Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1938 — Page 7
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MONDAY, SEPT. 12, 1938
CORREIA ae CEPR Ta sy gale
Tribesmen Gain Playoff Goal;
Cubs Aga
Cards Oust Th
Br————
Hoosiers Battle Blues K. C. Tomorrow; Return After Three Tilts.
in
A band of elated Indians breezed into Indianapolis today to make hurried preparations for the vasion of Kansas City where they
will battle the Blues tomoirow night | in the opener of one bracket of the
American Association playoff. At the same time Milwaukee will oppose the pennant winning Saints at St. Paul in the other playoff series The two series are for four best games in seven and the winners are to clash over the same route to de-
termine the league's representative]
in the Little World Series. The Redskins are scheduled Kansas City for three tilts, tomorrow, Wednesday and Thursday, all at night. before returning home with the Blues to wind up the series at Perry Stadium. The Indianapolis end of the schedule has not been
set, Riddled by Injuries
It's true the Indians limped in as they defended fourth place by half a game over Toledo, but since most of the players are limping and others are on crutches, it's surprising that they succeeded in achieving the first division goal over the challenging Mud Hens and Minneapolis Millers. I'he Indians also have the distinction of being the lone Eastern team in the plavoff. Tribesters on the shelf with injuries are Milton Galatzer, outfielder and firse baseman; Buck Fausett, third sacker and the club's leading hitter; Buddy Lewis, catcher, and Don French, pitcher. Another blow was dealt Ray Schalk's team when the Chicago Cubs snatched pitcher Paul Epperly from them to replace Vance Page, who is out of action with an injured kle. Epperly was here on option and there was nothing the Indians could do about it.
Mound Staff of Six
an
in-|
in
in Threaten Pirates; eir Veteran Chief
Chicago Cuts Bucs’ Margin To 31/5, Games: Paul Dean Goes Route.
a »
Tossed Out
| By GEORGE KIRKSEY | United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept. 12.—Prestige of the Pittsburgh Pirates plum=« { meted lower today after the Na|tional League leaders had been [licked by a sore-arm pitcher trying |a comeback on a team without a | manager. | The pitcher was Paul Dean, who {couldn't win in the Texas League. | Even the distraction of seeing their manager, Frankie Frisch, walk off { the field, fired by Sam Breadon during the game, failed to hamper the St. Louis Cardinals as they [rocked the Pirates with a 6-4 set- | back. With a 3'5 game lead the Pirates, | despite their tumbling tactics, may | be harder to dislodge than dis | senters suppose. They have a five{game advantage on the all-impor-tant losing side. Time is running {highly in their favor. They have 23 |games left to play and the Cubs, | Reds and Giants have only 20 each. |If the Pirates blow 12 of their games, the Cubs, for instance, | Would have to win 14 out of 20 to
| win the pennant, No. 18 for Lee
Big Bill Lee pitched his 18th vie tory and hoisted the Cubs back into undisputed possession of second place with a 2-0 triumph over Cincinnati. Luke Hamlin hung the 14th shutout of the season on the Giants as Brooklyn scored a 3-0 shutout. The Phils and Bees had a standoff, Philadelphia winning 11-2, then Boston triumphing, 3-2. Rookie catcher Charlie Sutcliffe of the Bees and shortstop Del Young of the Phils engaged in a fist fight over a close play at second. No decision. | The important development in the | American League concerned second place, which the Boston Red Sox t 9 (i we OOK over after being tied with ST. LOUIS, Sept. 12 (U. P.).—The | oe veland for five days. The Red major leagues were swept clean of gox hammered out 19 hits to offset
Frisch Third Pilot Fired Follows Cochrane, Grimm
In Majors’ Casualties.
I'he Schalkmen face the powerful Rlues with a mound staff of six consisting of Bob Logan, Lloyd Johnson, John Niggeling, Jack Tising,| Elmer Riddle and Horace Lisenbee. Niggeling and Logan saw action at Columbus yesterday and Lisenbee anc Johnson worked Saturday. Although out of action four weeks with a lame arm, French will make the trip to Kansas City and try to serve a turn in the box, St. Paul won the A. A. champion- | ship by a margin of six games over | the Blues, nine games over Milwaukee, 11'; over Indianapolis, 12 over Toledo, 12's over Minneapolis, 97 over Columbus and 38 over Louisville
1ii€e, rhe Indians entered the [final game of the race at Columbus yesterday knowing that victory was necessary to clinch fourth place and hey opened up in the first inning with a two-run blast. |
Four Runs in Fourth
In the fourth they blasted again [or a wh and th racas. The final score was T to & Niggeling opened on the mound and Logan pitched the last two frames, Earl Browne belted a homer off Niggeling in the fourth and Eddie Morgan duplicated the feat in the : Danny Taylor paced the at bat with three blows Toten. Lynn and Martynik toiled on he Columbus rubber. The fourgame series was divided.
