Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 42, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1934 — Page 26
YORK, June 20.—A young man by the name of Jack Bramhall got himself all dressed up in skirts and things, and tried to crash a women’s golf tournament yesterday afternoon at Carden City. The young man’s entry as a woman was accepted on the basis that ho was innocent until proved guilty, which is the modern, tolerant viewpoint, I’d say; and he was getting along fairly nicely until someone noticed that despite his carmined lips and interesting undulations, he seemed distinctly masculine around the dogs, or feet. the one vital drawback to the business of impersonating female . There is just nothing you can do to or with a pair of male puppes. or feet, that will give them charm, mystery or glamor. Even a co- birr with the genius of Chanel would find the task disheartening. So In due course this young man was stripped of his deception, to sav nothing of h;s bustles, and before a crowd mixed with emotions, he sheepishly confe ed the hoax. It seemed the young man just wanted to g*t himself a laugh and this was the medium he decided on. a an a a a THERE are so many women athletes who look like men I am rather surprised the and.. guise was exposed, despite the generous dimensions of the young man's bunions. But then thrre are so many men golfers who play like women perhaps it is necessary to keep a sharp check, on these things. Anyway, this is the first time a male biped has gone out in the m^ado' l lookn £ for birdies with a swish, and consequently the act must be duly acclaimed : terit] and pot ibly Pnntages. Asa matter of fact up to now the male has seemed to prefer his own company in spoits. He ha more at home—or, if a husband—legs at home and therefore happier. . „ To be >;re there have been a few exceptions. Notab.y in baseball , Bloon er Girls wt re in bloom. Generally speaking, the Bloomer • nders with baritone swaggers and peroxide coiffure. although there were some legitimate dolls on the team. nun n n n T'ROM tim to time I get letters from a young lady living in Chicago JT which makes me feel there is an interesting story- in the Bloomers, and if J. P. Morgan will quit pestering me about going for a sail on the Corsair maybe i’ll ect time to do it shortly. ~ . . This young lady is a graduate of Columbia and she tells me that in her time the Bloomers were a pretty nice set. no better nor worse than !ld b and that all of them— certainly all the dolls—were genuinely interested in baseball, and that was the main reason they joined up. She say they did a moderate amount of drinking and smoking and y ial { herwise they tried to pattern their ways after big nd that on the field they applied themselves senously to developing the mechanics of play. I wonder what became of all of thcm ? „ * Y WONDER, too. if Mr. Joe Wood was a member of this particular tiibe 1 of Bloomers Mr. Wood is the most distinguished graduate of this era of tourist ba cball. At least the most distinguished of whom I have any knowledge. H< eventually became one of the great pitchers of tbe Arner--1( an League, one year he won thirty-four games for the Boston Red Sox Only or.e n*hor player. Walter John.-on. then with Washington, ever beat that record in subsequent years. FOI the past ars Mr. Wood has been coaching the Yale varhe ever forgets himself in his skull talks with the Nov when I was pitching for the Bloomer
Harris Reverses Ideas About Detroit's Tigers Bucky Praises Team He Lambasted in Spring; Says Three Stars Make Club Contender.
BY HARRY GRAYSON SEA Service Sonrts Editor Ik. TEW YORK, June 29.—Stanley Raymond Harris is chewing copious IN consonants uttered in the spring. The words concerned the Detroit rent complimentary. Harris, cocky in his new beith as „ ", a ;Vr of the enormously wealthy Boston Red Sox. after having been i as guide of the Tigers, remarked that Michael Cochrane would have a touch task on his hands.
