Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 May 1952 — Page 12
* take a saw buck from Gross for looking the other way would
you can have 'em.
hated bear baiting, not because it gave pain to the bear, but
Press Box--| By Joe, Williams
Legalize Gambling To End Corruption
5 Send
NEW YORK, May 10—Couple of years ago they had Frank Costello in Washington before a Senate committee
to testify on matters appertaining to and touching upon
gambling.
: dy ~~ A previous witness had referred to Frank as-a glori-|
fied goon, a picturesque judgment, though hardly complimentary, yet to the question of why does ‘illegal horse betting exist?” the distinguished racketeer was strikingly forthright.
“You can't operate unless you get the green light from somewhere.”
i you've been listening to the dulcet notes of the Brooklyn mocking bird, Harry Gross, as he unfolds the fantastic and shocking story of police corruption, you know what Frankie boy meant. You get the green hight from the police and to get it you must come across.
” ” # THE SENATORS asked Frankie Boy another question. . “How can Congress stop bookies?” “Stop horse racing,” was the reply. That would da it all right but there's another, better
way. Legalize them, or rather the operation. In that way |
J AE hy
AOI SrA
SB
Little League
Fd
you sever the main artery of corruption. Remove the cause; ’
and you remove the effect.
Is there a more desirable way? Nobody's found it in generations of seeking and there's scant evidence the human instinct to gomble is diminishing or honesty is becoming more
fashionable. ..........
. 8 J : Sz : i a sigma oy ot AGB RRS ONE RESON it’ “inipossible 16 eliminate bookies 18 most people see nothing wrong in betting. This may also
explain why, when one of these scandals break, you find so
many cops on the make. It's quite conceivable a cop who'd
give his life to save a child in the streets or stand unflinching and shoot it out with a mad dog’ killer.
{
Basically our cops, I like to believe, are pretty decent
guys. As for their superiors who were on the make, too,
: The Ma Grundys tell us we shouldn't bet. It isn't they want to save us from our weakness. They just don't like
350 ‘Players’ Try for
to bet themselves. Or as Macaulay put it: “The puritan
because it gave pleasure to the spectators.” Singularly, the race track people are militantly opposed to legalized betting, even though it would enormously expand their business. One of their reasons (this was actually expressed in an address by Dolad Ross, president of the Delaware track, a paper I suspect was written by Bryan Field. his general manager) is that it would ‘encourage pepple to bet who can’t afford it.”
JUST WHAT ‘economic level a person must achieve before it is deemed safe for him to risk two bucks Mr. Ross
Places on Tiny Teams
By JACK WELSH . TY COBB, the baiter of modern major leaguers, doesn’t even have an argument on the way children play baseball today. b
“I'm a second baseman,” was the 10-year-old’s information. “Okay son, go out on the diamond, we'll hit you a few grounders.”
Bats were sometimes from rem-| nants of the woedpile, Pe That was the
did not state. When I attempted to explore the subject! Spencer Drayton, the FBI flatfoot who heads racing's gestapo, thoughtfully and gratutiously lectured me on editorial niceties, a kindness to which, I'm saddened to say, 1 did not respond with commensurate appreciation. The racing people, of course, are not the slightest interested in whether you can afford to bet or'not. If they were they'd close every thing but the $50 windows. They have a pretty sweet racket going for them and they don’t ‘want anything to happen to it. What worries them is it might get too big and arouse the reformers. : Gross gave an interesting picture of the mechanics of his operation, apart from the pay offs whch involved more than 100 blue coats and apparentiy want all the way to the top. All the essential information was avoilable, scratches, odds, jocks, track conditions. 10 the question: “Could onyone walk in?” he blandly answered “We were open from 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.”
- o } MOST oF the time one of the New York tracks was running. It was legal to bet at the track but illegal to drop into one of the Gross stores and bet. But would you feel you had become a law breaker because you gave Harry Gross your business instead of George Widener at Belmont? The technicalities of the law wouldn't concern you. Very likely you'd be interested only in the facilities and whether you'd get paid off —and it appears Gross was, in this sense, as responsible as Widener. He never "welshed.