Newark, Syracuse Are Host Cities
By United Press The International League playoff for the Governor's Cup will begin ymorrow when the pennant winning Newark Bears tackle the thirdslace Rochester Red Wings and the runnerup Syracuse Chiefs meet the Buffalo Bisons who finished fourth. Newark and Syracuse will be host “ities in the openers, Ultimate survivor of the playoff will meet the American Association playoff winner in the Little World Series.
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cluster of four markers, after|the inning, ne went through the Moesner. ss-3b .. 0. i ich the Red Birds grew dangerous reatened until the end of the|pegan packing. Tribeiof the ciub is necessary for 1939."
{us longer than any other manager
the three managers who dominated five errors and beat the Athletics, the 1934-35 baseball pennant picture | 12-7. with the passing today of Frankie Frisch as pilot of the St. Louis]
Cardinals, |
Feller Comes Through
Cleveland dropped to
COUNTY BOARD DELAYS ACTION ON '39 BUDGETS
Dr. Carr Elected Chairman As Book and Others Urge Reductions.
(Continued from Page One)
prevent a tax strike in Indianapolis.” “We believe,” he said, “that we have in our youthful organization an implement of public good. It was begun in the hope that its influence on taxing bodies might be forceful enough to bring about enough tax reductions to forestall a tax strike in Indianapolis,
“Certainly, we here in Indianap-|
olis do not want a tax strike. Nor do we want any of the various forms of drastic action that sometimes follow refusal of taxing officials to heed the cries of overburdened taxpayers. “Most surely, we do not want to limit the public officials to the point of injuring public service. This committee will not do that under any circumstances. “What we want isethis—an intelligent consideration of public expenditures, based on actual taxing needs, with an eye always on the ability of property owners to pay amounts that are levied.
“This committee expects to have | {some 25.000 signatures to present to
the Tax Adjustment Board sometime this week. This is a goodly per cent of the taxpayers of Marion County. They are intelligent persons, whose sole interest in a movement of this kind is the bringing about of real economy in government. “To all those persons who now are assisting us in this work, we of the committee extend our heartfelt appreciation. We are going to effect a permanent organization as soon as the rush of the Adjustment Board is through. We solicit the continued support of the petition
signers and of other thousands of |
Yo
PAGE 7.
Se
Barney Connett and His
" ” n
WILLIS VISITS
CALUMET AREA
Begins 3-Day Series of Organization Sessions With |,amed Mary-s1 County Leaders.
headache today—his only “reward”
spreckles, gills, large blue eyes and an all-steel body. It is 11 feet long, A : 37 inches high, 23 inches wide in Siste o o; P, : leaders turned |e middle, weighs 1050 pounds and their attention today to the popu-|pas a four-foot periscope. lous Calumet district as Raymond| Mr. Connett climbed into the E. Willis, Senatorial nominee, began craft at Michigan City, Ind., vester-
oa » " Siesta |day and, traveling three feet bea three day series of organizational neath. the" surface. of Lake: Michi meetings with county chairmen,
|gan, “swam” the 38 miles to ChiTomorrow and Wednesday, Mr. cago in 10 hours and 50 minutes.
