Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1952 — Page 12

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Brown Starts Rebuilding ‘Lean, H

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Marciano Is on Move

Right in Direction Of Joe Walcott

. ‘By HARRY GRAYSON NEW YORK, Aug. 2-—Rocky Marciano now has had

42 professional matches, and still no one knows for sure,

~o-

whether he can fight. :

Harry Matthews turned out to be little more than the.

myth so many suspected he might be. ; fellow, he is on the move, and Before the roof caved in at the Brockton = Block Buster Yankee Stadium, the totally un-| most certainly is—right In the

marked Matthews sald he had coll never been hit save for the time y nw

he suffered a broken nose in 1943. HOW Marciano will fare against And when Marciano landed the the FIOVIDE | targel at is the amazin alcott is now the quesgeod Jeff ‘hick in, the second tion. ror no doubt aa wil round, The Athlete acted just like \ ooo + =) ke off the most deva bloke who had never been hit. asting blow that has ever been It made you wonder who he parked on his chin, for the Great fought in 105 jousts. Father .of Camden has clearly

The answer comes pretty close to being ‘no one of consequence.” Marciano remains pretty crude, but as Jack Kearns best describes The Rock, he is a hurting fighter. |

tol in both fists. But a plodding Louis finally caught Walcott, and there Is little reason to doubt that the much younger and thoroughly

g 0 = | | aggressive Marciano won't do “HE RATES with Jack Demp-| the same. sey as a hitter,” says Doc Kearns,| There is a tendency now to

“may hit even a little harder and, compare Marciano with Dempsey.’

again like Dempsey, he hurts the They must mean the 21-year-old other guy with every punch.” Dempsey, who first came to New Marciano also has demonstrat-| york to box Wild Bert Kenny and ed that he can take it more than john Lester Johnson 10 rounds somewhat. He did this against zach at the old Commonwealth

Roland LaStarza. Joe Louis shook Club in Harlem in the summer of|

him up with a couple of punches. 1916. No one hut John the BarMatthews, who knocked out 62 per Reisler, who had him .at the opponents, twice belted him solld- moment, pald any attention to

ly in the first heat. - the young man from the far west When a heavyweight with the (who always looked ike he needed sock of Marciano absorbs pun- |a shave. He got little or no more mont and: crowds the. other money and disappeared.

IAC Swimmers Lead As Meet Ends Today

Indianapolis Athletic Club retained a substantial lead yesterday in the Indiana AAU state age group swimming championship at Broad Ripple pool. The three-day session

ends this afternoon. TAC. 4 Joan Pitterling South Bend. 5, Pat

The IAC

points while Twin City Club" of |1 460 by Sue Motis, South Bend 100-Meter Backstroke—-1, Gall Moll, IAC South Bend and Mishawauka a sharon Peeney, IAC. 3. Penny Savage,

w IAC; 4 Jean Fitterling, South Bend; § share second with 108 points Lynn Zuber, IAC. 6. Portia Hancock, IAC

each. Washington 8wim Club is Time oh ) 8. new record; old Jecord: 5 ” s | 4sby Joan tterling, outh en third with 73 points. | 200-Meter reestyle Relay--1, IAC «Por-

{tia Hancock, Penny Savage, Lynn Zuber, The remaining teams are In- Gay Moll); 2. Bouth Bend (Pat Waltman,

dianapolis YMCA 42, Lafayette Rosemary Vargo. Donna Parrish, Joan Swi Club, 40: Rivera Club gg |Fiuteriing Time: 2:26 4 m Club, 40; Rivera Club, Jz, GIRLS 14 AND UNDER and Ellenberger Park, 11. | 100-Meter Freestyle—1, Ann Morrison. » "o" { IAC: 2, Mary Marchino, IAC: 3, Margie {Molner, Bouth Bend; 4, Judy Huth, LafayTEN NEW RECORDS were es- tite: 5 Karen Newbold. Riviera: 6. Annie | Noone, Riviera. Time tablished, upping the total of old record: 1:15.8 by Betsy Alexander, IAC shattered marks to 17 in two days| 100-Meter Bremstatroke—1, Ann Morrison of competition. The age Group karo IAC. 4 Sus Mot, South Bend: «18, Elsle Hartman, South Bend, 6, vilis swimmers hold the finals this aft |8hields, Washington. - Time: 1:28.3, new ernoon starting at 3 o'clock. [record: old record: 1:36.3 100-Meter Backstroke - 1, Mary MarBill Cass, IAC, took 2.3 |ehina, JAC: 2, PE Morrison, TAC: 3. Judy seconds off ot Jim Morrison's {Hn jHareite, $. Margie, Malner Soul | Bend: 5, Judy Lambert, viera: ' ally state record in the 50 meter Wertz IoC Ti 1:23, tied stat d freestyle for boys 10 and under, 7 Betsy Turner. IAC i being clocked in :35.9. In the hi Barton, Sally Wertz, M

