Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1939 — Page 7
By Eddie Ash >
TOLEDO IS HAPPY, M’COY RETURNS 8 PLAYERS IN ONE SHIPMENT
LEDO, baseball hopes skyrocketed over the week-end as the Detroit Tigers cut the strings on eight pastimers and shipped them to the Mud Hens’ training camp. That's a lot of ivory in one load. . . . The big shot of the shipment is Benny McCoy, second sacker, who got plenty of ink in the American Association press last year by starring for the Hens. . Benay played a swell keystone and slapped out 190 hits, including 27 doubles, 16 triples and 17 home runs. . . . The stocky powerhouse batted .309. Others in the group turned over to Toledo are Frank Secory, outfielder, who batted .322 at Beaumont in 1938; Baron Poffenberger, pitcher, who helped the Hens part of last season with eight wins against only three losses; Dixie Parsons, catcher, who nudged the ball at a .320 clip at Beaumont; Boyd Perry, infielder, up from Beaumont; Joe Rogalski, John Tate and Lloyd Dietz, all righthanded hurlers who stand six feet or over. = » = 2 2 s MYLES THOMAS, former Indianapolis pitcher, is the oledo manager this year. . . . He served as coach under Fred Haney last season and was promoted after Fred took over the St. Louis Browns’ reins. Myles now believes his mound staff rates with the best in the league, for besides the newcomers, Toledo has Junie Barnes, Emmett Nelson, Pat McLaughlin, Jim Morris, Johnny Johnson, Jackie Reid and Eli Birmingham.
Where Fishing Is Made Easy
ISHING is a joy up around Escanaba, Mich. . . . Just toss in a dipnet and come up with a load of smelt. . . . No waiting for a bite or winding up a long day empty handed. . . . Truly, it’s the promised land for anglers in the spring. The spawning run of the silvery smelt is under way and elaborate preparations are being made for the fifth annual Escanaba Smelt Jamboree to be held April 13 to 15. . . . It attracts hundreds of visitors from the Middle West. With about a dozen streams within a 15-mile radius, Escanaba, in the upper peninsula of Michigan, has become widely known as a fresh-water smelt capital. . . . More than a thousand tons of the delicious silvery pan fishes were caught in that area last spring.
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In 1926, the Cleveland Americans dropped all but two Grapefruit League games and looked silly in the South . . . yet became a pennant threat and chased the Yankees home just two games behind. . . . Form displayed in exhibition games is often a gay deceiver . . . and that goes both ways. 2 2
2 ”
= eH # Some years ago Walter Holke, Indianapolis first sacker, came up from the South with just a couple of fluke hits to show for the training period. . . . Then found his batting eye on opening day and delivered the blows that won the game. ££ 8 = $s & &
Ted Lyons, White Sox, and Mel Ott, Giants, are the only major leaguers whose entire pro careers were spent with one club and without playing in the minors. = 2 2 2 s 2 Wrestling outdraws basketball by a wide margin at Oklahoma A. and M. College. . . . At one time the Aggies won 17 consecutive dual matches. 2 = = ® 2 'n
Nine races will make up the program for Kentucky Derby Day at Churchill Downs on May 6. . . . An extra race was added for the first time last season. . . . It affords the fans plenty of chances to wind up broke.
Joe Williams—
NEW YORK, April 3.—Putting one little word after another. . . . Top price for the battle of the boobery, otherwise the Louis-Galento shambles, will be $25. . . . “But we'll have a great number of cheap seats,” Mr. Mike Jacobs hastens to apologize. Sonja Henie may not tour again. Despite her protestations to the contrary she is beginning to lose her skill and speed. People who ought to know insist there are three or four gal skaters who can better her performances, especially in jumps. It will be a long time, however before anybody brings as much personality and grace to the ice. Headline carols: “Ed Wynn a Constant Nag.”...That’s the kind the horse players like. . . Ownie Bush who has been watching ball players for 40 vears says Pie Traynor was the best third baseman he ever saw, and Bush is an American Leaguer by origin and preference. Even if Hubbell has lost his screw ball, the Giants still have Bonura. . . . Jimmy Foxx who led the American League in hitting last season walked down the main street of a small Florida town the other night and nobody recoginzed him. . . . Observed a sports writer: “In his day Ruth could have walked down a back alley and even the sleepy tom cats would have hailed him.” Maybe Davey Day didn't fight like a 7-1 shot against Henry Armstrong, but the odds were accurate enough at that. Day didn’t win a round on his own, never hurt the double champion once and was finally
knocked out. We know bookies who will lay 7 to 1 all day on that kind of proposition.
