Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1942 — Page 10
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PAGE 10
td ean eH
5
By HARRY GRAYSON
Times Special Writer June 8.—There is a possibility that the Cubs are inter1g more than James Emory Foxx regaining his punch. Wilson is on the last leg of a two-year-contract, and it be said that the old world series hero of 1940 has been a
CHICAGO, ested in somethin Jimmy hardly can
howling success in Chicago.
Wilson's best friends tell you he is unhappy at Wrigley Field. The
nooga to replace Grimm. He did
majors.
19 years.
Kiki Cuvier, the former outfielder, was brought in from Chatta-
well with the Lookouts.
Unless the Bruins have something other than a player role for Foxx. he is additional evidence that they are the ol’ clo’smen of the
Sad to relate, the fact that Double X was waived out of the American league is an unmistakable sign that he is nearing the end after
Crowding 35. the greatest right-hand distance hitter of all time suffers from sinus. He tried glasses one spring, wears them frequently
veteran catcher does not hit it off too well with Pres. Jim Gallagher. it is said off the field. He was heavier than ever before when he suffered the Anyway, don't be startled if a change is made, and Jimmy Foxx has fractured rib that put him in the Boston dugout. managerial aspirations. Thomas Austin Yawkey, owner of the Red Sox, The Cubs specialize in weird deals, ried to interest the Cleveland club in the Sudlersville Slugger as a pilot. Magnate Philip K. Wrigley sent for the venerable Tony Lazzeri
In the event that there is a switch,
Charley Grimm and Hazen Cuyler. Grimm, once dismissed, is Front
Bar the Door. Millers, Here Comes Tribe
tremendously Brought back as a coach by Wilson and sent to the Milwaukee subsidiary in mid-season last year, Grimm has the last-place Brewers he took over in second place in the American association.
Times Special ! MINNEAPOLIS, June 6 — The) galloping, knock ‘em dead Indian-| Indians, rejuvenated and) restored in the American association race after ¥inning six in a row the Saints in St. Paul, un-| packed bat bags in Minne-| polis today to open a six-game the third-place Millers out at ancient Nicollet park ving climbed out of the league; and advanced to a tie for) i place with Louisville, the Red-| skins hope to keep rolling with the| first division as their goal before r depart the Twin Cities terri-|
apolis
Fra their
series with
The six-game victory march is the st for the Tribe this season | and it's the best record in years; for an In dial 1apolis team starting] i
a western trip Press Columbus for Fourth |
Although the Tribesters are 9% cames behind the league leaders—| the Kansas City Blue Streaks— hev are only a game and a half]
awav from the first division, in other | a game and a half behind | four place Columbus All this has been ter they dropped four in a the Memorial
words,
accomplished row
Louisville during
Da ol lidiay week-end The Minneapolis series calls for — a single tilt this afternoon, two to-| morrow afternoon, one Monday] ght and two Testay night And Manager Gabby Hartnett is| well-fixed in his ote department. | He only used seven pitchers in the | six-game St. Paul series, with Woodie Rich serving in the relief Jle in two games and Walter Tauscher remaining idle through!
long set at Lexington park. Unless Tauscher was called upon to face the Millers this afternoon, | ree Gill or Bob Logan was to| Tribe mound assign-|
ive the
Doubles Feature Attack The Indians said farewell to St
Paul by slaughtering the Saints last night, 13 to 2. Once the Tribesters got going in the fourth stanza they pounded the ball all over the premises with two-base hits featuring their attack. They collected 14 blows against nine by the Saints, and the cracked-up Apostles made five errors
It was St. Paul's 10th consecutive defeat and the Apostle fans and Manager Truck Hannah are ‘suffering” a-plenty Steve Rachunok Tribe mound and by Joe Bowman
opened on the he was opposed In the fourth the
Indians sent Bowman to the showers and Vedie Himsl took over the St. Paul toil The Indians splurged for four runs in that stanza Rich Receives Credit The Tribesters added a fifth marker in the fifth and the Saints
broke the scoring ice in that canto by tallving one marker. Rachunok control and Skipper Hartnett lifted him and sent in Rich. The Tribe chieftain was taking no chances on blowing a good lead Rich received credit for the victory In the sixth the Redskins staged another four-run uprising and increased their lead to 9 to 1. They chalked two more in the eighth and polished off the night's pastiming by adding a couple in the ninth. Dick Culler, shortstop. belted a homer off Rich in the ninth with the bases empty. The veteran Hartnett worked behind the Tribe bat again, only giving way to Johnny Pasek in the seventh after his team gained a commanding lead. The 41-year-old caught the entire six-game in St. Paul except the last three Innings last night—and two double-headers were included in the Series,
lost
then
skippe~
series
20 Drivers Enter Dirt Track Race
Drivers from several states throughout the Middle West will vie for honors in the dirt track racing program to be held tomorrow afternoon at the Indiana Speedway, 3200 S. Meridian st. Officiais of the Mid West Racing association, the sponsoring organ-| ization, have announced that 20 en- | tries have been received for the competition to take place on the half-mile track. There will be four races of 10 laps each and a 20-lap feature. Qualifications begin at noon and the first regular event at 3 p. m.