ne

200-Meter Freestyle Relay-1, JAC ary MarJaime vent for Eire 0 an yu. Motis, whine Hartman, Mar 1e . olner. Atsy ¥: J eh CRERY bis y ' [Mary Congoy. a Riviera (Judy Lampert bold): 4, Washington ‘Hetty Nel, Bar~ord by Tol a second, finishing Hara Peck ~Mary Harter, Phyllis Shields) in :404. oud GIRLS 16 AND UNDER In the boys 12 and under 100 200-Meter JTrestyle—1, Shella Donshus. = | \ : ' e » » tieter breaststroke, John ROCAD,| Fat Moll TAC: 4 Sus Behafer, IAC: IAC, shattered Tom Moran's Ruth Abbott, IAC: 8. .Linda Barton. IAC. state record by 16.8 seconds. In pals; Meter Individual Medley. 1. Sheila | onahue, Alayette: ' els urner, the same event for girls 12 and yoortye (CRavees 3 PING: © Bus under Lynn Zuber, IAC, nosed | &chater. IAC: 5. Pat Moll. ACT 6." Ruth out her team mate, Gail Moll, to Time:, 2:08.7. pet a new state record by 6.2 sec-| Turner Linda Barton, Pat Moll): 2, Sue v . ), onds. The old record was held Time 1:60 oo Deeey Alexander by Sue Motis of South Bend. .In S————— the 100 meter backstroke, Miss win in record time of 1:31.6, breaking Joan Fitterling, South For St. Paul Bend, record by 2.6 seconds. : : BOYS 10 AND UNDER CHARLESTON, W. Va, Aug. 8 Ode Freestyle—1, Bill Cass, 14C 2 (UP)—St. Paul hopped on over, IAC; 4, Bob Berner, IAC; 5. Carl Charleston for four runs in the

chino, Ann Morrison): 2, South Bend (Bue broke Sharon Feeney's old recTime: 2:24 4 | Time: 2:388 150-Meter Medley Relay—1., IAC (Betsy ) ° Moll, IAC, bounced back to Big 1st Wins Joe Layman, Washington: 3, 11 ood, Riviera: 6, Joe Quigley, IAC. Time:

direction of Jersey Joe Wal- |

demonstrated that he packs a pls-

Waltman, South Bend, 6. Lynn Blackburn, | swimmers have 309 IAC. Time 1:39 8 new record: old record: |

By JACK WELSH Times Sports Writer

CARMEL, Aug. 2—Think you got troubles, chum? Then how would you like to handle

a high-strung harness horse who follows commands given only in French? This perplexing problem fell on the shoulders of Wy. Leo McNamara '" and his son, Leo Jr., at Two Gaits Farms last week with the arrival of the standardbred stallion, Quel Veinard, from Paris, France. The McNamara's purchased { the 14-year-old | Jock Welsn French trotter last March and finally cut the red tape of Europe to have Quel Veinard flown to the United States.

