Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1939 — Page 6
By
LUKE APPLING ON WAY : BACK : 2 8 a )
SOX STAR SHAKES OFF INJURY
~
UKE APPLING, former American League batting EE champion, hopes to accomplish a comeback”in.a big way with the Chicago White Sox this season... , He ~ missed much of last year’s play because of :. broken ankle received in spring training and had to favor his injury during the closing weeks of the campaign. In other words, the crack shortstop never actually hit
his stride in 1938 and this
fact took a lot away from Jimmy Dykes’ Alabaster Hose. . . . Reports from the Pasadena camp indicate Appling has forgotten all about the injury of a year ago except when someone reminds him of it when he puts a little extra energy into the training routine. Luke batted .317 in 1937 and in the extra base hit department collected 42 doubles, eight triples and four homers, . . . He also pilfered 18 bases and played a fine game in the field and his work was a factor in the team’s drive to third place in the American League, three games behind the second place Tigers. = Appling toppled all big league hitters in 1936 by finishing the year with an average of 388... . Paul Waner, Pittsburgh, won the National League crown that season with a mark of ..373. Luke is 30 years old and probably is good for several more seasons in big time competition if the 1938 injury does not slow his stride in the shortfield and on the paths. Appling was the first member of a Chicago American League club ever to win the batting crown and he was the first shortstop ever to win the championship of the junior major circuit. - On Sept. 23, 1936, Luke gained ; | a firm hold on the title by belting Luke Appling a home run, double and two singles at Cleveland. . . . That gave him the lead over Earl Averill of the opposing team, who was his closest pursuer in the race. ., . . Luke clung to the margin in the closing games and Averil finished 10 points back at .378. The White Sox finished third in the 1936 race, just three percentage points behind the runnerup Tigers and in a virtual tie with Washington. . . . The standings: Detroit, .539; Chicago, 5364; Washington, .5359. t 4 s ” ” 2 &
NDIANAPOLIS K:uutskys professional basketball team closed its Nationa! League schedule in Cleveland the othér night and finished the campaign with 14 victories and 13 setbacks . .. A fair enough record ior a team's first venture in fast company. If there’s any kind of a plaque floating around loose just bring it in and hana it over to Frank Baird. . . . He was the Kautskys’ veteran hardwood pastimer and, was always in there up td the hilt. The former Butler University player and Broad Ripple High School cvach rrought down the house at Cleveland in the team’s last league fracas by sinking 15 field goals and three frora the charity line .. Total, 33, for a 192w individual high in the loop. : And he never ran out of gas ... He tallied 15 points in the first half and 18 in the second . .. Step up, Frank, and take a bow. TN ” & = 8 HE ALL-EUROPEAN amateur boxing tournament is to be held at Dublin, Ireland, April 19 to 22... and the eighi-man squad that wiil fight Chicago's Golden Gloves winners in Chicago Stadium May 12 will come out of this competition. Antonio Kolezynski, Poland's welterweight champion, who flattened Jimmy O'Malley of Chicago in the 1938 International Golden Gloves bouts, i3 still an amateur and probably will make another trip to America . .. His kayo victory over O'Malley was a “terrific” upset. . Herbert Nurnberg, German amateur lightweight chzmpion, who was outpoirtied by Milton Bess, Indianapolis, in the Internationals last year, still is competing in the European simon pur: ranks. eg 5 = 2 8 =
W GABBY HARTNETT can perform behind the plate ia 100 games
this seasen, the Cubs’ manager will set a new major league record,
because he will have caught 100 or more games in 13 seasons, something no big league backstop has done. At present the portly pilot is joint holder of the record with Ray (Cracker) Schalk, the Indianapolis manager, who accomplished the teat with the White Sox, beginning in 1913. Schalk caught over 100 [games in 12 seasons. 11 consecutively, and in 192 wcrked behind the dish in 151 games.
Joe Williams—
(CORAL GABLES, Fla., March 11.—It probably will be Don Meade up on another Bradley horse in the Kentucky Derby this year. | That’s what George Odom, the trainer, tells your jitterbugging correspondent.
