Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1939 — Page 10

Taulman, David Pace District Favorites Into Final Round

Reduced Field Battles Nerves and Highland Hazards for Links Title;

: ’ ie on Leaders’ Heels i ——————— | ” ” ” Cummings and Gronauer Slip During Second 18 Holes at Speedway.

Kowal and Esp

. them victory continued their justY |for-fun games.

ANI

Henry Kowal

Millers Stay Close to Blues

Work Old Squeeze Play to Trip Colonels, 5-4.

|

By United Press

Minneapolis, seeking to take ad-| vantage of its every opportunity to| stay within striking distance of the| American Association leadership, added another game to ils win| column today by a successful execution of the old squeeze play. In the ninth inning last night] with the score Minneapolis 4, Louis- | ville 4, the Millers had Otto Den-| ning on third and Hub Walker at] bat. Walker bunted and Denning] raced in with the winning run. Columbus climbed into fourth! place by defeating Milwaukee, 4-1. The Red Birds pushed across three tallies in the eighth. Milwaukee threatened in the ninth but scored only one run. Kansas City’s Marvin Breuer pitched a four-hit game to lead the | Blues to victory over Toledo. The score was 4-0. Toledo got two of its hits in the ninth inning. The teams have the same opponents today.

Cycle Hill Climb Set for June 25

A motorcycle hill climb is to be) held Sunday, June £5, on the Mann | Hill, seven miles southwest of In-| dianapolis on old Road 67. The| event will be sponsored by the Indianapolis Power & Light post of the American Legion. The climb, conducted under the American Motorcycle Association's] sanction, will include four types of events. Ken Hurlburt, A. A. A. and Speedway timing official, will be chief timer, and Sam Devitt, official referee. Among the drivers already entered | are Red Leeper of Indianapolis; Ed | Usalis of Dayton, O.; Al Skrelunas of Saginaw, Mich.; Bernie Peters of Green Ray, Wis.; Ray Blair of Louisville, and Van Natta of Chicago.

Browns Sell Mazzera ST. LOUIS, June 14 (U. P.).—| Outfielder Mel Mazzera, batting .300 today as compared with a .400 mark | in the first few weeks of the season, | has been sold to Toronto of the] International League, the St. Louis Browns announced. The purchase price was not disciosed. Mazzera is a left-handed hitter.

By TOM OCHILTREE | A handful of workmen of proved

golfing skill, led by John David and | § . | Jack Taulman, struggled today with

their own nerves and the hazards of the Highland Country Club course fas they battled it out for the In- | dianapolis District title.

Left behind now were the unsteady | | and the unlucky, who were shooting out this last of three 18-hole rounds |

in great clouds of gloom, while those carefree souls who entered

adequate golf never could bring

At the end of 36 holes, David and

Taulman were tied at 149 strokes | 3} each. Both are used to the rigors|:

of tournament golf, since David,

who hails from the Hillcrest Coun- | § try Club, is the Indiana intercollegi- | ;

the | § tournament mindful that their in-|3

Lal

ate champion, and Taulman, from

the Franklin Country Club, is a} former state junior titleholder. |} Both will need all their poise to-|§

day. Right behind them, so close

| that the leaders must think that they are being shadowed, are Clark

Espie, the Pleasant Run par smasher, and Henry Kowal, a recent arrival from Chicago, both of whom are tied at 150. A two handicap player, Kowal now has Speedway for his home course, and his play in this tournament has attracted more attention than a county fair hula dance concession. Two strokes off the pace is Bill Reed, whose fine 74 at Speedway yesterday after a limp 77 at the Indianapolis Country Club Monday, gave him a total of 151 when the field started for the last roundup today. Reed has the added advantage of playing these last 18 holes on his home course—a considerable item in any tournament.

