Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1939 — Page 6
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Hi A SORIA I Se
AR A Be I NS Ne AY
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COMER ee ae
Indians and Colonels Open Final A. A. Playoff Here Tonight
By Eddie Ash
A. A. AHEAD IN INDIANS HAVE WON
JUNIOR SERIES IT TWICE
URKING around the corner is the Little World Series with Indianapolis and Louisville wrapped up in a fight to see who gets the nod. . . . Twenty junior classics have been played and the American Association has triumphed in 11. , . . to nine for the International League. In 1917 Jack Hendrick's led the Redsking to a decisive victory over Toronto, four games to one, and in 1928, with Bruno Betzel at the helm, the Indians defeated Rochester, five games to one. . . . One tie also was played ooo It was a scheduled nine-game event that year. Louigville has won one Little Series, the 1921 battle,
defeating Baltimore, five games to three. . . . Joe Me-
Carthy managed the Colonels. . . . Louisville was knocked off three times in the inter-league play, in 1925 by Baltimore; in 1926, by Toronto, and in 1930 by Rochester. In 1926 the Colonels were bowled over five in a row. ... The current Little World Series setup calls for four best games in seven, . « » The event went the full distance last vear, Kansas City defeating Newark. . . . The 1938 attendance was 71,813, total receipts $55602 and players’ pool $18.749.51. Kansas City individual shares amounted to $451 while the Newark Rears each received $300.
International Reported Strong This Year
LOSE students of the International League believe the eirenit this last year was unusually strong. . . . Toronto is called the Strongest tailend club in a decade, Bob Elliott and Maurice Van Robayvs, outfielders who played with Toronto and Montreal, respectively, are hitting better with the Pirates than they did in the International Bill Terry believes the Jersey City club will be stronger next year, . The club will have more youth, which will make it more useful as the Giants’ No. 1 farm elub . Jersey City was eliminated by Newark in the playoff after winning the pennant in a close race. » ” » . » »
RNOLD GREENE. Albany, N. Y., first baseman, lavs claim to the champion batting slump. . . . His midseason average dropped from 330 to 258 when he hit safely once in 61 trips to the plate . Greene is an end coach on the Pittsburgh football staff.
A coincidence had Bill Barnicle, ing his first appearance as relief fo nacle Bill,
rookie Boston Bee pitcher, mak- + Bill Posedel, who is called Bar-
» » » »
Johnson IN THE HUDDLE
Expected | To Pitch
| | Tribe Ousts Kansas City in’ Five Games, Captures Clincher, 6-3.
Having destroved the Kansas City ‘Blues in the first-round American |
Association playoff, the rampaging Redskins will begin a new series at Perry Stadium tonight against the Louisville Colonels, who subdued Minneapolis. The Indians shoved the pennantwinning Blues out of the picture, four games to one, and the Colonels handed the Millers the same poison. { The playoff finals is on a four (best games in seven basis with the first two tilts in Indianapolis, tonight and tomorrow night. The teams will move to Louisville for | three games, and iy no winner has been determined at the end of the five games, the rivals will return! [to Indianapolis to conclude the | series. | Lefty Lloyd Johnson is slated to lopen on the Tribe rubber tonight land starting time is 8:15. He was la winner against Kansas City,
Prize Money at Stake
The winning team of this new series will receive $4000 and the loser $2000. and the winning team will represent the American Association in the Little World Series in which the plavers share in the receipts of the first four games, During the regular season play. Indianapolis defeated Louisviile 13 times in 22 clashes. However, the dope was knocked haywire in the playoff competition
first « round when both favorites lost. The Indianapolis-Louisville playoff brings together two managers who started the season as coaches
s Educated Joe Louis
» Three Fight ¥F Trainer Jack Blackburn's opinion the three fights that made Joe Louis a great battler were his two meetings with Max Schmeling and his clash with Tommy Farr | “When he hurt his right in the third against Farr, Joe first realized how important his left was,” says Jack. . . . Louis and Pastor are two fighters who have neither won nor lost a fight on a foul. . . . Both are former Golden Glove champions. On the day they fight in Detroit, Wednesday, there will be two examinations. . . . The first will be held at 1:15 p. m. at Detroit Fair Grounds in conjunction with the weigh-in, and the second within two hours of the time they step into the ring. This is in accordance with the State law and is designed to discern the effects of any rise in blood pressure in the late afternoon. » » » »
wi four straight pennants, Joe McCarthy takes a place all hy his lonesome among American League managers. , In the National League John J MeGraw attained the pinnacle with winners in 1921, 1922, 1923 and 1924 However, MeGraw's last two consecutive winners in that stretch were World Series losers McCarthy now heads for his fourth straight world title He set a record last year with three in a row. This is McCarthy's fifth pennant in nine vears as boss of the Yankees, whom he took over in 1931 and guided to the flag in 1032. The 1932 Yankees downed the Cubs in the World Series. winning four in a row... , They also handed the Bruins the same treatment a year ago,
|
» ”
Baseball at a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF (First Round)
(First Game) a 001 003 8% 13 © Indianapolis ............... . 0%} B= 1 Louisville “Kansas City *Minneapolis .. “Eliminated.