Odom, an old jockey himself and one of the most re-
spected men on the turf, is the party who risked public and official censure by deciding to give the black sheep of
the saddle a chance to come back. : “Yes, I look for Meade to ride Benefactor in the Derby,” says Odom¢ “And he might win with him, too. Benefactor is & lot of
horse.” Meade won a Derby for Col. E. R. Bradley, the old gambling man, with Broker's Tip in 1933. This was the Derby which produced boisterous dramaiics in the stretch. ; ames are 2 “2 os . 2 ” »
OCKEY FISHER was up on Head Play and was pulling away from the Bradley colt in the final sixteenth. Meade reached out and seized the saddle cloth on Head Play. Fisher retaliated hy boffing him across. the beak with his whip. " Fisher was an apprentice rider. It was Meade’s strategy to nettle Fisher and get his mind off his mount. The strategy worked. In the svlit second that Fisher had turned to swing his whip Meade urged Broker's Tip to the front for a whisker win. Meade will ride in the Derby May 6, even if it means delaying his application for reinstatement in New York. Although there are still cissenting opinions, the popular belief down here seems to be Meade will be accepted back in the fold by the jockey club One of the dissenters is a party high in racing society and he . told us he dcubted if Meade would even apply for a license to ride in New York; indeed, he intimated very strongly that both Meade and Odom had been strongly advised against seeking reinstaternent. ” ” ” 8 ” ” E asked Odom about this today and he said it was all news to him. “I certainly intend to ask for his reinstatement,” he said, “and furthermore, I have high hopes that it will be granted.” Admitting that venality should not be judged on a besis of geography, Odom nevertheless thinks the fact that Meade’s offenses were committed in Florida and later forgiven by Florida should be " taken into consideration by the persons who will sit in judgment on his moral fitness to ride in New York. : “pl stake my life on the proposition that this boy will never go wrong again,” said @dom who has always been an enthusiastic admirer of Meade’s riding ability. We asked Odom how he happened to give Meade a chance to ride in the face of the ugly scandal that had made him an untouchable in racing. . 2 2 = 2 x “@HORTLY after he regained his standing down here,” said Odom, “the boy came to me and asked if our stable could use a jockey. I suppese he came to me first because he knew I had always praised his horsemanship. “Living under a cloud for three years had made a marked change in him. Where in the past he had been cocky, self-reliant and sharptongued, he was a. meek, pasty-faced, sad-eyed youngster. Eis mane ner and apearance stirred your pity. : «Of course I know you can ride’” I began— ; “Meade broke in, a strange light in his eyes, and said: : « ‘Mr. Odom, I'm not asking for any sympathy. I did wrong and I _ deserved what I got. Give me a chance and if I don’t make zood for you in every respect I'll cut off my right arm.’ When he said that he held his right arm and it trembled and there were tears in his =yes. So I said, ‘Okay, you're hired.” { : ” » ; 8 5 =» : EADE had heen out of the saddle for three years. A recondition--ing job had to be done. Odom had him out on the golf links every day, sent him on long hikes, bought a football and ‘made him play with his boy, George Jr. all this, in addition to long hours of routine work at the training track. . When Meade came to Florida he was in better condition then he had ever been. This and the relieved state of his mind combined to maké him the sensation of the saddle. (And, of course, the important fact that he was trying to win with every mount was not exacily a ‘handicap to his success.) rv So what
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NEW YORK. March 11 [U. P.).—Pedro
Montanez, campaigning for a shot at Henry
PAGE 6
Entry List Is Largest Since | 1934
Noted Absentees ' Include Ciencia, Eight Thirty And Volitant.