: of the boys is wonerful and their] (have had a shutout except for y y |Chambers ol ep PITTSBURGH CHICAGO H A C i KB E S U L ! willingness to work would rival| © usage Bowell Flack" some inept fielding. Pittsburgh! = ABEQAl = ABHO A " - any rookie in a major leagled Cardials 2 3-to-3 victory over the Scored in the seventh when Clem Brirme.ib 101 1a dinet” aii. : : : turf 40 By United Press AT HELMONT PARK Pp aw Cincinnati Reds and square their Koshorek got a double as Hank (Kinet 2 1 7 oSsuerif 3 50 AT CHURCHILL DOWNS | d~Carys Hove (C. McCreary) 10. 430.) THE TRYOUTS have attracted Series at one game apiece. Sauer failed to relay the ball to MCtsonsh 413 2 onsivell § BE Mr. Good (8. Brooks). L160 280 The Wench iJ Dewitt 1838 a cross section of Kids ages 8 A three-run rally in the last of the Infield, and scored on George yy Greet § § o Simin § o'1 1 DF. Alex (LC. Cook. 10.00, 5.80! 3 Hoplite "th Tobin) 3630. 8.0. 630:(s 10" myer all have-a glove and|the sixth inning gave Chambers Metkovich's pinch-hit single to/flersia 18 & $Rushs = 311 8 8. Brooks), 5.00. $38: Naom! (H pioodhouses 43% ve {usually a cap but the “uniforms” his second victory of the season Second base. Both Bob Ramaz-|asex "196060 | . dock ann), 8.30, oy Cra Boot (N. Wall 12.70. 8.10.iare everything from a T-shirt/2fter Roy McMillan hit a pop-fly zotte and Dee Fondy neglected Dickson.p 2 * e 3 \ is J. Reman 1143 ie ahah 3.00, een 3.10, Ti [lettered “Butch” to the top half/double to center field with: the to throw the ball to the plate. | , ius 3 THT Totals BRET goin 10. QrohAl 3.00, 4s 20.12.30 Sar raat Bitten Mccreary) $48-'0f big brother's out-sized college Dases loaded to give the Reds al Rush gave up only three | Metkovich singled for Dickson in 7th.| Halcyon Blue (8. 1 Brooks). 2.40: out; aGrillle Young (8, Dimautol out. | jersey. ; |3-to-2 lead in the top half of the| walks and struck out one. He Pliaserald vogoed Sut for Wilks in 9th | S—Hal's Linda (I. Bairow). 8.30, 4.80. 5_Duke Fanell i Heo). 13.80. 9.00. Fat Boys, thin boys, tall ones, Sixth. i went three and two-thirds in- |b. 4.00: t (A. Perratuolo), 6.60. 880: Potpourri (O. Cutshawi, 83.30, 19.80. | ehort ones, bow-legs, stubby | Singles by Peanuts Lowrey and| pj bef 1 rio RECON SBEs 000 000 100— 1 | 5.80; My Sister (H. Lindberg), 8.80. | Mixture (B. Green). 6.30. ie | | mings ore he allowed a hit OD iv 5s 2rd C7 010 00) Olx— 3 $—Roval Flavor (K. Ch Teh), 9.80, 3.00.) S—Armageddon (R, Yorki 3130, . 3.30.1 legs, freckles and warts — (Red Schoendienst and a double] UNS—Koshorek, Jackson 2, Atwell. a S00 440 Slmais 1B coimath: "L$ 4 | they're all these. These kids by Hal Rice tied the score at 33 a onhers Beat | FoRome Mie ek. 30"§ 30. Prince Marci Sarrgw. 9040. Tevet Master 3 (Higler), $40. 8.48.) are twins in only ome respect and then a single by Dell Rice) J0PNErs ti son. Motkovich Fondy. #3. 8.40: appy Carrier q. Adams), 4.40. | Tripoll (8. Imetis), 4.00. —the love of baseball. gave the Cards their winning Twice 2 0 d 6-2 Td BALE res a Koshorek. | 080. 0. Bra me's Bey ST clay, 4.30: Bilietua i Woodhouse): (130. 996:| The instructors’ lot is not an Marigin. ’ and DOUBLE PLAYS—Dickson, Koshorek 0,’4 30; ‘Desert Raid |D. Geurlock), 4.40'| Canterbury (D. Tobias, 4.0. easy one. While the boys turn Blackwell's - defeat was his; BLOOMINGTON, ind, May 10, Mert ON BASES—Pittsbursh 7, Chi3.80, 3.00; This ar (8 Brooks), 4.00. 