Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1944 — Page 20
h Play Begins i in State Amateur Golf Tournament;
South Bender Is Medalist
The 32 qualifiers for match play in the 44th annual state amateur ~-golf tournament at Hilicrest- Country club today opened their two-day eliminations that will whittle the field to the two finalists, Dale Morey, Martinsville, defending champion, had Johnny McGuire, who won the title at French Lick in 1936, four down and four to go in the first round of match play this morning,
Ken Foster was 3-up on Lyle! Gant of Meridian Hills. his home course, second, third, fifth and eighth and Jost the ninth. Paul Sparks of Speedway was 1-| up on Red Mackey of Purdue.
|
“Playing Foster won the
The Pairings
UPPER BRACKET 9—Morey vs; McGuire, 152, 9:05—Ken Foster, Hillerest, 151 vs. Lyle
{ Sparks won the first and ninth and Gant Meridian Hills, 155.
! lost the anh. lus Mackey, West Lafayette, 154.
McGuire in Trouble |
McGuire got into trouble on both the fourth and ninth and conceded both holes. He won the par-5 sixth hole with a birdie. Morey missed a chance to win anfther hole when he three-putted as McGuire sent his tee shot out of bounds on the second hole. First, second, third, | seventh and eighth holes were]
halved. 8 Ken Loucks, South Grove, 153.
Jack Payne of New Castle won his |
9.10—Paul Sparks, Speedway, 148 vs.
9:15—Ken Young, South Bend, 152 vs. Francis Fleming, Evansville, 155. 9:20—George Fuhrman, Gary, 148 vs.
Ww.
olis,
E. Staples, Columbus, 153. 9:25—8. Sgt. Clayton Nichols, Indianap152 vs. Dan Bcism, Evansville, 155.
Leer, Highland, 149 vs. 4.
9 :30—Harry
Hareld Cork, Speedway, 15
9-35—Russ Rader, Sarah Shank, 152 vs.
Lioyd Crothers, South Bend, 155.
8 #8 = LOWER BRACKET South Bend,
9:40—Nick Garbacz, 147
9:45—Bill Norton, Richmond, 152 vs.
first-round match in the president’ S| {Kenny Sellers, South Bend, 155.
flight when Al Caseber of Speedway defaulted. Cecil Weathers of apolis Country "club defaulted to!
Paul Roell of Pleasant Run in the,
vice president's flight.
Second-round matches the!
in
championship flight were to get un-|vs. Bob Blake, Anderson, 154.
der way this afternoon. All flights | .were to play two rounds Jody,
Morey Automatically In Morey automatically entere a match play, battled the sun-baked Hillcrest layout Monday and yesterday in 36 holes of competition that saw Nick Garbacz, a practically unknown club wielder from Erskine Park Coun-
|
while the 31 others|
poi 50—Den Bink, Speedway, 149 vs. Mike
oliak, Coffin, 154.
rend Clark Esple, Hillcrest,
the Indian-| {Charles Taylor, Evansville, 155.
10— Bill Knick, Anderson, 148 vs. Manny Thacker, an Lick, 153. 10:05 . H. Moore, French Lick, vs. 8. BE. Pa jewsk, South Bend, 155.
10:10—Charlep Harter,~ Speedway,
152 150
10:15—Frank Feut Speedway, 152 vs.
Phil Talbot, Bloomington, 1
Bears Continue
Wi inning Ways
By UNITED PRESS The Newark Bears, currently the
try club, South Bend, take medalist | ©. co" 0 in the International
-
honors.
eague, continued their battle for a
Listed in a tie for 13th position ig op giviion berth last night by with a 76 at the end of the Opening | wining two games from the last-
18 holes of play on Monday, the] South Bender fired par golf in his second tour to compile. a 36-hole total of 147. He was away to a bad start yesterday with a two-over-par six on the first hole, but he parred the second, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth and birdied the ninth to arrive at the turn one over regulation figures.
Continues Fine Shooting
He continued his fine shooting with par on the 10th and 1ith, birdies on the 12th and 13th and par on the 14th and 15th. He then went: one over on the 16th and finished the remaining two holes in
{the
par. Sparks Bill Knick of Anderson and
"George Fuhrman of Gary were tied
Jor the runnerup spots, one stroke under ‘the leader. Sparks had 73-75; Knick, 74-74 and Fuhrman, 75-73. Following this trio were Don Rink, ‘Speedway, 78-71; Dr. Harry Leer of Highland, 76-73, and Morey the defending champion, 72-77.
Morey, who headed the pack with his 72 after the initial 18 holes on|
Monday, ran into difficulty yesterday, with a three-over-par card on each nine. Out-of-bounds penalties proved disastrous to the 1943 champ.
