Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1938 — Page 15

~ By Eddie Ash

Ame

: TURNER THRIVES ON TERRYMEN

SIX IN

-.vE OUT OF TWO YEARS

JM TURNER, the former Indianapolis chucker with the Boston Bees, thrives on facing the champion New York Giants. ... He's defeated them twice in two starts this year and his two-year record against the champions is five out of six. The Bees have won 11 of their last 14 games and along with the Cincy Reds, have changed the National League situation. . .. Usually it has been the Giants, Cubs, Cards and Pirates embraced year after year in the first division. But it's a different picture nowadays with Bees and Reds coming and Pirates and Cards struggling to hold

to their old pace and standards.

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S a consequence of his shutout triumph over the Red Sox on Memorial Day, Red Ruffing of the Yankees is listed as the American League's standout pitcher. . .. His record of six victories and one defeat was excelled by Lefty Grove's eight and one,. and Vernon Kennedy's eight straight, but Ruffing’s earned run mark is the best. In his six consecutive successes, he has allowed only seven runs, with two shutouts, and a pair of one-run games. Since he lost the opener in Boston, Ruffing has gone the route six times without allowing more than three runs to any club.

» WwW HEN that crowd numbering 83.533 gathered in Yankee Stadium Monday the box office count was more than $91,000, it is reported. . . . The Red Sox’ share was approximately $23,000. The paid attendance was 81.891, pass gate.

with 1642 coming in through the The Yankees picked up more than $57.000, the American League more than $2000 and the Government more than $8000 in taxes. . . . It was estimated concessions yielded $20,000. Maybe baseball still is in its infancy. » ~ ” EX MAYS, Mrs. Mays and Bill White have applied for passports to permit the California Comet to compete in the big motor speed event at Budapest on June 19 Mays was at the wheel of White's Italian Alfa Romeo car in the 500-mile race Monday and sent it at a blistering speed until forced out of action after completing 115 miles. The American race party will leave Indianapolis tomorrow and head for New York to sail for Europe. . . . Mays said he hopes to compete in all the important races overseas this summer and match his skill against Europe's best. Tazio Nuvolari. Italian champion. who attended the “500” preliminaries and the race, is to compete at Budapest, he announced, and will accompany the Mays party on the trip to Europe. Rex explained his decision to go abroad by pointing out that no more big races are on the American sports calendar this year. . It will be his first experience on foreign tracks and roads.

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ENRY ARMSTRONG, the atom of dynamite who trounced Barney Ross the other night and annexed the welterweight boxing title, said the two postponements of the fight worked to his advantage. . . . Henry explained it this way, “The postponements were just what the doctor would have ordered for me. I was at my natural weight and rarin’ to go.” The examining physician declared that Henry appeared to be more relaxed than he was at their first weighing in, adding that this was probably due to the fact he was not worried about his weight. And Armstrong agreed with the doctor's opinion. . .. He scaled 133 1-2 pounds Tuesday and Ross came in at 142.

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RMSTRONG'S low weight came as a surprise as the hard punchA ing Negro tipped 136'i pounds last Thursday, the date originally set for the battle. . Ross held a 5'2 pound advantage in weight at that time, having scaled at 141%. . . . Henry shed the extra poundage during the five-day delay and Barney gained i of a pound in that period. Henry had purposely built himself up for the original date as he agreed to scale at or over 136 pounds. . . . Ross agreed to weigh at or under 142 pounds. n n " HE New York Boxing Commission ruled the private weight agreement invalid after the first postponement of the match and Henry took advantage of the edict by trimming down to his natural weight, which he was sure would work to his advantage and not Barney's. Armstrong said, 136 pounds and felt great Tuesday when the chips were down. have to fight the additional weight off in the ring.”

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“I was a bit top heavy and slightly sluggish at I didn’t un

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LAYERS cast off by other clubs are doing right well for the up-and-coming Cincy Reds. . . . Buck McCormick, star first sacker, was turned loose by the Giants. . . . They advised him to quit baseball. . . . Now he's bracketed with the league's leading batters. Billy Mvers, Cincy shortstop. was on the Giants’ roster one winter. . . . He was sent away without a tryout. . . . Ernie Lombardi. the Reds’ first-string catcher. was traded off by Brooklyn, and Johnny Vandermeer, Reds’ Areball hurler, is another Brooklvn castoff.

