Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1951 — Page 16

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"PACE 18. =.

Dye F St Off Tos Williams So ~ Tee in Times ‘Golf

PAUL DYE JR. Country Club of Indianapolis golf ® Knockout, champion, will officially open the second annual Times fee colored Britisher,

To

‘By JIM

Tournament of Champions Sunday when he tees off against txt

the Pleasant Run champion,

Press Box

‘Putt-Putt Golfer In Drink

By BILL EGGERT

MOTOR SCOOTERS have!ciged last week but one of the artist.

been tried with success on . golf courses, but one motorist

®! ¢ ?

urney

»

Unless Ray Robinson has be-

come physically bankrupt he \should

#

Randy to G

NEW YORK, Sept. 12—| Utter disaster is not al

| penalty for nonconfermity.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

.

et Sugar Lum

ways the [recognize when a fighter has shot, ~«~——

. |his bolt, when only the empty out-| Tale-of-theTape

> ® It is popular to ascribe Robin-|lines of his brilliant art remain. gaNpy TURPIN RAY- ROBINSON | ison’s astonishing London set back These can be painfully deceptive I3 ¥es. = Exveotad Weleht 17 Tat | O | : ely .

/{to poor condition, induced by an|and judgment can be further be-is Fi. 10's In.

regain the middle: . Ne : ga ads : exhausting schedule (four fights|trayed by memories of past he- i8,In ~~ Chest (Normal = 381% fn. weight championship, possible by, 44 gays) and gay Paris revels.|roics which have a way of lingér-|741s in. Reach 721s In ; , from Randolphi pr io oiite likely, too, he held/ing much too long for reliable|s} in: week. 1s} In. Adolphus Turpin, 23-year-old cof- my nin “too - lightly. Robinson guidance. HAL Blows. © oi y oye 2 n, P when they never knowingly spots an op-| Usually it's not easy to give up 2i in Thigh 19 In. i th 1 , nd hands across the resin at ponent any advantages; as at- on a fighter of demonstrated abil- (191s In. Ankle w jn. contenders emselves.. e Polo Grounds tonight. tested by frequent run outs here,|ity. The critics réversed them-| 1214 In, | Forearm 1034 In All a fellow who presumes to when hé felt the need of addi-'selves on Joey Maxim. He had™'™ © = "I~, oo 0 0 tawdry, bauble they

Dye and his opponent will open know the basic principles of box- tional work.

firing over the rugged Coffin golf leourse in the first round at 9:30 ia. m.- Sunday. | It will be the

start of. three

18undays of firing for the city's tell him. And to

{country club and municipal course champions to select the champion of chanipions among the men and women slammers.

" n = DYE'S OPPONENT will be decided this week at Pleasant Run. The championship of the east Iside course was “to have been de-

[finalists was unable to play. { The entrants will tee off in |twosomes with five minutes be-

ing can tell about fighters is what his eyes and mind, if any

|me * there is no

{comparison - be{tween these two fighters as \craftsmen.

| Working from {the book, Robin|son is a finished An indi|vidualist, to give thim the best of the language, {Turpin does: few things right.

Williams

recently took on more than|tween each group. All will be| > 5.»

he could handle at a picnic and while trying to find his way home to Beech Grove got Jost on the Lake Shore Country Club golf course. Like most duffers, he missed the greens as he sashayed his auto across fairways. He got stuck in the creek just beyond the No. 6 green.

= = - ROSS: (Gravel Gertie) Wilson, the Caps’ hockey trainer, has won a promotion to the National League Red Wings and will be replacéd here by Merton Edward (Mert) Prophet.

Prophet has played American |

league hockey with Providence and in the U, 8S. League with Ft. Worth. For the past several seasons he has played amateur hockey in Canada. -Wilson recom-

mended Prophet for the Indian-

apolis Post,

a ” DANNY THOMAS, Indiana University guard, is the same Danny, who enlisted in the Marines when he was 15 and served two years in bloody Pacific ac{ion before he was found out and discharged at 17. Football coaches put small stock in pre-season team ratings. IU's Clyde Smith is one of these. Concerning his opener Sept. 22 at Notre Dame he says, “They're playing dead in South Bend. They're powerful and I know what I'm talking about.” vo

