Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1939 — Page 12
Lou Gehrig . . . he always has worked hard.
United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, April 25.—I found him in the shadows of the dressing room, tucked away on a bench in the corner, pulling on a cigaret and a tall glass of beer. In a room full of men he was all alone. Stripped to his funny baseball underwear he just sat there, unmindful of the laughing and the joking and the talking going on about him. Just sitting, just thinking, just worrying. The Yankees had just won a close ball game, but you never could have told it from looking at Lou Gehrig. His one hit in 17 times at bat, the walking of Joe DiMaggio to get at him as an easy mark, the cruel stabs in the newspapers, thé tough walk from the sunshine into the shadows — all of these hurts showed on the face of the man who for so long had dominated the American League with his bat. There could be no easy approach to the man, so I made it direct. “Lou,” I said, “if you had it all to do over again would you punish yourself the way you did to get that consecutive games played record? If you were just starting out would you drive yourself to play even when your legs were bruised, your toes and fingers broken, and—well, when you were sick?”
HE didn’t hurry his answer. Finally he said: ~~ = ° “Yeah, I would. Yeah, I'd do it just the way I have. Maybe it wouldn't be smart, but it’s all I know. Work, I mean. I never have known anything but work since I was 6 years old. If I had ever sat on the bench when I thought I could have done the club any good, I believe I'd have batted my head against the dugout wall.” Lou stopped talking and looked straight ahead, as if reviewing all the games he had played without a miss since that afternoon in June, 1925, when he broke in as a regular. “I know what you're thinking,” he said after a while, “That if I had nursed myself along I wouldn’t be worrying so much today. My legs would be faster, my eyes sharper, everything would be better. But you're wrong. Wrong about me, anyhow. I never could help giving all I had. I never could see playing in 153 games if you could play in 154. Col. Ruppert knew how I felt. I'll never forget him telling me that no man who ever worked for him had levelled any more than I had.” 2 » ” ® ” 1.oV pulled on his cigaret, and changed his tone. “Listen, suppose this is my last year. What of it? In my 15 seasons I have played as much baseball as the fellows who spread it out, took it easy, and lasted 17 and
Indianapolis Times Sports
18 and 19 years. When I started baseball I figured that a player's big league life was eight or nine years. I decided to get in all T could, get all the money I could while I was able. No matter how much a man loves baseball he must remember that it is his business, his career, and that from it he must earn enough to get a nest egg, enpugh to take . care of a wife and family. That's what I did. Drove myself as hard as I could. Concentrated everything I had.” I asked him if he thought this was his last year in baseball. x “No,” Lou answered, “I don’t, I'm pretty bad right now, but I was worse this time last year. Remember, I didn’t get a hit in the first 21 times I was at bat last season.” “Are you worried now, and are your pressing?” I asked. : “Sure I am,” the big fellow said. “I'm the worrying kind. Can't help it. But I'm coming out of it. At least I think I am. And haven't the Yankee fans been swell? Lord, it helps to hear them pulling for me.” When ‘I left him I couldn’t help but feel that the fellow who said only game fish swim upstream was all wrong. Because Gehrig, being swept downstream, is going gamely. He can take it—and is. (Copyright, 1939)
Tribe Wins
PAGE 12
Mat Headliner
By Eddie Ash
BUCS UPHOLD OPENER PRESTIGE EAST AHEAD OF WEST IN A. A.
