Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1951 — Page 9
Le
way. Until she wealth to share, » state subsidies e cannot pay for ut welfare cuts r. Churchill anq
pledge not to re. _
is serious doubt more productiy. unions distrust coal a slowdown
that the people igainst austerity austerity tempo. hey are not pre.
no basic reform ce the voters ex. A bigger issue in memory. Iran It is generally position during
y of warmongers |
the beginning of tated accurately
ics. He Beers:
the policy more
onstrate now. Plays, ini gamed ou Sore the left tackle. cut to the left veteran heard a younger, stronger man acclaimed the btier vard Te " Eps Han “and out-distanced Hall by 10 ‘his superior by a crowd which had not wanted sansa - JOf TIPS and tears .,rdqs at the goal after 73 yards. to see him lose, yet was not too sentimental to Meni. tothe ‘three yard line. I.ate in that second session, Perry accord homage to the victor. 8 : THEN WILSON called’ his Rodman interceded on a Hall flip And so today Rocco Francis Marchegiano, : > varterback sneak He ot} ia on the Shortridge 30, Sexson made out of Brockton, Mass., who is known to the trade in : Jus scoring act I fuess ie eight, then outran the strong-side as Rocky Marciano (because it's easier to pro-. 3 figured Sexson’s three touchdowns! “tC°ndary- on his right for 22 pounce) becomes the No. 1 challenger for Jersey ght to say it." : ; vk fo; fe nel | YaLds. : Joe Walcott's crown and at 27, personable, rugi Were enous for. one RiZh : WOrk. © ghortridge got a break start- gedly handsome and exceedingly bold as to proPANIIIIII ee a oh el I loins ing the third and scored. Bob cedure, the new glamour boy of the rowdy old
rt must approves
'd himself if hs
10 dle de
é ~
+" SATURDAY, OCT. 27, 108Y ______._ ~
a
Time
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Writes Sad Fad
By JOE WILLIAMS 8
: Seripps-Howard Sports Writer 3 NEW YORK, Oct. 27—It was one of the longest and most dramatic stories ever written. But
“ because of the nature of the central figure, his
contempt for the calendar and his tenacity. of
: : | purpose, the reader knew all along how the story n g cores ‘would end. The author had written the same story so often, the denouement had always been
Stops '
8 I've always was such a nice guy until h teammate—Joe Sexson—Ilast
"3 TDs as Tech
Devils’
By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS thought Tech Quarterback Norman Wilson
e pulled a mean trick on his night.
It was halfway through the third quarter.’ Tech, mak-
ing like a hard-hitting slugger, —
was playing Shortridge, ping like a clever boxer. Tech was leading 21 to 14. was a crazy game, except there was so much method to Shortridge’'s scoring madness.
scrap-
Tech started driving on {ts own 38, Tech gained 62 vards in seven
make it the city's third-best ball club, if Cathedral and Tech are the vardsticks,
plays Shortridge electrified Tech with a beautiful aerial from Hal)
1t to Ron Passwater for 40 yards’
down the middle, then Hall stabbed Jack Barney in the end zone for the point,
pe eB hy EE TEST Te Tecoma
angered. One play after the subsequent kickoff, he exploded off
Dyvar’'s punt was called back after Tech was charged with holding His ‘next punt was fumbled by Wilson and Jack Praed recovered
the same. But for a while last night in the bake oven, human packed Garden it looked as if the remarkable saga of Joe Louis might be extended to at least one more chapter. mln Ff The author—Father Time—who usually writes with a harsh, relentless pen seemed hesitant, as if like, so many others, he was reluctant to picture the inevitable.
