Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1944 — Page 6
SPORTS. By Eddie Ash
-Howard
who achieved a two-hit shutout.
ss =
Trotter from the Cardinal chain,
dates and delay the first contest the 9th.
8 =,
The Fans Want Week-End MANY OF our correspondents
chance to see at least one contest,
the American.
accord.
By DAN DANIEL
Reminiscences of 1940 Race
WITH THREE straight, and eight victories in their most recent ' 10 starts, the Tigers have developed a heat which is reminiscent -of 1940, when they nosed out the Indians and the bombers. The Cardinals, ®still 5 to 2 favorites in the world series, have dropped 10 games out of 12 and have tossed Bill Southworth, their manager, into a gorgeous case of the jitters. With all his wealth of pitchers, Bill got so scared the other “day he rushed in Bill
Staff Writer
Ser { Ash is on vacation)
NEW. YORK, Sept. 18.—While on the subject of the Yankees, whose three consecutive knockdowns by the far from handsome Atheltics today located them in third place, twe lengths behind the pacemaking Tigers, we are reminded of a placard we saw some years ago in a Tia Juana honky tonk. It pleaded, “Do not shoot the piano
player. He is doing the best he can.” ; As for Mr, O'Neill's Bengals, who on July 13 were in seventh position, with an Oct. 4 appearance in St. Louis as far from their thoughts as Durante’s schnozz is from the rest of his body, they 7 are the hottest outfit in the major leagues." They now overshadow even the Cardinals. It may be cooking in the pates of the fates to send this: wave-riding Detroit club not only to the pennant but right on to the world championship. It is important to note that the Tigers took yesterday's doubleheader from the Indians with the O'Neill second line of pitching - defense, Stub Overmire, who gave only six blows, and Rufus Gentry,
Those three Yankee setbacks by the Mackmen doubtless will . tool. the heated protests which have been coming into this department against the world series schedule which would become effective if the bombers achieved the pennant. The customers in these parts want to know why Judge Landis and associates approved a program which, with the Yankees as participants, would leave Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 7 and 8, open
in the stadium until ‘Monday,
» Games charge that the real fans are
- being chased out of the series, and insist that never again should the week-end patron be ignored. They point out that thousands of baseball devotees are so situated in their work that they can attend games only on Saturdays and Sundays. Edward G. Barrow, president of the New York club, says he would not need a Saturday or Sunday to fill the stadium if the bombers became involved, but the week-end customer is not concerned about capacity houses and the ultimate take. He wants a
and he would not get it with
Saturday and Sunday blotted out of the program.
Waner Eager to See Those Tigers
THOUGH HE would not be eligible for the world series if the Yankees, by some miracle, won their way into it, Paul Waner, at 41, is ar eager as any rookie in the McCarthy menage which will head for Detroit this evening. Big Poison, in the American league after 18 seasons in the National, wants to see those Tigers in action. He'd like to play against the reported super-club of the American league. Waner keeps insisting there is nothing super about the Cardinals —that they can be pitched to and no longer have the authority they commanded when Enos Slaughter and Terry Moore were with them, For a few hours recently Waner was in a bit of a jam with his new employer, Joe McCarthy. A newspaper story here quoted Paul as having said that the National league played *smarter” ball than
McCarthy burned up over“the yarn and decied to sumroon Waner and question him as to its authenticity, However, Waner walked into Marse Joe's office and repudiated the story of his own
Had the interview been traced to Waner, the veteran would have left McCarthy's office with an unconditional release.
The Baseball Calendar
ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF (Best In Seven Series)
2a w L|® Milwaukee ... 2 2{Toledo ....... 2 2 vs. vs, Louisville .... 2 2(St. Paul ...... 2 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet.) W L Pet. 78 62 55% Philad’ia 67 75 472
Detroit St. Louis 78 63 538 Cleveland 66 75 .468 New Y'k 76 64 .543| Chicago 64 77 .454 Boston NATIONAL LEAGUE - W L Pet.| W. L Pet. Louis 96 45 681 New Yk 63 Pars 82 58 .586 Brooklyn 58 Cinc'nati “79 60 558! Philad’ia 57 Chicage 66 73 .415 Boston MM
GAMES TODAY
: ASSOCIATION PLAYOFY
Milwaukee at Louisville (night), Toledo at St. Paul (might),
81 413} 82 410]
AMERICAN LEAGUE No games scheduled,
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Brooklyn at Boston. Only game scheduled.
RESULTS YESTERDAY ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF
Caldwell, ‘Gassaway, Scheetz, 8 Pruett; Johnson, Simonds, rk Walters,
smn
000 100 006 7 10 4 ahem as RE 100 wi 04x—12 10 2 ohia nes, mberlin and Schultz, Missler; adoiph, a Webb, et and Casir, 0.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
(First Game) rol LL... caine 101 011 201— 711 2 Cleveland .......... 000 000 002— 2 6 Overmire me Richards) Smith, Poat, Heving and Ro (second Shut) Detrolf .............: fH 000 200-3 9 ¢ Cleveland a 000 000-0 2 @
Gentry and Swift; Klieman, Heving afd Rosar,
(First Game) Dietrich, Ross and Tresh, Jordan; Potter and Mancuso.
