Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 307, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1934 — Page 29
MAT 1, 1934_
Eastern National League Teams Shade West Clubs in Opening of Series Play Giants Retain Lead With Victory Over Pirates, While Ed Brandt Holds Cubs to Two Hits and Braves Register 6-to-0 Win in Chicago. By Unit'd Pr'* NEW YORK May 4—On the basis of returns from the first intersectional major league competition, eastern National League clubs seem • trnntrnr than wr'ttpm i—. -
stronger than western. Eastern teams won three of the four games in yesterday's opening east-west play, while rain and fog prevented a test of strength in the American circuit, where western clubs wf>re ready to storm eastern aggregations. The Giants, Dodgers and Braves beat Pittsburgh. Cincinnati and the Cubs, respectively. St. Louis beat the Phillies. In the feature contest, the Giants retained their National League lead by trouncing Pittsburgh, 5 to 3, with Travis Jackson leading the twelve-hit attack. He contributed a homer, triple and single. This enabled the Braves to tie Pittsburgh for third place by blanking mighty Chicago, 6 to 0, behind Big Ed Br*ndt’s two-hit pitching. It was Chicago's third straight defeat. McManus and Berger made Boston home runs. Brooklyn shaded Cincinnati. 3 to 2. backing Ray Benge's five-hit flinging with a nine-safety attack. Some of the Dodgers' hits were bunched for three runs in the eighth, the same inning in which the Reds made their two. St. Louis edged the Phillies, 8 to 7. Joe Medwick's home run in the Cardinals’ fourth with the bases loaded featured the game. The Cards added two more tallies in the sixth to offset the Phils’ rally for three runs in the eighth find ninth.
> Standings <
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION \Vn. Cost. P*t- | Minneapolis 11 * -I?? INDIANAPOLIS * * Louisville 9 1 tc7 Columbos 2 *- Milwaukee * * -3K St. Paul * 9 - 308 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet New York 8 5 .615 Boston ... 6 7 .462 C'eveland 6 4 .600 St. Louis. 5 6 ,45a Detroit 7 5 .583 Phila .... 6 8 .429 Wash ton- 7 7 .500 Chicago -■ 4 7 .364 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet.' W. L. Pet New York 11 3 .736 St. Louis . 7 7 .500 Chicago 10 5 .667 Brooklyn . 6 8 .429 Piff.bg 7 6 .538 Phila 4 9 .308 Boston .. 7 6 .538 Cincinnati 311 .214 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul at INDIANAPOLIS. Milwaukee at Columbus. Minneapolis at Louisville. Kansas Citv at Toledo. AMERICAN LEAGUE S' Louis at Boston. Detroit at New York Chicago at Philadelphia. Cleveland at Washington. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Chicago. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. New York at Pittsburgh. Philadelphia at St. Louis. Results Yesterday AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis \ Louisville 900 000 001— 1 8 2 Starr and Hargrave; Bass, McLean. Penner and Thompson. Milwaukee 001 000 OCO 1 7 0 Columbus 004 000 00X— 4 8 1 Stiles and Young: Beckman. Teachout and O’Dea. (Ten Innings) Kansas City 000 010 010 3 5 6 1 Toledo . . 100 010 000 1- 3 8 1 Hockett and Brenzel. Gaston; Nekola. I Sewell and DeSautels. AMERICAN LEAGUE All games postponed: rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 102 001 200— 8 9 0 Chicago 000 000 000— 0 2 1 Brandt and Spohrer; Malone. Lee. Ward and Hartnett. Philadelphia 002 011 012— 7 14 4 St Louis 002 402 OOx— 8 11 0 P Collins and Jeffries; Rhem. P. Dean. Haines and V. Davis. New York 003 001 001— 5 12 2 Pittsburgh 002 100 000 — 3 8 1 Clark. Bell and Richards; French. Smith. Hoyt and Padden. Brooklyn 000 000 030— 3 9 0 Cincinnati 000 000 020 — 2 5 0 Benge and Lopez; Kolp. Shaute and 1 ©Farrell.