. . Sos
FOR THIS had not been an ordinary hero in an ordinary drama of the ring. Louis had defended the heavyweight championship more often, held it longer and graced the sport with more honor and decency than any man who had come before him. It was not a pleasant thing to close the book. It would bring no joy to the reader. «But in the eighth round, after two minutes and 36. seconds, the fateful period, marking the end’ of “the” last sentence in the final chapter, found its predestined place, and for the second time since Louis burst upon the scene with dynamic brilliance in 1934 he was knocked out. sre Slemeiesions sh ed Ee
RIGHT UP to the end the, old story teller kept to the deadly time-tested séript as the dazed
sport. Louis became his 33d knockout victim in an unbroken run of 38 triumphs. When the end came, and it came without warning, near ‘the close of the eighth, Louis was
a
ah
lw
LEADS WITH RIGHT (ELBOW)—Rocky Marciano was using every weapon at
wn
YOUTH TAKES CHARGE—A triumphant Rocky Marciano
s follows: John And furthermore, Wilson, read ,, the Tech 26. Hall failed on a shockin ight braces -his—trainer— Charli Goldman, —after—scoring—an ! v1 26. hc gly exposed as one of those empty shells . : . rh + » = {right}--embr; H y JE 3 8 a war veteran, - Ji ee Salted 306yards rush-ereqy then arilled a 26-yard with which the fistic roads have been littered is command fast night against the aging Louis. The photographer caught this shot eighth round technical knockout over former world's heavyweight murderers . . , & game, and Shortridge, ip to Barney with four minutes back to the days of Jim Jeffries and before. The knockdowns, however, came
fact he is a war
didate is, “is he 1" against it too,
thanks to ‘the Green's hopped-up line, managed 54 yards. You know what Joe made? He ram-
bled for 236 of those 306 yards”
gone, Barney also the
pass for the point.
caught
n uo 5 AFTER WILSON'S touchdown
hop We ideal
"IT HADN'T heen much of a fight up to then and of the fighting that had been done, the old
as a bony elbow smashed into Louis’ nose’ and eye.
from fists.
and seemingly unhurt at any time, his confidence and determination unshaken.
ful ‘punch. ‘He had gone down in a corner immediately in front of where I sat in the press
. champion “Joe Louis. The battle probably wrote Bomber's career in the ring. 8
"finis'" to the
sharp, brassy throat singing a dirge, background music for the old author's closing words.
and averaged 11.2 yards on 21 three inutes later, Shortridge y spite i : S : : : A » carries, fait he intercepted two Mee pores ong just 20 seconds iy fstiow, Te ~ He a os The Start of tle eighth 27g the sary scion Section and a8 | Studied BIR festures Witch FeBie : t+». 835 Coffey St. of the four passes Tech cut off fore the fourth quarter began. been uneventful and at one time, in the sixth, Were notin any marked way dissimilar from the tered embarrassed fatigue more than pain IN THIS situation Marciano showed extraorin its secondary. Shortridge scored on a 60-yard the crowd expressed its disapproval in its char- rounds which had gone pefore, except that Louis realized I was looking at a very old man who dinary composure for a youngster. He must have But aside from Sexson and drive. Barney caught two nine- acteristic manner: Boos. was finding the range with the jab more accu- was ready to come apart—a man who had chal- een “ag surprised as were close up observers those four interceptions — and yard thrusts, then Hall found Marciano had looked concerned when he came [ately and by now 1.seemned quits probaile det lenged the old author once too often, that it took so little to drop the faded Brown Tackle Hughett looking good Passwater in the left corner 26 into the ring’ and it was hard to tell looking at is onl ot Be es Ds $2 Bomber. . kicking all four placements—it yards away to the Tech 15. his deep-set eyes and long, swarthy face, whether 6 0 ? fag - " So YET WHEN he got up he appeared to be all Now he knew that a knockout was not be-
he people of In. efficient govern. d of government ration. I am a Mayor Bayt is
or, here is what yr from Indiana, cted governor in oesn’'t want this our government
was Shortridge’'s show, I'll clue vou. So will the 7500 fans who sat in the cool of the evening at Tech.
n 5 z COACH GEORGE GALE and his Blue Devils had a planeverything but the blue-prints except they didn't give Sexson a carbon copy. But despite Sexson’s touchdown pirouettes, Shortridge was in the game all the way. Little Dick Hall, a rifle-arm 148-
Hall sent speedy little Jim Strange tearing around the right flank on a pitchout, utilizing hig speed for six points. Then Shortridge and Tech spent the fourth quarter fumbling and intercepting passes deep in Tech territory.
= u ~ : HALL HAD HIT seven of his 19 passes for 144 vards. Tech missed all for passing attempts
this was resolution or anxiety. But at the gong he took the offensive and a few seconds before the end of the round a lpop-. ing right staggered Louis along the ropes and the articulate throng who had come down from the young Italian's home \town in New England shook the rafters with thet gleeful outcries. oe
ee
FROM THEN on the action\followed a fairly consistent pattern with Marciano\attacking from a crouch and the old fellow stabbing and hook-
campaign. It would go the limit of 10 or he might find the opening he was ceaselessly probing for and get ‘himself a knockout, which would give a touch of- drama to what had been a dull and monotonous spectacle.
