Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1940 — Page 14
THE INDIANAPOLI TIMES
MONDAY,
[UNE 10, 1940
After Four Tough Years Little’s Links Dreams. Come True
# Times- Acme Telephoto. Mrs. Little sivdys believed Lawsoff-could do it.
id
as
8
SPORTS... By Eddie Ash
A DEAL which appeared to be an even swap of fading - shortstops when made at the winter baseball meetings has - turned out to be a most important item in making Detroit a pennant contender again, according to Harry Grayson, . NEA Service sports. editor who is a close follower of the
~ Tigers. It is the transaction which brought Dick Bartell from the Chicago Cubs for Bill Rogell. . .|. Bartell, who is 32, not supposted to have a leg under him, but turned up at the Lakeland, Fla. training camp as sound as a dollar . .. and when abl is just about as good an all- a shortstop as you'll find. Bartell put life in the Tiger infield for the first time in years . stands out in noisy relief among such silent men as Rudy York, Charley Gehringer and Pinky Higgins. | Meanwhile, the Cubs, having traded the accomplished Billy Jurges for Bartell in the first place, were ltt in a hole when young Bob Sturgeon proved too inexperienced. Bill Rogell failed to meet requiren ents, and Bobby Mattick was returned to the position, but he is rather ordinary.
Leg Injury Keeps Cihocki on Coast
THE CUBS sought to purchase Eddie Miller of the Boston Bees, but were stopped by the price tag. . . . In desperation, the Cubs were considering bringing in Eddi Cihocki, now with Los Angeles, when the most seasoned shortstop in heir chain was put out indefinitely by a leg injury. | : The Cubs have fine prospects in Sturgeon, now with Jersey City, Harvey Storey and Leonard Merullo, but each is @t least a year away. " ... Storey was purchased from San Francisco for 1941 delivery. MERULLO, a fine fielder, was Villanova’'s captain-elect in 1939, but left college in February to accompany the Cubs to Catalina Island. . A shoulder injury suffered early in the training period kept him out all season, but this year finds him with Tulsa. Bartell was harassed by sore:legs and sciatic difficulties with the Giants late in 1938 and with the Cubs through much of ’39.
Keeps Legs in Shape Dhring Winter
BUT BARTELL set about correcting his trouble during the win= ter. .. . golfed, took up skiing, went on fishing and hunting trips, walked miles in heavy boots to get and keep his legs in ‘condition. .. . And then Denny Carroll, one of the more competent trainers, found "knots in his muscles he didn’t even know he had. and got rid of them. : The result is a Bartell who looks not unlike the one who sparked the Giants to a couple of pénnants. Dick Bartell’s name may be added to the list of more remarkabla comebacks. . . . He came back after everybody had given up on him ales everybody ‘but himself. | TIME.was when major league ball clubs regarded the colleges‘as a negligible source of talent, but scouts today are taking a good look—and a second look—at the campus heroes. The attention is paying dividends.~. . . You can’t find a major league téam that doesn’t have a couple college products in the lineup, and some more coming up. Reason: Simply that college baseball is getting better. . . . Oldtimer® like Jack Coombs at Duke, Wally Roettger at Illinois, Billy Disch at Texas, Andy Coakley at Columbia and Smoky Joe Wood at Yale give the finest possible coaching.
Western State Lads Hurl -No-Hitters The SMALLER schools, too, are playing a slick brand of ball. .
Johnny Vander Meer was the first to pitch two consecutive no- “hit- >
ters, but Western State Teachers College of Kalamazoo went the Cincinnati southpaw one better. Probably for the first time in collegiate history two men pitched no-hitters in ‘a double-header when Frank Overmire, junior lefts hander, and Harry Bailey, senior right-hander, worked perfect games against Iowa State Teachers, both winning 1-0. ! Overmire allowed the minimum of 27 men to face him, not one reaching first. Bailey, who pitched a one-hitter against Wisconsin -earlier this year, walked two men. : THE White Sox already have sighed Wilbur White, phenomenal . Bradley Tech hurler. The Yankees are reported very weiss, the North Carolina grid star and second baseman who led the Tarhetls in just about everything this spring. : Joe Smoky Joe ‘recently: | Paul Christman of Missouri is reported to be just as.good a first baseman as he is a quarterback, which should be sufficient.