1_publicity Miss (W. Kirk), 6.40. 400, /0Ut to play baseball, they are fourth in five decisions. .| (UP)—Right-handers Paul Giel **f8&s oN BALLS—Dickson 2, Rush 3. 420; Winning Stride (J. Adams), 4.00 32 Make Hay (C. Bierman), 12.30, 3.80; short on finesse and know-how. CINCINNATI ST. LOUIS |and Ken McGonagle pitched Min-| STRUCK OUT—Dickson 2, Wilks 2, fear BE et oo 39.80. Bnet inet 1% 00. 280. 360:| That's the Little Leagues’ assign: mations" s" 0": "s clavianess's § § § NOSOta to a double-header triumph Hrrs_ort pickson 8 tn 6. Wiks 3 tn 30, 15.00; Poxiets (B. Fisk), 10.60, 6.40; | HIST, S0gk JR Hutor do 340: Le®Siment, a big one where anxious Adamedd 4 1 1 OHemusss 4 ¢ 3 3 Over Indiana today, 2 to 0 and 6 to|* JY ANP EArNED BUNS—Diekson 2| i Cain 1G" Glasaner:, 18.80, AE Siem. a lyearlings are taught—slowly but Adcock 3 I 1 oMusteiis 3 | » | 2 In Big Ten baseball. PINNING. PIFCHER dork 7 and : si: oop Jude iL. Richards). 3.80, 3.20! ! 30 4 I, 1 ty Cy, Plarmant, , 14 3 skillfully — how to get the base-! ghtwskiy 3 3 3 : rey.ef 4 2 3 0 Minnesota ......... 000 020 000 2 6 4 Sf NG PITCHER-—Dickson® (1-5). naware IR. Gonzalez; 9.00. {3.80; Chased Again (E. Arcaro), 2.40 ossle 3 3 $3ehndnst2h 4 1 3 3 (Indiana 900 000 000— 0 5 4 YRMPIRES Stewart, Guelieimo, Mon-| wun Daly Double simée vol eLaran (A Vasil, 88. 's 00 3.90, | Pall job done. MeMilanss § 1 3 sp Rloedt 4 2 1 8 "Giel and Steiger, Colnitis and Sampias. |lan and Gere: een of Slike (0 Olussaer, 140, Avsley (P. McLlean), 530. 4.00; Syivan| And who knows — a decade Blackwells 3 1 8 Chambers.p & 0 1 1 Minnesota .....0.... , 000003 3— 610 11 TIMECLISe . 0 s1e "80: (H. Keene) 5.30. VAI Rock (M. Catfarelin), 4.00. « 'r emple 1-000 . Indiana . 2 200 000 0— 2 4 3! A TENDA PR— A186. 4—Mad YET (D. Madden), 11 6 5-~G. R. Petersen (G. Cardoza), 12.60, rom now some of these apple- — —— ee | McGonagle and Steiger; Weber, Rich-| ————— eg Mad Aral, (D. Madden) reel $30: (3.40. 340: Knixhts Reward (E. Campbell). cheeked kids might be thick, Totals 36102410 Totals “32 92710 ards (7) and Campl : edi G38 Banc Band. iv. valde). dd. oo | 4 8 Delfeht "tE. Arcaro:. 3.80. 2.60. shouldered rookies standing at the! Temple fouled out for Blackwell In BUN. | © mmm moore Blues Release Page | adows Imp (CG. Glasneri, 7.60, 4.40, 3 30; "330 250. ; Cincinnati ........ . §40° Pine’ Vitie' ta. Pedetsans.’ 8.80. 5.00: Buraging Lady’ (JN. Hardibrook). 320. Plate . . . the names of Cardinals, a “100 ss sx—s Rymkus on Mend | KANSAS CITY. Mo, May 10 Tass A eenst. 3.40. 4.00. 20. 10.00. onderful You (J. N. Hardinbrook). Yankees, Tigers emblazoned ¢RUNS—Adams, Adcock Borkowski, (UP)—Onetime New York Yan§48: Saint Nicholas ‘(R Gonzales. 30: 1000 8 Biff: ick, Sutton” IX, GraYl. |) ross their chest Sianghter, Lewres, Schocndienst. Rice. 2. | Lou Rymkus, an assistant line kee fireman Joe Page hit the end pi Shaver Bound 0, avers) Edo, | bine Gener (8 collins, 488. 3.00. 5h RUNS BATTED IN a MihLa coach at Indiana University, is'of the line today. 00; imme 4A. Despiritol, 12.00, 5.40. Wohneda (R. Root. a ne 8 TWO BASE RITS-TD Rice. (in good condition following a Page, a few years ago the ace ts (H Keene, S40 320. 280. , AT GOLDEN GATE | FOR THE MOST part, the boys| BOUHLE Prats ams. Slauchter. =~ knee operation at the Methodist left-handed relief pitcher who was odrigues), 4.00, 3.30: Briek okt (JO) Zutel), 400: 580. will pass into manhood seeking to Musial Blackwell to Matton fo Kinsew Hospital, Rymkus, the ex-Cleve- a key to two Yankee champion-| 80, {land Browns and Notre Dame ships, was given his outright re-|