Kramer and r and Dicke
(Second Game)
SL Lomis ........... 000 021 000— 9 {New York . . 000 010 f00— 1 §
Mills and Glenn: Gomez and Rosar,
Jarshany; Ruffing, Chand.
“800 200
le 200 |
> > -
3 NATIONAL LEAGUE 1
(Eleven Innings)
[hitting
for their respective clubs, Wes Grif. fin of the Indians and Bill Burwell! of the Colonels. In other words, the “acting managers” really “acted up” | in their new positions. After losing a thriller to Kansas City, 1 to 0 Saturday night in which Bob Logan allowed only five hits to seven by Ernie Bonham, who pitched for the Blues, the Indians made up for that exhibition of weak in the clutch by coming through in rousing fashion yesterday. : Barrett's Second Victory
The Redsking won the series clincher, 6 to 3. bzhind eight-hit hurling by Red Barrett, It was his second triumph in the series. The Blues got the jump and led, 1 to 0, for three innings, In the fourth the Tribe staged a two-run rally on MeCormick's single, Hunt's double, a sacrifice fiy by Newman and a muff of a throw by Third Baseman Jack Saltzgaver., Bill Baker also hit safely in that round. The Indians hiked their total to three in the sixth when Hunt) worked Tom Reis for a walk, Newman sacrificed and Baker singled, | scoring Hunt. The lucky seventh was that way for the home team and the 7119) Sunday fans. After one out Adair | singled to deep short and reached third on Paul Dunlap’s single | right. McCormick drew a walk, | filling the bases and Johnny Babich |
|
to |
‘relieved Reis on the Kansas City | mound. Hunt Crashes Double (R
With the count three and two. |
YES, your son may come home any afternoon now with a bloody nose reaped while tackling a human battering ram. But don't worry about that too much. Football is a game in which boy meets boy with a bang and likes .it. To deny there is some risk to life and limb on the gridiron would be silly as well as untrue, There are hazards in all places doing all things. But your football playing son is protected by specially designed leather and foam rubber armor, staunchly reinforced. He is trained to take care of himself under physical, mental, and
ably
quate
weighed by the American Football Coaches Association, Remember, too, while your son is on the football field, he can’t fall out of a tree, skid on a banana peel, sprain his elbow in a backroom bar, or catch bad habits in a poolroom.
ORBID Junior to play football, and he'll probwithout supervision, proper equipment, or ade-
medical scratches and bruises which, lacking prompt and
expert treatment, he is 10 times safer,
knows better than tance of holding a ”
play anyhow--on some sandlot team
attention. He may conceal
moral pressure. He is far safer of a fall afternoon than, for example, the lad who's taking his exercise in an automobile. The literal fact is, according to statistics carefully assembled and
clusively
Coach Elmer Layden's column will appear ex-
Friday during the football season.
in The Times each Monday, Wednesday and moral fiber of our
petition,
Seite By Elme
seriously aggravated. to you about the source of his bumps.
The normal boy is full Thank your stars if your son wants to let out some of his natural deviltry in athletics. My advice then is, if a competent physician certifies Junior as physically sound, if Junior has the will, and the opportunity, to play properly. supervised football, let him have his way. Alien principles and action today would subvert Americanism by weakening the physical and
r Layden
may become needlessly and At the best he may lie No one a parent the general imporboy's confidence. of the old nick.
youth, Maybe what young
America needs is more good, solid contact com-
Times Sports
PAGE 6
eo x
Paul Dunlap scores for the Indians, but Myron McCormick (behind Dunlap) was tagged out by Johnny | won t on a play resulting from Allen Hunt's double off the right field wall in the
Riddle, Kansas City catcher,
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1939 | Re d S Mo Tribe Traffic Jam at the Plate
pennant. They lost twice yesterday to the
Coasting Yankees Not ‘So Hot Against Browns; ve | Nearer Flag
Ruffing and Gomez Have Something to Work For, hut St. Louis Gives Them Both a Thumping; Dodgers Bidding for Third.