The Boston boss called the Ben- 1 gals a bunch of something or other, a id charged that they quit on him and icing the height of the 1D33 cam-p->ign. Harris contended that the Tigers. Cochrane or no. were anything but an outstanding baseball club, and that he. Ducky, and his new-found charges, would take it upon themselves to demonstrate to the addicts that Detroit no longer was in the American League. If memory serves, Harris storm brought one equally as frothy from the Mick of Hank Ford s town, and the verbal combat had ail the prospects of developing into a barrooom brawl at the first collision of the teams. • . However, the outfits lia\c nici, and no fights were forthcoming. Harris has changed his tune, for the Tigers have a substantial edge in victories, and Buckv is whistling now. a a a HARRIS said: “Detroit has better pitching than when I was there because I lacked a great catcher and Mickey Cochrane is one of the best ever. He's responsible for the fine pitching of Bridges. Sorrell. Marbcrry. Fischer, et al. “The swap of Stone for Goslin helped. Goose added many points to the attack. “Marvin Owen, at third base, is spending his second season in the majors, and naturally has improved with experience. "Charley Gchringer. always v star, is enjoying his best season. “The success of the squad is carrying several medicorc players along at far above their normal speed. “Right now the club looks like a serious pennant contender, but I prefer to wait until August before making a prediction as to where it will finish" a a a SPEAKING of Owen, there's a sweet, sentimental story in Cochrane and Cy Perkins, the gracious gentleman generally credited with the development of the third basenun now rated right along with Frank Higgins, the young star of the Athletics. Perkins had caught 806 games for Connie Mack when Cochrane put him on the bench in 1923. Mickey got much of Ins stuff from Cy. and didn't forget. Perkins wasnt out of employment long when the Yankees let him go as a coach last winter, for, meanwhile. Cochrane had landed the position in Detroit. And the first fellow Mickey sent for was the man whose mask he had taken in Philadelphia. Owen wasn't in the best of health in 1933. and not a few close observers got the idea that he was too backward to become a major league luminary. a a a IT was Perkins who tackled the task of transforming a timid soul into a tiger. This he did by having the other players repeatedly tell Owen how rough an athlete he really was. and in other subtle ways. Owen heard so much about his aggressiveness that he commenced to believe It himself. You ought to see him block runners at the far turn now. When the Detroit club took the lead the other day, he snapped at Cochrane. •UiJW, that were up there, see that you keep us there T’ Mickey was
By Joe Williams mam Man Golfer Turns Female • mm Big Feet Give Away Hoax mum Recalls Bloomer Girl Days
amazed, but adored it. He simply didn't know his Marvin any more. Managers frequently wish to make suggestions that, coming from the head man. might not be taken too nicely bv a player. A coach's hint often brings better results than a pilot’s command. Buffers are among the more important persons with ball clubs, and Perkins is an ideal one for the chap he broke in.
♦ Standings ♦
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won. Lost. Tct. Minneapolis 40 30 .511 Columbus 37 32 .536 IMUANArOI.IS 30 32 .529 I nuisville 35 35 .500 Milsiukrr 35 35 .500 Kansas Citv 33 37 .471 SI. Paul 31 30 .403 Toledo 31 41 .431 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L Pet.. \V. L. Pet. N York 40 24 .62 1 devoid. 22 29 .525 V* re:• 40 25 .615 St LOUIS 23 34 .452 B-v-ton 35 31 .539 Philadel. 26 38 406 Wash. 36 32 .523 Chicago 21 45 .318 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L. Pc- W. L. Pet. .V. York 41 24 631 Boston . 34 29 .540 Chicaco 40 26 60.- Brookivn 26 33 .400 S Lots 38 25 603 Philadei. 23 41 .359 Plttsbch 34 28 .348 Cincv .. 19 43 .305 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas Cits at INDIANAPOLIS (night). Milwaukee at Louisville. Minneapolis at Columbus. St. Faul at Toledo. AMERICAN LEAGI'E C’.evetar.d at Chicago. De-roit at St Louis. Others not scheduled.! NATIONAL LEAGI'E Brooklyn at New York. Chicaco at Pitsburch S’. Louis at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at Boston. Results Yesterday AMERICAN- ASSOCIATION Minneapolis at Columbus; will be played In double header Aug. 5 5* Paul 000 900 311— 5 15 0 Toledo . 040 300 OOx— 712 2 Class. Judd and Fenner. Perrin Bowler and Dcsautels. Milwaukee 002 000 320 7 12 2 tile 002 000 111— 5 10 1 Poll;. S-:~*. Presnell and Young Rcusa. McKaia. McLean and Thompson. AMERICAN LEAGI'E New York 000 030 IPO— 4 9 0 Washinitton 000 000 000— 0 3 1 Bulling and Dicker;. Weaver. McCall ar.d Phillips. Boston 000 100 OOO— 15 3 Philadelphia 510 000 Olx— 7 11 1 Welch. Mulligan. Pennock and R. Ferrell. Dietrich and Berrv. iTen lnningst Chicago 000 000 601 0— 7 14 1 Detroit 000 010 222 1— 8 13 1 Jones. Hevmr. Earnshaw. Lyons, and Madjesci: Marberry. Rowe. Hamlin. Aukcr and Cochrane. Others not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGI'E So games scheduled.