AD ) hy | ha kin), 31.60, 10.00, 6.00; 3.00: haapalt oreno), 32 ' al i eens) 80, 1.80; fo irst. : on Sienal iL Jeene) 00 300 Crack! {MGs " Jones). 430. 280: AT GARDEN L a ' 30, 4.50; Lyin Polly, (J. Stout), 8.00. 4.00, T. ts Out to (E, i$), 4.20. 3.00; 2.90: Teddysun $17.80, lowbrook (C. Burr), 3.60. a oss. Snooper A Peterson, 93 addy 1 iC" Baer) I. 280: £35: Jesuty Pate Ww! Marah. 3.00 £ ¢ Hy 20, Wg XN . Longden), 11.1 (P. Mo: w
OW
Tie" oo
r), 5.30, en), ie 2.40 er). 3. R i, 18 CER Ta
— y
Tedds- ways remember the beginning— Kiussewski, By Blackos way! gl 8— | Kluszewski ny Bisckwell Glave
, the Little League. [and 4: hy |W
d), 4.70, 3.90; Priend
0.
% The boy hesitated a moment. “What's a matter, son.” The kid's . |face flushed and he spoke meekly, “I...1...I don't know where second base is.” The Little League had a customer,
- o ” AND THEN there was the time when a pitcher on the mound 2 making faces at the catcher t
gaslight ‘era. Today the Little T.eagues have come to the fore as the best elementary school the sport has ever known, a Indianapolis is aboard the band-
wagon, The prog- Jack Welsh ress may be
and shaking his head. An instrucor went out to the mound to seen any afternoon in the twi-}speak to the boy. light dust at the State Fair-| “Hey, Eddie, what's idea of grounds’ parking lot. | all this head shaking. We don’t a & @ | have any signals in batting ED HARRIS, long an expo-| ice.” nent of children’s recreation, the| “Yes sir, I know,” said the boy, father of Little Leagues in this/ ‘but the big league pitchers on city. And now he's got so many|TV keep nodding their heads and children he doesn’t know what/I thought I'd better do it too. to do. g : {This is my tryout.” When Harris and his as- The hustle of these little people soclates decided to inaugurate a | Was best summed up by the lad Little League, they agreed it that told Harris he'd had league would attract the maximum of |eXperience. 200 youngsters. - When the try- | “Oh, yes and where did your outs began on Apr. 27, 350 chil- {team finish,” said Harris. dren swarmed the instructors. | A fighting—last.” The tryouts will end this week| — — mm i the instructors face the task] e of picking the four top teams, (CG d 4 k which will be known as the major ar S in leagues. These teams will be) suited with regulation wnitorme, R OCS 5.3 It won't be an easy task. The] I ‘ By United Press competition is too keen. The spirit] ST. LOUIS, May 10 — Clift
other fields of endeavor. Yet for) /that small faction destined to be-|™t\ 3
{come ballplayers . , . they'll al-|bers 2. play y ll Chambers,
RUNS AND EA One afternoon last week a ") spindle lad with ash-brown hair walked up to Harris.
ambers (2-2), hy (1-4)
GP pi! 3 -
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
When Tyrus was in knickers, it was the dark ages | of baseball for a kid. A weeded A strip of ground was his diamond. |
LEFT ON BASES—St. Lous 7, CineinON BA - BALLS—Blackwell 3, Cham operation Friday,
Jords. Secory.
