Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1934 — Page 8

By Eddie Ash Theme Song: Meet Me in St. Looie, Looie 9mm C ochrane Sees a Dean on Each Bed Post

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JT'S hardly likely that this year’s National League race ever mill be duplicated. There may be finishes, such as the Cardinal and Giants waged, but the 1931 windup will be hard to tie in drama and other interesting and unusual angles. For instance, there was Bill Terry’s belittling of the Brooklyn Dodgers last winter only to have the said Dodgers lyck back to haunt him in his club’s last two games of the season by smearing the Giants twice to rob them of a chance for a pennant tie. And the Dean brothers! One star pitcher in a family is all anybody could ask for, but Dizzy and Paul made it “a chicken in every pot and two cars in the family garage.” They asked for the burden of pitching the Cardinals to the championship and then went out and accomplished the feat. a a a a a a MOREOVER, in the next to the last series for New York, the Giants met the seventh place Phillies in two games, and Manager Jimmy Wilson of the Phils is a sworn enemy of Manager Frankie Frisch of the Cardinals. They used to be pals, but last year Wilson felt that Frisch went out of his way to grab off the managerial role at St. Louis. Wilson thought he was entitled to the berth and a bitter feeling was created between the men and Wilson requested the Cardinal executives to trade or seU him. This was done and Wilson took over the reins at Philadelphia. However, when Wilson's Phils battled the Giants in the two impor* tant games the first of last week the Quakertown manager swallowed his Frisch grievance and Sent his best pitchers against New York and won both games. a a a a a a OPPOSING the Cardinals in the last four games were the Cincy Reds. piloted by Charlie Dressen. a close, personal friend pf Bill Terry, who put Dressen in the big money last fall by bringing him up from the Southern League to receive a fat share of the world series boodle. With the Reds are players who formerly performed with the Cardinals and who are not backward about declaring they descried a better fate. Pitcher Derringer made tw'o efforts in the final series to slap back at his old team, but regardless of how he felt, or how Dressen and other Reds felt, the Dean boys were too much for them and St. Louis annexed four consecutive tilts and snatched the league crown right out from under the nose of the Giants. When Dizzy Dean was popping off in Florida this spring he said the Dean family would turn in forty-five victories, crediting himself with twenty-five and Paul with twenty. It was a balmy evening and Dizzy s listeners decided he was balmv, too. Well, he knew his grape fruit. He turned in thirty wins and Paul nineteen for a total of forty-nine for Papa Dean’s two shining lights. a a a a a a ON two occasions during the regular campaign the Dean boys put on a strike and brought extreme grief to Manager Frisch. Most experts concluded that the internal dissension was too great an obstacle for Frisch to overcome, but he had something left. He kept fighting, healed the sore spots and started all over again at a time when the baseball world had counted his club out of the race. , , . Two things saved the Cardinals. One was the New York slump and the other was the fact that Frisch had his Cardinals ready and on edge to take advantage of the situation when opportunity knocked. His team refused to die even when the Giants held a seven-game lead the first week of September. aaa a a a THE Chicago Cubs are kicking themselves for giving up too soon. When the Giants pulled far out in front the Cubs folded and played “Oh, what s the use" baseball. Their last eastern trip was more or less of a joy ride, whereas the Cardinals kept alert, seized the throttle and sped forward when the Giants struck the toboggan. The world series now will be played in Detroit and St. Louis and the New York Giants stockholders are out about $15,000 that was spent for series preparedness. a a a a a a OVERCONFIDENCE played a part in the downfall of the Giants. Manager Bill Terry grew altogether too cocky. When his team held a stranglehold oft the pennant he broke out with statements that led his Dlavers to feel thev coulan t lose. Asa matter of fact Terry said his team not only would walk off with this year's flag but would repeat in 1935 with the same lineup. . . . Terry’s head also swelled on him and he took to refusing lntcmei s to newspaper men. He couldn't be bothered. They in turn started calling him Sourpuss Terry. On the Giants’ last visit to Boston Terry turned down a sobsister who sought an interview and also threatened to have the photographer accompanying her pitched out of the Boston ball park. The photographer left the sobsister at the office the next day and went out and perched himself at the game and went to work. Terry went to him and said: “I guess I was a little hasty with you yesterday. This is not mv ball park, but if you dare to show up at the Polo Grounds in New York for the world series I will see that you are kicked out. And the picture-snatcher replied: “But Mr. Terry, what makes you believe the world series is going to be played in New York? ’ aaa a a a MICKEY COCHRANE, manager of the Detroit Tigers, has contracted insomnia all over again and is seeing a Dean boy on each bed post. Mickey preferred to grapple with the Giants in the world series and now will have to revamp his strategy end bend his efforts toward removing the Dean fear from the minds of his Bengals There has been so much in the papers about Dizzy and Paul recentlj that the voung Tigers players are in danger of losing sleep thinking about them. All of the Tiger hurlers have had a long rest, however, and the fact that the first two games of the classic will be fought in Detroit may keep their confidence soaring.