- » =" IT WAS without precedent in the history of trotters to have a stallion imported to America for breeding. But the old pros at the harness sport are confident blood lines reap a harvest in years to come, - Quel Velnard won't go into stud until Feb, 1, 1958. Right now Leo Jr. and Fred Tatford, who handles stallions at Two Galts, have a full time job getting the beautiful black steed acquainted in his new home. Quel Veinard left Paris by plane July 20. It wasn't lonely junket since Two Gaits Farms consigned a 9-year-old brood mare, Manina, and. her suckling to the flight. In 18 hours, Quel Veinard was \in a new world. Everything was (different the sounds, the |sights, the language. | » NN 4 HERE WAS one of France's finest breeding trotters stretching

its legs on American soil for the *

first time. This stranger, who {may rewrite a chapter in breedling, was as nervous as any im migrant. Yet the inquisitiveness shone brightly in his face. Young McNamara and Tat-. ford vanhed Quel Velnard to Two Galts Farms, arriving Tuesday after ‘taking more time than it took from Paris.” Looking at the statuesque

animal of long mane and thick : shoulders, you get the feeling the

McNamara's have invested thelr money wisely. A son of Telle{marue by Tradition, Quel Veinard (hasn't raced since 1947 but the big brass at Two Gaits are confident of his talents as a sire. “It will take a little time for

1710.4. new record: all of us. to get acquainted,” 5,

{Leo Jr. explained as he talked

, Brends|in the shadows of the mammoth @& barn housing Two Galits stallions. ™

“Quel Veinard has raced all over Europe . . . practically every word he's ever heard has been French. It's natural for the horse to be confused. A little patience will [bring him around. Quel Veinard !is as intelligent as he is sensitive

{but he's worth every cent we

: paid.”

. op o » 8 THE PURCHASE PRICE was lin the five figures but the actual amount was never disclosed, in

‘|keeping an agreement with for-

mer owner, Gabriel Moreau, a {Paris movie house magnate. | Quel Velnard is as French as the Eiffel Tower but in blood lines going back to the fourth generation, there's 1/16 Russian Orloff and 1/16 American mare .in his veins. The decision that brought Quel Veinard to this sprawling haven for breeding and training harness horses stems back to last fall when Two Gaits Farms fore'saw the need for new blood. “Dad and I investigated the top prospects in Europe for

Trotter Arrives From Gay Paree

new record; old record, 383 by first inning tonight, then coasted breeding,” Leo Jr. said. “While

9, tm’ Morrison, IAC. | o sprint {2 AND UNDER (to an easy 7-to;2 victory before the American trotters are the

100-Meter Bresststroke—1, John Rocap. $393 fans in the opening game of hest in the world, only the Very oO

IAC: 2. Joh ‘Dusch, South Bend: 3.|a twoDale Brown. RIVIeT: 4, eoTge Quigier. | ! t game home stand for the best are consigned to stud. ConIAC. 5. Tom Huston Washington: 6 Bob enators, [sequently there have been few s x me. , hew record, 1:88 by rom dora fac ®¢ Three Charleston errors, a outcross trotting stallions. The asd Meter Rackstroke—l Bob Loser passed ball and four stolen bases situation in Europe can't measure cap, IAC: 4, John O'Dusch, South Bend: contributed to the 8t. Paul up to our standards but if Amer5. George Quigley. IAC; 68, Terry Fuller

Riglera, Time: 1.39.0 victory. ican talent can go to work on top 200-Meter Freestyle Relay--1, IAC. y af 0 Corse utgles Jann Rone Jim Moms Jack. Cassini stole three bases European trotters, the results son. Bob Loser). Time :3.34.4 for the speedy -Saints, two of/could be startling.

BOYS 14 AND UNDER 100-Meter Freestyle-—1. Frank McKinney, IAC: 2, Tom Cone, Fllenberger: 3, Tom Maren, IAC; 3 Jack Patterson; -Indpls.| "MC! A ob. Lindsey Washington » Time: 1.0932, new record: old record, 1-109 the Saints’ attack with three hits by Mick Haves. Washington,

them in the fifth inning, ingluding # 8 8 home. g [08 LEO JR. traveled to France

Cimolf “ind Bill Sharman 1eg/last Winter and. frst say Quel Vejnard at Rueon.

