Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1942 — Page 10
PAGE 10
SPORTS. By Eddie Ash
JOE DIENHART, the affable gent who master-minds the sports teams at Indiana's St. Joseph's college, watched the Indians and the Red Birds go through the baseball paces at Victory field yesterday. . . . Joe is the former Cathedral high school of Indianapolis coach and he’s been
here and there and elsewhere. In other words, Joe Dienhart is a . His St. Joe gridders bumped off
Hoosierland collegiate circles. .
“name” coach now in the
Butler, you know, in the Fairview bowl last fall, 13 to 7. . . . Remember that upset? . .. We picked the Bulldogs to win It and got knocked for a
curve,
Dienhart’s St. Joseph's college's 1841
all-state Times), apolis’
football end (picked by Tne
Master Nick Scollard of IndianFast end out in the Ownie Bush neighborhood,
is now in the navy at the
Great Lakes training station. Chicago, and Joe will wager that the Indianapolis lad will “make” the Great Lakes eleven this fall like nobody's business.
“You
can name your all-America
footballers at end and I'll still take Scol-
Joe Dienhart
Still on visited the navy training station
land,”
terday’
said Coach Dienhart. the Great Lakes topic an Indianapolis sports goer who this week and who attended yess ball game here disclosed that Tony Hinkle can't swim.
The Rutler university athletics director who is on leave of abcense from Fairview was recently commissioned in the navy at Great
Lakes and according to this department's
paddle instructions under Jim Clark Clark, The Times’ Times for service!
veteran police sleuth. .
informant Paul D. is taking . . » who is the son of Heze . « You cant beat The
‘I'm No Slacker,’ Says Ted Williams
“I'm no slacker Baseball means all the world to me, more. country.
I'm not vellow.
One is my duty to my mother. I can't see the fairness of anybody trying to put me in
I'm as patriotic as anybody. naturally: but two things mean The other is my duty to my
the spot where I've got to choose between them.” In those words Ted Williams, slugging outfielder of the Boston Red Sox. defends himself in the current Liberty magazine.
“One thing I don't do is kid myself.” he declares.
“I'm not too
smart, and mavbe I've done some dumb things. But I'm not that
dumb. I don’t want to dare anybody navy. I'm thin-skinned.
to boo me into the army or the
I'm sensitive. The ball park can be full of
cheering people, and they can all be cheering me but one guy, and somehow over it all I can hear that one boo.”
= = = Williams, in the Liberty article, do if and when the booing starts. “If he says, temper and not answer back. But
it starts”
My case is no different from thousands of others.
—exactly like it—in baseball!”
like it
“TI try to take it.
says he cant predict what he'll
I'll try to hold my vou know me and my temper. I know others
Williams says it's so much poppycock that he had a lawyer to
“pull strings” in his behalf. He says
Eddie Collins, Tom Yawkey and
Joe Cronin all advised him to enlist, that enlistment would make
him a hero in Boston. leading, “because I in passing, maybe, as a ball player.” “When I know I'm right” enough to go as far as I can with it.
He says his presidential deferment was misdon't flatter myself he ever heard of me, except
he declares, “I'm just bull-headed
I have been the sole support of
my mother for four vears. That's the truth and that's enough.”
Baseball at a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION L
Columbus
Miwsaber Toledo . Louisville
Joh ot ph
Kansas City
AMERICAN XEAGY
New. York ............. 1% St. Lewis ..... a Boston Detroit Cleveland ..... Chicago
GAMES TODAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Celumbus at INDIANAPOLIS, Toledo at Louisville. Minneapolis at Kansas City. St. Paul at Milwaukee.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston at New York. Washington at Philadelphia. Chicago at Cleveland. Petroit at St. Louis.
XaTvos a LEAGUE New York a
t Bost: Philadelphia at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Pittsburgh.
Philadelphia Cincinnati at Chicago.
wwwwiemsor™
Washington
NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. |
300 | 350
Yo
Cincinnati Philadelphia . Cra
Pilots Get ( Green | Light at Franklin
Times Special
FRANKLIN, Ind. April 18
1.900 330 Toledo .... .330 Louisville
300 | ters.