MIDGET AUTO RACES
EVERY TUESDAY
Decker, RCA Manufacturing Co. ing Co,
Giants are interested in outfielder Sam Mele and third baseman John
wR oe | | Simmons of New York university. J 200s 49 players competing for 14 places in the Metropolitan sec-
other candidates would be to give his charges the Yankee
popular on the Lake Clyde Shoun and Outfielder Tuck
Side.
Industrial League
spirit,
He paid the Cardinals $185,000 and gave Pitchers Curt Davis and
Stainback for Dizzy Dean, although
everybody suspected Ol' Diz was pitched out. Babe Herman, who cost $75,000, got precisely nowhere on the North
Golf
8
Officers of the Industrial Golf league here in the city are (left to right, above) Vice President R. H.
Andrews, P. R. Mallory; President J. D. Macy, International Harvester, Other league teams are Lukas-Harold, E. C. Atkins Co., Allison EngineerNext matches will be played June 14 at Speedway.
Curtiss-Wright and U. 8. Rubber Co.
and Secretary-Treasurer M. L.
SPORTS
Ath By Eddie Ash
In a rousing ten-round main go at Sports arena last night Gene Luker, Cincinnati middleweight, better known as Baby Face, threw too many gloves and too often for Al Sheridan, the local biffer, and the Queen City boxer gained the decision on points. No knockdowns occurred despite a lot of stiff exchanges but Sheridan had a tough time weathering the seventh round when Luker swarmed all over him and turned on the one-two attack in rapid-fire fashion. . .. Sheridan's comment after the bell in that heat consisted of one word, “Whew!” Had it not been for the fact that Sheridan takes a punch well and recuperates quickly, he would have been stretched on the canvas in that seventh sizzler. . . , But Luker fought himself out in that canto and Sheridan made a fight of it the rest of the distance. It was a battle of left hands at the start with Luker forcing the milling. . . . He used his right to better advantage while Sheridan was siow in this important part of fisticuffs. . . . Al's body attack was all right—with his left hook—but he couldn't keep Luker from barging in and piling up points. Sheridan needs more fights over the ten-round route and also needs to develop a sharper, potent punch. . . . It takes some dynamite to keep opponents wary in the professional fight game. The five-bout Hercules A. C. card did not draw as well as expected, considering the splendid weather. About 1500 fans attended.
Gets Up Off Floor and Wins IN A SCHEDULED six-rounder between lightweights, Hollie Upchurch of Indianapolis and formerly of Muncie, excited the customers by winning by k. o. after looking the part of a certain loser. Phil Smith of Cincinnati flattened Upchurch’s nose in the first round and in the second heat Upchurch was dumped into the ring dust for the nine count. . . . But the bleeding Upchurch refused to surrender . He flashed a powerful body attack and hurt Smith with a crushing jolt good for the two-count before the termination of the second stanza. And Smith still was feeling that bread basket punch in the third round and Upchurch flattened him for the 10-count and victory in 1:50 of the round.
= s 8 2 8 =
ROBERT SIMMONS, Indianapolis welterweight, outpointed Benton Cobbins, Macon, Ga., in a six-rounder. . , . The former set the pace and chalked up a good advantage before the latter got out of his shell. . . . Cobbins was hard to hit and stopped many blows with his elbows. . However, he didn't lead enough to please the customers alth ough his blows were potent when they landed. Simmons proved the superior boxer over the short route but it was no bed of roses for him in the fourth and fifth.
