Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1941 — Page 20
PAGE 20 .
™
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
AA
FRIDAY, AUG. 15, 1941"
Down The Stretch Comes Williamson, The Open Winner
Like a Thoroughbred He Saved
His Best for the Final Quarter; He's $225 Richer
Heinlein Finishes Two Strokes Back
For Second Place; Champ Is Beaten
By I. E
Bud Williamson, who has a flair for loud socks and fancy golf shots, today was the Indiana Open champion and also
$225 richer. Like a
O'BRIEN
race horse who saves his speed for the stretch,
the 29-year-old Ft. Wayne professional held back of the leaders until the final 18 holes at Speedway yesterday after-
noon. Then he really came on. Two strokes behind Bill! Heinlein of Noblesville, the|, first-day leader, Williamson| was still a stroke off leader]
Frank Champs pace at the end of 36 holes. He still trailed by a stroke
when Wayne Hensley of Anderson; pred flashed in front at the three-guar- Be
ter pale.
Tums On
But nobody could touch his final |.
18 holes, which he negotiated with | a two-under-par 62. Two bogers and a birdie put the Ft. Wayne| flash one stroke behind par at the turn. but straight birdies on Nos. 11 and 12 put Williamson below] par and fattened the gallery that] had been on his heels. He refused to fiirt with trouble the rest of the way, was always sure of pars and was shooting for birdies most of the time. He bagged another on the short 13th hole and missed & medium-sized putt for another on No. 17. For the entire 38 holes, which Williamson shot just one stroke|Fred over regulation figures, he had a collection of 47 pars, 11 birdies, 12] bogies, a single eagle and a single; double bogey. His cards for the entire distan
{ “Howard Ely, Indi
| = » =
Yesterdays scores and 36-hole
{totals in the State Open Golf Tour-
jam ent: {Bud Williamson, Ft. Warne... 9 [Bil Heinlein, Ne | Frank Cha | Wayne Ren -| John Watsem, South Bend “ave | Russell. Stonehouse, IndelsMassie Miller, Indian ween ¥ Chick Yarbrough, Wawasee ... Gronawer, Indianapelis... 18Bed Hamilton, Evansville Wayne Timberman, Indian Maurice Feeney, Indianap ‘Bill Reed, Indianapolis Tommy Wright, Dyer oo ¥ { “Henry Kowal Indianapelis. ... Fritz Cex, Terre Haute . 8 {Dick Crimmeil, Ratthord Cits. : Jehan Vaaghn, Indiana . Joe Kaifas, South Be *Larty Inheff, Hartford City... *Charies Harter, Fndianapelis.. *Mike Stefanchik, Hebart ... ‘Boh Grant, Kekeme | Ken Beck, New Albany George Shafer, Anderson ‘Mike Pollak, Indianapelis . SB {Don Carmichael, Martinsville. . Peter Grant, Indianapelis Norman Kidd, Shelbyville Wallie Nelsen, Indianapolis ... Noel E rsen, Wawasee *Dick Tarlor, West Lafarvette. *Henry Timbroek Jr. Floyd Bam Tipton “The Cemmings, Indianapolis. . *Dick Stackhouse, indianapolis. % Howard Widener, Anderse w“ ¥ Dr. B. A. Burkehardt, Tpten. *Sam O’'Neall, Crawfords ville. . oot Miller, Ft. Wayne. .... McDermott, Tippecanoe. - *Rob Stackhouse, Indianapelis . 17 *Walter Chapman, Indianapolis 3 *Bed Phillips, Indianapelis.. Iw anapolis *Bob Stafford, Crawfordsville .. *Bill Diddel, Indian Don Swisher, Terre . \ Indianapalis. ve ie ¥ Harry Allison, Reches
FIRST ROUND . 484 §85 43-35 } . 484 185 4135-38 . 43% 834 345-38 TI: In . 435 484 343-38 2 SECOND ROUND i Out ...... S584 £33 445-38 i m : THIRD ROUND out .....o 335 £34 454-37 i | o.oo... S54 324 SS4--383--216 FOURTH ROUND Williamson Out ...... 433 435 543-38 Williamson Im ..... . $88 £38 2545-33285
oat ..... Williamson Cut Par In .. Williamsen
Williamson Williameon
Williamson Williamson
Heinlein Is Second
Bill Heinlein, who held at the end of the first round, took second-place money on his 288, while Frank Chamib Heinlein s two-| some mate on the last 36 holes, | finished at 230 in third place. Hein- | lein experienced trouble with his jfrons at the start of the third] round, and then his putter wouldn't] be true when strokes were valuable’ in the stretch. Champ started the day in fine; fashion, but he met up with trouble | on the nine holes inside the halo of haste and couldn't recover. Perhaps the hard-luck prize] should go to Hensley, whose third round was just as good as any shot in the tournamen All his clubs functioning ray. young aye calmly batted a two-under par But a 78 in the afternoon hoisted the Anderson professional to 291 and fourth place.
