Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 September 1938 — Page 14
me
~~
= By Eddie Ash
MACK RAT
GOOD FOR {
ES YANKEES GREATEST
MORE YEARS
OR 5
=
THE New York Yankees, 1 the greatest club of histc the 75-year-old Connie Mack. Co from a man League with
ming
wh
938 model, have been termed ry by no less authority than
plaved in the National
0
such strong clubs as Anson's old Chicago
White Stockings and the Baltimore Orioles and who man-
aged some of the greates the Athletic World's Champi
ala +1 aisS0 ine Iv:
years in
ha
1930 and 1931, this perha ywded the New York Amer
“Wh
ps
a C( od en these Yankees a
3
y . haat § yéat 1
ha ’» nem,
MN
il
wonderful tea hev've got brilliant individ thev're smart, toc
» 5
Ia . £ 5 mm ne n hing new for m
e telling you the prese he histor)
e 1886 and t
Then Connie gave expres 12 concern to his fellow ks 4 fil
tinction of . He was in
enn Frankie Frisc
uld not be re-engaged which had approxi i Cuban was born
the
time
Gonzalez ¢ its gave h. .. After
x thi
ip Mike,
time me,
Louis
a veal
d mn
the Cub
he Cards
T CcoaC As Coa
DY ROSAR pennant inners, fir ighest batting averages— and suspensions, ing receiver took se All-Star
B
said Mack In
. 1 11 01 baseball.
nere
Am
mee more George Bun the 1921 season, he dropped down to St. Paul,
mn later, a
s. M
shed
203-
t teams in the American League,
1910, 1911 and 1913,
ong ol
only club ever to win over 100 victories three
succession, the Athletic pennant-winners of 1
929, is the highest praise ever ican Leaguers. re in shape, no club in the recent Interview. wonderful club. ual stars and perfect team
a sy 4 really )
~
Ny =
5 to sav a thing like this, but nt Yankees are the greatest been in the major
never has been anything
['ve
to an
Sion al
opinion that may erican League club owners, to 20 on and win pennants TOW,
to stop them. Somebody
now I don't see from
5 =
of the St. Louis Cardinals n. Mike Gonzalez, nevert Cuban ever to pilot a leader pro tem of the med by President Sam i was released and paid lv three weeks to go. in Havana, Sept. 24, as a catcher in the majors with the Boston Nan he joined the Cincinth Wingo deal and to New York
stal h was
fry (
service was Seaso > Ivy ; relea
aseq
= = 2
member of the Reds
and $100.000 to obtain
became becam
1d later was turned over to deal for Milton Stock, with Howard Freigau,
1323. a1 1924
a long Lis
to Minneapolis for a acted as Columbus coach
Frisch in 1934
on
Ke oT ont 1331
a In Ae
in
2 »
ed the Indianapolis Indians In 1913 and '14 will be 70 rleroi. Pa.. and is reportwas Whoa Bill names ‘ He calls Pocket . ago boy, for a fullback away idered one of
had
Elmira,
erna
J al maiilonai
Bears, Int season with one of Ball, but between been an entirely happy sea-
Newark the regular Or aaniTe
ganizea
he 12 positions on the Internalected by the sports writers of
Indianapolis Times Sports
Harry
PAGE 14
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1938
up a few
grass cour of fine clay courts if they'll only pull
More or Less
Hopman, Australian Davis
Cup captain, said of the Germantown
te: “They have the makings
weeds.”
MORELAND, FISCHER FALL IN GOLF UPSETS |
Medalist Is Eliminated
By Harbert
Young Turnesa Takes Out a Former Champ: Goodman In Top Form.