Fast and Rough Tussle Promised by Mat Stars Coleman Has Local Winning Streak to Defend Against Raines at Armory Tomorrow Night. Lor*l wrestling fans will be in for a real treat at the armory tomorrow night if Abe Coleman and Dick Raines, the main go huskies, live up to their reputations.

These two nationally - known heawweight mat perlormers will clash over the two-out-of-three fall route in what promises to be one of the best tussles of the indoor season Both are of the aggressive type.

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Coleman, the popular Jewish star, w ill be out to defend a strong record inasmuch as he has not lost a local match in nine starts. His “kangaroo kick” has aided him in maintaining this record, but Raines is positive that he can stay away from that style of offense and "take’’ the Jewish ace into camp. Raines is one of the most powerful as well as colorful grapplers in the game. He is touted as the i ’ Texas Tornado” and has beaten a j list of topnotch heavies. He has won most of his bouts by his rough style. In tomorrow night’s semi-windup, Andy Rascher, the Hoosier youngster, will take on G. Bashara. former Oklahoma A. and M. athlete. The opener at 8:30 brings together Jack League and Whitey Hewitt. Los Angeles Keeps Pacific League Flag fly l nited Frets SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. I—The Pacific Coast League baseball season ended yesterday with the Los Angeles Angels, owned by the Chicago Cubs, winning the second half pennant by a margin of twelve full games over the second-place Hollywood array. The Angels, managed by Jack Lelivelt. also won the first half title . by a margin of eighteen games and j won the 1933 pennant which was played through a full season.

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Indianapolis Times Sports

CARDS AND TIGERS ARE SERIES OPPONENTS

Finds Self

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Jack Rothrock

One of the Cardinals’ most dependable clouters is outfielder Jack Rothrock, who finally established himself as a star this year, after several returns to the minors.

Detroit Is Keyed to High Pitch Over Title Play; Cochrane Worried as Cards Become Foe of Tigers

BY STUART CAMERON Lnited Press Sports Editor DETROIT, Oct. I.—A diamond conflagration—flaming with fight, color and prowess—will be touched off in this baseball-mad city Wednesday when Frankie Frisch's “wonder men'’ of the St. Louis Cardinals collide with Mickey Cochrane's “team of destiny,” Detroit’s Tigers, in the opening encounter of the 1934 world series. This battle will mark the first

Down the Alleys BY BERNARD HARMON

With the addition of several more leagues last week, practically every local bowler is again in action. A few late starters will get under way during the next couple of weeks, but the "cream of the crop” have settled down to hard work, and this week should produce some of the best scoring of the season. Last week’s totals again showed a decided increase in averages over the previous week, and some of the best scores of the season were produced. Although the long waited 700 total has not yet been turned in, John Blue, the veteran of many a ten pin campaign, stopped one pin short of the honor, when he drove 699 p’ns into the pits in the Washington League Friday night. Pete Clements and Hod Eller also blasted out huge totals in the Universal League, turning in 690 and 683. while several other individuals were well over the 650 mark. The Indianapolis, Washington. Fountain Square and Uptown Leagues showed some of the best work of the season. while various other circuits continued to improve on their early season totals. Polar Ice and Fuel Company posted the best single team score of the week, when they smashed the maples for a 1.093 in the Fountain Square Recreation League. Cook's Goldblume again showed the best three-game score, a 3.036, also posted in the Fountain loop. John Fehr, Lester Koelling and Ed Striebeck, who have been right at the top during the initial week's of competition, continued their lambasting of the maples, while many others were over the 600 mark for the first time in their present schedules. Webb Wallace, the rotund manager of the Indiana alleys, announces that the Kroger Grocery League of eight teams will start its season on Wednesday night at the Indiana drives. Tonight at the Parkway Recreation alleys, anew ladies league will be formed. This loop will roll games each Monday at these alleys, and all womeh bowlers are invited to attend the session tonight at 8:15. Inasmuch as it will be the oniy ladies’ league performing on the north side, i* is expected to appeal to all of the feminine pastimers living in that vicinity. The league, however, is open to any bowlers in the city. The usual cheery atmosphere that prevails at the St. Philip alleys was changed to one of gloom yesterday,

