Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1942 — Page 17
Td
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i
"BLUE POIN
Gs
IDAY,
Mrs, Robert Laycock and Mrs.
~ Dale Lentz won women’s golf
championships yesterday at Pleas-
: ant Run and Hillcrest, respectively.
Meanwhile at the Highland Golf ‘and Country club this" morning, Mary Gorham and Mrs. Louis Bola
- were to play in the championship
round. Mrs. Laycock scored a 4 and 3 triumph over Mrs. Frank Grovenberry for the Pleasant Run title. In other matches Mrs. Louis Gropp defeated Mrs. L. H. Brandes, 3 and
2, in. championship consolation; a
Mrs. Larry Fall defeated Mrs. Marvin Gillespie, 2 and 1, in first flight; Mrs. Fred Wuelfing de-
feated Mrs. A. Murphy, 2 up, in|}
first consolation; Mrs. C. Jones defeated Mrs. John Toumey, 6 and 8, in second flight; Mrs." A. E. Baker defeated Mrs. Roger Williams, 1 up, in second consolation, and Mrs. Victor Landis defeated Mrs, Paul Grubbs, 4 and 3, in third Slight. Following the Pleasant Run tourney Mrs. Grubbs was elected president to succeed Mrs. Wuelfing. Mrs. Fall will serve as the new vice president. Mrs. Arthur Wettle was elected secretary-treasurer. Mrs. Lentz won the Hillcrest Swanson, 4 and 2. Mrs. Swanson carded .a hole-in-one on the 155yard 12th hole. To reach today’s final round Miss Gorham scored a 3 and 2 triumph yesterday over Mrs. Joseph Brower at Highland while Mrs. Bola elim-
7 Championship defeating Mrs. L. R.
. inated Louellen Trimble, 3 and 1.
‘Drug’ Golf
An 82 posted by C. H. Sides won the druggists’ division of ‘indianapolis retail druggists’ annual golf tournament yesterday at Speedway.
Kerl won the salesmen’s fEdvard with an 81. SPORT SWEATERS
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Dodgers Salvage Prestige; but They Meet Passeau Today
By PAUL SCHEFFELS : United Press Staff Correspondent ;
NEW YORK, Aug. 28.—Hurled
the fast-moving St. Louis Cardinals, the National league’s pace-setting Brooklyn Dodgers staggered into Chicago today and bundle of trouble named Claude Passeau. . The Cubs’ Passeau, tied for top winning honors in the major leagues with two other pitchers at 17 victories, was scheduled to go to the pitch-
Joins Colors
Enos Slaughter, St. Louis Cardinal outfielder who is challenging for the National league batting championship, enlisted in the army air force yesterday at St. Louis. He will not be called probably until the end of the season. He is 26 years old.
Rivals Team Up For Net Meet
Frank O'Connell and Marshall (Babe) ‘Christopher, who have faced each. other twice as *members of opposing teams in doubles fihals of two local tournaments this year, today entered as a team to the growing list in the Indiana state tennis tournament.
Tomorrow is the deadline for entries in the singles events of the tournament which will open Tuesday at the Meridian Hills Country club. Deadline for doubles play was set at the end of competition Tuesday and the finals will be played Labor day.
Billy Howard Joins U. S. Navy i
George William (Billy) Howard, sophomore. halfback last year for Butler university, enlisted in the V-1 division of the U. S. navy today. Howard, who starred at George Washington high school three years ago as a football, track and basketball athlete, may remain in school for two years yet according to navy regulations. At the. end of that period -he will start training as an aviation cadet. .
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‘|a 10-game victor, and Murry Dick-
| feats. Bagby was credited with his
| Young,
: Skelley, ss dy
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No Army-Navy Tilt?) |
| OUT-OF-PAWN _A SUITS & TOPCOATS
back three times in four games by ran right into a
ing mound against the Dodgers, who now lead the loop by only 5% games, since their disastrous stop-over at
Frankie Hoerst and Rube Melton, two of the best pitchers the Phils have, will fire away at the Red Birds but they have only won 13 games between them. Howie Krist, |-
son, a rookie who has won only five | but is brilliant in spots, will work for the Cards. .