#
Three-Way Meet Goes To Manual
Triumphs in Relay Races
O Pittsburgh team has played its first National League game on its home grounds since 1893. . .. The Pirates joined the loop in 1887 and they have won 30 openers against 23 curtain-raisers in which they met defeat. Twenty of Pittsburgh’s opening games have been played in Cincinnati, and the Bucs have won 16 of them, this year being their sixth straight there. . .. Their last opening-day setback in Redland was in 1924. The St. Louis Cardinals beat the Pirates, 7 to 1, in 1934, since which the Bucs have five straight against all opposition, three froma Cincinnati, and one each from St. Louis and Chicago. = " x r [WENTY-NINE games were played in the American Association during the first go-around, West in the East, and the East finished ahead, 16 to 13. ... Indianapolis outscored ‘em all, five victories against three losses, Toledo won by a margin of four to three, Louisville the same, and Columbus won three and lost four. The Western home openers are to be staged tomorrow and the setup will be Indianapolis at Milwaukee, Louisville at Kansas City, Toledo at Minneapolis and Columbus at St. Paul. Rain and cold weather knocked out 22 games during the first bracket, West in the East, and Minneapolis and Louisville made it 23 by postponing yesterday's tilt by agreement. With 23 double-headers piled up, the eight managers probably will cut to the bone in all departments excepting the mound staffs. . . . Pitchers who can pinch hit and play the outfield are in demand right now as the skippers think of those midsummer twin bills coming up. Tribe Headquarters in West
NDIANAPOLIS’ INDIANS departed for Milwaukee this morning and will reach there in ample time to doll up and attend the Cream City’s annual baseball boosters’ party tonight. . . . Tribe headquarters will be at the Schroeder Hotel and the Hoosiers will be there three days Other headquarters on the Western swing: At Kansas City, Muehlebach Hotel; at St. Paul, Hotel St. Paul; at Minneapolis, I.eamington Hotel. . . . The Redskins will arrive home on May 8 at 1:35 p. m. and sol off for the night baseball opener against Toledo on Tuesday, ay J.
8 b-4 n
] » # zn un 2
WELLERS near Shibe Park, Philadelphia, object to night baseball planned by the Athletics and the Phillies on the grounds that the strong lights will attract mosquitoes and other bugs. . Maybe the bugs, like the fans, will go elsewhere if the Mackmen and Phils don’t show something this year. Connie Mack is frank to say that his team can't win the pennant and that the St. Louis Browns can't either. . . , He doesn't agree with those who think the Browns made a bad move when they traded Plicher Oral Hildebrand to the Yankees for an outfielder and a catcher. . “Hildebrand may win a lot of games for the Yankees.” < said, “but he never would have made a winner for the aay 7 isn't the type. There are pitchers who can pitch for one kind of team but can’t pitch for another.”
Knucklers Hard to Control
QL a few major league hurlers use the knuckle ball, but it is 4 said only two of them really know how to pitch it consistently and knew where it is going. . . . They are Fred Fitzsimmons, Brooklyn, who learned to control it while with the Indianapolis club, and Emil Leonard, former Brooklyn pitcher who is with Washington “ LSonsrd Is said to Raver greatest knuckle ball yet developed ut he has to use it sparingly because the Washingt * De hab a shington catchers can’t Fitzsimmons has controlled the knuckler better th ¥ a / top flight exponent of that tricky delivery. . . . John No er dianapolis, is one of the chief knuckle artists in the minors :
Baseball at a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION NATIONAL LEAGUE
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AMERICAN ASSOCIATION No games scheduled.
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Desautels.
Prexy of Eastern
NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at Chicago. Boston at Brooklyn. New York at Philadelphia. Cincinnati at Chicago.
AMERICAN LEAGUE Washingion at Boston. Philadelphia at New_York. Chicago at Cleveland. St. Louis at Detroit. (U. P).— The
| League,
Eastern
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS which opens
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
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Give Redskins Margin Over Ben Davis and Ripple.
TUESDAY, APRIL
St. Joe Foe Prothro Dese
Of Butler Nine Today
Bulldogs Gunning for Their Third Vietory in State Loop.
They May Wind Up in Cellar, But Theyre Putting On Real Scrap Now.
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, April 25.—There may never be another chance to
His Phils Won't Yell Quits
5 at Home, Goes West
Saints Hold Indians to Two Hits in Series Finale And Triumph, 6-1.
