Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1939 — Page 29
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| FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1930 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 29
- Tribe Seeks Sisters Compete in Swim
To Get Over 900 Mark
Toledo Series Ends Tonight; J Hens Bow Again to ) Indians, 4 to 1.
Having earned some new pres- == tige by getting even with the hoard at 18 games won and 18 lost, the Indians hope to hop over that 50-50 mark at the expense of the Toledo Mud Hens in the series finale under the lights at Perry Stadium tonight. w Six of the Tribe's victories have been achieved over the Flock from }§ the Maumee with nary a cefeat by Myles Thomas’ nine, and to add one more chapter to the massacre, John Niggeling probably will be © sent out to face the visitors in the j ladies’ night tussle. Niggeling was “due” last night, but Manager Schalk switched to voung Jimmy Sharp, southpaw. and the California Redhead came through with a maivelous pitching performance by winning, 4 to 1 holding the invaders to three hits while rolling up 11 strikeouts.
Bush in Hospital Billy Evans, general manager of the Boston Red Sox chain and chief | event is to start at 7:30 o'clock. of the Bosox scouts, was a visite: — — and he saw plenty out of Sharp However, Indianapolis is tied up
Williams of
mm ——— |
" | hour on his first qualifying and on (Continued From Page 28) | ; 2
Mee
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i | £1 | i |
: |seventh row, Thorne will be next to within the next few days.
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Mechanicians Nurse Motors of
Cars Still to Qualify for ‘500’
(Continued From Page 28)
: | hands with himself with his arms|Later he tried to qualify it again, member of the club and the year's :
over his head the way prize fighters but after running two laps at 118 outstanding man of speed. do. | miles an hour and one at 116 miles| The fellowship, and the speeches By virtue of their runs, Mays will an hour his pit crew flagged him| and jokes were much like any have the inside position in the in. He is expected to try it again| other banquet, but there is one thing that sticks in your mind. Everyone stands for a moment of silent prayer for the deceased | members. It must make odd | thoughts run through the driv- | ers’ minds, and yet when they sit | down again, the gaiety takes up
him and Andres will be on the out-| 8 8 0 side on race day. Zeke Meyer, Germantown, Pa. | A Ear | veteran. who is to pilot the other The au argument RY io Dow fast | motor-in-the-rear Miller, is the new | tae drivers ware FUNNIES COW { president of the Champion 100-Mile-1 traightaways was settled | : ¥ ong s fais S. Ri Kk . ti 0 |An-Hour Club, succeeding Wilbur when ( hester S. Ricker, timing | g},5, 1937 winner. Ted Horn, Burand scoring director, marked off bank, Cal, is the new vice presia half-mile course on the back dent. stretch and clocked Mays on this | Ear] Twining of the Champion] straightaway section of the track. |g..,c plug Co. shared the toastVyhite MAYS was turning prac. master duties with Shaw and Col. tice laps at between 128 to 129 | Roscoe Turner, speed flyer who is miles an hour, on this straight |, = .co ac honorary referee of the section of the track his speed was |30e was presented with a plaque 150 miles an hour. designating him as an honorary | The course used for this check — sr— i extended from almost the end of the southeast turn to the beginning | of the northeast turn. Part of the time along this stretch he had the|
right where it left off. The other ones would want it that way.
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|car fully open, but as he neared | | the turn he had to lift his foot from "| the throttle.
Ricker said this was the first time a straightaway clocking had been made since race speeds got up to 100,
miles an hour ang better.
Dolores (left) and Jerry Kidwell, sisters, are to participate in the swimming meet at the Hoosier Athletic Club tomorrow night.
The
Typically American, Says
Race Classic
|
ge - ME NL WRISTS SHOULD BE FULLY COCKED AT THE TOP OF TE BACKSWNG
Ninth of a series of illustrated and instructive golf articles,
with Cincinnati's Red Raiders and my unless Cincinnati “passed.” on Ownie Bush, president and manphysical checkup. The Colonels are and giggly girls flirt mischievousl gun in baseball and a former the humid Midwestern air. to see the Indians and Hens wage drivers mockingly call the amburather than lose time in identifving Tribe Officials at Purdue FOR PAR Inaiana University and Indianapolis hasty conference last night hetween They took off for Lafayette today the college pastimers. Ray Fischer, Fehring, Purdue coach, is a close Mud Hens, the Tribesters will play 1s sponsored by the St. Joan of Arc Wrists “are hinges that transmit and have won four in six engage- need for the golfer to call on the
lance, careens with reckless, imita-| tive speed over to the wreck. The crowds on the grounds swarm close to the rails. One question is on every Hp. . .. “Was he killed?” . . . In due course the fate of the unlucky driver is made known through the unemotional brass horns strung all over the place. And when this macabre formality is ended the crowds go back to the dusty roads and ‘the
their emotions undisturbed. The} seem to say, “What of it? Isn't this an automobile race?”
