Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1937 — Page 22

SOUTHPAW

HE'S WITH

By Eddie Ash

CATCHER TURNS UP

® x »

THE SCRANTON CLUB

HERE'S a strange creature on the Scranton club of

the New York-Pennsylvania League. . . The name is Lou Haneles, fresh from the ‘ew York City College. ... It is said he handles

catcher. campus of N

. . A lefthanded

the pitching expertly and also throws to bases as ac-

curately as any maskman in the circuit. . . .

Bob Coleman,

former manager of the St. Paul Saints, is the Scranton

pilot and the club is a Boston Coleman says number of extra patrons he

Haneles is worth his salary

Bee farm. for the

draws into every park to

watch him tackle the backstop problems in southpaw

fashion.

® x =

TTO MEYERS, outfielder, Charlotte in the Piedmont with 55 runs batted m. Elmer Riddle, also on option

» = Indianapolis farmhand with League, is batting .327 and He swings lefthanded

there from the Hoosiers,

n

has stretched his mound record to 13 wins against five

defeats.

Baseball Commissioner Landis had no part in the ousting of Rogers Hornsby at St. Louis which was at-

tributed to the Rajah’s

horse-

race betting activities

the judge said he 1s not concerned with how players spend their money unless the method of spending it would affect

baseball itself. on

OB FELLER. apparently

n 5

fully

” x x

recovered from torn muscles in his

throwing arm. is due to face the murderous Yankees when Cleve-

land invades New York tomorrow. . . . The Kansas City Yankees, nee the Blues,

hurler,

fashion on his last start. . . . traded Phil Page. southpaw Breuer. . Al Piechota. righthan

He trounced Washington in easy

to Newark for Pitcher Marvin ded chucker, was obtained from

Oakland and Norman Branch. a flinger of promise, was brought up

from the New York's Yankees’

farm at Norfolk, Va. . . .

It also has

been announced that Kansas City's spring training camp will be shifted

from Texas to Florida next year. x x x»

A recent night game at Durham

out to 15 innings and wasn't completed until 2:15 a. m. . . .

morning. everybody!

” ® x

n =

in the Piedmont League stretched Good

=

= 5 »

NTRA-CLUB warfare is annoying Manager Dressen of the Cincy Reds and he has announced that fines will be imposed the next time a

fight occurs. . ..

Pitcher Paul Derringer and Bullpen Catcher Gus Brit-

tain staged a fistic match on the bench recently and the commotion in

the dugout upset the team. . . , Bill

Terry Day, the first ever held in

honor of the Giant's leader in his 15 years as player and manager of

the New York Nationals, will be staged Aug.

28 at the Polo Grounds.

. The Giants will play the Pirates on that day.

= x x»

The Giants are in the theyll be back In the race. . . .

“if money” Wayne LaMaster, Hoosier southpaw,

" Ed

If the Cubs collapse,

CI4ss...

surprised the Bruins yesterday and pitched the Phils to a win.

» x =

" n =

HE deal by which the New York Giants acquired Blondy Ryan from Milwaukee was an involved one and had Ryan guessing. . . . He was playing with Milwaukee in St. Paul when he was notified that

he had been sold to Kansas City, to join the Giants in St. Louis. . .

but 30 minutes later he was advised . Blondy took a plane to Milwaukee

to pick up his belongings, a train to Chicago, and then flew to St.

Louis from Chicago to report to Bill the Giants sent Infielder Mickey Fe

Terry In exchange for Ryan. aslin to Kansas City with cash

and the Blues turned over Shortstop Eddie Marshall to Milwaukee.

» » x

Bud Connolly,

the management of the Montgomery . Bud spent 10 years in the Ameri

5 2 »

former Indianapolis second baseman, has taken over

club in the Southeastern League. can Association.

Baseball at a Glance

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Ww. L. 62 13 61 +“ 0 18 55 20 33 RY | a1 aM 12 11

Columbus Minneapolis Toledo Milwaukee INDIANAPOLIS Kansas City St. Paul Louisville

AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct WwW. L oN New York 5 29 685 Cleveland 3 Chicazo 3 aia ashingin Beston 389 Louis Re | Detroit 3 AM [Phitaaphia |

ATIONAL Lt LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Ww. L. Chicago 60 32 645 Boston 50 74 | New York 55 40 .579 Brooklyn 41 413 Pit *purgh 3) 43 413 Lou 30 43 3 .402