The Dodgers salvaged a minute bit of prestige and a game of their lead in St. Louis yesterday by defeating the Cards, 4-1. A four-run rally in the fifth, more runs than Brooklyn had scored in 37 previous innings of this series, knocked Max Lanier from the mound and sewed up the game for the Dodgers. Ernie White and Howie Pollet finished for the Cards and the entire trio gave up only seven hits. Curt Davis, former Cardinal, won his fifth in a row and 14th of th year, holding 3 the Cards to 5 : eight hits. Lanier, sent back against Brooklyn with only two days rest, yielded five straight singles in the fifth inning uprising which wrecked the Cards’ chances. It was his sixth loss of the year against 12 victories. Mickey Owen began the rally and was followed in order by Arky Vaughan, Davis, Pewee Reese and Billy Herman with sucéessive safeties before White came in. Hank Gornicki, In addition to hitting his first major league homer, handcuffed the Braves with two hits and brought the Pirates a 5-0 triumph. Paul Waner broke the spell with a drive off Frank Gustine’s glove in the fifth and Eddie Miller slapped the second hit in the eighth off Pete Coscarart’s hand. Gornicki “faced only 29 men and walked but one, not a Boston runner reaching second. Jim Tobin gave up seven hits and was charged with his 18th defeat. Gornicki poled his homer with one on in the seyenth after FElbie Fletcher had opened the inning with his seventh homer. y Harry Feldman . pitched the Giants to a 2-0, six-hit triumph over the Reds in 11 innings. It was the 14th shutout and the 14th overtime defeat of the season at home! for the Reds. No «other National league games, were scheduled, In the only American league game, the Cleveland Indians snapped the Boston Red Sox’ winning streac at nine in a row by scoring a 4-2 triumph behind the five-hit pitching of Jim Bagby. The Tribe scored twice in the ninth, breaking a 2-all tie and handing Tex Hughson his first defeat in 12 starts. The loss made his record 17 victories and four de-
15th victory. Ted Williams hit his 27th homer.
Tribe Box Score
COLUMBUS
Klein, Myatt,
OOO, OOO \ EO MR, N-NOo OHOON,CONOmD oocoogco0o0ool
Blackburn, rf ... McDowell,
Schlueter, ¢ .. Logan, DP .cevecess Hartnett .....c0000. » Pp CERT ERY YR
Hartnett batted for Logan in seventh. (Fifteen Innings) : 000 100 000 000 003—4 100 000 000 000 000—1 Runs batted in—MecCarthy, Gleeson, Myatt, 2; Bergamo. Two-base hits—McCarthy, English Home run—Gleeson, Stolen bases—] crifl :
at Davis, Skelley, Skelley to McDo
Columbus Indianapolis
: y plays— well” to McCarthy, - cheen to Antonelli, Bestudik to } to McCarthy, Skelley to McCarth: Carthy to Skelley to MsCarilly, bases—Columbus, 11; Indianapolis, 12. on balls—Off Logan, 1; Brecheen, 3; Re 1. Struck out—By Brecheen, 13; Logan 3 d, 4. Hits—Off n, 8 i innings; Reid, 5 in 8 innings. Hit by itcher—English, by Brecheen; Heath, by id: Wil pitches Logan 1. Losing pitcher—Reid. = Umpires—Parker and Showalter. Time--3:2.
TRIBE AVERAGES
AB Bestudik sess0cscssessne 1 Blackburn sscessseseges BD McCarthy ooceececcsnces B54 Seed
i ie Schlueter eeresririers 27% 19, Staucet «.ccieocievininn. 14 “125
WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 (U. PJ). —Although no definite decisions the annual army-navy football game may be canceled this year, it was reported
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Golden Bears Look Best In Far West
By RED GRANGE Times Special Writer California, which has been cuffed around the Pacific coast conference since 1937 when the
+ Golden Bears won in the Rose
Bowl, looms as the club to bring order out ‘of confusion in the Far West this season. In 1941, the Far West failed to produce a team which stood head and shoulders above the rest of the league, although Oregon State was capable enough to take Duke in the transplanted Tournament of Roses. '
But there was no team like the |
Southern California varsities of the early '30’s, the Stanford, teams of ’33-34-35 or Clark Shaughnessy’s T-toters of '40. Each team last season lost two games or more. Oregon State nosed ‘out Washington and Wash ington State for titular honors. Stanford was fourth as the northern group, for once, dominated the league. ® : . i A Shade Choice
California is the "choice over Oregon State by a shade. - Lon Stiner’s Beavers lost’ 15 lettermen, eight of them regulars, and three assistant coaches. Bob Dethman and Don Durdan leave a backfield gap and Martin Chaves will be missed in the line. George Bain, a 207-pound veteran, is a whale of a tackle and there are. few better wingmen than George Zellick. Joe Day and Choc Shelton are more than adequate at fullback. California has 13 sophomores on ‘the first two teams, and that is. the tipoff. If they can play major league ball in their first year, the club will be hard to beat.
