Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1940 — Page 6
SPORTS...
By Eddie Ash
THAT LONG encounter
yesterday set a record for
extra innings at Perry Stadium. ... Too bad the home boys lost it. . . . However, the stayaways missed a treat. . . . The playing field presented an ideal picture for an artist, what with the brilliant green grass and the ivy on the walls just about to bud. . .. The attendance was
approximately 3200. . . . Kind of The alibi? . . .
parently there is no definite solution except taxes and But give a guy a free ducat and he’ll bust his
oto the ball yard.
A Gallup Poll wouldn't solve the problem. . .
low for a sunny affernoon. . . . . Apgasoline. . . . buttons getting out
Many of the opening-day cheer leaders did not show up yester- :
day. . . . It was ever thus. .., Golf
and motoring got a big play yes-
terday but golf and motoring got a big play in other cities, too. . . . Louisville doubled Indianapolis in Sabbath attendance. . . . Give up?
Birthday celebrations yesterday Mrs. Wes Griffin. .
: Tribe President Leo Miller and . . and Joe McCarthy, Yankee manager, . .
The first two named lost some of their pepper when Minneapolis tallied three runs in the 16th but finally decided to forget it all and
think about another day. .
Minneapolis Newsmen Get a Break
ROBERTO CHICO ESTALELLA, Minneapolis left fielder, is a Cuban. . . . Three newspapermen are trailing the Millers and they were ‘aglow with adjectives after their team sewed up the fracas... . It’s a cinch to write “winning stories,” a pain in the neck to write
something from the losing end.
The Millers’ home opener will be against
and Miller President Mike Kelley putting the bellows to the Mill City
the Indians on May 2 is in the old home town now curtain raiser.’
DEE MOORE probably will catch all of Lloyd Johnson’s games. . . . He receives and handles Johnson’s knuckler in better fashion
than Dick West. . . . Don French,
the righthander who was turned
back to the Indians by the Boston Bees, had a kink in his side and Trainer Al Ritter is giving it a daily going-over.
French declares he’ll be ready shortly. . . . He hopes.
. . . ditto
Manager Griffin and the entire team.
There’s a Fellow Named Jacobs
OTHER PATIENTS on Ritter’s rubbing board yesterday were Art Jacobs, veteran southpaw, and Turkey John Wilson, righthander. .+ . Unless Jacobs comes out of it shortly he'll be rubbed to a frazzle. . . . He's a relief pitcher of no mean prowess on past reputation but the fans haven't seen enough of him to know what his business is
around the premises. ® »
THE INDIANS have been in
tJ the North long enough now to
» s
catch up on choice steaks and the alibi of poor nourishment in Florida
is out. . . . Maybe they are over eating. .
. » Four hits in 16 innings.
. Li there an oculist in the crowd? ¢ ook at the standing, Toledo and Kansas City sharing the league lead. . . . Evidently Toledo has better talent than the experts Ping
including this department... . . One
first and wound up in the coal hole. .
year Toledo was picked to finish . » On another occasion the
Hens were picked for the cellar and came within a whisker of win-
ning the pennant.
John Law and Baseball Pool
Tickets
SCORES OF “other games” are being posted at Perry Stadium
as repidly as they are received by
ticker. . . . This service informs
those who go in for the “baseball pool” ticket racket that they are
gypped again.
Organized Baseball has condemned baseball pool tickets and h as shouted from the housetops about the swindle but it appears that the
gullible public is going to continue dimes and quarters to keep big shots
to go for it and put out nickels, eating Kansas City steaks.
2 2 #
THERE ARE persons in Indianapolis who never hav e been in Perry Stadium simply because they throw their money away on baseball pools and choose to get the results by ticker or radio. The City police department and the Marion County sheriff depu-
ties are very efficient in juvenile
knocking off the baseball pool gyp they get nowhere
problems but when it come to
Baseball ot a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Toledo . Kansas City ...... JSDIANAPOLIS wer
3 Pau i nneapolis _Columbus :
0 td ft
AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww.
Boston .........0 0000000000 Cleveland
OTD 101910 bb jo fo bet
NATIONAL LEAGUE w.