Hollywood Likes ’Em Short
LOND Meegan Taylor, the world’s figure skating chamnion, gets in town today and we hear the 18-year-old British cutie is flirting with the films. Too bad she’s so tall. Hollywood likes em short. . . . Ten of the Pittsburgh starting lineup, including Goldberg, will play in the East All-Star football game next faii. Hitting fungoes to the Red Sox, Hughie Duffy became critical of one of the outfielders. “You looked like Mother Hubbard on that,” he sneered. Which prompted the ebullient Ted Williams to warn: “Don’t bring sex into this.” The playoff systoms in the big minors may be discontinued after this season. Neither the International I.eague nor the American Association wants it. The only thing that has kept it alive in recent years has been Newark with its runaway races, and this year Newark threatens to be just ancther ball club. It's just as well Jockey Don Meade isn’t a hall player; he wouldn't have a chance for reinstatement. There's no such thing as a second chance in haseball. Baseball argues it's the only way to hold public confidence and we agree. There is more rowdyism in hockey than any other sport. This is excused on the ground that hockey is a vigorous, man-to-man sport. Football is pretty vigorous, tro, but there is little rowdyism. Perhaps hockey can't be played without fist fights and stick swinging, but it still smacks of hoodlumism to us. Every time we see a fat ball piayer, like young Sears, Brown or Phelps, we know his motto is “Never say diet.” . . . Frank Ford, the cafe man who knows horses, thinks Ariel Toy is a good take-a-chance bet in the Kentucky Derby. He won the Arkansas Derby Saturday going away.
Clark Griffith Agrees With Farley
OU can always tell a modern Harvard man; he was born with a goldfish in his mouth. , , . Postmaster Jim Farley says that wasn’t a wild pitch Jack Chesbro threw in the last game of the 1904 season which cost the old Yankees (Highlanders) the pennant. He saw the game and insists Jack Kleinow, the catcher, should have held the ball. Clark Griffith says the same thing. He managed the club. All of which shows you how unreliable baseball history can be. Mickey Cochrane still is called the goat of the series in which Pepper Martin ran wild on the bases. The fact is he stole all those bases on the Athletics’ pitchers, none of whom knew how to hold a man
close to the bag. Most bases are stolen on the pitcher, anyway.
Bartell Latest Problem For Cubs’ X-Ray Experts
CHICAGO, April 3 (U. P) —The Chicago Cubs’ X-ray department, which labored overtime last summer to salvage seven National League victories from the ailing arm of Dizzy Dean, turned today to the mysterious miSery of Shortstop Dick Bartell, who may become 2a mole expensive invalid than Diz, himself. Bartell has been ordered home fo undergo examination by the local
medical ; for treatment of an silment his ankle.
ment is as much of a mystery as the so-called dead arm of Dean. It apparently hops from joint to joint. If he is unable to fill in at shortstop during a major portion of the campaign, the National League champions will be on the spot. Rookie Steve Mesner and the veteran Woody English are risky investments for a regular infield assignment, especially since the Cubs are chance-taking wil Phil Ca and Rip
2
PAGE 6
Tribe Nine Entertains Montreal
Newark Hands Redskins Their Second Grapefruit Loss, 7 to 4.