100-Meter Breaststroke Jack Patter. €ach, and Ed Amaros contributed] The horse had everything aor IBarie. Ten a Frank ter: | th inni \ in| We required — conformations r 1€ ninth inning home run with| IAC; 3. Tom Moran. IAC. Time: 1.37.3 " | were good, he was sound and hew record, oid record 1409 by Jack the bases empty, his 17th of the had nic ? it. H a tterson. Indpls. YMCA cB a ad a eo gait. e raced un-100-Meter Backstroke—1. Prank = Mc-|Scason, *3

til he was 9 and shortly after the war beat the field that went on to compete in the Prix De Amerique.” -

nk Hager: SSAC: 2, Jack Patterson, Indpls. Charleston scored one run in : . 2 me new record, old record 1258 by Jack thé second inning and its final|

Pafterson. Indpls. YMCA, tally { g 4 BOYS 18 AND UNDER ally in fhe turd.

ST. PAUL CHARLESTON [00-Meter PFreestyle—1 Frank Parrish. AB H 0 Al AB H 0 A| Quel Veinard's diet was a little ns: 2, Tom Lord. IAC. 3. Dick Wertz, Cassini2d § 1 4 3 Rojek.ss 50538 wie’ sally “Stl THERE pred | Cima 3 3 3 3 Eiohwant § 113 3|° The French oun ald ; l . re moli,c 5 3 3 1 Taylor,1bd 3 170 1 " Oftver TAC" Time: irs Sharmnrt § 3 ; 9 boerdd 3110 }| “The French called them oats L-Meter ndividusl Medler1, Tom Nilson. $ : 2 1/ Davis if 3 0 § o/but the kernel was larger than Sd Sid, Ronald Ralishury Indpls. Y Baldwin,e 10 1 Eg : : } othe American product and much Tndols yORr, JAC, 8. Leon’ Perkinson Bosiack.e 11.8 9 Righettied 4 0 2 3iwhiter. But we don't anticipate Diving—1, Ronald Salish sy A I honhdalh.p 1 { sh ick Harter, Hoban: ob: Otten 1031 Daliesndr, 1 0 0 giany Houble along the eating line A rkinson ndpls ‘MCA, ¢ | t J pit Meter | Medley. Relat. IAC: | Wourb 13S Soe eds ¢ Parric om Lord 1 J ¥ii a= prog Bi re . 2 Indole * YMCA on Jo 3 i LI Tota 39112710) Totals 34 82715 ins inson annatd Balighray! Tim ) \ » ~ T GIRLS 10 AND UNDPR | 108 |g paliesandro popped out for Connelly in| BEFORE BRINGING the horse

80 Meter Freestylo.. 1. Peggy Lehv. TAC Moore fii | > 2 Janet Raherky. Santh Bend 3 Marilyn | gy pay) ute a) {ho Indiana, Soo shows Quel

Reenev JAC. 4, Sue Deery, Filenbérger. 8. cp, ti ol 000 eoa— 311 9 /Veinard at Roosevelt Raceway.

|

. |geles Rams.

SUNDAY, AUG. 3, 1952

ungry’ Squad |

Will Rely on Speed To Regain NFL Title

By United Press

CLEVELAND, Aug. 2—The Cleveland Browns, National Football League runner-ups in 1951, open their training camp tomorrow as the “question-mark team” of

1952. jve|Lavelli, Mac Speedie and George After winning five consecutive vo. pyjihack Marion Motley;

' |professional championships from|y, oe rin Houston, Bill Willis,

1946 to 1950, the Browns lost OU py ny Gatski and the great field last December to the Los AnN- goa) gpecialist, Lou (The Toe) They had been the goa only champs of the old Al-/". i 00 qing newcomers are America Conference and won hein io hack George Ratterman, 1950 NFL crown in thelr firstign, wag with the extinct' New

&

*4

‘uimes photos py John R. Spicklemire.

PROUD STALLION—Quel Veinard, 14-year-old French trotting stallion, still has the look of eagles in his eyes—the mark of a true champion—after a long trip to Two Gaits Farms from Paris, France. Leo McNamara Jr., who purchased the horse to improve.breeding lines, looks on admiringly as he gives the new arrival a breath of Indiana air.

1 3

4 2 LL 7 y

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NO SHYNESS HERE—Leo McNamara finds two other new additions to Two Gaits Farms a willing combination in posing for pictures. Manina, a 9-year-old brood mare born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1943, casts a watchful eye on her young suckling who is yet unamed. The pair arrived with Quel Veinard last week after a plane ride across the Atlantic.