Novice Heavies Go "Round and Round
TINY BLAND and Robert Donnell, local heavyweights, didn't settle anything in their four-rounder except to convince the ringsiders they have a long way to go to learn the manly art of give and take professionally. The big fellows tugged, clinched and wrestled most of the distance and both were tired at the finish. . . . It was good comedy for the ringsiders, who prefer their heavyweights, raw or seasoned. In the four-round opener Whitey Hewitt received the decision over Gene Miller. . . . They are lightweights and former Golden Glovers. . . . It was Miller's first professional bout. . . . The third and fourth rounds furnished typical Golden Gloves action.
Another Turnesa Leads Golfers
BLOOMFIELD, N. J. June 8 (U.
Collegiate Comers
NEW YORK, June 6.—New York
‘tional qualifying round of the Hale America golf tournament started 'the final 36 holes of the 54-hole test today on the Forest Hill club course. | Mike Turnesa, White Plains, N.| 1 Y,, led the field in the first 18 holes] yesterday with a Duriinder par 67.
LOCAL RACES
Big Time Dirt Track Auto Races —Sunday June 7, at 3 P. M.
Sponsored by Mid West Racing Assn.
General Admission, 50¢
| losses.
Bearded Hindu on Mat Card Billing
Ali Pasha, bearded Hindu matman, has been added to the outdoor wrestling card next Tuesday night at Sports Arena. He is a junior heavy. Feature action is between two top ranking heavyweights, Chief Little Wolf of New Mexico and Louis Thesz of St. Louis. They meet for two falls out of three in a promised action-producer. Vie Holbrook,
popular Boston
Eckert of Missouri in the semi- | Windup. Eckert has just been re- | instated by the Indiana State Ath-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Jimmy Foxx May Manage The Chicago Cubs
The Cubs gave the Phils cash and Dolph Camilli for Don Hurst. They let Lonny Frey go for the waiver price.
Billy Jurges and Ken O'Dea
went in a three for three trans-
action which didn't help the Cubs.
Dick Bartell was passed on to stopped the Tigers to a pennant,
Detroit for Billy Rogell and short-
Kirby Higbe and two others went to the Phils for Claude Passeau, which was all right except that the Cubs didn't appear to recognize a fine pitching prospect when they had one. A long list of deals unfavorable to the Cubs could be compiled, but the dizziest one of all saw Lonnie Warneke go to the Cardinals for
Ripper Collins and Bud Parnielee.
President Gallagher traded the Brooklyns into the first pennant in 21 years when he turned over Billy Herman. The Dodgers have the Wrigleys to thank for Larry French and
Augie Galan.
The Cubs kicked Joe McCarthy upstairs to the Yankees after clubs built and managed by him established attendance records. So don't be surprised at anything.
To Try Again At Dual Meet
. Times Special EVANSTON, Ill, June 6—To the usually brilliant field which makes it the number one dual track event of the year and one of the nation’s 1 outstanding track and field spectacles, the sixth annual Big TenPacific coast dual track meet has added an exhibition by the world's
greatest pole vaulter, Cornelius Wwarmerdam. The dual meet, between top
ranking stars from the two con« ferences, will be held as a twilight event June 16 at Northwestern university. Warmerdam, the only vaulter in history to clear 15 feet, a feat he has performed on 24 competitve occasions, recently set a mark of 15 73% inches, which has been accepted for world's recognition. His ultimate goal is a height of 16 feet. Entries in the dual meet competition among them hold seven of the year's outstanding performances by American athletes in the 13 individual events which are carded on the program beside the quartermile and mile relays. Five of those seven top performances have been turned in by Pacific coast representatives, but the Big Ten delegation is optimistic over prospects for its best showing in the meet's history. Coast teams have won five times in the past, by margins ranging from 101 to 35 in 1938 to 80-56 last year. : Typical of the field's usual caliber was that of 1941 when 10 of 16 first places on the all-American college track and field team were picked from among the Pacific coast and Big Ten stars. Heading the list of outstanding individuals in the 1042 meet is Harold Davis, brilliant sprinting star from the University of California, whose recent time of 109.4 for the 100-yard dash has been accepted for recognition as tying the world’s record.
. ‘ Clark in Service heavy, grips with the aggressive Ray| PENSACOLA, Fla. June 6.—Lieut. y
Comm, George (Potsy) Clark, for-
taken over duties as athletic officer
letic commission. | at the “Annapolis of the Air” here.