Cummings Slumps

J. I. (Ike) Cummings of the Indianapolis Country Club also has a 151, but unless his touch with his iron clubs returns he is likely to find himself well down the list. At the end of the first day of play he had a fine 72, three strokes better than his nearest rivals, but he blew all that with a 79 yesterday. His collapse was rather sudden, too. On the outgoing nine at Speedway he took a 36, one over par, but coming in he had a 43. He was one over par on every hole from the 10th through the 15th, chiefly because he was short on every iron. He also took a bogie six on the par five 18th, a performance which usually makes a player leave the course with a shaken sense of confidence. Phil Talbot, the Bloomington star, and Dick Keil, Coffin, are next. Both are tied at 152. Keil has had two 76s, while Talbot tacked a T7 on to his opening 75. Yesterday's round took on a sort of Marx brothers tone when Bob Hobbs of the Indianapolis Country Club holed out his tee shot in the pocket of Charles Braughton, Speedway, wno was playing in the preceding foursome. It was a neat 200-yard drive that took one bounce. Braughton felt the thump, but walked along a few steps before he began to suspect what had happened. When he pulled the ball out he couldn't have looked more surprised if it had been one of the crown jewels, and he quickly dropped it. W. A. Kennedy, father, and Bud, his son, have identical scores for the 36 holes of 168. The father took an 82 yesterday and the son an 81.

White’s Playing Unusual

Stranger than fiction was the performance of Pete White, Noblesville. He went out in a 48, 13 strokes over par, and then suddenly shook the misery out of his game on the incoming nine and took a 33. He was so elated that when the usual 18th green spectator asked the usual “how are you doing” question, White looked as though he was going to [Giswer by pulling the speaker’s hat

shirt tails out. If he goes like that (Continued on Page 11)

sy over his ears and jerking his

Baseball at a

Glance

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Lost Pet. 19 .661 20 .636 28 509 27 4% 29 473 31 456 30 444 37

Kansas City Minneapolis ...... & INDIANAPOLIS Louisville Columbus Milwaukee

Cincinnati St. Louis Brooklyn Chicago New York Pittsburgh

Boston .. Philadelphia

GUE

9 17 21 21 2

25 30 31

000 000 . | Kansas City 100 102 00x— 4 8

GAMES TODAY

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

NATONAL LEAGUE Boston at Pittsburgh. Brookiyn at St. Louis. New York at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cincinnati.

. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Washington. Cleveland at New York. Detroit at Boston (two games). St. Louis at Philadelphia (night).

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 000 100 030— 4 7 1 Miilwa ike iB o —1 9 1 ndrews an 3 v and Hernandez. Teh SESEH Toor

10

Hutchinson and : - Cullongh nd Mackie; Brauer and Mc

mmm ebvre and Madjeski; he Ton)

100 08 Hash and Den-

Favorites Advance in Net

Tournament

ST. LOUIS, June 14 (U. P).— Officials of the Triple-A Tennis Club crowded the schedule of their third annual invitational tournament in an effort to complete second and third round singles today. Frank Parker, Pasadena, Cal, Davis Cup player, completed two rounds yesterday by beating Gus Boehmer, St. Louis, 6-1, 6-3, and Tate Courthard, Berkeley, 6-2, 6-1. Wayne Sabin, Portland, Ore. headliner, eliminated George Prelutzky, Triple-A, 7-5, 8-6, and Allen McDonald, St. Louis, 6-4,

-0. g All but three first round matches were but on courts

8

at St. Louis

scattered through the city. Three days of rain made the clay courts at the club almost unplayable and they were to be bummed off with gasoline toe dry them. Wilbur Coen of Kansas City defeated Jerome Horwitz, St. Louis, 6-1, 6-1, and Bob Billings, Dallas, 6-1, 6-0. John Doeg Jr. Orange, N. J, advanced into the second round when Wallace V. Smith, Muskogee, Okla., defaulted. John Shostrom, Chicago, advanced to the third round by beat-

and Tom Stokes, New Orleans, 6-3, 62.9

Mat Program

ing Glen Hewitt, Houston, 6-1, 6-3,| Be

John David

Re scheduled

Stacey Hall Replaces Thom In Semiwindup.