Games Today |

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Indianapolis at Minneapolis, (night). Louisville at St. Paul (nigh Columbus at Kansas City Toledo at Miiwaukee. |

AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at New York. { Detroit St, Louis at Washington. Cleveland at Boston. |

NATIONAL LEAGUE

New York at Cincinnati. | Philadelphia at Cnicago. Boston at St. Br rookl yn at ‘pittsburgh |

Thom May Face | Fast Easterner

3 7 3 52

.538 Cincinnati

538 rhiladhia 38

ol.

aiRhYY. |

| Cincinnati

There is a possibility that Ray Ryan, 181, the “Hoboken Hurricane,” one of the topnoich lignt |

heavyweight matmen in the East. |¢

will appear against Ccach Billy | Thom on the outdoor mat card at Sports Arena next Tuesday night. | Thom, who scales 178 and is mat instructor at Indiana University, has signed for a special semiwindup | match. Promoter Lloyd Carter | hopes to land Ryan who is said to be an aggressive performer with a good record. He is a “big timer” in Eastern mat circles. Initial appearance of the season | of George (Cry Baby) Zanarias, 240, | Greek matman from Pueblo, Colo., features the card. He encounters the popular Dorve (Iron Man) Roche, 220, Decatur, Iil., in the headliner. Most wrestling fans rate Zaharias the “No. 1 meanie” in the game. He often is publicized as a “one-man Tiok. »

Welcome Due for Davis Team Today

| |

NEW YORK, Aug. 5—A halfhundred representatives of the U. S. | Lawn Tennis Association and the | 71st Regiment Band will welcome | home ‘America’s victorious Davis Cup team today. Headed by the red-headed Cali- | fornian, J. Donald Budge, and in- | ciuding Gene Mako, Bryan Grant, Frankie Parker, Wayne Sabin and nonplaying Capt. Walter Pate, the team 1s scheduled to dock about | noon (Indianapolis Time) aboard | the S. S. Manhattan.

BOWLERS TO MEET Beam’s Recreation and Indian- | apolis Bowling Leagues will hold their opening meeting of the season tomorrow at 8:15 p. m. in the basement of the South Side Turner Hall. All captains must attend this meeting in order fo hold their franchise.

| |

| Louisville

| New

at Phiiadelphia. | Det oit | Philadelphia

| Washington fay

! Phelps: | Tobin.

| lea and Hartnett,

| Travis. Senators ..

Yesterday's Results

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Columbus 100 020 200— 5 4 Minneapolis 000 000 000— 0 5

Chambers and Crouch: Wagner, Grabow-

| ski and Dickey.

000 000 "“20— 2 9 001 002 11x— 5 14

Coombs and Pasek. ... 010 000 . N00 100 and Berres:

Toledo : St. Paul . 1

Cohen and Reifer: 201 — 4 7

020— 3 12 Moore,

Kansas City Peterson, Bass ' Breuer and Breese

(Only games scheduled)

LEAGUE Game) 110 300 010— 6 8 000 042 20x— 8 14 3 Galehouse. Andrews. Allen and Pvtlak: McKain. Walberg. Wilson and Berg. (Second Game) 000 000 221 — 5 10 { Boston 100 020 012— 6 10 Wyatt, Heving. Brown and Becker: termueller. Marcum and Desautels.

Chicago . 202 000 140 — 9 ork

005 000 401—10 Kennedy.

Hadley Wicker,

AMERICAN (First

Cleveland Be

Cleveland 1

12

Brown and Sewell: Murphy and Dickey.

012 050 120—11 17 100 015 000— 7 10

‘ Poffenberger SPurbeville Thomas

Law > Kelley | Bric ker

St. Louis

. 000 104 000— 5 8 0! 000 101 i00— 3 8 Hildebrand and Hemsley: : hen and Millies

NATIONAL LEAGUE . 010 010 200— 4 7 000 120 000— 3 7 Gumbert and Danning: Schott. Derringe and Lombardi.

003 310 003—1 210 000 022— Fitzsimmons, Henshaw Lindsay Brandt, Bowman. Weaver, Swift and Todd

010 100 000— 2 1 000 001 000— 1 and Atwood: French bie | Bottarini.

Boston . 000 310 020— & (1 St. Louis 001 010 005— 7 18 Fette, Bush and Meller: ia - reil. Blake, Ryba and Owe ig Hur.

Brooklyn

1 . 0 Pittsburgh 7

15 17

‘Bauers.

