Newspaper Page Text
T“('RSDAY, MAY 29, 1852.
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
ALVA MAYER IR oo Editors
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Is It End Of Road
For Champ Walcott?
By FRANK ECK
AP Newsfeatures Sports Editor
NEW YORK—Jersey Joe Wal
cott started the seventh with a
left uppercut to Ezzard Charles’
jaw. Charles countered with a left
and right to the body, forcing Wal
cott to a neutral corner. Walcott
staggered the champion with a
left hook to the jaw. Charles
drooled and his eyes had that
glassy look. He fell forward to his
knees and then crumbled flat on
his stomach.
As the referee counted. Charles
slowly pulled himself up but at
the count of 10 Charles fell flat
NOW
50 MILLION
PEOPLE
THRILLED BY
“CARBINE
WILLIAMS"!
The true-life story
that appeared in
Reader’s Digest, True
Magazine and Collier’s
IS now a great
picture starring
JAMES STEWART
A DIFFERENT KIND
OF LOVE STORY
From the m.at producer of }
“A Place in the Sun”
FONTAINE: MILTAND
WRIGHT
George Stevens
Something
ToLive For
WANTED
GOOD USED CARS
OUR STOCK IS LOW ON
DODGE - FORD
PLYMOUTH
WE WILL GIVE YOU
A _GOOD TRADE.
24 MONTHS TO PAY.
J. SWANTON VY, Ine.
on his back. The time was 55
seconds. Waleott officially be
came world heavyweight cham
pion.
This was their meeting in Pitts
burgh last July. Walcott hasn’t
fought since. You can hardly
plame him for he has been fight
ing on and off for 22 years or
since 1930 when he knocked out
a chap called Cowboy Wallace in
the first round at Vineland, N. J.
Wallace has seen better days,
better days fistically but not fi
nancially. He is 38 by Nat Fleis
cher’s Ring record book although
he looks much olaer and the fight
mob says he is older.
Walcott and big money were
strangers until 1947 when he al
most beat Joe Louis in Madison
Square Garden, although Louis got
the split decision.
Walcott thought .he won the
title that night. Louis thought he
lost. He was cut in several places
and one eye was closed. He started
to leave the ring but his handlers
pushed him back as if to say “wait
for the announcement, funny
things have happened in boxing
before.”
Afterwards, Louis agreed to
give Walcott another title chance,
hoping to wipe out the stigma of
the questionable verdict.
So the following summer they
met in Yankee Stadium and Wal
cott began to clown. He stuck his
chin out and Louis hit it, not once
but a dozen times and Walcott
saw his second title shot end in an
11-rourd knockout.
Then the next year, 1949, Louis
announced his retirement. The
world was left without a heavy
weight champion and Charles and
Walcott met in Chicagd for the
vacant throne. Charles won the
decision.
Less than two years later,
March of 1951, they put the show
on the road and Charles again
won a decision, this time in De
troit.
There was no reason for a third
Charles-Walcott fight other than
the fact that Pittsburgh had never
seen them. A charity shared in
the proceeds and furthermore
Charies figured Walcott was an
easy touch. He went easy In train
ing, they say.
Walcott surprised Charles and
everyone else. The odds were
something like 10 to 1 because
Charles had never been knocked
out and on 99 days out of 100 he
could box rings around the veter
an from Merchantville, N. J.
Walcott had such a hard road to
the title he thought he might keep
it a while before putting it on the
line. He said something about it
being the Lord’s wishes that he
should barnstorm as champion.
He made little money on public
appearances and now you might
say he's getting ready to give the‘
title back to Charles. At 38, ae“
doesn't figure to be the Wale
who almost knocked out Joe
Louis. And he doesn’t figure to
beat Charles again.
Why their 15-round boui on
Thursday (June 5) is being held
in Philadelphia’s vast Municipal
Stadium is a mystery to many
people. ‘
Hustling Bears Still
Lead In Southern Race
By The Associated Press
Although the fans stayed away in droves last night, the
Mobile Bears stayed on top of the Southern Association
race and enhanced their reputation as a hustling bunch of
youngsters who just won’t give ground. Y
Cubans Vie
With Famous
Red Birds
The South’s greatest Negro
baseball team will play six games
in this vicinity against the Athens
Cuban Red Sox.