Times Special BARTOW, Fla., April 3.—With a record showing eight games won in 10 starts, the Indianapolis Indians were to battle the Montreal Royals of the International League here today to launch their final week in training camp. The Tribe has tive more tilts to play in Florida, four of them ct Bartow, and on Friday evening the Redskins will break camp and head
for Chattanooga to meet the Southern Association Lookouts in a three-
Indianapolis. This week's schedule in Florida: Montreal at Bartow, today. Buffalo at Bartow, tomorrow. Montreal at Lake Wales, Wednesday. Louisville at Bartow, Thursday. Columbus at Bartow, Friday. The Indians motored to Sebring yesterday and received their second setback in the Grapefruit League at the hands of the Newark Bears of the International loop. The score was 7 to 4. Blow 4-1 Lead
The Hoosiers held a 4-to-1 lead for four innings but in the fifth the Bears solved Jimmy Sharp's stuff, knocked him out of the box and continued the attack against Don French. The rally accounted for six
‘runs, and since the Indians were
goose-egged from the third through the ninth, that one “big” inning put Newark in possession of the game. In a previous clash between the teams at Bartow, the Indians won, 7 to 2. Against the Bears yesterday, the Indians made all of their markers in the third frame when Milton Galatzer belted a home run with two mates on the paths after one run scored on a walk, single and an error. The Bears really put on a show in the fifth by getting five hits and a walk. the hits including a triple by Metheny and home run by Judnich. Their first tally in the initial stanza came as a result of a walk, a single and infield out.
Bears Get 9 Hits
Metheny led the Bears’ nine-hit attack with three blows and for Indianapolis Galatzer and Lang paced a seven-hit assault with two apiece.
The Hoosiers made it two straight over Buffalo Saturday by beating the Bisons at Plant City, Tto 5. In that game Jesse Newman wailoped a homer with the bases loaded and batted in two additional runs with a single. He was held hitless yesterday. Yesterday's box ccore: INDIANAPOLIS R
9
COCO T DOD WWUN RW coonvoocoooNel co~ooocooaPol
COOOODO Depa a
xSorensen
34 4 for French in Ninth.
-3 0 -
Totals xBatted Witek, 2b
Kelleh Jud Kahl
e, Delsavio.
zCorbitt Branch, »n
OOOO Ds aera 0 tS a Ott et 0 SP OOM DD OP onoommocoool
-3 ° »
zBatted for Stanceu in fif Indianapolis 004 000 000—4 Newark 100 060 00x—7 Runs Batted In—Kelleher, Galatzer 3, Metheny 2. Gabrielson. Judnich 3. Threebast hit—Metheny. Home runs—Galatzer, Judnich. Stolen base—Thomas. Double plays—Stein to Newman to Wheeler: savio to Witek to Gabrielson. _ Left on base—Indianapolis, 7: Newark, 5. Base on balls—Off Stanceu 4. Sharp 4, Branch 4. Struck out—By Stanceu, 4. Sharp Branch 1. French 1. 4 innings: French, 4 in 5: Branch. 1 in 4. Winning pitcher—Stanceu. —Sharp Umpires—Burton Tirhe—2.01.
Three Sandlot Leagues Ready
*
h.
Losing
itcher and Waish.
The organization committee of the Indianapolis Amateur Baseball Association hopes to complete its
| roster of leagues at a meeting to-
night in the association offices, 29 S. Delaware St. Managers of teams who have not yet signed up for league berths are urged to be present. The following leagues and teams are organized and will draw up playing schedules: Industrial: - Falls City Hi-Brn, Lilly Varnish, Real Silk, Rockwood, Link Belt Dodge, Link Belt Ewart. Municipal: Union Printers, General Exterminators, Beanblossom, Empire Life and Accident Insurance Co., Ajax Beer, Stewart-warner. Big Six: Bowers Envelope, Standard Nut Margarine, K. E. M. B. A, Garfield A. C., Baird’s Service, Loyal Order of Moose.
Ten Park School Cagers Get Awards
Ten members of Park School's undefeated basketball team received awards for the past season's play. Those receiving special sweaters bearing the insignia, “Midwest Prep Tourney Champs,” on the arm included Capt. Bob Cusack, Bob Bohlen, Alder Breiner, Bud Pack, Bud Harrell and Sal Iozzo. Other lettermen were Arnold
Sanders, Bill Elder, Mike Keene and John Lathrop. arp “Cus! also
iy
game series before taking off for||
MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1939
Bob Loane has heen seeing lots of action in the Indianapolis Indians’ outfield in their spring training games in Florida. Loane was with Durham, N. C., last season, where he batted .321.
