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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 44

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
44
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE COURIEHJOURNAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 8, 1965 6 Speedboats Clash Today In Marine Derby Regatta Smith Pick On Tenpin Star Team 2 1. "ff ipImUI stream from its former location, And the spectator area this year is on the Indiana shore at Jeffersonville instead of on the Louisville side. Preliminary heats will start at 12 noon, with the final and deciding heats scheduled to begin at 2:40. Seven hydroplane races are scheduled along with a ski boat event.

Two Heats Per Race All races except the Calvert Trophy spin, a free-for-all open to all classes of hydroplanes, will consist of two heats. A heat will consist of three laps around the course of 1 23 miles five miles to a heat, 10 miles to a race. The free-for-all is a one-heat event. Parking is available, said Noonan, on streets and lots near the spectator area. As for the weather, he added that only a "severe downpour" could cause a Florida racing and fourth places in Ohio racing at Columbus and Dayton." He bought the boat, he said, from Fuzzy Furlong of Coral Gables after the Floridian had won an international race with the Miss Kathleen in Italy.

Defending champions on the program starting at 12 noon are: Miss Crazy Thing, owned and driven by Bill Sterett, in the 7 litre class; Crazy Thing, owned by Sterett and driven by his son, Bill in the 280 class; Bally-IIoo, owned by Bob Ballinger and driven by Mike Wiener, both of Cincinnati; Fat Chance, owned and driven by George Englis of Detroit, in the 225; Mom's Worry, owned and driven by Raymond Weber of St. Clair, in the 150 and Warrior, owned by James Davies of Kettering, Ohio. A driver for Warrior hasn't been announced. The site of the 1 23-mile race course has been moved almost one mile up- Zippity-do-dah! It's that time again. Zipping speedboats, spraying rooster, tails of water in their flashing wake, race on the Ohio River today in the 19th Marine Derby Regatta.

Six of last year's champions in the even hydroplane events are scheduled to compete, said James V. Noonan of the sponsoring Falls Cities Motor Boat Racing Association, Sanders Drives Miss Kathleen And in the 266-cubic inch class, an international winner is scheduled to run the Miss Kathleen. The trim speedster is owned and driven by Harry Sanders, a storage and transfer company executive, who races in the Midwest area during the summer and in Florida during the winter. "The boat's shipshape and ready to go," said Sanders. "Since I've had her, she's had three firsts and one third in Staff Photo by Charloy Ptnct CANINE CO-OP Two miniature poodles that already have won high obedience degrees help another train for the Kentucky circuit shows by holding a hurdle.

From left: Beau Jacques, Le Due d'Or (jumping, dumbbell in mouth) and Zsa Zsa, owned and trained by Miss Pauline Walker, Lime Kiln Lane, and her 13-year-old niece, Barbara Mahan. Ph.D. Dogs So Smart They Coach Brother Sk303 CD Painesville, Ohio, show: Magic Money of Windy Hills, owned by Roger Williams of Pleasure Ridge Park, and Dodi von Kellersgraben, owned by Capt. Frederick Oldinsky, Ft. Knox.

Mamie Chotc Does lt Again Champion Lakeview's Han Sum, a chow chow owned by Mamie Reynolds Chinetti and handled by Joe Gregory, won the non-sporting group at Sandusky, Ohio, and was second in the group at Marion. In the latter show Gregory handled Mamie's Brussels griffon. Ch. Gaystock Le Monseigneur, to a group placement and piloted a miniature pinscher, Mur-phy's Jim Dandy, to best of winners and the completion of its championship. Jim Dandy is owned by Mr.

and Mrs. Don Coller of Bloomington, Ind. Mrs. Edna Voyles, Louisville, handled her Pekingese, Ch. Cho Sen's Brite Mischief, to second in the toy group at Waukesha, and Mrs.

John W. Par-fitt's long-haired dachshund, Heinrick von Hessen, to three Championship points at West Bend. Wis. Ch. Lakeview's Golden Emperor, a chow owned by Dr.

W. O. Mayfield of New Albany, was best of breed in both Wisconsin shows, with Edna handling. New Albany Show Aug. 22 Held up for two years by the lack of a hall, the New Albany Kennel Club at last has found a spot and will hold a Plan all-breed match Aug.