LOUISVILLE, Ky., March 11 (U. P.).—It costs only $25 to nominate a horse for the Kentucky Derby: so it
name of almost every 3-year-cld that can carry a rider among the list of 115 eligibles announced for the 65th running of the $50,000 added Blue Grass classic at Churchill Downs on May 6. With only a few exceptions, the list contains all the leading moneywinning 2-year-olds of 1938 and it is the largest group to be named since Cavalcade was the lucky one of 124 in 1934. Somewhere among the 92 colts, 17 geldings and six fillies may be another War Admiral, Flying ‘Ebony or Twenty Grand. But if so, the name won’t be known until after the owners of ihe few starters drop
Kitty and send their ct.arges winging around the mile and a quarter strip. But, for the time being, the Ilo. 1 candidate for racing immortality this year is a chestnut colt answering to the name of El Chico and owned by William Ziegler Jr., of New York. : Simultaneous with release of the entry list El Chico, undefeated in seven starts as a 2-year-old, was made a 4-1 favorite in the winter books. And most of the racing boys will tell you that the odds against a horse even starting in the Derby are 20-1.
Earnings of $84,000
El Chico's unbroken record of seven, victories includes triumphs in the Youthful Stakes at Jamaica, the Dover Stakes at Delaware. the Great American and Junior Champion Stakes at Aqueduct and the U. S. Hotel, -the Special, and the Hopeful Stakes at Saratoga. He topped the 2-year-olds with earnings of $84,100. El Chico is ky John P. Grier out of La Chica. Others in his stable nominated were Our Mat, Substantial and Time Sheet. Conspicuous among the absentees for the Derby are Ciencia, winner of the $50,000 Santa Anita Derby last month; George D. Widener’s Eight Thirty; Saratoga stable’s Volitant and Warren Wright's Beau James. This apparent lapse was not surprising because their owners had indicated they would not be entered before nominations closed on Feb. 15. / Mrs. Ethel V. Mars’ Milky Way farm led in total nominations with seven—Up the Creek, Giles County, Magic Key, Sports Writer, On Location, Rule All and No Competition. William Woodward's Belair stud, winners of the 1930 Derby with Galland Fox and 1925 with. Omaha, named six—Johnstown, Foxlane, Challenge, Flarion, Thellusson and Joharie.
Five From Greentree
Mrs. Payne Whitney's Greentree stable, whose Twenty Grand set the track record of 2:01 4-5 in 1931, has five eligibles, Equilibrium, Hash, One by One, Roll and Toss, and Third Degree. R. A. Kleberg’s King ranch, owner of Ciencia, nominated Brazado, Equestrian and Drawstraws. Valdina farm, owned by E. F. Woodward of Houston, Tex., hamed but one candidate—Viscounty—as compared to its usually large list in former years. The number of geldings entered was unusually large because only seven of them have ever won—Vagrant in 1876, the year after the Derby began; Apollo, in 1882; Joe Cotton, 1885; Macbeth, 1888; Old Rosebud, 1914; Exterminator, 1918, and Clyde Van Dusen, 1929. Only one filly—Regret in 1915— ever wen the Derby, so even six female entries for this year’s race was considered flattering. There was no outstanding gelding among ‘last year’s runuers but two lillies ncluded in today’s ¢ntries raced with considerable success. They were Inscoelda, acclaimed the best juve= nile of her sex, and Smart Crack, the runnerup. :
Don Trims Perry; Move to Boston
NEW YORK, March 11 (U. P.).— Donald Budge and Fred Perry movad to Boston today for the second stop on their transcontinental tennis
ur. Budge, to the surprise of no one, was one up after a straight set 6-1, 6-3, 6-0 victory in the inaugural match in the semi-privacy of Madison Square Garden last night. It had been billed as a “shooting match.” Unfortunately for the promoters, the feud did not break out on the court. And the slim crowd of about 8000, which paid $14,000 seemed disappointed. Budge was the master all the way, licking Perry even more handsomely than he did Ellsworth Vines in January in his first match as a professional.
Indiana Favored
In Wrestling Meet
CHICAGO, March 11 (U. P)— Qualifying men for the finals in six of eight weight divisions, Indiana
became a strong favorite today to
win the Big Ten wrestling championship. : Finals were scheduled late today. Indiana placed men in the final% of every division but the 145-pound and heavyweight class. Minnesota, was second among the qualifiers with s had two each, )
is the Jockey Club going to do about the repentant young
wasn’t surprising today to find the |
a $500 starting fee into the Derby | -
SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1939
Roll and Toss
Armsirong's welterweight title, scored a five-
round technical knockout over Jackie (Kid) Berg of England last night.
game.
at Indianapolis next Saturday?
