Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1952 — Page 25

na: known as the . asbestos Mnipsia | modern i. , Section NE 1. Section Dae 2 East in s the Spain, Ford, e

frame residence, good condition, «87, Project 187, . 4 of Section lange 2 East In as the Nicholas

rame, composition. rn, in good oops Project 187. CE. % Section 25, r 2-E in Marion n as the Harrie

SALE e required fo reuildings from the in sixty (60) days

cash, paid by tified check made r of the State ; of $25.00 will be at e si and wider, in the event bank

pt of bank draft ring the amount

'YBECK. Director and Supply.

] a AND DE. } BONDS AND OF THE PRO-

'H ‘BON n that a petition Schoo

sajd School City, nd certified under pter’ 119 of the eneral Assembly requesting said ds in an amount to raise funds for struction of. Inand installation Units 1 and Manual ‘Uraiaing r construction at easant un Blvd., lis, Tndiana. which p building. science ._ #cholastie d the zym- ¢ unit. A remon-

such ith the Board hy 1 estate anner nd within said Chapter 119 Hana General Asnded. given that The missioners of the ar meet

building, seience Piling. Scholastic and the zy

3th day of June, Vilug of all J 8 .755, | said School city ed sale of zal it present issue han ,132,900. CC »e end final de-

id ders necessary

xisting_ by 1eason -

or such Zactlities. at said hearing it to be heard on ich appropriation Board will be cerditor to the te oners, after which 'ax Commissioners \ereon within fifjearing., taxpayers opriation nay 2 payers Ma - dior oa to the h hearing. 3SIONa TANAPOLIS isiness Manager

nt

RS OF FOPATATIONS “the taxpayers of ¢, Marion Counts. d

Com~-

8. T. upon the ropriations for the d during the peDecember 31. 1952. ppriations are re not to be in of said Board for 1952 to June 30,

vdopted, viz: lOPRIA TIONS ATION OF pGLIS ES JL. 1953 ISTRATION cation. 41.303.00 net. 47880.00 Se ..00 41.328.00 AA 13,328.00 mrt 195.485.08 ION 120,405.00 A .. 484,106.00 aves 1.308.553.00 rors 155,560.00 ~2,068,624.00 CTV can 418,444.00 ar _ 102.526.00 517,970.08 G8 BUTLDINGS, 080.00

$30.621.00 318,090.00 6.250 00

R77.030.00 ,000.00 164.940.00 61,320.00 , ... 232,260.00 RO; “va 1.243.090 ans nine 239,668.00 ES .. 240.916.00 fe Lunches Cangas 7.080.00 RR 154.000.00 34,000.00 oms 292.600 00 4 5.000.00 492.8%0.00 i A . 123.905.08 ne 475.000.78 , ~508.995.00 TTLAY aun 28.200 08 149,350 00 123,500.00 LAY 121,550.00 3.545.510.08 DING FUND Imp, ng unes of - proprirojects rT. 2.234.355 08 VE bal + 2,234,835.00 10 aries . 2.983.752.00 Fawn 2,988,752.00 GET 10.169,117.00 also 8.534.262.00 WH 2.7: 00 at ght to be ard

m- &

0

rong

ET ——————.

FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1952

| One aps

By NORMAN MILLER .

United Press

Sports Writer :

Carl Erskine of the Dodgers, author of baseball's latest no-hit game, reflected today on what might have - been—if he only hadn't been in such a hurry to get out

of the rain.

In the jubilation of the Dodger dressing room, the handsome, 25-year-old righthander from Anderson, Ind.

explained how he walked Pitcher Willard Ranmisdell of the Cubs on four hastily thrown balls in the third inning

yesterday and thus missed major league's first perfect

an opportunity to pitch the game since 1922.

“The rain was coming on fast,” Erskine related. “We had a 4-0 lead at the time and we wanted to get in 415

innings to make it an official the ball directly back to me

Durocher Needs Miracle

To Cure

. By CARL LUNDQUIST United Press Sports Writer

If anybody has an old spare miracle around, please pack it up and send it to Leo Durocher of the Giants, who will be glad to pay the shipping charges.

At a moment when the Dodgers Were flying high today on the

© excitement of Carl Erskine’s no-

hitter and near perfect game, 5 to 0, over the Cubs, the Giants were practically in panic.