Boston
RESULTS YESTERDAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION . 100 000 200— 8 6 200 010 001 — 4 10 4 Marcum and Spindel; Sayles and Wal-
2 aoe wi 510 200 000 °x— & §
and Andrews: Page, eins
Herring a ‘Lanfranconi and George. Minneapalte Re
—~311
Nunts. gr heetz and ahatans. | Sohne, Hendrickson. and and Sears
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York _ Judd and ‘Convey. Peacock: Bonham and
Twenty-five drivers from the mid- | Dickey.
dlewest have entered the dirt track! Chicage ia auto racing program to be staged; Cleveland ..... .... 000 doe—0
on the local half-mile oval on Sun-' day afternoon, April 26.
Five of those already entered are | Washington
are Buss | Philadelphia asaess Leon, 400" rd, Zaber and Jel
from Indianapolis. They Wilbert, Harry Schwimmer, Hubbel, Rov Himilton and Cliff Griffith.
The Franklin American Legion
post is sponsoring the dirt track | Whitehead, Hollingsworth and
events which are being staged by the | Midwest Auto Racing association, the organization that has been in| charge of the local track and onej at Columbus, Ind, for the last four years. Officials of the Midwest group have announced that the program on April 26 will be open competi- Brook tion and that there will be four | events of 200 laps each and a feature race of 25 laps. Drivers will
be here from Michigan, Ohio, Mli-|""
nois, Kentucky and Indiana. Special tires for dirt-track racing had been purchased in advance of the tire “freezing” ruling and officials point out that the stock is not the type used on regular automobiles.
* > Big Six Game Sacks Auto Parts nine is to play Switzer-Cummins at Riverside diamond No. 2 tomorrow in a Big Six league game. Sacks players are requested to report at 2 p. m. and in
SSH), on Sy take notice.
OAN
|r The CHICAGC
- 38 0 0-1 $s 0
Lyons and Tresh: Heer Ei Desantels, Denning. Ra (18 Innings)
010 120000 0—3 10 1 000 100 012 1 f 1
Besse. Har-
s and Hayes, Wagner
.. 000 120 030—8 12 1} . 011 100 s0x—% 10 0 Trucks, Fuchs and Parsons: R. Harris, Ferrell. NATIONAL LEAGUE
Cinsinnati : . 100 001 000—2 10 cago 000 010 20x—3 3
Vander Meer and Hemsle - Cultough. stev: Lee and Me
New Yor: ... Boston 100 300 00x—% & ©
Schumacher, Feldman, Melton and Danning; Errickson, Sain and Lombardi.
Bhiladelphis 080 000 Goi & 1 A © 010 010 05x—3 12 © Boctah, Naku. Pod Allen Th Owen” "0 By Ne We Wou—2 1
St. Louis tisburgh Warneke, Lanier and A. Sewell ro. Lopez.
I. U. on Links
BLOOMINGTON, Ind, April 18— Indiana university's golfers, led by Henry Timbrook, state amateur champion, inaugurate their 1942
links campaign today against], S's
Northwestern at the Indianapolis Country club. The Hoosier delegation will include Robert Boden, Louisville; Lennis Murphy and Dan Cravens, Franklin; Wendell ANrich, Angola, and Timbrook, who hails from Columbus.
on Everythi Diamonds, Watches, Nsical Instruments, Cameras, Glatiing. Sagan: £4. i
ISWELRY CO, Ine.