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New Gas Will Add Mileage to Racers, Vet Pilot Asserts Bill Cummings Tries Out Fuel in Speedway Practice. BY VERN BOXELL Anew mystery fuel, which promises added mileage per gallon, has been introduced at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in early practice runs and may aid entrants who have been worried by the forty-five gallon restriction placed on cars in j the annual 500-mile race here May 30. Said to have been discovered by | accident in research laboratory tests, : the new gasoline mixture showed i the oromise of a 20 per cent inj crease in mileage in runs made recently by Wild Bill Cummings in {his fast eight-cylinder car, and apparently increased acceleration. Supply Is Limited “This may be the answer to our ; fuel problem,” Cummings said after j making several twenty-mile tests 1 with it. “The new fuel not only ; showed increased acceleration but • gave us about a 20 per cent increase in mileage, running at an average I speed of 111 miles an hour. The i tests indicated that forty-five gallons of the mixture should be equivalent to about fifty-four gallons of the best racing fuel we have been able to find heretofore, and those additional nine gallons would certainly come in handy in the latter part of the Decoration day race." H. C. (Cotton) Henning, veteran race car mechanic who built up the Boyle Special which Cummings was driving, confirmed the pilot’s statements. The supply of the new fuel is said to be limited, and for that reason it will not be furnished drivers on a promotional basis this year, but probably will be made available to them on an out and out purchase basis. Drivers Buy Own The fuel was developed in the research laboratories of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. It is said to be the heaviest gasoline ever refined and weighs considerably more per gallon than other gasolines. The base is a safety gasoline which is both nonexplosive and noninflammable at ordinary temperatures. This is blended with another gasoline of intense volatility to make it usable in high speed racing motors. Because of the limited amount of fuel, drivers must make application for a suppy of it before a specified date. Meanwhile, at the big speed plant, railbirds daily are waiting for the boys to cut loose. Frank Brisko was out late yesterday in his Four Wheel Drive Special, powered with anew four-cylinder motor. He turned about ten laps, the best being at a 110-mile-an-hour clip. Phil Shafer, local driver, also was out for an airing. Drivers and cars are arriving daily, but the pilots are delaying warmups while their cars are assembled. Sports Celebs Pay Tribute to Stevens NEW YORK. May 4—Sports celebrities and friends will gather tomorrow in the funeral church for services for Harry M Stevens, “hotdog king.” and one of the most popular figures at sports events. Stevens, who described himself as publisher and caterer "from the Hudson to the Rio Grande,” succumbed last night to an illness that began on Christmas day. He was seventy-eight.
Time Clock’s Southern Form Marks Him as Derby Threat
MSB? / —\
BY MAX RIDDLE (Copyright. 1934. by NEA Service. Inc.) TIME CLOCK, grandson of the incomparable Colin, and brilliant winner of the Florida Derby, will be a major threat to every horse that fulfills his engagement in the Kentucky Derby, A member of the Brookmeade Stable of Mrs. Isabelle Dodge Sloan, and a stablemate of the highly regarded Cavalcade, Time Clock is just about as good a horse as ever came north from the Florida tracks.
If he can reproduce the form he showed in the southland, many an expert believes the son of On Watch-Milfoil will do as .well or better than did Charley 0., last year’s Florida Derby winner, who ran third in the Kentucky Derby. tt tt tt TIME CLOCK was not a particularly high class 2-year-old, winning only one race in ten starts. He was not a stakes winner, and his lone victory was achieved over a mediocre field of horses. However, the Brookmeade stable felt it could afford to ‘wait on” the colt, and may shortly reap the benefits of its sagacity. The Brookmeade colt had been sent to Florida especially for the southern prize, but had failed to show much in his warm-up race. Consequently he was 15 to 1 in the betting. Mack Gardner kept him well off the pace set by Soon Over and Agrarian during the early running But when the field reached the stretch, Garner shook up his mount, and there was little left to the race. Time Clock raced around the field with the greatest ease and won in the fast time of 1:49 1-5, anew record for the event. TIME CLOCK is a son of On Watch, he by the unbeaten Colin, son of the great Commando. Commando was the sire of Peter Pan, the great Bradley stallion, and from this same line springs the mighty Equipoise. Bob Smith, one of the “old line" trainers, will undoubtedly have Time Clock ready for the big event. The black horse has already proved his ability to run a distance with weight up—something many a Derby candidate will fail to show when the crucial test arrives.
Prep Tracksters in Action Over State
Nearly all Indiana high school track teams will compete in meets today or tomorrow as a warmup for the state sectionals next week-end. Schools of the Northeastern Indiana Conference will hold their annual meet tonight at Ft. Wayne. Bloomington, Greencastle and Shoitridge were scheduled to meet here today in a triangular meet. Bloomington, undefeated, also has a team entered in a relay meet at Petersburg tomorrow. Other southern Indiana high schools have entered the Petersburg event. Tech will be host tomorrow for the seventh annual North Central Conference track and field championship. Schools entered include Anderson, Frankfort, Jefferson of Lafayette. Kokomo, Lebanon. Logansport, Morton of Richmond, Newcastle and possibly Muncie. Kokomo, defending champion, is the favorite. The Wildcats won second in the state indoor meet and recently defeated the state champion Froebel team.