They were shaky in the field, §

they weren't hitting, they blew two games out of three to the

last place Pirates, they dropped § five full games behind the Brooks,

and they lost Catcher Wes West-

rum for two weeks with a broken }

index finger. a EJ YESTERDAY, only lost the ball game but his temper with it in an officially pro-

tested, 8 to 1 shellacking by the J Little Murry Dickson held them to five hits as he won §

Pirates.

his fifth game, while the Giants handed Pittsburgh three un-

earned runs and got another ?

mediocre pitching job from a supposed staff ace, Larry Jansen. The Pirates made five runs, two on errors in a big third inning explosion when the Giants waged their protest as Umpire Dusty Boggess over-ruled Umpire Babe Pinelli on a play at the plate. George Metkovitch ‘was called out by Pinelli as he charged into Catcher Westrum, but Boggess claimed that the ball had been dropped and when the Pirates appealed to him the decision was changed. That made Durocher protest the game. 8 a ” ERSKINE, missing a perfect game only because he walked opposing Pitcher Willie Ramsdell in the third, faced just 28 batters,

beer

an A

” 3 Durocher not §

ball game. The boys whipped after each out to save time.

Gia

nts

5

CARL ERSKINE—Threw 4 hasty pitches.

|Cloyd Boyer hig third victory. Four hits and three walks ac-! counted for the damage against! the big right-hander who has) been one of the season’s biggest| ‘disappointments.

Hank Edwards’ $-run ninthinning home run presented Relief Pitcher Frank Smith with his fifth triumph for the Reds and tagged Boston's Sheldon Jones with his second loss. Ed Mathews hit his 10th homer of the season for the Braves. ! Reynolds pitched his 15th

jstratght complete game over a 2-/Indianapolis

year stretch as he held the Tigers {to seven hits for his eighth vic-

New Orleans ... Mobile ....... Chattanooga Nashville .... Atlanta - ..,.. Birmingham Little Rock .. Memphis

6 i 9%

11 15%

GAMES TODAY

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (All night games) INDIANAPOLIS at Kansas City. Louisville at Milwaukee. Columbus at Minneapolis, Toledo at St. Paul. LEAGUE

AMERICAN (All niaht games) New York at Chicago. Boston at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Detroit. Washington at St. Louis.

NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at i Chicago at New York (night), St. Louis at Boston (ni

s ht). Cincinnati at Philadelphia (night),

GAMES TOMORROW

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Minneapolis at Bt, Paul (night), (Only game scheduled)

} ington.

played. All no-hitters are freaks. relief roles. He was an Sometimes the best pitchers don’t; mound foe for Erautt until the ,

“Then, there at the plate wos Ramsdell, the only guy who couldn't hit the ball out of the park if | teed it up for him” Erskine went on. “I threw him four fast-balls. But | pitched so fast | couldn't get them over the plate.”

» = ~ n “ - EXCEPT for that one lapse, Erskiné might have be-.. comg the first National League pitcher of the modern era

to fashion a perfect game. Six flawless pitching performances are listed in the records, the latest thrown by Charley Robertson of the White Sox in 1922. The thunderstorm finally struck while the Cubs were batting in the fourth inning, but after a 44-minute delay, Erskine retired 18 men in a row with his brilliant assortment of fast-balls, curves and occasional sliders to complete his near-perfect, 5-0 no-hitter. “1 played bridge in the locker room during the rainstorm,”

The Times

Panic

major league shutout,’ a S5-hitter

¢ in St. Louis. The Red Sox got the t= only run they needed in ‘the first

on a walk and a pair of singles by Dom DiMaggio and George} Kell.

Washington's Connie Marrero won his sixth game of the year with a 3-run rally in the ninth in which singles by Jackie Jensen, Eddie Yost, and Mel Hoderlein,

Erautt Top And Indian

| Times §

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

e Kept Erskine’s No-Hitter From Pe

a

the slender Hoosier said. “I had a little oil rubbed on my arm” before | went back on the field and it felt good and loose.”

® = 8 ~ » ” “WANNA know what he said before the game?” Captain Pee Wee Reese asked of the assembled reporters. “Just before he started his warmup, he was sitting there on the bench. He held the ball up in his right hand and asked, ‘I wonder what this little pea has in store for me today.’ Ask the Cubs, they know now,” he chortled.