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—The New York Yankees were something less than terrific in their first start since clinching the American League
lowly St. Louis Browns, 8-4 and 3-1,
In 19 previous starts they had lost only once to the Browns.
Their two top-notch pitchers, Red Ruffing and Lefty Gomez, were on the mound and they didn't have a team of second-stringers behind them. Big Red was after victory No. 22, a mark he has never attained in
16 years in the majors.
Ruffing. Ex-Yankees played important roles in the twin St. Louis triumphs. Don Heffner's two singles and sacrifice drove in three runs in the opener and Joe Gallagher hit a homer and single. Altogether the | Browns rapped Ruffing for 13 hits, | finally knocking him out in the] ninth, Jack Kramer was the win-/ ning pitcher, allowing 11 hits. Myril Hoag's single drove in two runs, and Joe Glenn's homer accounted | for the other to make ex-Yanks re- | sponsible for all the Browns’ tallies | {in the nightcap. Howard Mills] | bested Gomez in a left-handed duel, | (giving up only six hits to El | Goofy's nine. |
Reds Hold Advantage | The Reds moved nearer the Na-| tional League pennant when they| held their 3'2 game advantage by dividing a double-header with the | Bees. Despite six errors the Reds | he opener, 6-5, when Harry| | Craft doubled home the winning
Times Photo.
seventh inning. The Indians won the game, 6 to 3, and took the first round American Association playoff | tally with two out in the seventh. |
from Kansas City.
| Paul Derringer, although allowing 11 hits, stuck it out to win his 22d
Indians
KANSAS CIty AB R
x
Sturm, 1b Rizzuto, s: Priddy, 2b Saltzgaver, DiMaggio, Metheny, Matheson, Riddle, ¢ Thompson eis, p Babriek, Bovle
CHICAGO, Sept. 18 (U. P).— | Bobby Jones had his “Calamity
SND DD DISD
P his “Madam X.” Between them,
She's My Sweetheart,’ Says Ward of Pet Putter
Jane” and Marvin (Bud) Ward has |
victory. The Bees snapped a sixgame losing streak in winning the nightcap, 5-3. Hassett and Majeski drove in two runs each. The Giants helped the Reds’ cause when they divided two with the Cards. Carl Hubbell conquered Morton Cooper in a pitchers’ battle to win the opener, 2-1, and end the Cards’ five-game winning streak. Alex Kampouris drove in the winning run with a double in the sevlenth. The Cards won the nightcap, |2-1, when Fiddler Bill McGee, with |
after the first three holes, but it wasn't until the 12th he began to pile up his lead. At the end of 18, he led four up and by 27 he was seven up.
Gomez was after No. 13 and the right to get, the pitching assignment for the second World Series game following
Pro Gridders InF ‘ull Swing
Green Bay and Washington Open With Victories.