e to navigate Rowdy Richard
uch interested in George Stirn- 3
ood has two sons pitching for Yale and Columbus, and Jr. pitched a no-hitter for the Elis against Weslyan °
By HENRY M'LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent CLEVELAND, June 10.—So few of us have our dreams come true that it is a sweet experience to sit with a fellow whose fondest dream has become reality. It is doubly sweet when that fellow is a friend. That’s why it was good to walk into the locker room of the Canterbury course here yesterday and talk to Lawson : Little after his victory over Gene Sarazen in the play-off for the National Open golf championship. Almost more than anyone else
I know what that victory meant
to Lawson. And to Dorothy, his wife.
I "Twas Duck Soup For Lawson FRENCH LICK, Ind., June 10 (U. P.).—Lawson Little’s first golf instructor, Mel Smith of French Lick, said today that the young Californian won the National Open title begause “he
played the game right, the Canterbury course was a natural for
nal Open before.” mith emphasized that the veland course has long holes
and big gréens, which were “duck soup” for Little.
Rapid Rex Sets
| World Record
~ MILWAUKEE, June 10 (U. P.).— Rex Mays, Glendale, Cal, auto racer, held the world’s one mile dirt track record of 37.78 seconds today. Competing in the AAA races. at State Fair Park yesterday, Mays
‘| bettered the old mark of 38.15 sec-
onds set in 1938 by George Conmors of San Bernardino, Cal. Mays, who placed second in the recent Indianapolis 500mile classic, also won the opening heat in the 102 - mile and the 30-mile feature event before 13,000, spectators. Mays drove Paul Weirick’s four - cylinder Kennedy Tank Special,
Rex Mays the same
“|car that Joie Chitwood plored in
the 500-mile race.
Dirt Track Pilot
In Fair Condition
Walter Williams, New Castle, Ind., dirt track driver who suffered face cuts and possible internal injuries in a crash on the track near Indian Lake yesterday, was reported in fair condition today at Methodist Hospital. Williams’ car spun as he came out of a turn during the 25-lap feature race and rolled over. The race was won by Swede Carpenter of Indianapolis, who also was involved in a previous accident. Floyd Robbins of Anderson was
_|second and Robert Stodgill of Indi-
anapolis third. The program was sponsored by the Auto Derby Race Association.
Race Pilot’s Bride Sees Fatal Crash
FT. WAYNE, Ind., June 10 (U.P.). —Stuart “Huffman, 21, stock car driver from, New Castle, was fatally injured yesterday during a trial spin at the Ft. Wayne Speedway. Huffman swerved his machine on the north turn of the track to avoid another car and lost control. His car rolled over twice, throwing him free. He was crushed - under the
[turning auto and died en route to
the hospital. His bride of five months, Loraine Huffman, witnessed the accident and collapsed from shock. . Her condition was not serious, hospital attendants said.
Golf Aid Dies
PITTSBURGH, June 10 (U., P.).— George A. Ormiston, 66, long-time secretary of the Western - Pennsylvania' Golf Association, and one of the guiding lights in the development of golf in this district, died
at his home yesterday following an illness of several weeks.
Baseball at a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION L. Pet. 15 .a88 478 A477 4 34
(Second Game) Minneapolis
000 1— Loyisville 100 120 x. aefner. (Tauscher and Denning: on and L
G. B.
NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game)
1 1012 13 151% Boston 1 6 Chicago . G.B.| posedel, Callahan, Javery and 610 ....|Masi; French and Collins. * (Second Game) 103 400 000— 8 9 ~ Javery, Coffman,
U bi ¥ ( . Barnicle, g . Masi;
and Lopez,
: Root,. Bi * : Page and Tod
(First Game) we aod ie eve w 310 012 o11 ” 000 1
Turner,
.@ =
*| Brooklyn * | Cincinnati Carleton and Phel Hutchings, Vander Herschberger.
(Second Game)
Cincinnati 3 1 Brooklyn .
New York
Pittsburgh hiladelphia ..