Cincinnati Brooklyn Philadelphia Pittsburgh Chicago St. Louis Boston
VIN IISIIM™
RESULTS YESTERDAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Milwaukee 1000 2 7 3 Toledo .... ......... 010 000 011— 3 10 1 Kline, Herring, Marrow and Garbark; Wirkkala and Spindel, Mackie. 8
060 003— 9 000 020— 4 2 Melton, Martin, and Tichacak,
Kansas City . 000 Columbus . 002 Wensloff and Riddle; Horn, Lowrey, Sherrill Cooper.
St.Paul :............ 130-001 610— 6 13 1 Louisville 1 00— 6 0 Herring and Schlueter; Shaffer, Hughson, Terry and Lewis.
AMERICAN LEAGUE 105 202 011—12 15 0 Cleveland . ......... 010 000 100— 2 5 2 Rowe and Tebbeits; Feller, Eisenstat, Jungels, Dobson and Hemsley.
002 103 000— 6 12 0 . Ss 110 000. 000— 2 7 © Eyons and Tresh: Coffman, Whitehead, Niggeling and Swift, Susce.
Chicago St. Lo
Other games rained out. NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Le L000 230 000— 5 9 1 Ry 011 001 010— 4 11 3 Davis, Lanier, J. Russell, Shoun
C. y Coaner and Padgett; J. sa Root, Raf-
fensberger, Olsen and Other games rained out.
Box Score—
o
Trechoc! Estalella,
NOOWO~WHHOODHIT WOAH HOOD WaD
» - 0] COCHRAN RD Bn -| coocoosooo~oa
Totals 3 1 Denning batted Geary in eighth
ed. » batted for ificed.
INDIANAPOLIS R
00000 OHOONOT oomoNaabntw;d) OOUOIPOINOWOD ooc0o0co~PooN
co00es002auwe
-
Minneapolis 000 000 000
000 000 3—3 Indianapolis 000 Uh 90 in—Weintraub, Rolandson, Rubs batted hits—Rolandson, EsSacrifites—Geary 2, Gaffke. Dou
Smythe. Two-base
1 InSmythe, none in 5 innings; off in 15 innings; off Doll, none nning pitcher—Smvthe '—Johnson. = Umpires—Ste
Haefner in 12th’
GAMES TODAY
*% AMERICAN ASSOCIATION nneapolis at INDIANAPOLIS. St. Paul at Louisville. us Milwaukee at Toledo. Only games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit at Chicago. Cleveland at St. Louis. . Philadelphia at New York (postponed,
cold). Washington at Boston.
NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Brooklyn t y ' New York at in aiortnenea fain) Chicago at Pittsburgh. St, Louis at Cincinnati.
% Bola Fires Low 80 i At Highland
Lou Bola fired a low 80 to.take top honors in the special medal handicap tournament held yesterday at thes Highland Golf and Country Club.
The list of division winners follows:. 5 ; Class A— Paul Browning, 8-11— 70; Chet Spriggs, 81-11—170. Class B—Gross, D. Eberts, 85; net, G. C. Miller, 8%-19—70 and H. S. Cheney, 88-18—70. Class C—Gross, Mike Duffey, 96; net, J. H. Taylor, 96-24—T72. More than 125 linksmen participated in the tourney, a duplicate of which will be sPaged Wednesday at the official opening of the course.
It's ‘Grandpa’ Now
Manager Bill McKechnie of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team passed out cigars today and grinned sheepishly at his new title of “grandpa.” McKechnie assumed .the title when a telegram from Birmingham, Ala. informed him of the birth of a son to the junior McKechnies. Bill Jr. married Peggy ‘Kinselman of Wilkinsburg three years ago. He is secretarytreasurer of the Birmingham Birons team. Deacon Bill's first grandson probably will be named Bill III. -
Diz 0. K.—for 3 Innings
CHICAGO, April 22 (U. P.)— Dizzy Dean’s “nothing ball” hasn’t changed a bit over the winter. He got by with it for three innings against the St. Louis Cardinals yesterday, permitting only a scratch single by Stuart Martin. He'd throw ,a slowball, then a slower one. tea For three innings he was 8 magician. Then the roof fell in on old Diz—five runs on.six more hits —and the Chicago Cubs lost, 5 to 4. The Cards just dug in, waited for Diz to throw one over, and hit. Knocked out of the box after four and two-thirds innings—adding another to the seven straight incomplete games he worked last season—Dean bundled up in a huge coat and sat out the remainder of the game on the bench with no remarks about a sore arm.
