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Frese) clataneecieeailied: oe fom Boe | = seek Reewyweight cham. —Scie.| INDIANS ON WARPATH oy ehattenger Bity Conn, oe et egies when the Brown * * x * ‘Souminer s terete punches made sins Gets te Gnd Uithe victim, 80 of Unbeaten William & Mary Nears Net Title a eee eS Ga ty ae! By ROBERT MOORE, AP Newsfeatures Writer “- = cane feet two| \§ nis team ph aesyny = ine j it has been mighty “lucky”, but the i. ed 10 corende cher the! eye teem the old school have always sid whet when tens = Se ehh round of the | wins as many as the Indians have, i “tuck” a 'y ave, it ceases to be mere “luck”. ‘on roan main event | Whatever the case may be, the Indians are quite sure their | por cae a. “tuck” will hold out through ther. Py! wen NCAA intercollegiate champion-|,. Pyne Semaees & lett off the fore | ahigs at Northwestern University |2ichmond, Va. last summer, a —~ “ak ome timeeit, Louis beginning June 24. | sophomore, Come coming in with » | Take a look at the team that’, Bernard Bartzen, of San Ange- ee bere aot missed with will represent William and Mary |! Tex.—National interscholastic yt oS i slows, Louis, the national meet: ‘champion in 1944, second ranking peeeee thet straight Gardner Larned, of Chicago— |junior player in the United States ot Geee §=«6hewis «emmashed Undefested in intercollegiate |" both 1944 and 1945, a sopho- se <mattonger tell im the face play, the No. 3 ranking junior |™°"°- mt + dull eed mark appeared player in 1940, present Chicago | James Macken, of Montreal— = Gomme tore, That ost the ns singles champion, and only {Won the Canadian junior cham- gee ee yoo ee ae frechmen here. " Linares a 1944, teamed with his oe fred « hard left ‘brother, Brendan, to win the Ca-,! smngered Welly and fuilowed Brendan Macken, of Montreal | nadian men’s doubles champion-| : teeet left eed reetet that ~The Canadian men's champion ‘ship the same year, a freshman. m tee beck of 1944, a former junior cham- Robert Galloway, of Due West, i ot Sefer FPPRE CoUPFET pion of Canada, one of the bright- |S: C—Second ranking boy play- ;er in 1943, and that same year he “het i ot 907 anai™ arapes ts for the Canadian | teamed with Oliver Roddey to win st aq | Davis Cup team, runnerup in the | the boys’ doubles title, a fresh- oferes Mid-Atlantic championships in | man. 1 short of} - — ———— --— ” ‘ argest gate Defeat A's In Lone AL Came Who's Greatest Golfer? ? HORACE C. BOREN | AP Newsteatures DALLAS. “Who was the greatest golfer that ever lived?” | artists everywhere | into camps. Byron “Nelson has played in six opens and won one,” says i Keeler. “In two dozen rounds, he too has averaged 74 strokes | —a fine showing. His best | round, too, was a 68. His poor- Fairway are divided + Aenmctnted Preset Nelson and Ben Hogar of the| @st was an 82. His lowest TPH YORK June 28--Im the] oresent crop of par-busters have| ?ank was thirty-second. - 9 tm the Ameri-l their fan clubs. Bobby Jones of! Jones won 13 major meets; | Det Atianta and Walter Hagen still, blazed through the British Open! peedtell Virgil! nave their rooters around the|for three wins in four starts, * . i the Phat 19th hole.’ | copped the British amateur once! ftece ease stased to The man who perhaps knows | in a trio of outs, in 13 amateur! the answer—if anyone does— [championships in the United; | Owens’ world record. He can run ley to run the 100, because he has | ja 10-yard lead over the rest of 'There were no watches to time Leaves New Mark In Mu SPRINTER’S START, AND DISTANCE STAM- INA TO SET RECORD By HARVEY HUDSON , AP Newsfeatures CHAMPAIGN, Ili—By °com- bining a sprinter’s start and dist- ance stamina, Herb MecKenley has raced ‘to the head of, the all- time list of 440-yard runners. Speeding through a light rain, quarter-mile record in the Big} Ten outdoor meet. His