Willis will cover the First, Second He was accompanied by the Idler, and Third districts in a conference a 62-foot schooner, carrying two tour calculated to bolster organi- divers. zational morale. “I didn't get anything out of it,”
He is expected to confer with Con-| De said. “I like to fool around with
gressional nominees M. Elliot Bel- Mechanics, so I pieced the Mary-El
shaw, First District; Charles A. | together during the last five years
Soka [from odds and ends of sheet iron Halleck eC stric - | > : pi hee me and Dis oy, Sad Rob |and tin, and fitted it out with an He will attend Jocal meetings at|clectris motor and oxygen equipGary, Hammond and East Chicago |": H- host anys: practicat
hard-hit taxpayers we have peen | before turning his attention to | He said the trip had been very
unable to reach in this short time.” The Indiana Taxpayers Association has made public an opinion that no legal authority exists for in-
cluding a 2-cent gravel road repair man, prepared for their Constitu-|to the sloop for half an hour while |
levy in the county rate approved by County Council, Judge Herbert E. Wilson, Superior Court, Room 5, who returned yesterday from vacation, has indicated
: third hyithat he would call the judges tosplitting with the St. Louis Browns.!gether to name the seventh Board
Frisch, who celebrated his 40th BOP Feller won No. 15 as the Vitt- member,
re ” men copped the opener, 6-2, but Van loi | t's double drove in the winmajor mana ger hing run which allowed the Browns casualty list for 1038. It was|to take the nightcap, 4-3. Frankie's 1934 National League | Washington, behind the seven-hit champion team that won the name! Pitching of Joe Krakauskas, beat the of the “Gashouse Gang” by riding Yankees, 6-3. The defeat trimmed over Cochrane's Detroit Tigers in the Yanks’ lead to 15 games. The the World Series, and it was Black Yanks now need seven victories {o Mike's Tigers that beat Grimm's clinch the pennant. Cubs four out of six for the world| Hank Greenberg hit homers No. championship in 1935. {48 and 49 off Ted Lyons as Detroit b won two from the White Sox, 10-1 No Fault Found and 5-3. Greenberg is now one game While Frisch's release was not 2nu one day behind Babe Ruth's entirely unexpected, the manner of record-breaking schedule,
its announcement was a surprise. | TRIBE BOX " ORE i X SC %
1S President Sam Breadon gave the] INDIANAPOLIS R H 1
birthday Mickey Grimm
only last Cochrane on the
news to reporters in the middle of | vesterday's game with Pittsburgh. | tabi Frisch was in uniform on the first- Sneriock 9b. 0.00" i {base coaching line. At the end of Rigi. 1
Q
Scott, r McCormick, Latshaw, 1b Chapman, ¢f «....... Niggeling, Jorgensen . Logan
dugout to the dressing room and
“I believe a change in managers
CD pt CS ret BG CC et pot NOUIOIDNDD ar oooosassooowd
i : Breadon said. “Frank has been with - Totals . 7 Jorgensen batted for Niggeling in COLUMBUS AB R
«9
DD PUDDING 83 | DDD DW BS rt oe ad pt
IF 2 Isince Branch Rickey. I do not blame eighth. (him for the condition of the club] this year. He has done nothing we’ can find fault with, and he has been M¢ a good manager. He has been paid Ha for the remainder of the season and 18 leaving the club today so he can be free to negotiate with other clubs seeking managers, Coach Mike Gonzales will run the team for the re-'Ma mainder of the season.”
Climax to Rickey Feud
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1! “1 QUOD Tre lI rd tI Wd
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“82 3 * Lynn in fifth for Martynik in ninth 200 400 000 102 Sherlock Browne 2, regan Two-base hits— Morg Home runs—
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i © y 3 r batte AQ §£ . 1) . v Release of the former Fordham IndIARADOIS Flash,” who came to the Cards as Columbus a second-baseman in a trade which Bains Be ted in t aker, Mesner, C sent Rogers Hornsby to the New row. a | York Giants in 1926, was the climax ayes, horgan, 3 N 4 . Brow: Morgan £{t on bases to a long-standing feud between !olis, 8: Columbus §& Base Frankie and Rickey, Cards gen- JiReeing. | 1 . e Struck out —Bv Niggel eral manager, 2: Martynik | “I haven't a thing to say,” Frisch ¢ foiLngs answered when beseiged by report- 2 “I'll probably be around St
2
IndianapBase on balls-Of Lynn, 4; Logan, 1 4: Folen, 1; Off Niggeling, Lynn, ning pitcher Toten. Time 2:
n second’:
Win cher
| |
* HAGUE PROBE ENDED
| |
gan, 3 in 2! Toten, 4 in!tion,
Umco (man of
Credit 1933 Law With Property Tax Drop
Property taxes in Marion County have been reduced $3.434855 or 16.44 per cent, as a result of the changes in the State tax structure in 1933, the Indiana Tax Study Commission reported today.
