Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1941 — Page 20
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Bobby Ruffin stands by nonplussed as Mike Belloise does a headstand in their preliminary bout on the Soose-Abrams card at New York Wednesday night.
Services Held Millers Slap For USC Coach Down Blues
By UNITED PRESS LOS ANGELES, Aug. 1 (U. P) Pl The highlight of last
The body of Howard Jones. 55, games in the Ameri A {ati Yoh : : 8 S ¥ S [ former University of Southern Cali-'° HU
fornia football coach. is to be sent to Middletown. O., today for funeral services and burial in the family plot. Services were held here yesterday. jconcerned. Jones’ son, Clark, and his brother,| Kansas City blew a six-run lead, Tad Janes, 0 Seetipahy the and the league-leading Minneapolis y. e will be ie sday i em esa Millers beat the Biues, 7 to 6. The Middletown. § difference between Minneapolis and At the services here, hundreds of Columbus was still two games tofootball fans, friends and former 3aY. but the Blues, in fourth place, U. §. C. football players pack (were down a game. First Methodist Chasers packed Del The Millers rallied in the seventh Bruce, vice president of U s c. for four runs, off Al Gerheauser’s delivered the eulogy © 2 ipitching. Don Hendrickson, Ed “He will live as long as the great Carnett and Charlie Wensloff, tried. game of American football is in succession, to stop the Millers, played, and wherever college men tut they couldn t. : Minneapolis gather and the conversation turns | 2dded another run in the eighth to football, his name will be recited | 307, two I in the ninth Jot with reverence and adulation,” Dr. | awen was the winning p cher. Bruce said. | Fleming, a pitcher who recently |
Indianapolis, but it profited the
{as progress toward the lead was
came down to Louisville from the Bi ‘ R T k Don See Ea steered the third- ! {place Colonels to a 3 to 1 victory ng's hace rac lover Toledo with his four-hit DEL MAR, Cal, Aug. 1 (U. P). pitching. —Bing Crosby's Del Mar race track; Clay Smith held Milwaukee to two opens its fifth summer meetin: to- hits, as the St. Paul Saints won. day with an eight-race card featur-'2 to 1 Relief third baseman Sid ing the $1300 six-furlong inaugural Gryska's homer in the eighth. with handicap. |one on, decided the game.
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night's
was Columbus’ 12 to 2 victory over
Looks Like Our Good
By J. E.
It might be the change in (drinking water, or maybe the |wigwam is too warm for good Sleeping. Anyway our Red- | skins, hailed as the winners of the West and the lulus of the league, are ready to grant that home is a good place to stay away from. Two nights at Perry Stadium with Columbus has convinced the Tribe {that it's not master of its own |house while the Red Birds are faround So it's just as well that the [latter have vacated in favor of To[ledo’s Mud Hens. The three-game series with Toledo opens at 6 o'clock this evening when the clubs tangle at twilight. This seven-inning encounter will be followed by one of regulation size when it gets dark enough for the
lights. Confident that the Tribe's Phen
double downfall at the hands of Columbus will develop into nothing
_ _|serious, Manager Wade Killefer has
|nominated Ray Starr and Bill Cox {to do this evening's chucking chores for the Indians.
| Fifth Place at Stake If this pair of flingers can register
| two victories, the Redskins will regain fifth place from the Mud Hens and atone for most of the damage {wrought during Columbus’ visit. | That game last night seemed like {something Orson Welles might con- { jure after a midnight lunch of welsh rarebit. Making the most of Indian
fighting Red Birds nothing so far errors and gifts, Columbus fashioned
a dozen runs from a baker's dozen of hits and scored a 12-2 victory. To give some idea of the state affairs were in, let it be said that Benny Zientara, the Tribe's hustling second-sacker, committed three eérrors in one inning, and the whole Indian infield, usually a pitcher's best friend, made a mess of six chances in the course of the evening. The second inning, during which Columbus plated six unearned runs, is almost too awful to review. Before that, Lefty Bob Logan had given up a single run on Mpyatt’s one-bagger, Sanders’ double and Haas’ timely hoist to left field. Then came the storm.
Red Birds Are Obliging
With one down, straight singles put Columbus runners on first and |second, and Myatt obliged with a {double-play ball to Zientara. But {Benny left that one behind him. It was the same story when Walker cracked another grounder to Zientara.
Maybe It’s the Water or the Wigwam Is Too Warm, but The Birds Got the Tribe Twice
A Parade of Errors and Gifts Gives Columbus a 12-to-2 Victory; It’s Starr and Cox Tonight
O'BRIEN
Whoever it was that said there’s no place like home, be it ever so humble, didn’t get his lyric-writing inspiration from our Indianapolis Indians.
Bird Lore
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Mazgay in center to chase the trio home. He followed them across the plate when Ambler threw wild on the relay. Fletcher's survival on Myatt's error opened an Indian rally in the eighth. Mazay singled, Ambler walked and Zientara drove in two markers with a grass-cutting single between short and third. A double killing ended the Indians’ final threat in the ninth. In spite of those six errors, the Indians produced a couple of fielding gems. In the first inning Hunt backed into the ivy to get Maas’ fly, and Ambler nipped Walker in the seventh afiér going way over behind second base for the ball.
