Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1931 — Page 11

JUNE 15,1931.

TIMES SCHOOLBOY GOLF TITLE PLAY GETS UNDER WAY

200 Youthful Stars Battle in Opening Round; 32 to Qualify

Harry Yelton, Cathedral Ace, Defends 1930 Honors. BY DICK MILLER Indianapolis’ army of schoolboy golfers battled over the South Grove links today in the sixth annual Times’ interscholastic championship. The field was expected to pass the 200 mark before the final scoi\s are posted in the qualifying round tonight. Lieutenant Naylor and Harry Schoop, active starters, sent the young mashie wielders out in threesomes to speed up the play, and were able to get nearly sixty into action in the first hour. This is the largest junior event of its kind in the country. High .school and grade boys are eligible. Qualifiers with the thirty-two lowest scores will be paired up tonight for the championship flight match, which will begin Tuesday. If the field of grade school players reaches sixty-five more today their championship flight also will be made up of thirty-two for match that begin Tuesday. Otherwise, the flight will be made up of sixteen. Yelton Defends Crown There will be no consolation flights. Absence of consolation flights spurs players to their best in the qualifying rounds. Harry Yelton, Cathedfkl star, who won the title last year, was in the field today attempting to win his second consecutive title. The only other plays to win two crowns was William Heinlein, also of Cathedral, who won in 1928 and 1929. Heinlein now is one of the leading amateur players in the state as well as state junior champion. Jack Merriam of Technical won the first Times’ schoolboy crown. Neville Ewing of Shortridge triumphed in the second event, followed by Heinlein’s two victories. Yelton won the 1930 honors in a thrilling uphill battle, nosing out William Russell, a. teammate. Blue Stars Enter Shortridge’s unbeaten golf squad, victorious in thirteen matches, was in today’s field. Tech, who tied the Blue linkmen in one match, had sixty players entered. Manual, led by Edwin Beeson, had nearly three dozen shooters, and Richard Carlstedt, who led the field of qualifiers last season at Riverside with a 54, tops the Washington list. Yelton, is the star of the large Cathedral entry. Match play beginning Tuesday will be for eighteen holes in the first, second, quarter-final and semi-final rounds. The title match will be over thirty-six holes. All grade school flight contests will be for eighteen holes. Prizes will be awarded from the Lyric theater stage Friday night, according to present plans, the title-winner receiving the beautiful j Kay Jewelry company trophy.

Baseball Calendar

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won. Lost. Pet. Louisville* 30 23 .566 St. Taul 29 23 .553 Milwaukee 38 21 .538 Columbus 25 25 .500 Minneapolis 26 27 .491 Toledo 35 29 .463 INDIANAPOLIS 22 28 .440 Kansas City 23 20 .442 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct.l W L. Pet. Philadel 38 13 .745,805t0n.. 19 30 .383 Wash... 36 17 .679iChicago. 19 30 .388 N. York 27 21 .563[Detroit.. 20 35 .364 Cleve 26 36 .500;St. Louis 17 30 .362 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct.l W. L. Pet. 6t. Louis 33 16 .673i Brooklyn 24 28 .462 N York 30 19 ~l3jPlttsbgh 31 29 .420 Chicago 29 20 .592 Philadel 20 30 .400 Boston.. 26 24 ,520!Clncy .. 18 35 .340 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul at INDIANAPOLIS (night). Minneapolis at Louisville. Kansas City at Columbus. Milwaukee at Toledo. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Boston.. St. Louis at Washington. Detroit at New York. , . Cleveland at Philadelphia NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Chicago. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. (Only games scheduled >