By UNITED PRESS The National League football season is a week old and nine of the 10 teams have seen action, leaving the New York Giants to begin defense of the championship next Sunday. The Detroit Lions, Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers stand dead - locked for the lead of the Western division with one victory each, and Brooklyn and Washington top the Eastern group with a single win apiece. Green Bay and Washington inaugurated the 1939 season with victories yesterday. The Packers handed the Chicago Cardinals their second straight defeat, 14-10, and the Redskins blanked the Philadelphia Eagles, 7-0. Forward passes were responsible for both victories. Sammy Baugh pitched a 29-yard touchdown aerial to Charlie Malone to hand the Eagles their initial defeat. Arnold Herber threw a 30-yard pass to Carl Mulleneau for the Packers’ first touchdown, and his toss to Don Hutson carried to the five-yard line and set up the second tally. Eddie Janowski needed only
they were about the niftiest putters On the 28th hole. he made a
ever to win the U. 8. Amateur Golf | . . Championship for their respective (Sassi Shop heb Oke Pious bosses. : ~ :
: 3 ‘a s tu upset. Billows had begun to click. ls Var Waeh ex Spd rom He laid a perfect stymie, dropping a a : ‘his ball five feet from the cup and
gr "Madam X" from a stack of cdds| . : . o and ends in Tommy Armour's pro | four feet from Ward's in a direct
(at Philadelphia, Brookl t Detroit. : shop the day before the 43d ama- Bud took ‘one Jong look: at ihe] WHO hurled the yellow ball, for 13/2 adelphia, Brooklyn a ro 0 teur championship began and she g dy hits as Hugh Casey won his 13th
° a : : |situation, pulled out a mashie= : a Never le. him down. ee | niblick, lifted his ball over Billows |8ame. Luke Hamlin outpitched 0 She's my sweetheart,
‘some ninth inning aid from Bob two plunges to carry the ball across Bowman, pitched a four-hitter. the payoff line. Tiny Engebretsen rooklyn Wins Pair | kicked both points after touchdown. Bolle NS , a definite con- | This week's schedule: Wednesday tender for third place, smacking the aClevelaid at Brooklyn: Sunéeye. Cubs down twice, 10-4 and 3-2. The icage ap Steen Bay, Cui | Dodgers slapped four Cub pitchers, | S380 LITS AL TILLSOUIEN, NEW 1 Or
FIO IODOOT Tre Te | DOOD T WRIT Q
o | Washington 000 bey om aie M=3 1} §| Hunt lined a double off the right Makoskv. p Tront, Thomas, MeKain and Tebberts: | field wall, his second in the game Chase, Carrasquel, Holland and Ferrell. fand seventh in the series. Adair] land Dunlap scored and McCormick was nailed at the plate. McCormick caught up with Dunlap but had to slow down to Keep from passing him and was tagged out by Catcher Johnny Riddle. Newman then poked a single to left, scoring Hunt, and the Indians
23
New York . Pittsburgh
Boston Philadelphia AMERICAN LEAGUE
BW DODD D ert yt DEG et et ps y -| ososcosocooco~ooos™
Totals . 3 24 Ravie batted for Babrich In 8th MeCullough batted for Makosky INDIANAPOLIS R
26,
2
in
New Vork Boston Chicage Cleveland Detroit Washington Philadelphia St. Lownis
Qo
Adair Dunian “ MeCormick, ef Hunt, If Newman, Baker r Lang, 3b
2h rf
‘Major Leaders
Pet. |
RATYTING
Top Skeet Honors
ih
DE le Td
> =
AR 1" DiMaggio, Yankees ... 428 he
io ABB “A WH
a Foxx. Red Sox | Mize, Cardinals IJohnson, Athletics | Medwick, Cardinals . | Keltner, Indians HOME RUNS Foxx, Red Sox 35/DiMage Greenberg. Tigers 29 Ott, G {Williams Red Sox 28! RUNS BATTED IN Will'ms, Red Sox 133/ Foxx. Red Sox . 105 DiMaggio. Yanks 13 Ce eR ards 108 "irs
McCormick, Reds 1 Rolfe, Yankees . 202 Keltrer. Indians. McCormick, Reds 183 MeCosky. Rens Medwick, Card’ls 182)McQuinn. Browns
GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF (Second Round)
Ponisville at Indianapolis, night game,
wn > po so
WIR IHD
38 3 34 33 33 33
DIV
NATIONAL LEAGUE Reston at Cincinnati, two games, New York at St, nis, twa games Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, Only games scheduled.