The famous Greensboro Red
Birds of the Negro American As
sociation, the cream of southern
Negro baseball, hold the remark
able record of winning over 100
games in 1951 while losing only
15. This year their record is 23-2.
June 1 Sunday’s game in Ath
ens on Bray's Field will find the
Cubans sending their ace hurler,
Big Jim Mack, against the Red
Birds’ Herman Edwards, who won
26 games for them last season
and has a 8-0 record this year.
Monday - night the two teams
will play at Greensboro at 8:15,
Tuesday night at 8:15 at Jeffer
son, and Wednesday afternoon
here on Bray’s Field at 3 o’clock.
Immediately after the game here
the two teams will travel to El
berton for a night game there be
ginning at 8:15. The final tilt of
the series is set for Elberton on
Thursday night at 8:15.
These games will test the met
tle of the Cubans, With the adadi
tion of Big Jim Mack and efty
Roscoe Knox to their pitching
staff they appear to be one of the
strong teams of the South and are
willing to take on any team that
comes this way.
R )
ace Season
Opens June 8
At Lakewood
ATLANTA, Ga.,, May 28—The
new auto racing sport, Indianapo
lis-type cars with late stock mo
tors, which makes its debut at
Lakewood Park here on Sunday,
June 8, already is the talk of
Southern speed circles,
Top Drivers
Sam Nunis, race director, who
will stage a 100-mile introductory
race here, is seeking to have the
country’s top stock racers com
pete. The race is the first NAS
CAR Speedway Division event
ever scheduled in the state of
Georgia.
Drivers already contacted by
Nunis include the first three fin
ishers at the nation’s first speed
way-type race recently held at
Darlington, S. C. It is expected
that a record field of upwards of
25 cars will compete here.
Buck Baker, Charlotte, N. C,,
the winner, and Bill Miller, Nash
ville, Tenn., and Tom Cherry,
Muncie, Ind., second and third at
Darlington, are expected among
the early signers for the local
opener. Baker drives a Cadillac
powered car and Miller and Cher
ry an Olds 88 and Mercury, re
spectively.
Topnotchers
Other national topnotchers be-.
ing sought for the unique race
here include Al Keller, Newark,
N. J.; Speedy Thompson, East
Point, Ga.; Wally Campbell,
Trenton, N. J.; Bob Jefferies, De
troit, Mich.; Tex Keene, Chatta
nooga, Tenn., and Tony Bonadies,
Chicago, 111.
Most of the chassis of the
speedway-type machines formerly
were used at the 500-mile race at
Indianapolis.
Hells Canyon in the Snake
River between Idaho and Oregon
is deeper than the Grand Canyon
of the Colorado and narrower be
tween the rims.
The place holds 102,000 for the
annual Army-Navy football game
and can seat many more for a
fight, as it did in 1926 when 120,-
757 paid $1,895,733 for the first
Dempsey-Tunney fight.
But this one, even at S2O tops,
may not draw 40,000 fans. Pro
moter Herman Taylor expects
something, like a $400,000 gate but
it may not go that high unless you
count $175,000 being paid for tele
vision rights.
In New York there is not a
great deal of interest except
among the bog wheels who sit in
the first few rows at nearly every
heavyweight title bout.
The average New York fight
fan, the fellow who pays $5 and
$lO for a fight, will see this one
on television. In Philadelphia and
a 75-mile radius TV will be
blacked” out. Maybe when the
fight is over TV viewers will say
“it should have been blacked out
entirely.”
YHOUSANDS OF- APPROVE
| IIIIB'I‘III!S I
And it's America’s
“ mother-and-child S‘I.JIISEFI!
| favorite. 'll'alc)]lets ASPIRIN
| are 1/4 adult dose,
| orange flavored. FOR c““m
| Buy it today, 39¢.
Wednesday — Thursday
“GOLDEN GIRL”
with Mitzi Gaynor, in
Technicolor.
Also Tom and Jerry carioon
HARLEM THEATRE
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Young Jay Ver Crouse pitched
his way out of jams all evening as
he hurled the leaders to a 4-2
decision over Little Rock before
1,891 fans-smallest tyrnout of the{
year in Mobile, |
New Orleans remained only one
game off the pace by measuring
Memphis, 5-1, while Atlanta ce
mented its hold on third place,
trimming Chattanooga, 6-4. Nash
ville and Birmingham were rained
out and will play two games to
night.
Mobile picked up all its neces
sary runs in the first inning off
John Weiss. The Bears, a great
bunch of opportunists, put together
three singles, a walk and two out
field flies for the scores. Don Zim
mer’s homer provided the other
run in the eighth.