Property taxes levied in the
{County were $20888,753.43 in 1932 R. McCormick,
as compared to $17,45389752 in 1937, the commission's report said. Property taxes collected in the 92 counties were $39,031,792.48 less in 1937 than in 1932, according to the report,
A meeting of owners of small businesses in Indiana has been called by James A. Slane, Lafayette businessman, to form an organization to combat ‘rising operating costs.” The group is to convene at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the Claypool Hotel.
CUMMINGS DENIES
Rumor Inquiry Was Quashed Irks Attorney General.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 (U.P). —Attorney General Homer S. Cum-
919-1 mings denied today that the De-
partment of Justice has dropped
Mor- its inquiry of alleged violations of
civil liberties and free speech in Mayor Frank Hague's Jersey City. Irked by reports that his department has squelched the investigawhich was begun last May, because Mr. Hague vice chairthe Democratic National
is
Bend and Elkhart. rough and that he had exhausted | Meanwhile, Republican women, his oxygen su under the leadership of Mrs. Elea- from Chicago. {nor B. Snodgrass, state vice chair- | “I had to come up and tie up |
pply about 25 miles
‘tion Day celebration here Saturday|the Mary-El filled up with oxygen,” he said, “That explains my head-
night, ache.”
SLL (FFIGIALS SEEK
Sponsored by the 11th and 12th| District Women's Republican Clubs, ! the meeting will climax a week's activity in building the Indiana
Federation of Republican Women's Clubs. Throughout the state this week, |G. O. P. women: were to hold Con[stitution Week exercises, at which {local women leaders were to out-| {line the party's program. On the celebration program Sat{urday, which will be held at the Columbia Club, will be Col. Robert Chicago Tribune | publisher; Mr. Willis, Charles W. (Jewett, 12th District Congressional nominee, and William Congressional nominee
Cut in Prices of Goods Shipped by Motor Carrier Believed Possible.
Reduction in prices of commodi|ties carried by truck between In- ° ag diana and Pennsylvania was viewed rom e 3 11th District. as possible here’ today bs State Meanwhile. thousands of Marion | Auto License Division officials who County Republican party workers prepared to draft a reciprocal inset out today to contact registered terstate motor carrier agreement |G. O. P. voters and locate those Who phetween the two states. |are unregistered. [ The agreement would eliminate the weight tax, Public Service Commission and license fees which The canvass follows a post card motor carriers operating in both campaign in which all unregistered states pay in Pennsylvania on the voters were urged to register. El ae Iv4isng ov; mi £ uty o Ward leaders began the organi- Ty au
ti { their urecinct th commissioner, said. zation of their precincts under the) «pyminating these barriers will
“block system,” which party or-'favor a price reduction in the comganization experts predicted would modities carried between here and reach “every home in Indianapolis.” pennsvivania.” Mr. Rodenbeck said. Although no political meetings) ? were scheduled in the County for] today and tomorrow, ward chair-| He explained that under the men will confer with County Chair-| FTVatil y ; : i. man Carl Vandivier tonight and jae, T enavly ania law the Indiana inter morrow night they will meet with | precinct and block chairmen,
Voters Urged to Register
In Effect Automatically
state motor carrier laws automatically go into effect when a carrier enters Pennsylvania. “By this agreement,” he added, “Pennsylvania collects the same weight and other taxes prescribed by the Indiana law.” The first draft of the reciprocal
Mrs. Kennington Heads
Veterans’ Auxiliary Mrs. Ralph E. Kennington, 3907 |
head of the women's auxiliary of week Mr. Rodenbeck said, and then the Veterans Bureau of the Marion | ij be submitted to the PennsylCounty Republican Committee, | yania authorities. Mrs. Joseph P. Smith, committee 1nhdiana already has vice chairman, announced today. |agreements with Ohio,
reciprocity Michigan,
HomeNgie “Trout.” Mechanical Fish a Success But tor No Good Reason
CHICAGO, Sept. 12 (U. P.).—Barney Connett, 32, a mechanic, had a | eign affairs but close friends in-
trip across Lake Michigan in a home-made mechanical fish. § ; r He described the contraption as a one-man submarine, a “trout” [€ven to tke exclusion of national It was built and painted to resemble a fish and has a | Politics—enlivened
SON'S CONDITION | CHEERS F. D. R.; STUDIES EUROPE
Surgery Is Success; James May Be Able to Be Up In Two Weeks.