Drafted from the San Antonio,
didate for either -the first or second
ting average last season was .277.
victory over urday night.
Tex., club, Jesse Newman is a can-
-base post with the Tribe. His bat-
Wins Serbian Meet JOHNSTOWN, Pa., April 3 (U. P)— Weirton, W. Va,, today reigned as national Serbian basketball champions by virtue of its
a Duquesne, Pa., team here SatThe score was 58 to 44.
Indians Launch Final Week at Bartow Base
City Pinman
Leader in
Solo Event
Sharum Registers 743 for Top Spot in State Bowling Meet.
Several changes appeared in the standings, especially in the minor events divisions of the 30th annual state bowling tournament today as a result of activities in the third week of competition at the Pritchett
Alleys. Three groups nosed into the fiveman team money also over the week-end, but there were no changes in the leaders for the first few places. : Reid Sharum, an Indianapolis pinman, skyrocketed into first spot in individual scoring with a dazzling 743 to displace Herman Land, Kokomo, who held that spot with 699. Sharum showed games of 245, 219 and a lofty 279.
Smythe Leads All-Events
Ivan Dalley, South Bend, dropped from first to third in all-events when Jess Smythe, veteran Indianapolis bowler, tallied 646, 617 and 643 to take over the lead in that event with a grand total of 1906. Frank Liebfag, also of Indianapolis, slipped in ahead of‘ Dalley with 1893 on scores of 624, 596 and 673. The same thing was true in twoman events when M. Skinner and R. Kelly of Kokomo dropped from first to third in their specialty. Basil Hanna and Don McNew, Indianapolis, stood well above all scorers to date with 1284. Gus Cohen and J. Hofacher also came in ahead of the former leaders with 1239. Hanna and his partner rolled games - of 444, 425 and 415. Those changes registered in the five-man team standings were made by the Hudepohl Beer five which rolled into sixth money in the regular division with 2832 and the Ko-We-Ba crew which scored 2830 for seventh spot in the same division. The Severin-Washington No. 7 team . slipped into fifth standing in the booster scoring on 2787 in the last
Guldahl, Cool as an Alaskan Icebox, Fires Final 69 to Take Masters’ Play
By HENRY M'LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent AUGUSTA, Ga. April 3.—Ralph Guldahl stamped himself as one of the greatest competitors ever to walk a fairway yesterday when, under pressure that would give most players “the bends,” he fired a final round in 69 to win the sixth annual Masters’ Invitation golf championship. This great run down the payoff stretch before a boisterous gallery of 8000 gave Guldahl a 72-hole aggregate of 279, three strokes fewer than the record established in 1935, when Craig Wood and Gene Sarazen tied for the title. Guldahl’s finish was one of the greatest exhibitions of shot making when the stakes were down that the ancient and honorable game has ever seen. When he walked to the 10th tee, with 63 holes behind him and nine more to go, he knew that to beat Sam Snead, whose score of 280 already was posted, he needed a 34 to tie and a 33 to win. And par on the long and tortuous back nine of the Augusta National course is 36.
Nothing Bothered Him
The National Open winner for the last two years faced the issue as calmly and coldly as if he were out for a practice round. Shutting out the howling crowd with magnificent concentration, Guldahl gave his white cap a tug, dug in his spikes, and began firing. Drives whistled long and true. Irons rose and dropped onto greens. Pitches bit in the lush velvet, and putts rolled rue. The champion was at work, and
1 he allowed nothing to bother him.
With an almost maddening slowness he studied his shots, but when he finally brought them off his patience and care were rewarded. A stroke behind Guldahl, in second place, was Snead, whose four rounds bettered par by eight strokes. In third place were Billie Burke, winner of the National Open title in 1931, and Lawson Little, once king of the amateurs, with 282s. A shot behind this pair was Gene Sarazen with 283. Craig Wood, the long hitter from New York’s Winged Foot Club, was next in line with 285, and behind him, at 287, was Byron Nelson.
