Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1952 — Page 5

r. 6, 195%

ch

To v dy icklemire

iggins jer. oyd W made

rd spectacle.

is, 7

o Tie 11 surged back st night to gain visiting Franke

saved from a » minutes when caught Bruce the 12-yard line chdown. 21 faced an 18he Bears came third quarter. the first Law-

on a plunge. , he passed to marker. Reibel y recovering a shes’ 33. ship's scoring 1d quarter when ished over and icked éenter to

third marker

nd half when

ver from the 1-

012 6 0-18 0 _0-126—18 rics .T. LC. 3 10 13 6 0 3 0 1 7 174 0 109 1 9 [1 5 0 1 0 5 3 2 2 0 HOOLS ove 7 Franklin Twp. 18 rg 0. hport 0, HOOLS r 0. 0. kville 6. 8 3 (tie). + t. ey 14.

ston 18, Michigan {orth Side 19. y 6.

Wallace 0. le 0.

). femorial 7, Bates 1e South Side 6. B .

0. e Central Catholle

e 6. uth Bend Adams 0, ‘oncordis 18,

n 12. wn 0.

3

dicap dicap dicap

rom Day servations

lleys

SATURDAY, SEPT. 6, 1952

\ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Grand Circuit Heads East After Fair

{

Record Purse Highlighted Racing Here

By JIM SMITH THE GRAND CIRCUIT harness horsemen have closed] - up shop in Indiana for another year and have headed ir Carthage, O., and Reading, a And they are taking with them $210,399.97 in prize money, marking the richest single week of harness racing here, and the satisfaction of knowing their five-day meét at the Indiana State Fair was witnessed by nearly 100,000 harness fans. In addition te taking down a top share of the prize money, | | Frank Ervin, driver and trainer of the Good Time Stable, Goshen, N. Y,, took away a special prize for being the top driver of the five-day meet.

o ” » 8 THE AWARD was presented] | by Herman H. Highley, owner of Highley Farms, Swayzee. The) | award was decided on a point basis with five points for a first place, three for second and two for third, Ervin gained a total of 77 points during the meet here. And one of his top victories of the week came yesterday at the reins of his crack pacer, Good Time. The son of Hal Dale took

high

These are men of character ’’- COACH RED BLAIK

Where Are The Army Cribbers? Wanderlust Hits. Former West Point Players

\

| 4

Turra!

Oirinm

the first heat in a close finish with Irish Hal and Dudley Hanover.

In the second, he couldn’t find racing room and wound up fourth with Dudley Hanover the winner. In the runoff, Benny Schue rated Dudley Hanover in front and Ervin was content to lay behind until the turn for home. Then the leading money winner moved to the outside and flew past Dudley Hanover covering the half in B57 4/5.

One other runoff was required on the final day race ecard.

Indianapolis’

The Times’

Times Swim Meet Set Today, Tomorrow

By JACK WELSH

top swimming

talent comes up for a crucial assignment today and tomorrow in Midwestern Open meet at Broad Ripple pool. The Capital City stars, along

: i

Helicopter with Harry Harvey up took the first heat of the Breeders Filly Stake for 2-year-old trotters, but gave up the second to Old Blue Hen with Ned Bower in the sulky.

= " = IN THE RUNOFF the second heat winner broke out of the gate on tgp and maintained her lead into the homestretch where the

Hoot Mon filly made her bid. The going was rough and close at the RE finish but Helicopter took the heat

and race by a head at the wire, The halance of the day's card went 8. ight heats. Frances Jewell took the opening race with Hugh Bell at the reins. Ervin racked up another winner when he rated My Time, another Good Time Stable horse, well ta take the 3-year-old pace. Lu Peck retained her undefeated string on the Big Five by capturing the 3-year-old trot in the identical times of 2:03 8/5. The next big harness event will be The Little Brown Jug slated at Delaware, O, Sept. 14. This race for 8-year-olds is to the pacers what the Hambletonian is to trotters. The estimated purse

with other Hoosier entries, match strokes with the cream of Midwestern states in the final outdoor competition of 1952. Elimination heats, got under way this morning at 9:30 o'clock in freestyle, backstroke, breaststroke and diving competition. Relay races and individual medley are also scheduled this afternoon. Approximately 26 events were to be completed before he finals at 3 p. m