<y,
Fashion
nde. . FEY a,
: 3
Diamond St
\
SUNDAY, MAY 11, 1952
arsints Stage
<%
Rally to Top Braves, 42
By United Press BOSTON, May 10. (UP)—Led by Rightfielder Don Mueller™ the i INew York Giants staged a two- . run tie-breaking rally in the seve |enth inning today to beat the Boston Braves 4-2. ° | Withgevery member of the Gl. lants’ lineup” getting at least one Ihit, last year's National League “|champions exhausted three Boston pitchers during the 15-hit ase 'sault .in the opener of a threegame series. Mueller drove in two of the’ Giants’ four runs, one in the first and another in the seve enth. However, the batting star of the afternoon was Bobby Thomson who doubled in the first to drive in a run, singled twice and reached base twice on fielder's choices in five appearances at the plate. The Giants hit losing pitcher Warren Spahn at will during the [72 innings he worked. Jim Hearn, notching his third victory against no losses, was touched for only three hits and issued three walks, 2 Cooper tumbled into the Giants dugout going after a foul in the {fourth inning and injured his back but he did not leave the game
PE 3
t
Times photo by John R. Soickiemire STRETCH, SON, STRETCH—Tommy Gerlach, 4841 Norwaldo Ave. (upper left) seems to be following that advice as he | makes a bid for a first base job in Little League tryouts. Tommy Buell, 4919 Carvel Ave. [middle circle) a third base aspirant, moves in on a hot grounder and while minus finesse, the boy dislays plenty of determination. "Come on, chum, groove it in ere,” barks Catcher Gordon Lewis, 4846 Winthrop Ave. (upper right), as Bob Pihl, 4923 Brouse St. measures his swing for a poke | at the big one. The gang's all here for a Little League fryout in | the picture at the lower left. These lads will battle to win a berth | on an organized team in Indianapolis’ first venture in Little League competition. Bob Walker, 4815 Broadway (lower right), may be thinking of another Bob—namely Feller—as he rears back to deliver a fast one. The Fair Grounds Little League will open June 2 | continuing until July 31. |
Rush Limits Bucs to 4 | Hits as Cubs Win, 3-1
By United Press | and the Pirates failed to get | CHICAGO, May 10—Bob Rush| another blow until six and two-
to four hits today while Ransom| ny. defeat was charged to! Jackson bagged his fifth home ,i,.ter Murry Dickson who suf-| run of the year and the Chicago|ge eq his fifth defeat against one! Cubs won a 3-1 game before yi.iory He worked six innings, | 10,816 fans. : and gave up eight hits and the| | * Rush, who gained his third vic-|first two Cub runs. Ted Wilks | tory against two defeats, could|finished for the Pirates, |
|football star, received the knee lease by the Kansas City Blues) lof the American Association.
i
Jd . |Blues Trip yy Tribe. 3 tol
Continued from Page 11
hart made a sensational diving catch to end the inning:
The damage was done, hOWeVer,| quis 40152713 Totals and Ruben Gomez, who relieved! Daniels flied out for Cusick in eighth. Maier when he was lifted for a|New York bed pinch-hitter, order in the ninth after Bill Hig-| Matte "ar TED don, batting for Bobby Wilson? opened with a single. ; Maier hires Drillantly, Jimit sarsensan:, Mather ng the Tribe to a pair of singles) ‘LEFT "ON . aire, x 12, Bose in the eight innings he worked. ton ON Was Yo u
made it a combination three-| hitter, 5 » s HIGDON, Harry
center brought Pope home after,
retired the
[until the eighth.