“I tried to get ahead of every hitter ond wos. throwing a fast-ball on the first pitch to nearly every hitter,” Erskine resumed. “My control was good and | was getting the ball over.” “Good?® chimed in Catcher Roy Campanella, “it was perfect. ‘Boy, you really had it today.” » = »

WAS ERSKINE ever worried about losing the nohitter?

“Well, I was a little afraid when Hank Sauer hit that long fly to right field in the seventh,” Erskine replied. - “I was afraid the wind might blow it up against the fence, but it fell just short. And I was a e nervous in pitching to Eddie Miksis in the ninth. I fell behind him 3 and 1, but I got the last two over.” .

Ed PRESIDENT Walter O'Maley of the Dodgers barged into the dressing room and pressed a $500 check into Erskine's hand. When reminded that. baseball rules forbid bonuses for special feats like no-hitters, O'Malley gleefully retorted: “Then consider your contract amended accordingly as of “You got off cheap, Mr. O'Malley,” Erskine replied. “I was just about to ask for a $1000 raise.”

now

Hoosier Stars Play Cream

AA Hurler0f Kentucky S Kn ow It fi JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS

THE BEST Indiana high pecial

2 og

school basketball talent of

KANSAS CITY, June 20—Ed Erautt is in the Ameri-'1951-52 tries retaining its

and a double by Mickey Vernon, can Association on option from the Cincinnati Reds. The mastery over the best Ken-

were key hits, Dale Mitchell accounted for Cleve-| land's runs with homers while the Reds today. Pete Runnels homered for Wash-, Erautt kept his Kansas City mates a game and a half from, first place last night as he hand-| {cuffed the Indians, 10 to 1, for,

Larry Doby and

Bobby Shantz wom his 11th straight and 12th victory of the year against one loss for Phila-

delphia but the White Sox re- (against one defeat. Troupe, e ... $ game sponsored by the Star bounded with a long-range at- 2 a» Tavior 1b .. ° Ty

tack which included a homer by Minnie Minoso to win the

na [lads 12% games from the leading

Shantz allowed only fiv. hits, full did not walk a man and struck | lIWaukee Brewats. and two

Dodgers who threw no-hitters,| scored lone runs in the fourth |

Carl Erskine told The Times to-| and fifth innings. ~ his first|

day: { Charley Sipple made | Ry: start for the Indians in two] That angle has been over- weeks after a regular stint of,

adequate

come up with them. Head was: roof fell in when the Blues ral-

just an average pitcher. My arm| feels great. I'll take my turn|

M d when the $5.3 I ayesdaY | THE BLUES, winning for the

The 25-year-old Hoosier, who eighth straight time, from the has a 2. twit 23-lost major | Tribe, collected 12 hits which inleague record since 1948, played cluded home runs by Andy Carey amateur baseball |and Bill Skowron. and was signed by Scout Stanley| Kansas City’s blitz finish Feezle of Indianapolis and even-| Was sudden as it was effective.

ning.