Brooklyn —e————— Cincinnati RESULTS YESTERDAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (First Game) (First Game; 11 Innings) Milwaukee 0600 210 w01— 4 11° © New York Columb, Herrin are Lalaeholder and 5 Ww. 'B Garbark; teil F Barrell and 1 | Danning; J. ran. Sehumae (Second Game) Shoun, Warneke and Owen, Padgett. 41 bg (Second Gams)
Iakosky, Blachold Bar Cooper Hioha
and Lomb
Hwaukee : Columb Sg
Hoa Kapa 000 001—
0 000 00x— Hendrickson and DePhilli itd Ce Berl Whitehead and Spinde
{Seosnd Som bt 3-511 1
diets City x » Sell ‘and’ Riddle: G. i, = Parton
ener and Spi
News York 4H ou Gumbert, Lynn, Vandenberg and
Danning; McGee, Russell, Shoun Fg gett, Owen.
ie?
(First Game) | puitadeiphia Pittsbur
MacF: ay dén, Fernandez
scond Game; ¢ Innin 3 phason A ly orf" 00
ts Blant man, ts a Dany a
Lanahan and Davis, Wa 0— 5 10
ES
. 000 000 100 015 010 00x— 7 14 1|w Lopez,
Chicago oi ri 20 4 060. 000 72x~—15 13 5 Strincevich Kafensherger,
5 1 Beggs, Np and Lombardi,
. 300, 000 000— 2 5 011020x+-6 13 1 Wyatt, Pressnell and y Bb Thompson
Eerie 304 010 101 02—11 16 2 00 013 003 00— 9 16 1 r and wman,
0 000 150— 7 14 3 201 000— 4 8 Des. Pad- 1
000 210 030— 6 3 0 fa 000 000 100 1 0 Mulcahy and Atwood, Warren; linge er, Berres,
Sunday law)
AMERICAN LEAGUE (First Game; 10 Innings) St. Lows 000 110 140 1— 8 14 1 Philadelphia 100 100 014 0— 7 5 1 Harrie Billdilli, Trottér and Swift; BaBich, Besse, Heusser and Hayes. (Becond Game) 0 000 211— 4 8 deip 110 000 000— 2 10 aN ane Susce; Caster, Patter ‘and Wagner, Hay
Cleveland New Yor 000 61 . Smith and Bemaleys Dickey.
000 002 001— 3 9 00x— 4 6 Ruffing and
" (Eleven Yruings) : ae 3 100 0l— Washington 003 00— 3 n 8 Lyons, Rigney ou "el Hudlin, Haynes and Early. Detroit at Boston, rain,
Chicago Masterson,
GAMES TODAY - AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (All Games at Night) Minbeagelis at at aNDIANAPOLIS.
Ri. AMERICAN LEAGUE Beiroit at at Botton,
e Louis at Washington. aly games sche HY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Broonien at Pittsburgh, New York at Chicago. Boston at St. Lou nly games scheguted.
Your car washed, Simoniz cleaned, Simoniz waxed and chrome polished, only
BLUE POINT bt
As he sat there on the
him and because he lost the Na- |
| blace today than at any time since
=| base, thus making all Yankee runs
to the meet in. 1932.
bench in front of his locker, tired, hot and all but choked up after 90 holes of play, I couldn’t help but think back over the fouryear span since he abdicated as king of the amateurs and went out to test his skill and his luck against the professionals.
Those were four tough years for Lawson. He won but three tour- . naments and they were widely, spaced. In between his triumphs he struggled and suffered. - The press wasn't kind to him. His fel“low pros weren’t kind to him, and year by year the glamour he had earned as an amateur faded away.