1
(Editorial, Page 10)
ROCHESTER, Minn., Sept. 12 (U. P.).—President Roosevelt divided his attention today between the! condition of his eldest son, James, and the critical international situation, both of which were causing him deep concern. Although he spent most of his time in St. Mary's Hospital at Mayo Clinic, where James underwent an operation yesterday for removal of a stomach ulcer, he took time to study reports of the latest European developments, sent him by Secretary of State Hull. Mr. Roosevelt and White House. attaches maintained silence on for-"
that he was with the greatest
watching
for five years work and a perilous dicated y interest,
| trends
today by the Maryland primary in which the
yellow and green body with brown¢
2-STATE. PACT
Washington Blvd., has been named | goreement will be drawn up this]
TRAFFIC TOLL CLIMBS T0 78
Milk Distributor Is Killed, Seven Hurt in One of 22 Week-End Mishaps.
prestige of the New Deal is at stake. Mr. Roosevelt was cheered by the findings of physicians that the ulcer had been nonmalignant and | counted on the superb physical con{dition of his son to pull him through. Troubled by Hiccoughs
He and Mrs. Roosevelt, and Yames wife, Betsy, visited the hos= pital twice yesterday and again last night. He said he would remain in Rochester until he was convinced that James was ‘out of the woods,” which may be another 48 or 72 { hours. : At 9 a. m. the following bulletin auto collided with the death oars yey issued: “James Roosevelt had driven by Walter Atkinson, 47, of as good a night as could be ex2037 Roosevelt Ave. at Morris and pected for his postoperative night. Belmont Sts. Royer told police, Temperature 99. Pulse 100. Respir=
they said, that he stopped at Mor- | 3tion and blood pressure — ris St. for the intersection and then normal... drove on before he saw the other| James was troubled by an attack car. Mr. Atkinson said, according of hiccoughs when his father ar-
to police, that he did not see the rived at his bedside last night. Royer car. | “What are they giving you?” the
President asked. Five Others Hurt “Carbon dioxide,” James replied. Besides Mr. Atkinson and Royer,|
(Continued from Page One)
“If they knew us they'd give you | bread-soda,” the President said,
the injured were Miss Mabel Yost, | (Bread-soda is a home remedy for
37, of 1405 E. Washington St. hiccoughs). George Haines, 21, of 3236 McPher- May Be Up in Two Weeks son St.; Miss Ruby Perry, 34, and Then h Rod : >n he remarked: Miss Agnes M. Adams, 24, both of “I understand the doctors had a
32 Summit St., and William Schwin, | tough time getting through your old: 1235 Marlowe Ave, All were treated | rowing muscles.” at City Hospital, James, like his brother, Franklin, [rowed in the Harvard University
Mr. Johnston, who was a milk| ~™" | varsity shell.
distributor for East End Dairies, is| Dt; Gray: notifies: the President survived by his wife, Mrs, Opal {hat James’ blood-pressure, pulse
oui] ane respiration were virtually norfather, William Johnston, all of Inf ak he said i young Roosevelt dianapolis, and a brother, Donald | H-besupsinii3ori4edays-Drovided Jonnaion Danville 11 | there are no complications bub SErvICEs are to be at 2 p. m | would have to remain in the hos- | Wednesday at the Dorsey Funeral | P1tal for at least three weeks. He | Homer -anditvarials will Pes ire Mes said that the next five days will he — Park Cemetery |the period during which any posVictor Langley, 19. Kokomo: died | SiPle complication might develop. (early today in Methodist Hospital Ulcer Not Malignant lof a fractured skull. The accident Afier a a Ls ‘occurred when he and a party were er assuring himself of James lon their way to the Indiana State | Prosress, the President returned to Fair. | the special train which is serving as Eight drivers were fined $69 rorghisiote) ¥hileshere: ad | traffic law