A Hot Finish
Golf has seen few hotter finishes than was provided by the final 18 holes in this Masters’ tournament. When the sparkling field started off on the final round only two shots separated six of the finest hitters in the world. Guldahl led with 210, Sarazen was second with 211, and
Amateur Cage Fives To Play Wednesday
The Central Y. M. C. A. Senior basketball team, state “Y” basketball champions, will play a benefit game with the Stewart-Warner five Wednesday at 8 o'clock at the Central “Y” building. Funds will be used to send the local team to the National “Y”
tournament in Jamestown, N. Y, April 13 and 15.
Men's and Women's
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Nelson, Burke, Snead and Little were tied at 212. First to get away was Burke, and he gave the boys something to shoot at when he scored 37-33 for a 70 and 282. Billy was scarcely in the clubhouse before Snead, the longhitting hillbilly from Virginia, cracked par apart with a 68 for 280. Sarazen had just finished with a 72 for 283, when Guldahl and Little, playing together, turned the first nine. Little’s 34 against Guldahl’'s 36 on the first nine had enabled the former British and American Amateur king to pull level with his partner, and they teed off on the 10th as the only two men left who could tie or lick Snead, Nelson having shot himself out of the running with a first nine 39.
Gambles and Wins
On the very first hole coming home, Guldahl laid his second shot stiff by the flag and rolled in the putt for a birdie three. This put him two strokes ahead of Little, who missed his chip and needed a five. Guldahl and Little parred the next two holes and then Guldahl really won the tournament with a magnificent gamble on the long and dangerous 67th hole. This hole, a 480-yard dogleg to the left, its green guarded by a hungry ditch, cost Guidahl a bogie six and the tournament two years ago. Yesterday, when he muffed his tee shot, catching it on the heel of his club and knocking it scarcely
Butler Trackmen Seek 2d Victory
Times Special FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. April 3. —Butler University's . track team will be seeking its second victory of its Southern tour when it meets the University of Arkansas here today. The Butler thinlies won a decisive victory over the Lincoln University at Jefferson City, Mo., T1% to 54%, Saturday, in the Bulldogs first of a series of road meets. Butler scored first in the mile, half-mile quarter-mile, 220-yard low hurdles, javelin, pole ‘vault, half-mile relay and special mile and one-half run and tied for first in the high jump.
Spring Sports Open At Indiana State
Times Special TERRE HAUTE, April 3.—Spring sports schedules will swing into action here with the opening of the Indiana State Teachers tennis schedule today against Eastern Illinois State Teachers. The golf team starts action this week also when it meets Wayne University of Detroit here Thursday. The baseball team plays April 10 against Indiana University and the trackmen get their first competition at Butler April 19.
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200 yards, it seemed as if the jinx had risen once more. Left with a downhill lie, on insecure footing, the careful, cautious thing to do was to play an iron short of the green, and play for a five. But Guldahl, blessed with a burglar’s nerve on the golf course, never even considered the safety measure. Uses Spoon
He asked his caddy for a spoon and, putting all of his 200 pounds into the swing, let the ball have all he had. It sang a song of victory as it started low, rose, rose, and rose some more toward the distant green. Over the creek it went to come finally to rest six feet from the cup. He sank it for an eagle thre, to pick up two more strokes on Little and sail into the lead. He parred the next, and got a birdie on the next. With only three more holes to go he parred the 70th, but dropped a stroke to par on the T1st when his second shot went over the green., Standing on the final tee, he needed a par four to win. He hit a fine tee shot and laid his second just on the edge of the green, about 20 feet from the pin. Guldahl took all of 10 minutes lining up his approach putt. Unmindful of the great gallery horseshoed around the green and the cranking of cameras, he studied it from every angle end then rolled it within inches of the cup. He tapped the next one in and the Masters’ was his. Wins $1500 The victory was worth $1500 to the man who only a few years ago had given up the game in disgust and turned to selling automobiles for a living. Snead earned $800 for second; Little and Burke split $1100; yaaen took down $400 and Wood 00. The other high finishers and their earnings were: Nelson, $250; Henry Picard and Benny Hogan, $175; Tony Penna and Ed Dudley, $100, and Vic Ghezzi, Tommy Armour anfi Harold McSpaden, $33.33. Bobby Jones, whose lone competitive appearance is made in this tournament each year, finished in a tie with Harry Cooper, Jimmy Demaret and Walter Hagen for 33d place with a 72-hole aggregate of 304. Jones’ four rounds were 76, 77, 78 and 73. Par is 72.