Other Leaders
leaders:
lead
{ Orville insists
Rusand} 202; 204; | and 2986, |
Other professional seil Stonehouse, Indianapolis, John Watson, South Bend, Massie Miller, Indianapolis, Fred Gronauer, Indianapolis Chick Yarbrough, Wawassee,
and Wayne Timbermen of Meridian
. 844 434 S35—se-14¢, (Rirsll
i=
{Tom Vaughn,
{ Marion Smith, Crawfordsville . *Harry Toole, Indiamapealis ...
| places Burton, Indianapolis... *¥
Renrr Culp. Elkhart ‘William Ward, Attica « ¥ *Freck Brisaik, Indianapolis. .- | Fred Brant, Greencastie Lou Feeney, Indianapelis *Bill Ressell, Indiana ‘*Virgil Campbell, India Phillips, Terre H:
nt, Kekome Frank Reales ndianapolis.. Indians
*Ray Jones, Indiana Macy, Indiana
*Boh Smith, Indianapolis *Denotes amateur.
“haassbane 3.
| “Bi Allen, Gary | “Quentin
ithe final 36 holes received a mer-
chandise prize, and the top award went to Bill Reed of Indianapolis, ithe Open champion of 183%, who pounded out a 28. Behind him] ame Henry Kowal of Indianapolis|
pow Fritz Cox of Terre Haute, with 200s,
&O9
Brown, Roche Battle Again
One of those “battles to a finish? {is promised local wrestling fans ‘ next Tuesday night at Sports Arena, where Orville Brown and Dorve Roche will meet in a return tussle
89.1 billed for two falls out of three and |
| no time limit Dorve is expected to put everything he has into his highly touted and punishing “octupus™ hold which is a new form of the strangle and sheuld be barred. Roche beat his rival with the hold earlier the season, but lost three { weeks ago when he dropped the only fall registered in the pat | He had the “ottopus™ clamped © at the finish, but the 90- lias
in al
Hills, the defending champion, and| time limit bell saved Brown in an
Bob Hamilton of Evansville each. Every amateur who qualified fori
187} exciting match. Orville hails from | Wichita, Kas,
and Roche from Decatur, Ill
it
The outcome of the game hung on this play and Jimmy Brown saved the day for the Cardinals by putting a sliding stop to Jimmy upset Stan Hack, Cub third sacker, with his slide into the hot corner sack during the 8th inning. out, but Hack was prevented from throwing to first for the double play that would have changed the ball game's outcome. The Cards won, 8 to 7.
Brown was
Big Red Birds Bang Out No. 8
By UNITED PRESS
Columbus’ heavy - handed third baseman, Bert Haas, hammered out a triple in the 10th inning last night, and brought the Red Birds their eighth straight victory, a 4 to 3 win over St. Paul, Haas’ triple scored Leftfielder Augie Bergano, and left Columbus atop a seven-game lead in the American Association. He hit the drive off the pitching of Ken Raffensherger, who relieved Clay Smith in the ninth—the inning Columbus tied the score. Red Barrett, the last iof our Columbus pitchers to go to the mound, was the winning pitcher. The second-place Kansas City Blues beat third-place Louisville, 7 to 5, and it also was a triple in the 10th that tummed the trick. Seeond Baseman Al Glossop hit the three-bagger with the bases loaded. George Barkley. and Rugger Ardizoia, who relieved him in the 10th, gllowed 11 hits. The Blues got 16. Toledo beat the fourth place and | faltering Minneapolis Millers, 9 to 4,
‘Horseshoe Match
The Fall Creek Horseshoe Club iwill leave from the local courts at 7 p. m. tomorrow night for a return match at Greenfields Riley Park at 8 p. m.,
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Doubles Stars Divide Honors
NEWPORT, R. I, Aug 18 (U. P).—Ted Schroeder of Glendale, Cal, and John Kramer of Los Angeles, ceo-holders of the national doubles title, go separate ways today in an effort to reach the final round in the 25th annual Newport Casino Invitation Tennis Tourney.