00 020— 2 sas. Walker, Sanders. |
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ____
Indians Came Home For
” ”
| Detroit, N. Y. Golf Is Donated
| Ray Jones, local amateur golfer
In Typo Finals
out this morning to eliminate the gay donated a $75 trophy as one of Ne York nine and assure them- | . principal prizes in the schoolboy selves of the championship in the| \f A (golf tournament to be sponsored by 31st annual Union Printers base-| 5. venile Court Aug. 22 at Riverside bail tournament. | The trophy will be inscribed with Once-beaten New York will have [the winner's name and will be kept to score a double victory today to|in Juvenile Court from year to year. win the crown. The earlier Gotham | The Juvenile Court Trophy will be defeat was administered by the given to the winner to keep. Motor City team. | Other prizes will be golf bags, Detroit pushed aside the Chicago |balls and clubs: ‘a 1042 season pass
their perfect tournament record and | merchandise checks and wearing gain a spot in the finals while the apparel. New York squad drew a bye. Additional indorsers and prize Lefty Norm Seddon of Detroit | donors include the Indianapolis was credited with the victory over Office Furniture Co. County Clerk the Windy City boys as he held| Charles Ettinger, the Indianapolis them to seven hits, but his team-|Union Printing Crafts, a “golf fan,” mates were forced to come from | David Lewis, Perry Stadium, County behind with three runs in the fifth| Treasurer Walter C. Boetcher, Madto tie and a single tally in the | den-Nottingham Post of the Amerieighth to win. | can Legion and the 40 and 8.
New Mat Star
On Program
The first Indianapolis appearance of Lee Wykoff, a 225-pountl mat star from Joplin, Mo., will be one of the features of the outdeor wrestling bill next Tuesday night at Sports Arena. Wykoff, a rugged performer who has tossed just about all of the
Logan got in the swing of things by walking a pair, after which came a brace of singles and another Bientara error. When things had cleared, the Réd Birds had six runs in on four hits. Encouraged by a seven-run advantage, Harry Breecheen, who doesn’t get a starting assignment from Manager Burt Shotton often, proceeded to hold the Tribe hitless for five innings. His spell was broken in the sixth when Stan Mazgay, the hometown rookie here, dropped a long hit deép into right (field that went for a triple. But still no runs. Young Glenn Fletcher, who took up for Logan in the third, wasn’t doing badly himself. He scattered four hits through five innings and granted only one run, that the result of Haas’ double and Marshall's single in the sixth. Then came the eighth, which for a time appeared to be almost as Bad as the second. A walk and two singles stacked the sacks, and Sanders lifted a three-baggér over
present-day heavies, will appear in one of the deuble windup matches. A suitable opponent is being lined up. Lee is the husky who engaged Ed (Stranglér) Lewis in a “give and take” encounter séveral years ago in Madison Square Garden, the bout going three hours and Wykoff turning in a victory. He also has beaten
Very| mverett Marshall and others of that
rank. In the other feature, Steve Brody, the Holyoke, Mass, matman, who has been going big in local grappling circles, will fate Coach Billy Thom. Both features will be for (we falls out of three.
Good Baseball
CHICAGO, Aug. 1 (U. P) —Baseball Commissioner K. M. Landis disclosed toSay that thé United Service Organizations would receive $53,226.27 when expenses totaling $10,04081 are deducted from proceeds of the annual All-Star Base-
ball game at Detroit July 8.
Baseball At
a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
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umbus at Lohisville. dig 7 at apelis, ansas City at St. Paul.
AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Washin
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Amateur Notes Date Changed for Softball Drawing 1 dor Temple, 8: Brosnan's Tavern, §.
Bush Fecele Independent ‘Leggue I fe "es fo un Stewart WAGE: netgway Merchants ™ | hament NOI be nol Tos » Ee 8:28 p. m., J. S. OC. vs. Holcomb Pontiac. ! : : sday, a day ae m. Gem Coal vs. Schoettle In- later than previously planned, tourney officials announced today, Schedule for Em-Roe Mercantile Friday | TAIMINE 8i€6 + the 3cifon St hres Night League: "teams to the tourney lists. BE west Puree ve Googe |g und tre E. ©, Atkins, In Whey Citizens Gas vs. Fire BU or AE 2 yh : = a Lore ve in last night's games in Bm-Roe Saturday Night Lea a ndustrial League: : Stadium. - gue at Softhall . 1; Gibson Helo'l™ » Entries close at noon tomorrow ~ Adams, 9: Crescent Paper, ). Resisretion blanks are available at The Castleton Merchants defeated Oak-|the Bush-Feezle and Em- - ater, SNAHO AFT 01% pads Ing Goods stores and ai the city Park tomorrow night at 6 o'clock. recreation department.