Semi-Pro and Amateur Baseball Gossip

Indianapolis Black Sox peunded three Midway hurlers from the mound to triumpn Sunday. 12 to 4. Williams pitched steady ball for the victors, allowing but five bingles while his mates gathered nineteen. Sox will travel to Cioverdale Sunday. They have open dates in July and w’o'uld like to hear trom state ana city teams. Write H. Woods. 921 Hosbrook street. Unsatisfactory umpiring by Jones was claimed bv Forester Cubs at Riverside Sunday following their double loss to Rhodius Cubs. Em-Roe League leaders. Scores were 5 to 2 and 7 to 0. Mtnardo and Laria allowed but three hits in the first game and Laria and Falkner allowed but Four In the second. Cubs collected seven hits in the first game and nine in the second. West Bide Monarch* defeated Red Wings Sundav. 3to 1 Owens held the Wings to three hits and had twelve strikeouts. For games with W. S. M.. call Be. 95e5-W ask for Tommie. An amateur pitcher desiring a trvout call above number. W. S M. will meet Wednesday night. A good first baseman and hard-hitting fielder are needed to round out a fast Sunday afternoon league team. Call Paul Miller at Lincoln 6556. between 8 and.s:3o. Indianapolis Cardinals lost to American Settlement. 8-3. Sundav at Garfield. Stoveheff twirled for the victors, and Wilson for the losers. E Quir.nette and A. Burris were outstanding. Cards will hold their weeklv meeting Wednesday, practice Friday, and meet the Forrester Cubs Sunday. Beech Grove Red Wings defeated Jake Feld Generals, 7 to 3. Sunday and continued their battle for the leadrship of the Em-Roe Junior League. Brude and Crouse formed the winning batteryWoodsldes desire games with state teams for July and August. Write M. E. Wright. 39 South Warman avenueJim Bova of the Majestic Radios staged an iron man act by pitching a doubleheader against Belmonts, leaders In the llx League, Sunday. Bova lost a Ssrs battle In the first tilt but phed in the second. It was the second time this season he has hurled both ends of a twin bill. Hitting of Maurer in the first game, which the Radios lost 4 to 1 although Bova gave up i but five hits, and Kuhn in the second encounter. Howard was the winner for Belmonts in the opener with a four-hit performance. MRS. LAKE TRIUMPHS VIRGINIA BEACH, Va., June 15. —Mrs. Marion Turpie Lake of New Orleans today began her third year as champion of southern women golfers following her 4 and 3 tri-umph-over Mrs. Ruth Raymond on Sunday. __ ■

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Among the field of 200 schoolboy golfers playing the qualifying round today of The Times interschclastic golf tournament at South Grove are members of the undefeated Shortridge match team. Shown above they are (upper left) Charles Hughes (upper right), Billy Reed Jr. Lower Row (left to right)—Marving, Heckman, Edward Eaton and Harry Yelch. Horace Kelley, southpaw member of the team, is not in the layout.

Heavies Monopolize Fight Card at Harrison Tuesday

Six scraps calling for forty rounds of milling will be offered Ft. Harrison fans Tuesday night when Captain James R. Kennedy, matchmaker, stages the weekly show at the "punch bowl.’* Heavyweights who turned in victories at the local armory on Legion programs will battle in the Harrison main go over the ten-round route to a decision. They are Bennie Touchstone, Detroit, and Rosy Rosales, Cleveland. Rosales defeated Chuck Wiggins recently and Touchstone downed Walter Pickerd and Muggs Kerr, giving the Tuesday feature more

Results Yesterday AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (First Game) Milwaukee 123 100 000— 7 16 1 Toledo 000 200 000— 2 8 2 Jonnard and Manion; Ferguson. Ryan. Cooney and Devormer. (Second Game) Milwaukee 000 222 OCO 6 15 \ Toledo 000 010 002— 3 9 .1 Gearin and Bengough: Scott, Rabb, Ryan and Kies. (First Game) Kansas City 360 205 000—16 15 1 Columbus 400 200 001— 7 13 0 -?^iLn nc Lf cters; Campbell, Baker. Dean, wetherell. Chapman. Gudat and Hinkle. (Second Game) Kansas City 1.. 1 300 001 3 710 2 Columbus 000 211 o— 7 li 2 Maley. Fette. Bayne and Collins: Campbell. Dean. Parmalee and Desautels (First Game) Minneapolis 100 COO 001— 2 6 1 Louisville 012 000 30x— 6 12 0 Benton and Hargrave: Penner and Thompson, (Second Game) Minneapolis ........ 010 210 113— 9 19 0 Louisville 003 000 001— 4 10 3 Hensicb. Sheehan and Griffin; Walsh. Marcum and Shea. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 000 120 000— 3 5 2 Chicago 000 000 010— 1 6 1 Frankhousa. Haid and Snohrer; Root. Brecht and Hemsley. Pittsburgh 000 003 000— 3 6 2 Brooklyn 000 210 03x— 6 9 2 French and Phillips; Shaute. Quinn and Lombardi. (First Game) Philadelphia 200 010 000— 3 10 3 St. Louis 000 151 OOx— 7 11 1 _J* E^ot t an< l McCurdy; Derringer and Wilson. (Second Game) Philadelphia 200 100 001— 4 9 2 St. Louis 913 000 OOx—l3 14 1 Bolen. H. Elliott. Collins and Davis; Rhcra and Mancuso. New York 100 100 001— 3 14 1 Cincinnati 100 100 000— 3 11 1 Sukcftfrth Hubbell and H °ean; Frey and AMERICAN LEAGUE St- Louis 000 110 001— 3 10 3 Washington 120 002 31x— 9 13 1 Biaeholder. Stiles and Ferrell; Burke. Hadley ana Spencer. Chicago . 010 220 002— 7 8 1 Boston 010 102 000— 410 2 Thomas Bnd Tate; MacFayden and Berry (Ten Innings) Detroit 000 001 001 2 4 10 1 New York 010 000 010 O— 2 10 1 Sorrell and Hayworth; Gomez and Dickey. Philadelphia ... 000 300 100— 4 8 2 Cleveland 002 001 03x— 6 12 1 *l\d” Shores and Hvl ns; Brown THREE BOUTS SIGNED Drake and Holloway Meet in Riverside Eight-Rounder. Three scraps have been arranged Ffor Wednesday night’s boxing show at Riverside. Ray Drake and Red Holloway, local junior welters, are slated to battle in the eight-round main go. The six-round semi-windup will bring together Jimmy Fox and Frankie Fivecoats, local bantamweights. Jack O’Brien and Mickey Holder, light heavyweights, meet in a four rounder. Two other scraps and a battle royal will round out the bill.