146 £. WASHINGTON ST
————
Neither Club Has Lost One
In Four Starts
It's a Shame Only 4000 Saw Beantowners
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Stal + NEW YORK, Ap —For a couple of ball clubs that nobody gave a tumble to in the advance predictions, the St. Louis Browns and Boston Braves are keeping some very exclusive company even at this early date. Unbeaten in four games the Braves and Browns are fellow travelers with the mighty Yankees. Not only are Casey Stengels Braves leading the National league with a 1000 percentage but yesterday they put on the best show in the majors. It's a shame only 4043 turned out for the Beantown opener which the Braves won from the Giants, 4-3, because the added attraction was worth the price of admission alone. Third of Giants Chased Umpire Ziggy Sears, working himself into a fine frenzy before anybody could drop a hat, tossed one-third of the Giant ball club right of the park. With a majestic wave of his left arm Sears gave the triple heave-ho to Manager Mel Ott, shortstop and Captain Billy Jurges and Pitcher Hal! Schumacher. The Giants’ protest resulted from Sears’ decision ruling Paul Waner safe at first. Waner had grounded to Witek who threw to Jurges forcing Fernandez, at second. The attempt to double up Waner looked so positive that Ott. Jurges and Schumacher rushed at Sears and an angry argument ensued. After Sears waved the three Giants out, Schumacher tried to charge the umpire but was halted by third base Umpire Tom Dunn. Explosion Costs Game The explosion probably cost the Giants the game because when Schumacher left the Braves shellacked his successor, Harry Feldman. for three straight hits. Cliff Melton came in and stopped the Braves with one hit the last 4% innings but it was too late. Ott and Mize hit homers for the Giants
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Those Browns And Braves Put On High Hat
SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1942
They’ i Pitch Tomorrow's Twin Bill
The Indianapolis Indians’ southpaws are “due” tomorrow in the first double-header of the new baseball season at Victory field. The Toledo Mud Hens are to furnish the visiting attraction, first game, at a2 p. m. At the left is Elon (Chief) Hogsett, purchased from the Minneapolis Millers, and the other flipper is none other than the fans’ idol, Lefty Bob Logan, who fears no team, spring, summer or fall
Following is another dispatch in a series high-lighting the 11 foremost contenders for the $75,000 prize of the 68th Kentucky Derby on May 2. Another will follow. |
By CHARLES MOREY United Press Staff Correspondent
and Nanny Fernandez hit a 400-foot circuit blow for the Braves. The red-hot St. Louis Browns) staved off an eighth-inning rally to! trim the Tigers, 7-6, and preserve their unbeaten record. Rookie Vernon Stephens drove in the winning run with a single. The Yanks won, as more or less expected, but they were lucky to scrape through with a 1-0 decision over the Red Sox, who suffered their first loss. Jim Tabor's wild throw on Joe DiMaggio's grounder set up the winning tally which scored on Charlie Keller's single past Foxx.
Red Sox Rookie Stars
T. W. O. Judd, Red Sox 32-year-old rookie southpaw, held the Yanks to five hits and shaded Tiny Bonham in a pitcher's battle before an opening Yankee stadium crowd of 30,308. Every American league game was decided by a single run. In addition to the one-run victories for the Yanks and Browns, the Athletics finally won their first game, beating Washington, 5-4, in 10 innings and Ted Lyons outdueled Mel Harder in the White Sox 1-0 triumph over the Indians. Knickerbocker’s homer won for the A’s after Bob Johnson had tied the score with a circuit clout with one on in the ninth. Lyons, starting his 20th season, scored his 206th victory, held the Tribe to seven hits.
Billy
1 1 Track Meet
{| Warriors Grab
In a dual varsity and freshman track and field meet, the Manual |
' Redskins dropped both to the War-
ren Central Warriors, 47 to 88 and! 64's to 703%, at Delavan Smith! Athletic field. yesterday afternoon. In the varsity events, a 1102 for the 100-yard dash, turned in by Don Fuller of Warren Central, and Redskin John Mascari's :54.1 440-yard run were the fastest of the meet. Warrior Earl Overbeck, with 13 points, and Fuller, with 10, were the high-point men. | Summary:
100-vard dash—Fuller, Scholl, Manual; tral. Time, :108. Mile run—Mike Mascari, Manual; Haines,
Warren Central; Washmuth, Warren Cen-
200 101 100—3 § 0!
Warren Central; Perkins, Warren Central | Time. 4:48.1. 440-yard run—John Mascari, | Washmuth . Warren Central; | Manual Time, :54.1. High hurdles—Lewis, Warren Central; tie for second: Morical, Manual; Gale, Warren Central. Time, :17.8. 830-vard run—Roney, . Mascari, Manual; Central. Time, 2:1 rd Sach Buller. Warren Central; ‘> anu Hamilton, Warren
Low hurdles—Fred on Warren Central; tie for second: Morical, Manual; Dick Johnson, Warren Central. Time, :20.5. Pole Vault—Tie for first: Sanders, Manual; . Height, i) feet, 8 inches. mp—Overbeck, Warren Central; Warren Centra 1; Sanders, Sy “tre 2% $ 0 N 9 inches. ot put—] Central; - beck, Warren Central.) orical, arar Distance, 43 feet, 8 inches.