In the 1952 Olympics, Russia Was Loaded for Bear—U. S. Bear

By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS [in men’s gymnastics. In women’s] A 5-5, 192-pound Russian dis-

YOU DON'T have to be [to 0. In Greco-Roman wrestling, |cus thrower is probably also Dackst in M |gymnastics, it was Russia, 951% abnormal for a Russian gal but ackstage in Moscow to sur-it was Russia, 56 to 0. In free- it comes closer to following the

sy . to 26. In women’s track and field, sia’ th o Russia’s Iron Curtain of ath- it was Russia, 70% to 11. Buses hing B it Ses hele I¥ letics. ({ In gymnastics, women’s humbly thankful Russia's show of athletic prow-| track and Greco-Roman wrest- Escorting a 175- und female ess in the Olympics should wrin-| ling, Russia outscored America, shot- Spang here a. wouldn't kle a fey eye-brows among Amer-| 304}; to 11. Total points were: | jong hii social grace to th can edugators— America 610, Russia 55313. z physical, cul-§ tural and political. In short, Russia's muscle factories haven't been | idle. "They've § been working | overtime. Rus- | sia came back | into the Olym-

|

| pics loaded for

American scene. . 8 8 = 8s 8 =» WRITERS HERE and abroad] THE AMERICAN victory at .|have pooh-poohed Russia’s satu-| Helsinki, too, has been clear-cut. ration raids on the gymnastic| The Americans smothered point-getting, dismissing it all as' themselves with glory by winan “Insignificant” phase of the ning the; games and events in Olympics since most nations dis-: which a premium was placed regard gymnastics. on skills, teaching methods To say gymnastics are “in- and techniques and all-around significant” is to disregard the | physical and mental capabiliimportant difference existing in | ties. the cultural traits’ and expecta- | 4.9 a tions within each nation. THE U, S. demonstrated that

| bear — Ameri- Angi The | Dear 2 &% | fact Russia stresses individual conclusively in many of the track | 2 8 @» | supremacy in physical exercises, and field events, in basketball

nip-ups and physical condition- Where our great coaching has exing among the male and female . ¢elled, in boxing where America masses reflects the kind of has been perennially prolific in thinking prevailing in Russia. [Winning world’s championships

Uncle Joe's boys is fraught with } b implications that go beyond ath-| 2 » &» |and in swimming, among many

letics. ; AN INDIVIDUAL “Hardness I> 2 sports. Inside Russia's mysterious stemming from group participa-

mausoleum of muscle must exist/tion in Russia's expansive phys- i a near-fanaticism toward physi-|ical fitness programs ateerto Tribe Stops

cal culture among most of theiself in the muscle-sports in the men and women of the Kremlin.|Olympics. Our high schools and Blues, 4 to 2 The Soviets demonstrated |universities teach competitive Continued from Page 11 clear-cut. tendencies to excel in gymnastics, but our calisthenics

THE BATTLE down to the ' final wire for world athletic “‘su-| | premacy” between Uncle Sam and

though the United States dominated the weight events.in men's track and field. For example, the U. 8. was fa-| jvored to win as many as five, be conditioning for more calisweight - lifting individual titles.| thenics. We won two. Russia won three. #8 o

2 = = NOT ENOUGH fragments of IN WRESTLING, Americans information have leaked out of " have excelled. in techniques, the Kremlin regarding the simon- Ist night, in She FS avently Ae {ranked among the world’s best. purity of the Russian amateur Blues by riflin pag IR Yet we won only one title. Russia athlete. It is a known fact, how-| ¢, right oy Cerv pire Yo won three. In rowing, Russia ever, that many of the athletes fast and caught it. Then o pressed the U. 8. and in boxing, are government-subsidized and Nielsen's Puen time u it was a Russ-U. 8. duel until last government-‘“sponsored.” Yet we watched the ne 32 wal night's walkaway. | Americans, hardly purists where | =~. over 3 fenc : America's stidlwarts almost it comes to tainting some of our PE i | walked off with everything ex-/amateur athletics, would have no a % a.

for the popular team sports like

baseball, basketball and fo anapolis club, , including track. ¥ Chances are all the scouts were

timber for their respective clubs. “No comment, but we enjoyed the

said.

and Class A will open on Thursday.

mise what's going on behind style wrestling, it was Russia 34 norm of physical specifications in tively.