Maki Races Next At Minneapolis
NEW ORLEANS, April 22 (U. P.). —Paavo Nurmi, great Finnish distance runner in the 1920's, prepared final instructions today for-his pupil, Taisto Maki, 29-year-old fellow countryman on tour of the United States for benefit of the Finnish Re-
| lief Fund.
Maki yesterday celebrated a return to the outdoor cinder paths by defeating Don Lash, former Indiana University star, in a three-mile race at City Park. Maki won in 14:10.4, well under his pwn wofid’s record of 13:42.4, but he finished 200 yards in front of Lash. Nurmi is leaving soon for Helsinki where he says business affairs will keep him occupied. Maki continues on tour with Naylor Stone, his manager, going to Minneapolis for a race May 4 and then to Los Angeles May 17. when he has a chance to even his score with Greg Rice, who beat both him and Lash indoors in New York this month, setting a new indoor record for three miles in doing so. Lash finished ahead of Maki in that race.
Industrial Golf Loop To Name Officers
The Industrial Golf League will elect 1940 officers at a meeting at 7:30 tonight at the employment office of the U. S. Rubber Co. The league will ke composed of eight-man teams representing the U. S. Rubber Co. Indianapolis Power & Light, International Harvester, Postoffice, P. R. Mallory, Unemployment Compensation, Kingan and Schwitzer-Cummins.
Greyhound Mound Worker
Stewart Davis, Indiana Central College sophomore hurler, will try for his third straight victory Wednesday against the University of Louisville on the Greyhound diamond. Davis . pitched a no-hit game a gainst Taylor University in his first start of the season and won a close game from Hanover College for his second win. Friday afternoon the Gr ey hounds play Taylor in an Indiana Intercollegiate College. Conferefice game on the local field as a part of the annual: high school day program,
Indians
Shape
2 Lefthanders [Baffle Tribe
In Long Fray “Logan Is Sent Against Millers in 2d-Game °
By EDDIE ASH The Indianapolis’ Indians ‘ were not too sure about the situation today and pulled in their tomahawks while holding & war pow wow, They
against lefthanded pitching. Perhaps as a team the boys refuse to admit the weakness, but on paper the statistics are there and the word already has been distributed around the American Association that the Indians are suck-
: |ers against southpaw pitching.
All of the Indians’ power is to
the left and the law of averages
says that in a tight game the *“percentage” is in favor of rivals who bave any kind of southpaw chuckers to send into the breach. At any rate, the Indians are at an even 500 in the «American Association standing with one “victory and one defeat, and 16 innings were required to knock ’em off in that single setback.
Wants Ace on Edge
Lefty Bob Logan, who defeated the St. Paul Saints in the seasou’s opener last Thursday, was given a call today to face the Minneapolis Millers inthe second of the series. He held the Saints to four blows Thursday and Manager Griffin decided to jump him’ over other mound members today to keep him on edge. “Bob is our ace and we intend to pitch him every fourth day. We dare not let him lose his edge,” Griffin said. 7 It was ladies’ day at the ball park today, the first free afternoon for the feminine customers. One was set up for them last Friday but rain cut them out. Today’s contest was scheduled to start at 2:30. The admission for women on ladies’ day is 15 cents, which covers Federal tax and service charge.
Easy Going for Fans
In some other cities it runs from 25 to 35 gents. Pretty soft for baseball customers here, frée parking space and three ladies’ days’ a week. And no “up” on ciggies. We bought a package in Birmingham early last week and it cost 20 cents. A thriller if there ever was one was staged, at Perry Stadium yesterday, Minneapolis defeating the Indians, 3 to 0, in 16 innings. The Redskins were subdued and baffled by southpaw pitching on the part of Milton Haefner (11 innings) and Harry Smythe (five innings), and were held to four blows over the 16 rounds. The Millers collected 14 hits, had 14 runners left on base to four
The Tribe “swatters” . were pathetic at the dish against a rookie lefthander for 11 rounds and against a veteran left for five.