156 Low to Qualify
|
place Syracuse Chiefs. Coming from behind in the seven-inning opener, the Bears counted four runs in the sixth frame to win, 5-3. Joe Page, third of four Newark hurlers, was the winner. The Bears had a snap in the nightcap, coasting to a 9-1 triumph. Ken Holcombe went the route to be credited with the triumph. In the only other game scheduled, Buffalo Bisons shut out the Rochester Red Wings, 4-0, to move into third place ahead of the idle Baltimore Orioles. Tom Gillespie, former Detroit Tiger, allowed but four hits in gaining the triumph,
Clowns Will Face Loop’s Top Hitter
Neal Robinson, star center fielder, who leads the Negro American league in home runs, runs batted in, doubles and stolen bases, is one of the Memphis Red Sox sluggers the Indianapolis Clowns will have. to check in their bid for a double triumph Friday night at Victory field. The first game of seven innings will start at 6:45, Robinson is hitting 319. His team-mate, Jim Ford, third-sacker, is clouting at a .329 clip. The leading Clown hitter is Antonio Ruiz,
The low score to qualify was 156,! pitcher, 324. a figure fired by six participants. |
In a playoff necessary to determine which of the sextet was to continue]
in the championship division, Phil
Talbot of Bloomington,
Play Summer Sked
SOUTH BEND, Ind, July 12 (U. usually P.).—Coach Jake Kline of Notre tough tournament competitor, Dame surveyed 108 candidates today
emerged the winner when he birdied .who reported for the summer base-
the first extra hole to eliminate ball season. The Irish have a 12Billy Charles and Bob Schuman of game summer schedule and the Pleasant Run, Marvin Shaw of Col-|team, made up mostly of V-12 Bill Thompson of Milan! trainees, will play week-end games
umbus,
and Keith Richard of Crawfords-| through the next two months.
ville, W BROKEN “P) LENSES 3 REPLACED
BRING IN THE PIECES
DR. JOS. E. KERNEL
TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG.
‘Matmen Rained Out
Rained out last night, Matchmaker Lloyd Carter of the Hercules ‘A. C., said that the same card will ‘be offered at Sports arena next Tuesday night.
Wolf Sussman, Inc.
139 W. WASH, : iM Established 42 Yearsyiiimimeg
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152 vs.
162 | decisioned Ray Acosta, |
| hopefuls and ferret out the best tal-
| | school.
after Herbie Lewis decided to give all his time to a war plant job. While plans for next season now are in only an early formulative stage, it is likely that the Caps will be in the western division -of the American league with Cleveland, Pittsburgh and St. Louis, a newcomer who only a couple of weeks ago obtained a franchise after a two-year plea. St. Louis formerly owned Winkie Smith and the deal that brought him here included a reafter signing, “it looks pretty good turn clause based .on certain fifor us. We'll have some of the nancial arrangements. So it is old fellows back and some new Hoss] ile Winkle. might return to ones. But I must find a home for The league's eastern division myself. If I don’t, I might have will be composed of Providence, to wince on the contract a little.” po goo Hershey and possibly 5 =» = + Springfield, if the ice arena there ‘SORRELL, a veteran, was play- is returned to the club by the er-coach here for the first time
army, which has had possession last season, taking over the Caps of it for some time.
Johnny Sorrell will coach the Indianapolis Capitals again next season—if wartime conditions pers mit hockey to continue, and Coli= seum officials believe they will, Johnny signed his contract to=day, and Dick Miller, Coliseum manager, is helping him in a search for a house or apartment for Sorrell, his 13-year-old son and 3-year-old son. “If hockey continues,” he said
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS ;
activity at the Coliseum, Miller
said he hopes to obtain professional instructors for the general sessions of skating and for private club skating,
ym Cavarretta and
[Humble Junior
PITTSBURGH, July 12 (U. P)
Clubbed b by Cubs
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Fighting Cop
RCA Trounces Lily Team, 8-3
In the only game played in the Bush-Callahan Night Factory softball league at Softball stadium last night, R. C. A. trounced Eli Lilly Co;, 8-3. The remaining tilts were postponed because of rain. Lo
Tonight's Bush-Callahan Industrial league schedule at the stadium follows: 7:00—Bridgeport Brass vs. Kingan A A. 8:20—Indiana) Allison Red Wings ' 9:40—Moose vs. S Metal Auto Parts.
The schedule of the Smith-Hassler Girls’ league at Speedway stadium tonight is as follows: ‘T:00—Camp Atterbury WACs ys. Ft. Harrison WACs. 8:00—R. C. A. vs, Beck Canvas
is-- Bleaching vs.