MAJOR LEADERS
By Lnittd Prets LEADING BATTERS G AB R H Pet Manush. Senators 66 379 S3 lis 413 Oehrincer. T:eers 65 354 66 100 394 Medwick Csrctna’.s 63 263 60 98 .373 Terrv. Giants ... 65 353 50 93 .366 Travis. Senators ..51 197 S3 72 .366 Vo&mik. Cleveland 44 172 39 63 .366 HOME RUNS Johnson Athletic* 23 Ott. Gian’s 19 Foxx Athletics . 21 Klein. Cubs 18 Gehrig. Yankees 20 Bonura. Wh. Sox 18 RUNS BATTED IN Gehrie Yankees 75 Cronin. Senators 64 Ott Giants . 71 Gehnr.ger. Tigers 59 Bonura. Wh. Sox 6.3 HITS Mim;aft. Sen. ...115 Knlckerbkr. Cleve. 93 Moore. Oi*i,*“ 100 Terrv. Gtants .93 Gehrtnger. T’V l '* too Urbanski. Braves. 93 Vcamic*. Carla.. 98i
Indianapolis Times Sports
HENRY COTTON WINS BRITISH OPEN TITLE
English Pro From Belgian Club Equals Record Set by Sarazen With Total of 283 New Champ Nearly Blows Up on Final Round; Takes 79; Victory Breaks 10-Year Hold on Crown by Americans; Kirkwood and Smith Tie. BY HARRY L. PERCY United Press Staff Correspondent SANDWICH. England, June 29.—Henry Cotton, lanky British professional attached to the Waterloo Club of Brussels, Belgium, today captured the British open golf championship. The 27-year-old Britisher, who shot some of the most spectacular rounds ever witnessed on this difficult course, scored a 79 this afternoon for an aggregate of 283.
Cotton owed his triumph to the brilliant 67 he scored in the opening round, and the record-breaking 65 recorded in yesterday's second round. He faltered somewhat in the third round played this morning when he scored 72, but slumped desperately in the final round this afternoon. Beats Jones’ Mark Despite the near blow-up in the final test, Cotton equalled the record low- score for the British open. It was established by Gene Sarazen of New York when he won the title at Prince’s in 1932. The previous record was 285 by Bobby Jones in 1927. Cotton’s victory broke the tenyear hold on the title held by American players. But even though the title will not go overseas it will not stay in England for Cotton will take it back across the channel and on to Brussels. Joe Kirkw-ood of Chicago scored a 78 in the final round of the British Open golf championship today and had an aggregate of 292. He was tied with Mac Smith of Nashville and they were tw'o strokes back of the temporary runner-up, Alfred Padgham of Great Britain, who had totaled 290. Denny Shute of Philadelphia, defending champion, scored a 78 in the final round. Shute’s game went to pieces on the inward nine, taking a 33 for a 78 and a 301 aggregate. He took three shots to reach the tenth green. He drove into the rough at the eleventh and put his second in a bunker, but chipped dead for a par. The wind blew off Mrs. Shulte's hat and this caused Densmore to fozzle a putt. “I can't remember a worse performance,” Shute told the United Press when his round was complete. Gene Sarazen simply quit trying on the final nine. He had a 41 for a round of 80. His aggregate was 302. Scenes of wild excitement marked Cotton's final round. The crowd was almost uncontrollable and the stewards added to the uproar by shouting at spectators and by waving their red flags. Gallery Goes Wild This upset Cotton considerably, although a snappy approach gave him a birdie 4at the fourth. He pulled his second badly at the fifth and took four to reach the green, taking a 6, one over par. Some of the spectators thought he had played a w-rong ball at the seventh, and insisted on telling him about it. “Let me alone! Let me alone!” he cried, and went on to get a birdie. Cotton played tw-o great woods to get home in tw-o at the long fourteenth. He missed a threefoot putt for an eagle 3 at the fifteenth. Cotton had regular pars on the sixteenth and seventeenth holes. His aproach to the eighteenth w-as bunkered at the edge. He chipped to within five feet, lying three. He had only to sink the putt to set anew British open record and he w-aited until the stewards pushed back the 5.000 fans, all of whom were trying to swarm onto the green. He missed the putt, scoring a 79 and an aggregate of 283.