Philadelphia “hicago Lamaster

Major Leaders gookLET ISSUED ON

Batting

AB R H Pct | Medwick, Cardinals 370 81 149 403 | | Hartnett, Cubs ... 109 25 78 392 |

P. Waner, Pirates. . Gehrig, Yankees. ..

Home Runs

DiMaggio, Yankees Foxx, Red Sox Greenberg, Tigers Trosky, Indians Gehrig. Yankees

Runs Batted In

Greenberg, Tigers | DiMaggio, Yankees | Medwick, Cardinals Dickey, Yankees Gehrig, Yankees

MEETS ST. PAUL GIRL By United Press ST, PAUL, Minn., Aug. 5.—FElizabeth Deike of Los Angeles met Ruth Seeger of St. Paul in a second-round match in the Minnesota State Open | Tennis Tournament here today,

tere

. 28

28

Teese ane

Lae 108 95 |

1

|

| ture.

| By United Press

TER CHELAN OFF NEWPORT,

| Cup. Ranger need only

|

|

Indianapolis Times Sports

wu

&

» »

| deavour, | before the official starting time of 170:40 a. m,

PAGE 22

THURSDAY, AUGUST 5

"Nephew Follows Heinie

Art Manush, nephew of the slugging Heinie, and a sophomore at the University of Towa, has been working out with the Brooklyn Dodgers. is an outfielder and hits right-handed.

He

RANGER TAKES LEAD IN FOURTH RACE

Endeavour II

Loses Time in False Start

British Yacht Beats the Gun And Is Forced to Recross Line.

®

ABOARD COAST GUARD CUT-

Aug. 5.—Beating against a 15-mile sou'wester, Ranger and T. O. M. Sopwith’s Endeavour II today siarted the fourth race for the America's Yachting to win today's race to complete for the United States a successtul defense against the British challenger. Ranger made a perfect start. Enhowever, crossed the line

Indianapolis Time, and had to go back and cross again. It |

| was the first premature start of ihe

| |

series, and a terrific handicap for |

Endeavour recrossed at 10:41:20, |

{losing 1 minute 5 seconds.

| triangular course. { miles | was east by northwest

| races made the best start of

| { the British sloop. | | |

Today's race was over a 30-mile First leg of 10 | southwest, the second | south and the third | by west one-half west. | which won the first three | the

was

Ranger,

| series, hitting the line precisely at | 10:40. Ranger was on a star-board

{ onto the right side of the white- { hulled sloop.

| {

tack, that is. the wind was blowing !

Loses Valuable Time

Endeavour, after recrossing the | line, went onto a port (left) tack. { Ranger then went over to a port |

| tack to stay in a position between |

| course, dimmed Sopwith's

| the wind and the British boat. | Endeavour also went onto a port | | tack. Endeavour’s start, of |

chance of

premature

| winning even one race in the series |

| Vanderbilt. Ranger's snubby | just as the light on the committee |}

|

and thus save him from utter rout. | by contrast. placed | nose on the line

boat signalled the time for the race to start. The code letter flag “M” was then hoisted on the committee boat, signalling that Endeavour must put about and recross. Soon after both boats were officially under way Ranger held a lead of 200 yards. Both were moving swiftly westward. to the right of the course. Both sloops were carrying working headrigs—quadri- { lateral jibs and staysails. Ranger was heading more nearly into the wind.

Short Tacking Duel

Endeavour went onto a starboard tack at 11:15 a. m. Ranger imme-

| diately followed suit.

1 0

3 {

Endeavour swung over to a port tack at 11:17 and Ranger followed.

Harold S. Vanderbilt's |

| day

| He also skippers

| a

Apparently the yachts were engag- |!

ling in a short- tacking duel. Endeavour went back to a starboard hitch at 11:19. Ranger again | followed. Ranger's margin at this time was

(estimated at one-quarter of a mile.

| immediately

Endeavour Port Tacks

Endeavour port-tacked after 11:20. Ranger followed at 11:22 and

5 | Sopwith immediately went back to

a starboard hitch. one minute Iater and Endeavour port-tacked. went over to a port Endeavour

Vanderbilt I hitch ‘at 11:25.

it was Sopwith's purpose to shake

Pearson.

1} Deshong. Co- | (yachts then were more than half |

0 9] 2 r

271 40 104 384 | of Indiana's fishing, hunting and | 375 67 141 76 | trapping laws and setting forth | 351 | open seasons, % V5 Tre | being distributed by of Fish and Game through county go clerks and agents.

