Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1943 — Page 7

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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Indians Feel At Home In A.A. Driver's Seat Once Again

Regain Lead Xin Splitting Double-Header

By EDDIE ASH in the American associadriver's seat, the Indians feel more at home although they realize it’s going to be tough sailing td defend tie league's top spot. The Tribes lead over runnerup Miiwaukee is only by one-half game and moving forward steadily is Columbus in third place and only four games behind the Redskins. Another team that bears watching is Toledo which eased into the first division over the week-end and running fourth 61/2 games off the pace. The rejuvenated Mud Hens are entitled to a couple of “@esists” for putting Indianapolis in first place again as they bumped off Milwaukee's Brewers in both ends of a double-header ut Toledo Yesterday. The Indians split their twin bill with the Minneapolis Millers here Wresterday. Minneapolis who the first tilt, 7 to 1, beating George Jeffcoat, and the Tribesters grabbed the seven-inning second contest, 4 to 2, behind Jim Trexier. It Wis Trexler's 12th victory of the gel son against only one setback. Miller Finale Tonight

Back tion's

The finale with the Millers is to be played tonight and Woodie Rich is slated to pitch for the Indians and Claude Horton for the visitors. It is ladies’ night at the Tribe park and game time is 8:30. Main reason for the Tribe's downfall in the first game was the pitching of Wilf Lefebvre, Miller southpaw. After Gill English belted a homer over the scoreboard in the first stanza, Lefebvre settled down dished out eight consecutive goose

Even at This Late Date, That 1919 Baseball Scandal Is Still a Sternly Hush-Hush Subject

Krueger is reluctantly convinced. The pre-

By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK, July 12.—Even at this late

date the baseball scandal of 1919 is still a sternly hush-hush subject as far as the high priests are concerned. They locked the skeleton in the closet and threw away the key. The children must never know. In all the official literature of the game there exists no detailed recital of the treachery which saw the White Sox, payrolled by gamblers, throw the world series to Cincinnati. » » ” a TO US THIS has always seemed a mistake. Instead of this ostrich-in-the sand attitude, we think it would be better to present a documented account of the betrayal, stressing the firm and vigorous ac-

greater feeling. In this particular instance, its importance lies in the fact that it does record the mechanical ups and downs of the series,

Mr. Krueger, a withess, professes to be suspicious from the opening game when the Reds got to Cicotte for five runs after two were out in the fourth inning. He writes that the Sox were 5-1 favorites in the pre-series quotations (which is scarcely accurate) and is supposed to find them no better

than even money at game time, His suspicions mount when he sees Lefty Williams, best control pitcher in the American league that year, issue six passes, three in a row and literally give the second game away. He is confused when Kerr, third string pitcher, beats the Reds in the third game. Cicotte, a superb fielder, makes a wild throw and drops a thrown ball in the same inning to help the Reds to victory in the fourth game and the author begins to hear sinister whisperings

game odds favor the Reds and this makes the author wonder even before a ball is pitched. Williams starts for the Sox and is belted out in the first inning, and the series, to all practical intents is over. A year later it comes out: Eight of the Sox are barred from baseball for life. » ” ”

A BOOK COULD be written on the series | alone. The Krueger column merely presents the broad outlines. It's mostly dry bone with no | flesh. There is, for instance, the ball with which Cicotte hit Rath, the Red's leadoff man in the first inning of the first game. That was the tell-tale pitch of the series, It informed gamblers all over the country the fix was on. This bizarre touch was necessary because the arrangements to sell out were not completed until the morning of the first game. The gamblers had been told in advance that if Cicotte hit the first hitter to start

| man,

tion with which baseball dealt with the crooks. The penalty those men suffered must always stand as a forbidding object lesson to others. The speed and directness with which baseball moved to clean its house must likewise always stand as a tribute to the integrity of the game. One Joseph J. Krueger has compiled a history of the world series from '03 up to now in a new book captioned “Baseball's Greatest Drama.” This is the only book we know of which presents the full details of the 1919 series together with insinuations, very mildly accented, that a faint aroma of perfidy hovered over the play. As a contribution to baseball literature it could have been prepared more objectively and with

It's Men Like Tommy Bridges Who Keep Tigers in Running

By PAUL SCHEFFELS United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK. July 12—Hardly a day passes in the major leagues without some strong-armed youngster grabbing the spotlight with a | prodigious batting feat or a brilliant pitching chore, so spare a thought | today for Veteran Tommy Bridges of Detroit who at 36 rivals any steel-

{armed stiipling.

