Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1952 — Page 29

7 to 6 and 3

# n League the | the Tigers, owns set back , to 3, and the gver the Ine

off on a ter drilled two le, batting in im a total of | Hearn's seve Giants. Marshall, who ince going to » the winning at Boston as | Andy Semirs and Rookie ne for Boston,

affensbherger yrren Spahn an the second gh Spahn Sid Gordon utout with a

» ene Woodling hit Yankee y Sain gained y with relief gue although alt Dropo hit

le it five vice for new Mane when Marion single in the ye Pillette his tie Bill Henry

ng his fourth ond over the have dropped ved 6-hit ball, 2-run homer ffset a later Rosen. efeat enabled to move into A's also were

ers am -

hose .232 hitthe Indianered this sea today te the Birmingham thern Associ-

-sacker in 42 at bat 168 batted in 25 home runs,

Meet

t Indianapolis If tournament. teeth for Dr, shot ‘a 76 at ly. Dr. Paul cond with 78 3ivin followed

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/

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THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1852

3 Shatter At $15 Par in PGA Qualifying EER

ithe locker room stool

BULLETIN | He sipped a cool glass of ~Swarthy Little Jimmy Tur- | hesa of Briarcliff Manor, N.Y, took the early 27-hole lead in | the final qualifying round of the | PGA golf championship today when he shot the front nine in & one under-par 35 for 108.

By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Sperts Writer

LOUISVILLE, June 19 —| Unknown Bob Gajda of De- PAR OUT 443 443 544—35 troit went out today with a Hogan ..... 543 443 534-35

{ moderation. ] At the stimulating, "hour-long golf clinic, Hogan had said: “I ‘think you can do too much of anything.” | | He had just broken par for the {tricky course in his first time at Meridian Hills. He and Dale

6-under par 66 in his pocket Stackhouse 44d 443 74539 aid. hope. in his heart’ that an. | David tives 84S 443 54435 pe 3 Morey ..... 443 543 644—37

other fine round would bring him| the $250 medalist prize in the PAR IN 43 445 345—36—T1 windup of qualifying play for the Hogan ..... 443 445 345-3671 PGA golf championship. Gajda finished a stroke ahead David sess 443 345 845—35—70 of three tough opponents—former Morey ..... 448 444 245-3471 National Open Champion Cary

Middlecoft, veteran Dutch Harri- Morey. his opponent, had fired fd son and 1950 PGA runnerup 71s. Big John David, a gracious,

Henry Willlams—in yesterday's|genial master who catapults tee opening round of qualifying play|shots, remained 1-below par—a as par at Big Spring Gok Club: 35-35-70. took a record beating. Dick . Stackhouse, David's Me-

8% 8 ridian Hills sportsman - buddy, THE DETROIT darkhorse led shot better than. his S-over-par

on the short, baked-out course as|77 indicates. Morey and David 2 others matched the card of perfection. And with 137 contestants 'in the best-ball play. hooting for 64 match play berths 8. come sundown today, it looked wHILE Hogan's 18-hole exhi-

(bition was par for the course, his 1 felinic of do’s and don’ts cracked] Hoosier Scores {par to smithereens. The well-{ (FIRST ROUND) behaved gallery of some 2500, B. Hamilton, Evansv’le 35-36-71 handled well by Pro Wayne Tim-| C. Harter, Logansport. 34-38—72 berman, 55 caddy helpers and B. Heinlein, Noblesville 37-36—78/$300 worth of rope, left the club| D. Fischesser, Cr'f’dsv’le 37-3976 wiser and thoroughly entertained. Fred Gronauer of Pt. Washing-! Hogan was worth his $1500 ton, N. Y, former Indianapolis! for his second Indianapolis amateur player, had 35-36—71. showing. His three or four | exhibitions a week (at $1500 | or more per) will carry him to Ft. Wayne Saturday, then to Cedar Rapids, Towa, back out

as if only those who could equil| or better par of 144 for the two] rounds would make the match play division.

As did Aristotle, Ho- hi (gan practices a philosophy of. ee

[Stackhouse 443 645 43538773

beat Hogan and Stackhouse, 1-up3

champion, a first-class competitor, |

00 Per Show

Hogan Is Doing Well

was weary. Last week's third-|

a broiling sun left him about | ¥ three pounds underweight at 159 | pounds. Right now, he’s cool! . towards winter competition.

Yesterday's exhibition was the| start of another Hogan work-day.| “%» What price drudgery that must! be at $4500 per week—or more, this summer,

But Ben's a skilled craflis- | man. Modestly he said: “I'm a | notoriously bad <putter” after his match. He went out in | even-par 35 and came home in even-par 36 for his 71.

