Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1939 — Page 19

=

orter’s

BUT STOUT IS

By Eddie Ash

MOST JOCKEYS HAIL FROM WEST

AN EASTERNER

IMMY STOUT, the 108-pound jockey who will ride the favorite, Johnstown, in the Kentucky Derby, says he does not expect to fall off at the start as was the case

with Granville in 1936. . . .

“And T am never going to

look back,” Jimmy says. “Johnstown should win off by

himself.”

The majority of the boys in the horse-backing pro-

fession hail from the Middle in the Far West, but Stout is

West and wide open spaces one of the few born around

the Big City, New York. ... He hails from Lakewood, N. J.,

and is 24 years old.

Jimmy has had poor luck in three Derby efforts and the posies have escaped him. . . . He was unseated. by Granville and in 1937 was fifth aboard Sceneshifter. . . . In 1938 Stout drew Fighting Fox, which looked like a sure

thing to finish in the money. . in sixth position. = = 2 OW he’s out to beat the jinx.

. . He wound up an also ran

* =» . . . Riding the Derby favorite is

always a strain on the jockey, but Jimmy thinks he’s all set this trip to reach the jockeys’ hall of fame. “I know racing is uncertain, especially a race like the Derby,” he said the other day, “but Johnstown already has proved his superiority over most of the other top flight 3-year-olds. We haven’t met

Technician or Challedon, but we'll

Stout got his first mount in 1930, at Jamaica, and in 1932 Trainer Jim Fitzsimmons acquired the boy’s contract and he’s been with Fitz

ever since.

be ready for them Saturday.”

Let’s Have Your Derby Picks

NDIANAPOLIS Derby fans are rounding into race horse form by

competing in The Times’ Derby fee, no prizes but an outlet for all the League of Experts. .

Selections Stakes. . . . No ‘entry Hoosiers to prove they belong in

. . Some of the late entries are:

Jack McGovern: Yale O'Nine, Xalapa Clown, Technician, El Chico.

« « « He likes the Bulldog Blue.

Lee Bennett: Johnstown, Technician, El Chico, Porter’s Mite.

Carrying the torch for the favorite. James Hale: Technician, Our Mat entry, Johnstown, Charles Kurtsinger mount. . . . Another vote for Woolford Farm. Bob Smith: Johnstown, El Chico, Technician, Lightspur. . . . “You

asked for it—here it is,” Bob says.

C. M. Balluff: El Chico, Johnstown, Technician, Challedon. . . . Rid-

ing with the 1938 baby champ.

Nine Races on Saturday Menu

(GE xcnal, DOWNS gates will

There will be nine races, the first at 12 o'clock noon.

open at 8 a. m. Saturday... . . .. Ad-

mission prices: Bleachers, 50 cents; general admission, $2.35; club-

house admission, $6.65.

The Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels will hold their sixth

annual reunion in Louisville tomorrow.

tion will be made at 10:45 a. m. colonels will take over.

The mint julep feud between the Commonwealth of

and the Maryland Free State will afternoon. .

5 ® x

- . If the colonels have any that they will go to Churchill Downs to

-.. A mint julep presentaand with that as a starter the Kentucky be argued at a distillery in the legs left under them after get in form for Derby Day.

® ® 5

fiorana UNIVERSITY'S band of 130 pieces will put on a march-

ing demonstration between the Day at the Downs. massed bands from Louisville and

. . . The Hoosiers

fifth and sixth races on Derby also will participate with the the University of Kentucky in

the playing of Old Kentucky Home just before the start of the

classic. Frederick E. Green is I. U.

Their trade name are usually about as many Hoosiers

: Is band director and this is the second year the Crimson musicians have been featured at the Derby. .

is Marching Hundred. .

. . Inasmuch as there as Kentuckians at the Derby, the

Bloomington marchers get a big hand.

Baseball at a Glance

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

=

Pet. W714 .643 625 H63 43% 351 333 333

ilwaukee INDIANAPO Louisville Toledo

Fok pk STCOanIe

Pet.