Kramer faces the tougher task in meeting top-seeded Don McNeill of Oklahoma City, Okla, national champion, in his semi-final encounter, but Schroeder has almost as difficult an assignment in sec-ond-seeded Frank Parker of Altadena, Cal. McNeill and Kramer completed the semi-final quartet yesterday with unspectacular triumphs. MeNeill went four sets but never was pressed seriously in eliminating Gardnar Mulloy of Coral Gables, Fla, 6-4, 6-4. 4-6, 6-2. Kramer trounced young Earl Cochell of Los Angeles, surprise winner over Wayne Sabin, 6-2, §-4, 6-4.
Local Golfers Meet
To Discuss Problems
Public links golfers from the various city clubs will hold a mass!
meeting in the South Grove club-|
house at 8 p. m. tonight for the purpose of discussing the condition of the various courses and exchanging views on other problems.
By GEORGE KIRKSEY
United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 15—Call out the band in Batchtown (Ill), flash the lights along old Broadway, shout it from the heights of Coogan's Bluff—Fiddler Bill McGee of the New York Giants finally won a ball game after four long months of defeat and despair. It may not mean much in the general scheme of paseus) Busse but in McGee's home town of Batchtown, and in the haunts of Giant fans and to McGee himself yesterday's 4-to-3 triumph over the Braves couldn't have been more precious if it had clinched the flag. McGee was
just about ready {to hang himself. In that Bill McGee | strange, mys | tericus way fate frowns on ball players, McGee after winning 16 games last season, was traded off by contending St. Louis Cardinals in May. He had been knocked out of the box three times. But a change to the Giants didn't help
Baseball At
a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Pet. GB Columbus . 81% i Kansas tity . S37 Louisville 548 S483 SA
E St. Brooklyn Pittsburgh Cincinnati ..
Louis ... kl
#RRLGHBET 2 RIBBEALET
AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww
Det . Philadelphia Ashington “ene St. Louis
222Ba%L8
GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Kansas City at Milwaukee (night). Minneapolis at Toledo (night). Only games scheduled.
NATIONAL LpanTe
St. Louis at Jittsbu Shicase at Cinein New York at IR (night). Only games schedul
AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia at New gr Beston a } Jah
Clevelan oS t Chicago “(nl ad Detroit at st. Louis (ni : ———————
RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (Ten Innings) 010 100 410 0— 3 000 000 20
8 1
11— 4 12 1M
Smith, Raffensberger hy Schlueter; Gabler, Brumbloe, Barrett and Poland.
(Ten Jnntngs) 000, 0— Y 010 2— 3 1
Ardizoia AN Barton: 3 and Glen
1 0
ee Judd,
Sayles, Dickman
, Kash and Denning: Kimberlin
and 8 ndel. NATIONAL LEAGUE
McGee = d Danning: Hutchings” Savery, Etrickson and M
Chicago od 6110 dr 00-2 8 0
Passeau and McCullough; Butcher, Wilkie, Klinger, Diets, and and Davis.
Only games scheduled. | AMERICAN LEAGUE
. Naw ark
(Second Game) 010 002 000-1} 6 1 120 181 02x10 15 © dra, Masterson, Anderson and Early; ponald and Dickey.
Washington
(First Game) Detroit «cccoiciiieie 100 000 000— 1 8 1 Chicago 000 011 Olx— 8 7 Bridges and Tehbetts; I®e and Tresh. (Second Game) 8 1
Detroit 000— 0
_ | Chicago
Newhouser, Thomas and Sullivan;
Humphries and Turner. (First Game: Eleven Innings) Boston .. 110 mn a an 1 0 2 | Philadelphia 00-818 2 M. Harris, Ryba Aonkey and oth Ferrick, Babich and Hayes. (Second Game)
Bosto 020 211 002— 8 14 1 Philadelphia . 040 401 10x10 14 2
Wilson, Futter, ‘Harris, H. Newsome and Peacock; C. Harris, McCrabb and H. Wagner.