time, 46.2; seconds, was two-tenths of a sec- ond faster than the accepted mark held by Ben Eastman of Stan- ford and Grover Klemmer. of California. j His coach, Leo Johnson, doesn’t know what McKenley might do under more favorable weather conditions. “He’s a good mudder,” Ss Johnson. “He ran the 440 in 46.7 seconds in a dual meet against Purdue when there were puddles on the track. He ran 46.2 in the Big Ten meet. If he’s any better when the weather is warm and there’s no rain I'll have to see it to believe it.” } Quick At Start McKenley also runs the 230, and won the event in the Big Ten show in 20.6 seconds, only three- tenths of a second off Jésse the 100, and in a quadrangular meet at West Point, he won a preliminary heat of 9.9 seconds. | Johnson hasn't called on McKen- ' plenty of sprinters. In his. world record-shattering performance, MeKenley opened the field in the first 100 yards. him at the 220 mark, but many of the coaches present thought he ran the first half Of the race in ©. B. Keeler of Atlanta. dean States he was crowned five 20.9 seconds or less. From that on a chilly day, the University can League. * 2 mart . ft of Illinois flash bettered the world|been flashing their bankrolls to (construction days, liwyen, first|gained much prospe’‘if/ Pasquels Are Losing, Rut serious doubts about the future of 44 over in Houston on his. way home after a visit to Mexico City as guest of the wealthy Pasquel Brothers, operators of the Mexi- The Pasquels have get players from the major leagues. “I don’t see how they can make it playing three days a week,” said Ruth. “They have had tremendous crowds but they still are taking a financial licking, I understand.” viee to players from the United States but he did have a little background of his own that he cited on the side. Back when Ruth was .a_ kid ganized. Said the Babe: “I got $600 for my first year’s play and I got an offer of $10,- 000 bonus and $10,000 a year. But I was afraid that any play- er who went to the Federal would be banned from organiz- ed baseball. I just wonder what would have happened to me if I had jumped.” With the New York Yankees The Sultan of Swat stopped The Babe didn’t pass out ad-! pitcher, starting out with Balti- more in the International League, e ¢ the Federal League was being or- | 1840 where it was used for in- Today’s Anniversaries. (Know America) a profitable cotton business be- ‘cause the product of slave labor, born in New York. Died Jan. 26,), 1868. a 1798—Daniel McCook, who. en- Misted in the Union Army: at. the age of 63, father of eight noted soldier-sons, borm at Canonsburg, | ag Died from wounds. received |" "" in service, July 21, 1863. noe pea’ 1824—John Tyler| Morgan, (Con- rate soldier, lawyer, noted) (ag Alabama U.S, senator, born, at 8 Athens, Tenn. Died June / 11, 1907. \ { Ch 1832—Benjamin H. Bris.tow,| “It is true,” severe’ Kentucky Union colo:nel and not-(lady of high ideals. ed Kentucky U.S. attorney ¥n Re-jcessful writer, “that U.S. solicitor, noted ary ‘of writings, but you the treasury, born, Elkton, Ky. : Died in New York, June 2%:, 1896,| “Perhaps not,” /returned the 1860—Alexander jWintola, the}author, “but whe’ s it:comes to a Cleveland bicycle; maker, ;;pioneér *question of whic’, shall live, my- automobile manufacturer; born in ;self or my writi' ags, I never hesi- Scotland. Died Jrne 21, 1932. tate to sacrifice/ my writings.” ; From the parsley plant family} According fo one count, the come seeds varyfing in flavor| Bible contaiAs 3,586,489 letters, from spiey caraway and licorice-| 773,690 words, 31,173 verses, 1,- like anise and ferjnel to pungent [189 chaptcsts arid 66; books. celery, dill and cramin. aS Mineral wool | was first pro-j wedding, presenjs in China, where duced commercially in Wales in}they are.consicered bad omens. Athletes Koot Itch HOW TO/STOP IT sulation. later he became the highest paid player in baseball history, re>| Make 5-Minute Test jceiving at one time $80,000 aj Get TE-OL, at any drug store. year. \ Apply this POWERFUL PENE- Ruth went to Mexico City at;TRATING jfungicide FULL the invitation of \the Pasquels,|STRENGTH. | Reaches MORE with expenses paid. He returned j germs to KILI; the itch. Get NEW with a gold watch and praise for |foot comfort ‘sr your 35c back. ‘their hospitality. ‘ GARDNE A's ‘Your Credit Is Giood at Paul J. Sher’s—Use It!’ —___ ~~ pd ly Ey of United States golf writers, | times while in 11, shots at the | point on he had the record in his Gevtee Brewer in @ night bet isn't talking. | U. S. open he won four times, | pocket. z ~ cmt Gee tetter 7-6 over the Approached on the subject of His crowning glory was sweep-| Jamaica Native " “esse Paetes with seok- | Nelson vs. Jones, Keeler hedges ‘ing all four major U. S. and|__A native of Kingston, Jamaica, sevebell artist, Joe Matton, | neatly | British contests in 1930—the cel-|McKenley is in his first year of “<—- © © creditable seve: You can't compare Jones and | ebrated “grand slam.” competition for Illinois. He never ote teanet Nelson in golf any more than| “Jones’ greatest "18 holes in|has been beaten — when he : “ + 43 fem] you can say Jack Dempsey was’ golf, in my opinion,” says Keeler, jwanted to win—since joining the wimg the |e better fighter than Joe Louis,” | “was his 66 in qualifying for the |lllini. He finished second to team- thew }says the links writer who was British Open in 1926. He had 33|™ale Bill awe ie a aera the great Bobby's “Boswell.” {putts and 33 other shots — six Reet Tu ce ps guste f the And when you're talking) threes and 12 fours — on a tre-|oniy for a place in oS ee . . about the greatest golfer that | mendously tough, 7,000-yard lay- McKenley’s father is a physi- AMERICAN LEAGUE ever lived, you shouldn’t over-| out, He added a ‘68 later for 134] oian and sur ; RUE te pee a : - : irgeon, with degrees ; look Walter Hagen. —which is still the record in}from the University of Edinburgh er eo. § })_ Keeler is high in his praise of | England for the Open.” and" University of Vieuna. fete . ecnten Nelson; his opinion of Jones is! Keeler lauds Nelson’s recent| did his first running for Calabar “" | history. He insists that Hogan} 259 score for 72 holes as an exX-|High School, Kingston, because he end Tebbetts | nd Hagen receive consideration | ample of what one of history’s for the title, “Mr. Golf.” | greatest linksmen can do on a ’ d “ GATIENAL LEASUE “The only fair comparison of ight Game and with improved clubs. m HM & | Jones and Nelson is in their » @| Showing in the U. S. Open | “But don’t forget Walter Ha- ; | Tournament.” muses Keeler, gen.” cautions the golf writ- Gar agivla for Jones never played the er. “He won 11 major cham- rt] pro ‘circuit.’ “ pionships: the British Open The Atlanta ace chased par in| four times, the U. S. PGA five he the Open 11 times. The greatest! times in six years and the : 8 linksmen of that era chased! U.S. Open twice. In my opin- 4 3 2}Jones across the finish line four, ion, Hagen was the toughest amen An | te Bobby was runner-up! match player of them all” pe four tumes, Keeler points out. He} At the same time, Keeler re- blasted through 44 rounds, aver-| iterates that Nelson and Hogan BM EJ aging 74 strokes. He never! needn't take a back seat to any- ® 7 Siciosed lower than eleventh! one. 7 ® Ol oiace. His finest round was a 68,; “They are the greatest of this Mieete and Ca-T + Interlachen in 1930. His worst|era, just as Jones and Hagen Sendieck was a 79. A 287 was Jones’ hot-| were the best in their day,” he test total in the Open. says. Fishing For Sharks Is wt Pet. GB esi Il In Day’s Work 2B sie All In Day’s Wor : 4 = AP Newsteatures ma 448 17 See ANB VELS S. C.