Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1934 — Page 25
JUNE 1, 1934
Dodgers Beat Giants, Cubs Move Into Second-Place Tie as Klein Clouts 14th Homer Cardinals Strengthen Hold on Top Position With ExtraInning Victory Over Cincinnati; Senators Gain; Cleveland Loses to Sox. By United Press NEW YORK. June I.—The “jinx” over, but mortification lingering, the Brooklyn Dodgers moved into Boston today after defeating the New York Giants for their first victory in seven games with their interborough rivals. With Bill Terry’s pre-season mocking words—“ Are the Dodgers still in the league?”—ringing in their ears, Casey Stengel’s crew came from behind yesterday to defeat the Giants, 6 to 2.
Knocked out earlier in the current series, Ray Benge held the Giants to ten scattered hits. The Dodgers trailed by one run until they knocked Hal Schumacher off the mound in the seventh inning when they scored all their runs. They made ten hits off Schumacher and Castleman. Bush Is Winner Guy Bush allowed fourteen scattered hits as he pitched the Chicago Cubs to an 11 to 5 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates, thereby winning his eighth victory of the year. The triumph moved the Cubs into a second place tie with the Giants. The Cubs pounded Bill Swift, Smith and Harris for twelve hits, including Chuck Klein’s fourteenth circuit smash with two aboard. The St. Louis Cardinals strengthened their hold on first place in the National League by nosing out the tail-end Cincinnati Reds 3 to 2 in ten innings. Manager Frankie Frisch drove home the winning run with a tw'o-base blow. The teams were held to seven hits. Paul Derringer, for Cincinnati, opposed Jesse Haines, Rhem and P. Dean. Boston and Philadelphia were not scheduled. Yanks Are Downed In the American League the fourth place Washington Senators gained on Cleveland, New York and Detroit by subduing the Yankees, 9 to 3. The Senators shelled Russell Van Atta and Uhle for fourteen hits. The New Yorkers made twelve hits, including a circuit smash by Tony Lazzeri. Mont Weaver pitched for the Senators. The Cleveland Indians were unable to overcome an eight run rally in the third inning, and succumbed to the Chicago White Sox, 12 to 5. The Sox hammered out seventeen hits, including Zeke Bounra’s twelfth home run. Hal Trosky’s ninth home run was one of twelve hits made by the Indians. Sam Jones, the winning pitcher, opposed Bean, Winegarner and Lee. The St. Louis Browns supported Paul Andrews with fourteen hits, including timely home runs by Clift, Bejma and Pepper, and defeated the Detroit Tigers, 11 to 3. The Tigers made ten hits. Philadelphia and Boston were not scheduled. IRISH READY TO END BASEBALL SCHEDULE By Times Special SOUTH BEND. Ind., June I. The Notre Dame baseball team is scheduled to play its last games of the season today and tomorrow. The Irish were to entertain Wisconsin this .afternoon. Michigan State will come here for a game tomorrow afternoon. Notre Dame has had a mediocre season.
With Softball Teams
Charles Stuart, pitcher for Phi Lambda Epsilon, was the outstanding performer , of last Sunday's Interfraternity Council Softball League. Stuart struck out twenty-two batsmen, but was defeated bv the Ace Club. 5 to 4. Other Interfraternity results were: Phi Sigma Chi, 1; Delta Alpha, 0 (forfeit t. Mercury Club. 2; Beta Phi Sigma 0. Phi Beta Sigma. 4; Delta Sigma Nu. o. Following is the schedule for next Sunday morning; Phi Lambda Epsilon vs. Beta Sigma Nu, at Ellenberger; Phi Sigma Chi vs. Ace Club, at Riverside No. 2: Beta Phi Sigma vs. Delta Sigma Nu, at Thirtieth and Dearborn; Kappa Alpha Phi vs. Mercury Club, at Spades; Phi Beta Sigma vs. Delta Alpha, at Riverside No. 1. Ace Club is leading the loop with seven wins against no defeats. Games scheduled in the Knights of Columbus Softball League for Sunday morning are as follows: Little Flower vs. St. Philip, at Brookside; Our Lady of Lourdes ys. Holy Cross, at Garfield; St. Joseph vs. 'Cathedral, at Christian, and St. John vs. St. Anthony, at Willard.