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Baseball at a Glance

STANDINGS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won.

22 29

| Kansas City Hoe 020 B10 | Louisville N31 000 10x— 3

Gay, P. Miller and Breese; | Ringhofer. Pet. ! .629

. 00D 031 BIN— 5 101 000 2ix— 8 16

and Galvin, Dennin Selway. F. Johnson,

Lost. 13 13 16 18 17 19 19

n9 to

Minneapolis | Toledo 629! Bean, 5343 (J. Johnson, and Linton, S14 |

A485 | A424 406

nen

«00

INDIANAPOLIS Kansas City Minneapolis Toledo St. Paul Milwaukee Columbus Louisville

Tauscher 3 Harris

St. Paul 302 000 N0N— 5 10 Columbus ” 010 000 000— 1 Herring and Silvestri: Andrews, | Lynn and Grace.

1 8 1

Lyons,

NATIONAL LEAGUE .. 010 000 000— Pet. | | Cincinnati . 100 001 02x— : 10 0 | Pressnell, Tamulis, Mungo and Shea, 649 | | Phelrs; Vandermeer and Lombardi. A571

S61 | New York 541 | Pittsburgh

Melton, W. 514 | and Todd. .429 | 387 | Philadelphia 314 | St ouls. ......

Mulcahy, Passeau, Harre]l and Owen.

AMERICAN

| Brooklyn n

13 15 18 17 18 20 19 24

Cleveland

2

000 001 O0M-~ 1 5 000 030 10x— ¢ 7

Brown and Danning; Bauers

Washington Boston Detroit Philadelphia Chicago St. Louis

001 003 000— 4 9 2 . 100 122 03x— 9 16 1

Smith and Atwood;

|

NATIONAL LEAGUE |

Lost. Pet. | 12 676 | 15 615 | Cleveland 14 563 | Philadelphia 18 “so | Harder. Humphries, «2<D | Nelson and Haves 18 —— 20 000 340 001— 8 13 2 26 one 000 022— 4 R 2 29 Sundra, Hadley

Boston at Chicago; rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE M20 030 600— 5 160 0 . 412 002 00x— 9 11 1} Zuber and Pytlak;

Chicago Boston Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Brooklyn Philadelphia

429 |

Detroit New York ...

| Rennedy RY Tebbetts; and Dicke

An 100 001 3 1 n 9 3

St. Louis . 001 301 10x-- 6

TODAY'S GAMES Se AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

and Desautels,

3 1 1;

Willis and |

2 |

EB: | Ajax Beer

9 |

Walkun, VanAtta and Sullivan: Wagner |

Indianapolis Times Sports

and some o

THURSDAY, JUNE 2,

1938

the Dodger of broadca

PAGE 15

It'll Be a Scream

Indications are that Bob Burns

will face pretty tough competition if

f the other radio comedians

's go through with the plan sting their games.

TRIBE AND BREWERS TO PLAY TWIN BILL

Redskins in Tie for First

——————————— &

As Blues Bow to Colonels; | Cochrane Praises Kennedy

Page and Jolson Likely to See Service on Mound Tonight.

Indianapolis series last night was washed into a double-header and

tonight. Vance Page and Lloyd Johnson

signments, Manager Schalk announced, but he was uncertain today in which order to send ‘em against the Brewers. Because Kansas City lost Louisville, 5-3, the Redskins today are tied with the Blues for first | place and the locals will be battling

|to stay on top in the close Ameri- |

| can Association race. Whitlow Wyatt, Milwaukee ace, | also is ready, and if he's matched with Page, the Hoosiers’ No. 1 | chucker, it probably will develop | into a close contest. Both righthanders have been going at a warm pace this season and are shooting for promotion to the majors at the end of the campaign. Action in the first tilt tonight will

| get under way at 7:30 o'clock over !