Jim Hiner Big Jim Hiner, 220-pound In-
Products. diana state policeman, will take | 9:00—Stout Field WACs vs, Allison Red Devils.
time out from his law enforcing duties tomorrow night to tangle with Ray Clark, 200-pound Negro heavy, at Sports arena. This heavyweight tilt will be one of six scraps to be staged by the Hercules Athletic club on the second “Club Night” program to
be offered at the N. Pennsylvania st. “punch bowl.”
Munger Inducted ST. LOUIS, Mo., July 12 (U. P). —George Munger, one of the ablest young pitchers in the majors, whose 11 victories this season represent almost the exact margine by which the St.. Louis Cardinals lead the National league pennant race, was inducted into the army yesterday at Jefferson barracks.
Callahan, Booster 33 Years; Will Direct ' Amateur Day'
Thirty-three years have passed since the annual “Amateur Day” was Inaugurated by the Indianapolis Amateur Baseball association. During that time teams, players, committees, officials and others
exception, Carl Callahan. Callahan was one of four amateur baseball boosters who organized the game in 1912 and he has served in some
This year he Realtors Hold Golf Tourney
“Amateur Day” staged at Victory field Sunday afternoon. Three games will be played. In the ini-§ The Indianapolis Real Estate tial contest, two board's July golf tournament will all -star teamsjgs be held tomorrow at the Indiancomposed of jun- apolis Country club. Play will tor baseball league start at 12:30. A dinner will folBr FOL sash low the tourney at 6:30. second, Armour Tom Kercheval is in charge. The committee assisting him. includes Vern Bundridge, Andrew Jorgensen, H. L. Richart, Lee Mcallister, Harold Holtam, Charles Ettinger and Warren Atkinson. Frank L. Moore will be the
is director of which will be
ond-place teamef Carl Callahan the Municipal league, plays Allison, which is in a three-way tie for the runnerup berth in the Manufacturers’ loop. Allison's gained the
associated with the affair have changed from year to year with ones;
Tribe Bows
Red Birds, 14-4
the Red Birds’ turn last night in the second of the series and they slaughtered the low® Indianapolis Indians, 14-to-4, by pounding out 16 hits off three Tribe pitchers, Wes Flowers, John. Donahue and Ollie Byers. ES The series now is even and the second-placers and eighth-placers will meet in the third game under the Red Bird stadium lights tonight. .It. will be war workers’ night ‘at the stadium with defense workers edmitted for 60 cents upon presentation of their identification badges. ' Stan Partenheimer faced the Redskins on the mound last night and although the Tribesters obtained 12 hits he kept the safeties fairly well scattered. The crippled Indians were blanked until the sixth when they scored two runs and they tallied again in the seventh and eighth. But the Birds went to work on Flowers early and Donahue relieved him in the fifth. The Birds scored two markers in the second, three in the third, one in the fourth, three in the fifth and five in the eighth. Byres took over the Tribe pitching in the eighth. The Red Birds stacked up a 8-to-0 lead in five innings and the hopeless Hoosiers were swamped before they dented the plate for the first time in the sixth.
right to see action in Sunday’s
Social club, secprogram through winning the toss| starter.
: —Jim Bagby, former Cleveland|club. Cl io o a g Pitcher, has resigned from the U.| Blackman, former manager of |s Borom, 2b .oeonrinn. 4 0 1 1 3 0S merchant marine and may re-|teams in the St. Louis Cardinals’ Bleck ef 3 ! } 4&0 1 {join the team for the second half|farm system, was appointed to the Lyon, rf-e=........., 8 © 1 1 0 00f the 1944 season if he fails to|post after Brubaker was shifted to Cremeans, 1 . “$1 3 3:08 | pass his impending army physical} the Phillies’ Wilmington, Del., team Schulte, rf “1 0 o 3 oe o examination, it was learned today.|offthe Interstate league. - Fazrell, 1b . «3 0 210 0 of Aliperto, ss 4 0 0 4 7T oO x “1 0 0 0 0 0 THutchings . - 1 : 0 : 0 0 Th B Il ahue, p . 