violations by Municipal | r. Gray said that the ulcer, which | Court Judge Charles Karabell oi-|%aS one and one-fifth inches in |day. James Cook, Bloomington, ar- | diameter, was of the penetrating [rested on charges of intoxication | type and eventually would have perland drunken driving yesterday, was | forated the wall of the stomach. The | fined $46 and sentenced to 180 days |operation, which had been scheduled on the Indiana State Farm. | for today, was advanced 24 hours so | Mrs. Grace Kirby, 56, of 1010 S. that the President could spend more Mount St. received a fracture of time with his son. It was performed |both legs when she was struck by 2 short time after the President had an auto late yesterday while she was arrived and given his consent. |crossing Sheffield Ave. at Morris St.| Young Roosevelt was on the op~* ‘Her condition was reported fair to-| erating table an hour and 45 min'day at City Hospital. | utes and was under anesthesia the Guy Day, 44, of R. R. 7, Box entire period. 44-B, was the car driver. JULIANA HAS COLD Hand Badly Cut AMSTERDAM, Sept. 12 (U. P.) — Evans O’Bannion, of 802 Wood-| Crown Princess Juliana is suffering lawn Ave., was treated at U. S. Vee fom Busey cold and has been ad- : . vise vy her doctors to remain inerans’ Hospital for a badly cut hand! js for several days, it was ‘as the result of a collision yesterday learned today. Officials refused to at Kentucky Ave. and West St. confirm or deny reports that she Richard Hoppes, 22, of 346 E. Was expecting another child. Morris St., was arrested on charges of driving while drunk after the car he was driving struck Kenneth Maxey, 17, of 549 Coffee St., who was
Retonga at All
278 baseman
Louis a day or so then leave for my home in New Rochelle, N. Y. Mr. | Breadon and I are stil on {friendliest terms, and I hope we will remain that way. We just had a salary difference, and that is there is to it.” Frisch was the on the
regular Cardinals’ championship team of 1928, 1930 and 1931, became manager late in 1933 and led the team to the world title in his first full season at the helm ‘in 1934.
the <
all)
second-
Today's probable big pitchers and their records: Pet. AMERICAN LEAGUE
Kr Detroit 396 536 Only game scheduled { «3 No National League games scheduled. | 536 errors S19} MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS 5161 tring _ S13 Lombardi. Reds ....... aig | Foxx, Red Sox . ‘ . Averill, Cleveland .... 346 Weintraub, Phillies
DiMaggio
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION league,
(Final Standing) | (Ben-
atl
Chicago ton, 3-2
St, Paul Kansas City . Milwaukee INDIANAPOLIS Toledo Minneapolis ......... Columbus Louisville (Dhillies
Home Runs
New York Boston Cleveland Detroit Washington Chicago ...cevsovvvnnn 3 St. Louis Philadelphia
378 Clift, Browns {0 DiMaggio, Yan! 571 Goodman, Reds . 519, Runs Batted In Foxx. Red Sox Siashrescetie A489 DIMAagRIO., Yankees .....csessansasanns 1d 429 Greenberg. Tigers { York, Tigers « 384 5 key Yankees 358
|
Kees
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (First Game)
.. 010 000 000— 1 11 . 101 811 2Ax~— 7 13
i Bean and Grace. Eight Innings) 000 816 10— 2 10 002 M00 01-38 3
» and Hernandez;
NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L Tw 59 80 61 66 2 n°” 89
fiwaukee Minneapolis
Gonerales and Just; (Second Game: Milwaukee Minneapolis Johnson, Lefebre and
Pet. 588 569 552 S545 504 A467 459 226
Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati New York Boston St. Louis Brooklyn .....c.000 Philadelphia
» .
. 74 3 687 63 . 81
e 2 Winegarner Denning. (First Game) arn 000 60e— 1 RR 2 103 800 03x— 7 11 © Riddle: Frazier and Silvestri. (Second Game)
000 110 0— 5 11 1 022 016 oM— 8 9 1
Chelini, Klaerner
Kansas City St. Paul
Miller and
AMERICAN LEAGUE | Ransas City Chicago at Detroit. Gay and McCullough:
Only game scheduled. {and Pasek.