Another Gas Cut Likely
Rickenbacker Says Engineers Will Study Successful 1934 Experiment; Interesting Results Revealed.
Indication that the forty-five-gallon gasoline supply for 500-mile race cars may be lowered still further for the 1935 race was made last night by Colonel E. V. Rickenbacker, president of the Indianapolis Motor Speed-
way Corporation. Declaring that he was highly pleased with the results of this year’s fuel experiment, Mr. Rickenbacker said that action on another gas slash depends on a study to be made soon by engineers. Data will be presented to the national technical committee, which meets in Detroit next month, and a decision will be made at that time. Os the ten cars to finish in the regular prize list, the minimum gas used was thirty-three and three-
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Title Threat
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Ralph Guldahl St. Louis has a crack links professional in Ralph Guldahl, and the Missouri ace will be supported enthusiastically when he competes in the national open tourney. His friends like to point him out as one of the real “dark hoss” threats in the title event.
Cub Boss Denies Grimm Is on Pan / Rumors Say Jack Lelivelt, Rowland Considered. By United, Press CHICAGO, June I.—William Walker, Chicago Cubs’ president, denied today that Manager Charlie Grimm was under fire and likely to be replaced before the end of the season. “So far as I know the matter of changing managers in mid-season has not been discussed,” said Walker Reports had come from the west coast that Jack Lelivelt, manager of the league-leading Los Angeles Pacific Coast League club, was slated to replace Grimm. Clarence Rowland, Cubs’ scout and former manager of the Chicago White Sox, also has been mentioned as a possible successor to Grimm. LOCALTsKEET GROUP TAKES TEAM HONORS Indianapolis won the team title shoot in the mid-West skeet tournament at the Indianapolis Skeet Club" yesterday, breaking 469 out of 500 targets to second-place Cleveland’s 456. Individual events were to be completed today, due to the large field competing.
quarters gallons in one car and the most gas burned was forty-three gallons. It was revealed that Bill Cummings had five and one-half gallons still in his car at the close of the race and three gallons of unused fuel in his pit. Six of the ten winners went through the entire race with their original tires. Only nine tires were changed in the pits during the speed contest.
By Joe Williams n n n Rabbit Was Always Trying His Idea Was’to Win Game mum May Have Played His Last
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YORK, June I.—l have high hopes that this will be a unique column of its kind in that no mention will be made of the Boston Braves of 1914 or of George Stallings, the miracle man. Anyhow, it is my notion that if there is anybody who reads baseball who is not completely familiar with the fact that the Braves under the Miracle Man came from last place in July to win the National League championship and later the world series in four straight from the Athletics, he or she—well, what shall I say? Perhaps it is best to say nothing. Nineteen fourteen was a long time ago. People were saying the war wouldn’t last three months, the radio was an impossibility and Florenz Ziegfeld was going to far in presenting an ensemble in short skirts. u * h nun I DON’T recall that they were saying anything about a little geezer named Rabbit Maranville, who was just breaking in at shortstop with the Braves. Nobody paid a great deal of attention to him. But it turned out he was to be one of the great men of baseball. You can even say one of the lovable men of baseball and not be far off. Twenty years is a long stretch even for a ball player with ambition, ideals and a strict adherence to self-discipline. Maranville had none of these qualities. To him the game of baseball —as well as the game of life —was a laugh. And yet after twenty years he is still with the Braves. IF it hadn’t been for that frightful accident in the south last spring when the Rabbit broke his leg he would still be out there in the infield making those close up belly catches of short fly balls. You probably recall the circumstances of that accident. It completely typified the Rabbit as a man. The Rabbit tried to score from third with what would have been the tying or winning run, I forget which. He was blocked off at the plate. When they picked him up he was a hopeless cripple. A jagged bone had cut through his flannels—a mute, grisly verdict that the end had come to remarkable career. Before lapsing Into a merciful sleep the Rabbit cracked: "Well, they didn’t knock me off short of home plate, did they?” a a a a tt a AND they didn’t. The umpire ruled the run had been scored by the Rabbit. It may develop that that was the last run the Rabbit was ever to score in big league competition. Whoever that umpire was he had a sense of romance—even if the Rabbit had been out by ten feet. That’s