the regulation route of nine innings. The second battle will be limited to seven innings in | the American Association ruling | governing night double-headers. ! Kansas City is scheduled to in-

| vade Perry Stadium tomorrow night |

and the series with the Blues will be closed out Saturday night. St. Paul will come for a twin bill on Sunday afternoon and a single game Monday, and Minneapolis will follow the Saints for skirmishes with the Indians next Tuesday,

Softball

| Burford Printing Co. | Warmoth Engraving, 10-1. 2 B S | |

| Wednesday and Thursday.

swamped La Bar, urford, allowed only two hits and truck out 12.

The Goodwill Buddies would like 2X0 of-town or city games. Call . 2725 and ask for Chick.

r The Shelby Street Merchants de- | sire a double-header for Sunday morning. Call Eddie at Dr. 2565-R.

Shaw's Markets in the National League will play Louisville a twogame series June 5 and June 12,

The second round of play in the Y. M. C. A. Industrial League will begin tomorrow at 5:30 p. m. with the Kiefer-Stewart squad opposing the Indianapolis Water Co. at Willard Park. Pittman-Moore plays the Indianapolis Street Railways al Riverside and ¥. M. OC. A. teckles Roberts’ Milk at Christian Park. Two of the first round games are vet to be played, the Water Co. vs. Street Railways and Kiefer-Stew-art vs. Y. M. C. A.

Industrial League

date:

Roberts’ | Water © [Y. M

standings to

| Pittman-Moore Kiefer-Stewart ' oe Street Railways ..

Tonight's schedule at Belmont | Stadium: 7:30—Howard Street vs. East Tenth 8:30-—Banner { H. Block Co.

| All-Star

Merchants Street Merchants. Whitehill vs. Wm.

Standings Ww

League

Richardson's Market Indiana Avenue Market Howard Street . England Market Rhigas Club serasares Fashion Cleaners . . East Tenth Street Merchants

NAMED I. U. CO-CAPTAINS

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June 2 (U. P.).—Ernest Andres of Jeffersonville and Tom Gwinn of Shoals will be co-captains of Indiana University's baseball team for next season, athletic department officials have an- | nounced. Andres, who played second base, also is captain of next season’s basketball team.

Ort rt BILINI DW C3 CA ND IND ft ok ok ot =

IRISH TO END SEASON NOTRE DAME, Ind. June 2.— Notre Dame will conclude its 40th winning season in 47 years of baseball here Friday and Saturday with Wisconsin's strong Badgers in the annual commencement week-end | games. The Irish can lose both | sames at Wisconsin and still finish with a record of nine victories and eight defeats. |

The opening of the Milwaukee-

the twin attraction is te be played | under the lights at Perry Stadium

are to draw the Tribe mound as- |

to |

accordance with |

|al way, Kennedy lan 8-4 victory over | terday.

-

Mickey Thinks He Got All|

Better of Deal With Old Pal Dykes.

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent

NEW YORK, June 2. — The ‘friendly feud” between those pals of Connie Mack's great teams of 1929-30-31, Mickey Cochrane and | Jimmy Dykes, was a horse of an- | other color today. Now rival managers of the Tigers and White Sox, Cochrane and Dykes are two of the keenest rivals in base- | ball—in a ball game, a trade or any battle of wits. Dykes drew first blood with his “city slicker sale” of | A] Simmons to Cochrane for $75,000 | two years ago. Dykes has laughed at Cochrane ever since. But Dykes’ laugh now is a little hollow. Cochrane finally has the upper hand He has Vernon Ken- | nedy, the eccentric pitcher whom Dykes traded to Detroit last winter | with the belief that he was putting over a fast one. Cochrane gave Gerald Walker, Marvin Owen and Rookie Mike Tresh for Kennedy and Dixie Walker. A storm of disap- | proval broke over his head because Gerald Walker had been a Detroit hero. | When Kennedy was with the White Sox he was bitterly criticized for living in a trailer. Some critics | said his wildness was the result of | improper sleeping. Cochrane was | asked yesterday, after Kennedy had hung up his eighth straight victory, whether his star still lives in a trailer. “I don’t know,” replied Cochrane. “But if you can find me another guy who can pitch like Kennedy I'll buy him a trailer to live in.” Cleveland Defeated