Millers Have Seven Sacrifices
Clever pitching ' and superb defense kept the Indians in the ball game. A record probably was established when the Millers accumulated seven sacrifice hits. And it was the failure of Pitcher Lloyd Johnson to sacrifice that cost the ball game. A good bunt in the sixth frame would have made a lot of difference and scored a run, but Johnson bunted to the pitcher and a runner ahead was erased at second. A walk and two hits usually bring a run, but Johnson, being on base, “blocked” the paths and three Indians were left stranded. : But Johnson pitched great ball. He got no hitting help from his mates who performed like a bunch of kitten ballers (softball to you). Allen Hunt got two of the Tribe’s four safe blows over the 16-inning route while regulars like Hill, Moore, Newman and Richardson got noth-
ing. . Smythe Does It
Haefner, a Florida State League graduate, held the Indians to four hits in 11 innings and the veteran Harry Smythe turned in a record of “rone in five.” Locked in a nothing-to-nothing score for 15 rounds the Millers went to bat in the 16th in this fashion: Wright led off with a double and Weintroub plated him with a single. Loyd Johnson seemingly sensed that it was a lost cause and “blew un.” Stori sacrificed, Fausett was safe on Moore's wide throw to first. Rolandson singled and Smythe single. The fact that Pitcher Smythe singled for the second consecutive time convinced Manager Griffin that Johnson was through for the day after pitching a brilliant game for 15 innings. : Art Doll was ‘sent in as a relief hurler, but the damage was beyon repair. The Indians could not hit the side of a barn with a fly swatter. It probably will go into the American Association records as an jtem—Tfour hits in 16 innings and no hits in the last nine inning.
Riggs Is Winner ; On Texas Court
, HOUSTON, Tex., April 22 (U. P)). —Bobby Riggs took the 10th annual River Oaks Tennis Tournament in his third try at River Oaks yesterday, beating Bitsy Grant, 7-5, 6-3, 715, in the final. He succeeded Frank Guernsey of Rice Institute, national intercollegiate winner for the last two years. Grant won the title here in 1935, 1936 and 1937. 4 Then Riggs, paired with his Wimbledon championship partner, wood Cooke of Portland, Ore,, in the doubles. final, lost to Charles Hare of England and Jack Tidball of Los Angeles, 6-1, 6-8, 6-2.
Simonizings # Your Erie 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ~~~ Dp as Suckers |
Gunning It on Franklin's Dirt Track
hits and six left by Indianapolis.|.
—M
NDAY, ‘APRIL 22, 1940
for: Southpaws 4
have decided they are pushovers| &
the rail) jockeying for the lead in the Franklin. The main event was won by
Here are Mike Salay of Seuth Bend. (on the outside) and *Chagles Szekeney, also of South Bend (on first elimination heat on yesterday’s dirt track racing program at : : Slim Rutherford of Louisville, Ky, while Salay fihished second. George Sheer of Indianapolis won a special match race for midget cars.
Butler Teams Will Be Busy
All spring athletic teams at But-. ler University will see action this week, with the track team’s participation in the annual Drake Re‘lays at Des Moines Thursday and Friday “afternoons highlighting the card. Coach Ray Sears planned to run his thinlies against Miami Univer-
sity today or tomorrow at Oxford, O. in preparation for the outdoor show at Drake. originally scheduled for last Saturday, was postponed because of! bad : weather. ; The baseball team, which lost its first game Saturday, 14 to 13, to St. Joseph, was scheduled to play Wabash this afternoon at Crawfordsville. It will meet Purdue here tomorrow and Earlham Saturday. | Joe Anson, Pendleton sophomore, was expected to lead his teammates in an intercollegiate ‘golf - match against Wabash at Crawfordsville this afternoon. Having been defeated in its first two starts, the tennis team will meet Ball State at Muncie Thursday. The Butler recquet wielders were edged by Indiana University Saturday on the new clay courts in the Fieldhouse, 4 to 3. : Fourteen athletes have been certified by Sears for the Drake outdoor carnival. They are Harold Feichter, Tom Harding, Earl Cummings, John Reno, Co-capt. Charles Marshall, Armstead Elkin, Ora Kincaid, Co-capt. William Southworth, Wayne Dunlop, James Stewart, Elias Poulos, Max Armer, Bernard Fox and George Blare,
One Change Made In A. B. C. Leaders
DETROIT, April 22 (U.P) —A week-end of heavy bombarding had brought only one change today in the list of keglers at the American
‘Bowling Congress. “Mile Shirghio, gray-haired veteran from Mt. Vernon, N. Y., accounted for the only shift in the leaders’ list. His total of 1935 was good enough
division. Leaders are falling, however, in the unofficial 10-year average rating. Top spot for the decade is now held by Walter Ward, veteran anchor of the Linsz Recreation All Stars, who hds an average of 202.75 for the 90’ consecutive games from 1931 to 1940 inclusive. A: huge series in the singles and doubles car-
rent classic, and this replaced the weak 1734 he rolled up in 1930. A ‘close second is Johnny Crimmins: of Detroit, who trails by 24 pins. Hank Marino of Milwaukee, who led the parade until the current meet started, is now in third place, and Freddie Breckles of the Detroit Goebels quintet is fourth.