“that attacked its integrity.” »

heart;

‘old fight.” come back and take

they made four errors.

FELSCH AND JACKSON let fly balls go for long hits, the Reds win again and Mr. Krueger, a die hard, fears they have lost their He isn’t so sure when the Sox

Weaver, Jackson and Felsch, later identified as three of the crooks, getting seven of the Sox's 10 hits. His doubts begin to fade further when the Sox win the seventh game (it was a five-out-of-nine series) behind Cicotte's pitching. On that day, incidentally, the Reds looked as if they were trying to give the game away;

The Reds take the eighth game and Mr.

betting. They operated in pool rooms where play-by-play accounts were available. And don't let anyone ever tell you this extraordinary incident is a product of invention, either. The information came to us from an authoritative source, from the man who made the fix himself, no less. If Author Krueger had his suspicions, hun= dreds of other did, but the story was so packed with dynamite newspapers could not touch it until legal action was started. Billy Evans umpired the series. He stoutly refused to believe what he heard, even what he saw. The spirit of the game was so close to the famous umpire and he was so positive of its complete, enduring integrity he remained loyal to his faith right up to the time | the fraud was exposed.

the game at its very

the next game with

Sewell Says He's Sorry

ST. LOUIS, July 12 (U. P).— There never was any question in his mind about the honesty or in-

tegrity of American league umpires, Manager Luke Sewell of the St.

Business—

teenth

INDIANA PORK

ecgs. The Indians were unable to "The Tigers are in second place, get more than one hit in any Inning ,,,4 41; games behind the Yankees. after the Hirst. | And it's the performances of men The Millers knotted the score at ike Bridges, long past their prime, one-all in the third on three €on-| who have put them there, far above gecutive hits and in the eighth they the ranking accorded them in prescored two markers on an error by| season estimates. Fairly, Ab Wright's triple and Bob | Bridges no longer has the velocDill’s single. lity in his fast ball—a hurricane Dill was caught trying to steal, ve that made him one of the second and this incident provoked | most effective pitchers in the game a fist fight on the field before the| voars ago—but the strategical savvy Jarge crowd of 8822. Involved 1IN|g.iied in over 12 years of studying the punch throwing DIL American league batters still makes Vaughn and Fairly. From hej)...» notent force when he goes

were

stands it looked like only one i the rubber for the Tigers. punch landed, by Vaughn on Dill | His value can easily be estimated | lafter vesterday's 9-0 triumph over) the Athletics in the nightcap after] the Philadelphians had taken the opener of a twin-bill, 4-3. The third-place Senators had split with |

Dill Plays Hockey, Too

A Other players on both sides, the managers and umpires restored order after the adversaries wrestled around for a spell much in the fash-

fon of hockey fisticuffs with more i LEILE * : t= & ve dumped the Tigers into a tie] than punching. Dill is a have dumped the Tig i

Holding for \ ith Washington. | professional hockey player as well 167 SHLonK DISED Wile aan: \ Faces 29 Men

gsi a professional ball player and he's tugged from the ground up. Bridges, however, looked like the Tribe Manger Ownie Bush left tosser of old who went over the 20- | his post in the dugout and went game mark three times and racked up four world series victories as he)

out and cooled off Fairly, Miller Manager Tom Sheehan cooled offf op gown the A's with only three

vaughn while others pulled Dill to his “corner.” The umpires evidently decided it was a draw as no players wera banished. in the ninth canto the Millers teally sewed up the contest by scoring four runs, boosting their total to seven. Jeffcoat was batted out and Chief Hogsett, who relieved, also was hammered.

hits and faced only 29 men. Only three men reached base off him, all on singles, and one was blanked out on a double play. He fanned four and had perfect control while the Tigers garnered 10 singles, three doubles and a homer by Paul Richards off three pitchers. Washington walloped Cleveland, 6-4, in the 10-innings nightcap after

