Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1938 — Page 8

By Eddie Ash

HARNESS ELITE AT STATE FAIR

RARE TREAT FOR RACE FANS,

~ Indianapolis Times

ports

PAGE 8

WHEN McLin, decisive winner of the Hambletonian Stake at Goshen, N. Y., early this month, lines up in his future races, he will be known as McLin Hanoves, for Hanover Shoe Farms, that bought him, adheres to

the practice of embracing the name “Hanover” in the title

of its horses. But whether or not the newest harness horse sensation goes under that name when he races in the Horseman Futurity 3-year-old trot at the Indiana State Fair on Labor Day, it is a foregone conclusion that he will be the attraction for thousands. At the Illinois State Fair, in his next start after ‘winning the Hambletonian, McLin, by winning the second heat of his race in 1:5914, tied the race record for his age and gait posted by Protector. It places the bay colt out in front for the Horseman prize, and good judges of trotters hesitate to pick one that will beat him, though it is assured that Vesta Hanover .of , the Sep Palin string will be a hard one to beat, she having trotted a third heat in 2:0114%, also over the Illinois State

Fair course. FJ ” 2 2 2 8

‘HERE are also in the Horseman event such stars as Long Key, a consistent winner on the Grand Circuit, and made a strong favorite for the Hambletonian, in which his manners handicapped him. Reining McLin in the Horseman event, will be Henry Thomas, who drove him to victory in the Hambletonian, also to his world’s achievement mentioned above. Thomas drove to victory in the 1937 Hambletonian, the filly, Shirley Hanover, and thus holds a record of winning two consecutive Hambletonians. . . . He is- an

accomplished, hustling driver and one of the most popular

on the Roaring Grand. ® = = 2 2 =

T. PAUL feels fairly safe about the American Association pennant, but is keeping a sharp eye on Kansas City and the galloping Milwaukee Brewers. . . . The Apostles have seven games left with the Blues and six with Milwaukee. . . . And three with their traditional rivals, the Minneapolis Millers. Columbus played 43 games with Kansas City and St. Paul this season and won only six, losing 37. . ... Against the Blues, the Red Birds lost 19 out of 21, and with St. Paul they lost 18 out of 22. . .. Which explains the Birds’ occupancy of the next-to-the last seat in the second division. Except for pitching, Toledo Ww equal to any club in the league gad possibly the strongest second division team the A. A. has ever own. *

8 2 =» 82 8 =

INE games at home and seven on the road will complete the Indianapolis Indians’ schedule. . The games: Columbus at Indianapolis—Tonight, tomorrow night. Indianapolis at Toledo—Sept. 2, two games; Sept. 3. Louisville at Indianapolis—Sept. 4, two games; Sept. 5, two games. Toledo . at Indianapolis—Sept. 6, two games: Sept. 7. Indianapolis at Columbus—Sept. 8, 9, 10, 11. . Ending it all. In games to date the Redskins have won six and lost 10 with

Columbus. . . . Won eight and lost eight with Toledo. . . . Won 12 and lost six with Louisville

Baseball at a Glance

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

W. L. Pct. 55 601 562 536 522 507 504 409 «398

(Second Game; 10 Innings) 3 piladeipnia a 0m Ja al 9 9 St. Paul .......... vy ts Kansas City ...... Milwaukee ..... Minneapolis ...... INDIANAPOLIS .. Toledo .......... Columbus Louisville .........

Passeau, Warneke, Boston Chicago

Turner ahd 0% French and Q’D

New York 00 000 000— 1 5 Pittsburgh 300 030 01x— 7 13

Coffman, yandenbers Tobin and Todd.

Sivess, Shoun and

i

21 020 210— 8 16 000 100 000— 1 5

Carleton,

AMERICAN LEAGUE

St. Louis 300 040 110— 9 12 Boston 002 200— 5 11 Cole, Johnson and Sanlivan;

Midkiff, Cramer and Teaeoul Detroit 100 000

New York ........... 300

AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww. 85 68 67 61 61 50

Pct. 697 576 558 504 500 A421 370 364

New York ....c... Boston ......ce0000 Cleveland ......... Detroit csqecseccce Washington Chicago ... St. Louis ......... 44 Philadelphia ...... 44

NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. 2 47 66 54 67 55

‘000—1 5 000 00x— 3 7

Cleveland .