Tie: Darkness)
010 010 010 0— 8 8 © 200 001 000 0-3 8 2
Dean, Feller and Hemsley: Niggeling and Ferrell.
(Ten Innings;
Major Leaders
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Williams, Boston Travis, Washington ...106 428 71 157 aggio, New ork..118 467 111 169 . Slehery Philadelphia. .100 385 B53 132 Cullenbine, St. Louis..108 355 64 121
NATIONAL LEAGUE
G Hope. st 500 iki ser
Re 94 3 Etten, Philadelphia a ze, St. Lo 92 35 Cooney, vol HOME RUNS
Keller, Yanks ... 29 Camilli, Dodgers. 23 DiMaggio, Yanks. 1f Henrich, Yanks. MW Williams, Red Sox 23]
RUNS BATTED IN Sox. .
DiMagsi o, Yanks. 1131 Tabor, Red Keller, Yanks. . Williams, Red Sox 84 ze, Cardinals. ol
k 1 38
DiMaggio, Yanks.169/Heath, Cleveland. .187 Travis, Senators. 157 Moore, Ci Ee —— Senators.138/Chapman, A's... os
El
146 E. WAS
A Spill Play That Saved the Day
You Won't Believe It but It Happened—Bill McGee Won
him any. He was knocked out six times before he finally went the route yesterday to throttle the Braves with seven hits. Oddly enough, the man who was sent to the Cards (along with a bundle of cash) ran into an unsccountable slump after a brilliant start. Harry Gumbert won five of his first six games with the Cards, wand pitched a couple of four hitters. But he went sour and until he won a game in a relief role Monday he had gone two months without a victory. McGee is potentially a winning pitcher. He is big and strong and has good stuff. His poor start was attributed to lack of condition, but Bill Terry had his fungo hitters run him until a dozen pounds melted off him and he still couldn't win. Not until yesterday when the Giants got him off in front and he protected a 1-run lead from the third inning on. In the last five innings he sllowed only one hit and was at his best in the eighth when Rucker dropped a fly ball and another man walked. With the tving run on third, McGee forced former Giant Frank Demaree to a to Babe Young for the third out,
Golfers Compete For Flight Spots
As a prelude to the championship matches Sunday the players who firec' 82, 84 and 87 in the City Amateur Golf qualifications will play tomorrow evening at 6 p. m. over the Sarah Shank course to determine their flight rating. The eight 82's will battle for the four remaining places in the championship flight, the four losers going into the second. Fifteen 84's will play for the 11 places in the second flight with the four losers going into the third and sixteen 87's will compete for seven remaining places in the third flight.
Competition Begins
In Women’s Swim
HIGH POINT, N. C., Aug. 15 (U. P.) —More than 250 swimmers from the United States and Hawaii began competing today in the National A. A. U. Women's Senior Outdoor Swimming and Diving Championships. Eleven titles will be at stake in the three-day meet, five of them undefended. Mary Ryan of Louisville, Ky., winner of the 400, 800 and
_|1500-meter championships last year, jn and Marjorie Gestring of Los Angeles, winner of the three-meter
springboard and platform diving crowns, were unable to attend.
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wy The CHICAGC
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Clothing, Shotguns, Ete. JEWELRY 604 Ine. INGTON ST
Much-Talented
Crescendo From His
finale between the Milwaukee The Brewers thumped the Tribesters, 10 to 2, behind young Dave Koslo’s five-hit pitching and Larruping Lou
played a big part in the downfall of the home boys.
tained with selections on the harmonica and then stepped out and battered Tribe pitching for four hits in six times up, including a double and three runs batted in. The Cream City pastimers took charge of the game in the second
off Ray Starr. He didn’t have his old stuff and it is evident that Old Iron Arm has lost "his cunning on account of going to the box several times too often.
Veteran No Puzzle
The Brewers stepped right into Ray's offerings and had him out of there in two innings. six victories over Milwaukee, but the Brewers sensed something last night and rolled out the barrel on him for six hits and four runs in two stanzas. Ben Wade took up the Tribe mound duties in the third and he, too, suffered a beating. The visitors had their batting clothes on and didn't care who pitched. They bumped Wade for 11 hits and six markers in seven rounds just to make their batting streak unanimous. In other words, the Brewers collected 17 blows and the contest dragged out 2 hours and 25 minutes. It was Ray Starr's 13th
in the league with 20 victories. It was Traffic Club Night at the Stadium and the customers got a good look at a great pitcher in Southpaw Koslo, 21 years old, and a go-getter for a kid serving his first season in Class AA. Looks like he's a cinch to land with the Chicago Cubs next season or in 1943. And he knows
and one was a triple with two mates on base.