Inclement weather forced a postponement last night of the outdoor mat card at Sports Arena and announcement is made that the threebout program, featuring the appearance of Louis Thesz, will be staged tonight at the arena. Action begins at 8:30. Thesz is rated heavyweight grappling champ by the National Wrestling Association and he will risk his honors against Alabama Bill Lee, widely known grid star. Louie hails from St. Louis and scales 225, while Lee, a former University of Alabama football performer, weighs 235. The match is for two {alls out of three. The semiwindup, also listed for two falls, pits The Great Mephisto, Newark, against Stacey Hall, former Ohio University athlete and well known light heavyweight. Hall replaces Coach Billy Thom on the bill. Thom has several horses entered in the Arlington horse show tonight and must make an appearance there. Mike Mazurki and Warren Bockwinkle, heavies, meet in a prelim.

Paces Bowlers

Smashing the pins’ for a 511 total, Mabel Fischer took scoring honors in the No. 3 spring bowling league last night at the Fountain

Indianapolis Times Sports

PAGE 10

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1939

Cleveland Enters Campaign To Knock Down Champs; Feller Works Today.

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, June 14 (U, P.)).— The hard-hearted Yankees finally have relented and let a ball player go to one of their rivals. Rivals may be the wrong word, but anyway the Yanks traded Outfielder Joe Gallagher to the St. Louis Browns for Infielder Roy Hughes and cash, believed to be as much as $25,000.

Gallagher is a real prospect and was sought by half a dozen major league clubs despite the fact that the Yanks had recently optioned him to their Newark farm club. Gallagher played 15 games with the Yanks and hit only .244. Last year with Kansas City he hit 343. Big and fast, Gallagher has everything to make a major league star. The other night playing with Newark he scored from second on an outfield fly, which gives an idea how he can turn on the steam.

Browns Get Good Buys

When the Yanks had to cut down because of their abundance of outfielders, Gallagher was dispatched to Newark. He threatened to quit basebail before going to Newark but finally relented. The Browns have been successful in their previous dealings with the Yanks. Myril Hoag, sent to St. Louis by the Yanks last winter, is hitting .352, and George McQuinn, who went there from Newark two years ago, is clubbing .358. The Yanks would like very much indeed to have McQuinn first-basing for them right now. Despite the Yanks’ nine-game lead, the campaign to knock down the world champions is gaining momentum. The Indians who have kept Bob Feller, the American League's No. 1 pitcher, out of the past two series against the Yanks moved into town today and had Feller all ready to open against the Bronx Bombers. Feller was due to face Monte Pearson, one-time Indian who won his first five games before losing.

Cleveland Revived

Oscar Vitt, Indian boss, has not given up hope of getting his club up into the thick of the race. Johnny Allen’s two-hitter in his last start and the revival of the hitting form of Jeff Heath and Ben Chapman have revived the Indians’ spirit” Cleveland is still hoping to swing a deal before the Thursday midnight trading deadline. The man they want is infielder Don Heffner, but up to now the Browns have

Square alleys.

asked plenty. With Gallagher on

Yankees Finally Decide To Let a Ball Player Go; Browns Get Gallagher

Joe Gallagher

deck, the Browns may take Heffner off the block altogether. There is the possibility of a three-way deal among Washington-Detroit-Cleve-land. The Senators are trying to land Rudy York from the Tigers in

exchange for Cecil Travis and a |Bak

pitcher. If the Tigers get Travis they'll be overburdened with in-

fielders and might deal Rogell or Balas, p

Kress to the Indians. Several National League clubs are negotiating for last-minute deals. The Reds want a relief pitcher, the Giants an infielder,

pitcher. There is some possibility of the Reds’ landing Max Butcher from the Phillies. With Burgess Whitehead nursing a bad finger injury, the Giants are desperate for another infielder. Bill failed in an effort to pry the Pirates loose from Lee Handley or Pep Young. Larry MacPhail is scouring the country for an outfielder and rumor has it that ne’s trying to land Vince DiMaggio, who's hitting 329 in 41 games for

the Yanks’ Kansas City farm club.