105 | "mussel regulations, and regulations g | governing the taking of fish, game

93 | provisions.

after defeating Judy Corning of St. |

| Paul 6-0, 6-3, in a first round match. |

SUMMER SLACKS & From a Tailor Shop egardl reallv fit your Nous 'y RE to vou and up

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[ter wind. Vanderbilt was forced to | respond to each tack to cover (stay ! {nearer the wind than) Endeavour |

3; o 1|since the American sloop was beat- | and | ing Endeavour in the present wind. and | vanderbilt went on to a starboard |

| tack at 11:28, Sopwith port-tacked at 1:30. The |

| way te the first 10-mile mark and | were beating into a 15-mile wind. Both were to the right of the course. Vanderbilt apparently thought that | he would be able to fetch the mark | | (that is, round it” without going on |

1! {to another tack) so he refused to | 0 | follow #nd | deavour

Endeavour’s last tack. En- | then hitched to starboard. | Ranger was leading by approxi- | mately one-half mile at this point. | At 11:45 Ranger was less than one | mile from the first mark, and foot- | | ing-swiftly. Tt was apparent that | 9! Ranger could fetch the mark on | | her present starboard tack. Endeav- | our was plowing through the wake | of the American Sloop.

STATE GAME LAWS

A booklet containing a summary

bag limits, etec., is | the Division

The booklet is printed with ink ! that will not be affected by mois- | Listed are the open seasons | and bag limits on game fish; migratory and upland game birds; game animals; licenses; permits;

animals, upland game birds and migratory birds, and miscellaneous

Copies of the booklet may be obtained by addressing the Division of Fish and Game, 406 State Li- | brary Building, Indianapolis.

| victory for Endeavour. {son it ‘had won the first race by {than 17 minutes and the second by

| got

| gambles, | second race he had been guilty oi |

|

Ranger followed |

immedi- | on ately went to starboard. Apparently |

| She was the better boat.

| has never | combination has | | take slower boats and tum them

| night along the harbor the old

1/loose Ranger and try to find a bet- | line far

in one of Ranger.

Here's the start America’s Cup series. bilt's sloop. »

» x

Coroner Already on Scene as Sopwith Prepares for Fourth Race, Joe Says

By JOE WILLIAMS

Times Special Writer

NEWPORT. R. I, Aug. 5.—There

| To come right out and say so there | | weren't very many around yester- | when the coroner arrived on | This was in connection with] Ranger's third] straight win over | Endeavour the never - better-| than-second. | Even the imme- | diate relatives | and close friends | of T. O. M. Sop-| with were ready | to admit the in- | evitable could not | be postponed] much longer. Mr. | Sopwith owns the | British Class J vacht—or the outclassed J yacht, as the old salts | along Thames St. derisively put it. it, for better or

official business.

Williams

worse. | Yesterday he did a good job. So | did the boat. Even the yatching | experts were hard pressed and |

| tightly pinched to find serious flaws

| either | manship or the boat's performance.

in the gentleman's helms- |

And when the yatching experts | can't find anything wrong it's news. The result was a better race and | closer one. The American boat! won by less than five minutes. This | practically amounted to a moral Bv compariwas a nose finish. Ranger better

better than 18 minutes. In the first race Mr. T. O. M. had | the worst of the breaks in | whims, had taken desperate | and looked bad. In

breeze the |

what the experts said was unwise | sail selection. But yesterday the | intangibles and the constants Were | about equally divided. It simmered | down to a question of boat against | boat. | So when Ranger sailed across the | out in front there could be any further doubt. Much the better. This had been suspected all along. The result yesterday merely | strengthened the evidence. For all anybody knows to the contrary Mr. Mike Vanderbiit’s Class Jayer may be the finest that ever took to sea.

Beaten Months Ago

If this is so—and there are many yachting men who believe it is— | the British invasion was doomed ! to failure from the start, and no | matter how well or inaptly En-| deavour was sailed she could not have won. She was beaten months ago on the designer's blue prints. | | Tt was Mr.

no longer

Nobody was beating Dempsey | | When he was Dempsey, Jones when | he was Jones or Tilden when he | was Tilden. Ranger seems to fit | into this sacred fraternity of in- | vincibles. Mr. Vanderbilt is ac- |

| cepted as the most gifted of skip- |

pers and the efficiency of his crew | been questioned. The | been known te |

into winners. You needn't go any further back | than 1934 to accent this superiority

| of human skill over boat architec- |

ture when Vanderbilt skippering | and crew co-operation on Rainbow, | an inferior boat, spotted the first | Endeavour two races and then suc- | cessfully defended the cup. But last

salts and old peppers were saying even this combination handling the newer Endeavour couldn't beat Ranger. Praise from Admiral Caesar couldn't be higher. There have been some exciting cup races and some dreary ones.