2 Double Winners At Hoosier Swim
The Hoosier Athletic Club swimming meet produced a pair of double victory champions, Bill Barkhaus and Thelma Pherigo. Barkhaus won the 100-yard freestyle and the fancy diving events in a meet at the Hoosier A. C. Saturday night. And Pherigo was winner in the 100-yard freestyle and 100yard back stroke races for women.
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Rice Student Cops River Oaks Title
Frank Guernsey, Rice
Hil’s Shooting Puts
BOSTON, April 3 (U. P.).—There is a hockey hero today, and his name is Mel Hill, a rookie whose] deadly shooting put the Boston Bruins in the Stanley Cup playoff final against the Toronto Maple
He is the youngster who fired the winning goals in three of the Bruins’ overtime games against the New York Rangers, whose courageous uphill fight before bowing in seven games will go down in cup
If the Bruins win the playoffs and the right to drink champagne from the battered $50 mug donated 45 years ago by Lord Stanley, Mel ia Ss
Hill's goal after 59 minutes and 25 seconds of overtime hockey gave Boston its first victory over the Rangers. His shot after 8 minutes and 24 seconds of “sudden death” play carried the Bruins to their secHe came through again last night after 8 minutes of play in the third overtime session
The first pair of games in the final best-of-seven series will be
HOUSTON, Tex., April 3 (U. P.).— Institute student, handed the United States
of the three changes made in the quintets’ ratings. :
Leaders Sit Tight
After the third week the team standings still stood as follows: A. M. Todd & Co., South Bend, first; I. U. Dentals of the booster class, second with 2939. Recreation Five, Kokomo, third with 2894; Indianapolis National Bank, fourth on 2885 and Union Printers Baseball Club, fifth with 2869. The latter team is the only other Class B team placing in the first five spots for five-man teams. Sharum stood a good chance of placing his name in the Indiana bowling “hall of fame” when he racked up his leading 743 for it is the second highest individual score ever made in the 30 years of the state tournament. L. G. Cobler, Indianapolis, won the event in 1924 with 757. The record for last year’s tournament, held by E. Craft of Ft. Wayne, is 676.
Liebtag Doing “0. K.”
Frank Liebtag, Indianapolis, is “doing right by himself” by having his bid in fer prize money in three different events at the present. He is standing in seventh place in individual scoring with 673, is second in all-events with 1893 and along with his partner, Gene Zwiesler, has a 1225, good for sixth, at the time, in the two-man event. Liebtag rolled with the Mayfair Seven Up crew in the tournament. He ordinarily bowls. in the Washington League at the Illinois Alleys. Only two squads of teams will bowl Saturday and one on Sunday.
Agnes Junker Is
Winner at Chicago “
CHICAGO, April 3 (U. P.).—Agnes Junker, 25, of Indianapolis, today was awarded a diamond ring, first prize in the Chicago Evening American women’s bowling tournament. . Miss Junker toppled 653 pins for first place in the Class A singles event. The Grand Rapids, Mich., Fanatorium Majors won the Class A team award.
Wins Skeet Shoot
Breaking 50 straight targets, Mar= bach won yesterday's skeet shoot at the Capital City Gun Club.
Lawn Tennis Association food for
thought today in a bright silver mug inscribed “River Oaks County Club Champion.” : To gain the trophy the Orlando, Fla., youth had to drive through the ninth invitational meet here in competition with most of the top-
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