Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 83, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1934 — Page 18

PAGE 18

Yankees Halt Tiger Streak With 8-2 Win Giants Split Double-Header With Pirates: Cubs Rained Out. BV THEON WRIGHT t ait#d MafT C •rrewpondrnl NEW YORK. Aug. IC.—Detroit's marathon winning streak —fourteen games long—was at an end today, and a source of great mental discomfort has been lifted from the minds of the New York Yankees. The Yankees themselves supervised the operation, breaking off the long chain which began on the last day of July, when Tommy Badges closed out a double-header with Cleveland. 4-2 It was Mr. Bridges, oddly enough, who was victimized in yesterday's ceremonies. The accomplishment was hailed WTth mingled joy and sorrow- by the 15000 Yankee supporters who clustered in the stadium. The victory was a bit late. Although it pared down Detroit's lead a full game, it still leaves the Yankees lagging by five and a half games, which is nothing for the New- Yorkers to cheer about at this stage of the C'rosetti Blares llomer Frank Crosettis blazing nome run into the left field benches in the second, sending Lazzeri over the rubber ahead of him. gave the Yanks enough runs to win But so deep ii the respect instilled by Mr. CochraneV Tigers that nobody was sure until it was over, 8-2. Boston continued its steady climb. Rube Walberg turning back the St. Louis Browns again to place the Red Sox within a game of third place. He gave only five hits and won. 6-2. The Athletics won twice over Chicago. booming along on Jimmy Foxxs thirty-seventh home run with two aboard in the first, which won. 7-4 Bill Dietrich doled out seven hits in the nightcap to win. 2-1. Dib Williams scoring both runs on a homer in the first and a wild throw in the sixth. Terry Cracks One The leading New York Giants split a double-header with the Pirates, winning the first. 5-4 and dropping the second. 4-3. Manager Bill Terry smacked home the winner with a four-ply wallop in the fourth that won the opener Arky Vaughan's homer and Gus Suhr's single, scoring Lmdstrom. kept the Pirates ahead in the late game. Brooklyn split with Cincinnati, losing the first 7-5. and winning the second game 7-4. Ralph Boyle broke up the nightcap, doubling Johnny Babich home to end a 4-all tie. The Chicago Cubs, rained out with Boston, stayed four games behind the leader. St. Louis and Philadelphia were also rained out. In the American League ram halted Cleveland and Washington. Grid Squads Ready to Beprin Practice Bit nr. <1 CHICAGO. Aug. 16.—First practice sessions were scheduled today for the Chicago Bears, professional football champions, and the allAmerica college team in preparation for their gridiron battle at Soldier field Aug. 31. Heavy rains prevented the two squads from holding their first drills yesterday. Jimmy Crowley. Fordham, who has been added to the college staff as an assistant to head coach Noble K;zer. was to arrive from the east today. James Masker. Milwaukee, veteran college official, today accepted an invitation to referee the game.

MAJOR LEADERS

■ By United Press! Plarer and Club O. AB. R. H. Pet. Manush. Senators 163 421 "6 160 .380 Oehrtnge T:g.*rs til 433 110 162 .374 Terrv Giant* 112 432 93 158 366 Oehrt'g Yankee* . 110 427 99 15€ .365 P. Waner. Pirates 107 442 89 161 .364 HOME BI N* Gehrig. Yankees . 37 Johnson. Athletics 28 Foxx A-h;erlcs . 37 Collins Cardinals 25 Ott. Giants - • 30 RI VA BkTTrn IN Gehrig Yankees 132 Troskv. Cleve Ml O-t. o:jh-< 12t Greenberg. Tigers 99 R j'nson. Red Sx 103 HITS 3eh- nger T ier* 162 Terrv Giar.rs . 158 P Waner Pirates 161 Werber. Red Sox 15. Manush Sen tor* 160