one of the things that made the Rabbit—he was always trying. He was never satisfied with being on first, or second, or third. He always wanted to get home. Most ball players are satisfied if they get a hit or walk. That makes them look all right in the box score. But the Rabbit had to score, even if he broke a leg. You could easily weave a stenciled success story around this incident, applying ib to merchants, doctors and authors, but it would lack something. Just precisely what I do not know. Perhaps complete honesty. There are not many earnest men who would break a leg for a principle. I don’t mean to say the Rabbit broke his knowingly, but I do say that was the way he played the game. nan n n n HOW are you to judge the values of men who take life with a stern seriousness and are successful—and still other men who take life as a lark and are just as successful? On the one hand I give you Walter Johnson. No ball player ever took his profession more seriously, and no ball player—at least no pitcher in the American League—ever contrived a more illustrious record. And on the other hand I give you the Rabbit, until very recent years a happy-go-lucky Hooligan, to whom rules meant nothing and training less. He stayed up all night and sang a very miserable tenor. He took world championship games as a common jest. When they made him a manager he ridiculed the majesty of the office by selling newspapers in front of the ball park. Will the June sophomores majoring in philosophy take a bite out of this one and see what it tastes like? I wouldn’t advise them to go too deeply into the subject. In the end they may be forced to report simply that it is “just life.”
Hornbostel, Fuqua Share Balfour Award at Indiana Whitey Wilshere, Ace Moundsman, Also Is Given Recognition as Outstanding Athlete. By United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June I.—Charles Hornbostel, Evansville and Ivan Fuqua, Brazil, were announced today as winners of the Balfour sportsmanship award in track at Indiana university. The two shared
California Crew to Defend Title Western Rowers Seek Third National Win. By United, Press t BERKELEY. Cal., June I.—The University of California varsity and junior varsity crews were headed eastward today, bound for Poughkeepsie and defense of their national intercollegiate rowing title. The varsity and freshmen crews of the University of Washington, other far western entrant, will leave Friday. California is* seeking its third national title. The crews, coached by Carroll M. (Ky) Ebright, won the four-mile Poughkeepsie tests in 1928 and 1932 and went on in each instance to capture the Olympics rowing title. U. S. C. POLO TEAM TO MEET ARMY FOUR LOS ANGELES, June I.—Captain Evan Shaw and four other members of the University of Southern California polo team leave tonight for New York, where they play Army June 8. The match will inaugurate athletic relations between the two schools. DEAN’S PUcTTBREAKS JAKE FLOWERS’ WRIST By United Press CINCINNATI, June I.—Jake Flowers of the Cincinnati Reds nursed a fractured bone in his right wrist today. Flowers was hit by a pitched ball by Paul Dean in the game with St. Louis yesterday. CATHEDRAL NET~CHAMP Robert Anderson placed first in the Cathedral high school freshman tennis tourney when he defeated Carl Stenger, 6-1. Eighty-two boys entered the tournament. The eighty-pound freshman conquered six opponents in the one-set play to win a trophy offered by Pretzel Bell. Anderson, who is the nephew of John Hennessey, former Indianapolis Davis cup player, allowed his six opponents to take only seven games. Anderson defeated William O’Neill, 6-2, to enter the finals. Stenger reached the finals by winning over John Masariu, 7-5. GRIFFITH’S BOY HONORED WASHINGTON, June I.—Calvin Griffith, adopted son and blood nephew of Clark Griffith, president of the Washington Senators baseball club, has been elected captain of next year's Washington university nine. PUSHMOBILE RACE A pushmobile race will be held tomorrow night at 6:30 at Colman park, 2500 West Michigan street, under auspices of the Amateur Pushmobile Association. L. Schmoe, 1927 Bloyd avenue, is manager. 1
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the same honor last year. Vernon (Whitey) Wilshere, Skaneateles, N. Y., pitching ace of the Indiana baseball team, will receive the award in baseball, Athletic Director Z. G. Clevenger announced. Hornbostel and Fuqua, stars of the Crimson track team for the past three years, will close their collegiate careers at the national intercollegiate meet at Los Angeles June 22-23 and at the national A. A. U. carnival, at Milwaukee June Both runners set new records in the Big Ten and state track meets, Hornbostel in the half-mile and Fuqua in the quarter-mile. The Big Ten record Hornbostel lowered had stood for eighteen years. Wilshere, a junior, has turned in one of the best pitching records ever established at Indiana university and recently attracted the attention of big league scouts.