THAT WAS the impression that was beginning to form and that was the way the crowd was beginning to think when suddenly Louis was on one knee in a neutral corner taking a count that was to reach seven. A short left
right and when Marciano came to him he begédn to trade punches with him as if the punch had not affected him at all and then suddenly he was down again, this time on his back, he had been punched through the lower rope and his back was resting on the ring apron and his eyes were closed for three or four seconds. Then they opened and he turned his head to the right and to the left and from his position in this strange and weird upside down world, he saw men standing in the press row and through
yond his powers, limited as he had shown them to be. He is not a sharp shooter and he had missed repeatedly, at times by so far as to look amateurish, but in this situation he did not falter nor did he miss. > >
A RIGHT hand drove Louis into the ropes, a left knocked him through them. And so ended, amidst riotous ringside clamor, the wonderful moving story of the simple Negro who came out of the Alabama cotton fields to become a living
Bavt Who has pound junior who threw for both but out downed Shortridge 10 ing, getting home some, missing more often, pry- hook had sent him to the floor and this was the buzzing which must have assaulted his ears symbol ia the eyes and minds of all peoples, re >. nyt who nas of Shortridge aerial touchdowns, to 6. ing for an opening through which he might land surprising because Marciano’s more lethal he heard a strange insistent, staccato clatter gardless of color or creed. ave good gov- ran Tech's secondary dizzy all The victory was Tech's third with the big one, once scoring with a hook which Weapon was his right. and while he could have no way of knowing A real champion and a real American. It
d prove to your- } with local gov. can't cure. N. Drexel Ave,
News .Y
{ent Truman can >t put a friend of
hould feel right She can't vote
: ridge
night. The Green shook Sexson loose with less than four minutes of. the first quarter gone. Sexson capped a 67-yard march with a 21-yard right end sweep behind fine blocking (including Wilson), Only two minutgs had elapsed in the second period when Shorttied it, 7-all. After two
Flyers, Capitals in Series
Times Special ST. LOUIS, Oct. 27—If hockey players depend upon instinct to guide their passes. the St, Louis-
straight in the city and puts the Green on the road to its second straight co - city championship with Cathedral, also a 3-0 winner with Broad Ripple and Sacred Heart to go. Tech has Washington remaining. Shortridge, which has a 2-2 city standing, bowed to Cathedral 25 to 13... whatever that means.
Reibel, Eddie Bruneteau and Bert Giesebrecht. The Flyers and Caps will play
shook his obstinate, swarming tormentor, shaking off what few punches that landed cleanly
Cancer Fund Profits After Judge Error
NEW “YORK, Oct. 27 (UP)— Damon Runvon Cancer Fund will net an estimated $10,000 as a re-
It was surprising. too, that Louis had dropped so quickly. It hadn’t been a particularly force-
Lavoy Gets Eye Dotted As Ol
BOB LAVOY
By FRANK ANDERSON knows a pupil who'd like to play hookey
sult of .an error made by the from the school of hard knocks. It's the pupil of his right
placing judges at the Jamaica pve, Race Track yesterday. > The error popped up in the third
Olymp Bob sees (with difficulty) a black future for
race when persons holding place the pupil for at least a few days. r
what this was or what it meant, it was a tele-
was too bad, almost pathetically tragic, he had
grapher’s {instrument intoning
Valpo Stops . Ball State to
MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 27 (UP)— Valparaiso's crushing Crusaders overwhelmed Ball State last night. 34 to 12, to win the first Indiana Collegiate Conference championship. It was Valpo's- sixth straight triumph this season and their
a requiem, a
to go the way he did.
Bonus for Extra Effort
ymps Win, 64-60 win icc Toga Admitted by Players
y- United Press
. B NEW YORK, Oct. 27—Three former Kentucky basketball stars, indicted for shaving the points in a game against
football Loyola of Chicago in 1949, also received “bonuses” for going
over the point-spread in three other games that season.