—The shark business is booming i 404 18) | IVEin McClellansville. ‘ a 26 The Day brothers—Leland and Leslie—revived the industry} “I'm g recently and now have four boats operating in local waters. | it’s different. HATIONAL LEAGUE They report that 20 to 30 sharks, ranging in length from four 7 Pe GB lu 12 test, are hauled in daily byg-——————_—— , 52 “ " ween Spaveenes et of chains | WONDER WHAT’S ZZ 2 The brothers, who came here| BECOME OF SALLY? 42 9 | from Morehead City, N.C., use al-| WELL, SHE’S OK? |off the Cob.” 442 » | most ev rything eri anes pre BALTIMORE (AP). — Four- 420 104 ) except his vicious c sire : 4 year-old Sally Moment calls her- 4iz in tive salted in drums and; -.if the “Lightning Girt”. | ilk company, which ex- | Her father, Goucher College Biology Prof. G. B. Moment, re- ported that lightning struck the | girl’s room, opened a large hole} vitamin A to enrich its juct. The fins are soaked in ne, dried in the sun and sold CITY SPORTS | _— food—Orientals use them in epee : z { 1H AMONDBALL king soup stock. The fresh {2% ‘the ates ata Pare «| Beyview Perk m ‘ is ay me soaks au sold he Bos alse package Gr necaie | hi Games) locally, and demand exceeds sup- |, eg ee 4 Se — ply. The hides are cured and and broke two legs off Sally's * Machinists {sold as leather ara tds ee pe ites airy.) ‘The shask sisking industry be-| "ly Went right on sleeping. MIGHT gan in the United States when the} . es Adams Dairy cod liver supply from Norway! More Advice To Saas Men | ey % ve American}was cut off by the war. Shark Beware, young man! Remember | livers were found to be rich in{ this; | - and the industry flourished} mnen picking out your Sweet | : . ae ne, CREATION tso, the western shores have al-} ee r ay ' = Tennis, Basket- ‘ready been almost fished-out. But |The girl who loves to “cut a} Handball Courts, Dia- the Atlantic Coast is virgin terri-| Tug <tat Mekdy Pleyground, tory for fishermen, because sharks Too often loathes to beat one. | ‘ have been breeding there unmo- | eeeeefef ‘ . a oo § Rest Beach—!lested for generations. |sharks appear at that time to fol- The local catch is expected to low the boats. The sharks don’t 7 oe & and Rest Beach—‘reach its height during the eat the shrimp, it seems, but they | » Bouts hrimping season, as schools of like the fish that do. i Fuehing, Sma | course designed for lower scores |decided running was easiest. school authorities insisted that he take some form of exercise. He Now, however, Johnson says he’s one of the hardest workers on the Illinois team, arriving! learly and staying late for prac- tice, and constantly worrying whether he'll ever break 50 sec- onds again in the 440. A SixFooter McKenley, 23, and a 150-pound six footer—has one more year of competition at Hlinois. If he runs |in the 1948 Olympics, he will rep- jresent Jamaica and, if his home island doesn’t have a team, he will race for that British Empire. McKinley, however, plans to jreturn to Jamaica to work in a physical education program there. | That’s,; why, he is enrolled in the linois.} Before coming to “the United States to study at Boston College in 1943 and 1944, McKen- ley worked in a British Govern- mental office in Kingston. Fresh In chiding Irvin S. Cobb about one of the humorist’s early arti- cles a magazine editor saidt “I’m taking this piece because The author beamed his appre- ciation as the editor continued: “Mind you now, your piece is plenty corny—and I have bought all kinds of corn in my day—but this is the first time it came right CPA restores wartime-banned frills to women’s wear. BROADWAY CIGAR STORE 610 Duval St. COMPLETE BASEBALL SCORES Received Daily by Leased Wire Popular Brands of Cigars and Cold physi¢al education school at | i, THE NEW KREISLER DOMEFLEX IT’S RICHER! SMARTER! 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