The only thing certain was a packed house with Anderson fans
‘|cherishing more tickets than root-
ers from the other three towns represented. ; The influx of visiting cheering sections, with their tonsils primed for some loud and sustained exertion, began. early. They began practice. sessions on the streets hours before game time, ‘Adding to the din were tooting horns and whistles and the sharp clang of cowbells, cowbells seemingly having become the most important weapon of basketball spectators. 0 Flags and pennants waved — sometimes in the eyes of those concerned with routine business mat-
k¢: |ters and unconcerned about basket-
ea RDO
Johnstown
L. S. Pratt Is
Porter's Mite ” J 2
Kentucky Derby
Gala Hour Get Off
Affair . American Byrd Ariel Toy Atatime Avesta
Benefactor Black Bun Blue Trace Book Plate Boston Lad Bostwar Brazado Briery Buddy Rogers Buffalo Bill Busy Man
Calexico Capulet Challedon Challenge Chief Onaway Chip In Counterpoise
Dark Watch ° Decatur Detector Done Gone Drawstraws
Guyencourt
Hants * Hash
Hysterical
Impound Inscoelda Invader
Jay Heart | Jay S. Joharie Johnstown Joy Boy
Lightspur Lostagal
Magic Key
Mordecai Nijinsky
Easy Mon Ebonito El Chico Equestrian Equilibrium
False Lashes Fern Creek Flarion Float Away Foxlane
© Opelika Our Daniel Our Mat
Play Pence
Race Riot Rule All
Tomorrow’s schedule is the EmRoe tournament at the Hoosier Athletic Club: 1:00 Indianapolis. Aces vs. Hoosier A. C.
Girls (preliminary). 2:00—Eastside Dairy of Anderson Hoosier A. C.
3:00—Greensburg Millionaires vs. Davis
Dairy of -Anderson. 4:00—Stewart-Warner vs. Guide Lamp of Anderso!
3:00—Forse All-Stars of Anderson vs. Lloyd’s Laundry of Franklin. The finals will be played Sunday, March 19.
The 22d annual City basketball tournament will continue tonight and the Dearborn Sunday tourney goes into the finals tomorrow afternoon and night. Tonight’s schedule for City tournament fives follows: 1:10—Castleton Aces vs. Ten Dee Cafe. 2:00—Mt. Jackson Tire Buddies vs. West
Side Cash Coal Juniors. 2:50--Drikold Refrigerators vs. Langs
arket. 3:40—DeGolyer Printers i Waverly Oilers nal). (tourney semi an Clip: Beer semi final). 8:00— (Tourney finals)—Winner 3:40 game vs. winner 4:30 game, Non-title games at the Dearborn
tomorrow follow:
7:00—Drikold Refrigerators vs. Hoosier State Commercial College. 8:00-Kin an A. A. vs. Schwi er-Cummins
5 O0Kols, 9:00—Stokely Vancamps vs. Langs Market. Four ight ||
games were played last n
in the City Tournament. Stewart-
| Warner took
Giles County Golden Clown
Heather Broom
Imperial Sir
Michigan Flyer
No Competition
October Ale One By One On Location
Porter’s Mite Prince Saxon
Roll and Toss
All-America
Local Pro Skeet Shot Wins Honor Second Time.
I. S. Pratt, local shotgun ace, has been honored by selection for the second straight year on the all-America skeet team. ‘The selections are made annudlly by James Robinson, skeet and trapshooting editor of Sports Afield, national sportsmen’s magazine. « Pratt was awarded the single pro position on the team which includes the nation’s leading men amateurs, the top-flight woman shooter and the highest ranking junior. The local man this year beat his former mark of breaking 9270 per cent of the 1150 registered all-bore skeet targets at which he shot. In commenting on Pratt's selection, Robinson writes: “The professionals of 1938 were above standard as was shown by their brilliant scores at the National and state shoots and other large tourneys. Pratt was our choice.”