BY HARRY FERGUSON United Press Sports Editor OAKMONT, Pa. Sept. 15.—The | bigger they are the harder they fall, |so today two of the great ones of (amateur golf were knocked out of the National Championship with a | thud that G: | vay to downtown Pittsburgh. Joh Fischer, Cincinnati, one of the hot favorites here, lost an sxtra-hole match to Willie Turnesa, { Briar Cliff Manor, N. Y., and Mel- | vin Harbert, Clay, N. Y., defeated Gus Moreland, Peoria, Ill.. who won che medal in the qualifying round
nnv nny
and seemed to be on his way to
yreat things Turnesa and Fischer were all | square when they sank their putts n the 18th green and the pressure | was on them as they moved over to {the 19th hole for a sudden-death i play-off. Playing cautiously and { fighting every step of the way, they {halved the 19th with bogey fives, and trudged on the 20th. Both were out 220 yards with their drives and Turnesa took a No. 1 iron and dropped his ball three feet from the pin. 10 feet short against nd roiled Turnesa squatted on to line up
ropped it for
the
bevond green and d tory
his
Harbert Becomes Threat
through the rain in a lack shirt came a N. ¥.10
f the
n Clay, 'K horse of and 2 victory over Moreland of Peoria, Ill, e medalist in the ua rounds here. His was Melvin (Chick) Harbert. He got the vears ago when he played a round of with Chick Evans, age of 6. No one but Harbert would have given a nickel {or his chances against Moreland rt of the match, but the kid brushed his thick black hair out of his eyes and nul
name
x 1¢ g0il
at tl] % at the Sia
18 courageously.
on Goodman Is Hot Johnny Gocedman, defending his National championship, handed out the bad news to the rest of the field when he blazed the first nine in 34, three under par for that long, tough layout, J. E. French Jr, San Francisco. who had the bad luck to tangle
could be heard all the]
{ i
| i
Fischer's | and his| the back of} a foot and a half |
three-footer | a birdie and vic-
green | 23-year-old | become the! tournament | the |
two,
nickname Chick 17;
at the!
Plenty of Action When
|
Al Marschke, left, Southport end, hopes to catch
few as above when the Cardinals clash | tomorrow
shown
,B
with Cathedral. captained by Joe Fitzgerald, right, night at
SRR
They Clash “More Spirit!”
Injured Players Return to
Oh, for more of the Old Notre School's Irish!
| That's the wish of Joe Harmon, Sure the Irish have the Notre Dame colors and a
{of the Blue and Gold. | Notre Dame man for a mentor. Indeed, it's a very much Notre
'23 and "24. Adam Walsh when the Four Horsemen were riding to glory. “Why, when Rockne was up there,” he said, “the fellows would rather die than walk off the field {with the count against them. It's | some zip, pep and fight that I'm [trying to instill into the boys here.”
Seven Lettermen Return
Joe, who returned to the coaching line after an absence of five years, following his resignation as football tutor at St. Xavier's High School in Louisville, inherited seven lettermen from last year's eleven, coached by Joe Dienhart, now at St. Joseph's College. “While we won our first game at Marion last week, 13-0,” he said. ‘someone’s going to take a kicking when we play Southport out there tomorrow night. I have a hunch it's going to be us.” Seasoned Irish performers this vear include Capt. Joe Fitzgerald, George Dell, Salvador Calderon, Jim Head, Charley Metzger, Paul Moxley and Harry Caskey.
[ Ing. Caskey or Perry is likely to set the call tomorrow night at the other half. Calderon or Moxley is to do the signal barking. Who is to be fullback is a big question mark. Cletus Concannon is shelved by injuries and Tim McMahon is down with the flu, It looks like Francis McMahon, Tim's brother, or Dick O'Brien will be called upon to do (the plunging. | Bob Zaepfel or Bob Bowers is to js at left end, with Jack Miehaus it the other flank. Dell and Head
en Davis n (are to be at the tackles. Likely
starting guards are Bill Cronin and
Ott Hurrle. Jim Fitzgerald is to be Early Battle ‘ 2 |
in the pivot position. Joe Fitzgerald is to do the kicking. | Oh, for a Passer! “Passers? That's something 1 don't have,” moaned Coach Harmon. “I've got throwers. I mean they can throw the ball, but they zan't ‘hit’ a man. Their aim’s bad. |That means we play a running
Times Photos,
Roosevelt Stadium.