Track Stars Renew Feuds in Milwaukee Meet Today Hornbostel of Indiana to Race Eastman Again in 47th A. A. U. Championships; LuValle Withdraws. BY GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent MILWAUKEE, June 29.—The nation’s greatest athletes, including twenty-five Olympic stars, eleven holders of fourteen world's records and eighteen holders of twenty-six American marks, were here today for the forty-seventh annual Amateur Athletic Union track and field championships. The meet started today with preliminaries in junior events. Junior finals will be held tonight under the floodlights in Marquette university
stadium. Junior events are open to all athletes who have not won a national championship. Finals in two senior events, the 5.000 meters walk and 10.000 meters run, were scheduled today. Events in both the junior and senior divisions will be held at metric distances. The senior finals will be held tomorrow afternoon. Despite demoralization of the city's transportation system because of' the electric company's striking employes, 10,000 persons are expected for tonight's junior finals and nearly 20.000 for the senior finals tomorrow afternoon. Among the high spots of the meet are expected to be the “rubber" race between Glenn Cunningham. Kansas, and Bill Bonthron, Princeton, at 1.500 meters; the 800meter race between “Blazing Ben”. Eastman. Olympic Club, San Francisco. and Charlie Hornbostel, Indiana, intercollegiate champion; the dash between Glen Hardin, Louisiana State, and Ivan Fuqua, Indiana. in the 400 meters; the duel between Jack Torrance, Louisiana State, and John Lyman, Olympic Club, in the shot-put; the battle between Walter Marty, Fresno, and George Spitz, New* York A. C., in the high jump. Those are only a few of the anticipated thrills. Every event in both the junior and sen*- division has a stellar field entered.
INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1934
Helen Jacobs Almost Upset at Wimbledon American Champion Given Hard Battle by Player She Snubbed. BY HENRY M’LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent WIMBLEDON, England, June 29. —Helen Jacobs, women's singles champion of the United States, narrowly escaped being eliminated today from the all-England tennis tournament by a relatively obscure English player seeking to revenge a snub by Helen last year. Joan Ingram, after faking the first set, 6-4, with a surprising display of corner drives and drop shots that left the American champion flatfooted, found herself unable to maintain the pace and lost the last two, 4-6. 1-6. It was understood Miss Ingram's inspired play w-as motivated by her desire to revenge her treatment at Miss Jacobs’ hands during the Bournemouth hard court championships of 1933. Helen objected to the English girl as a doubles partner, accepting her only after considerable persuasion. Miss Ingram’s gallant fight was all the more remarkable because she never has done anything in singles before, being strictly a doubles performer. Helen took the first three games and then Miss Ingram began a stiff fight in which she used practically every shot known to tennis. She ran the second set up to four-ail before cracking. Helen was able to maintain her accuracy but she was clearly off form and her shots were lifeless. Four Rounds By United Press SANDWICH, England, June 29. Scores of the four rounds of the British open golf championship: Henry Cotton. Belgium .. 67-65-72-19—283 Alfred Padgham, Great Britain 71-70-75-74 —290 MacDonald Smith, Nashville 71-71-72-72—292 Joe Kirkwood, Chicago... 74-69-71-78—292 Denny Shute, Philadelphia 71-72-80-78—301 S. F. Brews, South Africa 76-71-70-71—288 W. Nolan. Great Britain.. 73-71-75-83—302 xJack McLean, Great Britain 77-76-69-78 —300 Bert Hodson, Great Britain 71-71-71-76—295 Auguste Boyer, France... 78-75-77-71 —301 Percy Alliss, Great Britain 73-75-71-77—296 A. Terry, Great Britain . 73-76-80-82 —311 Sid Easterbrook, Great Britain 77-72-79-77—305 W. H. Davies, Great Britain 76-68-73-82—299 A. Dailey, Great Britain 74-73-78-75—300 Charles tVhitcombe. Great Britain 71-72-71-78—295 Marcel Dallemagne. France 71-73-71-77—292 Gene Sarazen, New l'ork 75-73-71-80—302 xDenotes amateur.