181 Enter C. Y. 0s
«Paddle Meet
Thirteen C. Y. O. parishes will be represented by 181 entrants in the annual C. Y. O. table tennis tournament next Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the Knights of Columbus auditorium. ; Play will be conducted in five divisions—men’s singles and doubles, girls’ singles and doubles and mixed doubles — and trophies and medals will go to the winnery and run-ners-up.- : - a Green, national women’s table tennis champion and member of the St. Joan of Arc C. Y. O.,, will be official tourney scorer. John Mann, tourney manager, will be assisted by Helen Finnegan, Ray Gardner, Joe Galvin, Mike Hartrich and Beatrice Ryan, C. Y. O. athletic committee members. ~~ - =
ROLLE DERB
Now Nightly 7-11 P, Cc FAIRGROUND
oLiseuiVl
BEES HE
The Miami meet,|
for eighth place in the all-events|
ried him to a 1919 total for the cur-|-
Yl
Copyright 1939, The Gec. Wisdemann Brawing Co., Inc. =
/
CINCINNATI, April 22. (U. P.).—Today’s game at Crosley Field - between the St. ‘Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds was to be played one hour earlier to beat the rising flood waters of the Ohio River. Warren Giles, general manager of the Cincinnati club, said that flood waters enter the field at 57.7 feet and the river was last reported at 6 p. m. last night at 54.8 feet and rising .1 foot every two hours.. He said that games. on tomorrow and Wednesday would be postponed if the Ohio rises enough to cover the field. ety
I. U. Still Guns For Michigan
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., April 22.— Indiana University’s track team still is looking for its first victory over Michigan this season. The Hoosiers had expected to avenge previous defeats by the Wolverines in the Big Ten indoor meet and Butler Relays at their own relays here last. week-end, but it was the same story. Michigan walked off with 81% points for first place, while Indiana ran second with’ "701/10. = Notre Dame and Illinois, the Hoosiers’ two other * guests, finished third - and fourth, respectively, with 49 5/6 and 28 2/5 totals. ! But although Michigan ran first or second in all seven-team events, the Hoosiers had something to cheer about in the solo performances of Ray. Cochran and Campbell Kane. Cochran took first place in the broad jump and ‘low hurdles, ran third in the 60-yard dash and ran on two relay teams. ; A record-breaking half-mile by Campbell Kane gave Indiana. its victory in the two-mile relay. Kane reeled off the distance in 1:51.5, fastest time recorded on the I. U.|
Helthouse track. : TRADITI
Patty Splashes
To 2 Victories
Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind. April 22.— Patty Aspinall, Indianapolis’ speedy mermaid, stroked her way to two victories and a second place in the Midstates and Indiana A. A. U. in‘door swimming championships held here last night. Patty had hoped to pare her own American record time of 2:55.4 in
the 200-yard breast stroke event, but.the best she could do was 2:58.5. That, however, was: enough for vic-
the Indiana 10-yard back stroke event. . ; June Fogel, another Indianapolis swimmer, won the Midstates 220yard free style event, with Miss Aspinall finishing second. Miss Fégel also was second in the 200-yard breast stroke swim. In the same event Patsy Brogan of Indianapolis was third. Other Indianapolis entrants who placed were Nola.Sweeney, third in the 100-yard back stroke; - Krock, third in the men’s Midstates 200yard -breat stroke, and Elsie Bauer, second in the 100-yard back stroke. Two Indianapolis teams placed in ths Telay events. A men’s team from the ‘Riviera Club finished third in the 150-yard ‘ medley relay event, while the Hoosier Athletic Club team showed the way in the Midstates 150-yard medley relay for women. In this race a Riviera Club trio was third.