A#12:10 A.M. (Yawn) Browns Scored and Beat the A's, 1-0
GEORGE KIRKSEY
United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, June 6.—The St, Louis Browns and Philadelphia Ath-
| etics battled 16 innings under the lights last night in the most dramatic
| and longest major league night ever i Ten minutes after midnight the park, Philadelphia, victorious, 1-0.
played. Browns walked off the field at Shibe Walter Judnich, St. Louis center
fielder, laced a triple off the rightfield wall, opening the 16th and scored
lon Chet Laab’s fly. The game lasted three hours seven minutes and none of the 10,777 spectators left.
Heart-Breaking Loss
It was a heart-breaking loss for Dick Fowler, A's 21-year-old rookie right-hander who came up from Toronto where he broke even last year, winning 10 and losing 10. He went the entire route, giving up nine hits, walking five and fanning six. It was Fowler's third start this season. He lost previously to the Indians and won a relief wvictory over the White Sox.
John Niggeling, Browns’ knuckleball pitcher, went 12 innings, al lowing nine hits, walking four and fanning six. George Caster, formerly with the A's, allowed one hit in the last four innings and took the victory, his third against no
Season’s Longest Game
The triumph brought the Browns up above 500 and only half a game out of the first division. In addition to being the longest night game ever played, it also was the season’s longest game. The previous
Max Lanier, who had beaten the Giants twice previously, was the loser. A crowd of 7642 attended at
St. Louis. The Cubs finally beat the Dodgers after five straight lickings.
Brooklyn rocked the Cubs, 6-3, in the first game of a doubleheader before 17,655 at Chicago, but Jimmy Wilson's outfit took a 4-3 victory in the 10-inning nightcap. Phil Cavaretta’s double drove in the winning run. Chicago fans bombarded Joe | Medwick with fruit in the opener | after the umpires ruled he made a sit-down catch of Lou Novikoff's sinking liner. Cincinnati knocked off another
3-2 and 6-1. Johnny Vander Meer won his sixth game and Ray Starr his seventh. Eddie Joost singled in the ‘winning run in the ninth inning of the opener and a six-run rally iced the nightcap. Pittsburgh snapped a 10-game, two-week losing streak, capitalizing on five errors and beating the Phils, 6-5. gle with the bases filled with the
high was a 14-inning affair between the Cubs and Reds. Buck Newsom, who hadn't won a game since May 6, lorded it over his former teammates again last night when he pitched Washington a 3-2 victory over Detroit in 10 innings. It was doubly sweet to 'Ol Buck because it dropped the Tigers from second to third. Newsom's record is now five victories (two over Detroit) and eight defeats. He held the Tigers to six hits and fanned seven. Harold White, who relieved Al Benton in the ninth, walked Bob Repass with the bases loaded in the 10th forcing in the winning run. An estimated 9700 fans saw the game at Washington.
Rookie Wins for Giants
Dave Koslo, rookie southpaw, cheered Manager Mel Ott last night by pitching the New York Giants a 3-1 victory over the St. Louis Card-
inals. It was a four-hit performance. Koslo walked only one and fanned four for his third triumph. | Johnny Mize's sixth homer (third maine his former mates) proved nai margin, shliouels the
{big Pirate blow. Although he had tp leave the|g [game with a bruised right leg after
being hit by a line drive, Lefty Gomez received credit for the Yankees’ 6-3 victory over the Indians. Gomez, hit in the second, managed to last through the fourth before he had to leave. Joe Gordon extended his hitting streak to 21 straight games.
Lou Finney drove in three runs),
and the Red Sox beat the White Sox, 4-2. Ted Williams’ triple accounted for the other tally.
Yesterday's Star—Hiram Bithorn, Cubs’ rookie pitcher, who hurled three hitless innings against the Dodgers in the nightcap and then doubled to start the winning rally in the 10th which gave Chicago its first triumph over Brooklyn this season.