More than championships and medals are at stake. Seven of the outstanding athletes will be chosen for a trip to Europe, starting July 7, and fourteen will be named for a tour of Japan, starting Aug. 15. Cunningham, the stocky Kansas boy who cracked the world's record for the mile in beating Bonthron in ! the Princeton invitational meet, was : surrounded by mystery today. He was here, but had yet to put in his appearance in a running suit. Rumors of his impending marriage, and injuries caused him to seek seclusion. He told a close friend that he had 1 a bad ankle and that he wasn’t sure he would be able to finish the 1.500- , meter race. The eastern contingent took Cun-, ningham’s statement about injuries lightly. The only two prominent athletes : who haven’t shown up' are “Bullet Bob” Kiesel. University of Califori nia sprinter, and Jimmy Luvalle, ! University of California at Los Ani geles. quarter-miler, both of whom are out of condition and forwarded 5 withdrawals. The battle for the team title is expected to be between the New i York Athletic Club , defending .champion; the Olympic Club of i San Francisco and Louisiana State.
Softball Champs of Inter-Fraternity Council
Back row, left to right—Lee Stout, Paul Robishaw, Charles Stuart. Lynn Jarvis, Harold Wilson. Jim Irv-in, Kenneth Avery. Second Row' —Eston Sterns, Gordon Sutton, Cecil Leigh, John Sutton, Harry Lister, Lester Ford, Robert Carver. Front Row—Byron Ragsdale, Robert King.
The Phi Lambda Epsilons won the local InterFraternity Council Softball League championship when they defeated the Ace Club, 14 to 9, in the final game. Charles Stuart, pitcher for the winners, struck out twenty-five batters.
Indians Emerge on Long End in Marathon Battle
Tribe and Blues Struggle for Fifteen Innings; Ladies’ Night Game to End Kansas City Series. BY EDDIE ASH * Times Sports Editor Red Killefer’s Indians and Roger Peck's Kansas City Blues picked out one of the hottest nights on record to wage a struggle that sounded the bell in the midnight league. The rival pastimers went fifteen rounds under the lights at Perry stadium in the fourth tilt of the series and the Tribesmen wound up on the long end of the decision, 7 to 6. The fifth and final tilt of the series will be staged tonight at 8:15 and it will be a “ladies’ night” contest, free to women customers. The series stands even, “two and two,” and another stirring fracas is expected. The Milwaukee Brewers will invade the Indian stronghold tomorrow night for a three-day stand and the pesky K. C. Blues will go to Louisville.
The conflict last night was a thriller all of the marathon distance and players of both teams and the fans were exhausted at the finish of the sixth extra round. The Indians used four pitchers and the Blues two, and the victory marker for the home team finally was put over in the fifteenth when Johnny Cooney singled after one out, took third on Cotelle's single and scored on Bedore's fly after Vernon Washington was handed an intentional pass. Four Hits Each Washington and Vincent Sherlock were the top hitters for Killefer’s men. The former slapped the sphere for four blows, including a double, and the latter put the wood to the horsehide for a home run and three singles. The victory over the Blues enabled the Hoosiers to gain a half game and the locals, in third place, were only three games back of the league-leading Millers today and one-half game behind the secondplace Columbus Red Birds. Louisville and Milwaukee are in a tie for fourth place. The Millers and Birds postponed their scheduled tilt of yesterday while the Buckeyes took on the St. Louis Cardinals in an exhibition. If the present pace of the A. A. continues it will be a .500 league before long, with every club standing a chance for the pennant in midseason, It's a tough race on the eight managers and most of the pilots are losing weight under the strain and are knocking at the door of the paper doll factory. It’s one of the tightest races in the history of the loop. V. Sherlock Homers In the battle here last night the Blues stepped away to a lead of two runs in the opening canto and the Indians knotted the score in the second when Vincent Sherlock blasted the pellet over the left field wall with brother Jack on base. In the fifth the Kaws boosted their run total to four and the contest went until the eighth before the Tribe caught up again. When Kansas City tallied twice in the tenth the fans thought it was curtains, but the Indians charged in their half and evened the count at 6 and 6. The teams then settled down to old-fashioned bitter competition and round after round was reeled off without either club gaining the upper hand until three hours had been put in. Tribe Shakes Jinx It was more than just one victory i for the Indians. They have been getting bad breaks in extra-inning | games and have been finishing on j the short end of overtime battles. ! It's possible, therefore, that last i night's midnight triumph will restore confidence in the local camp and set the Tribesters off on a winning streak. Nearly every player on both sides was worked hard during the melee. A glance at the box score will tell I the story of the frenzied contest. The marathon triumph is expected to attract an immense throng to the stadium tonight when the Indians and Blues square off in the “rubber" encounter. The fact that | the feature fracas will be free to : women doubtless will bring out the i record crowd of the season.