Manual: Crouch,
Warren Central; Sanders, Warren
Broad jump—Overbeck, Warren Central; Bisesi, Manual; Washmuth, Warren Central. Distance, 19 feet. Mil: relay—Warren Central (Perkins, Harman, Haines, al Manual; Warren Central. Time, 3:44 Ha-mile Se arien Central (Fuller, ohnsren, Dick Johnson, Washmuth): Manual: Warren Central. Time, 1:39.7
In the freshman meet, Manual |" pole vault, broad jump. and high
captured the 440-yard run, low and high hurdles, 880-yard-run, 220yard dash, shot put, mile and halfmile relays.
GOLF AT HIGHLAND The ladies of Highland golf and! country club are to open their 1942 season on April 28. The competition will be medal play, using handicaps. Mrs. Glenn Howe is the new leader of the ladies’ golf committee. There},
next Fri-
| Toledo, 4-3.
NEW YORK, April 18 —College; graduates around the race tracks] are few and far between, but don't! | be surprised if the trainer who wins the 68th Kentucky Derby on May | 2 is a Princeton man, no less. John| Gaver, for five years head man in the Greentree stable, will be shooting for the $75,000 purse with a double barrelled gun—Devil Diver and Shut Out. Devil Diver's career has been reviewed already in this series. He was the glamor boy of the Greentree string last year. But when the roses are draped around the Derby winner's neck they may go to the Diver's lesser known stablemate— one of the last sons sired by mighty
Equipoise before he died so suddenly in 1938.
That son is Shut Qut. Equipoise
{himself never got up to the Derby.
He was scratched on the eve of
[the race in 1931. Shut Out at least
will be given his chance to run. { Stabled now at Keeneland, where he will take his final prep in the Blue Grass stakes next Thursday, he will enter Matt Winn's turf clambake coupled with Devil Diver. At the moment no other stable is certain. to enter two aces in this cne race. And don't think that Shut Out will be sent along just to keep his mate company. record wasn't quite as brilliant as that of Devil Diver's but to the student of bloodlines he is a colt who should run faster as he runs farther. That is important. Greentree and Gaver will have a speed horse in Devil Diver and a router in Shut Out. Never quick to leave the starting gate, the latter
His 1941"
An Old Tiger Sends a Formidable Steed To Col. Winn's 68th Kentucky Derby
youngster really turned on the heat in the final stages of his juvenile races. He gave Saratoga fans a sample of his stretch drive when he came from behind to defeat Requested by three lengths in the Grand Union stakes. In all, he ran nine races and three times he won. In his only start this season he finished second behind Valdina Alpha at six furlongs, but he spotted the winner 17 pounds and after breaking slowly got up with a lost furlong burst of speed. The final test of his fitness will come in the blue grass—at a mile and an eighth, a distance whici should suit him better. He has breeding and unquestioned courages and unless all the signs are wrong—sShut Out is one horse who won't be looking for a place to rest when the derby field turns for home. His future book price
now is 12-1.
Those Association Clubs Really Battle to Finish
By UNITE
D PRESS
Games in the American Association yesterday confirmed the old base-
ball adage that the game isn't over and tuck contests kept fans in their The closest battle was staged at
until the last man 1s out. Four nip seats until the final putout.
Louisville, where the Colonels edged
First Baseman Andy Gilbert tripled with one out in the
| Purdue Nine to Seek 2d. Victory
LAFAYETTE, Ind, April 18 (U. P.) —With an initial 6 to 2 victory stowed away, Purdue's nine takes on Illinois in the second of their two game series here today. Yesterday's
cool-of-the-evening sumup the Red
Manager Gabby Hartnett made effort to make the home boys click, but it was to no avail. Joe Bestudik booted one in the second stanze, let’ the ball roll and the Red Birds: staged a three-run rally. Handicapped as they were, Redskins fought back and still had a chance to come from behind in
and Johnny McCarthy, the former big leaguers, failed to deliver in the clutch. Pinch Hitter Belts Triple
The Redskins had a great chance in that ninth. Bill Skelly, leading|p off with a triple pinch-hitting for Pitcher George Gill, scored on Wayne Blackburn's single to right. Allen Hunt sacrificed, Angle made a great play on Joe Moore's hot grounder and McCarthy flew out to Bergamo in left field for the game-ending out. The Indians are doing the best that is in them. Except at first base the infield is semi-pro and yesterday’s game was lost at third base when Bestudik blunderad and failed to make an effort to recover when a play still was in sight. Woody Rich and George Gill pitched for the Indians and George Munger and Preacher Roe worked for the Red Birds. Munger emerged as the winning hurler and the defeat was charged to Rich. The paid attendance was 611, the total 1031. It was “ladies’ day.”