MAJOR LEADERS
(By United Press) LEADING BATTERS Player and Club. g. ab. R. h Pet Hemsley, Browns ... 29 106 13 44 415 Manush, Senators... 40 168 31 66 '■?<>• Knickerbocker Cleve. 35 140 24 52 '.379 Medwick, Cardinals. 38 157 38 59 376 Hendrick, Phillies .. 24 72 10 27 .375 . _ . HOME RUNS £ih!?f,, Cu v S V Giants 9 Gehrig, Yankees 12 Johnson Athletics Q B? n v ura 4 White S . 12 Hartnett, Cubs 9 Foxx, Athletics.. HlTrosky, Cleveland 9 RUNS BATTED IN Gehrig, Yankees 45iMedwick Cards 70 aK- s HITS Srf ■o®"* SSBE,r&i£' and * U tmXSki, S*,, 0 '" 1 ""' Tigers 54
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Pedigo, Cortez in Brawl Tonight at Tomlinson Bouts Ed Harris, Scotch Collegian, Wrestles Slaughter. Three bouts in as many different weight divisions will be offered wrestling patrons at Tomlinson hall tonight by Promoter Jimmie McLemore. Cecil (Blacksmith) Pedigo, Louisville veteran, and Don Cortez, speedy Spanish welterweight, will clash in the two falls out of three headline fray. Action for the evening will get under way at 8:30 with a one-“-fall skirmish involving Ed (Mule) Harrison, Scotch athlete hailing from the University of Missouri, and Eddie Slaughter, speedy local middleweight. Harrison has won two scuffles here within the last month. Chief Little Wolf, Indian lightheavy, returns after an absence of several months for action in the semi-windup, meeting Harry Burris, ambitious Anderson youngster, in a two falls out of three ruckus. Since his last appearance here about four months ago against Ray (Tuffy) Meyers, Cortez furnished a national sensation with a win over Earl (Wildcat)* McCann, generally conceded as the world’s second ranking welterweight. Fighting, Picnics Both for Camera Baer Resting After Working Eight Rounds. By United Press POMPTON LAKES, N. J., June 1. For the next week, “picnics” and boxing will occupy champion Primo Camera’s training for his match with Max Baer in New York June 14. Camera, taking a hand in his training, said he was in good condition. A hike and a motor trip were his “workouts” yesterday. He planned strenuous boxing for the next three days, and tlfen several days of “picnics.” By United. Press ASBURY PARK, N. J., June I. Challenger Max Baer rested today after a strenuous workout yesterday. Watched by 500 spectators, Baer boxed eight rounds, punched the bag for three rounds more, did calesthenics, and then tipped the scales at 212. Dolph Thomas was expected from San Francisco today to assist the challenger in his training. I. U. Matmen Are Awarded Sweaters By United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June I. Fifteen members of the Indiana university freshman wrestling team who will receive numeral sweater awards were announced today by Zora G. Clevenger, athletic director. They are Willard Myers, Muncie; Tom McCarthy, East Chicago; Eli Aronson. South Bend; Cris Dal Sasso, Clinton; Harold Coar, Ft. Wayne, Henry Poole, Evansville; Francis Nix, Posey ville; Herbert Griffis, Winamac; Thomas Andis, Scottsburg; Darrell Giddons, Lexington, Ind.; Stanley Sparks, Stanford; John Campbell, Marion, and Robert Myers, John Mitchell and Charles McDaniel, all of Bloomington. Bloomington Track Team Is Rewarded By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June I. Fourteen members of Bloomington high school’s strong track team will be awarded letters, Coach Pete Phillips has announced. The team was undefeated during the regular season and finished high in the standings at the state meet. Tom Bolding, who set anew state record for the mile, heads the list of those eligible for awards. SAVOLDI, GRABER WIN By Times Special CAMDEN, N. J., June I—Joe Savoldi defeated Sander Szabe in a one-fall wrestling bout here last night in one hour and five minutes with a dropkick. Henry Graber used armpulls and body smashes in pinning Andy Rascher, Indiana university, in twenty-four minutes fifty-two seconds.