NATIONAL LEAGUE | ¥ouianitte 101 0% Jou—is 18 1, Open date,
Meadows. Flowers, Carpenter, Willis and | Madjeski; Valkup and Hinkle. i
—
BASEBALL AT A GLANCE
TI St. | Cleveland
Pytiak. 0
land Lopez,
(Committee, Mr. Cummings said that the inquiry is still under way, 020 000 000-2 9%
° 200 100 00x—3 10 3 “Such a statement is erroneous Johnson and Baker: Fisher ald was never made by any official Losing pitcher, Lisenbee, {of the Department of Justice,” he said. “The story was immediately
AT COLUMBUS SATURDAY
us
INTRODUCED CRAWL |
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 12 (NEA). {fortunately the denial, if it has Peter Jackson, who was fa- appeared in the press at all, has mous as a swimmer before he be- not been widely carried. came a boxer and who fought a 61l-round draw with Jim Corbett, in- no announcement concerning the troduced the Australian crawl to investigation in Jersey City has been {American swimmers, {made by the Department of Justice: me second, the investigation is still in progress; and third, no decision has consequently been reached on the question whether there have been violations of Federal criminal statutes.”
ELKHART COMPANY FILES PATENT WRIT
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 12 (U. P.). (First Game) —A bill of complaint, alleging Louis «...ooo...00 000 010 010-2 5 0 patent infringement, was filed 01 112 00x—6 13 © H. Mills, Cox and T. Heath; Feller ana | 2821NSt the Stackpole Carbon Co. Hemsley. of St. Marys, Pa. in U. S. District , | Court today by the Chicago Tele1 phone Supply Co. of Elkhart, Ind. and| The complaint alleged that the | Stackpole company was manufacNew, Tork . 208 ood ote—3 Wd Jlicting and selling an electrical conChandler and Dickey: Krakauskas and | $4 BY Jou which embodied certain Grand patented improvements which heoh Sw o/longed to the Elkhart company. L308 122 OIx—12 19 3{Ihe Sox was asked to compel the _Buxton, Thomas and|Stackpole company to account for Wilson and Peacock. |q)) profits from sale of the device and to asssess damages as high as |three times the amount of the asssessed profits.
WARRICK COUNTY CLUB PICNIC SET
Bronniva oO i 4 ul The fourth annual picnic of the New York oo 000 000 000— 0 2 Warrick County Club, IndianapoHamlin and Campbell: Wittig, Lohrman, lis, Will be held Sunday at the home W. Brown and Danning. of Judge and Mrs. Wilfred BradCincinnati on oan a0 4 1 shaw, 1125 W. 36th St. Committee cago ‘ « X= chairmen for the event Phili ! a 1e event are 1p Derringer and Lombardi; Lee and O'Dea. 17,4; Jr program; Howard Taylor, Pittsburgh «...ooooen 201 000 001— 4 12 2 membership; Mrs. Margaret FrahSt. Louis 000 300 2x— 8 11 03,0) refreshme ; ; s nts, and Dassel JohnTobin, d; P. Dean an ; ? globin, Bauers and Tod an andlson, registration, .
AMERICAN LEAGUE (First Game) Chicago ........ 100 000 — 1 9 0 Detroit . 203 011 12x—10 18 0 Lyons, Boyles and Tresh: Gill and York. (Second Game) 0on2 106 0-3 9 . 003 020 0Ox—3 7 Whitehead and Rensa: CoffLawson, FEisenstat and York.
Chicago .... Detroit Rigner, man,
0 0
(Second Game)
L100 00 3004 000 201 00-3
Sullivan: Harder
St. Louis .. Cleveland
Van Atta
8 and
Philadelphia Boston ..
Caster. Gumpert, Wagner; Heving. NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) . 000 002 000— 3 . 160 002 11x—11 18 1 Errickson, Shoffner, Reis Sutcliffe; Muleahy and Davis,
BOStOm oto oon 21 5 Philadelphia .. 1} MacFadden, Clark. { (Second Game) \ Boston 000 002 100— 3 11 i) Philadelphia 1 Hutchinson, | er and Atwoo |
. 000 000 i10— 2 8 Errickson and Lopez; Butchd.
i
3
{denied by the Department, but un-|
“I state unequivocally, first, that!
| Post 34 of the American Legion rjjjnojs, North Carolina, Louisiana,
was named for Mrs. Kennington's [son Robert, who lost his life in ithe World War. She is a charter member of the post auxiliary and past state parliamentarian for the state auxiliary. She also is a charmember of the Indiana Women's Republican Club and past |president of the Seventh District | Federation of Clubs.