MAJOR LEADERS

Leading Battrrs G AB. R. H Pet Gehrig. Yankees 154 579 178 710 .388 P. Waner. Pirates 148 599 122 217 ,382 Gehnnger Tigers 154 681 135 213 .354 Terrv. Giants . 153 602 109 212 352 Manush. Senators 137 556 89 194 .349 HOME Rl NS Oehrie Yankees 49 Collins. Cardinals 35 Koxx Athletics .. 44 Troskv. Cleveland 35 Ott. Giants 35 RINS BATTED IN Gehrig. Yankees 167 ott Giants . 136 Troskv. Cleveland I*4 Collins. Cardinals 128 Greenberg. Det 139 HITS P Waner. Pirates 217 Gehrig. Yankees 210 Gehnnger. Det. 213 Tro&ky. Cleveland 207 Jerry. Giants ... 212i

INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1931

Homer Star

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Jimmy Collins

Leading home run blaster of the Cardinals is Jimmy Collins, who crowded Mel Ott all season for National League honors. He hit 35. the same as Ott. Collins plays first base.

time in baseball history that National League champions from St. Louis ayer tangled with Detroit pennant winners of the American League in a world series. It should be a classic that is a classic. Glamour oozes from every angle of this world series picture. Fiery Mickey Cochrane versus the erstwhile Fordham flash, Frankie Frisch; either of the mighty Deans, Dizzy or Daffy, vs. the Arkansas wonder, Schoolboy Rowe, and so

with the announcement of the death of Arthur O’Brien, who is a member of the Pittman-Rice Coal team n in the St. Philip No. 2 League. O'Brien was one of the game’s greatest boosters and one of the peppiest bowlers appearing on the east side drives. He'left the St. Philip alleys after a round of bowling Saturday night, was taken suddenly ill at 2 a. m. Sunday and died in St. Vincent's hospital a few hours later. This column extends to his family the sympathy of all members of the local bowling fraternity. Picked up around the drives: Ted McGrew didn’t get his usual umpiring in this summer, so he has taken to bowling to keep fit. . . . Ham and Eggs. Steaks, what names this Spencer Ladies League has .... and then there’s the Flower league, and the Birdie league. What a spot for the spring poet! John Mulry, one time pin boy at the Fountain, is developing into a real bowler . . . maybe he’s following Johhnie Murphy's footsteps. There no truth in the report that Chick Taylor rode that Gobbler up to the alleys last Friday night. It's about time for Elmer Burt to break loose. ' Doc’’ Kemner still has his fast ball in operation, maybe that’s where Dizzy Dean got his speed Earl Neppel, a Prosecutor. Good Mornin’ Judge. Jack Hunt says that •182 will be hard to live down. That Ruell Moore-Buford Cadle match last week, nroved to be more for Moore . . . imagine having a ball ’hat netted a 683 on the alleys .... I'd put it in a safe deposit box' How Oliver Altum hates to see the Dutch Masters scoring those 2,800. Big Larry Reno, of baseball fame, is firing them in again in the Ipalco League. "I Hit’s ’Em” Hardin is having difficulty backing up his monicker. Jess Pritchett says it should be “I misses ’em.” Freddie Schleimer has emerged from his secretarial duties lone enough to turn in a couple of fancy totals. The D-X boys at the Fountain have had tough going, dropping nine out of twelve. Give ’em a pep talk. Oscar. Eddie Striebeck ’"week-ended” in Chicago Lou Koehler, wkifh his re-bored ball, is all smiles again. Jess Mount will probably get into action again this week, then look out you south siders. Fritz "Paisley" Grune'r has taken to bowling acain. Bob Weimer s slants have not yet found there mark, but it won’t be long, savs Bob .... and so we’ll get back to our knitting.

Texas Aggies Grid Team to Drill Here Football fans of Indianapolis will have an opportunity to watch the Texas Aggies in football practice Wednesday night. While on their way to Philadelphia, for their tilt Friday night. Oct. 5. with Coach Pop Warner's Temple university Red Devils, the Aggies will stop off at Indianapolis for a workout. They will practice beneath the lights of Butler bowl. The Texas Agricultural and Mechanical college (the aggies) is located at college Station. Tex. YOUNG TRIBE RECRUIT TWIRLS NO-HIT GAME B'J Timr/i Sprcial EVANSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 1 Yank Terry, promising 21-year-old pitcher who is tied up with the Indianapolis Indians, hurled' fourteen innings without allowing a hit here yesterday as the Owensboro Kenrad team nosed out the Evansville Servels, 1 to 0. Terry also was credited with twelve assists. The Indian protege recently twirled a victory over the Louisville Colonels.