667 t. 1 600 Cincinnati .. S45 Philadelphia . Brooklyn ..... Chicago New York .... Pittsburgh

500 500

waBwd ures

273

AMERICAN LEAGUE w. Pet. “66% 1636 533 462 .364 264

St. Louis Cleveland

Baladel NLR po

TODAY'S GAMES

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at St. Paul. Toledo at Kansas City. Columbus at Milwaukee. Louisville at Minneapolis.

NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago at Brooklyn. Cincinnati at Boston, St. Louis at New York. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia.

AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis, Boston at Detroit. New York at Cleveland.

az |

[Cincinnati

R73 |

| YESTERDAY'S RESULTS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | Toledo . Kansas City Barnes, Nelson and M kie, Vance, Makosky and McCullough.

001 100 030— 5 7

Parsons;

| Columbus 200 000— | Milwaukee 020 003 00x — : 5 3

. Curlee, Turner and B 3 oie T remer; Kimball and

en isvitte at Minneapolis: postponed,

NATIONAL LEAGUE | Chicago . ‘Philadelphia : 5 ° Whitehill, Root and Hartnett; Mulcahy iis Davis. 210 000 100— 4 10 000 130 20x— 6 9

Walters Brown,

| New ork

|_ Vander Meer, Weaver, Lombardi; Schumacher, and Danning.

| St

and Melton

| Louis at Boston; cold weather. | Pittsburgh at Brooklyn; cold weather.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WRU. 000 010 310— Cleveland g 000 000 o10— 3 i 3 Auker and Peacock; Hudlin, Hemsley, Pytlak. Wn, Pave: WY Philadelphia Chichipn” . .......... Caster and Wagner; vestri.

New. York... 310 402 000—10 9 » Detroit 012 000 921— 6 11 2 Sundra and Dickey; Benton, McKain and York. y CT,

Dietrich and Sil-

Washington St. Louis

Leonard. Thomas,

111 010 223—11 18 4 500 131 000—10 13 4 Appleton, Alexande and R. Ferrell; Newsom, Marcum, Pyle and Sullivan.

‘Comedy of Errors’ Plays Two-Day Stand in Majors

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent ‘NEW YORK, May 4 —Baseball, as played in the major leagues the last two days, would make old Abner Doubleday hide his head in shame. The boys have been something less than terrific. In six games yesterday in the {wo leagues there were 64 walks, 108 men left on bases, and 14 errors. The day before there were 65 walks,

108 men stranded, and 17 boots in:

seven games. That's averaging about 10 walks, more than 16 men left on base and close to three errors per game. The Giants-Reds’ exhibition yesterday was nothing less than atrocious. Nineteen walks, 28 men left on base, three passed balls, two wild pitches, and a balk. And it was worse than it sounds with oop flies dropping for hits, infielders leaving bases uncovered, runners forgetting to slide.

And whatever it was they put on in St. Louis between the Senators and Browns must have been worse. Twenty-one runs, 31 hits, eight errors, nine walks, 22 men left on base and two hours and 56 minutes. One of the few teams that has ‘played consistently sane baseball in the National League is the Boston Bees, and that’s why they are leading the loop. The Yanks are setting the American League pace because of their old habit of applying the pressure at the right time. They won another game the old Yankee way yesterday, making four hits count for eight runs in four innings %6 bump Detroit again, 10-6. Kennedy walked two men in the first inning and Dickey hit a triple— two runs. A fly, and Dickey scored. A walk, a single, a wild pitch and an

infield out gave the Yanks another run in the second. Rogell’s error, two walks and Rolfe’s single spelled two more runs in the fourth. Crosetti singled in Rolfe, and ‘then worked a double steal with Henrich for the fourth tally in that frame. Hank

was just a drop in the bucket.

and won over the Indians, 5-1, with Eldon Auker winning his first game, a five-hitter. George Caster pitched a three-hit game as the Athletics trumped the White Sox, 3-1, and broke Chicago’s five-game winning streak. St. Louis blew a six-run lead in the last three innings and the Senators came from behind to nose out the Browns, 11-10. Jimmy Wasdell, after making four errors, drove in the winning run in the ninth. Jimmy Ripple’s pinch double in the seventh gave the Giants a 6-4 victory over the Reds. For the second straight day the amazing Phillies knocked off the Cubs, winning, 4-1, behind Hugh Mulcahy’s five-hit pitchin. Gilly Brack had “3 for 3.”