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With Semi-Pros and Amateurs

r* C:-- B: i;: !nv< Lo-juvil.f ? .rtji-. -ar.g,* with th Fall* Cltv tram of -ha- r;•-. Aii pia-rra a;' rr) irs-rd to be UI South Dr!aaitrMt Sunday • * a m For further information call Lincoln S2M Frankfort Merchant* would liie to 'r*d iV a road same for Sunday. A.so a * is and da’e* tn September. Write lit: Monroe 14 Fast Ohio street Frankfort Ind . or phone 1328 Frankfort. Broad*av Baptists will piav the Polk Mi * n.r.e at Rl*ertde No 4 Saturday at 1 p n. All Baptie-a report by 3 p m. Indiana poll* Cardinals will mix with Itstrs*on M-rchan’s Sunday at EU*nberser a• 230 A k 26, Cardinals will meet Fort-.-.h Street Merchant* Following notie* Kendall Dobb* Sim, Flora, Coffin. Hockersmi'h and Hamburg Ber.nett Coal nine will piay at Avon Sunday Ail plaver* are reques-ed to be a- the coal vard Sunday noon, at 130 East Morris street. South Side Tiger* topped Southeastern AC sto 4 Tigers have a diamond and ■> ir,” a game for next Sunday Call Drexel after 6 p m and ask for Goger P-acM - *i.l be held a- Garfield park this evening Pat Rll- * Monarch* *;!! piav • Gold-—..-h Sa- .rda-. and at Bloomfield Sunda Monarch* have Sen- 2 and 3 open Address L Slaughter 1931 Highland place. Indianapolis. Dcat ir R C ‘rounqed Morrorco Giants. 12 to 1 McCrearv held the losers to t*o .its and whiffed thirteen Next Sunday. Decatur plays Columbia A C. s at Perry stadium. - We,- s.-le Chevrole-s will leave Sunday at 10 a m for Bringhurst where they *ill •ark the Brinphuist Greyhounds, rhamjnnr of the Wabash Valley League. Ch*-. ;e have Aug 26 and Sept 3 open S’a’e nines * rite William Rider, 1542 Bellefon’a:ne street, Indianapolis. Matmen to Scrap for Crack at Belt West or Kauffman May Get Bout With Banaski. One of thp four grapplers w ho will wrestlp in the two feature bouts at thp North Illinois street arena tomorrow night may have an opporI tunity to bid for the light heavyI weight championship in the near future. This was announced following word that Joe Banaski, recognized by the Midwest Wrestling Association as light heavy champ, had agreed to meet the contestant making the best showing here. The main event will show Stanley West and Clete Kauffman in a renewal of their hostilities of last week. West was the victor by disqualification of Kauffman. Turp Grimes of Dayton and Bund Mitchell of Nebraska, light heavies, will clash in the semi-windup. The one-fall prelim will bring back Silent Rattan to meet the highly-touted Spic Ashby of Cleveland. They are junior middleweights.

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LETS^ CO Irr ,7/ ' {MFISHING h i

WELL, for one thing. I always, fish the worst places," said the leather-necked old fisherman when I asked him for some of the secrets of his success. “That's as clear as mud,” I answered. “By that I mean the hardest ones.” he went on. “There are lots of spots along streams, especially the smaller ones, '.hat are doggone tough to get to with a bait. Log jams, high, cut-under banks covered with bushes, pools where thick branches come right down to the water; places like that. “I figure the best bass are where you can't get at them. That’s why they’re still there. When I come to an open pool with the banks tramped down and old bait cans along the shore I keep going. I find a stretch that doesn't look so promising that every fisherman that comes by wants to try it. “It may be just some little pocket under the other bank that nobody is going to take a lot of trouble getting to becaust it's the only place along there that's any good at all. If there's some branches shielding it so you can't cast into it from the other bank, so much the better. “The worse it is to get at, the more I want to. Chances are if there’re any bass in the stretch, t-he best one will pick that place. The biggest ones always take their choice and run the others out of their pet hideouts. a a st I JUST can't seem to get past a troublesome pocket like that without figuring a way to get a bait into it. It may look impossible, but it's not. Just takes brain work. I may have to float my minnow or worm down by the pocket on a leaf and twitch it off at the front door, cr maybe I'll stage a long, careful stalk on mv hands and knees to get close without the fish seeing me or feeling the vibrations of the ground, but there's always a wav. “Once I located a dandy bass un-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

der some roots where you couldn't cast because of an old fence and thick branches. You couldn't drift your bait down for the same reai so. The bank was high and steep and every time you got close to it ; some dirt would come loose and roll down and scare the fish and even it it didn't, when you stuck your head or a pole over the bank he would see it and be scared as long as ! it was there. i “I spent the best part of two days puzzling over that setup before 1 ! got the right idea. Then I got the biggest yellow grasshopper I could find and put it on a small hook and waded right out from the opposite bank into that old boy s front i yard. a a a “T STUCK the point of the hook 1 lightly into a dead, branch about a foot above the water and backed away, keeping enough pull on the line to lift it off the water. I went clear back to ihe other bank, playing out the line, and tied it to a tree, still keeping it off the water. I had a six-foot gut leader. I figured that baby was smart and I'd need all the breaks I could get. “Well, sir, I got behind a bush

-iftSHSr LAST TIMES TONIGHT WILLIAM I'OWELL MYRXA LOY “THE THIN MAN” —Plus— Buster Keaton In “GOLD GHOST”

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and lit my pipe and smoked for a solid hour, waiting for the bass to get over the scare he got when I busted in on him. Finally he came out of his hole and made a pass at a school of minnows and I got ready for action. I reached out and untied the line from the tree and gave it a little jerk so that 1 the hook came loose from the dead branch and the 'hopper lit on the

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water right over where the bass lived. “I guess he had been watching that grasshopper and wishing it would fall off the branch, because he nailed it right away. Just came up easy and sucked it in and I hit him hard and got him out from his tangle before he knew what it was all about and he never did get back. He tried to for about five

minutes before he gave up. He weighed a tnfle better than four pounds. “Yes. sir. I always look for trouble when I'm fishing.” PERU APPOINTS COACH By I'nitrd Prr* . PERU, Ind.. Aug. 16.—William McClure yesterday was announced

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AUG. 16, 1934

as the new football coach at Peru high school, succeeding J. C. Loveless, resigned. McClure has been assistant football coach at the University of Illinois for three years and in 1930 was head line coach at Butler university.

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