Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1952 — Page 28
‘PAGE 28
n all ranks of the sport
he line, teammates go their seprate ways , . . trades, injuries rnd retirement usually shape 8 their destiny. In bowling, a mvastime general-§ © ly free. of in, § "I iuries, there are §§ three men in Indianapolis who have been through the thick” and thin of compe tition for ‘17 consecutive years, Today ! they are still getting there share of strikes, > Joe White, Connie Curran and Charley Quinn were on the: line together when the first .game was bowled in the Holy Cross League in 1934 at the ald Delaware alleys. This year they are again blasting the maples together, but the site is | ; Fox-Hunt Alleys on Monday nights, This trio has been instrumental in winning four Holy Cross League pennants—in 1938-40-42-| 15. During the mid-thirties, the| personable Irishmen represented Fox-Steak House; along with such names as Len Sylvester, Bill Brunot, and Danny Haley. Haley ‘tuck with the group for 15 years but switched over to Haag Drugs n 1050 and is now a strong rival, Whité, Curran and Quinn won the league crown for Mull Tavern in 1947 and then wore the colors of Mid-West Sales. This year the keglers are performing for Raftery’s Five. And 'tis a fine job they are doing. Raftery’s” Five are. leading | the league on a 44-22 record and are out to sew up the title early after getting caught in a | rolloff last year and dropping the crown to New York Flower Shop:
.. u » WHITE, a 50-year-old bespec-| tacled veteran, has been secretary
Jack Welsh |
hree Pals Sma
THERE ARE many long|of the league for 16 years. In the i mid-forties, \ssociations among athletes posting a 190-average but this
vorld. But somewhere along!’
Curran, a hard-hitting silver haired bowler, carries .a 176 average this year but usually
| in the Printcraft League at
Joe was regularly season he has 1606. In 1945, White, who has bowled 22 years, rolled a 720 - series. This mark stood as the highest in the league until Joe
Kirkoft fired a 744 in 1947,
finishes in the 190-bracket. He consistently led the league several years ago and once was chosen from the city field as the receipent of the Tom Bemis Sportsmanship Award,
side with 619 in the Bowes Seal Quinn is, a man who answers Fast League at West Side. Groeto 59 years of age but flashes the pel sparked Schuster Coal te 2728 vitality of a 19-year-old. Charley team total on games of 212-205-formerly managed the Fox-Hunt 202 Schuster Coal’s threesome in-
Alleys until moving over to'cluded 870-907-951. Pritchett-Hunt-O'Grady last year. Bertha Gorka of Schuster Coal Although he has been ham- was runnerup with 588 and Dotpered by a sore arm in recent |tje Berkopes of Hickman Whirlayears, Charley had a 185 \ways fired ‘576. Other league
average in 1950-51. His current |goores included Ann Sauter, Ban-ipollad 600 in
average Is 168 but in recent gamed his old form. It. was a common site to see| Quinn on the Fox-Hunt alleys] with a group'of pin boys i showing the lads the do's and don'ts of the game. r a 601 series in the same loop. This fine trio cannot be tabbed! Mel Roach of Moulding Inc. as “old” in ranks of bowlers. In| 4 pq Stevenson of National fact, their keen enthusiasm and|mpgjjer Sales shared top billing skill hint of many more winning i, the Coca-Cola League with 633 years on the alleys. To the op-\,a0p at Pritchett-Hunt-0'Grady. position ‘this can mean only one| pg; Monday of Model’ Tire was
Joe Bise of Tansy Motors led
| with 642 at Pennsylvania Alleys. C. Cherry of Uhl's had
thing headaches and In large ty, jeader in the Won-Ten Clasnumbers. sie at Pritchett’s with 641, Walt 2 Eggerding ‘started with 276 but Harding Gets Lone 652 only finished with a 636 series. THE GREMLINS ruled the Harold Diehoff was third with 622 alleys pits last night and In-land Ken Anderson of Century
'dianapolis bowlers were unable to Cleaners posted 608.