-
AMERICAN LEAGUE
St. Louis at New York. Detroit at Nahington, Cleveland at Philadelphia,
181 180 Only games scheduled, 180
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF
Indians at Bat—
|
were out in front, 6 to 1. The Blues went down fighting and threw a scare in the ninth. They got tn Barrett, scored twice and had runners on third and first when the game-ending out was made as Clyde MeCullough. a pinch hitter, {popped to Newman. Jimmy Adair and Lindsay Brown! had heavy duty around the keystone | as Barrett kept the Blues smashing the ball into the ground. Adair accepted 10 chances and Brown nine | out of 10. Hunt and McCormick turned in difficult catches in the
outfield. |
Minneapolis . .v 100 900 100 2 11 Louisville . 001 910 Bix— 8 7 Hash, Hogsett and Lacy; Rich Lewis,
“
and l PLAYOFF STATISTICS AB H 2h 3h HR n 9 4
| "Hunt Adair Lang . McCormick .. Newman . Baker Sentt Dunlap Brown
Football
NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game)
.. 001 000 106 2 . 000 010 M0
Danning; Cooper
LE LI |
and
New Yark St. Lownis Hubbell
Jan Owen. JA
and (Second Game) 100 D000 BN | St. Louis 200 800 MOx— 2 Lohrman., W. Brawn and Danning: Gee, R. Bouman and Padgett,
1 6 LI
Me-
New York
Ja83
DD wD wD
(First Game) { Rroakisn ...... , 300 012 004-10 13 0 Chieage 100 000 M3 1 1} Casey and Tedd: Whitehill, Root, Russell, Lillard and Mancuso. (Second Game)
Results
, | COLLEGES
we Ano 50
Happy Chandler Sought as Pro Grid League Head; McCarthy Must Get Credit for Yankees’ Winning
250 | 250 |
3 8 2 9 5 1 Passean,
Brooklyn Chieagn Hamlin and Rartle, Root and Hartnett,
N20 000 NIN. NOR 200 HON Todd:
Louisiana Normal, 15; Centenary, 0, Concordia (Minnesota), &: Meorhead Teachers, 0, Union (Kentueky), 9%;
Alfred Hel.
brook, WO, San Jose State. 35: Montana State, 0, New Mexican State Teachers (Silver City), 12: Arizona State (Flagstaf), 12 (tie). Bemidfi Teachers, ers, 0, Lenoir Rhyne. 13: Roanoke, 0, Milligan, 20: Kiwassee, 3. Emory and Henry, 11; Randolph Ma. eon, 13, Wake Forest, 31: Elon, ® - St. Mary's (Texas), ¢ on pd N- 210 3 San Francsico, 6. Gee, Sewell and! | Ridsiohie goo aon Joo 4
Pearson, Kerksieck and Warren, Kracher; Klinger and Susce.
(First Game) \ . B30 200 eX 11) tna 030 00 10x— 8 10 R Posedel, Frankhouse, Earlier. Lanning and Lopez: Derringer and Lombardi. (Second Game) Lv. BOD O03 200-- 5 10 0 , B00 O01 M1— 3 9 3 ThompLom.
12; Mayville Teach-
Boston ‘ Cincinnati Errvickson, Lanning and Loper: son. Niggeling, Vander Meer and bardi, Hershberger, (First Game)
.. -
hiladelphia University of tishurgh Johnson and Warren:
Mueller, STATE HIGH SCHOOLS
Valparaiso, 12; Crown Point, 0. Connersville, 7: Richmond, 6. Muncie, 14: Morton Memorial (Knightstown), 14 (tie). | Washington (South Bend), | (Evansville), ® 200 100 100— 2 yx Central (South Bend), 00 M02 Px— 4 ® ville, o MeCrabh, Caster,
(Second Game) A
13: Reitz
AMERICAN LEAGUE
(First Game)
x 25; Crawfords-
Cleve Phila
Feller and Hemsley; ———————— Potter and Haves, PROFESSIONAL Philadelphia, ©
11: Chicago Cardinals,
“©
(Second Game) an Ceneaneses 020 326 230-1 IY 2 LA HH TO 100 200 S00— 5 13 A Milnar and Pyrtlak: Nagel and Brucker.
Washington,
Green Bay, 10.
Ross, C. Dean,
| Win Casting Events
«12 a Ollie Baus took the Fish-O cast3 Ing contest at Riverside Hatcheries A Desanten Galehonse, Wilson yesterday with an 88, while Joe DenN Second Gatuer (laney was second with an 81 and Chicage ... 0on 301 1ee— 7 so Fred Hibernik third with a 74. The Boston «+ O31 #03 13x—11 18 3 women’s event went to Mrs. DeKnott, Eaves. Marenm, €. Brawn and |laney with a 43. The next contest
s . Reving, \ - Trent Shocach, Desawtels, Dickman, Bar: is to be held Thursday.
(First Game) GCRICORS -ooo.oovvne 200 110 002— Boston Vaasa SEE LLU LL fee and Tresh;
n “
Wind Plays Tricks
A strong wind hampered the fly Firing an eight-over-par 118 for 27 purists it may be a long time be-|the 10 miles in 12 minutes, 20 sec-
chasers and also checked some long
RBU Av. drives. Vince DiMaggio pulled down Ky. 400 a blast by Bill Baker that had State amateur golf tournament title. He looks, thinks and acts like a [third.