As the Dodgers swept their 3-tory. tually was paid an $8500 bonus. Floven batters Hoo heir cuts game series with the Cubs on the # = = |Feezle also signed Gil Hodges for an sautels ke) pple ou right-hander’s double blank job, ROOKIE Ivan Delock gainedthe Dodgers and Bob Friend for| there in hopes he could put out they kept up their home run bar- his third victory and his first the Pirates. the Bre, rage with Roy Campanella, Carl all started on a walk, Harry * Furillo and Andy Pafko hitting ° | Malmberg's error on a grounder, for the distance ase a an in and an infield hit to load the In other National League " |bases. Carey then smashed his games, the Cardinals beat the’ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION AN LEAGUE |12th double of the Year down thel Phillies, 6-4, and the Reds de-; . Won Lost Pot. B.| New York at Chicago. {left field line. ree runs were| Milwaukee ........s 40 20 .667 -— | Boston at Cleveland. home and Carey joined the runfeated fhe Braves, 74; Sansa UY +. 4 28 ea 1a RAGERON AY Retro ‘ners when Roy Partee slapped a St. Paul v.33 31 368 9% X . of res ros Denna: sopping [Gil EH RH cae SOMSOEIEACT or page Tit. 1, | . y : the Tigers, 8 to 0, and staying |Colnmbus Cs 3 3 a3 1 Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 8» 21; games ahead of the Red [Toledo ...0....o.... 19 42 31 3% ttsburgh at Brookiyn (night). ERAUTT sacrificed Partee to| Sox who also scored a shutout, AMERICAN LEAGUE RESULTS YESTERDAY |third and Kermit Wahl's long fiy| 2 to 0, over the Browns, New York “yoreesss eg rE} pie iro sy AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ts aad the Blues jg i pon) gute Senators handed the Tn-Chelio, sii i Hd 3 afm cio lied de fans their sixth straig eal,|Cleveland .. .3 $3 ai Taylor a vans; Conley, | 6 to 3, while the White Sox beat|st Louis HE Gk (magma 000 000 000— 0 10 0 Ci Tennis Meet the Athletics, 5-4, after losing Ealiaddipnia ... xe H % 4% oS Pa at Bel ea amin 3 the opener of a double-header,| NATIONAL LEAGUE * + Baldwin. 303 600° 110-7 11 ‘1| 4-1, : | : Won Lost Pot. G.8.|Minneapolts 1111 020 000 001 3 12 1 Starts Tomorrow : on Broonlyn reassess ve 4 32 a3 3 | Dailies and Sarni; Schmitt, Libby ( Approximately 100 entrants are| THE Cardinals routed Howie Chicago -... 3 88 i imoston AMERICAN LEAGUE: 2 8 1 expected to battle in the annual] Fox, who dropped his sixth game, Cincinnatt, 0 483 1343 Lou asd 000, 900 009 Bb S city tennis tournament sponsored | in a 5-run sixtn inning to give, Boston ees L373 34 dna Is. | Madison (37. pace 0) "snd Johnson. by the USLTA tomorrow through | SO NTERNATIONAL LEAGUE {}uing Pitcher—Holcombe oo 10g— 8 12 o June 29. ted at Fall Creek's. Won Lost Pct. G.B | Detrott lis (3-4) and 9 co Ostuart| The meet, sia a3: a pd Montreal 36 2h B00 = lar aoien iaond Ginsberg. Yome courts, opens at 1 p. m. with Rochester ... +38 28 363 3 Runs—Berra 2, Bauer. Losing Pitcher— competittion in the men ‘and Toronto id I 2 2 328 i WRInAton «or. tens 111 000 goa— 6 14 1 women’s singles. Men's doubles ringftie . ’ 1 Pn Buffalo rears "38 35 4d |“ Marrero 6:3) "and Grasso: Wynn (te) and mixed doubles play open e Buitvhre tu ROB 48 3. apd Heean. "Home Runs—Doby, Mitehell (Monday. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE : (First Game) | Ralph Burns will defend his | op [Pijladelpnta ,....... 001 000 003— ¢ § 2 men’s ringles title and Burns and San Diego Trrrseness — “Shantz (13-1) and Astroth; Brown (1-1) Stan Malless will be doubles deOakland - gjand Mash, ond game) fending champions. Pat Stewart, eg 3 (Ehlindelohia .......- 020 000 903—¢ § 3 women’s singles titlist, is particia0 6 an, Francisco 124 Hooskr (30 and Tipion; Doon. Ker: | pating in a Southern tennis meet Sacramento ......... BIR _Dinose, Winning Pitcher = Dobson in Memphis and may be Snable cs (8-3). NATIONAL LEAGUE io Sotend her women’s singles : Dallas . 3 — chicago ....... (No hidoo 000 000— 0 0 1! ‘ Ft. Worth ,.. . | 2 (Brooklyn .......... 310 000 01x— 5.7 0 Deadline for entries is 6 p. m. nme Bonn iy oor 48H 1 | Hecke mand a aad, Anl|today. Late entrants may call Jim eaumont .—e ry 37 507 3 Be Compan Furillo, Pafko. Losing McClure, TA. 2579. San Antoriio : 133 38 dot 7" Bitfsbyra Beker 4 008 100 11 813 1 : E VERN ASOT TW Nickson. 5-9)" ‘and Garaglola; Jansen, ONE for Your Album