Fuzzy-faced Don Cochrane, the
19-year-old Arkansas phenom,
continued his robust mound work
by limiting Memphis to three hits
to keep his New Orleans team
mates within striking distance of
the front-running Mobile entry.
Don Nicholas of Memphis swip=
ed two more bases to run his lea
gue-leading total to 23.
Atlanta owed its victory to a
third-inning blast when the Crack~
ers pushed over all their runs.
Can Anyone
Top Wallard’s
“500” Record?
INDIANAPOLLS, May 29 —
(AP) — Motorists and motorcy
clists massing outside Indianapolis
Motor Speedway gates today
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by Yoe Stearns
Huge Fish Crop Going to Waste
BILL HOLLEY, state fisheries biologist, is selling Georgia
on rough fish control. Bill is an able ambassador and has
more answers than a quiz show.
. Recently. I made a trip up the Oconee
ee, River with Bill and one of his assistants.
O The first trap we lifted out of the water
g R was empty and so was the second one.
fla Bill quickly shifted the traps to new
Taas. % locations. It seems that some of the
. st v natives had worked the traps. They
¥ | paid little heed to a silver tag on the
e trap which stated it was the property
. AT | of the U. S. Government. That’s asking
i for trouble. :
The next trap held catfish. Other traps held catfish, quill
backs and redhorse suckers. In twenty traps only two bream
were caught. These were returned unharmed. At the end
of 20 traps we had a big wash tub full of rough fish, mostly
blue channel catfish.
Taking these desirable blue channel catfish brought
up a question. Since people like, desire and want to
catch these catfish, why should we trap them out? Bill
then unloaded the scientific facts on me. I was told that
we could trap catfish in the Oconee River for 100 years
and never seriously damage the population. The more
we trap, the betier the food conditions and the more cat
fish our fishermen will catch with hook and line.
It was explained that there are millions of pounds of catfish
in the Oconee that will go to waste. The only method of
harvesting this huge and valuable food crop would be a law
making it legal for commercial fishermen to use traps, con
structed and operated under state supervision. Special traps,
then, would not take but 2% or less game fish. These would
have to be put back.
Bill Holley has taken, at this writing, about 6,000
pounds of rough fish, although his preject is in its infancy.
It is like taking a dipper of water out of the ocean. Bill
assured me that seme people would protest taking the
catfish. Even if they knew that by taking them, it would
vastly improve their chances to catch them, they still will
protest.
Few of us know that catfish are temperamental. If he
does not get the correct diet, he will resort to other measures.
Ordinarily he is a bottom feeder but when food is scarce due
to heavy population, he attacks and eats small bream and
bass. Then game fishing rapidly goes to pot.
Even the die-hards ought to give this great rough fish
biologist a chance to prove his facts. What a wonderful
thing it would be if we could legalize the use of approved
and controlled iraps by commercial fishermien in ONE
Georgia river and watch results, Bill says that one river
would soon become not just a good fishing river but a
GREAT fishing river.
Here is something we can and should appreciate. Holley
offers to take along any person who does not understand the
control measure and actually show him or her the system
in action. You are invited to go with Holley. He lives in
Vidalia and is easy to find. Now is the time and opportunity
for conservationists to take an interest in rough fish work.
You can be convinced with facts, just as I was. Thank heavens
Georgia has a man of Holley’s strength and caliber on the
job. It makes conservation a little bit easier. Tennessee in
stalled a rough fish program years ago. It is a great success.
What happens to the rough fish Holley gets in his
traps? He turns them over to charitable institutions. The
result—thousands of healthful meals for people who need
them.
As young fish, the catfish competes with bream and bass
for the same type of food, thus reducing the chance for these
desirable fish to thrive. As larger fish, the catfish competes
with the bass. His diet will include thousands of small game
fish. A worm to a catfish in good water and under desirable
conditions, is like an ice cream cone to a child. He does not
take that worm as readily when he is in over populated
water. When you get too many catfish, you can be sure your
bream and bass fishing is terrible.
Holley makes a trip every day on either the Oconee, the
Ocmulgee or the Altmaha Rivers. Make it your business to
accept his free invitation to go along and absorb the very
latest in scientific facts.
- & * 5 =
Sad words—lt wouldn’t have happened if you hadn’t
stepped between me and the spittoon.