1 0 2 Byers, » nino 0 0 oo ol] 1€ DASEDQ a endar Totals ............ 33 4 13 24 13 3] Tr *Batted for Flowers in fifth. COLUMBUS AMERICAN AssociaTION Luulswitle wed arsetvas - se 9. ! : - RH O AE Ww. et. | L, Pof.j THOUS «oroiqhbs asi McLain, ef .....ei0. 1 1 5 0 0 Milwaukee 57 25 .695/St. Paul .. % 36 456 "pleat and Walters; ers; Goedde od Schulte. Mallory, If .... 8 2 2 1 0 O Columbus. 47 29 A inne ols 28 47 a8? Wyrostek, rf .. 5 2 4 4 0 O Louisville. 48 32 600 Kansas C. 24 49 320 St. Paul at Kansas ¢ City, both games Mack, 1b .. .... «3 232 0 8 0 0 Toledo... 46 31 .507INDPLS... 21 57 .269 Postponed; wel grounds. Cre wiord. 3» ceranes 3 } : : : : tte —— Antonelli, rernnni . AMERICAN LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE Heath, ©. rerees «4 2 3 5 0 © W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet, Young, st ..... ..4 1 1 2 4 0[St Louis. 45 34 510 Chicago... 34 37 .479| NO §ames scheduled. Partenheimer, Pe... 0 1 0 0 0 Boston 42 36 538 Cleveland. 37 41 474 — ee e— New York 39 35 .527 Detroit.... 36 462 NATIONAL MAGE Totals ........... 37 14 18 27 12 0 Wash'ten 38 39 .494,Philad’phia 35 42 455] Ne nme scheduled. INDIANAPOLIS .......... 000 002 110 4 etm ColuMbBUS .....ovnenvvenss 023 130 05x—14 NATIONAL LEAGUE R batted in—Clemens, Poland, Eng- w. . Pet. GAMES TODAY uns ba > F084 Louis i 3 Toh Philad'phia % Gi Tow lish, Schulte, Antonelll 3, Heath 3, Wyro-| piiiohureh 39 30 .565 Brookiyn.. 38 43 Au AMERICAN ASSOCIATION stek 2, Young 2, Mallory, Partenheimer.| cincinnati 42 33 360 Chicago... 29 40 .4 ¢All Games at Night) McLain. Two-base hits—Antonelli, Wyro-| RCISRN 33 5 J ROUORS > 30 8 305] INDIANAPOLIS at Columb stek 3, Poland. Three-base hit—Clemens, Louisville at Toledo. Stclen base—McLain, Sacrfices—Crawford, RESULTS YESTERDAY St. Paul at Kansas City (we). Partenheimer. Double Plays Young to] * Minnea lis at Milwaukee. Antonelli to Mack, Borom to Aliperto to AMERICAN ASSOCIATION peo Farrell. Left on bases—Indianapolis 12, (First Game 7 Innings; Afvesment) . Columbus 9. Base Li ball Sewers 3, Minneapolis cresigunve a 3 31 :- el 3 " : AMERICAN LEAGUE Donahue §, Partenheimer §. s—Off waukee ............ led. Flowers 8 in 4 innings, Donahue $s in| Lippold and Aragon; Soeoutl, Fendrick:| NO Somes sehedu 3%;, Byers 1 in 34, ing pitcher— son an ruett, : , Flowers. Umpires—Donovan and Fenton.| Second Minneapolis-Milwaukee game NATIONAL LEAGUE T:me—1:56. postponed; rain. No games scheduled.
COLUMBUS, O., July 12—It was|'
Talbert of . Indianapolis for the western title. * Segura’s match with| gy Jacob ' Greenberg, scheduled for yesterday, has been postponed, pending the result of the X-ray diagnosis,
third round yesterday by defeating =
ABR HO A E .4 0 0 4 0 © 4 03 3° 1'9¢ 4 001 8 Fu) «4 9 1.10.0 S300 ge 4 1:1 0. 4.0 wl oe. § 11 «3 00. Y 0.0 1.0 0.4 01 Johnny Sorrell 131: ° 0 : C00 100 190 8008 0 0 0 1 0 - 00 00-0 0 Se ra Waits Tobals. oon. ies B11 6M 9 3 Higgins batted for Muncrief in 7th. NATIONAL LEAGUE ABR HO A E Galan, It wut 1. 1:2°0.0 X-Ray Result [suri 77734% Musial, efrf Loo. f 1 12 14 RIVER FOREST, Ill, July 12 (U. 0 0 0 0 0 © P.).—Whether or not Francisco v4 0 30:3. (Pancho) Segura, Ecuadorian tennis “30 00 30 star, will continue in the Chicago 1'9+-1'3.2.4 open tennis tournament depended 31 0 3 3 0 today upon the result of an X-ray ya . y 20012 of his left ankle, injured last Sun- Raffensberger, p 0 0 0 0 0 © day in a match at Neenah, Wis. ~~ |Nicholson 1 +34.5.9% The X-ray was made to,determine Svar’ 0 0 0 0 o\e if a bone below the ankle had been |Tobin, p .. +8 9: 9.0 0 0 fractured when Ségura beat Bill{ Totals 7 12°27 14 1
Ott batted for Walters in 3d Nicholson batted for Raflensberger in
Medwick “batted “for Sewell © in’ ah and sacrificed, - . American ...... sersessnnves 010 000 000-1 se. 000 040 21x17 : Runs batted in sorowy x. Nikitin Ml « | Cooper, an, Wa Urow uTalbert, seeded No. 2 and rank- (CoM her Bo ha
ing fourth nationally, reached the
of = Chicago,