District «Attorney Frank Hogan
Cio : ¢ : . of New York disclosed yesterday Indianapolis week - end hockey ro gut in Inglasapalls. tickets on Sao Paolo were paid And in hindsight he sees the Indiinapolls or Ft. ‘Wasn® wor 18th in a row in regular season ithat. former All-Americans Alex o C ) aps ay sent Rookie ‘¢= 0 : shorstd X 0 TO FTN ~ - h 10. per cent pay series opening. here tonight could 4 fag 34 i . $5.10 for §2. Later the judges ,y,u of a Ft. Wayne Piston. oomnoith Bg. $4 {| 1play. Groza and Ralph Beard and team- em ft d-take with the be confusing. Alex Dei Vechhio to the Detroit discovered Air Service finished © ud frat tory Barker.f 3% 3 100 ¥ wo» mate Dale Barnstable received . 4 - girs rs il "Seven former Indianapolis play. Red Wings in exchange for Cen, sscond and: Sac Paolg.was third. Put Walt a minute. A story goes Hollandt 2 0\3 ~AeFud QUARTERBACK -Henry.- Meier co €4Ch oF "eXtFa SHOTS 10 86 oo "a ers now wear the Flyers’ uniform. ter Larry Wilson. The trade was, 2 ¢ 7 . with it. ioferan? = 94 ON 3 5 4and Halfback Joe Pahr were , .. ypa noint-spreads” in 1949 i . One ex-Flyer, ‘Billy McComb, is made to. give the Caps a better SO THE track decided also to While the Piston elbow was Mogus.c .. 8's 00 2 Valpo's stars. Meier passed 10 ames against DePaul at Chicago, 0S 1] - eds in Korea Is an Indianapolis plaver now and balance and at the same -fime pay a place price of $10.10 on Air dotting Bob's: eye: last .night in Tos : ! a 2 AQ } o Pahr for one touchdown, and 10 vanderbilt at Nashville, Tenn. y ' the Russians— the Caps’ captain, Enio Sclisizzi, strengthen Detroft’s forward line. Service. This “would ~cqs¢ ‘the Logansport, Bob's team was dot- Yaliter 3 > > y «nd El Rapaich for another, and St. John’s at New York: | By United Press &t one time has played on the , track $16,555 if all place tickets ting the “i” in grit. The Olymps Yoial Bo rete RARE scored a third tally himself, and ye PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 27— same team with all of the seven on Air Service were cashed. matched the shine on Bob's orb ~°** © 70 °0 Q * Pahr passed to Sid Marshall for . rout former Indianapolis plavers. Plan Amateur Bouts However, between the time the with a 64-50 win over the Pistons. 1ngjananol . gp 11\ 19_s4 another marker. Pahr added thee THE THREE players -and five Temple “University Ca Sk ated since 1045, __That’s not all. Mud Bruneteau Second annual program of ama: race first was declared ‘official’... rrr Fr BAS rere Ue LS GeO fr PPO A HITE PHUTIRE —aceused-bribers-were-indicted yes behind-twice-tast night on a pair
issed—Crocker
m-country meedy “the Flyers’ new coach, who has teur boxing, sponsored by the and the error was rectified, many : Gren Igwy missed Crocker. Lofgren 2 | Ken Larue scored on a 25-yard terday for fixing the outcome of of touchdowns by Ed Charters his club in a first place tie in the Marion County Democratic Vet- bettors had destroyed their THE PISTON elbow made an Qprien Joust, “Scnaus, Share. Brian, inasg play from John Mathias and Reatioays Jabs ageind Loyola, . 77-yard touchdown pass to Western Division with Pittsburgh, erans, will be staged Thursday at’ tickets. And that's where the impression on Lavoy- and the = gq, "° entages: Indianapilis — ‘Mathias ran 25 yards for Ballin the 1949 National Invitation . ! : : : Ca 5 : . pr JOne, percebiages: Jodlanapolis : z Tournament. The indictments freshman Bob Daniels to upset rissioner Dunlap last year coached six of the pres- the Indiana Democratic Club, 211 Runyon Fund stood to benefit, Olymps made an impression on’ £52" "346 Tndiamapolis—20. of 32 FTA, State's second touchdown. charged Groza received $1000 and| favored Bost University. 20-13 incheon that all ent Indianapolis players at Omaha N, Delaware St. Fighters will be for the track plans to turn over 2000 fans in the Logansport High 625: Ft. Wayne—16 of 22 FTA, 127 Ball State ....... 6 0 0 6—12 ge 4 avored Boston University, 20-13,
It looks now as
--Jim Hay, Frank O'Grady, Earl
from Bland's Gym.