25, 1939
rves a Hand,
After winning five games in eight starts during their first home stand, the Indians departed Indianapolis today for a tour through the weste ern half of the American Associae tion.
The league-leading Redskins open on the road in Milwaukee against the last-place Brewers and the
Manuals track team yesterday won its second straight triangular meet of the season, downing Broad
Coach Tony Hinkle and a small squad of 13 Butler baseball players left this morning by automobile for
wave the flag for Thompson (Doc) Prothro, the Memphis dentist whose courage exceeded his good judg-
Cream City lid-lifter will be staged tomorrow afternoon. It was an open date in the league today as all clubs left the East.
Ripple and Ben Davis. The score | was: Manual, 65; Ben Davis, 53, and | | Broad Ripple, 17. Manual and Ben Davis battled it lout all the way, Redskin victories {in the mile and half-mile relays accounting for the margin of triumph.
Louis Thesz
Rensselaer, where the Bulldogs wefe ment when he signed a two-year to meet St. Joseph College this contract to manage the futile Phil|lies, so let's give him a rousing | Today's tilt marked Butler's cheer today. fourth College Conference venture.| For one week anyway, he gets the At present the Bulldogs have won palm for the outstanding managertwo and dropped one in the state|ial feat in the majors. He has the
| afternoon.
The Indians were made to look powerless in the series finale with the St. Paul Saints yesterday as Harry Boyles, a long righthander from Longview, Tex. held them to two hits, both singles. The Apostles won, 6 to 1, and got a split out of the four-game series.
Wittig, Coffman and Dan-
100 032 00x— 6 12 © Whitehill,
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00 000 010— 6 0 001 100 02x— 4 9 1 vdishnson and Glenn; Bridges and Teb-
I T. Lee and Silvestri; Humphries, Drake, |
3 | servation Department Commissioner
000 Potter, C. Dean and Hayes; Pearson and
SY); (i 000 111 240 1—10 16 3 2 031 0—9 wad ell; c Bagby and
League Optimistic
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. April 25 aseball tomorrow, {probably will attract more than 1,»1000,000 fans in its 17th season, Pres4 1 ident Thomas H. Richardson said
|__The circuit's opening games have | Midshipmé liam; Prt goles and
Southport originally was entered in the meet but was forced to withdraw because of the approaching county meet and final exams. The Rockets replaced Southport. Outstanding contestant of the meet was the “one-man team,” Vance Wilkinson, who scored 16 out of Broad Ripple’s 17 points. He took first place in high and low hur- | dles, first in the high jump dnd third in the broad jump. | Some of the fastest marks this | season in the city were set when | stocky Morris Nahmias of Manual | took the 440-yard dash in :51.2 seconds. Marshall Snoddy, also of Manual, missed equaling the city half-mile record by .7 of a second when he ran that event in 2:04.7. Other fast times were :10.6 for the hundred by William Fair of Manual; :23.9 for the 220 by Kemp of Ben Davis; 4:43.2 set by Ed Hammer of Ben Davis in the mile, closely pursued by John and Mike Mascari, twin freshman milers of Manual, and the time of 1:35.2 made by Manual in the half-mile relay.
Simmons’ Injury Is Believed Slight
NEW YORK, April 25 (U, P).— Al Simmons, Boston Bee outfielder who was “beaned” by a ball thrown by Van Mungo yesterday, was not believed seriously hurt, but he remained in St. Mary's Hospital overnight for observation. X-rays revealed no fracture, and the danger of a minor concussion appeared slight. The accident occurred in the third inning of the Dodger-Bee game. ] Mungo lost control of a sweeping curve. Simmons turned and ducked, but the ball hit him solidly in the back of the head. He dropped unconscious. Revived after several minutes, he walked to the clubhouse.