Ml}l{i{ghway sign—Rest Rooms ahead. Speed limit 15
Chapman Out
Of British
Am Tourney
By TOM OCHILTREE
PRESTWICK, Scotland—(AP).
Defending Champion Dick Chap
man was knocked out of the Bri
tish Amateur Gold championship
in an upset today but U. S. Ama
teur King Billy Maxwell, Walker
Cup Player Jimmy McHale, Fran
kie Strafaci and Harvie Ward car
ried America’'s colors into the
sixth round.
Chapman, 41-year old socialite
from Pinehurst, N. C., was blasted
out of the running by Maj. David
Bair, 35-year old Scotsman, 3 and
2. Maxwell, of Odessa, Texas,
eliminated Don Cameron, another
Scot, 2 and 1; McHale, of Phila
delphia, ousted Minty Miller, a
Glasgow football player who had
beaten three Americans earlier, 5
and 4. Strafaci, curly-haired New
Yorker, nipped Jimmy Wilson, a
Scottish Walker Cup member, 1
up on the 20th hole and Ward, of
Tarboro, N. C., routed Andrew
Whyte of Scotland, 5 and 4.
killed time debating:
Can anybody match Lee Wal
lard’s record-breaking 1951 speed
in tomorrow’s 500-mile Memorial
Day auto race?
Old-timers who had seen a doz
en or so of the past 35 “500’s”
doubted that Wallard's 126,244
mile-an-hour average will be
equalled.
This year’s 33-car field averaged
about two miles an hour faster
than the ’sl field in qualifications.
But it isn’t likely to enjoy the
perfect racing conditions of last
year,
Ralph Snow Elected
TD Club President
Ralph M. Snow was elected president of the Athens
Touchdown Club last night at the annual election barbecue
held at Frank McElreath’s Lake.
Durward Watson was named.as
vice-president for the forthcom
ing year with Harry Atwell as
treasurer and Glen Dillard as sec~
retary. ;
Named as the four new mem
bers of the board of directors were
Bill Stroud, Gordon Dudley,
James Thornton, and Dr. John
Stegeman,
Mr., Snow succeeds W. O. Mc-
Dowell as president of the Touch~
down Club.
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Davey Williams Is Making
Giant Fans Forget Stanky
By MURRAY OLDERMAN
NEA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK—(NEA )—lt wasn't
difficult to recognize the good
looking guy sitting on the stairs
of the Giants’ clubhouse catching
up on his fan mail.
That would be Bobby Thomson.
And bustling around, still clad in
shorts, was Skipper Leo Durocher.
Over in a corner sat Davey
Williams, quietly autographing
baseballs.
The Williams signature is quite
in demand these days among the
kids who hang over the bleacher
walls next to the clubhouse en
trance. One *“Williams” will al
most get you a “Thomson.”
Davey’s the boy who’s making
New York fans forget a fellow
named Eddie Stanky ever held
down second base. .
In his own taciturn way (he’s
a Texan, naturally), he's giving
Durocher the best second-basing
in the National League, Jackie
Robinson. notwithstanding.
Yet only last Winter, the 24-
year-old Dallas native was quoted
as thinking of retiring. .
“] didn’t mean it that way,”
smiles Davey, in retrospect *“I
only said, ‘Sure, I"d quit if some
thing better came along.” The way
things have been breaking for me,
I'd be crazy.”
He ran up an errorless streak
of 207 chances in the field, broken
only by a bad throw on a double
play attempt. Durocher says he
has “the surest hands I've ever
seen,”
The Giants might have antici
pated his second base feats if they
had checked his 1951 record with
Minneapolis in the American As
sociation, where he fielded a re
markable .988,
“He‘s fooled nf®” continued
Durocher, “and he’s going to fool
a lot of other people. Why; there
just isn’t anything he can’t do. He
just never makes a bad play. He
could go on to be one of the
greats of the game.” i
Leo must have had some doubts
last Spring when Davey (back
home in Dallas they call him “D.
C.”) had a miserable time at bat
in training.
“But Durocher stuck with me,”
notes Williams, “and that gave me |
confidence. Leo said the job was
mine to keep, and once the season
began they started dropping in
safely.”
As leadoff man, he doesn’t draw
the walks that Stanky did, but he
kept his B.A. up around .290 the
first month of the season and sur
prised with an occasional long
ball,
Last year at Minneapolis he hit
four consecutive homers in one
two-game spurt.