22. Because the National Guard Armory is no longer available, the show will be in the Knights of Columbus Hall, 809 E. Main. Judges will be: Hayden Wright, sporting and working; Mrs. Doris Lester, hounds and non-sporting; Mrs.

Al James toys, and William Ennis, terriers. Questions of general interest and notices of new field, obedience or "bench" champions must be signed and mailed (not phoned) to: Dog News Editor, Sports The Courier-Journal. Ohio Valley Lifting 3Ieet Is Scheduled For Sept. 25 Saturday, Sept. 25, has been set as the date for this year's Ohio Valley Open Weightlifting Championships.

The meet will be run in double sessions at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and will be held at Convention Center here. Paul Anderson, 1956 Olympic heavyweight champion who is considered one of the strongest men in the world, will present an exhibition. Entry deadline is Sept.

15 and entry forms may be obtained from Malick's Gym, 312 W. Bloom Louisville 8. Solunar Tables Uio Eoitorn Standard Tlmt I By KEN RUSH Slender, sober-faced Harry Smith, who just missed winning the recent Louisville Open Bowling Tournament, must have felt a little better when he was named to an All-America tenpin team yesterday. That, plus the money he's won on the pro tour. Along with Harry, the star outfit am nounced by the National Bowlers Jbiav nal also Included Billy Welu, Dick Weber, Jim St.

John, Billy GolembiewskI and Bob Strampe. Welu and "BillyG'1; also competed in the tourney here. For its women's All-America, the magazine picked Marion Ladewig, Olga Gloor, Betty Kuczynski, Helen Duval, Ann Slattery and Donna Zimmerman. Smith, one of the most regular of regulars on the Professional Bowlers Association circuit (145 of 148 tournaments in six years), now stands second on the all-time moneywinning list with $142,662. Weber, another AU-American, leads with $184,290.

Don no longer active on the tour, is third with $137,416. After a two-week break since the Louisville finish, the touring pros will converge on New England next weekend for the $28,500 Boston Open. Among them will be Billy Hardwick, the former Californian now rolling out of Louisville. Billy and his bride of three weeks, the former Patty Reader of Shepherdsville, left Friday for Boston. LEAGUE SCENE With the winter bowling season less than a month away, many of Louisville's leagues are going through a flurry of organizational meetings and last-minute efforts to fill gaps in team lineups.

The top circuits are much like the rest. Among the open-pinnage, five-man leagues, both the Western Classic and Algonquin All-Star are shooting for two-team increases (from 10 to 12) and think they can, make it. The Classic opens up Tuesday, Sept. 7, and the All-Star Friday, Sept. 10.

The Mid-City United Major, oldest hereabouts, is sticking with 12 teams for a campaign beginning Thursday, Sept. 9. The open-pinnage, three-man Thelmal Masters is planning 16 teams again but there'll be one big change in its format. Each trio will roll TWO three-game matches against rival outfits each Sunday night, starting Sept 12 which means a total of 66 matches in the league's 33-week season. And the season-long tournament for keglers of both the men's and women's Masters Leagues will be double-elimination this time.

The tourney schedule begins Sunday, Oct. 3. STRIKES SPARES Four Louisville area pairs plan to roll in the National Women's Doubles Eastern Regional at Parkersburg, W. on Sept. 11-12 Cookie Beam-Pat Robinette, Mary Underwood-Peggy Bargatze, Margaret Henderson-Doris Gagel and Bonnie Hannah.

Helen Schlageter (actually, Mrs. Underwood now lives in Corbin, Former junior star Sandy Catlett, who finished last season with a 174 average, will graduate to adult leagues this fall, rolling in the Pee Wee Reese Ladies' Classic on Monday nights and the TheJ-mal Ladies' Masters on Wednesday nights. Louisville-area bowling lost a longtime leader with the death of Louis Knowland, 62, at Clarksville, Friday. He was president of the Greater Louisville Bowling Association during the 1957-58 season. Gene Wells, who formally took over as 1965-66 president of the GLBA at last week's pre-season meeting of league officers, reports a record attendance of between 600 and 700 at the session.

-He succeeds Jack Koch. Shirley Alvey, who never had so much as a 500 league series in three years of bowling, zoomed to an actual 607 at Ken-Bowl Lanes recently. Her current average is just over 140. Mrs. Cranford Sweeps To Win Mrs.