Golf Sale 500 Golf Clubs at Greatly Reduced Prices. EM-ROE GOOD^CO. 209 West Washington Street
PjICfcISWJNGi
ENTRIES for the ninth annual Indianapolis Times interscholastic golf tournament are rolling in fast, coaches at the various high schools report, and indications are that the usual young army of school boy golfers again will be in the event when the eighteen-hole qualification round is played over Coffin course next Wednesday, June 6. Grade school boys likewise are showing greater interest than ever this year with an eighteen-hole medal score tournament to be held for them over the same course. nan The official individual entry blank for both high school and grade school boys will appear for the first time tomorrow. Boys who plan to enter the tournament should clip the blank immediately and put it in the pocket of their school clothing so they V' ll not forget it Monday. At school Monday they should have it signed by the principal or golf coach and mail Monday night. n n n THE only requirement of this tournament is that each entrant be a schoolboy. He must have attended school right up to the end of the present spring semester. The golf coaches at the various high schools—R. T. Campbell, Washington; Lieutenant George Naylor, Shortridge; Brother Eymard, Cathedral; Ed Deiderich, Broad Ripple; Harold G. Boese, Manual; Tim Campbell, Technical, and Lou Reichel. Park school—are compiling blanket entry blanks. That is, they are having the boys at their schools who intend to play in The Times tournament sign a list and they will certify the entire list as eligible entries. However, boys who attend grade school and high schools in the county are unable to do this and the individual entry blank is for the benefit of those boys who must have it signed by the township trustee, principal, teacher or other school official. If the entrant is a caddv and the professional at his course personally knows that he attends school, the pro signature will be accepted. The idea is to limit the entry to boys who regularly attend school and still not make it so difficult that ambitious entrants can not meet the entry requirement. nan THE high school boys will qualify next Wednesday from 8:30 until dark. High school boys out of school should make it a point to get to the course as early as possible Wednesday morning and play an eighteen-hole qualification round. This will help in two ways. First, it will relieve congestion before regular patrons desire to play, and second, it will give the boys who must attend school Wednesday an opportunity to play when they arrive at the course after school. nan Coffin course will afford the young golf stars a stiff test. It definitely will determine if these boys who have been able to fire par and sub-par golf in all of the preceding tournaments can do so over the toughest municipal course in Indianapolis. It is because of the toughness of the course that the grade school tournament has been cut to one eighteen hole round. The tournament has been set for June 6,7, 8 and 9 so that it will not conflict with the Indianapolis District Golf Association tournament, to be played June 11, 12 and 13, and also to enable boys who pjan to go to work on Monday after school is out an opportunity to play in the golf meet. n n tt DICK M’CREARY of Shortridge, winner of the 1933 tournament, will be in the field again this year trying to win two consecutive tournaments. Bill Heinlein is the only player who ever was able to win two of The Times events, accomplishing the feat while he was a student at Cathedral several years ago. a a a There will be the usual abundance of prizes for players who have low scores in the qualifying round and who advance farthest in the match play. There will be several prizes for the grade school boys who have best scores in their eighteenhole championship Saturday morning. It will be the ninth annual Indianapolis Times school golf classic and, with a large field of entries, should be bigger and better. tt tt tt THE park board has agreed to allow the boys to use the course without greens fee as a move to stimulate golf among the juniors
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of the city. There is no cost to the entrant and every effort has been made to schedule the tournament so that every schoolboy can enter and play without interference to school attendance, work, etc. Briefly, here are the plans again: Sign the entry blank that will appear tomorrow, or sign the blanket entry blank held by the golf coach at your school. Appear at the course as early as possible next Wednesday prepared to play your qualification round of eighteen holes. If you are a grade school boy, appear at 8:30 a. m. next Saturday June 9. tt tt tt The thirty-two high school players who have the lowest medal scores Wednesday will qualify for the championship match play flight and these boys will begin elimination play on Thursday morning. Second round matches between the sixteen survivors of the Thursday morning round will be played Thursday afternoon. Third round matches will be played Friday morning and semi-final matches Friday afternoon. . All these matches will, be eighteen holes each. The final match between the two who survive play Friday will be Saturday. This match will be thirty-six holes. Get your entry in at once.