s J? Alvr clothes on EASY CREDIT

than ordinary prominence. Touchstone’s victory over Pickerd was an upset to Walter’s followers and there were many who thought Wiggins v/ould succeed in doing a comeback against Rosales. Heavyweights also will meet in the top six-rounder Tuesday when Marion Youngstaefel, Vincennes beanpole, tackles Jimmy Hartley of Louisville. Youngstaefel has become a local favorite by willingness to mix it. In the semi-windup of eight rounds, Captain Kennedy has matched Tommy Ryan, Little Rock, end Tim Charles, Louisville, boxers who have performed in main events elsewhere. Other bouts Tuesday, first at 8:30, follow: ; Six Rounds—Charlie Baird, . Louisville heavyweight vs. K. O. Brown, Ft. Harrison. Six Rounds—Pat Murphy. Danville (lU.) welter vs. Pus: Smith, Indianapolis. Four Rounds—Kid Hogan, Anderson vs. Frank Rosenstein. Indianapolis, light heavy.

Major Leaders

LEADING HITTERS Player—Club. G. AB. R. H. Pet. Hendrick, Reds 37 142 23 59 .415 Ruth, Yankees ....... 41 144 38 56 .389 Morgan. Indians ... 39 124 23 48 .387 ■Cochrane. Athletics 42 169 38 65 .335 Goshn. Browns 44 166 32 63 .379 HOME RUNS Klein. Phillies.. I6;Ruth, Yankees .. 11 Foxx Athletics.. 13 Gehrig. Yankees . 10 Arlet. - Phillies... ill RUNS BATTED IN Cronin. Senators 56; Klein. Phillies .. 47 Foxx. Athletics.. 53. Chapman. Yanks 45 Gehrig. Yankees 48! KING MATCH WINNER Howard King defeated Mark Billman in the match race at Walnut Gardens and also won one of the five-mile prelims. The fifteen-mile feature event was rained out. Vernon Trestler and H. Lower triumphed in the other five-mile races, with King turning in the best time of five minutes one second. YANKS SWEEP SERIES By Times Special BERLIN, June 15.—George Lott and John Van Ryn, American tennis stars, made a clean sweep of the international series with Germany by winning the final singles matches Sunday, defeating Ferdinand Henkel and Dr. Heinz Landmann.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Redmond, Camera Clash in ‘Frolic of Freaks’

By United Press NEW YORK, June 15.—Weather permitting, the Primo Carnera-Pat

Twenty Grand Champion of 3-Year-Olds NEW YORK, June 15.—The Impressive victory of Mrs. Payne Whitney’s Twenty Grand in Saturday’s Belmont stakes stamped him as the greatest 3-year-old of the year, and the very men who last year hailed Gallant Fox as a worthy successor to Man OTVar, now declared the Whitney horse superior to the "Fox” and a rival of Man O’War as the greatest horse of all times. In Saturday’s race, Twenty Grand came from behind to run his rivals into the ground, winning eased up in the fast time of 2:29 3-5. The time was two full seconds better than the Belmont stakes record established last year by Gallant Fox. Twenty Grand carried 126 pounds as compared to the 118-pound impost carried by Man O’War when he made his best time of 2:23 4-5 for the mile-and-a-half in 1920.