Open to Publie

Jim Clark, veteran city swimming coach who will serve as referee, announced that the pool is open to non-competitive swimmers. Spectators may pay the price of admission wearing street clothes or they may watch in swim suits and take a dip later. Cool breezes and heavy overcast threatened the Midwest Open earlier in the week but once again the weatherman befriends the swimming fraternity. The temperature is slated to rise to 88 degrees today and rain promises to hold off until Monday. Clark estimated a field of 220 swimmers—both boys and girls— will have toed the starting line

for this one is $65,000.

Two-Year -Olf ra

B 3 yo Jr.,

War

Public spirited local merchants, as. an expression of goodwill,

before tomorrow's finale. Toddy’s field include out-of-state entries from Kenosha, Wis, Battle Creek, Mich, Ky., St. Louis, Mo,, Chicago, Day-

Harness Race Results

ace

risburg, Pa.

Three-Year-Old Pace, Purse §6410

Louisville,

Purse Frances Je Jewen on Selb, Cessssens 3 onnie Widow (W. Smart) ..eeeees Pleasant SE an irk) ooeeee i Preciony 1 Baldwin} ws 242 . io ol ge (B, I ae a 56 J our LR winnine 7-7. Times—2 a Owners—dJ. T. and t A workm Sea ford, Del. Two-Year- facve Trot ne. 5238 2 Belcopler, on i Boyer. nnran ue atur (J. Art ar) Mey Hanover (J. Bimps! ci 5 13 - Hanover (L. Sheppar - Whoa Colby (R. Baldwin) T7- 5, 0s Yudy is: Winger Fo a 7 36 ‘8 Winning Owner 2 overt

(P. Brodin) ..oeeiens 1 want you to receive this lovely My Caine: assle (TF. Alden) ii. i basket of gifts, if you have just |SCia, aon” on “aumpeenl” " to the city, are 0 New Miss, Winsock! gn tien) 34 Suv hd, or have just moved to Lg dn Li Natalie | gl

a new address within the city. There's * nothing to buy. No

3, 4 §ihnte’ Boshen™

Trot, Purse $6935

shligation. Phone Jou Welcome I n Bet i Tyol, Purse agon Hostess whose phone is olcano Wate 1: far below and image fo [Numbers Ming 'Q; Wiaetiel !

receive these gifts, ner Date (J. O'Bri

(M, Milburn) 6-6, Metre) 9-8," Miss

s Taek eg “8. $i

yon Es

Newport Jeritra . Sameran) 3.4. pin.

i - Hanover (J. Arthur) 9.8. mes Welcome Wa on 10%" 5 3 03 3/5, Winning owner— , 10. L. Mears, Toledo. O. : of ‘RL Jor, Al Pace, Purse $3720 1 New York © Memphis ® Los Angeles fi jai Ein air: & Toronto ! I i or ig (Rate arn ihan ba n Tar e o pi 1s. B 4k - ove PHONE TA. 279 grr EL

Tine Stable, YH

Our service embodies all that . goss to give that after-feeling of satisfaction; the satisfaction of a beautiful tribute to a loved one yet no burden to those left.

HISEY & TITUS Cleary

951 NORTH DELAWARE ST,

®

ton, O., and Toledo, O. Late entries are also expected from Champaign, Ill,

Hoosiers in Field

Hoosierland’s hopes for a sweep

of the championships -are bolstered with swimmers from Washington, Lafayette, South Bend, Huntington, Ft, Wayne, Peru and Terre Haute. Mike Londrigan of Springfield, Ill, is one of the tep threats among the invaders. The 12-year-old lad won the Chicago Tribune meet recently and also starred in the Napperville, Ill,

MURRAY OLDERMAN YORK, Sept. 6-—The

wanderlust has seized several of ROTC unit,” They worked in conthe dismissed West Point foat-|struction for a while. ball cribbers. Five have flitted

from one school to another since)

J leaving the academy.