John Cranford won the Hunting Creek Country Club women's golf chanmionship Friday with a 54-hole total of 279, 18 strokes ahead of runner-up Mrs. Walton Jones Jr. Mrs. Ralph Beard won low net honors by five strokes over Mrs. Ann Broadbook with a 222.

SET TO GO Louisvillian Harry Sanders checks his Miss Kathleen, a 266-cubic inch class speedboat, and finds it ready for today's 19th annual Marine Derby Regatta on the Ohio River. The Courier Sportsman Little Change In Wildfowl Rules ST. LOUIS (AP) The Mississippi Fly-way Council recommended yesterday that duck and geese hunting regulations remain essentially the same this year as they were last year. Representative from 14 state game and fish agencies in the Mississippi Fly-way met at St. Louis.

The recommendations are made to the Federal Bureau of Sports Fisheries and Wild Life. The only change recommended was that the possession limit on geese be twice that of the bag limit. Last year, the bag limit and possession limit were the same. The council proposed that there be a 70-day season for geese with a bag limit of five, including two Canada geese. They asked that the goose hunting seasons be scheduled between Oct.

1 and Jan. 15. For ducks, the commission asked for a 401ay season scheduled between Oct. 6 and Jan. 9.

They proposed a bag limit of four with no more than two black ducks or mallards or one of each. States in the Mississippi Flyway are Missouri, Illinois, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, Ohio, Alabama, Mississippi and Michigan. will run across a peculiarly shaped tree. These trees appear to have a secondary trunk growing at a right angle from the main body of another trunk. And often this accessory trunk which first follows a line parallel to the ground then takes another right angle and shoots straight up as normal trees are supposed to do.

Nature had nothing to do with these oddities. Actually, these trees are trail markers left by colonial Indians to point out certain routes in the wilderness. An Indian would pick an oak, elm, maple or hickory sapling, bend it so the trunk paralleled the ground, and the tip pointed in the direction the trail should follow. The tip was either buried in the ground or tied down with vines. Within a few months, the tip died and the roots sent up a secondary trunk from the old one.

The result was a road sign which lasted as long as the tree did. Golf Mr5-fUOO' fO Squirrel Season Almost Here Staff Photo by Ooorto Bill? This species is the game for the lazy hunter. They stay out in the open a great deal and are most likely to hide in the first tree they climb when the hunter comes into their woods. The grays are more likely to escape through the top to another tree. Trail Markers Veteran squirrel hunters have a basic method of hunting these animals successfully.

They first look over the forest floor carefully for the shells of acorns or hickory nuts which are signs of feeding squirrels. Then they go to a feeding ground before the species they are after is likely to appear. This would be sunrise for the gray squirrels, a couple of hours after sunrise for the fox squirrels. Once here, the hunter finds a comfortable spot to sit and just waits for his game. Then patience and skill with a rifle or shotgun takes over.

Occasionally, a hunter or fisherman By LEW SIIARPLEY Two miniature poodles owned by Miss Pauline Walker of Lime Kiln Lane are so smart that they are teaching a younger dog some of the "tricks" required for obedience-show work. Beau Jacques end Zsa Zsa hold up a hurdle while their younger brother, Le Due d'Or, leaps over it, retrieves a dumbbell and jumps back. Due is owned by Miss Walker's niece, Barbara Mahan, 13, who is training him for the coming Kentucky circuit shows. Recently at Morgantown, W. he won the first of three legs required for the "companion dog excellent" degree.

Zsa Zsa already had her CDX and Beau Jacques has not only a CDX but also the "utility dog" degree, the canine equivalent of a Ph.D. A Louisville poodle trying for his "companion dog" (high school) diploma will be Count Beau Jean, owned by Susan Wallace. Jean recently won two legs in Cincinnati shows. Two Kentucky German shepherds completed their CDX requirements at the mum mm mm mm 'mm WW I il WW' VfU'i Si KWWf in White mates in two (Composed by B.G. Laws) (Solution below) The King's Men Mathews Open Next Weekend At Indianapolis By MERRILL DOWDEN The Indianapolis Chess Club has asked this department to extend an invitation to players in Kentuckiana to participate in the first annual Norbert Mathews Open.