- lected by the bettors.
to the fund any money not col- School
gym. The
“starless” | ing
Officials—Jewell Young and John Pelk-
Valparaiso ...... 7 7 6 14—34
Beard and Barnstable $500 each. The eight accused men were re-
for its fifth straight victory.
for the jug. -— - ~~ - - oS Olymps moved faster than binoc-\ ~~ > Ese leased on bail. Charters made his first appearOF THE total cash put up to Uiars at a burlesque show. When ° N Hogan also revealed that ance Of fe Season Sine Suirering reward Afr Service's place back-1! was all over the Pistons had a ortie iven ace gamblers had approached the aD an 2 nj id $ Syracuse ers, it was estimated only $5,000 nearly drowned in their own ) |players with bribe offers to Same. e struc or the s
1I0WS
ply
) beat the Nov. 3 tight supply
sweat, Two free
worth of undestroyed might: be presented.
High ‘School Football
Tech 28. Shortridge 20. Clinton 33. Terre Haute Wiley 6. Dyer 13. Crete (Ill) 12, East Chicage Roosevelt 21, Whiting 20 Fast Chicago Wasington 47. Hammond 19 Elkhart 6, South Bend Adams (6 tie) Evansville Bosse 20. Evansville Central 18.
tickets
at the half.
throws Joe Grabowski put the Olymps ahead to stay at 41-39 second quarter. The Pistons had started with mn 8-1 Olymps were in front 18-16 at the first quarter buzzer and led, 34-30,
5
by Jumpin’ in the
lead. The
in the elite of Indiana's high
Among Prep Grid Elite
By KURT FREUDENTHAL
United Press Sports Writer
Make room for the slashing Slicers of La Porte today Ky.; Notre Dame at Louisville,
school football ranks.
. They belonged there after their 44-to-0 massacre of
“dump” six other games during the 1948-49 season. The games were against Tulane and St. Louis University in"the 1948 Sugar Bowl Tournament at New Orleans, and against Bradley at Owensboro,
Ky.; Bowling Green at Cleveland, and Xavier at Cincinnati, O.
from the one yard line in the second period after BU’s Harry Agganis had thrown a 26-yard touchdown pass in the opener. Then after Boston went ahead a second time, Charters went 43 yards on a reverse for the score which gave the Owls a 14-13 halftime lead. :
: Gary Tolleston #, Gary Froebel 0. x =. 2 : 4 #4 8 ” = ” n this country. JAUmeng CIATk 31 Himmong Teed ny IT WAS another team victory northern conference defending champion, Mishawaka. They’ HOGAN said there was evi- THE OWL'S clinching T-D eing told they LaPorte oh Mishawaka 5 for Coach Herm Schaefer's fired- led only 6-to-0 at the half, but ————————————— dence that the gamblers and.same midway through the third Portage %, Gary Wirt 0 up crew. Each Olymp scored. when Halfback Bucky Haag ' players dickered over fixing those period when Paul McKernan 23. - A . edestal, 20 R, . cs e in Scotch con- a : Tehe Baste Gar-\}avoy and Paul Walther were ¢cored on a 90-yard kickoff re- besten ' festa io 3 and games, but the deals never were faded back and spotted Daniels this country has Son Bend Somtral 3 ioihen 3. 7, team leaders with 11 points t,rn opening the third period, the Out of the Southern Conference mye all alone on the Boston 45. A perearnings for Westfield 20, Carmel 0. apiece. Buckshot O'Brien got 10, rout was on. lead. Sophomore Quarterback The fixers indicted were the fect strike fell into the big ends