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oa,

the Harold S. Vander- | is at the left, a trifle behind T. O. M. |

| has been nonexistent.

| won't be many people around to see | has been outclassed by a finer boat. | the formal burial at sea of Eng-| BY now even the most confirmed |

| land's latest yacht cup hopes today. | optimist has tossed in the anchor.

,| Butler University, | ers’ | vide

[| Stadium on Saturday,

T. O. M's hard luck to | come up against a -super boat. |

races in the Sopwith's

= » d ’

This has been the most dreary of all. The element of competition | A fine boat |

There is nothing to hope for, and | since there has been nothing to cheer for, apart from the cold, sheer excellence of the American boat, the spectators are deserting in droves. Mr. Vanderbilt got his boat across the starting line ahead of Endeavour yesterday for the first time since | the series started, and was never headed. It was reasonably close for | several miles on the windward lee— | a 15 mile sail into the wind—but Ranger was leading by three-quar- | ters of a mile at the turn and held | her advantage. more or less, on the | run home. On the windward test Ranger | went fast enough to break a record | that had stood since 1893 and while |

{ records of this sort can’t mean much

due to fluctuating conditions of breeze and sea, in this instance 1t furnished added evidence of the extraordinary qualities of the Ameri- | can boat—especially on a day when the British boat was performing | welk This was, race of the : hires.

Scouts to Have ‘Day’ at Purdue

LAFAYETTE. Aug.

the tightest | it was dis-

to repeat, vet

5.—Purdue’s

Endeavour three races and only sure a further stay of the ii on this side,

| bike racing, offered five bucks for |

{ the

season opener on the gridiron with |

initial football rival. the athletic feature Scout Day on the Purdue campus The battle with the

Sept. 25, 1s | expected to provide an ideal attraction for the visiting Boy

the Boilermak- | will pro- | of Boy |

Bulldogs, | § | which will be held in the Ross-Ade |

Scouts, |

| who will be guests of the Purdue |

athletic department. An invitation to attend the game will be extended to Indiana Boy |!

Scouts through the various Scout | executives. For the entertainment |

of troops that arrive on the campus

early in the morning, plans are be- | ing made for a special program that | will include tours of the campus and ,

special demonstrations. AND SOME MATCHES NEW YORK, Aug.

| Hagen lost 22 pounds on his trip | around the world. i

| | |

|

5—Walter | THE SHERBROOK DISTRIBUTING CO. Cincinnati, 0.

®

Legion Ni ines in

Play at Anderson

By United Press

Times-Acme Photo, The Ranger has won today to as-

§ needs to repeat

” n

mally dull. Except for the start and the minutes immediately following, | the boats were never close together, : and when a young lady on the press | boat patently addicted to six-day

a sprint, she evoked a deserved | round of applause. Only once was the growing mo-! notony broken. This was on the run | home when Rod Stephens, one of Ranger afterguard—which is to be confused with a right | guard or a left guard—climbed to | the top of the towering spar tlo| straighten out a twisted rope or | something. This was something the specta- | tors could see, and to be able to see | anything at a cup race is epochal. Besides it seemed quite a gymnastic | trick, this climbing a pole some | 170 feet tall on a rolling boat. Still, | as a practical gent to my left re- | marked. “It's nothing a monkey | cant do.”

Additional Sports, Page 24

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ANDERSON, Aug. 5.—Logansport | will compete in the Indiana American Legion junior baseball tournament after winning its protest concerning regional competition, officials anounced here yesterday. Logansport players had refused to compete in regional play, July 22, because Jecauive they | had Played in the sec-!

__[BLUE POINT

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| tional the day before and had not | had any rest between tournaments. All other regional contestants had the advantage of a rest period be- | tween meets. The first official rui- | ing forfeited Logansport’s scheduled | game, but a decision yesterday reeversed the ruling. | The revised schedule is as follows: | Logansport vs. Princeton tonight, | with the winner meeting Jasper to= | mor row while Anderson faces South { Bend. Survivors will play Saturday | for the right to compete in the In- | diana-Michigan-Ohio - Pennsylvania series at Flint.

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