Three Runs in Second
The Red Birds hopped off to a three-run lead in the second stanza, added one run in the sixth and two in the seventh. The Indians had a tough time getting around the bases, scoring one in the fourth, one in the fifth, one in the seventh, one in the eighth and one in the ninth. Joe Moore, down from the Giants, is having a hard time getting started with no hits in two games. Five of the Indianas’ 13 hits yesterday were for extra bases but the home boys failed to cluster them. The Columbus team is on its toes and after playing 20 games in the south. The Indians are a bit gameshy for lack of competition but they are catching up. The infield will have to be made over, however, if the Redskins are going to be first-division contenders. (E. A)
3 Junior Misses
Swim for Titles
Three “Junior Misses” from Indianapolis and the coach that built them into top-notch swimmers shoot for new marks tonight at the Detroit Athletic Club in races spon-
sored by the A. A. U. Betty Bemis, the 19-year-old co-ed from Butler ‘university, will set her sights for
victory opened thee 220.yard free-style indoor record
| Marshall,
the ninth inning. But Joe Moore Roe,
Boilermakers Big Ten competition, to aqd to her trophy string. Miss and was the first conference loss for | Bemis currently holds the national the Illinoisians who had previously
last of the ninth and scored the winning run on Fred Walters’ sacrifice
{3-3, land then went on to win, 5-3, with | tallies in the eighth and ninth. | Steve Suchock homered for the
took the 100-yard dash, mile run |®
jump, while the Rhinie warriors] 16.
will be a luncheon at 8 a. m. at S'Ualt mile relay
fly. It was Toledo's first defeat. A ninth inning uprising also fell short for St. Paul, and the Milwaukee Brewers won, 6-5. O'Dell Hale, Ted Gullic and Will Norman hit homers for the Brewers. Minneapolis came from behind in the seventh inning to tie the score, in its game with Kansas City,
Blues.
Kokomo Relayers Defeat Techites
Taking nine out of 11 events and both the mile and half mile relays, the Kokomo cindermen handed the Tech thinlies their second straight defeat by the overwhelming score
Next at Armory
of 73% to 423: on the East side! |
track yesterday afternoon. Three of the best individual performances of the 1942 track sea son were reeled off as Dale Burries | soared to twelve feet, one inch in| the pole vault, while Louis Denny | of Kokomo ran the 220 low hurdles in :234, and his teammate Henry Harris took the 220 yard dash with the fast time of :228. Burries also heaved the shot put 39 feet 11% inches to take individual honors for the Green and their only two first places. Starring for the Kats along with Denny and Harris, were Wayne Crispen, who won two events and participated in one relay, and Bill Bassett who captured the 440 yard dash and was also in a relay.
Summary:
100-vard dash: Harris oom: Teel). Clark Kokomo). Tim
Mile n Kokomo) “Trapp | (Tech) )u h), 5
440-vard dash: Bassett ( Y 0), udison (BOKOMO). Parker (Kokomo) An me
154.1, AR hi bh a Rion oe ome
Hal fmile run: Crispen (Kokomo), yar renburg (Tech), Selmar (Kokomo). Time
yard dash: Harris
(Rokomes: Volk Clark (Kokomo). 122.
hurdles: Denny (Kokomo), Man. 0), Hendrichs (Tech). Time
“Pole vault: Burries , tie for second amon Baithie | TRbkome) Moore A5k0me) eider (Tech t 12 ft &h t put: Burries (Tech), Reed (KokbHA **batchett (Kokomo). Bieende 39 ft.
BE Fa Ro
(Tech). Dis ee
Ne Teen Cine, Hon
Volk |
'220(Tgeh}. 220
ai
The 248 - pound Ray Eckert, (above) a powerhouse wrestler from Missouri, has high hope of humbling George (K. 0.) Koverly, 231, California, in a “mixed” match to serve as an added fea-
ture on the Armory grappling card Tuesday night. Koverly will wear regulation boxing gloves and must k. o. Eckert to win within four rounds, while Ray must pin George's shoulders to the mat for a three count in order to be victorious. Dorve Roche is to meet Bad Boy Brown in the wrestling
| feature attraction.