Only two people believed he could win, One was Lawson himself, and one was Dorothy. They
Yanks Just 3
ames Behind
| Lead in an Afternoon
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, June 10.—The old
Yankee home run punch had the world’s champions closer to: first
May 3, the day before they went into a coma and dropped eight straight. They were only three games astern the league-leading Red Sox. : Al Smith, Bill Terry's -castoff, gave the Yanks only six hits/yesterday but three of them were homers and the Bronx Bombers sank the Cleveland Indians, 4-3, preventing them from displacing the idle Red Sox at the top of the American League. Smith had won five straight, beaten the Yanks twice and hadn’t
ing his home-run ball. Babe Dahlgren hit one in the fifth and Joe DiMaggio and George Selkirk each hit one in the sixth. DiMaggio’s came with a mate oh
the result of homers.» Now It’s Yours, Now It’s Mine
The National League lead changed hands twice yesterday before 34,909 paid customers, third largest .crowd in Cincinnati's history. During the Dodger-Red series the league lead has changed hands four times in three. days. The Dodgers, after being knocked from the top by Saturday's 23-2 massacre, came back to win the first game of a twin bill yesterday, 9-1. Tex Carleton, who pitched a nohitter against the Reds on April 30, hurled a five-hitter to win his first game since then. Brooklyn clubbed four Red hurlers for 15 hits, including six doubles. Junior Thompson pitched the Reds back into the lead in the night-cap with a 6-2 triumph over the Dodgers. . He allowed only five hits, scoring his eighth victory. Bill Werber and Billy Myers hit homers. The Giants came to within three games of the Reds by knocking over the manager-less Cavdinals, 11-9 (11 innings) and 7-4. Billy Southworth, new Card pilot, will not report until late today to take over the Cards, in seventh place, 15 games off the pace. Stu Martin's three-base error with two out in the 11th paved the way for the Giants’ winning rally in the opener. Johnny Mize hit homer No. 16. In the nightcap the Giants put on a five-run rally in the eighth to rout Bill McGee, who had a 4-2 lead at the time.
Cubs Still Riding High
The Cubs won a double-header from the Bees, 7-1 and 15-8, to run their = winning streak to seven straight. Larry French held the Bees to six hits, winning his seventh game in the opener. Phil Cavaretta’s four hits, which drove in four runs, led the Cubs’ 13-hit attack in the nightcap. Hugh Mulcahy broke the Phillies’ [! six-game losing streak when he pitched his club to a 6-1 win over the Pirates in the first game of a twin bill. Pittsburgh bounced back to take the nightcap, 11-5, and to hold fifth place. Elbie Fletcher drove in five runs in the second game with a double and two singles. In the other American League games the Browns left the cellar by thumping the Atheltics twice, 8-7 (10 innings) and 4-2, and the White Sox nosed out Washington, 4-3 (11 innings).
K. of C. Pinmen Choose Qur City
A delegation representing the local Knights of Columbus and the Indianapolis Convention Bureau returned home from Chicago today after obtaining the 1941 K. of C bowling tournament for the city. The tournament was awarded to Indianapolis last night at a meeting of the Knights of Columbus Bowling Association. It will be held in March and April and is expected to attract 3000 pinmen to the city. Indianapolis was last host
Gosport Marksman Tops Shoot Field
Times Special . CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind, June 10.—Walter Rice of Gosport took top honors in the feature 12-yard shoot here yesterday, breaking 98 of 100 targets. Roy Phillips of Brownsburg and H. P. Juvinell of Collison, Ill, tied for second place with scores of 96. In the 25-yard 50-target shoot, Phillips was first, breaking 48 birds. The next shoot here will be staged July 17.
AUTO and DIAMOND
_ Reds Lose and Regain|
lost a game until he started throw- |.
‘| game progressed.
never lost faith in the swing, or in the courage, that enabled him to win two British and two American amateur championships in two years.
He proved in the 18-hole playoff battle against Sarazen that the faith was justified. In Sarazen he faced one of the toughest compet‘tors the game has ever produced; a man who, when the stakes are sufficient, has the nerve of a second-story worker and the touch of a locksmith.
Sarazen gave him the full treatment at Canterbury yesterday. So did the gallery. The customers never were ungracious enough to openly shout their wish that Sarazen would win, but the dif-
8 2 #
lay low behind their fancy displays
hibition at Highland.
are going to expect to get their scores out of the July-temperature-reading class. The pros will be asked why “I—a 210-pounder who never diets—can’t get my drives to whistle off the tee for 270 yards like that little Benny Hogan does?”
‘What's the Matter With Me?’