It turns out that it wasn’t Kennedy's trailer that made him wild, In his White Sox days he pitched overhanded and underhanded. When he joined the Tigers this spring Cochrane suggested that he concentrate on pitching his naturoverhand. pitched

the Tigers to the Yanks yesblanking them until the {last two innings at which point he

| had an 8-0 lead.

The victory enabled the Tigers, | still in fifth place, to move within five games ol the league-leading Cleveland Indians who lost to the Athletics, 9-5. Johnson, Hayes, and Chapman hit homers for the A's to drive Mel Harder from the box.

Senators Beat Chisox In the other two American League games Washington beat the White Sox, 5-4, on Buddy Lewis’ ninth inning single, and the Red Sox triumphed over the Browns, 6-3, on Manager Joe Cronin’s homer with two mates on. The Giants dropped their third straight and had their National League lead cut to two games as they were beaten by Pittsburgh, 4-1. Russ Bauers pitched a fivehit game to triumph over Cliff Melton. The second-place Cubs were idle because of rain. Cincinnati turned back Brooklyn, 4-1, behind Johnny Vander Meer's five-hit pitching and the Cardinals

tree uaa mel

hammered out a 9-4 victory over | the Phillies. Ival Goodman hit { homer No. 11 for the Reds. Joe | Medwick, Cards, came out of his { batting slump by getting “4 for 4,” including a homer.

FIGHT SHOW PUT OFF UNTIL NEXT WEEK

Roy Wallace, matchmaker for | Foster Enterprises, Inc. today is arranging bouts to be held on the first outdoor boxing card of the season at the Sports Arena next Thurs- | day night. It will be ladies’ night.” The show originally was scheduled for tonight but was postponed due to the inability of Wallace to find a suitable opponent for Elza Thompson, local Negro heavyweight. The postponement is expected to make it possible to book Thompson,

|

[ major

| player—1875.

a former Golden Gloves champion, with a worthy foe.

_ Homers ‘Incidental’ 10 Him

Ha \

When smiling Lou Gehrig selects his war club for a trip to the trouble brewing for some pitcher,

plate there's

(Second of a Series)

By

fifth place in the Yankee batting & order, Still his severest critics said that | Columbia Lou, who played his 2000th | game on Tuesday, was having! trouble manufacturing his former power. They suspect that he is | swinging for base hits now. He] doesn’t appear to be pulling the ou as of old. But Gehrig insists that his stroke | is the same. Indeed, it difficult for the great first baseman | to change it after all these years. “I've hit a lot of home runs.” | he asserts, “but seldom try to hit |! one. Babe Ruth cut up at a ball and lofted it over the fence. He | tried to hit home runs. “I merely try to hit hard. Some- | times my hard drives are good for | home runs. That's incidental. My | consecutive-game record is inci- | dental, too. “As I look back over the seasons, the thing that impresses me most is the realization that I always have tried to do my best, and that I have helped the Yankees to win.”

Highest Batting Average Many consider Gehrig the greatest all-round first baseman who ever played the game, and that's taking in considerable territory. | Columbia Lou has the highses lifetime batting average in the American League, .344. Paul Waner, now reposing in the Pittsburgh Pirates’ dugout, is the only current

league athlete ahead of the Horse in that respect, with Gehrig showed the way to hitters with 363 in

Iron 348. American

Gehrig has batted in more runs other American League , He has hit the most home runs—465. He has compiled 400 or more total bases on five occasions, and 300 or more 12 times. He holds the league and lifetime | record for scoring runs . . . more | than 100 per season 12 times.