EJ = » SOME BIG TEN schools are grumbling about Tackle Joe Campanella and End Dick Anderson playing on the Ohio State eleven this year while they are in the Air Force. They are cadets .at| nearby Lockbourne base. They take a full academic schedule at OSU and 30 hours a week at the base. Their academic schedule

match play. been drawn in two brackets, Dye heading the top bracket.

| First match in the lower

bracket will be John Wolf, Broad-|

{moor champion, against “Palmer { Millikan, Riverside titlist.

be Dick Stackhouse of Meridian Hills. against Joe McDaniel of Indian Lake. > u = ou | BOTH WON their club “championships last year and played {in the first Tournament of Champions. In the first round, Ralph Jordan of Sarah Shank has drawn {& bye and will not see action until the afternoon. ’ Winners in the first 18-hole round will play in the second round in the afternoon. >

n = = | THE WOMEN champions, play{ing (only one round at Coffin Sunday, will begin teeing off at 1:30 p. m. Leading the women off the tee will be Mrs. C. Richard Fulmer of Hillcrest, runnerup this year for the city and state championships, against the Lake Shore womeil’s champion, which | still is being decided. After the final women's two-

= = ” OTHER WOMEN’S matches will be Mrs. Joseph Rothbard, Broadmoor, against the Sarah Shank champion (still being decided); Mrs. Robert Laycock, Speedway, against Mrs. W. S. Cox, Pleasant Run, and Mrs. Rick Herrick, Highland, against Mrs. Charles Greathouse, Woodstock. Players are evenly matched this year and competition is expected to be rugged. Other matches in the men’s division bring together Mike Sullivan of Speedway against Byron

makes them clear on conference | eligibility. a !

= ” = ~ DICK COLE, after a slow start, has hit safely eight times in his last 22 trips at bat for the Pirates to get his average up to .204. Gus Bell, only six behind Ralph Kiner in team RBI leadership with 86, is hitting .281. Other exIndianapolis players’ averages are

Hollet, Woodstock; Frank Weiland, Highland Country Club against the Lake Shore champion | (still being decided); Chuck Hess

of Coffin against Bob Hall, Hillcrest; Buck Hatfield, South Grove, against Hank Campbell, Brook.

Willow

The four players who gurvivel

the grind this Sunday will move

Pete Castiglione .262, Ed FitzGer-|t0 Hillcrest Country Club Sept. |

ald .227 and Tom Saffell 220 , . .|

Dick Wakefield is dickering for| M1 be over the Meridian Hills

a tryout with the Cleveland Indians next season either as an| American League player or some place in the farm system, which: could mean Indianapolis,

#® un 4 WHAT AMOUNTED to 81 cents! worth of fuel is the difference] between the winner's: $3250 and! the fourth place $850 that Tony | Bettenhausen received in last Sun-/! day's AAA 100-miler in Detroit. | Because he had cracked the frame at Syracuse the day before, Bettenhausen and his crew figured the least amount on which

he could go the 100 miles, He led | cjyn.

until the 97th lap when he stopped for two minutes. Actually Betten-

...hausen wheeled the little 99 for ,u,or Country Club. vs.

100 miles considering that he drove at least 100 feet out on the track on each lap. It also was estimated that the low gear ‘ratio and the high-winding engine was consuming a gallon of fuel for every two miles.

Three More Join 650 Pin Rolls

The upper crust of the bowling fraternity was joined by Vern Havens, Jim Magill and John Brannan today after the high scoring trio established

for the semifinals. The finals|

Country Club course Sept. 30. Pairings at Coffin MEN (Top Bracket) 9:30 a. m.—Paul Dye Jr., Indian-| apolis Country Club vs. Pleasant Run champion. ! 9:35 a. m.— Mike Sullivan, Speedway vs. Byron Hollet, Wood-| stock Country Club. 9:40 a. m.—Frank Weiland, Highland Country Club vs. Lake! Shore Country Club champion. | 9:45 a. m.—Chuck Hess, Coffin, vs. Bob Hall, Hillcrest Country! (Lower Bracket) 9:50 a. m.—John Wolfe, Broad-

Millikan, Riverside. 9:55 a. m.—Buck Hatfield, South {Grove vs. Hank Campbell, Willow | Brook.