Dutch Meyer to Talk At Wisconsin Clinic

Texas Christian University, who has developed two of the most widely publicized passers in the recent history of college football, Sammy Baugh and Davey O’Brien, will be a guest speaker at the second annual football clinic to be

Sa JE on ‘Forvarg

Greenberg hit homer No. 4 but it Sh The Red Sox slugged out 14 hits W

MADISON, Wis, May 4. — Leo (Dutch) Meyer, football coach of!

2 Porter’s Mite

Lyn Lary Goes To Brooklyn

Deal Leaves Cleveland in

Market for Inflelder.

CLEVELAND, May 4 (U. P).— The Cleveland Indians were in the market for & good infielder today, having sold Shortstop Lyn Lary to the Brooklyn Dodgers for an undisciosed sum.

“We'll grab a good man if we can get one,” Manager Oscar Vitt said, “but Lary’s going doesn’t mean there will be another infielder here tomorrow.” It was reported the Indians were trying to get Johnny Mihalic, former Cleveland sandlotter now playing with the Jersey City Giants, the New York Giants’ International League farm club. Lary came to the Indians in 1037 from the St. Louis Browns. He hit .268 last year. His sale to the Dodgers leaves the Indians dependent on their freshman secondbase combination of Jimmy Webb and Jim Shilling.

Links Purchase Lauded by P. L. A.

Purchase by the City of 37 acres of ground for the expansion of Sarah Shank Golf ‘Course was commended by the Tndianapolis Public Links Association in a resolution submitted today to the Park Board. Sarah Shank now is a nine-hole course, but with the purchase of this additiona land it is to be expanded to an 18-hole layout. The Public Libs Association resolution said in part: “Sarah Shank now is inadequate to meet the needs of the South Side and should be an 18-hole course. There are three 18-hole City-owned

courses on the North Side and on 011 163 00x— 6 10 © Nn

in Irvington. “The City-owned golf courses in 1938 made a profit for the Park Board of $14,000, of which $2000 was earned at Sarah Shank. It is fitting economy that some of the profits be used in expanding the City fee courses to meet the growing needs of the public.”

Armory Mitt Card Completed

Bud Kelly, Cincinnati lightweight, and Perky Stevens, Richmond, have been signed by Matchmaker Kelse McClure, completing the boxing card for the regular Friday night show at the Armory. The first bout will get under way at 8:30 p. m. A pair of heavyweights also have been added to the bill. They are Jimmy Norris, Madison, and Chet Harris, Cincinnati. Norris has fought twice at the Armory and won both by early knockouts. Harris will be making his first appearance here. A return match between Herb Gilmore, Cincinnati featherweight, and Patsy Patterson, Somerset, Ky., headlines the card consisting of 30 rounds. Herb Brown, Indianapolis, light-

nati, meet in the six-round semiwindup. In other four-round preliminaries, Paul Smith and Claude Dixon, local welterweights, are paired and Ray Woods and LeRoy Dycus, Indianapolis lightweights, will trade punches.

TRIBE BOX SCORE

INDIANAPOLIS R

. wis, K. Lewi Lindsay French,

BI Or po GO 89) RIO Ort td ny

HEHNOOORN

ated for Pasek in eighth, §Batted for Taylor in seventh. Indianapolis 00100151 0—8 St. Paul ... 00001005 0-6 Runs batted in—McCormick 2, Latshaw, Chapman, K. Lewis, Jacobs, McC s, 4, 0-base —McCulloch, lish. Three-base hit—McCormick. runs—K. Le Ni is. Sacrifice—French. Stolen bases—McCormick. Lindsay Brown. Left on Sota napolis 7, St. Paul 7. Base on balls ff French 3, Llovd Brown Himsl 1. Struck 3,

pitcher Jove ‘Brown TT — . Bond and Dunn. e207:

held tomorrow and Saturday, He Di Pass Of-|w

weight, and Jerry Martin, Cincin-'

Favorite Steps Fast In Workout Before ~ Crowds

at Churchill

Belmont Futurity Winner Has Gone Stale, Says His Owner.