Hold Autopsy in Wrestler’s Death Joe Shimkus Dies Following Ring Collapse. By United Press NEW YORK. June I.—An autopsy will be held today in the death of Joe Shimkus, a wrestler, who died last night in Polyclinic hospital, where Ernie Schaaf, the Boston heavyweight, succumbed after a bout with Primo Camera. A week ago Shimkus was thrown out of a Richmond (Va.) ring by the referee, who said he was faking. Shimkus collapsed after wrestling seventeen minutes with Walter Podolak. Three days ago he entered the hospital. On May 22 Shimkus wrestled Babe Caddock at New Haven. SILENTS DEFEAT PARK The Silent Hoosiers won their fifth consecutive baseball game by defeating the strong Park school nine, 5 to 3, at the Deaf school diamond in a seven-inning game. The Hoosiers will close their season at Alexandria Monday. Yesterday’s score: Park School 100 000 2 3 9 4 Silent Hoosiers 012 101 x— 5 7 2 Allen, Carroll and Birthright, Mumford; Cooper and Bowman.
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Catholic Prep Meet to Close Spring Sports National Champions Will Be Decided Tomorrow at Notre Dame. By United Press SOUTH BEND, Ind., June 1. The first annual national Catholic high school track and field meet at South Bend Saturday will conclude championship competition in spring sports for the 1934 season in Indiana. More than twenty teams are slated to compete for the Catholic title in a meet sponsored by Notre Dame university and directed by Coach John P. Nicholson. Among those entered are: Aquinas, La Crosse, Wis.; Bellarminen, Tacoma, Wash.; Cathedral (Latin), Cleveland; Catholic Central, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Corpus Christi, Galesburg. 111.; Decatur Catholic, Decatur. Ind.; JDe La Salle, Chicago; Fenwich, Oak Park, 111.; Joliet Catholic, Joliet, 111.; Marmion, Aurora, 111.; Mt. Carmel, Chicago; Northeast Catholic, Philadelphia; St. Bede, Academy, Peru, 111.; St. Catherine’s Racine, Wis.; St. Mary’s, Columbus, O.; St. Thomas Military Academy, St. Paul, Minn., and West Catholic, Philadelphia. Other teams which may compete are St Mel’s, Chicago; St. George, Evanston. 111.; John’ the Baptist, Philadelphia; Rosary, Columbus, O : De Paul, Chicago; St. Patrick’s, Chicago, and Jesuit, New Orleans. DEMPSEY TO REFEREE SOUTH BEND MATCH By Timrs Special SOUTH BEND, Ind., June I.— Jack Dempsey, former world heavyweight boxing champion, will referee a wrestling show at Lippincott park here tonight. The Manassa Mauler came here from Benton Harbor, where he and his wife are guests of Floyd Fitzsimmons. Tonight’s feature bout will bring together Jackie Nichols, Miami. Fla., and Bobby Wagner.
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