He got his only bogey of the day—a 5—on the first hole, He! Bl didn't hit. long enough, then, EF muffed a 10-foot putt. He nabbed | his only birdie of the day on No. 8, a 316-yard, par 4 hole after| stuffing an S8-footer down the cup. s ” ” SEVERAL birdie putts rimmed the cup. He chipped beautifully! on No. 11, and parred No. 18 after pushing a wood shot over * the trees to the right of the green in the rough. He was steady, un ruffled and still a man of tron} with his iron approaches. { David, who out-drove ’'em all! + most of the time, was steadiest| kt of all. He parred every hole go-!

8 442-vard, par 4 No. 13, getting on-in>2 and sinking a 4-footer.

Ben Hogan

way, having hit all his greens on| the front nine before straying a| |couple of times coming home. He| |was 4-under when he stole the;

East, then to California by September.

A plane carried Bantam Ben to show from Hogan at Logan last one my manager says for me to|

{Indianapolis from Dallas yester-| |year,

(day. He stayed in town over-| Morey, the radar-like puttin night. He took diathermy treat- specialist, rimmed inside the cup jments for a neck cramp ag-ion numerous 20 and 30-foot stabs, {gravated yesterday demonstrat-! ibut “I was pushing them - too {ing with hilarity a dubber ad-| ‘hard.” he said. Morey was 2-over| |dressing a tee shot, cockeyed hat! {going out and he and David were and all. 1 down after nine. But MY {long infield bunts began _falli fair for him coming back

He sank a 15-footer foga birdie|

» ” » THE 3-time National Open

Actually only 63 berths were at stake, for Defending Champion Good Golf's Easy . . . No. Sam Snead of White Sulphur] Springs, W. Va. qualifies auto-| matically. Sam, suffering from strained side, went out to uv the course yesterday and helped himself to a Hattoa-sucourag- | "bn par 72. hind Gajda, and the ul In second place, there were tive| with 68s, three with 69s, eight| with 70s and 15 with 71s. s » ” THOSE at 68 were Claude Harmon of Mamaroneck, N. Y., last year’s medalist; Argentine Champion Roberto De Vicenzo, 1942 runner up Jim Turnésa of Briarcliffe Manor, N., Y.; Milon Marusic of Herkimer, N. Y., and Marty Furgol of Atlanta, Ga. Another shot back of them at 69 came two determined competitors, Charles Lepre, a tiny veteran from Doylestown, Pa., and Dave Douglas, the thin man from! Wilmington, Del. ? Two shots under par with 70s came 1050 Champion Chandler Harper of Portsmouth, Va.; PGA President Horton Smith of Detroit; Clayton Heafner of Charlotte, N. C.; Jackson Bradley of Chicago, John Dodson of Mission, Kas.; Phil Friel of Nashua, N. H.; Jack Isaacs of Langley, Va. Air Force Base, and Eddie Joseph of Fairfax, Cal. Those with one under par 71s were too numerous to mention but they included Jackie Burke of Houston, Tex. | They all have the mechanics & 8 8 |down pat. THE SECOND and final 18 : 8 =. = holes of qualifying play today! SOME have a little more power| will send the low 63 and Snead than otHers, although size means into two rounds of 18-hole very little. Ben Hogan hardly is| matches daily until the two final-|a giant, yet never has felt that he| ists go at ft in the championship Was shortchanged physically. | battle next Tuesday. Some have a greater power | of eoncentration than others, | | which givés them a terrific

Negro Royal Giants bulge.

Play Local All-Stars The margin between a chamThe Brooklyn Royal Giants, one! Pion and just-another contestant of the oldest nonleague Negro) is that the titleholder makes up| teams in the country, are to ap:| |for what to him is a bad round pear at Victory Field tomorrow! {with a good one, a score low | night to put the test to the In-| {enough to keep him in the com-| dianapolis All-Stars’ bid. for rec-| | petition. ognition in Negro baseball’s bigtime. Game time is 8:30. me, took a bad shot as a matter| he Brooklyn lineup ncludes of course. Before starting al ayes le i ba ‘Tha “Royal round. The Haig figured he would! ague {make so many poor shots, and Slams BHCe Jvére Misiirhers of Sue when this great player slipped his have oh a stellar attraction | Philosophy was such Bat ne had just one less error to make ‘ playing independent ball through- One of Hogan's secrets 18 |

out the nation, Stephens 3 Up Cardinals Schedule

TROON, Scotland, June 19 Tryout Camp (UP) —Frances Stephens of Eng- Times State Service land, sééking to regain the Brit- BLOOMINGTON, June 19 — ish Women’s Amateur Golf cham-| Tony Kaufman and Jack Sturdy,| pionship she won in 1949, led St. Louis scouts, will conduct a Moira Paterson of Scotland, 3-up, Cardinal baseball tryout #camp,! today after the first round of their June 23 and 24, at Cascades Park. 36-holé tournament final. Workouts will begin each day

at 11 a. m. Players must bring Softball Notes

their own shoes and gloves, Em-Ro¢ Twilight Softball League Jehed.

je t ht at 6 o'clock: Riverside ard ms Co., vs, Purdue Extens 0 oh Riverside ; College Eagles vs, ABC Sea Riverside 5.

venger Co.: v Indiana Paper!