By JACK GUENTHER United Press Racing Editor

LOUISVILLE, Ky., May 4. —Porter's Mite dropped out of the Kentucky Derby today while the advance guard of an expected 100,000 visitors trooped into Louisville to watch a race that lasts barely two minutes. Owner W. E. Boeing, a Seattle, Wash., airplane manufacturer, announced the Mite had gone stale. After a conference with Trainer Ted

Horning, Boeing said the son of The Porter could not be brought into proper condition for the 65th running of the Race of the Roses Saturday and that he would not be started. With Porter’s Mite went the last hope of the Far West for a possible victory, and the thousands of dollars Californians had laid on his chances in the future books. Winner of the Belmont Futurity and holder of the world record for 6'% furlongs, the Mite had been a disappointing quitter as a 3-year-old and appeared capable only of sprints. Fans Have Their Choice

The news failed to dampen the enthusiasm of the crowds. The fans already have picked their horse— Johnstown, the loose-limbed widestriding beauty from Belair. Tales of the Eastern giant’s prowess had filtered into Kentucky for two weeks, but today natives and visitors alike knew for themselves. Johnstown went back to work between the third and fourth race yesterday and turned the fastest mile spin of the training season— 1:38 3-5. The son of Jamestown stepped into stride beneath the judges’ stand a trifle slowly. The clockers caught him in :24 3-5 for the quarter and :49 flat for the half. He passed the three-quarter pole in 1:14 1-5, and then he started to fly. Spectators gasped as they bay swept past the mile and the time was announced. Then he was eased up over another eighth in 1:52 2-5, and half trotting, half walking, finished out the full Derby distance of ‘a mile and a quarter in 2:10. Others Work Out The move was doubly impressive in view of the performance in the Derby Trial of one of Johnstown's two most feared rivals—Technician. Big Tech, stablemate of Lawrin, the winner a year ago, was beaten by humble Viscounty at the same mile route and the time was just a fifth of a second faster. Additionally, Johnstown stepped his mile around two turns, while Technician went out of the chute. Five other horses worked out earlier, but far less spectacularly. Johnstown’s stablemate, Challenge, went a mile in 1:41 and another eighth in 1:55, breezing. William Seigler’s Our Mat outshone his mate, El Chico at a mile, the former rapping it out in 1:43 1-5 and the latter in 1:44 4-5. Mrs. Bessie Franzheim'’s Xalapa Clown went the mile in 1:451-5, and John Hay Whitney's Heather Broom took an unclocked gallop. Most of the eligibles were given their final blowouts today. The probable field remained fairly steady, although T. M. Dorsett was slightly weakened by a high temperature. The expected starters still were: Johnstown, W. L. Brann’s Challedon, El Chico, Technician, Viscounty, and Heather Broom. The less-certain but probable contenders: Xalapa Clown, T. M. Dorsett, Junius W. Bell's Steel Heels and Milky Way Farm's On Location. The doubtful starters: T. E, Mueller’s Timeful, W. H. Whitehouse’s American Byrd, T. D. Taggart’s Yale o' Nine, Mrs, C. Gregory's Lostagal, Challenge, and Our Mat.