Semi-Pro and Amateur Baseball News, Gossip
The Bargersville Merchants are ready 5?- ,_'' vith fast state teams. \\ rite Eddie Verbryck, Bargersvile. Inch The Fairview Cardinals will play at 10 tomorrow 1 lorning at Riverside No. 4. Wilson or Clark will be on the mound for the Cards. Ed Brown notice. A large crowd is expected at Douglas I park at 3 Sunday afternoon to watch Troy [ Manlove's Sanitary Commission nine eni gage Dick Jones' Douglas Parkers. Both | teams are undefeated in the city Negro League. | Glenn's Valley wilt meet the Elmigos at Glenn s Valiey Sunday. The Glenn's Valley nine wants a game on May 13. Phone Drexel 6840-W. The Ben Davis Merchants and the Bennett Coal nine will tangle on Brookside No. 2 tomorrow. Tne Merchants i SSS* .A s ame Sunday. Phone Belmont 0920 before 5 p. m. and Belmont 2916-W I after 5. 1 - The „ Pflummville Tigers will face the | East Side Cubs Sunday at Pflumm's diaj mond. Game time is 3 p. m. The Banner Farm Dairy team will plav at Piainfield Sunday. Plavers are re- ! quested to be on hand for practice at 5 i P- nt- at Dearborn drive and Thirty-fourth and Keystone. Teams wanting games phone Cherry 1903 before 6 p. m. and ask for Arvan. The Midway A. C. and Falls City Beer ! yiU play a Municipal League tilt at 3 Sunday afternoon at Brookside Dick I Vetters will twirl for the Midways and . Grav will be behind the bat. Young and i Hayden will form the Fails City battery. The Dady's W. I. Cubs will play the - Martinsville Hornets at Martinsville at 2:30 Sunday afternoon. The Cubs have I May 13 open. I The Cloverdale Gravs will play at i Bridgeport at 2:30 Sunday afternoon. The Gravs lineup will be Joe Farnell. j Sigler. Mell Martin, Tobin. Dalv. Flint. Corn. Dady. Williamson. Britton and Hoffa. Strong state clubs write to Civde i Hoffa. 1228 Oliver avenue. Indianapolis. The Oak Hill Flashes will play Stilesvilie Sunday. Plavers be at the manager's home at noon. Out of town teams desirjnß H2 mes rite to William E. McCorkle. 2306 Fernway street. Frankfort and Martinsville notice. The Lebanon Merchants want a came for Sunday. May 6. with a fast team. The Merchants won from Thorntown in a free hitting contest last Sunday, 28 to 13. For f?f} es^ caU c,us Chambers, phone Lebanon j 1194. between 8 and 6 p. m.
BICYCLES Indiana's Leading Dealer for 30 Years HOFFMAN’S
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MARCEL THIEL BEATS AL ROTH IN PARIS By United Press PARIS, May 4.—Marcel Thil, French veteran, retained his claims to the world middleweight championship last night, by winning a fifteen-round decision over A1 Roth of Belgium after a hard fight. Thil, who is recognized as champion by the International Boxing Federation, weighed 157 pounds; Roth, 157. SPARTAN NETMEN WIN By United Press OBERLIN, 0., May 4.—Michigan State’s tennis team defeated Oberlin college here yesterday.
Cash Cascades at Downs Repeal, Classy Field, Cut Rates Combine to Swell Betting to Million-Dollar Mark. BY GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent LOUISVILLE, May 4.—Fresh money was flowing freely in this old southern metropolis today with prospects of a $1,000,000 clicking through the mutuel machines on Derby day tomorrow. It’s been four years since that much money has been wagered on Derby day. but the way the boys are spending their dough around town on the eve of the big race it seems likely that a betting revival will take place tomorrow.