Champs Matched
VANCOUVER, B. C., June 8 (U. P.) —~Lou Salica, New York, world’s bantamweight champion, and Kenny Landay, Vancouver, Canadian 118-poun have
Champ Vaulter
mer professional football coach, has |
doubleheader, beating the Braves, Rach
Rookie Johnny Barrett's sin- x
Conference
Head
Ray Sears, Butler university track coach yesterday was elected president of the Central Collegiate conference in Milwaukee as six schools prepared to compete for track and field championships at Marquette university. Other officers elected were Melvin Shink, Marquette, first vice president; Ear! Schlademan, Michigan State, second vice president; M. E. Easton, Drake, third vice president, and Stanley Lowe, Marquette, secretary treasurer,
Surprise Colts Race Today
By JACK GUENTHER
United Press Staff Correspondent
3-year-old title
two standout youngsters in
to benefit by at least $150,000. Rich Purse
at 3-1,
26-1 to 100-1. biggest and the purse, the richest in six years, but as far as competition was concerned the mile and ‘a half gallop was a twohorse contest. Those two thoroughbreds were the Greentree colt and Little 'Sab, the former ugly duckling who surprised even his owner in the Derby, and the latter the ragamuffin $700 bargain who turned the trick in Maryland a week later. For either, a
first claim to the divisional title. Six Other Horses
The other six horses, all good enough in their own class, but apparently no match for the two top nominees, were Calumet Farm's Col, Teddy, Mrs. F. A. Clark's Top Milk, | W. P. Chrysler's Ramillies, J. M. Roebling’s Lochinvar, Belair Stud’s
Half Crown. Two had a point in their favor. Col. Teddy is trained by Ben Jones and the head man of the Calumet | string is a sharp horseman. Lochinvar is a puzzling animal who always runs best when he appears outclassed. But these reasonings, were those of the confirmed longshot bettors. An upset would be the most shocking of the season,
Tribe Box Score
INDIANAPOLIS ABR B O A KE Blagkburp, ff ...... 3 3 2 0 0 1} McDowell, 2b ....... dé 3 4 T+ 4 C Seeds, If .. ...cie0e 6 0 2 3 OG 0 McCarthy. 1b ....... ¢ 4& 3 13 0 Of Bestudik. 3b ........ 3 2 32 0 1 9 Moore, cf ......iu000 $5 0 30 0 SKelley, 88 .....co0v. F O¢ 1+ ¥ 4 ¢ Harthett, G siivivuns Ss + O02 1 ¢ SK, €. «: .iiiivase : OC 9 1 0 0 Raohunok, ETT vd OO 0 0 1} @ DP iiiiiiiinives 30 0 ¢ 1-0 Totals ....ccvviv. 45 13 14 27 13 1 8ST. PAUL AB R H QO A B Culler, 88 ........iss 3 1 1 1 2 1 Lg rf +4 0. 0 3 © ¢ Drews. 30. ...ccoveis & 0 0 3 2 0 Weintraub. 1b iiss 3 0. 0 9 0 § ant, 3Y i. .coiiien $¢ 0 3 0 1 English, i .......vit 4 6 0 0 0 0 Stumpf, ef ....o0000e 3 0 3 3 0 CO Andrews, 6 ...eiieeen $¥ 0 6 8 0 ¢o Bowman, p .. wet 0 3+ OO @ HimSl, p ....¢ weesses bd 2 §. GG 2 0 Artin, P ccoiieniies $$ 9 I 6 § 0 SCHAIOW .ccusieesee.. 1 0 O 0 0 © Totals ........... 833 3 9 nn 1H» 9 Schalow batted for Martin in ninth INDIANAPOLIS ........... 000 414 022—13
t. Paul 000 010 001— 2
Runs bateed in—Blackburn 2, McDowell Seeds 2, Skelly 3, Culler, Grant. Twobase hits—Bestudik 2, McCarthy 2, BlackDo Three-base hit Sacrifices
» 2 8 ® = 2 Fog 8 «>
—Rachunok 2, artim ia GikeoutsRachinox 2, Rich Martin 3. Hits—Off Rachuno. 5 in i \nnings Rich, 8 in 4Vs, 33. Himsl 1 2-3,
Martin 6 in 3%. Hit by * pitgner—5y | Rachunok (Graham). Passed ball— drews, Tia itcher—Rich. oan itcher—Bowman po Mpites-=Jolneon an iethe. Time—3a:
Louis Starts Tour
NEW YORK, June 6 (U, P.).— Corp. Joe Louis, world's heavyweight champion, began his exhibition tour of army camps last night drawing a crowd of 7000, including 3000 soldiers, for his bout at Ft.