Civilian life has its pitfalls,

ki too, they've found out.

A case in point is Ray Malavasi,

' who typified the football fever

that prevaded West Point. He was

. an all-New York metropolitan

| area guard at Clifton, N. J., High | School and was set to attend Virginia when a visit by Army Assistant Coach Johany Green detoured him to the citadel on

{ the Hudson.

The squat 190-pounder was

/ called the best line prospect to

enter West Point during the Blalk regime and in his one season proved it. He also picked up a bad

Knee. With his buddy, Gerry Hart, a tackle from rooklyn, Ray

emigrated to Kansas State after the cribbing blowup. His first semester in civil engineering he made three C's and a D. He also reinjured the knee, “Just horsing around,” explained Ray. “Now I'm ruined for football.”

» - o HE and sidekick Hart left school last March when studies weren't going so good and, says

White, Carter Win

Stock Car Features

Coming from far back in the field, Herschel White last night won the 25-lap feature stock car race at the W 16th St. Midget Speedway. At Speedrome, the 25-lap feature was ‘won by Al Carter. Second to White. was Bud Moneymaker and third was Frankie Mike. Moneymaker and Don Dewey won 12-lap semifinals. Heat races went to White, Dewey, Jim Irvin and George Polland. Ed Manuel was second to Carter at Speedrome and Omer Traylor was third. Carter won the semifinal and Mel Hunter wan the trophy dash. Heat winners were Bill Arnold, George Mann and Ben Wellington,

Cobb Quits Hospital RENO, Nev, Sept. 5 (UP)—Ty Cobb, baseball's immortal “Georgia Peach,” was released from St. Mary's Hospital today following treatment of a virus infection and | returned immediately to his sum-

meet,

mer home at nearby Lake Tahoe.

NEW YORK, 8 Sept. Pt. B—Despite face cuts that required 10 stitches, Young Gil Turner hoped today to meet his upset conqueror, Bobby Dykes in their contracted return welterweight contenders’ bout at Philadelphia within 40 days. Dykes, a tall ahd somewhat ters rific Texan, won a split 10-round decision over Turner of Philadelphia in an electrifying fight before 4144 at Madison Square Garden last night. The sharp-shooter from San Antonio, who had gone into the ring an underdog at 8-b, sliced Turner's right cheek so badly it required six stitches and he gashed the left brow so that four stitches were heeded.

IN ADDITION, EarEor had a very sore lower lip, which bled from an inside cut in every round. Dykes suffered the only knockdown in the fifth round. Georgie Katz, Turner's pilot, said he was confident Gils

wounds would be healed for a mid-October fight at Philadelphia’s Convention® Hall. He said

Turner Hopes for Return

night, although his weight of 150% pounds slowed him up a little. Next time, the poundage will be about 148, he said. Dykes carried 151 ‘pounds on his 6-foot frame, and the skinny man appeared ready to topple over several times; but he would amaze the faps by suddenly shooting straight rights that snapped Turner's head back, or right uppercuts that nearly lifted him off his feet and that knocked out his mouthpiece three times,

ing in every round as he bored in with a bob-weave hooking attack against his retreating oppenent. He knocked Dykes half through the ropes onto the ring apron with a left hook to the thin in the fifth round. Dykes was back into the ring at the count of five, but he took the mandatory eightcount. Referee Petey Scalzo and Judge Harold Barnes voted in unison five rounds for Dykes, four for Turner and one even. However, Judge Jack Gordon favored Turn-

last

I I) OVER WEEK-END 26 HOMES

SOL

TODAY 4 P.M. to 8 P. M.—

Speedway. Reached on State

1 LOANS §

j APPROVED

61.2

PER MONTH

Plus Ins. & Taxes

engineering throughout, All i closets ith sliding

col b and rah bith, tub and

DONALD

Broker & Developer 9 W. Main St. °

er, 5-4-1.