Times Special ST. PAUL, May 4.—Maybe the Injuns’ luck has turned. At least the Indianapolis Tribesters felt better about the baseball situation today as they climbed out of the sheets and relished their morning meal. Food tastes swell after a victory and the Redskins hoped to turn it on again at Lexington Park this afternoon and leave town with two out of three from the Saints. The Tribesters are to open a four-game set at Minneapolis tomorrow against the slugging Millers ana they sort of got in slugging form themselves yesterday and walloped St. Paul, 8 to 6. : Don French lasted the route on the Indian rubber but in the eighth it was stormy weather for the “slider” chucker from Mt. Pléasant, Mich. He was touched for five markers, including Bobby Reis’ home run with the bases lqaded, in that round, but Coach Wes Griffin told him to keep his chin up and the derrick was left in the dugout. Manager Ray Schalk had been sent. to the dressing room in the

(third inning for having had words

with Umpire Claude Bond.

ins New Support

Times Sports

PAGE 19

THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1939

DETROIT, May 4 @U. P).-— Freddie Hutchinson, the “boy wonder” from Seattle, who rode into the majors with much fanfare and a $100,000 price tag, returned to the minors for more seasoning today. The 19-year-old right-hander, who cost the Detroit Tigers $50,000 and three players, was optioned to the Tiger farm club at Toledo yesterday by Owner Walter O. Briggs. Manager Del Baker didn’t know about the move until newspapermen informed him. Freddie, who won 25 games for Seattle in his first full professional season last year, was released to the American Association club on 24-hours recall. In his only major league appearance Tuesday against the New York Yankees he gave five walks, five hits, and eight runs in two-thirds of an inning. Hutchinson took his demotion philosophically. “I guess it’s for the best,” he said. “Spike” Briggs, son of the club owner and vice president of the Tigers, explained the move as both beneficial to Hutchinson and Toledo. ‘The Mud Hens need him, and he needs to work regularly,” the junior Briggs said. “He has been wild, and regular work ought to straighten him out. If he comes around and the Tigers need him, we can get him back on a day’s notice.” Although Hutchinson reported to the Detroit training camp at Lakeland, Fla. as “the pitching find of the year,” he never lived up to expectations. His fast ball wasn't fast enough, his curve had a sandlot sweep, and he lacked an effective change of pace. His main asset was “control,” and he had displayed little of that since coming to the Tigers. He triumphed once in four exhibition tries.

Sent to Toledo

# a

Hutchinson, Detroit's Boy Wonder, for More Seasoning

Freddie Hutchinson

BY HENRY M’LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent LOUISVILLE, Ky., May 4.—Louis= ville is a one hoss town. The hoss is Johnstown, a big, 16-hands-high business with a coat gel color of a concert piano and a white “J” of a blaze on his nose. Up until yesterday afternoon Derby speculation included mane and tailers as Challedon, Technician, Heather Broom, Kl| Chico and Viscounty. But then yesterday afternoon Johnstown eliminated them as topics of conversation by appearing on the Churchill Downs track for a mile workout. Just a few hours out of a box car from New York (they still won't let horses, even champions, ride in the Pullman) and with Jockey Jimmy Stout ali but standing in the stirrrups to hold him back, the Belair beauty worked 5280 (track parlance for a mile) in 1:38 3-5. This look at Johnstown convinced Louisville that the only way he can lose the Derby is to lose his jockey, And, believe it or not, there are more than a few persons counting on just that thing happening. It happened once before to a Belair Derby favorite, you know. Granville was the horse’s name, and the Derby was the one that Bold Venture captured. And who do you think it was that fell off Granville? That's right, Jimmy Stout, the same boy who will have a leg up on Johnstown. .

Anything Can Happen That’s the trouble with racing— anything can happen. Sitting in a taproom last night an old SE man told the true story of a ol

tain Kentucky owner and breeder who, year after year, was cheated | out of victories by hard racing luck. Then there came an afternoon when the pride and joy of his life, a sleek little filly who could run like a scared thing, went to the post in

a big stake. A sixteenth of a mile

Lady Luck Is Smiling on Them Again,

Indians Feel

The Apostles used four pitchers trying to halt the Hoosiers who col-

Louisville a One-Hoss Town—He’s Johnstown

lengths out in front, and running away. Then, all of a sudden, her legs got crossed and down she went in a heap, to bobble in a bad last. The old KXentuckian’s friends stayed away from him as long as they could, knowing they would meet a crushed man. Finally they went to him and

such | found him smiling.