Wilhel! (4), Spencer (8) and Westrum,, |Yvars Ta. ome Run—Garaxiols. Losing | CHICAGO {Pitcher—Jansen (6-3). | i 0 A St. Louis ........ses 000 015 000— 6 12 lyn ae oo ABR 1.94 Philadelphia cer... 012 001 000— 4 9 0) Addis, of tera S06 01 | Bover. Brazle (8) and D. Rice: POX. gormanski, rf 306 4 2 Konstanty (6), Hansen (7), Heiwtzelman gov" em ™ a 9 4 8 |(8) and Burgess. Winning Pitcher—Boyer| geo “0 ‘a. 0.0.2 1} | (3-3). Losing Pitcher—Fox (1-6). Fonds, 1b 2 0 0 12 Cincinnati .......... 001 100 023— T 11 0 3 0p on. 2b yaa “3 0 9g Boston _............. 011 002 000— 4 7 3|RuGraole i ap‘: 323 ve Church, Smith (8) and Seminick; John-| go ope.™y : ‘0.00 0 © Son. Jones if) and Cooper. Home Run | Ramsdell, p o.oo 10.8 wards. nning cher 3). | Fatyriel o 0 0 Losing Pitcher—Jones (0-2). jCavarretia od — a — ATIONAL LEAGUE | Totals 2 0.0 AU I { Sra Ire 3. | Cavarretta flied out for Ramsdell in 9th, Ottawa 5, Montreal 4. BROOKLYN Rochester 7, Baltimore 8. 2 KK OA Springfield 7, Toronto 6 (10 innings). Morgan, 3b . ¢ 0 0 4 i PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE REGS 88 . ...xssvvonnriis 2 2° % ! Portland 6, Los Anggles 0. Robinson, 2b .. o 4 6 3 | Sacramento 7, San ncisco 0. Campanella, ¢ Y. 3 49 | Hollywood 17, San Diego 4. Furlllo, rf 4 1.1 3 0 | Seattle 6, Oakland 2. Snider, oh e § s n 0 TEXAS LEAGUE (Patho, it... 3 J .p ul Tulse, 4. Sequmont a . | Erskine, » .. 3.0 0 2 4 " ort CONE fl: wt =" 1 0 ON gl — a_i San Antonio 11, Dallas 7. | Totals 3 3 7 318 Oklahoma City 8, Shreveport 3. MCIOARO «env auersisavav 000 000 0 {Brooklyn ............ . 310 000 01x— 5

SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Atlanta 4-3, Memphis 2-2 (second game| called after 11 innings. curfew), Birmingham 8-8, i Rock 2-3. New Orleans 7, Nashville 5. Mobile 4. Chattanooga 1.

EFRROR—Atwell, RUNS BATTED IN—Campanells 3, Furillo, Pafko. Home RUNS — Campanella, Furillo.

Pafko, STOLEN BASES-—Reese 2, LEFT ON BASES—Chicago 1, Brooklyn

"BASE ON BALLS—Erskine 1, Ramsdell 1. STRUCK OUT—By Hacker 1, Ramsdeli * AITO Off Hacker 4 In 1} " Ramsdell 8 in a ’ n 3/ innttige, RUNS AND EARNED RUNS—Hacker 4 nN PITCH k kine (6-1 3 ~Ers (8-1), LosIN PITCHER—Hacker (4-2). ox 8—Conlon, Stewart, Guglielmo,

TP. ATTENDANCE—7732,

{-Hour Cleaning

Service

Every Hour on the Hour Until 12 Noon Saturday

SERVICE DRY CLEANERS 1613 Prospect 51. FR-2208

———————

Erautt's 12th Win

his 12th - victory of the year §

| oh THIS TIME Erautt spun a 6- Beamer. ...

hitter which left Gene Desautels’ jip%le;®

‘lied for 6 runs in the eighth in- ne MPIR

o hind Bennett. The Giants’ lineup : includes such topnotchers as Pep-

3 Robinson and John Begley. Game § time is 8:30. : 0 The All-8tars will play at Elk-

|Indianapolis Indians wish the big pitcher was back with tucky has to offer in the annual]

{Indiana-Kentucky All-Star prep, iclassic at Butler tomorrow. Game time is 8:30 p. m. A crowd of more g expected to watch the June ver- . sion of Indiana's January basketoball in the 12th annual charity

INDIANAPOLIS

Malmberg, ss Stirnweiss, 2b ope, of

ol o/ KENTUCKY, winner of only 1 © 0 oe » ¢one game in 11 during the inter-

¢ 24 10 1 State hardwood rivalry, will rely Sipple in ninth. [on anusual height with a starting]