shake free from the frustration] A 643 series by Omer Larrison of fair-to-middlin’ performances. of Shawnee A. C. was strong Bud Harding of Hilton- |enough to lead Iaria’s Recreation Hawley saved the day for the |League. men when he rolled a 652 series | the Ideal Furniture League at Delaware. Fox-Hunt. Ralph Shearer of GulHarding's work was the only ling Auto Service was top gun honor count-of the evening and he with 635 and Jim Meyer of Sacred
{earned the total on games of 217- Heart Lanes had 629. The other | 258-177.
scores included Jim Kemmerer, Hilda Groebel of Schuster Coal Sacred Heart, 617; Ronald Whitwas the standout on the distaff man, Ideal Furniture, 612; Vern
8
COMPANY, I
4
Dee Restaurant, 548; Mary reague at Dezelan’s. weeks Quinn seems to have re- gpuzich, Milano Inn, “547, and Erodes Marie Christian, Milano Inn, 539.
the Fi-Blak Insulation League |
'Mary Bipple
There were seven 600 series in!
'Ann Martin :
CORPORATE D,
Yeh a i Siig
Havens, Roddy’s Auto, 611; Russ Houze, 609, and Bob Plummer, Halcomb Super, 607. _ . Bob Marshall posted’'a 623 high in the Shrine League at Central Alleys while Bob Bowers and Ed Brill Jr,, finished one-two in the Speedway Handicap League. Sowers, rolling for Carlisle Pumping, had 627 and Brill of Pearson Hardware hung up 615. Mace Jenkins of Yaver Men's Shop paced the action in the Gwinn Paint League at West Side with 635. Boyd Thaxton had 622 and Charlie Maddox of School Employees 4olled 602. \Bernie Connolly's 615 was the runner-up score to Harding in the Printcraft Major League while Harry Stiver led the Delawar® with 617. Gus Krebs and Bill Krineg, rolled 604 and 601, respectively. In the Speedway Mixed League, Tora Greenwood had 613 and Charles Urbanc) the. Holy Trinity Fonnie 605 led the«Elks League at Antlers. u
Other scores last night:
Sturm’s—Recreation. League George Howard Bullding Trade Shaner 581 albot Lanes—Western Electric 97
Diamond Chain
{x
George
{Bob Van Cleve v0 590 Uptown—V.A. Mixed League Charles Pittinger a v0 0.538 Rosemary Harrison » : .. 470 Christ The King Ed Lichtenbing 580 St. Patrick’'s—Women's Thursday Kate Tuttle 482 Spetdway—Linde Air Producls Chuck Navakis 584 Sport Bowl—Madison Ave. Flower Jim Purpura 571
Derline Fraker Growers League Stumph evens 3T4 Fox-Hunt—E. C. Atkins Charley Prather ..578 Fun Bowl—Women's League
$easas 433
Henry
Gladys Chestnut | . 513 Ruth Turner ‘ 505 Taria—Christian Church Women Bernice Schmid ..503 Delaware—Bell Telephone Men Wayne Strong eee. OT Dezelan's—Deselan-Brisnik Viola Akeman ,.......: Tad ae a. A 520
sssnvenes B
Evelyn Saligoe . Allison Women Ann Coffin cesasensee 467
Men's League Woody Smith wis hah Ch sans sas mad 504 Fountain Square—Recreation League
(Luke Heiman vor 0 1084
Moose League Bob Whitlock ..587 Antlers—Thursday Night Women
Louis SBtegemoller Ilinois—P. R. Mallory Ginny Stroh terns a Lenora - Shoemaker ...