Tribe Gets Vacation
It was the Brewers’ last appearance here and the tailenders departed for home to meet Kansas City tonight. The Indians got a vacation today on an open date in their schedule and they will resume action at Louisville tomorrow to launch a long rcad trip that will keep them away until Aug. 27. Lou Novikoff got six hits in 11 times at bat in the two-game series here and sent his average skyrocketing. After solving Starr for a single and double last night he crashed two singles off young Wade in four tries. In his last plate appearance the Mad Russian tried to belt the sphere out of the park and struck out. Tribe Skipper Wade Killefer wasn't around the premises after the second inning. He was given the old heave-ho by Umpire Halstead for prolonging an argument over balls and strikes. Ted Gullic swung at one in the second frame and the umpire called it a ball
Before the game Novikoff enter- Nov
inning by splurging for four runs|?
He holds|,
defeat, but he still rates plenty high H
Mr. Novikoff
Conducts a Symphony of Swing For Our Poor, Hapless Indians
Tops His Harmonica Concert With a Mighty .400 Bat; We Lost, 10 to 7,
By EDDIE ASH Well, at any rate, Mad Russian Lou Novikoff put on a good show and he had 2600 fans watching him instead o £ peering at the crestfallen Indians last night in the series
Brewers and the Indians.
Swan Song
MILWAUKEE
o o
Myers, ss
—- HERO OMB
G 3 Gulls, 1b Todd, ¢
BIBI Di © O23
Koslo, p Totals sevecoeins 43 10 INDIANAPOLIS
al ant amd ol cooromoouw, =| cococeco~u
8 -3
o O
— Sl noocoooamwoy,
Blackburn, bl
mbler. ss Bestudik. 3b Zientara, 2b Brubaker, Hunt, If ...
ol moroomoomm | conowmmrme wl ~oocoocococcn
8 -3
Totals
Milwaukee Indianapolis
041 002 003—10 020 000 000— 3
Rung batted in—Koslo 3 Myers 2. Novie ff 3, Mazgay, Lakeman, Epps, Abreu, Two-base hits—Novikoff, Zientara, Three-base hits—Mazgay, Koslo. bases—Todd. Galle, Sacrifices—Peck. Dou ble plays—Gullic to Myers, Zientara to Ambler to Brubaker. Ltt on bases—Milwauke8 11, Indianapolis 4 Base on balls —off Starr 1, Wade 3, 1, Struck oY Stay 3, Koslo 6, Wade 2. Hits— off Sta 6 in 2 innings; Wade, 11 in 7 hnings. ' Losin pitcher Starr, n,
ires —Halstead and Rcurtis, Time—
Tribe Berager.
BATTING 2B 11
AB
148 372 ...286 86 . BY 407
.498 133 73 231 462 . 98 24 208 47 PITCHING
RBI AV. Lakeman .... Blackburn ... Bestudik Maz
Brubaker . Galatzer ...
WWW DOADWWOW a DOWD WW CO 20
NIAPF ..cenes
vee. 20 18 «0 10
Lo what to do with a bat.|Moner He got three of his team’s safeties Wade
a Fletcher Johnson
This brought Killefer on the run and led to his banishment for the second time this week, The Indians were thoroughly subdued by Koslo's pitching and after the second canto they were helpless. They racked up three hits in that inning and then passed out, the only other blow being an infield hit by Wade in the third and he was promptly doubled up. In the second Bennie Zientara doubled, Stanley Mazgay tripled and Al Lakeman singled, accounting for two runs. Thereupon young Koslo really turned it on and after that only one Indian got as far as second base. The season's record between the teams reads 13 victories for the Redskins and six for Milwaukee, with three to go in the Cream City.
Watch Lafayette
EASTON, Aug. 15 (NEA) —Sevens teen lettermen are among 39 canw didates for the Lafayette Collegas
Entire Summer Stock of
CLOTHES
Ready for Immediate Wear
football team.
Tailor-Shop
o SUITS e TROUSERS e SLACK SUITS eo WASH PANTS o SPORT SHIRTS
235 MASS. AVE.
in the Middle of First Block