Model House shown above furnished by L. S. AYRES & CO.

3 BEDROOM HOMES Oren House « 402 Do

uglas Drive SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 7 P. M.

IN MURPHY MEADOWS

Northeast section in town of Brownsburg . . . 8 Miles N. W.

Road 136 or W. 56th St.—

DOWN

Plus Closing Cost

YRS. 4% 4

20:

$10,750 1g $11, 600

QUALITY FEATURES THAT YOU WILL FIND IN YOUR DREAM HOUSE AT MURPHY MEADOWS

i Richard B. Pall +s + ual tori nd Designed bi, Richer A ation Fy a an ; 5

flush doors, full sized guest

closet, distinctive grille separation in living rooms, choice of

shower. Black top street, sewer, landscaped. Storm and screen

E. GRAY

{mer Army Coach Murray War-

# a 3 TURNER FORCED the fight

Ray frankly, “to keep from going to military summer camp with my

Then, at the invitation of for-

math, they trekked down to Mississippi State for a spell of summer school. Next Ray thought of going to Newark, N, J,, College of Engineering. But Coach Bill Meek of Kansas State offéred him a chance to continue his studies there if he'd coach the guards) and tackles. So back to K-State he and Hart will go. Kansas State was an original focal point for seven cadets. As Malavasi noted, “Bill Meek called all of us with these offers when almost everybody else had turned us down.” 8.8 » FIVE enrolled—Malavasi, Hart, End John MecShulskis of Kearny, N. J, Guard Bob Volonnino of Passaic, N. J., and Guard Ed Stahura of Indiana, Pa. Gene Filipski gave it serious thought before choosing Villanova. Halfback Herb Johnsén of Sandy, Ore, backed down to get married, then was in a serious auto accident which ended his football career. Now only, McShulskis and Stahura will play. The latter first enrolled at Illinois with a big fanfare of publicity but switched to K-State when he found out he would be ineligible” for two years at the Big Ten school. The merry-go-round was in full swing when Volonnino pulled out of K-State after one week. He got homesick and went to Villanova. »n ” # STILL another switch was made by Al Conway of Avondale,

{collegiate football -career with {William Jewell this Fall

West Point. He first enrolled at Missouri but left after one semester because, according to Big Seven Conference rules, his two seasons at Army ruled him out for football, Conway turned up at small William Jewell College as a “math” major, and it was six months before newspapers ever got wise to the switch, Conway 1s 4-F in the draft because of a bad knee. But bad knee and all, he'll close out his

Tomorrow: Pity Poor Frank Leahy.

Columbus Hurts Colonels’ Hopes

United Pres THE COLUMBUS Red Birds were responsible today for all but ruining the hopes of the Louisville Colonels for a chance to make fourth place and a spot in the American Association playoffs.

Dick Rand's single for Columbus with the bases loaded and two men out drove in the two winning runs after an earlier single by Red Bird Jim Neufeldt had driven home the two tying scores as the Red Birds took the Colonels, 6-4, The Colonels got only seven hits off Ralph Beard and Bill Allen, who hurled hitless shutout ball the last three innings to get credit for the win, Fourth-place Minneapolis turned the tables on pennantwinning Milwaukee to upset the Brewers, 12-2, It took the Asso-

Mo., a top-notch offensive end at!

DOWNTON & WHEAT... Presents the

1953 SYLVANIATV

The television that gives you everything!

Toledo Case

By United Press TOLEDO, O. Sept, 6—Contempt of court against Danny

Menendez filed in connection with his transfer of the Toledo base-

notice.” The hearing, scheduled for

ball team to Charleston, W. Va.,| CaP has been postponed “until further

PAGE 5

Set Back

day at the request of both in the dispute between those ¥ want the team a Toledo and those

Ra transfer to the Wot Virgie tal

Meanwhile in C endez anounced that Sih in advance Toledo Hoket been repgid and that about "S400

Monday, was postponed yester-

Texans Wins

SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Sept. 6 (UP)—The Dallas Texans tucked away today their first professional football exhibition victory, a 27 to 14 decision over the Washington Redskins last night at San Antonio. A crowd of 19,075 fans at Alamo Stadium witnessed brilliant passing and running by Quarterback Bob Celeri as he

remains” to be paid when the purchasers ask for refunds.