“Gentlemen,” he said, “I'm getting old, but never again will I worry about dying of heart failure. When the filly went down, and I didn’t keel over, I knéw that I was forever safe from any trouble like that, It is very comforting.” (Copyright, 1939)

Butler Netters, Nine Compete

Butler University’s baseball team, fresh from its victory over DePauw at Greencastle yesterday, was to meet another Indiana College Conference foe in St. Joseph at the Fairview diamond today. Meanwhile the tennis team was to travel to Purdue for a match with the Boilermakers. Sophomore John Noel was expect= ed to get the starting call for the mound duties this afternoon from Coach Hinkle, with Dick Wilson doing the catching. Five netters were to make the trip with Coach Jack Hiatt. They were Art Mundt, Bob Dietz, Bob Wildman, Harold Howenstine and Max Bird.

YJ OL

. /

1d

a

MLL CURT

Big Day at | Speedway Expected

Deacon Litz Likely to Have His Car Ready; Await: Third Miller Entry. |

The season’s largest turnout of cars was expected today at the Speedway after drivers and me= chanics had spent a fay tuning their entries in downtown and track garages. Deacon Litz, Dubois, Pa., was exe pected at the track yesterday in his V-8 Maserati but did not get it ready. Railbirds should get their first view of the Deacon's car today, Harry Miller’s third car should be here any day now. George Bailey Detroit, has been testing the other two cars almost daily. No other drivers have yet been named by Miller. Joe Thorne, Rochelle, N. Y. owner and driver, is casting an

{anxious eye toward the west for

his four racers which are almost overdue here. Jimmy Snyder, Chis cago; Rex Mays, Glendale, Cal.; Mel Hansen, Los Angeles, and Thorne himself are the drivers of this four man team. Brisko Arrives Newcomers at the track vesters day were Frank Brisko, Chicago car owner and driver, and Charley Allen, chief mechanician for the entry of Ed Walsh and Joe Pirrung, of St, Louis and Bruz Ruckelhaus of Ine dianapolis. Brisko will drive a new front wheel drive car with 271 cubic inch piston displacement which is listed as the National Seal Special. Ane other car being readied by Brisko is the Elgin Piston Pin Special, also a six of 271 inch displacement. The latter car is a rear drive. Although no driver has been named, Tony Willman of Milwaukee is expected to get the assighment. Floyd Davis probably will pilot the car under the care of Allen.

Shaw Out Soon

Local interest will be “drummed up” at the track with the appears ance of Wilbur Shaw in his new straight-eight Maserati Saturday. Cotton Henning, boss of the Mike Boyle stable of three cars, reported that his three cars would be out ready to roll Saturday. Another jis the four cylinder car in which Chet Miller of Detroit fine ished third last year. A third is the eight which was driven last year by the late Bill Cummings and which is to be driven by Ted Horn of Burbank, Cal. Latest car to arrive at the Speed way garage is the Maserati V-8 ene tered by Richard T. Wharton of New York.

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lected 10 hits, including a home run |§

by Kermit Lewis in the third stanza.

Indianapolis’ big inning was the seventh when five runners rounded

the paths. Eight is a lot of runs for |

the Indians and Chief Schalk commended the athletes for their fine performance. It was the Tribe's first victory since last Saturday and the boys felt certain today that their batting eyes have been located. St. Paul banged out 12 safeties and the game was in a 1-1 deadlock at the end of the fifth. Indianapolis jumped ahead, 2 to 1, in the sixth, threw that Big Five in the seventh and closed with one marker in the eighth. The Saints’ runmaking was confined to two innings, the fifth and eighth. Lloyd Brown, southpaw, opened on the home mound, Harry Taylor entered the fracas in the seventh, Avie Himsl in the eighth and Frank Gabler in the ninth. Pinch Hitter Reis, the Saints’ handy man, was the home hero, and ordinarily his round tripper with the paths filled would have been a game saver.

from home the filly was three

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