Horning, Hibernik, High at Casting
Top honors in the Marion County Fish and Game = Association’s Skish games yesterday were shared by: Ed“Horning and Fréd Hibernik, both of whom turned in scores of 180 for the - three-game route. Competition was. held at the Riverside hatchery. Mrs. Ollie Baus turned in a high 109 to top women casters inthe three-game Skish plug play. Rex Edwards was victorious in the Skish
ONALLY
fly game with a 27.
@
tory. Her other triumph came in|
A UM
Black Hand of |No-Hit Disaster Grabs Feller
Bullet Bob Is Rudely Shelled by Tigers
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United ess Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, April 22.—Tk3 same’
‘|black hand of disaster which
swooped down on Johnny (Double No-Hit) Vander Meer after his two perfect games in 1938 had Bob Fel~ -
|ler in its clutches today."
The spell of magic Feller cast
{over the White Sox opening day | was rudely and unceremoniously
punctured by the bombing bats of e Detroit Tigers yesterday. The: orn-fed Van Meter, Iowa, boy with he mighty right arm was routed in three innings by the Tigers. Making his first appearance since" is* no-hitter and his first start at eveland, Feller was only a hollow shell of - himself and was clouted-
| for six runs in three innings. ‘The:
Tigers kept up their barrage .until.they had 15 hits and won, 12-2, :
Maybe Grove Was Right
Lefty Grove, who had a no-hit game himself opening day for seven innings and closed out his stint by. allowing only two hits, perhaps was. right when he said: “I'm not sorry I didn’t get a no-hitter. Thosa: things are unlucky.” : : Feller had one of his worst days’ since he became a star yesterday against the Tigers. The first man to face him, Barney McCosky, lashed a double to right, and ‘Bruce Campbell, his. ex-teammate, followed with another double. The Tigers really teed off in the third," and combed Bullet Bob for five: runs.. In the general colla Fela ler allowed four hits, two walks, hit" a batsman and unloosed a wild pitch. The climax came when Campbell .bunted a double over the third baseman’s head. : Schoolboy Rowe pitched brilliantly, - allowing only five hits, one a homer by" Trosky. 15m Hold Your Horses, Boys! Feller was lucky to get away with his life during the bombardment. McCosky ripped a line drive back at “Cleveland’s young pitcher and he barely got his glove in front of his face in time to stop the blazing, ball. To make the defeat more . galling, the Tigers, who were licked six times by Feller last year, scored: their first victory over him in tweseasons. Those historians who were ranke ing Feller ahove Walter Johnson; had better hold their horses for a while. Feller still has some 357 victories to go before he gets in the Big Train’s brackets. It’s also interesting: to ‘note that Johnson: won 25 and struck out 313 in his fourth year in the big show while’ Feller won only 24 and fanned 246." It would be a shame if the no-hit, no-run jinx which clamped itself on Vander Meer plagued Feller too. In the last 10 years the pitchers’ who've hurled no-hitters have had one thing and another to contendwith after reaching the hall of fame, : : he
Lyons Still at It
While Feller was getting belted Ted Lyons, 40 years old next De--cember, yanked the White Sox into. the victory column with*s 6-2 win. over the Browns. It was Lyons’: 222d major league victory, marking the start of his 18th campaign. Joe. Kuhel hit his second homer in two." days. . Dizzy Dean’s 1940 debut was & flop. The Cardinals knocked him. out of the box in the fifth and scored a 5-4 victory for their firstwin in four starts.
-
*
ERTCAN
of America and ambitious young men
from ihe Atlantic seaboard were treck-. ing west to "grow up with the country”.
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L l
4s late as 1870 Indians were still bums ang buffalo over the unfenced prairies
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