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Redmond "frolic of freaks” will be staged at Ebbetts field, Brooklyn, tonight. Perhaps the only kind thing that can be said about the bout is that the fighters are well matched in ability—or lack of ability. Although Redmond never has been accused of having championship ability, since the bout with Camera was postponed last week several boxing writers have picked him to defeat the 270-pound Italian and Promoter James J. Johnston is aiding the “steam up” by statements indicating that he would consider Redmond as an opponent for Jack Sharkey next month, if the Irishman wins tonight. RAIN HALTS FEATURE FT. WAYNE, Ind., June 15. Maurice Rose of Dayton was leading on the twenty-eighth lap of the 100-lap feature event at the local flve-eighths-mile oval here Sunday when the race was halted because of rain. Rose and Bob Cary of Dayton won the two ten-lap prelims. COPS MEXICAN CROWN MEXICO CITY, June 15.—Tom-: my White of Houston, Tex., knocked i out Alfredo Gaona in the ninthround here Sunday to regain the; Mexican welterweight crown.

McCarthy’s Hopes of Piloting Flag Winner Fade; Yanks Falter

BY LEO H. PETERSEN United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, June 14.—Joe McCarthy’s hopes that he would begin his career as an American League manager by winning the 1931 pennant with his New York Yankees, ape pars hopeless. Handicaped by poor pitching, the Yankees are running a poor third in the American League campaign, nine and one-half games behind the pace setting Philadelphia Athletics and six and one-half contests back of the Washington Senators. The Yankees were defeated by Detroit. 4 to 2 in ten innings Sunday. Sorrell of the Tigers allowed only six hits while Lefty Gomez weakened in the closing innings, allowing the Tigers to tie the count in the ninth and to score two more runs in the tenth. Washington advanced to within three games of Philadelphia by whipping St. Louis. 9 to 3. as the Athleticn were losing to Cleveland. 6to 4. The Senators batted Blaebolder and Stiles hard while Hadley, who relieved Burke, had little difficulty with the Browns. Philadelphia’s defeat was its second at thii hands of a western club this season. : Brown held the Athletics to eight hits, 1 while his mates were collecting twelve off McDonald and Shores.

The Chicago White Sox defeated Boston. 7 to 4. in the other American League contest. Tommy Thomas allowed ten hits, but was effective in the pinches.

St. Louis Cardinals increased their National League leadership to three fuU games by overwhelming Philadelphia in a double-header. The Cardinals won the Brat game. 7 to 8. behind the effective pitching of Pan! Derringer, while in the Cliff Sutter Tennis Victor By United Press CINCINNATI, 0., June 15. Clifford Sutter of New Orleans held anew tennis title today. The Loyola collegian defeated Bruce Barnes of Austin. Tex., 6-3, 6-3, 2-6, 6-3, in the finals of the tri-state tournament here Sunday. Miss Clara Louise Zinke of Cincinnati defeated Mrs. Ruth Riese of Saginaw, Mich., 6-1, 6-1, in the women's finals. Karl Kamrath and Barnes won the men’s doubles crown, and Ruth Oxeman, Cincinnati, and Miss Zinke won the women's doubles titles. FIFTY ENTER RACE Fifty athletes and eight teams already have entered the annual In-diana-Kentucky A. A. U. two-mile steeplechase championship at Broad Ripple, starting Sunday, June 21. The race will be run in eight legs, with an event each Sunday, except; July 5.

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second contest th(t pounded four Cotters for fourteen hits and a IS-to-i decision. Chuck Klein clouted his sixteenth homer in the opener. New York gained sole possession of second place by nosing out Cincinnati. 3 to 3. A single bv pinch-hitter Ethan Allen, scoring \ ergez. who had doubled gave the Giants their winning tailr in the ninth canto. Chiearo dropped to third place when de. seated bv the Boston Braves. S to 1. The Braves made the most of their five hit* oft Charier Boot, while Frankhouse and Hald gave the Cubs but six safeties Joe Shaute allowed Pittsburgh only six hits in pitching the Brooklvn Robin* to a ti-to-3 victory. CARDS BUY FLOWERS By United Prrsa BROOKLYN, June 15.—Jake Flowers, utility infielder of the Brooklyn Robins, has been sold to the St. Louis Cardinals for the waiver price, the Brooklyn club announced. Flowers, who came to Brooklyn from the Cardinals In 1927, was benched: because of erratic fielding.

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