Pepper Fit

i* * ®_

Pepper Martin

Pepper Martin, who already has made a hero’s name for himself in the world series, has had a great year, at bat, on the paths, and at the third sack for the Cards.

on as they trot out Pepper Martin, smashing Jim Collins, “DuckyWucky” Medwick, speedy Jack Rothrock and blazing Charley Gehringer, Nimble Bill Rogell, Blasting Henry Greenberg, Dextrous Marvin Owen. Throw in ancient General Alvin Crowder and Goose Goslin, and there’s the answer to a baseball press agent’s wildest dream. Asa matter of fact the picture looks far too good to please Cochrane. Mickey had hoped the doddering New York Giants would stagger into Detroit Wednesday, instead of the Cards. As far as Cochrane and his Bengals are concerned, the Cards are unwelcome guests at this little party. Mickey and his men had regarded this series as a sort of exposition which would reveal to the great automobile center what a beautiful, streamlined baseball machine it had turned out. But now many of the experts fear that the lads from down Missouri way may steal the show. The question is: Can the Tigers, who finished seven games above the New York Yankees and clinched the pennant with ease a week ago, stop the momentum of the St. Louis steam roller? Betting men fear they can not. The Tigers, heavy favorites to beat the Giants, were on the wrong end of the quotations today. The odds were 3 to 5 against the Cards winning the series and 6 to 5 against the Tigers. Anyway, the series will open on

High School Grid

GAMES OF SATURDAY Cathedral. 41: Southport. 6. Bosse iEvansville). 7: Booneville, 0. Reitz (Evansville). 26; Johnson City, 111.. 0. Richmond. 14: Newcastle, 6. Westfield. 18: Sheridan. 0. Goshen. 14; Michigan City. 12. Mishawaka. 14; South Side (Ft. Wayne), 7. Garfield (Terre Haute), 0; Dugger, 0 (tie). . „ . Jasonville. 6; Worthington. 0.

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PAGE 8

Outfield Ace

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Joe Medwick

Outfield ace of the Cardinals, a long range clubber, and a flash in the field, Joe <DuckyWucky) Medwick has played a front row part all season for Frankie Frisch’s men.

Wednesday in Detroit, as scheduled. A second game will be played there Thursday. Then the caravan will shift to St. Louis for the next three games Friday, Saturday and Sunday. If two more games are needed to determine the winner, they will be played in Detroit Monday, Oct. 8, and Tuesday, Oct. 9. Birds in Front as Series is Resumed Columbus Grabs Two-Game Edge Over Toronto. B>i Times Special TORONTO, Oct. I.—The Columbus Red Birds and the 'Toronto Maple Leafs were to resume rivalry in the little world series tonight, with the.* American Association champions high favorites to end on top. The teams rested yesterday, but the Birds already hold a two-game lead over the International League team, and* two more games will be played here before the fight is transferred to Columbus. The Buckeye pitching department has, so far, proved highly superior to that of Toronto. REDS ARE VICTORIOUS Beech Grove Nine Tops Gross Fu#neral Home, 2-1. The Beech Grove Reds nosed out the Gross Funeral Home nine at Beech Grove yesterday, 2 to 1. Chuck Waite of Gross struck out ten batsmen and Gilligan of the Reds fanned seven. Johnson, Murcurio and Bettner hit best for the Funeral team. Score: Gross 660 601 000— 1 3 0 Beech Grove 000 002 OOx— 2 4 2 Waite and Huddleston: Gilligan and Schuch.

El Dorado to Be Behind Rowe The 2,000 citizens of El Dorado, Ark., home of Schoolboy Roice, are looking forward to the world series with almost frantic enthusiasm. They will go to Detroit on a special train. More El Doradoans arc expected to make the baseball trip than attended the World Ew[r.

St. Louis Clinches National League Pennant by Shutout Victory While Giants Lose Dizzy Dean Registers 30th Triumph of Year as Frischmen Finish Two Full Games Ahead of N. Y.: Dodgers Win in Tenth Inning; Bengals Take Two. Bu United Press NEW YORK. Oct. I—The St. Louis Cardinals brought one of the major league's most hectic seasons to a grand finale by winning the National League pennant, and today are preparing to meet Detroit in the world series. This last-minute triumph unquestionably provided the most thrilling chapter of the campaigns in the National or American circuits, although the brililant pennant march of Mickey Cochrane's Tigers was an epic in itself.