By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, June 14—Some days ago, the cables reveal, a soccer team of insane men defeated a team of sane men. It was a sort of outdoor clinic designed by the medical men of Bilbao, Spain, to prove that insanity is not necessarily a handicap in sports. The result of the game would seem to suggest that the contentions of medical men are valid enough, and until evidence to the contrary, obtained from similar experiments, is presented, it must be assumed that the finely attuned mind is unimportant in sports. Of course, it may be that soccer is a peculiar type of game insane men play better than sane men, and if this is so the demonstration must be set down as unfair to the large army of supposedly sane sportsmen who function in other fields.

Remember Those Dodgers?

Be that as it may, we feel that in the interest of fairness the experiment shouid be extended to all sports. We should like to know, for instance, if there is a team of insane men somewhere capable of beating the supposedly invincible Yankees. Naturally this is secondary to academic desire to learn whether the mentally deficient ball player is to be preferred to the totally sane ball player. In this connection you immediately think of the Dodgers of old, but their strange behaviorisms, it seems likely, were inspired more by. community atmosphere than mental fevers. Sociologists maintain you just naturally get that way in Brooklyn. Statistics show insanity is on the rise in this country, and that there are more strutting Napoleons in the wacky wards today than ever before. This appears to be an alarming condition until you consider that possibly a big percentage of the sufferers are where they are through choice. y Very likely there are many socalled liberties, pleasures and conveniences available to the unrestrained citizens of this country which the mentally unfit would reject instantly as undesirable if not downright repugnant. They probably consider themselves better off in their present situation. We cannot imagine anybody in his right mind, for instance, paying $27.50 for the privilege of seeing Joe Louis belt Tony Galento around,

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yet according to all accounts such tickets as are being sold are going to reputedly normal persons. It is our firm belief that if you tried to sell one of these tickets to an inmate of a daffy den he would fix you with a piercing gaze and say, “I may be crazy, but I'm not that crazy.” . We understand that inmates of these institutions frequently insist they are victims of persecution, trickery and even error. This reminds us of an incident we have related before. It concerns Battling Nelson, the old prize fighter, who now resides in suburvan Chicago. Sceme critical neighbor reported the old battler was acting funnylike, and the authorities picked him

Averill Traded

_

CLEVELAND, June 14 (U. P.). —Earl Averill, Cleveland Indians’ outfielder, was traded to the Detroit Tigers for Pitcher Harry Eisenstadt and an unannounced amount of cash, business manager Frank Kohlbecker announced to-

Colonel Would Carry Test Further And Pit Insane Nine Against Sane One

up and put him in a psychopathic ward for observation. They subjected him to routine tests, found nothing wrong and presently released him. A few days before the second Dempsey-Tunney fight we were walking down Michigan Blvd. with him. It was a scorchingly hot day. As we walked two gals approached. It was the vogue then to wear furs in summer. The gals had their necks all wrapped in furs. The old battler nudged us. . . “Get a load of them dames in furs. And people say I'm nuts!” The old battler wasn’t trying to be funny. He spat the words out in bitter scorn. It was his indictment of a mad feminine conceit along with a system which presumes to determine what makes one person officially insane and another officially sane.

Similar Incident at Open

We witnessed a somewhat similar incident at the National Open in Philadelphia last week. Johnny MeDermott was there. You may not remember McDermott. He was the Bob Jones of his day, the first great American home bred. He won the open in 1911 and 1912. Shortly afterward his mind snapped. He has been a semi-institutional case ever since.

