Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1939 — Page 24
FRIDAY, JUNE'S, 1089 — eet - Bill Terry |National League Yankees . Hh A : : acht, whose highest salary as LRN ae
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Back Where Sy He Started
What'll He Do Now That McGraw Stars Are Yielding to Time?
By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Service Sports Editor
NEW YORK, June 9.—New York critics whom William Harold Terry so sorely antagonized finally have
caught up with the manager of the Giants. i Here is William H. Terry with the once almighty Giants trailing like a favorite 10 lengths behind that many lengths away from the wire. The Yankees, Col. Jacob Ruppert’s club, long since won the homegrown vote. Bill Terry of the Giants didn’t like the city which his baseball career sentenced him to . . . doesn't like it now. And the big town doesn’t like Terry. It is just seven years ago that Terry assumed managerial command of the Giants. He won three pennants and a world championship, but he did it with McGraw men, and he now finds himself back where he started. Now he must rebuild on his own « . . and with what?
Inherited His Stars
The great players he inherited from McGraw . . . Carl Hubbell and Melvin Ott specifically—have begun to yield to time. The Giants of the past seven“years were basically McGraw’s club. Hal Schumacher, Freddie Fitzsimmons, Ott, Jo Jo Moore and Harry Danning. . . . Terry inherited them all from Little Napoleon. Anybody else that Terry picked up up meanwhile was experienced and developed elsewhere. . . . Gus Mancuso, Burgess Whitehead, Dick Bartell. No member of today’s infield or outfield is a Terry development. Terry is confronted with this problem. All the McGraw players are growing older. Most of them are through. McGraw found replacements. Can Terry?
Ripple Stays on Bench
It is interesting to note that the three men doing picket duty for the Giants at present are Moore and Ott of the McGraw regime and Frank Demaree, a ready-made performer brought from Chicago via the big trade, while Jimmy Ripple, Terry's own, gathers slivers on the bench. At the outset of the current campaign, Terry boasted that this was the finest club he ever managed. That in the face of the fact that Jimmy Dykes of the White Sox and Bucky ‘Harris of the Senators, fair sort of managers, told everybody that the Zeke Bonura for whom Terry paid $25,000 of Horace Stoneham’s money to play first base, would let in 100 runs, which is as many as he hits in annually.
Started Without Pitchers
Terry said he would win although |t
he started with no pitchers at all. Clif Melton was a flop in 1938. Hal Schumacher and Carl Hubbell had elbow" operations. Outside of Harry Gumbert, a run-o’-mine sort, Terry had only Manuel Salvo, a busher, to depend upon. He was oversold on George Myatt, who never hit .300 in the minors. It rapidly begins to appear that the biggest asset Bill Terry had as a manager was Bill Terry, the first baseman. That position alone has cost the Giants more than $100,000 since
HEAQKEN TO THE OLD FAMILAR —— NOW THAT MEWECHNIES
MEN HAVE WON 17 OF TRER LAST
20 CANES —AWD ARE ony 1 MOMER. BEHIND THE YANKS
WITH THE NATL LEAGUES TIME HONORED : : CUSTOM OF PULLING IN THE INFIELD WITH MEN ON
THE
eg
IVAL GOODMAN ROUNDS OuT Jusr ABOUT AS TOUGH A THREE SOME AS AY PITCHER IN BASE BAU HAS TO FACE =
WR
JUST SMACK \T OVER THEIR. WEAD'S — \ —THE GIANTS DON'T CATCH ON —
ReOS DOUBLED UP ME GIANTS TURES
TIMES’
THares 7 IN TWO DAYS =e WATS PAQ.T
JUST TAXING OFF WHEN IT HIT THE SCORE BOARD —
NR) —A HOME RUN
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Terry decided that his playing days were concluded. Terry paid $40,000 for Johnny McCarthy, now decorating the Giants’ bench. Terry paid $25,000 for Bonura, who can't get off a dime under prodding. Paid $20,000 for Leslie
Terry paid Brooklyn $20,000 for Sam Leslie and threw in Buddy Hassett, worth at the time twice as much. Terry lost his touch with pitchers
with the departure of Dolph Luque, |}& a McGraw coach. Luque developed
Castleman, Gumbert and Melton,
Terry passed up Bill Weber (§' when the A's asked waivers. Right} ph
this splendid third a pennant for
the antique Buddy is Terry's lap. Tet ing for five told him he Ww Lewis has bee} for Washingtol You couldn't bu Bill Terry was with McGraw bad hie: How far will he go now that he has to find his own?
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NEXT—Unusual Lies.
Runner on Board
ANN ARBOR, June 9 (NEA).— Warren Breidenbach, Big Ten quar-ter-mile champion, has been elected student representative on the Mich-
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OIROULAYTION POR 1914 average Daily for First Nine Months 32.890 September, 1014 Oross, 80.027 Ney, 5887S.
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VOL. XXVII. NO. 129.
INDIANAPOLIS _HOME EDITION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1913.
ONE CENT.
blAL DRUGGED IND ROBBED IN TAXI, SHE SAYS
Found’ Unconscious in Road, 1s Taken to Hospital in Comatose Condition.
GIVES MAN'S NAME AS ARTHUR
1:1 Police She. Lives in Chi-cago—-Start Search for Her Relatives.
Yi«t she was drugged. Tob serown from sm automobile o «f lrvington yesterds) «Merwe very told Sy & young woman riwe 88 Plorence Bows, 2, M88 Norfh Clark stl
ven in the Chiy bespitsd todxy. after she had been abendencd fo he
*| Tipton Bank Cashier Is Sen-
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HTH nh Fila
1 J
CHARGED deat at the bande of
Sam Welserie, who is In three
white slavery wo. reported by the police to the federal MOeritien today.