Others will demand to know what tricks Jimmy Demaret employs on his line-drive iron shots. On what Byron Nelson has got “that I haven't got” with la No. 2 iron. Or why “my approaches don’t go for the pin like Bill Heinlein's.” : Yessir, | brother, this foursome dished out about as much golf proficiency over the well-barbered Highland layout as you'd find:in any meeting of man, club and pellet. If there was any common weakness, it was in the putting department. Several birdies got away because of inaccurate greens sniping, but after all Messrs. Nelson, Hogan and Demaret hardly were given time to strike up an acquaintance with the course. The match itself pitted Nelson and Demaret against Hogan and Heinlein, the former pair winning five holes with a best ball of 67 to the latters’ four holes with a combined score of 68. The cards read like Hg:
Highland Par—
svallerenirineie 445 314 y 4
443
Gn
524—37 444—84—71
Nelson— besipiee esses. DIS 354
352
354 434—35 443 444—35--70
5 454 443
—37 pi ime
6 443 434—36 443 434-3490 The gallery's biggest enjoyment came from watching Hoosier Heinlein match these three tee tourists fresh from the National Open—although the three might cbject to the word “fresh” after their hurried trip from Cleveland. Bill's short game was especially deadly, showing steady improvement. as the
But each eof the four competitors drew applause at various times from the gallery: Demaret was the first to gain an edge, when he dropped a 15-foot putt for a birdie three on the 445-yard second hole,
Then it was Heinlein's turn to sparkle, which he did with a three on the ‘par-four sixth hole. An accurate.approach shot was responsible for the birdie. Nelson did some under-par work on the short eighth hole with a
(Continued on Page 15)
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BASEBALL TONIGHT | INDIANS vS. MINNEAPOLIS
INDIANA BELL ii A ;
NIGHT
Spectators F ind Just How ‘Easy’ the Old Game Is
! By J. E. O'BRIEN Local pros would do well to bar the doors of their workshops and the current epidemic of golf fever subsides. For if we’re,not mistaken, the pitch-and-putt professors will be stormed by many of the several hundred spectators who happily accepted sunburned faces and rope-burned hands to watch yesterday's ex-
, After seeing how easily par was battered around, these stick-swingers
(Citizens Win
ference in the volume of applause when Gene made a good shot and Lawson did the same, was enough to. tell Lawson where he stood in their affections. Sarazen fought Little to a standstill, thrice making unbelievable shots to challenge for the title. He canned a 60-foot putt. He rah down a 45-foot putt.. He chipped in from the rough. But Lawson wouldn't fold. He just kept pounding the ball, and at. the finish was two-under par ‘over a course that man had made tough and nature, with her rains and sun, had made tougher. To me Lawson's greatest $how ‘of competitive steel came on the 14th” hole. The four-stroke lead
That's Byron holing out.
of clubs and blister ointment until
Firemen and
The Indianapolis Firemen and the Muncie Citizens today boasted four victories apiece over IndianaOhio League competition after hanging up week-end triumphs. The Firemen pounded three Lafayette pitchers for eight hits to secure an 8-2 victory. Although Lefty Twigg, Fireman hurler, allowed an equal number of safeties, he kept them well scattered. The|A Firemen’s big innings were the first and eighth, in which they scored three runs.
sixth and, seventh frames gave the Muncie Citizens their margin for a 7-5 victory over the Indianapolis Kautskys. Waldron, Grine and Potter pitched for the Kautskys, while Hundley and Archenski did the victors’ mound work,
elimination victors,
Finney, Boston i ht, Chicago . rimen Boston
oy A pair of three-run rallies in the | Wal lladeiohia
Mize, Celina. Foxx, Red
Foxx. Red Danning, Giants..
he had picked up in the first five holes had been narrowed to two strokes. On the 14th Sarazen chipped in for a birdie three. On the green in three, Little faced a downhill, sidehill, six-foot putt ‘for a par four. ‘Jf he missed it Sarazen would draw even with him and the match would be in the lap of the gods. Bud Ward, national athaleur champion, was with me as Lawson stepped up to the putt. “I'd die a thousand’ “deaths looking at that one,” Bud said. If there was any quit in Little now was the time for it to show, But the yellow didn’t appear, the
_feathers didn't flutter.
Little knocked the putt right
Visiting Pros Show Some Tricks of the Trade
ho The. large gallery rings the 11th green at + Mighiand to watch Byron Nelson, Jimmy Demarer. Ben Hogan and Bill Heinlein do their putting.