Shot Are th

By JACKIE BURKE Golf's Newest Star

GOLF is basically a simple ‘game. The trick is following in-|

structions. Few do this because at the out-|

out.

that the begin- | i ner usually feels the game is vastly mor el complicated than it actually | is because he is| doing the easy! things wrong. This onl y| makes things i more confusing "=i for the player, * the professional Jackie Burke and everybody | concerned. The mechanics of every shot | are the same. The biggest difference in good golfers is in their thinking.

» » »

WALTER HAGEN, they tell

- Solunar Table

(Central Standard Time)

Co. vs. Emerson Scheuring Tank Co. Jo Minor Major Minot Major Sam's Tayern efeated Kinmar Service. .domorrow ..see. 3:35 9:36 4:08 10:30! EE i Ee SB oi over Indianapolis. Deal Club, | panda sevednss B23 1148 800 Gon ite & and day Co, trounced Tabpr., Tuesday ....... 05 12:55 7:35 1:%0 foss-Bluc 8 Shield beat Grain Dealers Wednesday .... 50 1: 40 8:15 2:00} uty ASR 1 Langue scores 3 Amateur teur Baseball a 3 road ountry Club 9, Decatur | 'willght League results yesterday. {erchants. 4 ag oo 9, Linde Air Prod-| arn m Construction .. 010 900 3-1 4 2 t | vo League scores at M tet! HATastings and Crick, Wise (5); Kane and| al; Link Belt Ewart 1; West- A 2 a | Piehouse 10. JD. Adams 1: L. 8. [Sotth ‘Sie samts $3 Apres W, Doe ders va Parm| Turner and Moriarity; =f "ind MenPuresu: 8:20, 120, Ordnance vs. C10 No. BSL. A nam : n vs. Kin gen a Ady [nds fia 18 3 AWrZyn a ak, Raya’ 1» and Ver . Ruckelshuus 24 11, Allison's 1 12; Linde 4 Ar de

ertr Jan gm na fs TERT 10 Ba, GEE |

| COVERS

‘Coach and and

Mechanics of Every

set they are a bit hard to carry tournament will have three good! rounds and what is for him a don'ts? 35 professionals who blasted par bad one. The trouble in most cases is/rounds win.

I was 7.

I on No. 15, a 593-yarder, then| dunked an 8-footer on the next| lhole. He recovered well on the; par 5, 18th green, finishing with] a 2-under-34 on the back nine and a 71. ” » ¥ {

STACKHOUSE was 4-over go-| {ing out, getting a double-bogey, on No. 7 in the trees. He double-| lbogeyed the par 4 No. 13, hitting! into the water for a 2-stroke pen-| on thealty. He wanted to gamble on the|

e Same

that he never wastes a stroke, regardless of the circumstances.

The average player,

other hand, is so upset by stray- shot, feeling he owed the crowd jing out-of-bounds or dubbing althe good show?it received. He

{shot that he sloughs off several iparred No. 17 with a fine, down-| {more strokes.

| thill 8-foot tap, getting a 2-over-! {37 on the back nine.

What are the Hogan do's and

ORDINARILY the winner of a

{

ONE—Play all except high and| {low shots off the inside of the] A lot of golfers hit the ballleft heel. well, TWO—Drop the right foot far-| jway. {ther back for longer drives. Use| A golfer can’t start too early.isquare stance for No. 5 iron.

{Most of the top players were | THREE—Greatest pressure in |finding their way around courses’ lleft hand comes from middle fin-

at a tender age. My father cut] gers. The grip is in the fingers, {down wood shafts for me when |, 4 palm of hand.

sn.» FOUR~—The stance is the width THE beginner starts with pure/of shoulders. Flex knees. Keep

fundamentals, of course, and the;left arm straight. Turn body onefirst of the basic things to learn quarter turn, Pick out a small ob-

Sometimes two low!

but don't score the same

'|about the mechanics of the game'ject down fairway. Wag club to

is the grip. jrelieve tension, This and hand action are the | FIVE—Use rhythmic swing. basis of all fine shots. {Downhill swing is of utmost imThe grip is perhaps the most portance. Turning of the hips important fundamental. should initiate the downswing. I never saw an accomplished Movement of the body should ac- | golfer with a poor grip. |[commodate the hands and arms lin swinging. The body turns most going forward on the downswing.