Park Nine Beats Southport, 11 to 9
Park School's baseball team opened its current season with a 11-to-9 victory over Southport yesterday on the Cardinal's diamond. Park overcame Southport’s 5-to-2 lead in the fourth inning to score nine runs on five hits and a homer | by First Baseman Mike Keene. In the sixth frame Bill Claver relieved Bob Bohlen on the mound for Park to squelch a three-run Cardinal
020 900 0—11 050 013 0—
Bohlen, Clauer and Cusack; Davidson, Miller and McBeth,
State Game Life Is Increasing
The raccoon population on the | Wells County State game farm has \increased by more than 400 in the | past week, Virgil M. Simmons, Con-
{
announced today. : This is only a small part of the game life increase expected for this spring, Mr. Simmons said. Pheasant eggs, now resting in electric incubators at the JasperPulaski and the Wells County game preserves are expected to hatch May 12. Quail ‘eggs are nearing the hatching period and Shug art eggs are being prepared incupators, More than a half-million eggs are expected from the two game preserves this year, Mr. Simmons estimates.
JIS, Joe Hunt of } of
Lios An-|deérstand why humans shouldn't get
Title Go Tops Armory Card
Thom and Wahlberg to Mix In Semiwindup.
{ Touis Thesz, the young St. Louis grappling star who is rated “tops” in the industry by the National Wrestling Association, will appear against Mike Mazurki, Polish “giant,” as the feature attraction| on tonight's mat card at the Arm- | ory. It is for two falls out of] three. | The Indiana State Athletic Com-| mission has sanctioned tonight's en-| counter as a title affair. In addition, the Commission has granted Mazurki’'s wishes that there be no time limit to the tussle. Mike is a tall and powerful matman and he figures he has a good chance to extend Thesz. The New Yorker, who touts a victory over Gus Sonnenberg, scales 236 against Thesz’ 225. Louie turned in a victory over Steve (Crusher) Casey several weeks ago after having gained the title two months ago from Everett Marshall. ‘Coach Billy Thom, 179, Bloomington, and Whitey Wahlberg, 178, Duuth, Minn., mix in a special semiwindup for two falls out of three, or 45 minutes. Johnny Plummer and Joe Corbett, heavies, open the program.
A Going Gym EVANSTON, April 25 (EA)— Northwestern's Patten Gym will be cut into three sections this summer and moved across the campus to a new site.
By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, April 25.—When 2a
young fellow who has been bouncing around in the headlines of sports for a number of years suddenly
tosses his press clippings out the window and starts to talk about saving civilization, the usual reaction is to grimace pityingly and say, “The guy is wacky.” If it isn’t this, the sceptical inquiry is, “What's his racket?” Take Bunny Austin, the British Davis Cup tenniser. Austin’s over here advocating what he calls “moral rearmament.” That's a pretty formidable name for it, but it serves the purpose. If Austin had a long gray beard and 2a pulpit packground, the heavy thinkers probably would adopt him more enthusiastically. In some circles the feeling seems to be that unless a fellow has lived a long life he isn’t capable of serious emotions, and it’s quite possible the fact that Austin has been known only as a sports page figure, up to now, is a handicap.
An Earnest Young Fellow
We heard Austin discuss his ideas and ideals tie other night and were sed. He is an earnest young fellow who has become sick of a world that is fast coming loose at the seams and feels that something He can be QUA an it. s philosophy, if it is matured enough to be called tl it consists in the main of , understanding and n short, he can’t un-
David Marks
Niem- along as humans rather than mad EE i ue er
ave been
linemen all
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that, is simple;
loop. Jerry Steiner was the probable starter today with either Lyle Neat or Ralph Swager, sophomores, on hand for relief. Dick Wilson was to start behind the plate. Butler will play at home tomorrow afternoon, meeting its intracity rival, Indiana Central. Wabash will conclude the week’s schedule Saturday, by appearing at the Fairview diamond.