CAPS $ * New patterns, the kind you won’t see elsewhere. P LEVINSON Hatter
PAGE 26
Bob King of the losers smote a home run with the bases loaded in a rally which fell short. The game v r as played at Riverside. Eight teams competed in the league. They are playing a post-season roundrobin tournament.
Night Extra KANSAS CITY AB R H O A E Kreevich, cf 7 1 2 6 0 0 Mosolf, If 6 3 1 1 0 0 Alamada rs 6 2 2 4 0 0 Wright, lb 7 0 2 19 1 0 Knothe. 3b 6 0 3 2 3 0 Niemiec, ss . ... 7 0 3 5 9 1 Brenzel, c 4 0 110 0 Crandall, c 2 0 1 2 0 0 Schulte, 2b 6 0 1 4 4 2 Carson, p 5 0 0 0 4 0 Stumps 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fullerton, p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 58 6 16 *44 21 3 Stumps batted for Brenzel in the tenth. *Twc out when winning run scored. INDIANAPOLIS AB R H O A E Sigafoos, ss 8 0 1 4 8 0 Cooney, cf 7 1 3 8 0 0 Cotelie, If 7 1 1 0 1 0 Washington, rs 6 0 4 4 0 0 Bedore, 3b 8 0 2 2 2 0 J. Sherlock, lb 8 1 1 11 1 0 V. Sherlock. 2b 5 3 4 7 2 0 Sprinz, c 6 0 2 9 2 0 Turner, p 4 0 2 0 2 0 Butzberger, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rosenberg 1 1 l o 0 0 Chamberlain, p .... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Logan, p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 62 7 21 45 18 0 Rosenberg batted for Butzberger in the tenth. Kansas City 200 020 000 200 000—6 Indianapolis 020 000 110 200 001—7 Runs batted in—Knothe 13), V. Sherlock (2). Mosolf, Wright. Cooney, Bedore. Two-base hits —Bedore, Mosolf, Niemiec (2). Crandall. Three-base hit—Cooney. Home run—V. Sherlock. Stolen bases— Sigafoos (2 1, J. Sherlock. Sacrifices— Knothe. Sprinz. Cotelie. Schulte. Double plays—Niemiec to Wright i3i. Left on bases—lndianapolis, 18; Kansas City. 11. Base on balls —Off Turner. 1: off Cham- | berlain, 1; off Carson. 3; off Fullerton, 2. i Struck out—bv Turner. 8; by Fullerton. I 2. Hits—Off Turner. 14 in 9 1-3 innings: j off Butzberger. 0 in 2-3 inning: off Cham- j berlain. 1 in 2 1-3 innings: off Logan, 1 in 2 2-3 innings; off Carson. 14 in 9 1-3 innings; off Fullerton, 7 in 5 1-3 innings. Wild pitch—Fullerton. Winning pitcher— I Logan. Losing pitcher—Fullerton. Umpires—Donahue and Johnson. Time of ! game. 3:01. TRIBE BATTING FIGURES AB H Pet. Bedore 253 88 .318 Washington 221 76 .344 Rosenberg 180 58 .322 Cotelie 172 53 .308 Riddle 114 34 .298 Cooney 294 85 .289 V. Sherlock 238 70 .294 Sigafoos 209 59 .282 Sprinz 130 35 .269 J. Sherlock 139 35 .252 Lee 250 59 .236 Lawrie 8 1 .125 TURFMEN ARE FINED By Timr * Special CHICAGO, June 29.—Jack How- , ard, Lexington <Ky.) turfman, was fined SSOO and his Negro stable foreman, Charles Mitchell, was fined' SSO when they were convicted yesterday by Federal Judge Phillip Sullivan of “doping" race horses during the 1933 Arlington park meeting.