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
shing Pins Since 1934
P. R. Mallory
Russ Anderson
Frank Bowman
Beech Grove—~Women's
Ida Bottema Majorie Lynch
5 League «528 502
St. Catherine League
Charles Simmons
Broad Ripple—~Thursday Matinee
Helen Rohr
Hillcrest League
Barbara Davis
ladiana~—Farm Eleanor Buehkorn ‘
Eli Lilly League "Meyer Electric ier
John Lamb Fred Hauk Glen Kelshaw
Moon-Lite—
Estle Nash Betty Besisi
Doris Sustmichel Ne : Moenlite Major
Mel Asher
Parkway-—A
Kate Pickett Eloise Webb
Art Fields
merican United Life * Highland Women Shrine Guild ~~’
Margaret Sonatser Major at Firemen League
Burea
Hines B88 508
434 _ gs Buffalo Bisons strengthened their ++..581 hold on the third and final playso9 off spot in the Eastern Division 564 Of the American Hockey League
last night by defeating the Cin- studded copy of the Taj Mahal. 521 cinnatl Mohawks, 4 to 1. :
sees
Thursday Sponsor
Prritchett-Hunt-0'Grady—~RCA. League Herman Garsmett
i Pritchett's—Bridgeport Brass :
C. E. Wynn .s 570 Thursday Women Ruth Raney ' Fert eves vr 530 Edna Bunt... ...c.coredivanvse . 559 chiennanes 533
of Apex CoaliMarsle ‘Wechsler... x
Omer Russell v ov 504 Valhalla—Inland Container Rosemary Smith ..... a 48 Otis. McFee ‘a ¥ 546 West Side—~Women's FP. M. Leazue ay Sibley oiive suievisn . 504
" 10-Game Schedule
LOUISVILLE, KEN
me PST SY
- -Lead Over
Pennsylvania—Stewart Warner League .
4 in seven games with Cincinnati out of the West Virginia hills with ....515 this season, enabled them to move |jttle more than a stylish swing ..445 5x points ahead of the fourth- and unconfined bunions.
432
(fn the
{Goalie Phil McAtee's bid for a
% 2: FRIDAY, FEB. 15, 1052 | |
Bisons Widen Look Out Fellows, Snead
Has That Hungry Look : By'OSCAR FRALEY for about $20,000,” Sam walled; United Press Sports Writer ,/“Well, the -contract called fi |. MIAMI, Feb. 15 — Slammin’ eg; 500 and so far the dange . a Sammy Snead was moanin' the thing has cost me $60,000. money blues today as he prepared «aan I ain’t got that kind of {for a swift return to the golf money,” ¢he insisted. : {tournament trail. | That last part may cause a By United Press - { The man who reportedly has huckle among his fairway cone BUFFALO, N.Y. Feb, 15—The more money buried in tomato gtjtyents., For, while the Slams cans than there is in Ft. KnoX mer doesn’t live up to their theory [recently decided to build himself {hat he makes a copper Indian a house in Coral Gables. And to squeal, Old Jackson can keep a hear Sam tell it his new shanty right tight .squeeze on Uncle cost more than a diamond- gam’'s lovely green bond, any dee nomination. :
- ” » “JUST TAKE one thing,” Sam says, “and I wish you would. I called up a house furnishing store and asked them to send me out some lamps. You know, little old table lamps and such. “Well,-they sent me over seven of them and I'll bet you couldn't guess how much the bill was,” Sam stuttered. “Well, those seven
hey “I've got to get back to work,” The victory, the Bisons’ fifth .omplained the man who came
place Syracuse Warriors in the Eastern Division race, No other AHL games were scheduled. he isn't a first cousin to Capt. Defenseman Stan Long, Cen- John Smith, but the Slammer ter Ab DeMarco and Right Wing- 300n became known as an
man Lorne Davis scored in* the| LF Vv. Usually that stands for first period to give Buffalo all First Family of Virginia. little bitty lamps were $500. One
In his case it meant “First of them was just a piece of tans McNabney ee: Sor Financier of Virginia.” Nor was gled-up wire, like you'd get in Ys p : Samuel Jackson exactly prodigal a junkyard, and they wanted $79 ton of the Pacific Coast League, ; ' :