This tournament will be staged Saturday and next Sunday in the club's headquarters at the Sheraton-Lincoln Hotel in Indianapolis. It will be a five-round Swiss, rated by the United States Chess Federation, with first and second prizes of $75 and $50. Additional prizes will be based on the number of entries. Registration will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday and first-round play at 10.

This game was played more than 60 years ago by two Russian officers in Manchuria on the eve of an assault in which Captain Perwago was killed. RUY LOPEZ Lt. Capt. 10 QxB Denn Perwaco 11 K-Rl N-B6ch! Q-Q3 Q-B5 B-R6ch! QxBPch P-N4ch K-Rl R-KN1 Q-B5ch Q-N4 mate 1 P-K4 P-K4 12 PxN 2 N-KB3 N-QB3 13 K-N2 3 B-N5 B-N5 14 KxB 4 P-B3 B-R4 15 K-R4 5 OO KN-K2 16 KxP 6 N-R3 17 K-R4 7 R4 Q4 18 P-R3 8 BxN NxB 19 K-R5 9 NxP NxN Solution to problem Key, 1 R-K8 Ta Team To Face Snyder-Valentine Dick The Bruiser and Gene Kiniski will take on Wilbur Snyder and Johnny Valentine in a tag-team tussle that will head up Tuesday's wrestling program at Convention Center. The bout is for two out of three falls and carries a one-hour time limit The No.

2 event is a head-and-head tugfest between Calvin Pullin and The Assassin No. 1. The program opens at 8:30 p.m. with a midget scrap involving Baron Dandy and Chico Santa. Jack Nicklaus On QUICK" CH0 A.M.

Dttt Day Miner Maier Minor Major Aug. I Sunday 2:00 8 5: IS 0 Monday 2:35 :05 :00 9:30 10 Tuesday 3:15 :50 :40 10:15 ,1 4 10 10:35 7:15 11:00 1 Thursday 5:05 11:20 7 5 I 05 1:15 12:05 14 Saturday 7:10 12:35 I 15 Sunday 1:15 1:20 M0 1:40 By BURT MONROE Kentuckians probably do more hunting for squirrels than for any other game. And maybe that is the reason why so much difficulty is experienced in 'setting a season that suits everyone in all parts of the' state. Ever since the first reference to squirrel hunting in the game laws of 1874, the regulations have bounced up and down like a rubber ball. Hardly any two years in succession have the same laws or even the same concept of what the laws should be.

This year is no exception. Once more, regulations are juggled. I The split season aspect is retained but the idea of the two zones the Eastern 'and Western with different hunting days has been tossed out. An additional sixteen days have been added to the season which runs from August 14 "through October 31 and then from December 1 through December 31. These dates apply to the entire state, not to tones.

Bag limit Is still six and possession limit is 13. It's a safe bet that neit year's squirrel regulations will be changed again. Most of the hunting here is for the gray squirrel. A second species, the fox squirrel, is much less common and much larger. Gray squirrels are distributed widely over Kentucky from the Big Sandy to the Purchase, from the mountains to the swamp areas, and arc found in woodlots and surburban backyards as well as in extensive hardwood forests.

Since they are by nature animals of the deep woods, the best place to hunt them is in a stand of white oaks and hickories that are mature enough to produce a good mast crop, and where the undergrowth of brush is fairly heavy. Fox squirrels prefer much different -surroundings. They like a grove of ancient white oaks with very little undergrowth. They also like to be near a cornfield that can provide a good supply of the grain which is probably their favorite food during the fall. The best place to look for them is in a farm woodlot in the fertile river valleys of central and western Kentucky.

This will outnumber the gray squirrel in parts of the typical Blucgrass region Gray and Fox Squirrels Differ These two species of squirrels have different habits which the hunter should consider carefully when he seeks them. squirrels are early risers in the deep woods that are their natural homes. 'Game biologists have discovered that they are most active between 7 and 8 o'clock in the morning. They begin to -slow down after 9 a.m. and do not make themselves apparent again until after 3 o'clock in the afternoon.

On i cold day, they may stir around for only a half hour or so immediately after sunrise and then go back to their dens until late in the afternoon, leaving woods that is full of squirrels but -appears empty to the hunter who has 'appeared too late to see them. Fox squirrels are active, for the most part, during daylight hours only and they especially active on clear mornings from 6 to 9. They are least active during the day between 2 pjn. and 5 p.m. and partial or complete cloudiness decreases their activity.

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