203 020 Philadelphia : Rion 20

esssses 020 220 200— 8 12 Smith, Nelson and H Chicago Washington

ayes. 000 010 110— 3 7 000 010 001— 2 6

Pet. and Giuliani, Ferrell. 605 550 549 © 545 504 463 | Lo

Pittsburgh New York Chicago .....ce00¢ Cincinnati ........ 67 56 Boston ......00.0. 60 59 St. Louis .....0.00 56 65 Brooklyn ssseeesse 55 66 455 Philadelphia ...... 38 79 325

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus at Indianapolis (night). - Toledo at Louisville. St. Paul at Milwaukee. Minneapolis at Kansas City.

esses ene

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Batting

- Home Runs Greenberg, TIRETS ...ieesevesrvessonse

Re . Clift, "Browns esissssustsrvenee ssesense Runs Batted In

Foxx, Red Sox DiMaggio Nonkees ve Gree ere. pa 207s pa York, Ti Dickey,

Savoldi, Thesz

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

NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Pittsburgh (2). Philadelphia at St. Louis (2). Boston at Chicag

and Vv. I 0O’Dea Root,

and ° Danning;

Heving,

Gill, Coffman and York; Chandler and Dickey.

Allen, Humphries and Pytlak: Potter, D.

Rigney and Schlueter; Appleton, Deshong

“2: | at 150. Tournament rules call for

cree ssenssscnse eesessee 132 11

Wind Up Even

by elusive open field running with the

Andy Puplis gained fame ‘em against the champion professionals

Irish and will be up and at at quarterback.

¥

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1938

Cecil Isbell, the ex-Purdue grid ace, kicker, passer, runner, is expected to be a shining light on the side of the Collegians at left

. halfback.

| Four Local Linksmen Set For National Amateur Play

Four local golfers today were making plans for an. attempt to dethrone the National Amateur king, Johnny Goodman. Yesterday the quartet, William Russell, Speedway; William Reed, Highland; Paul Carr, Speedway, and William Diddel, Meridian Hills, captured the Indianapolis district places for the Amateur by leading 95 other linksmen in 36 holes of 2 | medal play over the Meridian Hills 2 | course. : Three additional competitors, Ben o | K. Cohee, Meridian Hills; Francis 0 | C. Cox, Terre Haute, apd Ray W. Roberson, Speedway, won places as 1 | alternates. 9| The National Amateur is to be held at the Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa., Sept. 12-17. Shooting a 144, one over par for 2 | each -18, Russell outdistanced his 3 | rivals and was awarded the United States Golf Association medal.

8! While other low morning scorers were blowing wide open in the afternoon round Bill Reed posted a four3 | under-par 32 on the last nine for a 146 total and second place. Paul Carr, who was out in front ) for the morning round with a 72, faltered on. his second 18 to post a 77 for a 149 total—good enough for third. At the end of regulation ‘play Ben Cohee and Bill Diddel were tied.

Se : COMPLETE SCORES William Russell, Speedway . 12-12—-144 William Reed, Highland %5-71—146 Paul Carr, Speedway Wiliam Diddei. rieriGlan Hills. Ben Cohee, Meridian Hills .... Francis Cox, Terre Haute ..... Ray Roberson, Speedway ....s. J. Clark Espie, Hillerest ...| Dick McCreary, Country Club..: Mike Pollak, Speedway Dale Morey, Martinsville ...... Ray Jones, Speedway ..... “ose Donald Ellis, Meridian Hills ..8 Max Buell. Speedway John McGuire, Speedway ... Clifford Wagoner, Speedway .. James Wiley Jr., Speedway.... Freeman Davis, Highland ..... W. E. Kennedy, Martinsville... Stephen Rose, Terre Haute .. Robert. Fair, Speedway Ike Cummings, Country Club .. Harold Cork, Speedway Bob Rhodehamel, Meridian Hills D. H. Kennedy, Martinsville .. Frank Shields, Meridian Hills.. 80-36—166 Stuart Tomlinson, Speedway... 82-86—170 W. A. Kennedy, Martinsville..76, withdrew Charles Braughton, Speedway.82, withdrew

%3-77—150 76-74—150 $7-74—151 74-78—152 "9 73—152 79-74—153 78-75—153 %8-75—153 %6-77—153 n6-18—154 5-80—135 79-78—157 79-78—157 %8-80—158 %9-80—159 79-81—160 %9-83—162 $3-79—162 80-83—163

82-83—165 85-80—165

ELINED EFITTED EPAIRED | Mens

LEON 2 ass ave The PICK of the better Beers Fehr's X-L

Ss

.| deadlocks to be broken by the “sudden death” method. Before the 37th hole could be played, Cohee left the course which automatically put Bill Diddel in as the fourth man and left Cohee as first alternate. Mr. Cohee explained his withdrawal by saying he “did not believe he could make the trip to Oakmont.” One stroke back of this pair was Francis Cox, who added an afternoon 74 to his earlier 77 for a 151. Tied at 152 for the third place alternate were Ray Roberson and J. Clark Espie. In the playoff Espie shot a five and conceded the hole to Roberson who lay a foot from the flag after three shots.

ctf

2-11—149:

Brooklyn at Cincimati (night). YESTERDAY'S RESULTS

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (First Game)

Toledo 100 310 000— 5

12 0

Poffenberger and Linton: Cain, Phelps,

Klaerner and Silvestri.