General improvement in business conditions, cut rates for the Derby, the classy field and repeal are among the leading factors in the anticipated betting boom. Hotel reservations and demands for box seats and grand stand reservations at Churchill Downs far exceeded the last two years. Derby prices have been scaled down this year, with boxes that brought S9O in other years going for S6O and the clubhouse price cut from $8 to $4. There are at least six horses in the prospective Derby field which will get a heavy play and swell the Derby-pool itself to its biggest total in several years. The east, midwest, far west and south all have contenders which will make for more wagering. This is the first Derby since repeal, and mint juleps, Bourbon highballs and old-fashions are likely to make plungers out of conservative bettors. Since the peak year, 1926, when $2,098,701 was wagered, Derby day betting has been on the decline each year until it slumped to $745,547 in 1933. If $1,000,000 is dwagered on the seven races tomorrow at Churchill Downs officials expect, it will be the first time the million dollar mark has been reached since 1931, Twenty Grand’s year. The highest total ever wagered on the Derby itself was in 1926, Bubbling Over’s year, when $694,958 was bet on America’s greatest turf event. Last year only $229,352 was bet on the Derby alone. STANFORD WILL NOT TRY IN I. C. A. A. A. A. By United Press PALO ALTO, Cal., May 4.—Stanford university’s decision not to send a team to the I. C. A. A. A. A. track and field meet at Philadelphia this month was announced today by the board of athletic control. Lack of adequate finances forced the decision, A1 Masters, graduate manager, said. University of Southern California authorities gave the same reason in announcing that the present I. C. 4-A champions would not compete at Philadelphia. University of California has not announced its plans.
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Schools Card Heavy Spring Sports Menu Track, Baseball, Golf and Tennis on Colleges’ Week-End Bill. A dual track meet between Indiana and Marquette universities tomorrow at Bloomington will head Hoosier collegiate sports this weekend. Ralph Metcalfe, Marquette’s allAmerica dash man, and Charles Hombostel and Ivan Fuqua, former Olympic stars who led Indiana to victory in three events at the Penn relays last week, will compete. The Indiana baseball team will entertain Indiana State tomorrow. Purdue, defeated and tied by Indiana in a two-game baseball series ending yesterday, will entertain Chicago tomorrow in Big Ten baseball, track and golf. Tomorrow will be “state high school day” at both Purdue and Indiana. Notice Dame engaged a Big Ten team m track today, meeting Ohio State at Columbus. The baseball teams of the two schools will meet at Columbus tomorrow. Notre Dame's tennis team will entertain Albion tomorrow. Other Saturday tennis includes Ball State at Indiana State, Indiana at Earlham and Armour Tech at De Pauw. Manchester and Huntington netters were to meet at the latter school today. Several Hoosier college baseball games were scheduled for today. They included Wabash at Butler, Indiana Central at Franklin, Manchester at Huntington and Ball State at Central Normal. Tomorrow De Pauw will play at Ball State. De Pauw also will entertain Armour Tech tomorrow in golf. Dual track meets in Indiana tomorrow, in addition to those at Purdue and Bloomington, will include Central Normal at Indiana State, and De Pauw at Earlham. The Butler and Ball State freshmen track teams were scheduled to meet this afternoon at Muncie.
Dundee Retains Claims to Title By United Press PATERSON, N. J., May 4.—Vince Dundee of Belleville. N. J., retained his claims to the middleweight championship easily last night with a fifteen-round decision over Young A1 Diamond, Paterson, before 8,000 fans. Diamond was outclassed. Dundee, recognized as champion by the New York state commission and the National Boxing Association, won ten rounds, according to the United Press score Diamond took only one, the fourteenth. The otehrs were even. Manager Max Waxman said Dundee's next fight probably would be with Teddy Yarosz, Monaco, Pa., who beat Vince twice last year before he won the title from Lou Brouillard. Negotiations for the match are under way. FEDSKKIN TEAM WORKS OUT Beginning Monday Manual’s tennis team will start work-outs at Garfield park and later will play practice matches with Tech and Shortridge. The racket wielders are Donald Wagener, John Nackenhorst, Eugene Wahl, Ralph Chupp, Kenneth Windhorst, Don Linson, Merrill DuHammel and Wilbur Baker.
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WtSmma miller
TWENTY women players took part in the first season tournament at Pleasant Run Thursday, a blind par event. Mrs. Kathryn Crawford, with a score of 90, hit blind par on the nose and took first honors. Second place went to Mrs. Lottie Munroe, with 89. Mrs. Helen Stone was third with 88. and Kathryn Mountain and Mrs. Bernice Brandes tied for fifth with 92 each. The Pleasant Run ladies will play every Thursday throughout the season.