A386 plenty behind it when it left the Play was over the Helfrich Field seasoned professional golfer.
(Continued on Page Seven)
A386
By JOE WILLIAMS
Times Special Writer | DETROIT, Sept. 18—Theres a strong move on to make Governor Happy Chandler of Kentucky presiident of the National Professional | Football League. . . . And the Gov-
ernor can be had. . The job's worth $25.000 a year. | Joe Louis will be a 3-to-1 choice to stop Bob Pastor in their 20-] {rounder here Wednesday night. . . . |There is one very insistent and | noisy dissenter. . . . Mr. James J.| Johnson tells all and sundry Pastor will stop Louis in seven rounds. | . « We forgot to ask him, “what ith?” | Main trouble with Nova is that he thought he was much better] than he is. . . . And that was the main trouble with the experts, too.| I. « « Nova talked such a good fight | he had everybody believing him... | He'll never be a hitter and until! he develops better footwork he'll never be a real top notch battler. | . + « He lacks foot balance and any kind of punch will up-end him, | Pastor has fought 252 rounds since he first met Louis in “the battle of the furious reverse.” , . .| In the same space of time Louis {has fought only 43 rounds. . . . Mr.! {Johnson points to this fact as one of the reasons why his man will] win, asserting that Pastor doesn't (stop his men and Louis does. In four years attendance in the! professional football league has
w
‘
| —Sturm.
Lr
n
Brown
AW Barrett, saw
IAD ae 85 re ~BODDD DD >
2/beamed. “I just her in
1 1 1 0 n 0 n 0 f
10 14 100 000 002
a= 29
Totals ....ovnn
Kansas City \ | Indianapolis ..... . DOD 201 30x
Rung batted in-—-Priddy Newman Baker, Hunt 2 Selizgaver, Thompson. year, “Madam X" won the amateur wo-bas a 2 Pr p, 8 $ RUE, MW Sacrifices “Newman 2, Reis. | fOr Ward. He was deadly on the Dole Ray Adair I ewan, greens all the way to the fina iddle Saltzgaver. ' ¢ 58m | © Kansas City 6, Indianapolis 6. Base Gt Sour Soe ier; fEalliss Ray Bilballs—O eis, 4; Barrett, 1. Struck out lows ou . . - —By Reis. 3; Barrett. 1. Hits—Off Reis, | ee p Us agepsie, ¥ Ya he - 8 in 6'34 innings: Babich, 2 mm 23 inning; | quire only putts on e MakoskY, Jone in 1, uning. Losing pitcher | greens he had to play to defeat -- mnpires—Stewart, Johnson an - " Conlan ‘Tine 1:43, the Poughkeepsie printing salesman, 7 and 5. On 12 of those greens
Keeps Tri-State Title re neded only one stroke.
Ward is no picture golfer, but EVANSVILLE, Ind. Sept. 18.— if he decides to remain among the
sight.”
Just as Willie Turnesa's mag
Berry yesterday
holes, Wilson, Owensboro, fore they take the big gold U. S.
retained his Tri- amateur trophy away from him.
course here, Ward had Billows on the run|
upped B84 per cent, far exceeding ever became a great success in the! any other sports activity at the box | ring. Steve Hamas came closest: he | office. . . . Like the corset, pro foot- advanced far enough to beat fel{lows like Loughran and Schmeling but even so he never got close to! championship brackets. It may be that football training brings into | play an entirely different set of! muscles and thus unsuits the in-| dividual for the demands of the!
ball is here to stay.
An item not to be overlooked in connection with the Yankees winning their fourth straight championship is that the team played heads up, spirited run-every-thing-out baseball all the way. There was no disposition to rest on laurels or Prize ring. surrender to ennui. The team played| Jim Braddock and Joe Gould are as if it were winning its first pen- out here for the fight. . . . They alnant. And a large part of the credit | Ways like to be around Louis when belongs to Joe McCarthy, the man- [the pay off comes. . . . They get 5 ager. [per cent of the Negro's purses, an
This was supposed to be Mec- arrangement dating back to the Carthy's toughest year. Even his/Chicago fight. friend, old Connie Mack, expressed| Out at Ann Arbor, the Michigan doubt early in the season that he | tub beaters are grooming Tom Harcould keep the players keyed up tojmon of Gary, Ind. for all-America another championship drive after honors this fall. . . . He's the young winning three in a row. Well, the man who threw a late pass to beat final returns are in and we think | Yale, 15-13, last season. . , . Fritz McCarthy's entitled to take a bow.| Crisler says he's a potential touchHe's done another fine job of man- | down threat whenever he gets his aging men. {hands on the ball, which in the Nova was a football player and | Wolverines’ attack, is three out of so was Pastor . .. and it’s a singu-| five times. lar fact that no football player We still doubt that Mike Jacobs
CHAMPIONS’ DAY--TOMORROW!