Bucs Lose Back

COLUMBUS, Q., Sept. 5 (UP)~ Physicians told Ohio State University Football Coach Woody Hayes today that Left Halfback Bernie Skvarka “definitely” would not be able to play this because of a life-long kidney ment. The decision came after tests were made on Skvarka at a Columbus hospital.

we

sparked the Texans to victory,

LOANS

Any employed mon or

sonal and business need erty improvements, med

PERSONAL

Quick Conve

nient « Private .

woman having a steady

income and o good paying record may make a Personal Loan here. Small loons are welcome. Many loans are made on single signatures. + Youmay borrow at moderate cost to pay for per-

s, home furnishings, propical, surgical and hespital

expenses—in fact for any reasonable purpese.

MODERATE COSY

TRADE-IN YOUR OLD SET FOR A '53

DOWNTON & WHEAT

3745 Ww. WASHINGTON ST. OPEN DAILY ¢ AM, » ? P.M. BE, 338) OPEN SUNDAY

ciation’s sécond-spot Kansas City First $1000 . . + « + « « + $7 per $100 Yearly Bl 11 inni t th » og a Won ne St. See 81 Over $1000 . . a 08 ae $6 per $100 Yearly Amount of Cost for Amount 12 Monthly Loan One Year You Receive Payments $108 $ 1.5 $10044 | § 900 216 15.12 200.88 ~ 18.00 %a 300 21.00 279.00 25.00 Priced : : ny -ouy C50 00 | 465.00 "ne . 1000 70.00 930.00 83.33 $ 35 150 | soo | wie | 12800 Full Price > Yo Exes Also for Larger Amounts and Longer Periods This table model in mahogany with the Sylvania “Movie Clear” picture and “Studio-Clear” sound APPLY AT ANY OFFICE FOR PERSONAL LOANS

is a real a} Ss. 00 it today! erformance

Fletcher Trust Company

INDIANAPOLIS 14 CITY-WIDE OFFICES » SEE YOUR PHONE BOOK

MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE coRPORATION

2 P.M TO 6 I

Phone Now

> CLASSIFIED WANT Dorr LAHIEN ANT EERE EEE ITE] ; Fre EI EEE IE |= |= [SE = 88 EE em et = = I= |= 1 | r= | 2 = = I T= =E I ax em S32 ER HS jaa |S en |S 22 —— EE == RE wa 8 | 2S em oa v Be iF I= == EE EE oa Ve FSS IT | 2% —— = B= FF = | TEX a lol % "z= Se | - - Sr. 2 =| or fun | 5 10 QI EZ|= = =e l= = MEE |= = = L|= il ¢ Lasies oorway R T 1 Jf © To Home Ownership ———]* # 11= » : y wi « —

Start Your Home Hunting This Week End

If your present home is not all you wish for in comforts,

convenience, style, size, location and newness start shopping

for your more suitable home today. Don't put it off day. See the real estate pages of The TIMES now.

Shop For Your Home Through The Times

her

Because you want to chaose your home from the widest possible selection of home bargains offered For Sale, your

best plan Is to read the Classified Real Estate pages

of The

TIMES. Hundreds of home values are advertised EXOLU-

SIVELY in The TIMES ,

. . beth daily and Sunday.

sure to read Section 4 of ‘tomorrow's Times.

‘Hundreds of Homes In The Sunday Times

; For convenient delivery of The SUNDAY Plaza 2001 Times to your doorstep first thing in the morn»

Be

ing, you may phone your order any time until midnight fonight,

The Indianapolis Times

"A Scripps-Howard Newspaper

Indiana’s Best Guide for Home: Buyers. bo 2 3 a