| Ben Davis High School is to open grid tomorrow eleven is
its second season night against Sheridan at Stout Stadium The scheduled for 7:30 o'clock. ; game.” f } ed Havilan yi 3 : » gn Red X lie : | The team weighs in at about 150 | training his candidates for three pounds. It will look a trifle small {weeks in preparation for the tilt.|against Southport.
|Last year, their (first football |
the game
has beer
in backfield aspirants include Al
the Giants won one|
|Joe played at South Bend in 1922. - He was sub center for the Irish
Fitz is doing the right halfback- |
Besides the likely starters, other | r-|
Joe Harmon
Cries to Irish Gridders
Southport Lineup for Game
Against Cathedral Tomorrow Night.
* By LEO DAUGHERTY
Dame spirit among Cathedral High
now in his first season as coach
Dame man they have for a mentor, Only two home games are on the bill. They are against [Elwood and North Side of Ft, Wayne. | And as Irish are without a home field it has not been decided wheres to play those games. Athletic department officials are dickering for the use of either Roosevelt Stadium at Southport, Perry Stadium or | Butler Bowl. | Joe Harmon spins his yarn about his team and invariably switches back to Notre Dame. | “Say, I haven't seen anything new since Rockne's days. They're all using the same old stuff.”
‘Southport Line ‘Regains Strength
| Coach A. E. Pitcher of the South= port Cardinals has new strength to send against the Cathedral Irish at | Roosevelt Stadium tomorrow night, { The team which opened the season last week with a 25-12 victory lover Seymour will be bolstered by the return to the lineup of Capt. | Charley Wilson, quarterback, and Ralph Dailey, guard. Ill effects of a spider bite kept Wilson out of action in the opener, William Shimer, fullback, will be the only regular absent. A cracked collar pone has him on the side- | lines. | Starting with Wilson in the back= field are to be Ed Schienbein, {Johnny Williams and Harold Mil=ler. | Linemen, besides Dailey, probably will ba Al Marschke, Lester Tabor, Harold Coats, Fred Hoeltke, Don Davidson and Frank Sawyer. | With Cathedral followers swelle ing the crowd, the Southport athe letic office expects about 4500, Coach Pitcher expects a battle—but another victory.
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with the champion on one of his] hottest days, never recovered from that staggering first nine and lost| the match on the 16th green. Pat Abbott, a curly-haired movie extra from Altadena, in California, found the mist and mud of the East liking and came in with a
| competition, gerson, Larry Gerlach, Jim Sylves- | (and lost five games. ter, Bob Akin, John Lauch, Vic Mul- | { Sheridan has figured on the grid-|ler, Dick McAlly, Jack Noonan, Jack | {iron since 1898 and during the years | Reis and Don Potter. [since then has developed some of| Bidding for line service are Don | {the State's most outstanding play- Sweeney, Ed McNamara, Charles | lers. Last week they lost to the Williamson, Don Potter, Tom Scan- | | strong Frankfort squad. lon, Tom Welch, Joe Cantwell, Paul |§ | Coach Haviland has not decided Commons, John Morrison, Jim Lyn‘on the Ben Davis lineup for tomor- skey, Tom Rohyaus, Dick Dugan, | row night's tilt. The Stout Stadium | Art Foltzenlogal, Jim Moran, John is located one block south of Stout Welch, Bob Kiesel, Harry Strodtman, | Airport, at W. Raymond St. and | Jim Pappas and William Matthews. Holt Road. | Tackle George Dell is the giant ee of the squad, toting 210 pounds. Johnny Lauch, who would do some Park Team ‘Down ball carrying, is the tiniest. He goes ‘To Hard Drills Coach Lou Reichel's Park School
around with only 120 pounds. Southport is only one of eight leleven will encounter Howe Mili tough assignments still ahead of tary Academy's gridders Oct. 8 on the Park field at 2 p. m. The squad | has finished preliminary training fand is now practicing with full equipment. cs | Among the additions to the roster are Mike Keene, Scott Moxley and rial for new tackles, the post which! Bill Higgins. | was hit the hardest by graduation — -