Michigan and Bucks in Fight
LAFAYETTE, March 11 (U. P). —A Michigan-Ohio State dogfight for the Big Ten swimming title was in prospect today as natators prepared for the finals of the 29th Western Conference swimming meet here tonight. The Buckeyes, defending champions, together with Michigan were favored for the team title, and each led the qualifying rounds last night. The two teams met in dual meets twice this season and each battle ended in a 42-42 tie. Although the eight other Conference schools were represented with strong individual contestants, none of them carried enough power to threaten the dual supremacy of the Michigan and Ohio State teams. Records were threatened tonight in all events, and one conference record toppled last night when Waldemar Tomski, Michigan, set a mark of 23.1 seconds for the 50yard free style. The old record was 23.3 set last year by Ed Kirar, also of Michigan.Other outstanding swimmers were
El Chico 2 an»
Entries
Sabriel Say Judge Scotch Trap Shambles Sidney Carton Silent Witness Sir Marlboro Sleepy Tom Smart Trick Southland Gem Sports Writer Steel Heels Stockboard Substantial Syracuse
Tack Point .Technician Teddy Kerry Temulac Thellusson Third Degree Time Alone Timeful Time Sheet T. M. Dorsett Tobacco Road Total Eclipse Touch And Go
Up The Creek
Veyo Viscounty Volitation
Wapello Weisenheimer . Worthy Matron Xalapa Clown
Yale O’ Nine Yankee Lad
the Wolverines’ Capt. Tom Haynie, |
Amateur Basketball |
26. Yogan made the winning basket. Kingan Knights beat the Fashion Cleaners, 36-28 and in the nightcap R. C. Colas defeated the Indianapolis Flashe s, 40-29. ;
Results in the Senate Avenue Y. M. C. A. state tournament: ” All-Stars, 44: Muncie, 25. Richmond, : Wadesville, 29. Kingan, 52; Terre Haute, ‘Lfonight's schedule:
Princeton vs. Kingan. Bloomington vs. All-Stars. Link Belt vs. Columbus. Hershberger’s Fall Creek Athletics defeated the Yellow Jackets, 43 to 42. Bob King scored 23 points to pace the winners. The Athletics will play the Oaklandon Merchants at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the McCordsville gym.
Casting Winner Scoring 97 points, Ralph Carr wen the Indianapolis Casting Club’s weekly indoor tournament.
* Exacting . . . . . Watch Repairing ‘At LOWEST PRICES!
STANLEY JEWELRY 00
free-style distance man, and Curly Stanhope, Buckeye backstroke artist. : The Ohio State medley trio of Stanhope, Higgins and Quayle was expected to endanger the 2:59.8 record set by Michigan in 1936.
Butler Mermaids In Telegraphic Meet
- The telegraphic swimming meet between coeds of Butler and Ohio Universities this afternoon will be part of a national telegraphic meet. Times of the meet will be wired, between the two schools and also will be submitted with times of meets in which 61 national: colleges
ball, although the latter clan is very much in the minority among
: |the Anderson citizenry.
ANDERSON SCHEDULE 2 p. m.~Southport vs. New Win-
chester.
3 p. m.—Greenfield vs. Anderson. 8 p. m.—Afternoon winners meet in finals,
Regional play being more of a novelty than a habit with Southport, Greenfield and New Winchester, followers of those three teams were making a holiday of it. Savings accumulated during a sea-
'son of anticipation went into tick-
ets—if available — transportation, restaurant: groceries and other necessary expenditures. Sele The winner of tonight's game here will go to Indianapolis next Saturday to meet the winner of today’s Greencastle regional where Greencastle meets Pine Village and Waveland goes to bat against Clinton.
Pickers Take Holiday
The other two teams which will be at Indianapolis for the semifinals are the winners at Greensburg and Rushville. The four contestants at the former are Franklin vs. Waldron and Scottsburg vs. North Vernon. Rushville games are between Aurora and Connersville and Rushville and Osgood. Naturally, there was no way of stopping the pickers from picking and the better ones were picking Southport and Andersen as afternoon winners here today, but the pickers were inclined to take a holiday when it came to the possible Anderson-Southport fight. Southport is a rugged aggregation which Coach Buck Plunkitt has piloted to Marion County and Indianapolis sectional crowns and through a complete record of 19 victories against eight defeats.