| 10 a. m.—Dick Stackhous, Me|ridian Hills Country Club vs, Joe

Club. |. Ralph Jordan, Sarah Shank, draws a bye in the first round

but meets the winner of the Stack-

house-McDaniel match in the sec- the

ond round in the afternoon. WOMEN

(Top Bracket) {Charleston,

The players have

Last | to tee off in the first round will!

some tees off at 1:45 p.m. the] men will open their second round. Walker Cupper Jimmy McHale, {the hometown favorite and a for-

Palmer round —by-downing-—J-

AND YET there is the incontestable fact that two months

cisive licking. why can’t he do it ‘again?

have something. What if he does

they be the right way for him? No qustion about it.

and reach the top, anyway. Al Simmons, with his foot-in-the-bucket batting style did it. Twice,

& un ” = And leo Diegel, grotesque putting stance,

“a top flight golfer for years. |

DarkHorse

Tag Given To McHale

By United Press BETHLEHEM, Pa, Sept. 12—

mer pro, drew the No. 1 dark horse role in the U., S. amateur golf championship today as 64 survivors went out to knock down, the field to 16 in the first twomatch day of the tournament. | Personal title choice of most of his Walker Cup teammates, Mc-v Hale was matched against 29-year-old Billy Joe Patton of Mor-|

Dale Morey, Indiana's Ama- | teur and Open &hampion, faced | Ray Weston Jr. of Spokane, | Wash, today after a 3 and 1 triumph yesterday over Robert Kosten of Omaha, Neb. Dick | McCreary, former Indianapolis | District and Indiana amateur | titleholder now playing out of Houston, went up against the 1949 U. 8. Amateur champion, | Charley Coe, today after whip- | ping Charles Price of Bethesda, Md., yesterday, 6 and 5.

gantown, N. C.. who took the! measure of several top pros in the

(Carolina Open championship.

n E-3 EJ IT WAS the key match of the morning third round involving name players because the two general favorites to reach the finals—defending Champion Sam Urzetta of Rochester, N. Y,, and British Amateur Champion Dick Chapman of Pinehurst, N. C.— met foes virtually unknown along! the big time. Urzetta, easy winner over Jack Selby of Dallas, Tex., 4 and 3, in the second round, was matched

against Bill Stalls of Greenville,

N, C., while. Chapman drew Benno Janssen of Charlottesville, Va,

" ” ” McHALE reached’ the third Brown, Brielle, N. J., bank president with an unimpressive 1-up (victory. But Patton, who ousted {former champ Ted Bishop in the {first round, brought in a card {marked with six threes in 13

(McDaniel, Indian Lake Country holes played as he walloped Mike

Dudik of Johnston City, N. Y., 6 and 5. Two-time Champion Willie Turnesa of Elmsford, N. Y., became only major second -round casualty when he went down be{fore 19-year-old Billy Picard of S. C., son of Pro

| 1:30 p. m.—Mrs. C. Richard Ful- Henry Picard who won the PGA

them-/mer, Hillcrest Country Club vs. crown in 1939. Picard, who belted

selves in the 650 class after last Lake Shor: Country Club cham-|Willie, 3 and 2, was matched

night's action. Havens, bowling in the Commercial circuit for the Greeley Bros. Texaco lineup, fashionéd a 667 series. Magill rolled 194-224-243-661 in the Chevrolet league at Pritchett’s, ‘while Brannan hit 276-180-201—-657 with Century Cleaners in the rolet Classic at O'Grady alleys.

the Pritchett-

The Lyric Proudly Presents

EXCLUSIVE SHOWING

OF THE RETURN BOUT

World's Championship RANDY

TURPIN

VS. SUGAR RAY

ROBINSON

FIGHT PICTURES Round by Round— Blow by Blow! I's a Ringside Seat ~~ Less Than 24 Hours After the Fight . . . ; and at

Kast Side Chev-|

pion. |against Curtis

1:35 p. m.—Sarah Shank champion vs. Mrs. Joseph Rothbard, Broadmoor Country Club. (Lower Bracket) I 1:40 p. m~—Mrs. cock, Speedway vs. (Cox, Pleasant Run. { 1:45 p. m.—Mrs. Rick Herrick,| Highland Country Club vs. Mrs, Charles Greathouse, Woodstock.