the normal $20 Colle e Scores He hit on three of his four first The Slicers of Coach Johnny Bob Henderson fired two touch- Englisis brothers, Anthony and hands and he romped to the goal r to above $56 9 1 SC quarter shots. Janzaruk, beaten only once this down passes to Bernard Bonde Nick; Saul Feinberg, Marvin, Agganis completed 14 of 2° ch is Britain's Heidelbers 40. Indians State 0. Bucky also made a liar out of season and well-regarded in the to lead the Bulldogs. snapping Mansberg and Nate Brown. All passes for gains totaling 155 dollar earner. Valparaise 34, Ball State 12. The Times pro basketball writer. United Press honor roll (as is Central's six-game winning but Brown allegedly were in- yards. His touchdown heave was lings per bottle A le JamPa 13. wd (Fla) o 1D€ CYnic (Frank Anderson) had Mishawaka) scored three times in string. The Bears ran fifth, volved in the Bradley - Bowling an accurate toss to John Kastanin e up. Before Ko- Bemidil (Minn) Teachers 12, Moorhead o. sald that Bucky was weak on de- the third period. and added 20 He Green Ax of 1949, in the first period, ch distillers av- Branch gericultural Collere (Utah) 19, fengse, How wrong can a guy be? more points in the final stanza. Kowalski. Atlas SS Y- Bt . : Ch 9, y i i i Bottle} how they Dane ends yeiissionl Southern 7. And how nice it is to be wrong. to hand the Maroons one of their ’ ww Windy City Named for To See Action
what you ‘pay f Scotch goes to ibutors in profits charges and to rnment in taxes. e chances for in-
Hofstra 13, King's Point 0. Fort Leonard Weed 19, Camp Breckinridge 14. | George Washington 19, Furman 19, Gustavus Adolphus 13, Hamline 6. Kentucky State 13, St. Augustine 8. Kirksville Teachers 22, Warrensburg 6. Lebanon Valley 7, Albright 6, Little Rock Junior 40, Hendrix 20. Loras 35. Buena Vista 6, Middle Tennessee State 20,
Milwaukee Hawks in Crawfords- a {ville. They take an exhibition markers, one on a 70-yard punt record of 7-2 to the Athenian city. return as Mishawaka wound up Four of those wins have been With a combined net gain of miscored” since the departure Alex Nus seven yards. Emory and Groza and Ralph Beard. # a =
Tonight the Olymps mest the Worst beatings in years.
Jack Bunce scored two of the
On Rassle Card
A battle between Wladek Kowalski, the “Polish Apollo,” and The, Mighty Atlas, Hollywood's strongman, will highlight pro
Three $100,000 Races
' CHICAGO, Oct. 27 (UP)— Windy City, Irish-bred two-year-old colt, has been nominated for ‘three of the four $100,000 added races at Arlington Park. and
n=
NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (UP)Newly acquired Jimmy. Conacher will center the New York Rangers’ third line in tomorrow night's game with the Montreal Canad-
iens. Conacher, purchased from
h imports? Miami 20. Mississippi 3. eg.» MEANWHILE, unbeaten South wrestling action in the Armory washington Park in 1952. It was the Chicago Black Hawks on nmediately, says re india 8 Central rolled over Goshen, 39 to Tuesday night. announced today. waivers yesterday, will replace te, vice president Savannah State 26, Aibany State 12. IT'S HARD to describe what 7, capture the east NIHSC Whitey Whittler, of Springfield, Windy City has dominated Paul Ronty, who is fighting an
[{iford Distillers
South Dakota Mines 26, Sioux Falls 0,
Washburn 32, Beloit 20.
the Olymps are doing. So much of flag, thus qualifying to meet
Mo., -and Farmer Jones, popular
attack of influenza.
Southwestern (Kas.) 19, Northwestern : juvenile racing in Europe. la oh gre 88 Cilhnar 15 Macelester § their work doesn't show up in rohanly either Gary Emerson or Arkansas hill-billy, will clash in|" Racing Secretary Ivan Thomas TE says that be- | Temple 20, Boston U. 13. the box scores. Even their dour gpaet Chicago Roosevelt for the the semiwindip. announced receipt of entry blanks
‘great gaps” in ~ 8cotch whisky t war, there has al exhaustion of
{ Wayne State
} |
| Wofford 21, Newberry 0.