Grid Coach Has
Unique Method
EAST LANSING, Mich. April 25 (U. P.).—Joe Holsinger, new assistant football coach at Michigan
State College, has his own Way of |. 410 pen in every ball game. impressing linemen not to fall prey | How, nobody knows, as they haven't
to “mouse-trap” plays. Holsinger worked his method last year at Dayton University and he says he'll employ it again this year if the Spartan forward wall is found gullible by opponents. Before the Marshall-Dayton game last year, Holsinger warned his week against being sucked across the line of scrimmage and then sideswiped with a vicious block. On the way to the game Holsinger stopped at a hardware store and bought seven mouse-traps. Each lineman got one. Dayton won the game and only one lineman allowed himself to be caught in a mouse-trap play.
Empire Nine Wins
The Empire Life & Accident Insurance baseball team downed the Kroger Grocers, 11-7, in a slugfest at Riverside Sunday. The Empires h a v e workouts scheduled for Wednesday and Friday evenings at 4:30 o'clock at Garfield No. 3.
Bunny Austin
4
| Phillies in fourth place today, and mister that is a miracle even if they only get a cup of coffee and a doughnut before they tumble back into second division. | It's more than idle baseball talk to say that anybody can win with good ball players, but it takes real ‘genius to win without them, Up to now, Prothro is a baseball wizard 'because it’s the unanimous press box { opinion that the Phils have the worst collection of misfits, hasbeens and never-will-bes in the majors. Yet Prothro, in his whimsical way, |has them fighting as if they were entertaining ideas of going some place instead of winding up in the cellar as they are certain to... if |anything in baseball is certain.
16 Pitchers on Parade
| The Phils have played six games, won three, tied one, and lost two,
| had a pitcher go the route. Prothro
| has paraded 16 pitchers, four times
| calling on three hurlers to get the Phils over the jump. They've been in three extrainning ball games, losing the 12ining opener to the Bees, tying the Dodgers in 11, and beating them in 12. The Phils copped their three wins in succession. They scored | three runs in the ninth to lick the Dodgers, and the next day jammed over two in the 12th to win. Yesterday they licked the Giants, 6-5, holding on for dear life after the | Terrymen staged a five-run rally in | the eighth. That's winning the the hard way, and it’s a tribute to Prothro’s hustling leadership. If there are any more leaders like Prothro in the Southern Association, the majors would do well to seek them out:
Cubs Grab Lead
Hershel Martin's double which drove in two runs was the winning hit for the Phils, and Boom Boom
Bunny Austin Wants to Do Something ing Loose at Seams
He's in there giving it what the boys call the old college try.
normal, certainly nothing ridiculous, about a young fellow feeling deeply about a troubled world and striving to do something about it. We should hate to think there aren't a great many young fellows of this type still around.
Athletes Enlisted
Tn truly adolescent manner, Austin reveals the grim thought suddenly came to him that “we were all of us faced with the possible end of civilization” and with it came a realization of the utter futility of a life dedicated to trying to win tennis cups, and so he sought to fashion “a cause by which the youth of Britain could create a new chivalry in the world.” Having been in sports for a numper of years, Austin decided to start his missionary work among the players of the games and in due time he enlisted the support and sympathy of the ericketers, the footballers, the golfers and even the prize fighters. What Can You Lose?
It may be true, as has been hinted, that we need the balm of Austin’s credo much less than countries and communities much closer to the young fellow’s native land but what of that? It never hurt anybody to be exposed to an occasional blast of fresh air or human warmth. Personally we'd like to see everypody in sports line up with Austin. After all what can you lose? And, carried out te another dimension, sports shouldn't end with the score.