Sol Gould of Chicago, 6-3, 6-2. Nation a Ryan io. Tarvia. a In the women's division Dorothy |bsses—American Nations , Bases on Mae Bundy, Santa Monica, Cal, top house 3. 80 x ott ; aan 3 Bai 2 seeded player, moved into the|fensberser 3. Hughson 3, an quarter finals by beating Ruth Salz- hn 3 ininge; Bait ns gor. 1 in 3; man, Chicago, 6-1, 6-0, after draw-(Berows, 3 in 3: Hughson, § In 1%: Muning a first round bye, 2 houser, 3 in J Neviom, A Ya: Mary Arnold, Los Angeles, seeded John. Rone 1 A. Ne Losing No. 2, reached the quarter finals cher nm ins ghar Umpires—Bar after defeating Vivian Greenberg, “Huvard Chicago, 6-0, 6-1, in the first round Frid . and Constance Ebbers, Detroit, 6-0, Wher Apoint 6-0, in the second. . Betty Ruth Hulbert, st. Louis, de-| Farm Team Pilot
feated Mary Lou Beyer, Detroit, 6-3, 6-2, in the second round,
Bagby May Return
CLEVELAND, O,, July 12 (U. P)).
PHILADELPHIA, July 12 (U. P). —Catcher Ken Blackman of the Phillies’ farm team at Bradford, Pa., today was named to succeed Ray Brubaker as pilot of the Pony league
____ WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 14
league and the senior circuit boasted its most impressive all-star game triumph in the 12-year history of baseball's mid-summer world series. “For it was Phil Cavarretta and Big Bill Nicholson, whose Chicago Cubs are buried 4 deep in seventh place in the National league pennant
Nicholson -
_ Shine as National Toagers
Loopers, 7-1
~The bottom half. of the National for the top half of the American
race, who led an ‘assault that blasted a three-year ° American league victory streak by a 7 to 1
i : g £ 2
fourth triumph of the series. | The victory of their murderous hitting before a sweltering
of 20,580 at Forbes field last was none other than Tex
pennant chase, little difference to the two cago clouters and their mates.
Made All-Star History
They hopped on the Texas tosser from the second place Bo-Sox in the fifth inning and before they batted around the lineup they had touched him for five hits and four
g
second when Ken Keltner of Cleveland "|singled and advanced to third on base two infleld outs. Borowy then
- {bounced a single through the mid-
dle to score Keltner with the lone American tally.
The Fifth—and Disaster Hughson took over for the Ameri-
: : i55E ; fh
{
g g
Cavarretta tried. to make only to be trapped at the plate Bob Johnson's toss to Hayes, moved to third and came home Dixie Walker's single. ‘ They Get Two More
2lacross in the seventh. Hal New
houser of Detroit went in to pitch and they proceeded to belt him around. Again it was Cavarretta, with a single. Musial sacrificed him to second and Phil went to third when Cooper beat out an infield hit, Walker went out on a fly, but
Frankie Hayes missed the ball. Ducky Medwick sacrificed him to second and Galan and Cavarretta—again— walked to fill the bases. Musial lined to Johnson, Marion scoring after the catch, and that was the
ball game,
of a coin.
In the main attraction the un- . defeated Kingan Reliables, who lead the Manufacturers’ circuit with 10 victories, will play DeWolf News, {Municipal league pacemakers, who have won nine and lost one. | Managers Reb Russell of the Reliables and Bob Elliott of the Newsmen have not announced their starting, pitchers. Russell has Ochell Tuck and Lefty McGill ready for service while Elliott will rely on Bob Adler or the veteran Rollie Miller, It was announced “today that umpires who will handle the games {will donate their services to aid in making the affair a financial suc|cess, The use of the field was made | possible through the courtesy of officials of the Indianapolis basepail club.
Splits Grid Hopefuls
LAFAYETTE, Ind, July 12 (U. {PJ — Head Boilermaker Football [Coach Cecil Isbell planned today to (split his spring training candidates into two sections in order to pro- | vide individual attention to the 93
(ent. Isbell said that 44 of the men {were just graduated from high
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FARLEY