. Butler Eves {last June. The two most likely | d contenders for these positions are| Grid Opener
two Indianapelis products, Joe! A field enough to
Dezelan and John Rabold | Dezelan is a 202-pound sophomore | tackler who has moved up rapidly] from last season's undefeated freshKeep Butler University gridmen from practicing yesterday as Coach Tony Hinkle whipped his players lengthy workout in
man squad and Rabold is a hefty] preparation for the season's lid-lifter
a. Newark. first base; Mickey Witek, Newark, shortstop; Carnegie, Buffalo, left field; Charlie Keller, Newark, right Ken Raffensberger, Rochester; } and Red Syracuse,
carsells : Mike ; Of
L = City, ) Newark
1 Jersey 11 May,
Out
SAVE
lie
Per 8 Gallon
arrett to his or two-up victory over James E. Fraser, Absecon, N. J. He had a mediocre 79, but Fraser took 80. Joseph Thompson, Hamilton, Canada, only foreigner to fight his way | § this far in the tournament, took an-| § other one of the hair-line victories | for which he is becoming famous] § when he defeated Walter Blevins, | Kansas City, one up on the 19th
green,
» =
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1al ball irculated a petition, tiations to get Ralph back harge of the 1939 team to Kentucky coionel, Ownie Bush, who will Louisville next year. iss the good fishing in Minnesota's
offer plenty of streams
\ INNEAPOLIS friends o 1; ved sensation at shortstop for Millers in
dent Mike Kelley to start
the ul
the Millers are dickering w
- O thet +I ot » = J 5 now ina the Boston Red
said tieup,
puisville
ith the Chicago Cubs for a
Sox have left them to take Sinks 8-Footer
A couple of boys from the Eastern Seaboard had a heart-stopping Watch when Dick Chapman, Green-
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Baseball at a Glance wich, Conn. met T. Suffern Tailer, } ; g Times rho. Westbury, N. Y. Chapman, squint- Capt. Charley Wilson is expected to start at quarterback for AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ing along the emerald roll of the Semifinal Plav-off. green, sent an eight-foot putt 1 i Pet gurgling into the cup to defeat 1 o 1.000 Tailer, 2 and 1 0 1 009
First Game) 1935 Shelbys G02 6M a—12 18 5 200 101 040— 9 13
Southport
St. Lewis 17th Philadelphia Macon and Bremer: Sivess, Lanning and \
Hallahan Clark,
Passeau, Davis,
Game)
190 810 10— 3 101 000 d0o— 2 3
Hollingsworth
Kansas City —
Edwi CiRGRIey PY Eo i 3 LAawWin Kingsley. 23-vear-o Indianapolis n $ ! 3-vear-old
copper ore sampler from Magna, Utah, marched ahead with a 4 and | 3 victory over Wilfred Crossley of | Dedham. Mepss Chris Brinke, Birmingham, Mich. | staggered around the first nine with | a weak 42 but his opponent, Frank Strafaci, Great Neck, N. Y., was having a bad time, too. Brinke won and 2 "Black Wednesday’ matches elimnated both Hoosiers who had quali-
a
Second Sy 6 0
Louis Philadelphia 399 Cooper Atwood S30 Chicage Boston Root an Doll
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Fette, Hutchinson,
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viclories NeCOSSary a win in
Se winners meet for
d Hartnett
and Lopes not
soft was
TEE
nn 257-pound junior who was ineligible | last year. | Saturday has aside by} Hinkle for the annual varsity-fresh-man game, Approximately 45 can-|
AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game) 201 AMR WMI. f TT Nn oN? BON M0— 3 11} Thomas and Waener: Newsom and Sull.
AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww, 1.
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Philadeinhia
St. Leuis set
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New York through a
Boston a fied. Bill
-
Cleveland Detroit Washington
-
33 13 17
Chicago Philadelphia 5 wt {3
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
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Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati New York Boston St. Louis Brooklyn Philadelphia
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AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Playoff Games)
INDIANAPOLIS at Kansas City. St. Paul at Milwaukee,
AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Detroit. Josten at Cleveland (2).