with his pennies. But to hear for it. made i final Bison goal late gam ‘tell of his current house- x wx = “ st period. | building troubles, he's down to THOSE incidents, along. with Center Buddy O'Connor ruined his last few kopeks. landscaping and what not, have
“I came down here from West shaken the thrifty Sam to the
” ” o IT WAS quite a parlay, maybe
WORCESTER, Mass, Feb, 15 shutout when he made good on a Virginia and all I wanted to do very top of his backswing. So ' (UP) — Holy Cross College an- close shot in the second period. was build me a little old house he’s on hig way back to work. snounced. ts “1953 football sched- (frre — i ule today-—a 10-game affair opening Sept. 27 and ening Nov. | OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9:30 10 5 {with Boston College. The schedule: Sept. 27, at Dart- wy i is s . A vt mouth; Oct. 4, Fordham; Oct. 11, ; . og : > i at New York University; Oct. 18, Nn , A LN 7 Brown; Oct. 25; at Syracuse; Nov. : | \ 1 1, at Marquette; Nov. 8, Colgate; : ’ Nov. 16, Quantico Marines; Nov. Te ) A } ; 22, Temple; Nov, 29, Boston Col- ; 5 > at lege at Boston. : “ VIER RA ER " Feds a . oll * ® . Pontiac for Parilli Springtime is sweater time! Save in this LEXINGTON, Ky. Feb. 15 : ! (UP)—Fans of Vito (Babe) -Par- 7 : illi, Rochester, Pa. Kentucky's All-America quarterback, have presented him with an automo- : i > WO ) bile. % a I - 1 Funds for the car, a shiny new ; SELL" BLE LLB A VY. : Pontiac, were raised in a cam- ek CW. » - : : MEN'S paign headed by Ed Ashford, corr ee * a ; o13 sports editor of the Lexington % . 514 Herald. : - ORIG. 6.95 195... 7 A. ORIG. 7.95 COAT SWEATERS Baby shaker knits with ribbed cuffs and /bottoms, taped shoulders for permanent fit, two pockets! Dark green, grey, " maroon, camel or luggage. Sizes 36 I to 46.4 B. ORIG, 6.95 PULLOVERS With V-neckline, ribbed cuff and bot- . tom, taped shoulders. Men's small, o
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FRIDA Four
Sectional qualification ters tomorr«
And, like finals at 1} month, the tional Is ex biggest fire: Tech, un meets, com; ridge, Munci Anderson a Muncie’'s se Lafayette Roosevelt a stage sectiol Individual weight class will compete Feb, 23 at J Twenty-th than last y the four sec
BLOOMIN to-Mater De Decatur Ce Ben Davis. fordsville, K Central and has Rooseve Hammond, Howe Milit St. John’s of Weigh-ins p. m. Prelim semi-finals c and the fina Muncie's fin: Coach Bill team, Marioi Central Con could move contention -sl individual of vidual cham als would pu meet Since | the favorite at Jeff. CH Indiana Con
4 TECH'S U ers Include: Bob Pollak, Edgar Lam Woolen, 168, Pollak, 10: last. vear, hj and Woolen, ball shoulder Shortridge, dual meet ( beaten Jim port's 1951 graduation - ington’s chief Central; cong ton in a du The Pant] lettermen, hs who won tt crown two y Jeff's Joe Moser, 148; Jim MecClat Rohr, 178, heavyweight, in the NCC
Fight Res:
By NEW YORK Bossio, 1243. Pi Bowman, 128'3,
(Ratings
Kentucky Duquesne Kas, State 8t. Bonav'ture Washington Illinois Dayton Louisville foton Hall owa
St. Louis Minnesota
Hamline
a ™ - >» “
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uke W. Ky. State 8. W, Texas St. Murray 8t Memphis St. Texas
7
Navy Penn State Yale
~-~
B. Wallace Case Rose Poly .
S.E, Okla. Bt, W. Michigan
Geo'town, Ky, ami, Fla. ssSquthern ice 80. Carolina Tampa Texas Tech . Texas Western *
Virginia West Virginia Wofford
F Brig'’hmYoung * California Oregon Pepperdine . Seattle J, + . UC. L:. A. Washington Wyoming
Amherst e Brooklyn own Buffalo * Columbia Connectcut
F&M Gettysburg Holy Cross Lafayette LaSalle Louisville Manhattan avy Niagara Penn State Pittsburgh . Rochester ‘ t. Bonav/ture ° t.Francis,N.Y.
eton Hall Syracuse’ Vermont ‘ Williams ARRAN le
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