Wayne (Neb.) Teachers 26, Kearney 20, 26, Kearney State 20. Waynesburg (Pa.) 26, St. Franc Weber (Utah) 7, Carbon 2. West Chester 41, Millers 14. : William Jewell 6, McPherson (Kas.) 0,
|General Manager and President NTHSC championship next month. J. R. (Babe) Kimbrough manages
Is (Pa) 0. 3 half-smile when he sees Joe scoreless tie by La Porte |Holland, Cliff Barker, Leo Barn- geek eked out a 13-7 win at
held: to a last
South Bend Riley,
Another bout is being planned to complete an all-heavyweight card.
from Ray Bell, owner of the Wyndham-Staunton colt, for Chicago's “twin” three-year-old features, the $100,000 Arlington
{horst, Walther, Lavoy & Co, City. . Classic and American Derby, and distilled in 194D OMinhoma AGM SY Doviolt 7. keeping: themselves and the fans NE es Roosevelt shaded Fighter Arrested Th S000 Wak mgten Pong ars. The limita- | Newport News Apprentice 21, Wilson in a sweat. . . 1 2 2 n the quantities | Missouri Valley 34, Culver-Stockion 0, | Whiting, 21 to 20, to keep pace On Dope Charge (handicap. tb e shipped ari [osm Soin | Maybe it can’t last. Maybe the with Emerson, 21 to 0 winner over eA a | 180 Lived Hs lAoaies T : team will fold like the White Sox./Gary Mann Thursday. Both are NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (UP)—A Brewers Collect $880 | youre 0 ay EO producers of thp ggies op Detroit But they'll cut the heart out of unbeaten in league play. But professional fighter who appeared Each for LW Series offer 8 cance ps rahds are main. DETROIT, Oct. 27 (UP) —Okla- every Olymp player before it Hammond's Wildcats dropped out on last night's Joe Louis-Rocky y ! fi pay 1 many t gl) ality standards homa A&M relentless aerial happens. Meanwhile, it's a thrill of division contention, East Chi- : s LOUISVILLE, KY. Oct. 27 on 300 cits TET om h attack proved more effective than '0 Write about the gamest bunch cago Washington steam-rolling to Marciano card at Madison Square (UP)—Members of the, winning byes PEEL A =~ lers resumed op- | the University of Detroit's bril- ©f 8uys we've seen in professional 5 47-to-19 victory, the Cats’ first Garden was reid i Hl all yrilwaukee Brewers received $880 place for Yo any © a , small scale in og . liant but erratic ground game last basketball, conference loss .in four starts. = today ona narco i are o. 20, apiece for their victory over Mon- if YOU “0 lgted A 1948 and since 4 0 ond A De BS night as the Aggies defeated the! . nn 4 a » Vincent (Jimmy) Gambino, tic treal in the Little World Series, opemPE = ed sect? Titans, 20 to 7. The Aggies won! THIS MAY answer the ques-| INDEPENDENT Hammond was arrested by federal narcotic \ = oo" co 00 president (he c\as
oduced virtually al Scotch inven-
MEAT FOR THE FREEZER—Fred Hoffmeyer (left), Allison
the game without benefit of fisti- tion asked by the little boy on Noll,
cuffs and Tackle Wilbanks Smith, Evanston Ave.
the top-seeded club, He wanted to stretched its victory skein to 14
agents at the Garden just after losing on a technical knockout to
Bruce Dudley announced today. The Royals, on the short end
Ray Wilding of England in the
accused of throwing the. punch know what he could believe in with a 27-to-0 win at Calumet ies between that broke Drake University star now that basketball's in trouble. City, TIL, Fractional. eight-round semifinal. eR ee , Johnny Bright's jaw last week, | Well, sonny, one thing you can Well-regarded Evansville Bosse U. S. Attorney Myles Lane sald Lait SIaOil Fuses. came in, returned last week. Hoffmeyer brought down the bear with a |played only on offense and made believe in is a team that believes turned in a mild upset by knock- that Gambino sold 55 grains ons: te. pl os iby single shot from 35 feet. Biggs got the bobcat and one deer. no outstanding plays. " |in itself, _ i, _'Ing city rival Central off the un- heroin for $80. Sih es Of a
3 Sn : ; 4 y v . . . y « 2x go ¥ : . . .
foreman, and Claude R. Biggs fright) display their take following a hunting trip into Canada. They went to Warroad, Minn., and then by boat to Falcon Island, ke of the Woods, Ont., and
built up in Scotinventory is not roducers as hav- “- i the maturity itain quality, Mr.
g S ~ ae * . A J ~ ¥ . 4, i 25
