Johnson and 29 world’s). Papish then got into the act. Wayne MecLeland a rough eve: Mordarski, ¢ 0... 4.1 17471. 818 Forty: y-Niners C pretsue—George Hoster| knocked him to the sidewalk. | Pages 28, 1'1 e{He knocked down Russ Sullivan’ 's| ning. The Redskins seored twice Mumimarp oid 5 3 5 3 0mm . a Heit ® banked -track/— in the first. Frank Kalin doubled| i... RI = 553 : ¥ ~~ speed recgxd to . behind Merson’s single and Dom INDIANAPOLAS AE 200 000 001—3 ris (Negro Nines Take Over siLYTritsr ven iiivee, ABEL OPEN MONDAY NIGHT TILL 8 P. M. : ly PecoM of Tribe Field Tonight iruns. ur La iarza 4. erson ou tio = Rin : . conds se ap Barnacle. § her Double ; * se Two Negro American League McLeland ‘settled down after Play—DeLe augh ty {6 Camp- Friday and Satu rday Till é P. M. Walt Faulkner at Salem last! 5 : that, although he sweated a bit bell« Gert INDIAN APOLIS 2g 3 Toledo 6 § & 7 ase On ~ pish 2 year rencently aseball teams take over Victory —m—m7@8 ——— T_T Pant Or Bajisron Me Hd 2 he: Other Da Till 5:30 was moved tg Winchester Speed-| | Field tonight. The Chicago Giants B I ki a IL re a 2: ys ae way when Duane Carter gotla,g the Philadelphia Stars clash Ull=SKi itis i A ESE ¢ a i ae» at 8:30 in a game sponsored by] Te aly on Fazio’'s 63 Sets Course 4d BT se S. a ; LER riet news agency, The entry list for Sunday's the Federation of Associated said today that Russian stars k i race, the only AAA speedway car ¢ uns have established more world Mark in Western Open sprint event in the U. 8. that day,| (Chicago -is expected to start! records than athletes of any DAVENPORT, la, July 13 also includes Jimmy Daywalt either Ralph Palmer or Bob| other country, (UP)—George Fazio led the. field Pete Romcevich, Joe James, Bill Hinesman on the mound. Phila- The dispatch said Soviet of the Western Open golf tourna- : Mackey, Doc Shanebrook, Leroy delphia will counter with either| sportsmen had established 65 ment at the Country Club course Warriner, Cliff Griffith, Gordon Bob Griffith or Jonas Gaines. registered world records. in- [today with a new course record Reid. Buzz Barton, Roger Ward cluding chess. (men and wom- and his fingers crossed against : Billy McGee, Red Bales, Don Free- Soluncs Tables en), men's volley ball and [the Friday the 13th jinx an land, Ira Collins, Joie Ray, Roy AM r women’s skating No other Fazio blazed through a 65 for; Hamilton, Wayne Padgett, Bob i Minor Majer Minor Maler| world records were listo the first 18 holes of the T2-hole : Barker, Bill Earle, Fred Somner, FOURY 1295 6:70 13:08 in Sut the newspaper, Tass said. |medal event yesterday to erase Russ Royce and Mike Nazaruk, SEndsy 1:34 7:00 2:05 warned sportsmen that great [the mark of 64 set by Ralph Gul- : second in the “500.” | Tuesday 18 10:00 420 as they are, they must rise to dahl on his homéstretch drive to AN Ls ” Buy 1 Pair of Slacks A 50-1ap championship event Thurwday 33 "2 TH JW stil greater heights. the Western Open title in 1936. geet 2. i will climax the sprint program . from our complete selection which starts with qualifying trials | \ ‘/) at 12 noon, Indianapolis time. The rr rr ST ———— : 5 $ 5 first race begins at'2 p. m. In ad- + $ 9 T0 9 dition to the 50-lapper, there will be three eight-lap races and a 10lap consolation. ir of vour he hi league drivers will face an and get another pair of y f STK 2 or a $7000 purse. own choosing of equal value Hal Driver Named Brownstown Principal Times State Service for N CONNERSVILLE, July 13--Hal ® Driver, basketball and track coach Onl of Connersville High School is the y ” new principal at Brownstown. Driver, an Indiana Universjty graduate, resigned his Connersville post last week after coaching ; here fog the past two years., : BME cry dollar you save during Leon's Pants mew and Sldcks Event represents a real savings. Quality has not been sacrificed nor has our obligation to- fit you right 3 } CAR CLUB If necessary any alterations will be made RESERVATIONS in the same day. 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"” n » n o x HE WAS to tee off against Morey at 9.30 a. m. today and°15 minutes later John Hare of Indianapolis, winner of The Indianapolis Times Tournament of Champions last season, and Fred