Cards Have Lots of Drive
The Cardinals are a driving lot who concentrate on forcing their foes to long shots while they themselves prefer to bore in for short ones, with everyone on the squad being a potential point getter. Anderson has smoothness, a Chadd-conceived strategy which is unpredictable from game to game and above all else, the experience of the furious tempo of tournament play. Coach Amos Shelton’s New Winchester Warriors have copped 19 and dropped six while Shrimp Englehart’s Tigers’ scorecard shows 11 on the right side and 12 on the other. Officials for the basket scramble here are to be Gale Robinson and Orville Jones.
Wrestling Tourney ~ Is Set for March 18
The annudl Indiana - Kentucky A. A. U. wrestling tournament will be held March 18 at the Indianapolis Y. M. C. A, it was announced today. The tourney is open to amateur wrestlers of both states, and competition will be on both individual and team bases. March 15 is the deadline for entries.
115 Horses Nominated for Kentucky Derby High School Net Fans Crowd Anderson, City Of Hopes and Guesses
Dopesters Lean to Southport and Anderson in Afternoon Games, but Few Are Picking Final Winner; Packed Gym Is Only Thing Certain.
By LEO DAUGHERTY ‘Times Staff Writer ANDERSON, March: 11.—This city today was one of hopes and guesses— hopes of the four teams in the regional high school basketball tournament and guesses of the devoted and enthused followers of the
Who will cone through and advance to the four-team semifinals
In the final analysis all that counts is the action of the leather : sphere when i flirts with the hoop—it swishes through or it bounces out,
Park Five in Semifinals
Downs Defending Champion At Chicago Tourney.
Times Special . CHICAGO, March 11.—Park School of Indianapolis was to meet St. John’s Military Academy of
semifinal game of the Midwest Prep
Conference basketball tournament here.
ing back St. Bede's Academy of Peru, Ill, 34 to 25. | St. Bede's was defending champion. Breiner, with 14 points, led the Indianapolis team which never was headed. The victors held a 5-2 margin at the quarter, a 15-8 edge at the half and a 25-13 advantage at
[the end of the third stanza.
-J. Harrell, who collected 10 points, paced the losers. In other tourney games Howe Military Academy downed Onarga Military Academy, 36-32; Chicago Latin School turned back Shattuck School of Faribault, Minn., 46-33; Chicago's Morgan Park defeated Todd School of Woodstock, Ill., 39-29; Mooseheart downed Howard School .of Chicago, 34 to 25, and St. Johns of Delafield, Wis., defeated Lake Forest Academy, 56-44. :
Plan ‘Ump’s’ Cage Clinic
Indiana College Conference. basketball coaches plan to sponsor an official’s clinic in December in an: attempt to do away with some of the inconsistencies that occur in interpretation of various rules, The group held its annual spring meeting last night at the Hotel Antlers. At the same time the clinic / was discussed the coaches voted to retain the type of leather ball used this year. Their objection to the molded ball now used in Indiana high school games is that it is too lively.
the national rules committee on the rules covering the fumble at the beginning and ending of the dribble and the committing of deliberate fouls for the purpose of getting possession of the ball. Arrangements were made for the football meeting, Sept. 11 and Terre
state golf tournament, May 20.
out but withheld until nonconference contests are arranged. Roy Tillotson, Franklin College cage mentor and chairman of the basketball committee, was in charge of the meeting last night.
Meyer at Clinic
LAFAYETTE, March 11 (U. P.).— Lee (Dutch) Meyer, coach of the * undefeated Texas Christian eleven, will join Hoosier mentors in con=ducting the eighth annual Purdue Football Clinic to be held here March 31 through April 1.
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in A
and universities are competing. The local meet will start at 2 p. m.
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Delafield, Wis., this afternoon in a
Park advanced yesterday by turn- .
Clarification will be sought from.’
Haute was selected for the little
Conference schedules were made
ay i AEE Bea. anus
samt
ER ER