{season in the league. York Yanks of the NFL last | Coach Paul Brown, hard-driv- year: Fullback Sherman Howard, ing leader of the Cleveland team, 4150 an ex-Yank, and Rookie Don had no {illusions about his vet-/gjosterman, star passer from erans snapping back. “When you oyola of California. lose,” he sald, “you have to re-| Besides the seven-year vets, build.” Brown has some lesser ‘“olda 88 sters” returning In, Such well. r | known players as Horace GilONLY nine ich on He ae Sieh) lom, You Fora, John Kissell, J Hiram College,| Derrell Palmer, Abe Gibron, about 20 miles south of here,| Tommy Thompson, Rex Bum-

dner, Dub Jones, Tommy have been with Brown since he gardner, ) ‘turned pro seven years ago—and| Jamis, Ximerson Cole and War-

they will have a battle to stick. | Ss

Brown sent the 55 players a NINE 2 players from the squad jeter 4k Wich Te ol Shel |which lost only one game in regu-

ny [lar season play last year are gone, motto—“Be Prepared.” He em- , . 1} 00 of them were key men phasized, however, that he had |—Linebacker and Capt. Tony | no intention of running a Boy |, 4.16 who quit to enter mediScout camp. | {cal school; Guard Alex Agase, “Remember, this isn’t a college oy coaching, and Tackle Lou team,” he wrote. “This 1S a pPro- pyyig who retired. Others gone fessional football team and the|, ro Chubby Grigg, Don (Dopey) burden of reporting in shape t0|ppeing Carl Taseff, Don Shula, make the club is strictly up t0 g,h, Gaudio and Cliff Lewis, who {you. just quit football this week. As for last year, Brown has “WE ARE going back to our po excuses about losing the chamold principles of keeping our foot-|pjonship other than a belief his {ball players on the lean andiplayers just ran- out-of steam, hungry side,” he added. “The|“We got ready too fast,” he said, team will be based on speed. EX- pointing out- that the Browns | pect speed trials the first practice. started training in July to get {Come prepared.” ready for the August All-Star And Brown said, significantly, game. “regardless of how good a friend| “It's a new year coming up,” {you might be of mine, or of how Brown said. “We'll stay ready {long you have been on our squad, |this time.” ‘or of how much of a football name you might have, it means

nothing when it comes to making| | All Came Out this football team. : In the Wash—

“To make the club, you must

| earn the right. It will be a | tough, ling, yi : | fight.” gruelling, competitive Game Rained Out

2.8 8

= BROOKLYN, Aug. 2 (UP)— | THE “OLD-TIMERS” still with|Jackie Robinson of the Dodgers {the team are Quarterback Otto attempted to punch Manager Srahaz, the mainstay of Brown’s|ppj) Cavarretta of the Cubs durteam since the start; Ends Dante ing today’s Brooklyn-Chicago game and had to be forcibly restrained by Coach. Cookie Lava-«

Junior Baseball [S5" Robinson sald he became

Ready for Meet angered when Cavarretta ale

The 1952 Junior Baseball city legedly called him a dirty name. championships start tomorrow| The Dodger second baseman afternoon at 5 o'clock with 16 later admitted “I could have been teams in action at Riverside wrong” after Cavarretta denied Park. that he had used a dirty word.

In B 1 " meets rabethacie on Aiamond Ne. 1: bre: The flareup occurred in te pa ugie

erside Hawks. play Broad Ripple Merchants on diamond No. 3: Junior Indians engage inning when umpire | Staspndrews on dismond “No. 3, and Car- Donatelli called time because of ov diamond Ne {. Ben Davie: Giants’ and rain with the Cubs Jeading, 40. e rst roun yes. T'h Camore against Tarkington on Among en rire ’

Sycamore against Tarkington on diamond No. 1: Riverside plays Broad Ripple on retta came down from the third Washington on diamond No. 3: Ellenberger hase coaching box and called

diamond No. 2; Brookside square off with me aS ERR A Suet Mobinson a name as he demanded Aus. 28 while 208 Jengue-tesme “itt ve in that Donatelli -disecipline Jackie year-olds and under will clash i Ra for stalling tactics. Robinson to he championship. $5. Siavts. Tatsdh’ went after Caverretta but Lavagetto and Umpire Tom Gorman reached him and held him back before he could get closer than 15 feet. : The Cubs had taken a 4-0 lead in the 4th inning, during which

Win Stock €ar Features

Bud Moneymaker won his third straight 25-lap feature race last

night at W. 16th St. Speedway when he traveled the course in Hank Sauer hit a 3-run homer.