*1000

CASH

OFFERED EVERY DAY | es OPEN | Cea

25P. M.

Robert Lay- § Mrs. W. S.

Person of Memphis.

GRAND PRIX

Waleatt:

# 1¥

» ”

; IT WAS lack of condition {that beat Robinson, then his pres;

looked wretched in his last out, in the second or third round shouldn't bother to claim. Such ing against Kzsard Charles. which, to all practical purposes, as last night when the Browns

” ” sol HE WAS at the age at which decided the other fight in Turpin’'sirose up from the frustration of

oF. FORTS ice ent physical state is the key to fighters begin to fade.. It was favor accumulated years and twic 'the fight. How good is he today? agreed he was through. Where- - y 28. ‘knocked out the Yankees, 4 to 3 ght, g 5 y. ag , : TURPIN, young, immensely and 6 to 3, winning their first

|As good perhaps as a 31-year-old upon he turned in the best fight {fighter can be. With 60 odd days of his career in battering Irish lof normal living during which he Bob Murphy. /has had time to recharge his bat-| [teries he will certainly be more son may be completely washed up. formidable tonight than he was|Unless a fighter has deteriorated

jon the night of July 10. Or so it/markedly it is almost impossible

{would seem.

It is;

| consider the

| even if Robinson had been at | his best Turpin, for all the flaws | in his equipment (at least they are flaws to the purists) still | ‘would have beaten him. This is

| |

fluity. =

HIS SLIP has been showing for bring the two as a big leaguer, he hit over .390 some time. It's only a matter of same focus as craftsmen. the with his [some able youngster will catch up to go by: comparative skills. was (with him for keeps. . The trick here is to be able to of London, tells me it was a body Manual's so-so Redskins.

time “before

PLAYOFF STANDINGS

AMERICAN (Best Milwaukee ....... VE. Kansas City ..... Louisville : ........ vs 8t. Paul

however necessary

possibility

| a point I shall not attempt to ago, in dethroning the Harlem| argue to the contrary. I simply ‘hot shot, Turpin dealt him a de-| would have no way of knowing. got left. If he did it once, And who else would, really? This brings us to another posSurely the young man must pity Is Robinson through as : : Sa fighter? Once a fighter reaches do everything wrong? Couldn'tisy he starts down hill. Even Robinson concedes It is notifighter he used to be. Remarkable unprecedented: to ignore the book candor in a fighter, yet a super-

he

n x

calendar

ASSOCIATION «of -Seven) Won Lost PLR 0 sees 1 Won Lost Andean 0 0 0

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE (Best-of -Seven)

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF »

Kansas City Milwaukee

Wiesler, Peterson (2), ney: Johnson, Jester (8) and Unser. (Called at the end of seven innings, rain) cov... 004 000 5 rT 1

Louisville“. ..... St. Paul

W. Evans, Mueller (7) and Okrie: Mc-

Glothin, Mossor (7) and Thompson. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE PLAYOFF (10 Innings) Syracuse .... 000 100 031 1—- 610 © Rochester 001 102 100 0— 5 10 3 Miller, Costello (6), Eisenmann (7, Hartley (9) nd Baker; Collum, Tiefenauer (8) and Bucha. Buffalo cranes ney. 900 000 000-0 7 3 Montreal 200 002 21x— 7 11 ©

Minarcin, Robinson

and Nowick: V

an Cuyk TEXAS LEAGUE 1 Beaumont 4, Houston 1 (Beaumont leads 0, i San. Antonio 3, Dallas 2 (San Antonio

5 002—

0 00 054 001 00x—10 15

Jones and

100 001 3—

(6), PLAYOFF

leads 1-0). AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit. grime Qe AGA Gua Boston 03x—

: 000 100 Stuart, Bearden (8) Trout (8) Kiely, Kinder (9) and Rosar.. Robinson (9). | Winning Pitcher—Kiely (6-4).

er—Bearden (3-4, (10

Home Innings) 012 200 100

isn’