THE Riverside women have organized a club and will play every Friday. The first tournament next week will be a selective hole event in charge of the new officers, elected yesterday. They were: Mrs. Agnes Murphy, president; Mrs. Hal Holmes, vice-president; Mrs. Rose Lykins, secretary and treasurer; Mrs. Russell Stonehouse. handicap and tournament committee chairman, and Mrs. C. R. Eisaman, prize committee chairman. tt a tt Fred Keesling, former pro at Fortville, has been named pro at Indian Lake this season. Formal opening will be next Sunday, and Fred invites you out. Don't think you know the course, even though you have played it. Numerous changes have been made. tt tt a Tonight has been designated .as business night for both men and women golfers of Sarah Shank municipal course. The women will go into a huddle at the clubhouse and expect to complete an attractive season tournament schedule and outline a membership drive before adjournment. While they are talking golf there, the men will assemble at the home of Clayton Schultz, course pro, and their program for the evening reads something like the women's. Schultz has jumped the gun on the boys, however, and has taken it upon himself to stage a blind par tournament Sunday. 8 tt tt TIM CAMPBELL and his state championship Tech golf team traveled to Batesville today for a return match with the downstaters. With only Paul Gentry back from' last year's team the Big Green players downed the Batesville team at Speedway recently to s]i.5 ] i. Since tnen—three new players, Chester Werner, Wedmore Smith and John Laffey have improved and coach Campbell is confident of victory by a greater margin today. u tt tt Speaking of high school golf bids us remind schoolboy golfers that The Times again will stage its schoolboy golf tournament this year on one of the local municipal links. It is hoped the event can be staged on Coffin.. If later plans develop that the course might be too hard for the grade school lads, then their division of the meet will be staged across the road at Riverside. As usual, it will be put on at the close of school. The tournament has become so much an institution with schoolboy golfers that to publish the program at this time ic almost useless. But just to refresh the memories of those who will be there this year, there will be the eighteen-hole qualifying round, with match play to determine the champion in each division. tt tt tt /TTEMIZED program from the A Hillcrest Country Club shows an opening party scheduled for Sunday. It is to be a membership and guest
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affair, beginning with a golf breakfast in the morning. Pete Lambertus, president and general chairman, will offer a free Dutch luncheon at noon, and has waived greens fees for the day. While there are some special tournaments planned. Pete wants it understood that those participating can arrange any kind of games between themselves they desire. He hopes, however, that the great majority of men and women there will take part in the mixed twoball foursome play scheduled for the afternoon. a tt a The program further states there will be a special dinner served at night at reasonable prices, there will be prizes for everybody, special favors for the ladies, music and general entertainment, cards, (lancing and a jolly good time with arrangements made to relieve the parents of familv/worries. A maid has been secured to supervise and watch over the kiddies in the playground during the entire day and evening. The party is for members and their guests and the guests can be men or women or families. a tt a The Indianapolis District Golf Association executives went into session at noon today in the Columbia Club.
With Softball Teams
The Interfraterunitv Indoor League schedule for Sundav is: Phi Sigma Chi vs. Delta Sigma Nu. Riverside No. 1: Be:a Phi Sigma vs. Phi Beta Sigma, Riverside No. 2; Phi Lambda Epsilon vs Kappa Alpha Phi. Spades; Ace Club vs. Delta Alpha. Thirtieth and Dearborn; Beta Sigma Nu vs. Mercury Club. Eilenberger. Elmer Henn's pitching and hitting gave the St. Joe softcall team a victory over Nortbert Sexton's nine. 10 to 4. For games with the Saints, phone Cherry 1966-W and ask for Eddie.
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PAGE 29
Pat Finnegan Faces Pedigo in Main Bout Chick and Kauffman Tangle in Semi-Final in Hall Arena.
TONIGHT'S CARD
Main Bout— Lord" Patrick Lansdowne Finnegan. England, vs. Cecil (Blacksmith) Pedigo. Louisville, welterweights, two falls out of three, an hour and a half time limit. Semi-final—Bobby Chick. Texas, vs. Clete Kauffman. Columbus. 0.. light heavies, two falls out of three, forty-flve-mlnute limit. Prelim—Ed (Mule) Harrison. Missouri, vs. Hugh Webb. Indianapolis, welterweights, one fall. Place—Tomlinson hall. Time—6 30. Referee—Bud Westfall. A marcelled young Adonis, who looks like a dude and wrestles like a Neanderthal husky, will pit his ring cleverness against the experience of a veteran welterweight in the main go on the Tomlinson hall card tonight. The bout brings together “Lord" Patrick Lansdowne Finnegan, whose performance against Duke Ruppenthal here lasc Friday night brought demands for an encore, and Cecil (Blacksmith) Pedigo, who has starred in the Tomlinson hall arena several times during the current season. In the semi-final on the bill, Bobby Chick, Texas, and Clete Kauffman, of Columbus. 0.. will tangle for t,wo out of three falls with a forty-five-minute limit. The main event also is for two falls out of three, with the limit an hour and a half. A curtain-raiser go between Mule Harrison, former Missouri university athlete, and Hugh Webb, local welter, will complete the card. Both Chick and Kauffman will enter the ring tonight with impressive records, which include victories over several topefehers in their weight divisions. Both have been touring for some time.