NEW YORK BOSTON [ AB H 0 Al AB HO A | Willams.2b 5 1 0 3 Hartsfd.2b 4 0313 Lockmn,ib 4 314 } Mathews 3b 3 1 1 3 Thmpsn,3b 5 3 0 5 Jethroe.ef 4 4 1 | Elliott, If 4 1 0 0 Tognson,lb 3 10 8. CPSHNE BWA RC aeperie Be Bud 8 Mueller,rf 5 1 3 ol A . 1 : 1 % SSR Es va iy RE rt i all.rf 4 A. : Da Fp RRR ee Westrum.e 3 2 3 0 Cusick,ss 260112 Hearn,p 4 1 1 2 Daniels 1000 {Clarkson,as/® 6 0 9 Spahn,p /] 2000 Burdette.p/! 0 6 0 0 Denovan,p 6 #® 0 0 3 3279
Fein 200 200—4 010 100 600-2 Lockman, Thompson. Cooper. IN—Thompsen, Mueller Dark, Cooper. Mathews. TWO-BASE HITS—Thompson, Westrum. HOME RUNS—Cooper. Mathews. DOUBLE PLAYS—Cusick. Hartsfield and Mathews and Torgenson:
side In| RUNS—Williams,
4. BASES ON BALLS—Off Hearn 3, Spahn
The ninth inning blow off Gomez|1, Doneva
n 1. STRUCK OUT—By Hearn 3. Spahnm 4. HIT! ff Spahn 12 im 623 innings, Burdette 2 in 5. Nanovan ® in 1. | RUNS—AND EARNED RUNS—Hearn 2 | and 2, Spahn 4 and 4, Burdette 0 and 0,
i) 0 9, Malmberg | HIT BY PITCHER—Spshn (Lockman).
and Dave Pope were the three PALE Duldeie Indians who hit safely. NG Pope produced the Tribe's 10ne poiiantang run in the seventh when he oe gled to right and raced on fo
third as Renna let the ball get| through him. Frank Kalin's fly to Elk art Gets
G _PITCHER—Hearn (3-9), LOSING CHER—Spahn 1-3). TRES—Barlick, Goerdman, Donatelll,
-
TIME—2:34. ATTENDANCE—3948.
18 In Regionals
he catch. The Indians went up and | ; down In order in the first, sec- | pLICEAT (ho Max A oe) ond, third, fifth, sixth and g 0
eighth. Their only other scoring threat came in the fourth when | they put two on with one out. A strikeout and an bouncer ripped that threat.
|sectional track championship to|day, scoring 75 points and qualifying 18 men and both relays for {the régionals. infield | Goshen was runner-up with 28 |points, advancing eight men, and
Maier, who posted his first vic-/gendallville was third with 20.
tory for the Blues, walked only] one and fanned four. Abernathie counted for one meet record when {wound up with four walks and he high-jumped six feet, % inch, {four strikeouts while absorbing and Joe Checkley of Elkhart set
the loss. ” td ”
THE Indians will attempt to] rm t————————— {salvage the last of the three- s {game series tomorrow atternoon Franklin Takes Meet (as they take on the Blues in a|
single game.’ Frank
slated to pitch for the Tribe. pin \
Jarrin-Jokih , Wins Iroquois Steeplechase
Times Special
"NASHVILLE, Tenn. | Tarrin-John, owned by James Dea- And gained a tie for first in the {ton of Lexington, Ky. won the high jump.
Iroquois Memorial
Eleven of the-
Indianapolis, June 14.
In the Frost Hunter Steeple(chase, - Bit-Whip-Comet, {by Burford Daner of Zionsville, | {Ind., was second after being re-
mounted when he fell
Steeplechase |
' |in ‘a blinding rainstorm Here to-| ! limited the Pittsburgh Pirates thirds innings had gone by. (day. | SCHIFF S
14 mounts finished the race. Most of. them will race in the fifth annual i Royalton Steeplechase north of
Kendallvill颒s John Thrapp ac-
{the other with-a shot put toss of {49 feet, 2 inches.
Times Special FRANKLIN, May 10—Indiana Central trackmen today were edged in a track meet by Frank{lin College despite multiple wins of their star, Chuck Zopf. Franklin‘ defeated the Hoosier Conferencé champions, 66 to 65. Zopf , May 10— Won the broad jump, low hurdles
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