Death can come with terrible swiftness cn the SpeedWays and no matter how long you have been around or how many things you've seen, you can never get accustomed to it. Four or five years ago we stood in the pits talking with two cheerful lively young men, Bill Denver of Audubon, Pa., and Bob Hurst of Indianapolis. They were getting ready to roll their car out onto the track to qualify. “Say, get me a coke, will you?” asked voung Bob. It was a great dav for him. He was making his first start on the famous Speedway, and in his home town. We came back with a coke for him, watched him and Denver squeeze into the tiny monster and turned to go back] to the press box . . . Before we got there they were both dead. A crash!
trees, the hamburger stands, their expression unchanged.
n ” ” Floyd Davis, Springfield, Ill, got “two strikes” called on him vesterday and now has only one more chance to qualify the W. B. W. Special, but at that he is as lucky as the fellow who draws the case ace to fill a full house. He also gets A-plus for nerve and | driving skill. For two laps he piloted this big
four-cvlinder entry of Ed Walsh around at better than 121 miles an}
The i REASON |! Back of
his third lap he punched down a little harder in the turns. | He got through the southwest turn all right, but his car was behaving with all the easy grace of a bull in a china closet. He was working to correct it through the short stretch, but in the southeast turn he lost it | Luck and his own good driving | judgment in not overfighting the steering wheel caused the car to drift down off the track onto the | dirt apron which borders the inside edge of the curve. If he had snaked the car up until it smacked the outside retaining wall. he | might have been in the position that Johnny Seymour was in Saturday. Neither Davis nor the car was hurt by this mishap and he drove) it around under its own power. |
BASEBALL TONITE
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Evans was not on hand for scoutThe former umpire and sports ager of the Louisville Colonels, who a part of the Bosox chain. with amorous vouths. and the smelly sports editor of the Newspaper En- The racers get the flag to slow an interesting battle. He misplaced himself stepped up to the box office PREPPING Evans’ visit and news that the Technical High School bali plavers President Leo Miller and Manager to watch the Michigan at Purdue Yniversity of Michigan coach, is an follower of the Indians host to the Columbus Red Birds to- | By ART KRENZ parochial school The Birds are the power of the swing to the club. | ments from them. (body and shoulders
ing purposes. He couldn't buy Jimscribe came to Indianapolis to call is in St. Vincent's Hospitai {or a Incidentally, Evans, a real big grease of hamburgers mixes with terprise Association, paid his way down until the meat wagon, as the his baseball Annie Oakley and and shelled out the cash. | Louisville club was cutting in on for a “look,” brought about =a : : SG A Lit | Schalk of the Redskins. game and jot down some notes on old friend of Schalk and Dutch Following tonight's tilt with the morrow night. The Saturday game NEA Service Golf Writer no easy pickings for the Redskins’ The more wrist action the less
at the head of the back stretch. | B When the wrists are doing their mm !job properly there is no jerky moGetting back to last night's game. tion in the backswing or lurching Jimmy Sharp experimented with a of the body at the ball in the downsouthpaw screwball and got awav Swing. with 1t First to face him was There is no definite point in the Perry, who doubled. Secory singled backswing where wrists cock ang Perry was held at third on Gal- This should be a gradual coiling atzer's fine throwin. Grace forced Process with the main bending takSecory at second and Perry scored, Ing place at the top Then Sharp settled down, The Here they must be fully cocked only other Toledo hit was a single If the golfer hopes to get power. bv Harry Taylor in the fifth, Jim- EXT—Rioh my struck out Right Fielder Flem- _NENTwRIeH elloy, ing, a southpaw swinger : y IBD i Soutnp meer, four) Cardinals Triumph In the fourth, Sharp fanned, COLLEGEVILLE. May 26.—Ball Fleming, McCov and Huff. Catcher State's baseball team scored a 13-4 Dee Moore congratulated Jimmy by Victory over St. Joseph's in an Ingiving him the ball for a souvenir. |diana College Conference game here It was one of the most enter- Yesterday. taining games of the home season. In the third stanza with Pred Vaughn on first and two down, Nolen Richardson blasted an in-side-the-park home run on a drive that bounced over Center Fielder Grace's head and rolled to the deep center field wall In the fourth Chapman was struck by a pitched ball and 1ode home later on Vaughn's single. McCormick singled Vaughn to third and they worked the double steal, the latter scoring Lloyd Dietz pitched pretty ball for Toledo and struck out six. He sent Dee Moore moaning back to the dugout three times out of four. It was just Dietz's bad luck to be up against Sharp at his best Newman Replaces Latshaw
Jimmy Uses Screwball
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Jess Newman replaced Bob Latshaw at first base for the Indians. He went hitless but hit three on the | 0," Gaod any time of dav or evenose, Latshaw was benched on | ning (except for league play) until account of a batting slump which [| June 3. Each merech li selown made him an easy victim to Mr. K.. which means strikeout Vaughn crashed one in the third frame that probably dislodged | bricks in the left field wall. But; Secory of the Hens plaved the re-| bound so well that he held the blow to a single. Had not the wall been there, the drive probably would have carried across 16th St
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