* | Tipton,
i» worning.
PRENHAM, Tex, Ott 8—-Drover of pe § *« sre Seeing today from Breabam snd
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part of which hed been returned.
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Returns from Pr. 158 precincts in -=€ county Auditor Patten up to noon today show a registration of 68,183, The re. r pg nine preeinets will
received by
fenced to Five Years in
You adopted a course which al ways leads to ruin You built a fine house on borrowed money, |
tion: Cont Ov mmitor. Lawrence, Pike, 556; Washington
REVEN | Fares | pg
i *eourt today polut owt the inevitable Trag‘edy which pursue the man whe beremes | the slave of tndiscrest fudulgences of (hat 1 deyire. commen to us wil to Bmep up with
arama - on 3
More Than Levied of
(ot ws we cun afford te, but su others pose {about us live < | Hite Nlure to deed the examples of oth. e™ who have followed the course to @leaster breoght a Sve-vear sentence fa the federal prison to Gleon 0. Huree former casbler of the First Nstlonal bank of "od. after eloquent pleas for mercy bad besa Wade to the court this
WASHINGTON members of the toflay received tax dN framed cus, when they
portad the bill te The HN wih according to the wry department. pay wore than t cratic differences cancun. the eade »l oplaton s the pose of the bill | The finance con tax on the mene of the flat tax of wx wii be IM » arets up to 15.008
For vesrly an hour afer Huron bed changed his plea of mot guilty to guilty, be snd his attorsey, M. W. Hopkiss pleaded mitigation of the punishment, avd Judge Anderson of federal court asked bi many questions. Hurea wes sentenced to five yeirs 'o the feders! prison. Huron was ndicted on wixty three counts, which incinded embessiement. mis appropriation of funds, false entries on the bank's books and false reports to the comtroller of the ewrrency. some Wonthe after De left the bank in Beptember, 191% The misuse of funds for which Huros was fufiicted amounted to about $30,000,
Huron maintained be composure fairly well until Judge Anferson swmmnmd 9p bis cave, saving that while the sentence seemed severe on a young man, Be could see Bo extenuation for Hurom's wrongful acts “Prose. phase, your Besor, give We ® hanes,” cried Huron, sod then sfter @
(Coutinned ou Page Teo.)
to the senate 8 committee. Tt he! wines and § cen westlc wines. Tt amendment to © tween the Paclic wine producers, w rommittee
Times Big Scoreboard ar ExtraWill Farnish Fans( ReturnsonWorld’s Seri
HE INDIANA DAILY TIMES will furnil T of readers with first-hand news and featu ing the world’s series which are slat on Friday afternoon at Philadelphia. The T Woard, the only one of its kind in Indiana, detail of 20 the fans. Direct wires will office from Philadelphia and Boston and th shown on the electrie board within a momen made. after each game The Tin extra will be on the wrest, containing a M battle. Special writers will give you expert game on the following day. Not a featurs looked. Come to The Times office Friday watch the first game. The Braves and Ath playing st 2 o'clock eastern hime which is There is room for thousands on Georgia at The Times office and everyone 1 invited
teenth, 1,349. All precincts wm aut town. ships have reported show the follow. ry reestra.
series at the expense of this newspaper.
Hoosier Feds, Federal League Champions for the Season of 1914
iF ®ousch and Vand
9!" ChND JURY OF 2 | UNPISSED LANG
Appearance of McCullough as Prosecutor's Aid Starts patrovers
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TOKIO, Oct. 8-—Because of intimations 1x the Ameri. can press that Japan's naval activities in the Pacific ocean are simed at the United States, Minister of Foreign Affairs Kato sssured George Ww. , the American
t has made no statement us to how 1t wall dispose oi Jaluit after all afficials re it
REACH ANTWERP. GIVE RISE TO HOPE
Troops and Heavy Artillery Are Rushed to Aid of Bejiered City
0 KEP
p | ent of Defenscs.
LONDON, Oct. 8 Heavy reinforcements
re v have Phe he.
CEAMANS MAY TAY TO FORGE ISSUE IN WEST
Appearance of Cavalry Nee Lille Causes Tl a Belief in London,
STAFF SEEMS ABLE TO MEET ALL NEEDS
Resume of Action Throughout War Zone Seems to Favor Kaiser.
LONDON, Oct. 8 ~The German gens #talf is weeting with energy sod rrsousEnfulness a precarions sltustion ia the wal. ern theater of war. Tbe ability to wimg strong reinforcements to the assistanes & the barried German right wing at a wl) when Germany was thought to have #id her available forces stationed at polueg from which they cond pot be moved, she wi the kuiser's military establishment Wl . Bot reached the end of its resnurces The iovaders are pushing thelr atta:t against Antwerp and the Belgian gown. ment bas beed moved for the second chung that Is, from Antwerp to Ostend. Thewsands of residents of Antwerp arv Bossy. some tuto Holland snd others to Englows At Ostend the new Beigian goveraman is under protection of guns on Wmgli2 dreadnoughts fn the harbor. It is cemammly admitted the Germans have bremcoen Ui outer line of forts at Antwerp and Lw@ moved powerful siege guns to posit ne from which they can throw shells into Loe eity. Meanwhile the Aovwerp garrison tas heen fGzltlng desperately, but the “ess forse of the Germans seem to have bass able to withstand all i tracks, Tee | would
German tactics followed ‘fa menesvera The annus) war drill of the Ysmmen arm x Cit of v I'S
ularly
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