Just what happened to him is vague. Anyway, McDermott, accompanied by sympathetic friends, made one of his infrequent public appearances at the recent open. He tried to follow the players and watch the shots. He found the going tough. He was elbowed, jostled and pushed by the mad, galloping throngs. Finally he gave up and sought refuge under a tree. Indicating the sweaty, milling thousands who were rushing all over the place in apparently aimlessly fury, MeDermott turned to his friends, put a forefinger to his nose, described a series of sighificant circles and whispered, “bugs.” es Sahn. SS Sas.

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Play Second At St. Paul

French Is Likely Starter for Indians; Apostles Take Opener, 8 to 2.

Times Special ST. PAUL, Minn, June 14—Manager Ray Schalk of the Indianapolis Indians is expected to start Don French on the mound tonight in the second game of the series with St. Paul's Saints. Harry Boyles is likely to oppose him. The Saints last night turned in an 8-2 victory over the Indians before some 2000 fans on hand to welcome them home. Merritt (Sugar) Cain worked on the rubber for the Apostles and set the Hoosiers down with seven hits. He failed to yield a single hit during the first three frames, John Niggeling, the Tribe's chief of staff, started, but Schalk was forced to yank him in the third for Mike Balas. The Saints nicked Niggeling for five hits and Balas for four. It was in that third inning that the Apostles salted away the game, scoring four runs to bring their total to six. Catcher Schlueter helped things along by driving out a home run with a mate on base. The Indians pushed over one of their runs in the sixth and added the other in the final stanza. Myron McCormick and Bob Latshaw paced the Hoosiers at hat, each rapping Cain for two hits. One of McCormick’s was a double.

the Dodgers Sark an outfielder and the Pirates a Ra

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12 10 001—2 4 000 11x—8 in—Latshaw, Chapman, York, = Madura, Fleming 2, McCulloch, Schlueter 2. Two-base hits—Mc¢Cormick, York, Madura. Three-base hit—McCuiloch. Home run—Schlueter. Bacrifice—Cain. Stolen bases—Fleming, Stumpf. Double plays—Lang to Sorenson to Latshaw, Richardsun to Sorenson to Latshaw, York to Madura to Anton, Reis to Madura to Anton, Madura to York to Anton. Left on base—Indianapolis, 4: St. Paul, 8. on balis—Oft Ng i. Struck out—. Cain, 6. it nings; Balas, 4 in 5. Ni geling _ (Cain, Stumpf). ild pi Balas. sing pitcher—Niggeling, Umpires —Dunn and Johnson. Time—1:45.

Card Golf Derby At Country Club

More than 175 linksmen are expected to compete in the 12th annual golf derby Saturday and Sunday at the Indianapolis Country Club, Jimmy Lawson, pro, reported today. . The 18-hole qualifying round is scheduled for Saturday, with another 18 holes on Sunday. Prizes will be awarded for low net and gross scores on both days, as well

-3 | coccorccan

- 83 © S po

batted

.|as to leaders for the entire stretch.

Sunday’s low net scorer is to receive the Homer McKee trophy. Local private club members and numerous out-of-town players have been invited to compete.

Lou Gehrig Registers At Rochester Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn, June 14 (U. P.).—Lou Gehrig, the New York Yankees’ ailing first baseman, registered at the Mayo Clinic today for a routine physical examination. Gehrig, the “iron horse” of baseball, arrived late yesterday from Kansas City where the Yankees played an exhibition game Tuesday.

This Michigan Mutual

tages designed to make

Likely Louis Foe

- Tommy Farr s s 2

London Bout In the Making

|

Carlen Hints Nova Wants to

in, | month had been cancelled definitely. | He said Jersey Jim was passing up

Delay Go With Joe.

NEW YORK, June 14 (U. P.).— It’s hard to believe half the talk you hear around a fight camp, but two and two today adds up to a Joe Louis-Tommy Farr heavyweiglit title bout in London, come September.