Jack Herrero, 185-pound senior, |P
is one of the best guards in the country. John Ferguson at end and backs Bill Reinhard, Gene Pickett and Frank Porto provide the punch. Reinhard, brother of the Bears’ All-America Bob, is a bright prospect.
Plenty of Power
Southern California has a seasoned squad of 28 veterans, some outstanding personnel and a new coach in Jeff Cravath, who moved down from San Francisco when Sam Barry was commissioned a lieutenant-commander in the navy. The backfield will be built’ around the talented and left handed passing Paul Taylor, shifty -Mickey McArdle and Bob Musick, brother of the Trojans’ famous Jim of a decade ago. A rock-ribbed line, bolstered by 235 pound Earl Audet, the Georgetown tackle transfer, should give the Los Angeles array plenty of power. : Marchy Schwartz, who starred in the backfield for Notre Dame, is the new Stanford coach. He inherits a good line, a backfield that carries a real star in Randall Fawcett and thin reserves. The center of the forward wall, with such stalwarts as Ed Stamm, Loren LaPrade and Milt “Wuchinich, is just about the toughest in the west.
. Bright Items
~ Pest Welch has a Washington squad streamlined "by war and graduation. : He has bright items in center Walt Harrison and halfback Bob Erickson, who are likely to be thee coast’s outstanding performers at their positions. Dmitri Tadich is a rugged guard. Welch will blend the T into the Notre Dame box, but his backs will not shift. Washington State has the best end on the coast in Nick Susoeff, a 6-foot 4-inch, 208-pound Russian who ripped the Stanford T to shreds last season. Eligibility losses hurt ; Oregon’ finished the 1941 campaign by dropping a 71-7 affair to Texas, but the Webfeet start off undaunted under Vaughan Corley.
. A Bleak Outlook
Bob Koch, who was shifted from Stanford under a ruling by Commissioner ‘Atherton, is a fine fullback prospect. -U., C. L. A. has Al Solari and a lot of question marks. Francis Schmidt is on the upgrade at Idaho. Santa Clara and San Francisco are the best of the independents. Jimmy Phelan faces a bleak outlook at St. Mary’s. S'x major . coaching changes took place between seasons. Four ‘were the result of military service, two of the vicissitudes of the profession. : After taking the blasts of synthetic alumni, you can’t blame a coach for tackling a nice, easy assignment like fighting the Japs.
Je SUCKER FISH, BY A
. CURIOUS SET OF VACUUM PLATES
ITSELF TO
(Lo CIR
¢ Ux FIGHTING THE JAPANESE, THE CHINESE ARE NOT YELLOW," JAMES LEW, UX AATZONR.
~~
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SHARKS. ..THUS GETTING
s FREE TRANSPORTATION AND LEFT- ; OVERS FROM THE SHARKS’ MEALS. °° cop. 1942 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
SOME PSYCHOLOGISTS SAY: HIGHLY INTELLIGENT PERSONS OON7 NEED MSC Y SLEELS, |,
lo — YS
ADAMS—Wabash river is muddy, and fishing is poor. ALLEN—Everett lake -is clear. Fishing is fair. - BENTON—Big and Little Pine creek, and Sugar creek are milky, = fishing poor. ’ : BLACKFORD—Lake Placid is clear, Salamonio river, and all pits are muddy. Fishing is fair. : BROWN-—Yellow Wood and Ault lakes are clear, Salt creek is muddy, fishing generally is poor. CARROLL—Lake Freeman, Tippecanoe river, Deer creek and Wildcat creek are milky, Wabash river is muddy, with poor 8. > :
CASS—Wabash, and. Eel river, Pipe a Deer creek are milky, with poor fish-SRAWFORD—-Bi§
and Little Blue muddy; and Eckerty pon oor.
is clear. Fishing is
DEARBORN—AIl streams are muddy, and fishing is fair. "i DELAWARE — White river and Mississinowa river are muddy, poor fishing. FULTON—Manitou, ‘Nyona, 8. Fletcher, Bruce King, Zinks lakes, Tippecanoe river are all clear. GIBSON—White and Wabash rivers are clear, with fair fishing. ig . GRANT—AIll creeks and Mississinewa river are clear, with good fishing. . GREENE—West fork White river, Eel river, Richland creek, muddy. < . HAMILTON—Fall creek, Stony, Hinkle, Cool, Little and Big Cicero, ite river, and all pits are clear. HANCOCK—AIl streams are clear, an fishing generally is fair. a HOWARD—Wildcat creek is milky. Kokomo creep is clear with fair fishing. HARRISON—Big Blue river, Big Indian, and Little Indian creeks, Buck Creek, are all muddy, and fishing: is poor. JASPER — I Carpenter, Blue are muddy, with fair ng. ; JAY—AIll streams and pits are muddy, no fishing. JENNINGS—Muscatatuck, Graham: and Sand creeks are milky, with poor fishing. JOHNSON—BIlue River, Sugar Creek are milky, fishing is fair. Y
Mud, and
uois river, Pinkamink,
Indiana Stream Conditions
a and Kankakee river| gas fishi
fishing. Wabash river is Shins.