WORLD'S OUTSTANDING HORSE RACING EVENT
GREYHOUND, PETER ASTRA, DEAN HANOVER
and Other Exhibitions—FAIRGROUNDS—Tomorrow, 1:30 P. M. Tickets now nn sale at LL. 8. Ayres, Junior Chamber of Commerce and
exerved Seats, 81.28 (Inel. Gen. Adm.)
N. Pennsylvania St.
GENERAL ADMISSION 50c*
the | shop once, but it was love at first
jc /mind he won't be beaten,
2 niblick won the championship last |
Cherry Wins Feature
|
Times Special
Clyde Passeau to give the Dodgers | victory in the second game, lifting |them to within one game of the | third-place Bruins. | Big John Gee's debut was spolled when the Pirates made eight errors, and the $70,000 southpaw lost his first major league start to the Phillies, 7-2. The Pirates grabbed the | afterpiece, 10-1, as Bob Klinger hurled a four-hitter. | In the .American League the third-place White Sox held their half-game lead over Cleveland by | breaking even with the Red Sox. Lefty Lee, allowing only three hits, | won the first game, 6-1. The Red | Sox hammered out 16 hits to grab | the nightcap, 16-8. Cleveland made five errors to help stall Bob Feller in his quest of | /victory No. 22. Joe Gantenbein’s single in the eighth drove in the two winning runs in a 4-2 victory. | The Indians won the second game, 18-5. Hank Greenberg's homer in the | 11th gave Detroit a 2-1 victory over |
and bounced it into the cup to halve the hole in par four. That's Ward's game. In his own
Auto Spin at Muncie
MUNCIE, Ind, Sept, 18. — The 20-lap feature event of a stock car auto racing program at Steeplechase Speedway here yesterday was won by Tom Cherry, Muncie, who turned
onds. Eddie Ropon, Muncie, was second and Joe Nester, Albany, Floyd Robbins, Anderson, Cherry and Bernie Morgan, Muncie, won elimination races.
Taken by Christie
The 50-target skeet shoot at the Capital City Gun Club yesterday went to M. G. Christie, who broke 48 targets. There was a tie for first in the 25-target event when Arnett, Beanblossom and C. Farrington each had perfect scores of 25.
Grote and Griffith tied for top honors in the skeet event at the Indianapolis Trap and Skeet Club, when each shattered 48. Boggs was winner in the club's trapshoot with a 46.
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outlined training plans, and yet he|delight you, money refunded. Peter-
to another whirl against the dark destroyer. In some respects, the Jersey bar keep is a remarkable man. He is undersized, has a short reach, is built along the general lines of a
Make Woodworking Your Hobby-—Use
DELTA MOTOR DRIVEN TOOLS
Exclusively at VONNEGUT'S
120 BE. Washington Et.
is still a fighter, despite the fact|son’s Ointment also wonderful for
that he must be in the middle 30's.itching of feet, cracks between toes.
AFTER A HARD DAY'S WORK-
IT SURELY 15 GREAT TO RELAX AN’ REST ON THE WAY HOME,
A Wl
¥F -
® SEF our New Fall Arrivals In
Quality Clothes for the Family——on Easiest of Credit Terms.
JULIA'] GOLDMAN Union Store
118-122 No. Pennsylvania St.
RIDE HOME ON THE
TROLLEYS OR BUSES! NO PARKING OR
OXYGEN THERAPY This equipment can be rented at HAAG'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE 22nd and Meridian
TRAFFIC WORRIES
: ENJOY ® COMFORTABLE. BN CONVENIENT AND ECONOMICAL TRANSPORTATION! RAILWAYS
Established 38 Years }
AUTO AND DIAMOND
LOANS |
20 Months to Pav
WOLF SUSSMAN, INC. 230 W. WASH. 8ST. Opposite Statehouse
LI-2749
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