Trexler and Owen heats hoskea] te Tribe had blasted Milo Canup in the pet oi " i; 1S ee] dini's seven-game winning streak in ond contest ah 16 Tribes ace ha [igh game, 5-1. A four-run hurler got off to a shaky Start, He (ay in the seventh and two in the issued two ye ae jst foutd 10th pulled the Senators home after) and then worked out of the JAM. Apis Reynolds had to be relieved The Indians chalked up & run ij ynen he became suddenly ill. Cantheir half on Blackburn s single, 2 dini lasted only one-third of an wild pitch, Moore's single and Eng-| jie as the Indians racked up

half a game ahead of the Senators

tack to five hits for a 4-2 success in the finale, The Cardinals continued to move away from the rest of the field in

the National league, stretching their |

margin to 5'4 games by walloping Boston, 3-0 and 9-8 (11 innings), as the runner-up Dodgers split with Pittsburgh. Harry Gumbert hurled the Cardinals to their fourth successive whitewash with a six-hit chore in the opener for his seventh win, fifth in a row, and his second shutout. Whitey Kuroewski's two-run twobagger and George Fallon's squeeze bunt pushed across three runs in the 11th of the nightcap. The Dodgers dropped the opener

Cleveland and a Detroit loss would of a twin bill to the Pirats, 3-2, as

Max Butchr held them to 10 hits. Mickey Owen's infield safety sent in the tying and winning runs of a four-ply rally in the eighth that won the nightcap for Brookiyn. Cincinnati tripped the Phillies,

|T-4 and 14-2. Bucky Walters won

his first game since May 26 with a seven-hitter in the opener as he survived one bad inning and made three hits, including a homer. The Reds rapped three pitchers for 11 runs in the first four innings of the second game, called because of the curfew at the end of the eighth. Ray Starr, working in his third game in six days, allowed seven hits. The Giants split with the Cubs to remain in last place by three games. Ernie Lombardi's seventh homer broke up the first game in the 10th and gave New York the edge, 4-3. while Bill Nicholson duplicated the feat with one on in the seventh to give the Cubs the nightcap by the

Louis Browns said today. Sewell's statement resulted from a story last week in which he accused the arbiters of favoring the New York Yankees, His remarks brought protests from Manager Joe McCarthy of the Yankees and started an investigation of the story by President Will Harridge of the league. “There was no thought in my mind, nor did I intend to infer, that the honesty or integrity of the ume pires was being questioned,” Sewell said. “In any discussion with anyone about American league umpires, that opinion has always remained uppermost. I sincerely believe every decision they make is an honest one, and if anyone has interpreted these conversations differently, I am truly sorry for it was certainly not in my mind to discredit any umpire or ball club in the American league in any manner.”

Turnesa Wins Florida Open

VALUE UP 44%

There Were 4,588,000 Hogs on State Farms Jan. 1, Summary Shows.

Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind, July 12. —

There were 4,588,000 hogs on Indi

ana farms Jan. 1 of this year, representing a 12 per cent increase above last year's Jan. 1 figure, with a total valuation of $101,750,000, approximately $2220 per head, or 44 per cent more per head than a year earlier, according to the 1043 annual livestock summary. The 1042 spring and fall pig crops totaled 7,605,000 pigs raised in| Indiana, the largest number for the period for which records are available, : The 1,868,000 head of all types of

cattle on Indiana farms Jan. -, 1043, was 4 per cent more than a year earlier, and was the largest number

ORLANDO, Fla, July 12 (U.P). —Vietory in the 1843 edition of the 72-hole Florida open tournament belonged to Ensign Willie Turnesa, U, 8. N,, today. Turnesa staved off a last-ditch rally by Pete Cooper of Gainesville, Fla, and wound up with a five-under-par aggregate of 279.

since 1867 when records began. There was a 1 per cent increase during 1942 in milk-cow numbers, and a little more than 6 per cent in other cattle. The $103 value per head of milk cows was 24 per cent more than for the previous year, while the $77.50 estimated value per head of all cattle represented a 23

golf

Cooper took the runner-up position with 281. Turnesa, former national amas teur champion, had a 138 at the halfway mark and turned in a 72 and 69 yesterday. Earl Christiansen, Miami's golf ing detective, finished third with 284, “ ol

per cent increase, Lambs Unchanged

The 1042 estimated Indiana lamb crop of 550,000 was the same number as the year before, but the 717,000 head of stock sheep represented a 2 per cent increase. The total valuation of the latter was §$8,-

fish's long fly. Trexler Smacks Triple

The Indians also scored the second on Fairly's single, an error and Trexler’s single. In the fifth Trexler thrilled the crowd by walloping a triple to left center. After Blackburn's out Moore singled and Trexler crossed the plate. The Tribe's fourth run was a gift. Pike took two bases on Pofahl’s error, advanced to third on Schlueter’s sacrifice and scored after the catch on Vaughn's long ly In the Miller seventh a lot of

pctivity occurred in the Tribe bull- —— a STRAW

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three runs in the first game, The Yankees added a full game to their league lead by heating the White Sox, 9-0, and 8-6. Spud

same score,

535,000, nearly 22 per cent more than the year before. The total number of chickens on Indiana farms Jan, 1, 1943, was 18,-