Washington at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Chicago 2}.
NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at New York, Only game scheduled.
\ g rey I YESTERDAY'S RESULTS NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Gam?) . 108 000 10— 2 100 120 20x— § Meer, Barrett and Lewmbardi Fitzsimmons and Shea (Second Game) 220 930 100— % 12 0 No 190 O01 — § 9 2
and Lombardi: Frankogers and Campbell
Cincinnati Brooklyn Vander Hershberger;
Cincinnati Brooklivn Walters, Weaver house, Posedel, L.
(First Game) 000 000 00— 9 Y 0 x— 3180
Todd; Schu-
Ruisvuris 200 190 Blanton, M. Brown and macher and Danning (Second Game) Mi— 3 10
tizdbureh 4. ey York t 1ix—190 14
ew Yo > A Danning,
000 200 170 000 4
Swift and Berres; Gumbert and
Philadelphia at St. Lownie postponed: ran
second game
321 OQ M01— 2 18 8 000 000 2— 2 a o
Rridges, Laws
Boston Detroit Heving and Peacock Rogalski and Yark
on
Nea York at Cleveland: rain
Washington at Chicags: rain
ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF 102 400 000— 3 11 1 320 208 20x— 9 11 1}
Reis. Blacholder. Winegarner and Becker; Phelps, Klaerner, Chelini and Silvesiri
AMERICAN
Milwavkee St. Paul
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Batting
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HOOD
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Runs Batted In i Son Y inkees 1iSCTS ors
trainer
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announced
rn 0 today that attempt would be made by the worlds trotting champion until Saturday because of the slow track at the Indiana State Fair Grounds. Whether or not a trial would be made then would depend y upon the weather, he
! er Greyhon
recora
no
a
Reed of Indianapolis lost his first-round match to Melvin Harbert of Syracuse, N. Y.. 3 and 2 Jimmy of New Albany marched through Bud Rrownell of D2] Monte, Cal. 4 and 3. but lost his second match to James Fraser of Atlantic City. 4 and 2 | Results of today's matches in the tournament s third round of match piay
Sentt
Johnny James French.
Goodman, defeated
{ and 2,
Omaha, San Francisco, Pat Abbett, Altadena, Cal. James Fraser, Absecon, N. J, 2 up. Dick Chapman, Greenwich, Conn... defeated T. Suffern Tailer, Westbury, N. Y., 2 and 1, Joseph Thompson, defeated Walter up, 19 holes, Chris RBrinke, Birmingham, Mich., defeated Frank Strafaci, Great Neck, N. Y., 3 and 2 Edwin Kingsley,
Hamilton, Blevins, Kansas
Ontario, City, 1
Magna, Utah, defeated Wilfred Crossley, Dedham, Mass, 4 and 3. Melvin Harbert, Clay, N. Y., Gus Moreland, Peoria, Ill, 3 and 2. Willie Turnesa, Briar Cliff Manor, N. Y., defeated Johnny Fischer, Cincinnati, one up, 20 holes.
GENTLEMAN EARLY BIRDS Ct tenary
College Gentlemen, avoids
defeated |
defeated
irtis Parker, coach of the Cen- |
intense heat by having his gridders
report for practice at 6 a. m.
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In an attempt to strengthen his line and field, Hinkle has effected changes. Captain Charles Broderick who has been plaving the quarterback position eaul for th t vear has heen a nn. = reguiariy for the past year has bf F l u shifted to the fullback berth which Av'os Clothing ara fe » By . a . . FR Fs eradueil] Jewry + Watdhes jon of last year's cap ‘ ‘7 . ; | ypewriters ° Dia-
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Bill Kreag, a junior from Kokomo, is the leading contender for Broderick's new position. The brunt of the signal calling duties is now left open to Channing Vosloh, senior lettermen; Bob Connor, junior, and Henry Abts, a sophomore. | Hinkle has been eyeing his mate-}
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