[ter
CCC HERE TO STAY LONG TIME. BELIEF
Greater national income | prosperity, better national and more interest in civic and national affairs is the result of proper selection of Civilian Conservation Corps enrollees, James J. McEntee, acting director of the CCC, said today. Mr. McEntee spoke before the CCC State Selecting Agency Conference of the Fifth and Sixth Corps at a luncheon at the Severin Hotel. He said he thought the CCC is here to stay for many years. “So long as youth in substantial numbers continues to reach the working age without employment and so long as there is needed conservation work to be done on forest, park and farm, the country cannot afford to scrap the CCC program.”
PLANS SINGING CAREER
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 12 (U. P.).— Movie producer Hal Roach's daughter, Margaret, will begin a singing career in a Hollywood club tonight against her parents’ will. Miss Roach, a student under the same tutor who taught Jeanette MacDonald, Allan Jones and Irene Dunne, will sing swing songs and
| operatic arias in French at the La! | Conga Club. She declined her fa-
| ther's film offers.
KINNEY’S
for SHOES
138 E. WASHINGTON ST.
| Tennessee, Virginia and West | Virginia.
riding a bicycle at W. Morris St. | and the Belt Railroad. Maxey was treated at City Hospital for lacera- | tions.
fontaine St., a pedestrian, was
‘WIFE OF CONDUCTOR FOUND DEAD IN HOME treated at City Hospital after being i — struck yesterday at Capitol Ave. and
Mrs. Blanch Fitch, 49, of 52 N.|North St. by a car driven by Glen
Chester Ave., was found dead a 39, of 3614 N. Capitol Ave. her home today.
A verdict of cui- |
{cide was returned by Dr. Hugh x. Arrange Funeral Thatcher, deputy coroner. For Auto Victim
Riley Palmer, 30, of 1802 Belle-|
HAAG Stores 98¢
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[ The body was found by Mrs.
|
and Catherine Baker, 28, of 48 N. Chest-| Funeral arrangements were comhealth |er Ave, a neighbor, and Harold pleted today for Floyd Wright, 26,
|Stenger, 2481 Mansfield Ave., and [Robert E. Brodie, 2022 Laurel St, |Gas Co. employees. | Mrs. Fitch, who had been ill,
[apparently tried to commit suicide
{by filling the house with gas, Dr.|
Thatcher said, but failed. She |then drank chloroform, the deputy coroner said: Mrs. Fitch was the wife of Harry |C. Fitch, 53, Illinois Central Rail(road conductor. | Beside her husband, Mrs. is survived by a daughter, |Paul E. Dorsey.
Fitch Mrs.
PROTEST NEW TAVERN
The Marion County Liquor Board today took under advisement a petition for a liquor permit for a tavern at 10th and LaSalle Sts., after a remonstrance was filed by 95 persons living near there.
SALE!
SUITS
Men’s Out-of-Pawn All Sizes
253
FAIRBANKS Jewelry & Loan Co. 213 Wash. St. Opposite Court House
Men's and Women’s
CLOTHING
ON EASY CREDIT
| Askin & Marine Co. 127 W. WASHINGTON ST.
{ MONTICELLO, Sept. 12 (U. P.).—| Wif Wi F i |Idaville farmhand injured hall A iti P . collided with a truck driven by] rom eur IS an quickly relieves i pain of neuritis, rheus | matism, sciatica, lumbago and neuralgia. Woman Fatally Hurt : formula——developed by a physician, contains no opiates or narcotics. Why suffer a singla’ LAFAYETTE, Sept. 12 (U. P.).—| gist tell you about this proven Nurito, that Mrs. James E. Person, 76, of near eases torturing pain and enables you to work; : So confident are we that you'll get satisfac auto crash a mile and a half north on" we make this i Sia of Pyrmont in Carrol County yes- , = rola g uaa not relieve the pain to your satisfaction, yous . here. money will be refunded. Try Nurite today.
yesterday when his automobile |Charles McCauley, 22, of St. Bernice.| Thousands have discovered that NURITO: Strange as it may seem, this quick-actings North of Pyrmont hour of unnecessary pain? Let your druge Mulberry, was injured fatally in an in peace. Delay won't relieve your suffering. that if the very first three doses of Nurito dm terday. She died at Home Hospital i. Te —
“For Convenient Transportation, You Can’t Beat the Trolleys
INDIANAPOLIS RAILWAYS
en ——— —
ai
had