Hamilton. Louis boxed three rounds;
with George Nicholson, one of his sparring partners. Nicholson's left eye was cut in the third round.
Open Till 10:30 P. M.
NEW YORK, June 6-—Shut Out and Alsab, the surprise colts who crossed up their critics by romping to triumph in the Kentucky Derby Lo and the Preakness, meet in the 74th running of the Belmont stakes today to settle their feud and the W L in the first allcharity racing program of the war. The rubber match between the the oldest and the longest of the great spring fixtures drew 35,000 excited customers to Belmont park for what shaped up as a fine race and a finer gesture. Every penny of the profits was earmarked for the army, navy and U. 8. O. relief funds—expected
Alsab was heavily favored on the morning line at 2-5 with Shut Out and six almost completely obscure candidates ranging from The field was the at $57,150,
clean-cut victory in the third leg of the triple crown today meant
Trierarch and Christiana Stable’s |
Wilson . . , his friends tell you he’s unhappy.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL LEAGUE
GAMES TODAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Mianeapolis, Louisville at St. Paul, Columbus at Kansas City Toledo at Milwaukee. AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit at Washington (two). Cleveland at ow! ork. Chicago at B St. Louis at Phaladelphia.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Boston at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. Brooklyn at Chicago. New York at St. Louis.
RESULTS YESTERDAY
Ww L Pot. Kansas City ...... 30 15 667 Milwaukee ........ 26 18 A501 SL pneayalie sve 2 2 563 Colum oo 22 A488 INDIANAPOLIS «+ 25 A457 guisville ......... 21 WB ABT ele... 20 30 400 25 St. Paul ......... 17 27 .386 1213 AMERICAN LEAGUE Pet. GB New York ........ 34 11 156 — Cleveland ........ 26 22 542 1s Detroit ....oe000.. 28 24 038 914 Boston ......ee:: M4 22 H22 1013 St. Louis ......4e: 26 2B 510 11 Nyaciingion CresEe 19 29 .396 161 Chicago nT 18 29 383 17 Philadelphia ..... 20 33 397 18
L Pet. GB Brooklyn 1 908 — St. Louis 20 Bid 61% New York ... 24 A520 9 Boston . 26 500 10 Sineinuayl 24 500 10 Chica nN A460 12 Pittsburgh 28 417 14 Philadelphia ..... 16 33 327 181%
Baseball Gordon Slugs Calendar [Away at .386
NEW YORK, June 6 (U. P.).—=
GB | Second Baseman Joe Gordon of the “314 | New York Yankees replaced Bobby 31s) Doerr of the Boston Red Sox, is) leader for three consecutive weeks,
as the top batsman of major league clubs today, according to official tabulations of games played up to and including last Thursday. Gordon chalked up a mark of
| .386, three percentage points better *| than Doerr, 2| leadership he held during the first
to regain the hitting
week of the season. Catcher Babe Phelps of the Pittsburgh Pirates topped the nae tional league batsmen for the sece ond straight week with an average of 373. Pete Reiser moved up from fourth place to second with a .366, trailing Phelps by seven points, Ernie Bonham, the forkball master of the Yankees, paced the major league pitchers with eight victories, which include four shutouts, withe out a defeat. Larry French led the senior circuit hurlers with four triumphs and no setbacks. Leaders in other departments: Doubles — (N) Reiser, Brooklyn, and Joost, Cincinnati, 16; (A) Mce Quinn, St. Louis, 16. Triples—(N) Slaughter, St. Louis, 5, (A) Spence, Washington, 7. Home Runs—(N) Camilli, Brooke lyn, and Marshall, New York, 8; (A) Williams, Boston, 15. Stolen bases—(N) Miller, Boston,