Silverman (8) and Atwell,

and Swift; |

Losing Pitch-! Run—S8ouchock

strong and a willing puncher, con-|goubleheader in Yankee Stadium |centrated on the body In his'gince Sept. 19, 1945. .\warks at the Grossinger resort! But did that help the Indians, For all 1 know for sure Rowin |upstate. Apparently this is to beleven though they regained first /his battle plan. place? They had a grand chance This would be tactically sound.|{o take a comparatively firm hold which are/ The way to beat Robinson is toon the lead in Philadelphia. And crowd him, shorten his firing they acted liked champs by comthat |brief. range, make him miss altogether. | ing from behind to top the pestif- | Dempsey, for example, never|Lurpin has the desire, strength erous Athletics, 6 to 5, in 11 inllooked better to me than in his/2nd boldness to do this, succeed- nings in the opener. final prep, sparing with Tommy|in& in something else. |Loughran, for the first Tunney] In final analysis, this fight is coming from behind with four {fight. Robinson's works, crisp/@ stern challenge to Robinson’s/runs in the eighth inning of the land often sparkling, offered no/8eneralship, adroitness and coun-|second game, they suddenly be- | genuine clues as to how much he’s|ter punching ability. In picking|gan to act as if it really didn’t : {him to win handily I am, natur- matter who won the pennant. They “ Nevertheless I can’t see him |ally, assuming he will be able to|let the sixth place A's score five losing. I could be more wrong (bring these qualities into play runs in their half and go on to than ever before — and that With forceful effect. win 9 to 5. So instead of taking

So-So Redskins Are Kept

to tell in workouts, to mostly pointless and much too

~— but my pre-fight picture is that he will give the sharp faced, pleasant mannered visi-

t the

tor a boxing lesson and perhaps F + § alii tv Spart 4° trond above, I simply can’t or e y par ans

the And, and essentially, that's all a critic has

together in By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS | Sophomore Pat Lynette, a little Now that Sacred Heart's hefty shaver, sparked for two of the Spartans have overcome their three aerial strikes. He flipped a y first-game timidity and chari- geven-yarder to Ed Teagardin in My friend, Gen. A, C. Critchley tapjeness, they can get ready for 'the end zone in the first quarter (and connected on a 36-yarder to The Spartans visit ManualiHarlan Petty with three-minutes Friday in their annual Battle of remaining in: the third. the Southsiders — and Coach Harry Caskey’s letterman studded Spartans could find themselves handcuffed by Noah Ellis’ semiey pale faces without Charlton seven setting up-the TD. Sacred Heart did a satisfactory Paul Bortlein made the only boot. Martin (7). Scheib (11) and Tipton, Mur- : .

iray (9). Winning Pitcher—Wynn (18-12). job with that 21 to 0 lid-lifter . Ha {Losing Pitcher—Sheib (1-12). Home Run— 5 o4inet Plainfield Charlton at IN THE second half, Sacred

pet. | Kennedy. Hoot a ha : CYO last night. eart provided two runs just 1.000, Cleveland. 2 2 for the thrills. Early in the third,

Meanwhile, Strack flipped to End Jim Haag for a seven-yard TD just before the half. Lynette hurled 25 yards to Petty to the

(Second Game) 010 000 040 — 5 7

000 Philadelphia . 3 020, 000 oT 12 3 " ” ” 000!" "Peller, Brissie (8), Garcia (8) an 0 Pct. Asthroth, Winning Pitcher—Hooper (9-10 THE SPARTANS finally took Fullback Bill Knieper, a speedy

000 | ising Pitcher—Brissie 13-5). Home Runs— its first half jitters, opened up its 2253-pounder,” charged 62 yards to

AaEoONE, SUAS ONAL LEAGUE shaky offense and won handily the promised land but an off-side ..oo...... 002 342 000—11 14 4 even without a pair of touch- penalty nullified it.

: 23x—13 1 : pet. | Chicago S60 200 nC 43 Midway in the fourth Dave

Then, leading 5 to 4 by also,

Pare

rs WEDNESDAY, ——— \ ~~ Lowly Teams PS Show A

L Way Boys

By United Press : Second division teams appeared today to be more inter-

$In lasted in who wins the American League flag than the

The big contenders suddenly are treating first prize as

lover two games in front they |have only a single game lead.