To our mind theré is nothing ab- |
Na
Doe Prothro
| Beck, veteran southpaw, stopped the | Giants’ rally in the eighth and shut | them out in the ninth. The Chicago Cubs grabbed the undisputed National I.eague lead by dumping the Pirates, 6-2. Earl Whitehill went seven innings and held the Pirates to six hits, with Jack Russell finishing for him. In the other National League game the Bees beat the Dodgers, 4-1, as Lou Fette won his second game. Al Simmons was beaned by Van Mungo and spent the night in the hospital for observation. The Yanks nosed the Athletics, 9-1, on three hits, one of them Red Rolfe’s homer. An infield boot by Skeeter Newsome let in the winning run. Monte Pearson held the A’s to four hits.
No. 2 For Bridges
by winning from the Browns, 4-2, behind Tommy Bridges’ six-hit pitching. It was Bridges’ second victory. MecCoskey’s single, Gehringer’s double, a walk to Greenperg, and Fox's single drove in the winning runs. Capitalizing on 15 bases on balls off Humphries and Drake, the White Sox beat the Indians, 9-3. Lefty Lee gave up nine hits. Gee Walker led the White Sox attack with four hits. Jimmy Wasdell’s single in the 10th drove in the winning tally as Washington edged the Red Sox, 10-9. Ted williams, Red Sox rookie, failed four times in the pinch with runners on third. Boston used five pitchers for the second straight day. Jim Bagby, pitching only one frame, lost the game. :
Goldberg Offered Long Island Job
| =Marshall Goldberg, Pitt's | America back, has been offered a
island University when that school inaugurates football as an inter= collegiate sport next season, it was revealed today. Goldberg said he conferred last week-end with Clair Bee; Long
letic director. “We made a brief visit to their spring traifing drills but nothing was definitely done about my taking coaching job,” Goldberg said, adding, “To tell you the truth I still don’t know what to do after I graduate in June.”
California Guns
SACRAMENTO, Cal, April 25 (U. P.) .=California’s limit of 12 rounds on boxing matches would be raised to 15 rounds in event of champion= ship bouts, according to a proposal to amend the California constitu= tion. The amendment, urged by boxing interests as a means of attracting more big time fights to California, will have to be submitted to the voters of the state at a general eiec= tion if it is approved by both houses of the legislature,
Fight Films Billed Films of the recent Joe Louis=Jack
Roper heavyweight title fight are to pe shown at the Alamo Theater Fri-
Tt wouldn't hurt if it touched a |nighee note. of 8
day through next Monday.
TR
Detroit moved into second place
PITTSBURGH, April 25 (U. P).|8 all= 3
job as backfield coach at Long:
g Island basketball coach and ath- Ge
For Big Fights
Logan to Showers
The visitors had a circus with Bob Logan in the fourth inning and in the one frame hammered him for a home run, two doubles and a sine
gle. Needless to say, Lefty was dere ricked and John Wilson took up the Tribe toil. John was greeted with a single and the rally was good for five runs. George Fleming belted the home run and one mate was on base at the time. The drive cleared the west end of the scoreboard in left center. In the fifth Leroy Anton picked out one of Wilson's offerings and smacked it over at the same spot that Fleming pioneered. The Ine dians got a gift run in the second stanza when Fred Vaughn got two bases on English’s high throw over first and scored on two infield outs,
Three for Anton
Anton paced St. Paul's twelte-hit attack with a homer, double and single in four efforts. York at short
jand Jacobs at second handled 17 chances between them without a hobble to lend encouragement to Boyles’ pitching. Boyles had the Redskins topping the ball into the dirt and the Saints had 18 assists. The Indians went from the third until the eighth with out getting the ball out of the ine field excepting on Pete Chapman's single in the sixth. Bob Latshaw got the Tribe's other safety in the second. That Old Punch
Bat power told the story and the Saints had it. Oniy one miscue was chalked against the Redskins and it didn’t figure in the St. Paul rune making. Myron McCormick and Don Lang came through with a couple of daze zling catches which was about the only consolation the fans received. Boyles is built along the lines of Monte Stratton and is the property of the Chicago White Sox. He's 23 years old and stands 6 feet 5 inches,
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