Se ~s DR Soceuea~aSO

“| sos~s0s229¥ SUSSSIODwIP

otals prs 34 Higdon flied out for

a

The Press Box--

By Joe Williams

Maxim’s Left Is His Best Weapon

| are not fighting their fight; they are working to develop than 10,000 is| Speed, sharpen punches, eliminate flaws. Besides, they

i na Cie Tah] "lh SE Ene BIN Fa aT | Wahl, ss ..o4 1 1 1 ‘4 we b-foot mark. : the outsetr The Indians tied |RBoliwes. 1p gs 1 1 8 1 0 Ind 's All-St 'h d- | Mazmanian, 2b 0 0 0 0 0 nalana s ars, whose pre ‘N Hi A up the ball game briefly when |p Trt 5% o 2 3 1 olecessors lost the 1945 game to ; o-Hitters re Bud Hutson hit a home run in |Skowren, if > 3 3 8 0 { Ih od Innine. The Blues {Segrist, 2b-r i eo ° o g Kentucky, 45 to 40, are blessed] : 9 : e Seco. nning. e {Renna, ef ... 1 2 6 § Owith typical, fast-breaking Hoo-| Freaks Erskine { Sutehed that an HW Ihe bot | Parte. 's : 1 i 5 : o sier speed and versatility. Last! | tom half o e rd and Erautt.p ..........3 1 1 2 1 2y.ap Indiana won, 68 to 57, with! RECALLED of the fates of Ed| gon drew out for the lop-sided | Totals ....34 10 1* 3 1* 4 Crispus Attucks’ Bob Jewell, the Head and Rex Barney, former |. decision. Kansas City also [INDIANAPOLIS . er... 010 000 1

‘701 101 ogs—10| Trester Medal award winner, giv-|

Kansas City RUNS BATTED IN—Hutson, Skowren 3. €0 the No. 2 berth. Bollweg, Carey 4, Partee, Wahl, TWO-BASE HITS—Carey. Partee. BoE Rs ped, Cats homren, ner, ani. ri he ’ DOUBLE PLAYS—Malmbers, Stirnwelss| City’s all-time athletic greats, will

Tay! . ! « er ON BASE In diaspoll. Jhnes; Wear the “Mr. Basketball” mon-

City 7. { { BASES ON BALLS—Of Sipple 4, Erautt icker as the No. 1 star polled by "HIT BY PI ae] | Sipple ‘(Boliwer), CT ER —Erault (Smith): casters. x ES—Padden, Carney and 0'Con-| TIME—2:25. i ATTENDANCE—3367.

8 » =»

guard Kentucky's Jerry Bird, a and was ultimately scored by 6-6 rebounding ace from Corbin, singles from Vic Power and ranked by Kentucky Coach Ed Skowron. Skowron hit his 16th home [Standing college prospects. run of the year and broke a drought aftér 14 games. Carey (tral’'s hardwood reinsman, will is a close rival with 13 home handle the Hoosiers. Other Indiruns. There were two away in the|lin, New Albany; Dan Thornburg, second frame when Hutson hit{Muncie Central; Dean Rainbolt,

Angus Nicoson, Indiana Cen-|

jana stars include: Jim McLaugh-

This year’s Trester Award win-/ i : Tech's Joe Sexson, one of the, Joey Maxim's workout for his Monday night's fight with

the state's sports writers and ping and hooking with his left and at such times there | was usually the trademark of the pro. It developed later SEXSON PROBABLY willl he was concentrating on the left and this explained in part

| 1 |

{Diddle as one of the state's out-| obvious source of annoyance.

| | | { { |

|

his home run, 420 feet over the!Bloomington; Cal Grosscup, Au-|

left-center field fence. Baumer and Sipple singled but{Molodet, East Chicago Washing-

Malmberg ended it all with a'ton; Jim Barley, Marion; Junior and Maurice

fly to center field. (Phipps, Kokomo, ® x5 = i Lorenz, Madison. ERAUTT BLANKED the In-|

dians until the sixth inning when

Al Smith hit a single with two, . outs Baumer hit a single in the| Welsh Rare Bifs

seventh but Sipple hit into a fast, double play. | Catcher Quincy Troupe, now hitting in the clean-up spot,

By JACK WELSH

. Carl Erskine started his singled with one out in the | ....0. 45 a sandiotter in Ineighth and Ben Taylor was | jan, The way he had the

safe on Kal Segrist’s error. | Erautt got out of trouble when Smith forced Taylor and Hutson fouled out to Carey.