(Second Game; Five Innings; Rain)

Toledo ..... verses sevetny 000 00— 0 St. Paul 000 1x— 1

4 1 4.0

Nelson and Hinkle; Frasier and Pasek.

(First Game)

Louisville 023 102 003—11 Milwaukee 010 000 000— 1

18 © 71

Meadows and Madjeski; Gonzales and

Just, Becker.

(Second Game: Six Innings: Agreement)

Louisville Milwaukee Shaffer. Hampton; Reis and Becker. (First Game)

Columbus Minneapolis Thompkins, Martynik and Es. Toten and Gra

(Second Fey Six Innings; Darkness)

Columbus ‘Minneapolis

041 00x— 5 4 0 Thomason and Ringhofer,

Vainveesaree 300 010 a 8 3 }

Ly

Lynn, Thom+kins and Schults; Tauscher

and Denning.

\ NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game)

Brooklyn 001 120 000— 4 Cincinnati

Frankhouse and Phelps, Campbell; ringer and Lom

bares Game)

Srocinaatt 30x— 7

1 1

000 220 001— 5 9 1

300-000 0104 3 2 100 003

Mungo and Campbell; Moore and Hersh

‘berger:

(First e)

200.120 019 4 o ]

Butcher and Atwood; nm and a

BASEBALL TONITE

LADIES" NIGHT INDIANS VS. COLUMBUS

Joe Savoldi, 211, Three Oaks, Mich., and Louis Thesz, 226, of St. Louis, drew in the feature match last night at Sports Arena.

Thesz won the first fall in 10 minutes, using a body press, and Jumping Joe took the second after 44 minutes with flying tackle and a body press. Neither succeeded in pinning the other during the remaining 16 minutes. Buck Weaver, 181, Terre Haute, gained a fall over Tuffy Cleet, 184, Detroit, with a dropkick and body press after. 22 minutes in the semiwindup. Rudy Stromberg, 220, Milwaukee, downed Chris Zaharias, 291, Pueblo, Colo., with a body press

after 17 minutes.

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Former Tennis

Ace Qualifies

NEW YORK, Aug. 31 (U. P).— Ellsworth Vines, the chap who made his, name and his money in tennis, was back in the amateur class today—one of 156 qualifiers for the (Continued on Page Nine)

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INDIANA

HENRY HOOK Is VICTOR

Times Special ° DETROIT, Aug. 31 —Henry Hook, Indianapolis boxer, won an easy 10round decision from Jimmy Urso,

Detroit, at Arena Gardens here last night. Both weighed 119. Urso appeared tired early in the bout and Hook scored at will. The

two had fought to a draw here last December.

IRedskins Favored, 2- to-1, 3

Mike Jacobs and Madison Squar Garden, now partners, have a virtual monopoly on fight matches. The only thing Mike lacks now is a return bout, Jonny Weissmuller vs. Lupe Velez. —

BAUGH, WHITE FOCUS OF GRID BATT

ad

To Outpass All-Stars, £

Collegians and Pro Champs Clash in Chicago Tonight; Three Hoosiers Listed as Starters.

PROBABLE LINEUPS

REDSKINS ALL-STARS Charles Malone.... LE ....Perr; Schwarts Berber LT ed Shire

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Referee—Tommy Hughitt, Buffalo. UmKrieger, Ohio State. Head ardner, Cornell. Field Judge—Larry Conover, Penn State.

Kickoff—7:30 p. m. Indianapolis time.

CHICAGO, Aug. 31 (U. P.)—It’s 2 to 1 around town that Slingin’ Sammy Baugh of Washington's Redskins, professional football champions, will outpass Byron (Whizzer) White or anyone else in the fifth annual charity All-Star game tonight under the floodlights in Soldier Field. The Whizzer, a passing, running, kicking genius from Colorado, is the chief offensive hope of the collegiate squad picked by 8,000,000 fans in a nation-wide poll. _.Rémember Baugh? His touchdown pass last summer gave the All-Stars their only victory of the series. His stunning barrage of passes in the bitter cold last winter, perhaps the greatest performance ever seen, routed the Chicago Bears, 28 to 21, in the National League playoff. Baugh will be a marked man, and the All-Stars mark them well. In previous games they manhan-

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Peli | Packers,

What defense coach Bo McMillin of Indiana and his staff of four have worked out to stop Baugh has been kept secret. It may be tricky. Bo usually is. His five man backfield at Indiana is an example of that. One thing is sure, Baugh will be rushed as he hasn't been (Continued on Page Nine)

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