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION and Murtaugh, Philadelphia, 8; (A) (First game; 11 innings) Kuhel, Chicago, 10. Toledo ........... 110 001 000 00— 3 8 0 Kansas City... 000 003 000 01— 4 12 o Following are the ten leading Kimberlin, Cox and Keller; Volpi, Roser,| batsmen in each league. Karpel and Sears. NATIONAL (Second game; 8 innings; agreement) LEAGUE RBI Toledo ......ocvierineren, 000 200 2 4 1) Phelps, Pittsbur Pet. Kansas City ............ 010 003— 4 6 1 Reiser, Brora». 52 3B 5 3a Pyle and Spindel: Johnson and Garbark, | Owen,’ Brooklyn . «9% 3 4 —— Lamanno Cineinnati, 101 33 1% ir Columbus: ........... 120 211 100— 8 13 0 Lombardi, Boston ....105 31 13 337 Milwaukee .......... 010 401 100— 7 11 2 Medwick, Brooklyn 147 4T 31 8% Roe, Gabler, Barrett and Heath; Lawson, hy Srikiyn per 308 3 2.31 | Lantrancond and Griswold, George. Slau ay St. Louis... 162 Ci ” Sis | Louisville ........... 000 000 000— 0 § of VV Cooper, St. Louis. 112 34 16 304 | Minneapolis rin ieieh 000 030 10x— 4 4 0] AMERICAN LEAGUE Sayles and Walters; Mungo and Giuliani, Gordon; New York As N RBI Pct, —————— | Doerr, "Boston. ....154 50 13 339 AMERICAN LEAGUE { Dickey, New York..... M0 36 11 .360 | ence, Washington ..188 66 32 .351 Cleveland ........... 020 010 000— 83 7 1| Hassett, New York....128 44 15 .344 |New York ........... 302 000 01x— 6 11 2 Fleming, Cleveland ...170 58 34 .341 Smith, Gromek, Embree and Hegan;| DE ma en rave ++ 18% % 1 -333 . . oe . vedi | Gomez, Breuer and Rosar. | Weatherly, Cleveland 146 46 18 318 lChicage: ............ 100 010 000— 2 8 Stephens, St. Louis ..193 60 31 311 Boston ............. 102 000 10x— 4 11 H Jempinies and Tresh; Terry, Brown and/ odie Dal Sasso Reports (Ten innings) Detroit ..... Oo 001 oot 0— 2 6 1 For Induction | Washington ave 001 100 000 1— 3 | Benton, White and Tebbets, roan SOUTH BEND, June 6 (U. P.).—
Newsom and Early.
{Sistem innings) St. Louis 000 000 000 000 000 1-1 9 Philad: Iphia 000 0600 000 000 000 0— 0 10 1]
Niggeling, Caster and Ferrell; Fowler and Swift,
|
NATIONAL LEAGUE
(First Game)
Lo. 000 002 000 2 7 . 001 000 002— 3 6
Vander Meer and
23
a
op ATE ra
Javery and Lenbardi; Hemsley.
(Second Game)
Boston Cincinnati Earley, Wallace, and Lamanno.
Salvo and Masi; Starr
(First Game)
Brooklyn Chicage ............ Wyatt, Casey and Owen: Olsen, Brithorn, Erickson, Haneyzewsii and McCullough. (Second game; 10 innings) Brooklyn 100 020 000 0— 3 5 © Chicago 200 000 010 1— 4 8 1 Head, Casey, French and Sullivan, Owen; Fleming, Bithorn and Hernandez, McCullough. { Philadelphia ........ 201 000 011— 5 12 5 Pittsburgh 020 000 04x— 6 8 1
Hoerst, Pearson and Livingston, Warren; Klinger, Heintzelman, Dietz and Lopez.
New York .........s. 010 001 001i—3 8 0 St. Louis ........... 001 000 0001 4 O Koslo and Danning; Lanier, Beazley and W. Cooper.
Dudley Exempt From Qualifying
NEW YORK, June 6 (U. P.).— P. G. A. President Ed Dudley has been exempted from qualifying in the sectional rounds for the Hale America National Open Golf tournament at Chicago June 18-21, Joe Dey, secretary of the United States Golf association announced today. Dudley, scheduled to qualify at Denver, was detained in Washington on business and Francis Ouimet, tournament chairman, invited him
|
Chris Dal Sasso, head football coach at South Bend Central high school and former Indiana university foot ball star, today was ordered to re= port June 15 for induction in the U. S. army. Del Sasso, a native of Clinton, succeeded Coach Robert Wood as football coach at the South Bend school when Wood went into the armed services a year ago. Dal Sasso was captain of the I, U. football team in 1937.
HOOSIER
Ball
to compete without qualifying,
Bally an All Day Sunday | Stock
on on Everything
Diamonds, monds, Watches, Musical instruments, Cameras,
pS eto Shotguns, Ete,
Bee
gine
ay a i
pi
SE alas