” ” ” BOSTON was the only cone tender to show a solid profit for [the day, yet the mighty Red Sox |sluggers could muster only three [hits in their 4 to 3 win over fifth {place Detroit. And the Boston boys still have faces .as crimson las their sox over the two-way humiliation they suffered from {the Athletics Sunday. | The Bréwns had the most fun lin their sweep of the Yankees. Rookie Jim McDonald won his lown game by singling in the {winning run of the opener with two out in the ninth. Then two {especially frustrated ex-Yankees, [Cliff Mapes, and Tommy Byrne, went to work in the second game. {Mapes hit a three-run homer to

{put the Browns in front for good

and Byrne received credit for his fifth victory, even though Satchel Paige had to come in to pitch one-hit relief ball for the last 3'3 innings. : ’ |. The Browns beat Rookie Tom

{Morgan and Ace Allie Reynolds,’

treating Reynolds like a second rater until they finally knocked him out. Yogi Berra hit a homer in each game to bring his geason total to 26. Ben Taylor and {Earl Rapp homered for St. Louis in the opener. The Indians won the opemer when Relief Pitcher Early Wynn ‘tripled to score the tie-breaking run and receive credit for his 18th ivictory. In the second game after Luke Easter's two-run doubles highlighted the four-run Cleve~ land rally, the spoiler A's burst loose with a succession of singles ‘and won going away, Bob Hooper getting his 10th triumph in relief.

» » ~ THE RED SOX scored three runs in the eighth after Detroit (had used a triple-play to cut them off in the previous frame. Ted Williams delivered a two-run single for the key blow as Rookie Leo Kiely won his sixth game al-

Clem

“archery at its best” is on display.

1714 1 2

Court-

5 2

Fromfourde 4 3.0

Chicago 0— 6 14 2} f 1 in) Washington 030 720 0G1 1— 7 15 1 A I i NY Judson, Grimsley (3) Dorish (6 and] : k ) : 8heely, Masi (6); Marrero, ‘Sima (4) Con- Hy /e wild i PTR nine Biker Faire Be Ea a SAA ). nning cher—Ferrick (2-1), 5 i \ J - ip8 Biteher—Dorish (4-5). Home Run— bl | i : 7d Hill and Hill's (First Game) mil Il i i IRM W St. Louis . c+... 010 200 001— 4 9 1 1 in JY CNN New York 110 010 000— 3 17.3 BAHL ~ Wh \ McDonald (4-6) and Batts: Morgan, Os-!

Garcia, Gromek

(9) and Tebbetts, ‘Hegan _ (T); Zoldak,

100-LAP

NATIONAL

CHAMPIONSHIP

"RAIN DATE SAT. SEPT. 15

8:30

(5), Brissie (7),

FRIDAY NITE, SEPT. 14

RESERVATIONS

BELMONT 3316 Inverted Races With the Nation's Finest Cars and Drivers

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Millions have voiced ap. proval of this superb | Kentucky Blend

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Superb Straight Bourbon that smacks of the - good old days, -