“That was like a blind pig find
ing acorns,” scoffs the slim 165-
pounder, but then adds with quiet
confidence, “I told the boys last
Spring not to worry. I'll hit. T al
ways have, and I'm not going to
stop now with the big chance
here.”
Only two railway routes cross
the Andes, according to the Ency
clopedia Britannica.
Now Many Wear
Wi ith Little Worry
Eat, talk, laugh or sneeze with
out fear of insecure false teeth
dropping, slipping or wobbling.
FASTEETH holds plates firmer
and more comfortably. This pleas
ant pocwder . has no gummy,
gooey, pasty taste or feeling.
Doesnt’ cause nausea. It's alkaline
(non-acid). Checks “plate odor”
(Jenture breath). Get FASTEETH
at any drug store.
Major League
Leaders
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL
Batting: Ennis, Philadelphia,
.343.
Runs Batted In: Sauer, Chicago,
41,
Hits: Sauer, Chicago and Ennis,
Deadlock In
“Y” World
Series Play
The big game of the softball
season which will attract most at
tention at the local YMCA will be
played on the “Y” field Friday
night at 7-o’clock when the Wol
verines and the Trappers meet for
the fifth game of their world se
ries competition. The Wolverines
made the tally of games in the
best three out of five series two
all with their win over the Trap
pers yesterday.
Final outcome of the game was
13-7 in favor of ‘the Wolverines.
Heavy Wolverine batting power
came from staunch team mem
bers Floyd Williams, Frank Gil
mer, Tommy Nunnally, Jack Fer
guson, and Howard Abney, all of
whom got two nice safeties.
Big gun for the Trappers was
Freddy Worrell who banged out
two homers in the course of the
fray. Cuppie Roberts and Andy
Mapp got two hits each for the
losers. The Wolverines and the
Trappers will be out for a victory
on Friday night when the cham
pilonship game for the Indian
league is played and the public is
invited to witness the fray.
Members of the championship
Hotrod team in the Cub class were
presented their awards today dur
ing regular class period. The Hot
rods were the champs of the Cub
league by virtue of three wins out
of five against the vaunted Scrap
pers. The members of the Hotrod
ream who were given awards to
day include: Jimmy Bryant (cap- |
tain), Billy Gambrell, Tommy
Gordon, Sammy Callaway, Ray
Danner, Harry Stevens, Baxter
Crane, Thornton Morris, Walter
Glenn, Jimmy Kenney, and Bud
dy Nunnally.
Billy Wells, halfback on Michi
gan State’s football team, won the
inter-fraternity diving champion
ship on his first serious try at the
sport.
Small ocean ship moving up the
Clumbia River can dock in Ihaho
at Lewiston.
The half million people of Cy
prus are mostly Greeks but the
island is under British control.
Since Puritans objected to May
poles and other May Day cele
brations, they were forbidden by
the British parliament in 1644.
I Athens Drive-In Theatre |
LAST TIMES TODAY I FRIDAY
Do Wnons Bk eMA
o ROE VLN | 8 W%B i
foonn WINNANLAVO\VLRY | GEORGE BRENT inp\s G
ot .AN BAIT \g@'
w 0 Ffi?’. L%
Also: Cartoon - News Plus Kartune ‘
PAGE NINE
Philadelphia, 47.""
:w Runs: Sauer, .
Stolen Bases: J
Reese, Brooklyn and Chi
cago, 5.
Pitchingt Maglie, New 9
0, 1.000; Roe, Brooklyn and VN
helm, New York, 4-0, 1.000,
American
Baiting: DiMaggio, Bo.“}i 361,
Runs Batted In: Rosen, Cleves
land, 26.
Hits: Robinson, Chicago, m
Stolen Bases: Rizzuto, New
York, 9.
Pitohing: Shea, Washington, 3-0,
1.000. , <
.
Sam Smith
“
Nips James
Team, 8-2
Sam Smith Company beat
Charlie James last night, 8
to 2, in a Municipal League
game played at Legion
Field.
Donald Epps went the distance
on the mound for the winners.
Dummy Farr started for Charlie
James, but was relieved in the
late innings by Uke Cape.
Willie Fowler of Sam Smith
cracked a home run with two
mates aboard, but he forgot to
tag second base and was called
out.
The Sam Smith team outhit the
James crew, 6 to 4.
Tonight’s game in the Municipal
League pits Amvets and DeMo
lay. g
Doors
Open
Features: 1:15, 3:16, 5:18, 7:20,
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