It had seemed pretty well settled that young Lou Nova would be the|

boy to climb through the ropes

against Louis next fall, but a startling sequence of events yesterday up at Pompton Lakes, N. J, where Louis is training for his June 28 title defense against Tony Galento, reversed the picture com-, pletely. | The Louis-to-London ball started] rolling when Joe Gould, who manages both Jim Braddock and Tommy Farr, spent an hour in serious conversation with Promoter Mike] Jacobs and Julian Black, one of Louis’ comanagers.

Second Link Forged

The second link in the circumstantial chain was forged when Gould announced that the scheduled Braddock-Farr fight in London next

the Farr fight to referee the Soliy Krieger-Al Hostak middleweight title scrap in Seattle June 27. Then Ray Carlen, who manages Nova, put his oar in with a hint that he would not accept a September title match with Louis if the Brown Bomber beats Galento, “because Nova and Louis will pull in four times as much money if they fight a year from now.”

Armstrong Gets Two Belts

Henry Armstrong, who was on hand to receive two gold belts from Nat Fleischer, editor of Ring magazine, has just returned to the United States from a successful defense of his welter crown in England, and Jolting Joe kept him busy all afternoon answering questions. Armstrong enthusiastically related the fine treatment accorded Negro fighters across the Atlantic. London promoters have offered Louis $250,000 virtually tax free to defend his heavyweight title against Farr. Gould later told Black, “It will be the happiest moment of my life when I see your face in the opposite corner of that London ring.” Gould faced Black across the ring once before—when the Brown Bomber belted out Braddock to win the title.

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Into Second Golf Round

Miss Barrett and Mrs. Hill Head List of Western Open Favorites.

ST. LOUIS, June 14 (U. P.).— Defending champion Beatrice Barrett of Minneapolis and former champion Mrs. Opal Hill of Kansas City headed a list of favored players moving into the second round of the Women’s Western Open golf tournament at Westwood Country Club today. Miss Barrett defeated Mrs. J. L. Bauman of St. Louis, 7 and 6, in her first round match. Mrs. Hill, medalist, beat Mrs. W. F. Anderson of St. Louis, 8 and 6. Mrs. Hill is a professional. Only upset of yesterday's first round was the defeat of former national champion Mrs. Helen Hicks Harb of Iong Island by Dorothy Foster, Springfield, Ill, 5 and 4. The first round was played on a soggy course under occasional showers. Championship round pairings today: Miss Barrett and Mrs. Charles Harting, St. Louis; Mrs. Hill and Shirley Ann Johnson, Chicago; Helen Dettweiler, Washington, D. C., professional, and Helen Hoffman of Salt Lake City; Miss Foster and Virginia Pepp of St. Louis; Jeanne Cline, Bloomington, Ill, and Mrs. Lillian Zech, Chicago; Ella Mae Williams, Chicago, and Mrs. Bert Weil, Cincinnati; Mrs. Albert Neblett, New Orleans, and Mrs. Sam Israel, New Orleans; Goldie Bateson, Milwaukee, and Phyllis Bu=chanan, Denver. ; Miss Johnson gained the second round in the only overtime match of the day when she defeated the veteran Mrs. Leon Solomon of Memphis, 1 up in 20 holes.

Junior Links Meet Opens

Golfers From Five Midwest States Entered.

ANN ARBOR, Mich., June 14 (U. P.).—The Western Junior golf tour=nament opened today as the Mid= west’'s best young linksmen drove down the tough University of Michigan course for qualifying rounds. Golfers between the 16 and 19 age limit were entered from Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Indiana and Michigan. The universities of Notre Dame, Northwestern and Michigan were represented. Individual stars in the four-day tourney include John Holstrom, Rockford, Ill, youth who won the crown in 1937; Chase Fannon, Northwestern sophomore who holds the Big Ten title, and Drew Egleston, Detroiter, who took the Michigan Junior championship. There was to be 18 holes of medal play today, two rounds of match play tomorrow, two more on Friday and the finals on Saturday. The championship flight will consist of the 32 qualifiers.

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