NEXT: The grip.

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(JURY

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

: place in the National Open under;

‘pion, weighed 149 pounds for his)

itle last night with Rocky Castel. |

{ I should stick to welters. It's |

ing out for a 35 and birdied the pa, posted his second win over

He was even-par the rest of the gnd encounter.

| right hand again.

Think U.’S. Fans Major Leaders Wild’? Look: en iT

» « « Spanish Bullfight fans burned down a grandstand. hicago .. « + « Two Guatemala City soo- NATIONAL LEAGUE | cer fans killed each other in |, a A argument over favorite player. feb poet 3 wisi 3 ticket oaks fans Bo Necks. 3

ratton Feels He'll Stick To Welters

DRY CLEANING

® Hats Cleaned & Blocked

255849

ta. ie 3

= Ole These are some of the “wild” | uer. Gubs “He an Giants i . R y ress goings-on of foreign sports fans |Tronson. Gia a | Expert Shoe Repairing CHICAGO, June 19—Wel-| as related in PARADE on Sun- uo. con BONS BEE ay a terweight Johnny Bratton| day. |Campaneiia. Bo odess. odiers 43) INDIAN

PARADE Comes With THE SUNDAY TIMES

ING ine. Dodgers |hanie" Whites 3 H! elie Giants Hearn, Giants

(figured today that seven 144 W. WASHINGTON

pounds cost him a victory | over & man he had on the verge!

of knockout three times, | Bratton, a former NBA cham-

Hl

60-SECOND TASTE TEST SHOWS How TO «vo

Be your own whiskey expert |

10-round Chicago Stadium bat-|

{lani, at 156, Castellani won a 'split decision with 54 to 46 and 52 to 48 scores by Referee Norm McGaritty and Judge E. Allen] Frankel. Judge William O’'Connell held it 51 to 49 for Brattton. ” » ~ “I HAD him out in the third, | and the fourth and the seventh” Bratton said. “I know I had] hirr out, but he had it in his mind | that he was bigger than me and) that’s a hard thing to beat. “He's not a hitter,” Bratton added. “If we were the same weight, it would only have gone two or three rounds. I'd love to | {ight him again but I feel that |

hard to beat a big middle- | weight.” | ” " » { CASTELLANI, from Luzerne,|’

Bratton and he thought Bratton was a tougher foe in the sec-

“Ho was a much sharper puncher,” he said. “I'd like to! {fight Rocky Graziano or Johnny {Saxton now, but I'll fight any-

fight.” Castellani required two stitches {to close a cut at the edge of his left eye, while Bratton hurt his|

[J 2 Only 10 Yanks MAKE THIS TASTE TEST TQDAY: Have i oz. of Calvert put in one glass and the same amount of any other whiskey in another — without knowing “In British Open which is which. Taste each one for smoothness, flavor and freedom from | harshness. Then pick the one that really tastes better to you. By United Press LONDON, June 19 — Only 10)

Americans—the smallest number in years—have entered the Brit-| ish Open golf tournament, the| starting list revealed today. ! With Frank Stranahan of| |Toledo, heading the list, the {Yanks will be shooting for Max Faulkner's crown in the qualifyling rounds which begin July 7.| Faulkner will defend his title. | In addition to Stranahan, the Americans entered are Lloyd Mangrum of Niles, Ill, Army {Capt. Jock McHaffey stationed at Mannheim, Germany, Willie {Hunter of Los Angeles, Jimmy 'McHale of Philadelphia, Larry {Habholtz of Chicago, Jimmy Hines of Chicago, Gene Sarazen {of Harrison, N, Y., Col. A. J. | Lawrence of the Heidelberg, Germany, Army installation and | Herbert Small of Chicago.

WORDS CAN'T DESCRIBE the big difference in whiskies . . . the difference in smoothness, mellowness and freedom from bite. So we say compare Calvert with any other whiskey and let your own taste decide.

We're sure you will prefer Calvert Reserve, because its taste is determined by folks like you who make over 50,000 taste tests a year.

But, after your own test, if you still prefer another brand, stick with it. Fair enough?

Calvert Challenges Comparison

with any whiskey on the market |

CALVERT RESERVE BLENDED WHISKEY + 86.8 PROOF « 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. CALVERT DISTILLERS CORP. NL. ¥. &

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