These two great clubs emerged victors from two long, gruelling, topsyturvy scrambles that saw the New York Giants and Washington Senators dethroned as champions of the National and American Leaguers, and the rise to power of new clubs and players. Frankie Frisch, in his first full season as player-manager of the Cards, clinched the pennant yesterday when the Giants last to Brooklyn, 8 to 5. It would have been clinched anyway just a few seconds later when the Cards took their fourth straight game from‘Cincinnati, 9-0. Thus St. Louis finished two full games ahead of New 7 York. Dizzy’s Seventh Shutout. Dizzy Dean registeded his thirtieth victory of the season when he shut out the Reds with seven hits. It was the National League's champion pitcher’s seventh shutout this year. Yes, indeed. Dizzy replaced mighty Carl Hubbell of the Giants as the circuit’s leading pitcher in 1934. In fact, he and his brother Paul won forty-nine of the Cards, ninety-five victories. Every St. Louis player except Ducky Medwick assisted in the fourteen-hit attack on Si*Johnson, Frey and Stout. Delancey and Collins made home runs. Collins’ blow tied Mel Ott for the league's home run championship. Each made 35. Casey Stengel's Brooklyn Dodgers proved to manager Bill Terry of the Giants that they still were in the league by driving out three runs in the tenth to take their second straight game from the Giants. With the count tied at 5-5 in the tenth and the bases loaded, Blondy Ryan fumbled Lopez’ grounder, permitting Leslie to score. Chapman’s long fly drove in Cuccinello, and Boyle's long fly scored Stripp. The Dodgers made twelve hits off Fitzsimmons, Schumacher and Hubbell, while New York collected only seven from four Brooklyn hurlers. Braves Clinch Fourth Meanwhile the third-place Chicago Cubs took two games from the fifth-place Pirates, whase failure this season caused a midseason shift of managers, with Pie Traynor replacing George Gibson. The Cubs won the opener, 8 to 2, behind Lon Warneke's nine-hit pitching and aided by a six-run burst in the sixth. They took the nightcap. 7 to 5, by virtue of two timely tallies. Boston’s Braves ciinched fourth place for the straight year by taking both ends of a doubleheader from the Phillies. They won the first game, 4 to 3, when Randy Moore’s single in the tenth drove in the marginal run. Four hits and an error in the seventh of the nightcap provided two runs and a 5-4 victory. The game was called then because of darkness. In the American League, the Tigers, whom fiery Mickey Cochrane guided to the pennant in his first season as manager, wound up a glorious campaign by beating the

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•Some Ball Playing!’ Is Comment of Frisch as St. Louis Cops Flag

Ity I nitrd Press ST. LOUIS, Oct. I.—“Some ball playing. I'll tell you,” was Man* ager Frankie Frisch's comment after the Cardinals won the National League pennant! “Imagine going into the last month of the season six games behind and coming out on top on the last day. “I felt that our Cards would come out on top ever since the Giants became shaky, and, boy, they surely were shaky.” That was all. He had, discreetly, nothing to say about the ponding series with Detroit. “Why, w 7 e lyavc just won the pennant, and it takes a little thinking to plan for a world series,” he explained. The city, of course, was just about crazy, in all the ways you ever heard of, knew of, witnessed, and it was quite positive that the Cards would sweep the Detroiters into the lake. St. Louis Browns twice, 10 to 6 and 6 to 2. This gave the Tigers a total of 101 victories, a brilliant showing for a club that was accorded little chance to go places early in the season and for a club that was a game behind the Yanks July 4. Crowder, Rowe and Marberry pitched for Detroit in the opener, and Bridges, Anker and Hogsett in the second. Babe Ruth played his farewell major league game as a regular as his New York Yankee mates lost to Washington, sto 3. First Baseman Lou Gehrig of the Yanks stretched his all-time record'for consecutive games to 1,504, and his final batting aveiage of .363 was the best in either league. Lou made his fortyninth homer of the season. He replaces Jimmy Foxx this year as the home run king of the majors. Local Soccer Team Loses Close Tussle The Indianapolis soccer team played Dayton on even terms here yesterday until the final two minutes, when the visitors scored two goals for a 4-to-2 victory. Fast play featured the tilt, an opener on the Indiana-Ohio-Ken-tucky Soccer League schedule. Jimmy Lathw T oler, center forw'ard, scored both of Indianapolis’ counters. The Indianapolis team will play at Cincinnati next Sunday, manager Joe McLafferty has announced. GAELS OPEN WITH WIN By Times .Special SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. I.—St. Mary’s Gaels started their 1934 football season with a 61-to-0 victory over Columbia university of Portland, Ore., here yesterday.