Tech Golfers Play 7 Matches
The golf schedule released by Athletic Director R. V. Copple have the Tech crew playing seven matches, all with city or county schools except the North Central conference neet at Marion. Under the guidance of a new mentor, Mr. E. W. Ensinger, the boys hope to get underway soon. Schedule: Apri) 2% 33-Sheriridge. ER
vy 7 11 1
ae
ference invitational, »
taken two games from Indiana. Purdue grabbed an early lead in the second inning, bunching five hits with a pair of walks and Illinois errors for its six-run winning total. Illinois hurler Charley Campbell, after the one bad inning, yielded only ‘hree hits the remainder of the game. Walt Leifheit, Purdue twirler, allowed only three singles in the first six innings but weakened in the seventh and was replaced hy Misselhorn in the eighth.
Howe High Boys Win on Track
Howe high school came from behind to score 80 points and take a triangular track meet from Southport and Greenfield at Howe field vesterday. Southport rated second |) with 73 markers while Greenfield collected four. Seven new track records, four of which were less than a week old, were shattered.| New marks in both the mile and | half-mile relays were established by | the Howe running teams. The for-| mer time of 3:44.4 in the mile baton
{mile relay was run off in 1.355 (which was 1.1 seconds better than {the previous record. T. Haynes, Southport inne lace, paced the mile and the {mile in the new low times of hil ord jand 2:07.9. B. Aliff of Southport edged out Howe's Art Graham in both hurdle events and registered {the new low time of :24.0 in the |200-yard lows. In the field events, |B. O'Toole, Southport, broadjumped 20 feet 10%: inches, more than a
Howe cinders, and Dick Dobbs of Howe high jumped 5 feet 9 inches for a new high.
Tourney at Grove © A pro-amateur golf tourney is to be held at South Grove course tomorrow afternoon, starting at 1:30. Entries must be in by 1:00 p. m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Purdue, 8; Nlinois, 2. Indiana, Tove o, utler. x Central Normal, 6 ‘diana "ih 3.
LADIES | Jesse Womack, Dorothy Kent
race was cut to 3: 40.7 and the half-| Anetta Frost, Social
{courts in an Indiana foot better than ever before on the | match.
400-meter free-style title. Coach Bud Sawin and the Fogle sisters, June and Joan of Indianapolis also will enter the meet, that will highlight the women’s national 100-yard backstroke race. Joan will compete in the backstroke event against the defending champ, Gloria Callen of New York.
Bowling Scores
Last night's leading bowlers:
Vernon Williams, Jyashington R. Daramore, Pepsi-Cola H. Powell, Recreation Fred Gobel, Seven-Up Bob Wuensch, Washington . Ren Peters, Fletcher Trust .. Art Hoover, Recreation . “ee William Martin, P. R. Mallory “reas Charles Richardson, Industrial Oscar Buses, Elks Chris Rasmussen, Washington . Herb Thibo, E. C. Atkins ’ Harmon Pritchard, Automotive Sears, Seven-Up Night hawks "...... “eae 3 Martin Hodapp, L. S. ayes . “on Pete Corsaro, Alpha . : Lou Conley, Builders . Menry Stumph, Vegetable Growers . James Shine, Allison Larty Ecks ein, Public Service James Mur shy, Prest-0-1 te George Albietch, Intermediate raion atoc, Recreation binson, “Koch Furniture ear Hodson, Koch Foraiture: . Riehard Moore, No.
Our Indians Collect 13 Hits, but the Red Birds Get The Runs; Score—6 to 5
The Gabby Guy Makes His Debut as a Tribe Catcher; Ninth Inning Chance Blowed
It won't be long now until we win one. The Indianapolis Indians ale most won yesterday. The score was 6-5, Columbus. The home boys collected 13 hits to eight for the visitors, but in the
Birds grabbed the long end of the
score. And the scoreboard is the payoff.