Service

"

| Chandler held the Sox to six hits [in the first game while Bud Metheny's homer with none on in the ninth featured a two-run Yankee rally that won the nightcap. Chet Laab's 11th homer with the bases empty provided the Browns with a 12-inning, 8-7 edge over the Red Sox in the first game while Nelson Potter pruned Boston's at-

pen. After one out, Trexler walked gfkladany and Blazo doubled, scoring Skladany. DeCarlo batted for

Then Fairly saved further Miller threats by coming up with a nice play on Clifton’s blow near second. The Tribe shortstopper turned it into a double play, the game was over and the Indians were back in first place.

Pike's Streak Halted

After getting one or more hits in 10 consecutive games. Willard Pike, Tribe right fielder, was held hitless during the Sabbath twin attraction. The Indians defeated the Millers in the series opener Saturday, 5 to 1, behind big John Hutchings who held the visitors to seven hits. Victory field paid attendance for the season to dete is 101,631, The winner of the season pass for being the 100,000th cash customer to pass through the turnstiles for 1943 was Charles Powell, 241 S. Temple ave, Tribe Secretary Al Schlensker awarded the Annie Oakley.

Home in Ohio

Although a native son of Knoxville, Tenn.,, Ken Burkhart, Columbus Red Bird pitcher, now makes his home in Lakewood, Ohio.

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Add Bill Thompson's name to the list of Indianapolis hockey players who have entered the American and Canadian armed servfees. The 30.year.old wing and center who spent the last three seasons with the Caps has been inducted at Ft. Benjamin Harrison

645,000. Of this number, 16,181,000 were hens and pullets of laying age, 13 per cent more than a year earlier. The number of turkeys ine creased during the year from 67,000 te 77,000.

Incorporations Hie

Walnut Manor Apts, Ine, Indianapolis; dissolution, Grege and Son, Inc, Indianapolis: articles accepting provisions of 1820 Corporation act; 2500 shares common without par value. Sterling Laundry Co. Indianapolis; articles accepting provisions of 1020 corporation act; 500 shares common of $100 par value; also certificate of redemption of preferred stock. W. A. Bechtel Co, Nevada corporation; admitted to Indiana to engage in construction business. Bngineering Construction Corp, 120 BE. Market bldg., Indianapolis; agent, Henry B. Steeg, same address; 1000 shares without an value; Ray A. Hyman, Robert V. Lloyd, Henry B. SBteeg. The LaGrange State bank, La Grange; dissolution, Rock Run Credit union, Goshen; 10,000 shares of 85 par value; Merl G. Whitehead, Artie Berkey, Otis Hartsough, Noble Bowman, Ralph BE. Bates, Mary McDowell, Paul A. Phillips, The Godfrey Conveyor Co, Elkhart; ar. ticles acepting provisions of 1029 corporation act; 1000 shares common and 250 shares preferred stock of $100 par value, Modern Enterprises, Ine, Ft. Wayne; | change of street address to 203 B. Berry st., Ft. Wayne. Farmers State bank, 8t. Paul; dissolution,

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Hagg Plans to Break Record

LOS ANGELES, July 12 (U. P) = Gunder Hagg, feted: by the Holly wood movie colony and holding a new American two-mile record, was en route to San Francisco today planning to break his new mark. The Swedish track star had| lunched with Greer Garson, Sighe Hasso, and Ingrid Bergman, the

latter two from his homeland, and then spent Sunday with Miss Berg-

own

Hagg and the actress swam in the ocean, sunned themselves on the beach, and then drove up the coast for dinner. With Hagg on the train trip north was Gil Dodds, Boston divinity student who trailed him 100 yards in the record-breaking race Saturday. Dodds will meet Hagg Saturday in the two-miler at San Francisco. The Swedish ace earlier had planned to concentrate on a world one-mile mark at San Francisco, but changed his mind before boards ing the train. “I haven't had time to develop the speed for the mile,” he said. Disappointed, Dodds said his twos mile appearance Saturday against Hagg would be his last for that dis= tance. “I'd certainly like to run the mile