Burnside, also of Indianapolis, were matched. Burnside worked hard for his spot in the semifinals. defeating Paul Dye Jr, 1-up in 20 holes. After finishing the 38 holes

the 36-year-old Speedway golf champ slumped in a chair by the scoreboard.

DE po

4, = -™

Ramsay Surprised He's In State Semifinals

“T worked for that one,” he said. "That's mére golf Han I've played in a year. 1'll be back tomorrow if I can get out of bed.”

s » » . - ~ »

DYE, WHOSE game hag been improving by leaps and bounds

recently, made a brilliant comeback on the 17th hole yesterday to keep the. match alive. Two down going into No. 17, Dye holed a 20-foot putt to win the hole. On No. 18 he chipped to within

inches of the cup and won the hole to even the count. They halved

19 and Burnside won the match when Dye missed his putt on No. 20 ’ Morey gained the semifinals by ‘defeating Dr. W, A. Hall Jr., 37-year-old Michigan City dentist, 1 up. Dr. Hall earlier had ousted Defending Champion Bob Myers ” » » 4 x n n

HARE HAD the shortest match of the quarter-final round, defeating 23-year-old Dave Holmes Kendallville 7 and 6. Holmes, ‘who defeated medalist Joe Campbell of Anderson in the morning round ‘failed to win a hole. Hare was out in 38 even par and Holmes had a 41. After today's play twe players will remain to battle it for the title over 36 holes tomorrow,

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. PAGE 27

2 Students In Publinx

Semifinal Semifinals By United Press MILWAUKEE, Wis., July 13— Two young students, an unem{ployed lumberman, and a govern{ment clerk paired off in a wide{open semifinal battle today in the National Public Links golf tourinament. ’ Ralph (Pat) Schwab, an 18-year-old Dayton, O., high school graduate, took on Ralph Vranesic, a 35-year-old government clerk at |2 Denver Air Force base, in one match. In the other, Dave Stanley of Los Angeles, a 20-year-old UCLA sophomore, meets Bill Lees, Port-

=

land, Ore., a 6-foot 1-inch lumber —————— man, temporarily out®of a job.

Bland Boers Miss Shutout

The Bland Boxing Club of anapolis will shoot for a shutout

next time. But for now the Blands | \ : n will rest on the laurels gained in Bret nine and held It.

a 7-1 victory over the Fenwick Stanley took the first four holes Club of Cincinnati at the Sahara against John McClure of Wichita, Grotto Punch Bowl. Kas., and led all the way to win, The Blands chalked up the vic- 3 and 2

Finals Tomorrow

The winners of today's 36-hole matches meet tomorrow in the final of the Standish Cup championship race. Schwab. fought his way into the semifinals with a 1-up victory over Mel Waggoner of Janesville, Wis. He took a 1-up lead on the

Indi-

tory last night in the first of an Vranesic also won the first four inter-city series, sponsored by the holes of his match with Bill Grotto. Sanctioned by the Indiana Szustak of Buffalo, N. Y., aad

Dave Holmes, Kendallville, de- Do

TKO'd the course.

dianapolis,

feated Joe ampbell, Anderson, 1 ng (2 and 3 =D) iia ghovens, Jnd ian apol olis, de- Golfing Family 7 s tanapoli ” Pete Dye, 1 7 yolis eate 135—-Ch 3 y ie Dye, Indianapolis, defeated cisioned aries © Indianapolis, de “I'm over the hump,” he sald.

Carl Smith,

in the ninth. - A single by Pinch- Indianapolis, 5 and 4. Heavyweight vans, Indianapolis,

a bridesmaid but

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