Hut 1 tRet! Erskine, the Anderson utson nearly got another| pe jg considered the best home run in the fourth when]

| change of pace pitcher in the left-Reld fence to catch his ne| Sime: In that no-hitter the pace never changed-—just one

drive. disgusted Cub after another Illness threatened to cut further going back to the bench.

into the ranks of the Indians last » = ~ '

{night when Pitcher Bill Aber- Herb Conyers finally hooke

{nathie was taken to the hospital \suffering from appendix pains.| °° With Birmingham. If the

'He was later released. Outfielder {Milt Nielson remained in his hotel {room suffering from the flu.

Cubs swinging yesterday they were just beginning theirs. #“ s »

bat than he did with the Indians, Conyers will think southern hospitality is a myth.

Jim Bennett to Lead Stars Against Giants |

| Jim Bennett is slated to pitch| {for the Indianapolis All-Stars at | Victory Field tonight when the {local Negro independent team] {meets the Brooklyn Royal Giants, |long ‘one of the nation’s outstand- | {ing traveling clubs. | Sam Seagraves, Herman Watts |and other former Negro American League players will perform be- ?

ES

\ V

[§1 *

FV

per Young, - Clover Erwin, Ed

‘hart tomorrow and at St. Joseph, | Mich., Sunday.

Additional Sports, Pages 26, 27 |

i

[V1 {LCS BOURBON Uh

PROOF

Jack burn; Fritz Franz, Jefferson; Vic| he must keep him off balance. As a jab it is a stiff left and | with the pull in weights he’ll have (close to 20 pounds | by the time he eats and enters the ring) it figures to be

|

| |

| |

big man doesn't show a better | at least have made him a picture boxer in the mold of

you have heard they were highly regarded in their day.

AN EVENT REPEATED BY POPULAR DEMAND!

MEN

Open Thursday Evening ‘Til 8:30 :

GROSSINGER, N. Y,, June 20—Only on rare occasions does the sports clairvoyant find a visit to a fighter’s training camp rewarding. That's because the bruisers

are equipped with head guards, heavy gloves and pained boredom. : Even condition, the one simple thing workouts can be depended on for reliable guidance, can trick you, as it did those who gave Billy Conn a chance in the second Louis fight. If you saw Conn, up on his toes, buoyant and sparkling in his next to last workout, you had to be impressed. But in his final workout, two days before the fight, you saw an entirely different Conn. Flatfooted, sluggish, worried. He had hit his peak too soon; he had left his fight in the gym, as the boys say.

Whatever chance he might have had had been destroyed by an, unbalanced poorly managed schedule. He was doomed. » = » » # "

THERE was not much that was resplendent about

Robinson here yesterday. Maxim seldom threw his right. Mostly he was jab-

the unexciting Jperformance—this and an ill-fitting head guard which was constantly dropping over his eyes, an

The left is Maxim's most effective weapon, so it is not surprising that he unsheaths it so often in practice with accuracy the primary objective. : If Maxim is to thwart the middleweight champion it must be with his left. When he isn’t crowding him in close

hurtful—much more hurtful against a middleweight than against the bigger fellows Maxim's been fighting. # » ” = » ” THE BLUNT fact is Maxim at even weights against anybody is not a forceful hitter and never was. Pound for pound he would not have a chance against Robinson, who is faster, hits harder and is, I suspect, ‘a quicker thinker. But the Harlem Hot Shot will come into the ring pounds under the middleweight limit while Maxim will be over the light heavyweight limit by two or three. For a big fellow without a punch Maxim is not really a bad fighter, in his way, which unfortunately stresses defense. Robinson, quick as he is, may not find him easy to hit. He doesn’t look as stylish in action as some of qur past light heavyweight champions, but none of them would have found him exactly a soft touch. It’s too bad Jack Kearns didn’t have him from the start; he would

Jack Delaney, Tommy Loughran and Gene Tunney. As

GET THAT EXTRA PARR OF -

PANTS of Your Choice for

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Buy a pair of Leon's Quality Pants at Leon's Regular Low Prices . . . $8.95 to $19.95 . . . Get your second pair of the same quality for $5. You can buy them for a friend, your Dad or your brother . . . they don't have to be the same size. Wide selection of patterns. All materials including worsteds, gabardines and sharkskins. All sizes 28 to 50. >

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THE EASIEST TERMS IN TOWN

As you know, credit is no problem at Leon's. There are no carrying charges or red tape . . . simply tell Leon how you want to pay and that is the way it will be done.