BASEBALL Tonite, 8:15 INDIANAPOLIS KANSAS CITY LADIES’ NIGHT
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Buffalo Fans ‘Go ’ for Baseball Fans in Buffalo of the International League don't wait for baseball to come to them. They go after it. When the Buffalo Bisons played a double-header at neighboring Rochester, 3,000 of them clambered aboard thirty-eight train conches to invade the Rochester park.
Kautskys to Play Leaders of League Locals and Schroyers to Mix in Richmond. The Indianapolis Kautsky A. C.'s will meet the Dayton Schroyers at Richmond Sunday in an IndianaOhio League game which is attracting sharp attention around the circuit. The Dayton club has won five straight games with no defeats for first place in the league while the Kautskys, after winning six straight, lost to Middletown last Sunday in a ten-inning game, 3 to 2. Manager Schroycr of the Dayton club will have all three of his hurlers, Hermann. Pfahlcr and Maxton ready for duty, while Manager Kautsky is expected to use Charley Biggs, with Pendergrast in reserve. The Kautskys have an open date July 8 and any fast club wishing to book them call J. E. Matthewg, Cherry 4461-W, or wire him at 963 North Chester street, Indianapolis. RHODIUS TEAM DOWNED The Riviera Club water polo team defeated the Rhodius youngsters, 2 to 1, at the Rhodius pool last night. The Rhodius youngsters held the Riviera veterans to even terms in the first half, but were unable to check a last-half rally. A crowd of more than 2,000 witnessed the contest. NOBLE WALLACE VICTOR By Times Special DAYTON, 0., June 29. Noble Wallace. Indianapolis middleweight, knocked out Lou Barney of this city in the fifth round here last night. Jimmy Goodman, Indianapolis welterweight, gained a draw' W'ith Gypsy Moulton, Atlantic City.
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Klick Halted by Canzoneri During Ninth Three-Time World Champ Expects Chance at Barney Ross. By United Press NEW YORK. June 29.—Thre9 times a world champion—three times “washed-up” Tony Canzoneri. stubby Italian-American from New Orleans, today stands once more on the threshhold of a world title. Last night the little battler, who lost his third title a year ago to Barney Ross of Chicago, clubbed down the challenge of Frankie Klick, the Portola Pippin, and became again the outstanding threat for the title he once held. Tony won in the ninth round when Referee Patsy Haley halted the fight. Klick was groggy from the smashing, mule-kick mauling of the tough Italian, who seemed a l * good as he was the day he knocked A1 Singer, the Bronx bugler, stiff. Fought Like Champion Counted out six years ago w T hen he lost his featherweight title, supposedly washed up w'hen he fought Singer and won the lightweight title, and again when Johnny Jadick beat him for the junior welter crow'n, the gorilla-chested Tony came back last night and fought like a champion. Klick won the first two rounds, but in the third Tony looped an overslung right to the jaw which rocked the Californian on his heels, and after that kept piling up a lead. In the fifth round he slugged Klick in the eye and a purple welt rose over it. It was this lump, oozing blood for four rounds, that forced Referee Haley to call the fight in 1 minute, 42 seconds of the ninth. Lost Title to Ross Canzoneri now is expected to be matched with Ross for the lightweight crown. He was fighting in better form than he has displayed any time since he lost his title to the Chicagoan. He drummed Klick with battering blows, moved fast and hit accurately. He took the best Klick had, as he did with Jackie Berg, Kid Chocolate and Billy Petrolle, and slammed his way to a clear victory. The New York boxing board agreed to recognize the winner of the Klick-Canzoneri fight as the logical opponent for Ross. Louisville Catcher to Have Operation By United Press LOUISVILLE, Ky., June 29. Hank Erickson, Louisville catcher, on whom the Philadelphia Athletics have an option, must undergo an appendicitis operation, physicians said today. His loss in the height of the season will be a heavy blow to the Louisville (American Association) team, which has played a rejuvenated brand of ball since a change of managers last week. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT } (By United Press) AT NEW YORK—Tony Canzoneri. 134. New Orleans, stopped Frankie Klick, 133 3 4. San Francisco (9); Harry Dublinsky, 142 1 4. Chicago, outpointed Billy Hogan. 140 ’ ii. Piermont, N. Y. (101.