8:13.93. But the homer was washed away Jack Farris and Frank Rossler|210N8 With the Cubs’ “victory.” finished second and third; respec-

Giants Recall Corwin

Heat winners were. Money-

American male 18 maker, Wayne Hawley, Joe Pal- From Minneapolis

mer, and Vic Ebbing. The 12-lap| NEW YORK, Aug. 2 (UP)— winners were Gene Warriner, Jim|Manager Leo Durocher made good Ervin and Hawley. Harris set ajon a promise today when the New

. Renner,

new 1-lap record of :18.44.

York Giants recalled Pitcher Al

the strong man-type sports, al- are used chiefly as conditioning Prete Pain > ig esa |

In Russia, calisthenics must’ trying to spot some promising

game,” the scouts and Hornsby |

On Niesen’s third time at bat |

IT WAS an errorless tilt and

Ben Wellington was the 25-lap|Corwin from their Minneapolis feature winner at the Speedrome|farm affiliate in the - American with Bill Arnold and Ed Manuel| Association. taking second and third, respec-| Durocher.had promised Corwin tively. Ray Arbrough won the|/when the young right-hander was semi-final and Roy Hunter took|farmed out earlier in the year the trophy dash. that he would be recalled for the Heat winners were Manuel,|Glants’ late-season drive. Arnold, Wendall Fall, and George| Corwin won 5 games and lost 1

Pollard. Racing tonight begins at|for the Giants last season. His 8:30 o'clock with time trials start-|record at Minneapolis thfs year is 8-11.

ing at 7:30 o'clock. |

Beautiful, Lifetime

Self-Storing Rustproof Aluminum Requires No Upkeep—

HONEY DOWN]

AND NO PAYMENT UNTIL NOV. 16 THEN SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS

SUNDA’

INDIA] up with ano It will the first tir

16th St. was midgets back show the stoc tracks. The laterace once a The track policy of its pi ing for any y Saturday and cept for the n run.

n LATE-MOD restricted to c on the highwa fenders, heac and must be | respects. The to carry roll ment inside tl body from cr a crash. Ho will be require mets and safe idea, for you may happen ii The only the late moc permitted tc front wheels. The late-m will include 10-lap races, ¢ for the five | 50-lap feature Qualifying v and the first r

o SALEM Sp Sunday aftern The half-mi] which has hit paces. in the AAA sprints. The field Ruttman, Mik Carter, Andy Jim Rigsby, Sweikert, all “500” plus Speedway and Red Bales, Pe my Daywalt, Don Warriner, Jad Denny, Buzz Gee, Crash Cre Vern Faler, others. There will elimination r event and th ship feature. start in the f will start at | first race at light Savings

” THE NEX championship for Indianapol and other 500 the Springfie! —— Ry

Dim D 5th R

. 8 DETROIT, Maggio drove a grand-slam today’ to lea Sox to a 10 tc Detroit Tigers Dizzy Trout Boston hurler: his eighth. Vv many losses. the loser, hi against four v Wildness by his downfall pitches were giving both I Archie Wilsor base. Hoot F sacrifice and tl when Newho ball. 8 DIMAGGIO home run, his son, and the I to stay. Detroit got tom of the Johnny Pesky and a Boston Trout got tl second with h the -season, b the sixth v cracked out | of the year tc Dropo and r¢ to 5-3. He was rep A home run | 11th, with G Sammy White field out gave runs -in the e

|Sipple simply outlasted Cereghino, |who apparently pitched himself] lout in the early innings. The VIRTUALLY everything in the Tripe righthander worked a care-|

(Won and lost records in parenthesis).

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