| 1934. | |

than any

| | |

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HARRY Sports Editor, NEA Service Just when his sour beginning this spring had some of the New York critics hinting that Henry Louis Gehrig might be cracking up, Man started pasting the ball at such a clip that he was moved up to

iu

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GRAYSON

the Iron

‘TWIN BILL DATES SET BY HARRIDGE

———— |

CHICAGO, June 2 (U. P.) —Dates for 11 double-headers to play off postponed American League games have been announced by league! | president Will Harridge. The sched- | ule:

|

June 2, Detroit at New York: June 8, |

Chicago at New York; June 12, St. Louis | at Philadelphia, Chicago at Boston: June | 17. Washington at Detroit: June 138 New | York at St. Louis; Some 21, Boston at De- | troit; Juhe 22 York at Cle eland; June 28, Philadelphia at New [Or'K.

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Law Urged to Save I Fighters From Beating Like Ross Took

By HENRY M'LEMORE

United Press Staff Correspondent

NEW YORK, June 2.—There's an! unwritten law in boxing that guar- | antees a champion the right to keep | fighting as long as his legs will hold him upright. It is now time for that unwritten

bit of the pugilistic code to be void- |

ed by a written one that will pro-

tect a champion from his own courage, his own pride, and, if you will, his own vanity. Such a law was badly needed in Madison Square Garden Bowl the night before last when Barney Ross took a savage, brutal—and unnecessary—thrashing from Henry Armstrong for 15 rounds. Because Ross was defending his championship, | and because he had exacted a promise from his handlers to him see it through, no matter how' rough the going, the fight wasn't stopped. After the seventh round it wasn't any more than a man backing a boy into a corner and senseless would

his right eye, and his left was partially closed. He had to grope for

him he could only slap feebly at him. His legs were leaden, paralyzed by weariness, and during the rest between rounds he could speak, so bruised and swollen were 1s lips The crowd yelled for Referce Arthur Donovan to stop it. Donovan, knowing that a man in Barney's condition might be seriously injured, if not killed, by a punch, appealed to Ross’ handlers. They wanted to call it quits but remembered their promise. Donovan then spoke to Gen. Phelan and Dr. William Walker of the Boxing Com-

mission, but they stuck by the un- | the cham-

written code and said pion could have the final word. So Barney hung on. He had sworn he would never

out, never lose his title on the

let |

be a| Ross could see nothing from |

not |

be knocked |

floor, and he kept his to | himself. But he should not have been ale lowed to keep that trust If the men who control boxing |don’t think enough of the boys who fight, to pass a law protecting them from unmerciful beatings, then {they should pass it for their own selfish interests. Because a few fa | tal injuries to fighters while in the en ine’) Ross was in would threat

promise

en the life of the game. It is my opinion that Ross would have finished the fight worse condition than he did had not Armstrong, a thorough little sportsman, eased up in the final rounds. Even Henry, with the welterweight title in his grasp, did not relish belaboring the pitiful target that Ross offered toward the close.

in even

NEW YORK, June 2 (U. P) | Henry Armstrong, welterweight and | featherweight champion, will be a | busy man from now on Just before his 15-round victory | over Barney Ross on Tuesday night, Henry signed a contract with pro= moter Mike Jacobs to fight exclusively for him for three years, it | was revealed today His next assignment will come on {July 26 when he meets Lou Ambers | of Herkimer, N. Y., for the light= | weight title, either at Yankee Sta= dium or Madison Square Garden | Bowl, The site wil be decided after { Ambers returns here following a fight next Tuesday in Los Angeles | against Baby Arizmendi. Should Armstrong defeat Ambers, it would mark the first time in his= tory that any boxer ever held three crowns at one time. Bob Fitzsim= mons held three championships, but not simultaneously.

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AMERICAN LEAGUE

Detroit at New York (2). Cleveland at Philadelphia. Chicago at Washington, St. Louis at Boston.

“B” BANQUET DATE CHANGED The Butler “B” Men's banquet date has been changed from June 9 to June 10, according to James Stewart, chairman, because the earlier date conflicted with the College of Religion dinner. Coach Tony Hinkle is to be the principal speaker and will announce track and baseball awards.

Baseball and softball games between the varsity and alumni are to precede the banquet.

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