his debut as a Tribe catcher in an ” » on COLUMBUS AB R
©
Jyatt, of... Antonelli, 2b rf
Angle, 1b .. Heath, ¢'..... M
— DBO CD rt a © ON CO
3 2 5 wee § Young, ss .. vee 4 4 4 4 0
|
ol ocoon~nOCOwW — . Sl romano no>
ol ocooccecoccom
2 al cocoon 0 -J
INDIANAPOLIS Blackourn, oh Hunt, If . Moen, of trvive McCarthy, 1b .. . Bestudik. 3b ... Powell, rf ... Rogers. Ss . Hartnett, ¢ ., Rich, Galatzer ill, p Skelley
LAR E et dab ff datal Ldat | noomo~nu~O win | cocosesrnwwaxn
|
nl al coo~rooonoond®
Totals .“ 38 13 an Galatzer batted for Ri Skelley batted for oan 18, fin, Columbus .......... indianapolis... 0 000 Mn 9-3
Runs batted In—Angle, Mun Heath, Bergamo 2, Powell, Huns 3° Saat Blackburn, Two-base hits—Powell 2, ich, Shree-base hits—Bergamo, Hunt, Skelley S glen ¢ Pase—Myatt. Sacrifices—Antonellf 3 a Double DiageYouns 2 Antonellf " ases-—India Goimbus 8. Base on balls—O a Bich 3 y unger 1, Struck out—By R Munger 3. Hits—Off Rich, 8 in 7 by 3 Gil, 0 in 2; off Munger, 1s in 8 and $ batters in 9th; off Roe, 0 1. Winning pitcher—Munger. Losing | Pticher ans mpires—Peters and Johnson. Time—1 1:56,
wl! oococcoroco~B
Tech Pastimers Win Opener
Game
The Tech baseball team won its opening home game yesterday afte ernoon vanquishing Central of Lawrence 7 to 3 on the Green dig mond. Scoring a lone run in both the first and second innings, and then busting loose with a three-run bare rage in the fourth Tech was never in serious danger. Collecting a triple and two Sine gles, outfielder Lafe McCall paced the victor’s attack, while Charley Maas twirled three-hit ball and struck out seven Bears before leave ing the game at the end of the sixth inning with a sore finger. In the seventh Central loaded the bases, and Jake Luther came through with a double plating two runs, but the Greenclads put out the fire with two straight strikeouts, The score:
Lawrence Central .... 000 010 2— s 5 Tech 110 320 *— 7 9 i
Maas, Roller and : Crane. Kafader; Beagle and
Thomas Returns To Plymouth High
PLYMOUTH, Ind. April 18 (U, P.).—Art Thomas, former Plymouth high school basketball star and later football and baseball regular at Indiana university, will report back to his home high school as coach and athletic director, suce ceeding George Belshaw, Thomas has been a physical education ine structor at the McKinley school, Muncie, for the past four years,
Hoosiers Out to Beat Hawks Again
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. April 18 (U. P.).—Indiana and Iowa clash in the second of their two-game basee ball series here today with the
¢s4 | HoOsiers out for a repeat of their
7-t0-0 victory over the previously unbeaten Hawkeyes yesterday. With Indiana twirler Johnny
*3| Logan sparing the Iowa batters only
five hits, Indiana scored one run in the first on a single and error by
ithe Hawkeye outfield, drove in a
second run in the seventh and
3|touched off a five-run spree in the
eighth for its first Big Ten victory in three starts. Everett Hoffman of Evansville
606 305 | slugged a triple, double and single
to lead the Hoosier attack. The line score:
I dvives ! John Blue, Washington
581, 549! 546 | Aileen Fray, Coca-Cola . .. .. ....... 537% Gertrude Hatfield, Tillerest GC Cuivvven 508
Pattie Striebeck, Thursday Night .....
Butler Tennis Team Victorious
The Butler university tennis team turned in its first victory of the season yesterday, defeating Evansville college 5-2 on the Riviera club Conference
The Fairview netters won four of five singles matches’ and split the two doubles contests. Last year’s Butler tennis squad lost all seven
Louisville, 9; BePau w, 8
| Ba 4 yet
Towa sve Indiana Faber, man,
- . 000 000 000— 2 3 100 000 15%— Hill and Welp; Logan nd wells
POCSETESOCHESHESE: X —FLASH— % Shooting Exhibition Shotgun, Rifle, Revolver By Mr. Parsons Famous fancy shooting artist, | courtesy Winchester RepeatS ing Arms Co. ¢ Public Invited==No Charge
% CAPITOL CITY GUN CLUB
X SUNDAY, 3 P. M.
LS 0006606455656605000T Open Till 10:30 P. M.
Daily and All Day Sunday
Largest Stock Auto Supplies In the State at Deep-Cut Prices
DELAWARE
BLUE POINT
& MADISON
NPS
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