Halo of Gloom

Is Spun Over

Brooklyn by Internal Strife

By JACK CUDDY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 12~Despair spun a halo of gloom over tne borough of Brooklyn today. Not only were the beloved Dodgers a full 5's games behind in the National league chase but internal dissension seemed about to burst the club wide open, The Dodgers, with poor pitching and even worse hitting, has been slipping further back in the senior league race almost daily but not even the most rabid pessimist counted | = = ———— ——— Brooklyn out of it as long as the| This somewhat historic and hysclub was pulling together like one terical revolt==which brings to mind

man. Now they're not. y | the rebellion of the Cleveland Ine Dissension in the ranks has ap-| parently been brewing for some dians under Ossie Vitt—=may be the time. But it came to a head Satur«| forerunner of more severe explo day afternoon when a player strike sions to come. Certainly, it cannot threatened to divest the club of | be said that Durocher has full control over his forces, and when a

player's necessary to field a complete | pilot and his players work at cross

team. how long did

: The fuse that started the explos|purposes—well, just sion was a three-day suspension|Vitt stay at Cleveland after that slapped on Pitcher Buck Newsom | ruckus, anyhow?

against him,” Dodds said.

for reasons not generally known. Durocher gays it was for general in subordination; others say it resulted from an altercation with Catcher | Bobby Bragan over one of Newsom's | pitches. Third Baseman Arky Vaughan tourned in his uniform, Dixie Walk« er threatened to join him and so did several others. Peace was restored during the sixth inning of Saturs

day's game with Pittsburgh, with |

President Branch Rickey apparently | wielding the olive branch. Although another open forum was held yes terday for the press and players,| only the surface is serene now. |

Can You Guess?

We have no intention of sticke ing our already well-bruised nose into the affairs politic of any baseball team, but even from a distant point of vantage, it wouldn't be too risky to predict that a shakeup in the Dodgers is due-=<perhaps overs due. Rickey is too intelligent a baseball strategist to let an occurs rence like this slip by like water under the bridge and the axe right now may be swinging into position. Whose head will fall, we have no way of knowing, but it wouldn't be too hard to guess—would it?

State Meat Production I

Recovering

Capt. W. H. Huehl

Word has been received by of ficials of the Indianapolis Life Insurance Co. that Capt. Walter H. Huehl, actuary for the coms pany, now on leave with the army alr corps in England, is rapidly recovering from an unusual ace cident, Several weeks ago he was ride ing a bieycle and had to stop very suddenly. The brakes worked too well and he went over the handlebars and broke both el« bows. He has been in the hospital for several weeks, but reports he is “back on the job" except for X-rays and minor treatments,

BAKERS FEARFUL OF WHEAT DIVERSION

CHICAGO, July 12 (U., P.) =~ Thomas Smith, secretary of the American Bakers’ association, says that the baking industry is concerned over the diversion of wheat to animal feed and to the manufacture of alcohol. Mr. Smith said the industry's concern was increased by the plans of government agencies to promote wider use of grain foods. “We are fortunate to have enough wheat,” he said, “but we should not let the supply dwindle too low before we begin taking account of its uses.”

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LAFAYETTE, Ind, July 12<The| “barometer” of the egg market is reflecting the effects of hot weather, as receipts fall off and egg prices move higher along with upward

adjustments in price ceilings, B. H. Matzen, Purdue university extension marketing specialist, said today. As a lower and lower proportion of high quality eggs appear on the market, prices are moving upward, increasing the premium on good eggs over undergrades, he said in his prediction. This situation probs« ably will continue through October. Producers who sell eggs on the basis of quality will find that, at] this season of the year, proper care | of eggs pays big dividends, he said, ! and called the attention of pro-| ducers te recommendations for ime proving egg quality. “The first thing to do is to keep the roosters away from the laying flock. The hens need adequate housing and equipment, and these should be kept clean and dry. One nest should be provided for every four or five hens. A properly balanced ration with oyster shell hop-

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Egg Receipts Falling Off As Hot Weather Arrives

market them twice a week. They should be clean, packed large end up, protected from sun, rain, dust and jarring on the way to the mar= ket, and sold on a graded basis. “It is recommended also that they be cooled quickly and thoroughly, and allowed to stand over night in a wire basket before casing. The humidity in the egg room may be increased by dampening the floor or hanging wet burlap near the eggs.”

per fed and water or milk before the birds at all times is suggested. “Three times a day is not too often to gather eggs when the temperature is above 70 degrees, and at this temperature, it is best to

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