LAKE—AIll lakes are clear, good fishing. LAGRANGE—Waters are all clear, but
fishing generally is Tr. is| LA PORTE -N. Pine, 8. Pine, Fish, Hud-
son and Stone lakes arg all clear. MADISON—White river and Pipe creek are muddy, with: poor fishing. MARION—All streams are clear, pits are milky, MARSHALL—AIl lakes are clear, MORGAN—White river 'is muddy, lakes are clear.
MONROE—Beanblossom lake is muddy
Griffee and Leonards lakes are clear, with |=
poor fishing. ' MONTGOMERY—Sugar creek is milky,
channel catfishing is good, bass fishing |= Wabash, |E
is fair. MIAMI—All lakes are clear, Eel, Salamonie and Mississin are muddy, fishing is poor. NEWTON—Kankakee river and Iroquois river are milky, with fair fishing.
owa rivers
ORANGE—Lost and Patoka rivers, and |= fishing.
Lick creek are all muddy, poor LAWRENCE — Ail creeks, and White river are muddy, poor fishing. 'NOBLE—Elkhart river and Lakes Sylvan, Waldron, Jones, Diamond, Eagle and Sand are clear. PARKE—Big and Little Raccoon, Sugar, Cold, Mill and Leatherwood creeks, and Wabash river are clear with good fishing. PERRY—Anderson, Oil, Sulphur creeks and Middle Fork are all muddy and high. PORTER—Kankakee river is ‘muddy; Loomis and Lake Eliza are milky with fair fishing. PULASKI —. Biss Round and Hartz fishing is fair. PUTNAM—Big and Little Walnut creeks are clear, good fishing. RANDOLPH—-Mississinewa river muddy, with poor fishing. . RUSH—Big Flatrock is muddy, poor hing. .
lake, Lingenbaum, lakes are clear and
RIPLEY—Laughrey creek, Milan pond and Batesville reservoir are clear with
fishing. 80 REE woonts and Eagle lakes, Rebbibs ditch, Eagle creek are clear, good fishing. : WHITE—Shafer like is clear, with fair
.|an announcement today by William
‘muddy, poor | &
all
with |
Judges Named
Paul R. Jordan has been named referee and ‘Bruce Fogle starter for the annual city swimming championships at the Garfield park pool tomorrow and Sunday according to
H. Merrill, director of the meet. Frank (Pop) Heddon, supervisor of swimming for the city recreation department, will be clerk of the course and Randall Willis will head a staff of timers including Bud Sawin, Flora Kinder, E. R. Hallack, William Jordan, W. C. Larson, A. R. Coffin, Earl Montgomery and Thelma Willis. Finish judges will be Ed Aspinall, ‘Wallace O. Lee, Alvin Romiser, Frank Luzar, James Macon, William Hart, J. Patrick Rooney, George Deiner and George Sumner.
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103 Men From Indianapolis
N AN N
LL iN
LL NR MN NN AN \ N
et Commissio ¢
REAT LAKES, Il, Aug. The steady stream of marching toward front line after receiving training at Great Lakes naval training s continued today with the an ment that Robert Calinan of cago, John Lobsiger of Gary Lee Huber of Louisville were g ed commissions as ensigns and }
assigned outside the contine United States. * oath
The three were members of Is ‘year’s brilliant basketball
which won 31 out of 36 games, they followed baseball, foot! track and ‘other basketball pl
who have departed from here
join their shipmates at coastal tions or at sea.
IY IEE
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House Banks Have Been Called Into ‘the Armed Forces of the United States
The migration of experienced ‘employes entering the armed forces
has affected the services rendered by all types of business. It is the patriotic duty of business, industry and every single one of us to =
accept these changes philosophically . + . to continue to operate as
efficiently as is possible.
by you for
children.
So +o « if there are imperfections or delays now and then, charge them up to the fact that this is a human world, and more directly to the fact that all of us, together, are engaged in a struggle for national existence . . . a struggle which we must win if we are to have
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