Quick Mr. Costa Has His Day
Mike Costa, a Champaign, Ill,
speed merchant, won just about
everything within reach during yesterday’s midget auto racing program at Carey's Ranch. Besides leading the pdck in the 30-lap feature, Costa won an elimination race, a handicap race and set the fastest qualifying pace. Otto Butler of , Indianapolis and Bud Russell of New Albany were other while Russell defeated Butler in a special match race. The Shearer brothers of Indianapolis also competed in a match
race, with George coming home first.
Win Boat Honors
CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., June 10.—Tony Venezia and Art Werner, both of Indianapolis, ran one-and-two in the two Class A speedboat
events held yesterday on Lake Wehi,
Major Leaders
AMERICAN LEAGUE
R 26 60 22 30
G AB 36 163 . 44 173 . 47 192 . 47 192 30 41 184 26
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Radcliff, St. Louis. . pling, Chicago .
aler, Brooklyn ....
nning, New York .
Da Gleeson: Chieago .... 30
HOME RUNS ..16|Kuhel, White Sox.. . i4;Johnson, Athletics., ..14|Greenberg, Tigers.. S BATTED IN 8|Trosky, Brevejand. irisioadworth, Sen..
Sox.. Irosky. Cleve. RUNS
Walker. Senate ors..
in the widdle of the cup to pre< serve his lead. That was fhe match, and Little clinched it on the next hole with a birdie three.: Sitting ih the locker room Little admitted that any golf he might play from now on wouid be in the nature of an anti-climax. “This is what I always wanted— the open,” he said. “Now I know that amateurs aren’t all I can beat, It was tough going—those years since I turned professional, but this makes it all worth while. And what a nice way to win it. By beating Sarazen; the toughest competitor I ever saw, and one of the greatest golfers who ever lived. Lawdy, I'm happy, Lawdy, | I feel good.”
Mauled Millers Here Tonight
Tribe Down to .500 Association Standings
| Minneapolis’ Mauling Millers, who were mauled | in both ends of a double<header Louisville yesterday, had blood their| eyes today when they arrived in Indianapolis to battle the Indians in a threegame series. The. opener will be tonight at 8:15 and Lefty: Lloyd Johnson has been nominated to toil on the rubber for the Redskins, The Tribsters are down to the .500 mark in the American Association standing and are being hard pressed to hold third place as the Colonels and Brewers threaten. ‘It will be ladies’. night at Perry Stadium in the opener with the Millers. After the Minneapolis series, ending Wednesday night, the Indians will hit the road for their longest trip of the season, playing In seven cities covering 19 days.
Lose Two Out of Three
The Tribesters dropped two ouf of three to St. Paul over the weekend and kindly lifted the Saints out of the league cellar. The Apostles won, 8 to 1, on Saturday, and. in yesterday's twin bill the Indians annexed the first half, 10 to 6, and St. Paul the nightcap, 11 to 2. Pete Sivess lasted out a freee hitting contest to win the Tribe's lone game in the series. He was bombarded for 14 blows but his mates gave him a big lead to work on and he staggered through. St. Paul used three hurlers, Taylor, Belknap and Reis, their versatile star who started the game at first base and finished it on the mound. The Indians collected 12 safeties and two were doubles by Don Lang,
Nine Runs in Three Innings
The home boys tallied nine runs in the first three rounds to save their bagon. ‘The second tilt was a cake walk for the Saints. They pounded out 16 hits in the seven-inning affair, including a home run by English and“doubles by Stumpf, Morgan and Bejma, Earl Caldwell, Red Barret and Don French took turns on the Tribe mound and the Apostles never cooled off. Joe Mack, with a homer and two singles, led the Indians’ attack. Vic Frasier held the Indians to nine hits.
Barret oft Form The Redskins fell apart in the
4 field in the .nightcap and com-
mited - four miscues. Barret, who
¢ (recently returned to the Indians from the Cincinnati Reds, was a
disappointment on the mound both Saturday night and yesterday. Three Indians are out of regular action on account of injuries, Catcher Dick West has a bruised hand, Oufielder Allen Hunt a weak wrist and Second Baseman Bennie Zientara an infected foot.
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