BYEatUse. Lh Won. Lost Wilson, ‘Burdette (2), JFaine (4). Chip- downs that were called back. {though he needed a little help Roch’; o 1 oo Lish. Dubtel 14), Leonard (5). Lown (6. Coach Harry Caskey’s boys Bauer lashed over from the twoifrom Ellis Kinder. ochester .....sssveeres Won Lost Pet. Klippstein (8), _Rush (9) and Burgess. gathered a 13 to 0 halftime lead but Heart's backs were in motion. | In the only other American Winning Pitcher—Klippstein (6-6). Losing} 1 . Montreal ...,. eerraraens ! 0. 1000 pitcher—Chipman (4-2). Home Runs— Over the inexperienced Charlton Two plays later Charlton's E.Jeague game, Sam Mele singled BOTAN + ora cineinin o 1 ooo forseton. Gordon. Sauer... , eleven but didn’t add up the yard- Nickerson recovered Hear t'shome the winning run in the 10th — CIRCIRaN 107 and’ 230 500 900-~ Sri age until the second half. {fumble on the four and Plainfield for a 7 to 6 Washington victory LEAGUE STANDINGS (3), Erautl (5), Perkowski (6), Byerly 8) Held to 71 yards rushing for/ended another threat.’ lover Chicago that broke a nineNATIONAL LEAGUE = and Howell. Losing Caen’ ToX (8-14). two quarters, the Spartans ran| Charlton threatened three times game losing streak. Brooklyn, : 48 841 . Sa¥ Tork 910 110 304—10 12 0/it to 208 yards rushing all game but was stopped on the Heart 15.| In the National League, BrookSt Louis ‘ 84 32% 18 | oslo (8.9) and Westrum; Staley, Bokel- and smothered Plainfield with &ri8-and 21-yard lines. The thrust lyn went six games in front of Botton iia . . 8 sn Be (8, Losing Piteher — ‘Bokelman (2-3, 19-yard net rushing total’ effort./to the 15 was prefaced by the the Giants when Rookie Cincinnati : 80 429 30, Home Rups-~jnhinsen, Svestrum, But Sacred Heart's forte came Howard Maginty-J. C. Moorman Labine pitched a six-hit, 7 to 0 X » . a ‘ee Bl 2 K x $ Pittsburgh 5783 407 44 |New York ... 000 000 003— 3 § o through the air lanes, pass combination which gained 20 victory over the Reds as New AMERICAN EVE, a St. Louis . 100 100 11x— 4 14 2. The Spartans bombarded the yards to the 19. York was splitting. at St. Louis, Cleveland Hh 3B © Janzen. Corwin (8). Kennedy (8) ahd ig1nrg ‘with three touchdown! Twel t H 'e 15 first d o Nov Fork 5 81 gre Westrum; Chambers (13-11) and D. Rice Slory > welve o eart’'s 15 first downs winning 10 to 5, then losing, 4 to Boston 54 600 5 Losing Pitcher—Jansen (18-11). Home Run passes when their ground-gaining came from rushes and two of 3. The Phils edg&d the Pirates, 3 hicaga ..... 83-38 Huigihomen. . 000 010 200— 3 § 2/SPuttered and their line chipped Charlton's trio of first downs/to 2, as Robin Roberts pitched a Philadelphia a 428 3 Pittsburgh 000 020 000-2 5 o in with a safety by Jerry Haller were aerial achivements. five-hitter for his 19th victory, St. Louis A ne yl Rotel Th Bh A IRs with six minutes to go in the'Sacred Heart .... # 13 8 2—21 while the Cubs outslugged the GAMES TODAY | =Carhsen (3-3). Home Run--Jones. fourth. Plainfield serves 000 0 0 Braves, 13 to 11. ee. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION i . (First-Round Playoffs) { Kansas City at Milwaukee (night). { “ 4 Louisville at St. Paul (night). ! / AMERICAN LEAGUE - Chicago at Washington (night). | AN Detroit at Boston. o (Only games scheduled. ° a NATIONAL LEAGUE 4 \ Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. : re er Brooklyn at Cincinnati (night). - Ron ork hieago. souls (nish \ SY Yorx 4; 5%. Lowls (isin. When masters of the bowman's art compete in , RESULTS YESTERDAY the National Archery Association's annual meet,

rich Kentucky flavor will not help you become an expert will help you make tastier, more satisfying drinks. Ask for Hill and Hill, whether you prefer the

trowski (6) and Berra. Losin ftcher — archer. But it Ostrowski (6-4) Home Runs—Rapp, Tay-! lor, Berra { (Second Game) | St. Louis . .... 003 300 000,68 9 0 - New York 010 002 000—'3 7 2 Byrne, Paige (6) and Lollar; Reynolds, | Schallock (4), Overmire (7) and Berra. | Winning _ Pitcher—Byrne (5-10). Losing] Pitoher_Reynolds (14-8). Home Runs—| erra, Mapes. i C (First Game, 11 Innings) i Kentucky Blen Cleveland 002 001 200 01— 6 10 1] Philadelphia 000 230 000 00— 5 14 2]

Straight Kentucky Bourbon or the fine

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WED? Footh

Tk

This is , ticles by writers = college fc ers of 1 The Tim Rolls inte area, By Sports

MIGHT strongest football, |

rest of

down foun In 1951 more goo

Harm

be powerf national c] Notre D 500 last 3 in 18 cai bounce bac Every te except. Mi improved A formi consin, th If injuries time, the 1] top. Never t good back: in one se Vic Janov unanimous ——————

Prep Pc

At L Her

“By JIMM ~~ OURS ~ high sche Indiana, can play

football. Decatur

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