SOFTBALL STADIUM Results in last night's games: Indiana Gear, 6; Gem Tonal, 0
STOUT STADIUM
|
The undefeated Detroit Typos set who likes boys and their sports, to-
squad, 5 to 4, yesterday to maintain|to Perry Stadium. a wrist watch. |
FRIDAY, AUG. 1, 1941
A Rest
Lessons From a Veteran
Fred Mitchell (right), veteran caddy master at Coffin Golf Course, is spending several hours a day helping youngsters get ready for the schoolboy golf tournament to be Aug. 22 at Riverside. The pupils (left to right) are Henry Boyt, Kenneth Hays and Ralph Brown.
: | Trophy
Putting Wins Junior Golf Title
For Miss Louise Davisson
LEESBURG. Ind.. Aug. 1.-Indiana’s crown-a-new-champion-year in all amateur golf competition added another name to it’s list of rulers today—Miss Louise Davisson. This junior miss from the Tippecanoe Take Country Club continued her perfect putting to defeat Eleanor Allen of the Ft. Wayne Country Club on the 18th green yesterday for the Indiana Women's Golf Associa tion junior championship. 3 Sema Just as in the women's and men's | state tournaments the defending champion was eliminated before the final round and a new titlist was born. The finalists were all even as they prepared to tee off for the 18th hole. Both had good drives, the daughter of the Ft. Wayne club professional had, as usual, the longest shot. They were on the green with a second shot, Miss Davidson's ball landing six feet from the pin while the tall Ft. Wayne girl's shot stopped just three feet short of the title. Louise strokéd her next putt home and Eleanor didn’t. thus climaxing the contest. Throughout the early holes the favored Miss Allen kept in the match with her beéoming tee shots, but could not compete with the champion’s short game. The 15-year-old Ft. Wayne girl was two down at the turn, but she staged a great rally on the back nine and went oné np on the 16th gréen. But Miss Davisson's true putter carried her to victory on the last two holes.
Par out Miss Davisson. Miss Allen
Mrs. Cooke Upset At Maidstone
EAST HAMPTON, N. Y., Aug. 1 (U. P.).—The position of defending champion, Dorothy May Bundy of Santa Monica, Cal, as favorite in
the Maidstone Invitation Tennis Tournament was considerably enhanced today following the ousting of top-seeded Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Cooke of New York in the quarter finals. Mrs. Cooke was upset yesterday by Louise Brough of Beverly Hills, Cal, 6-2, 6-4. Miss Brough played one of the finest games of her career, sweeping the first four games of the opening set and coming from behind in the second set to overcome a four-game deficit. Others who gained the semi-finals were Hope Knowles of Philadelphia, who eliminated Virginia Wolfenden of San Francisco, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1; Pauline Betz of Winter Park, Fla., who defeated Mary Arnold of Los Angeles, 5-7, 6-0, 6-0, and Miss Bundy, who eliminated Shirley Cate: ten of Alameda, Cal, 6-2, 7-5.
Tennis Star Falls Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Aug. 1. — Paul Dixon of Champaign, Ill, seeded No. 2, was eliminated from the Indiana tennis tournament yese terday by Dale Wallenbrook of
444 454 444-37 . 534 455 544-39 .. 345 484 476-44 543 444 434-3572 Miss Davisson... 874 555 634-—45—84 Miss Allen 633 536 545—40--84 Joan Brown of the Kokomo Country Club defeated Phyllis Shutman
of Limberlost Country Club, Reme City, 5 and 3, for the consolation
flight championship. Terre Haute.
SPEEDWAY STADIUM
Schedule for tonight's games in Power | and Light League: 7:00 p. m., Original Cost vs. Plants. 8:15 m., Me Gems,
ter vs. 9:30 e
. m., Office vs. Line.
2.Year-Old Sets
Harness Record
LARGEST SELECTION OF SEAT COVERS IN OUR HISTORY
WEY
Times Special
MUNCIE, Ind, Aug 1-—The name of Billy D. Grattan was writ-
isheits os) Io 11 3 training. Rysiphries and rer, Dickey, |
ten into the record books of the harness world today after his 2:06: half-mile pacing yesterday afterneon. Running in the first heat of the second division of the 2-year-old pacing stake the young horse came home in record time. A telephone conference with United Trotting Assotiation officials confirmed the new world’s record for 2-year-eld pacing geldings over a half-mile track.
The horse is owned by V. B.
2 3 Rhinehart of Fort Wayne. A down-
pour cut short the harness program at the Muncie fair after only four events had been run.
Champ to Tour POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Aug. 1 (U. P.).—World welterweight champion Freddie (Red) Cochrane of Elizabeth, N. J, planned today to go on an exhibiiton tour with former welterweight king Mickey Walker, also of Elizabeth. Walker now weighs around 175 pounds but believes he may be able to regain fighting trim by rigereus
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Bears Sign Two CHICAGO, Aug. 1 (U. P)=The Chicago Bears, professional foot ball team, today announced that James (Sweet) Lalanne, University | of North Carolina backfield star, | andl Bill Glenn, back, whe played | at Eastern Illineis Teachers College at Charlestown, have signed cbntracts for the 1041 season.
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