74 66 .520 Wash'ton 60 81 .426| Ne
(Second Game) 100 000 322 8 8 100 000 100— 2 10 1 i Reiss and Hayworth; Muncrief, Zoldak, Jakuski and Hayworth, Mancuso,
Chicago Louis
irst Game) Philadelphia 010 000 202— 5 8 0 New York 010 003 000— 4 11 3
: 0 Hamlin, Christopher and Hayes; Bonham and Garbark. (Second Game) Fhilaasiphia 000 011 000— 2 4 1 ew 000 000 100— 1 6 0 lack Te rey nq Hayes; Dubiel, Borowy and M. Garbark
Boston ............ 113 000 010 6 12 1 Washington oo. 060 000 10x— 7 11 1 Bowman, Terry and Partee; Leonard,
Carrasquel, Lefebvre and Guerra.
NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) S08
Brookiyn .....ivo. 000 000— 0 4 1 Boston 010 20x— 3 7 1 Davis, ‘Webber and eS Tobin and Masi, |
(Second came)
Brooklym .......... 000 011 010 3 8 0 BOM oil ies 000 020— 2 5 Meiton, Herring and Andrews; Javery,
Hutchinson and Poland, Masi. (First Game) ne
St, 104i saaanae ems 10 000— 1 9 © Chicag 1 000 00x— 2 7 Lanier and O'Dea; Wree and Williams, (Second ome sania aras 000-1 5 0 000 000 20x—2 5 9 Brecheen and Pe Passeauand Williams,
©
Chicago
(First Game) 000 010— 1 10 1 Pittsburg on 840 VOx— 7-13 Shoun' "Malloy, Katz and Mueller, Just and J. Riddle; Sewell and Lopez. (Second Game; 10 Innings) 100
Qinsinnati
Cincinnati 000 1— 2 11 0 Piktshussh, . 010 000 0— 1 8 1 Gumber{ and Mueller; Ostermueller and Camelli, (First Game) ¥Ork .virviiies 000 000 000-0 ° 4 asain 001 012 30x— 712 2
Melton, Feldman, Miller and Lombardi; Lee and Finley. . (Second Game) New York 011 200 000— 4 10 2 Philadelphia . 301 001 00x— 5 5 1 Brewer and Mancuso; Kennedy, Karl and Peacock,
12500 Expected
‘| while
Nichols of Nova Scotia in other
For Mat Show
STUBBLE
An attendance of 2,500 or more is expected at the Armory tomorrow night where Matchmaker Lloyd Carter has lined up a promised “natural” for local wrestling fans, the bout bringing together Steve Nenoff of New York and Farmer Jones of Arkansas.
. It is viewed as a match in which B
“anything ..can happen” as both have turned in outstanding per formances in Indianapolis, with the popular Jones appearing in defense of an almost perfect record. He has dropped but one match in 18 months ‘and he evened up on that one by winning against the same
1 opponent in a return engagement.
Jones beat Red Dawson here last week. Although Nenoff rates low in popularity among the weekly patrons, he commands their respect for his skill and tricky maneuvers. He is the “give and take” type, ones is a “hill billy’. style of wrestler. The bout is for two falls out of three. Coach’ Billy Thom of Bloomington, Ind. meets
| Buddy Knox of Toledo and Ear]
Malone of Chicago opposes Jackie
The Tigers Are
the arrival of the New York Yankees, who open a three-game stand there tomorrow. The double-header victory came as a surprise because” it was authored by the Tigers’ third- and fourth-string pitchers and allowed the victory twins, Hal Newhouser with 25 triumphs, and Dizzy Trout, with 24, to rest up for the important series.
The American league pennant race at a glance: -
W. L. Pct. G.B. Detroit ........ ..18 62 551 .. St. Louis ,, ......78 63 553 4 New York ........ 76 64 543 2 Boston ........... 74 66 .529 4 Games left to play: Detroit at home: 3 with New
York, 4 with Boston, 3 with Philadelphia, 4 with Washington. Away: none, St. Louis: At home: 4 with New York, 3 with Boston, 3 with Washington, 3 with Philadelphia. New York at home: None. Away 4 at St. Louis, 3 at Detroit, 3 at Cleveland, 4 at Chicago. Boston at home: None. Away: 4 at Detroit, 3 at Cleveland, 3 at St. Louis, 4 at Chicago.
Frank (Stubby) Overmire pitched a six-hit 7-2 win for Detroit in the first game and Rufus Gentry put the Bengals out in front, a half game ahead of the Browns, with a two-hitter in the nightcap. Overmire received ample and encouraging batting support from the Tigers’ late season hitting ace, first baseman Rudy York, who collected a triple, double and two singles in five appearances. Gentry’'s effort was nothing short of remarkable. He displayed plenty of stuff and had a no-hitter working until the ninth when he issued a single and double as he shutout the Tribe, 3-0. The Browns, who had opened the day's play in first place, maintained their position through the first game, beating the White Sox, 5-1, but took an 8-2 beating in the
*'finale to fall back into second.
Yanks Drop to Third
The Yankees, in first place on Saturday, dropped into third when the giant-killing Athletics defeated them twice, 5-4 and 2-1. The A's, who started the Browns on their recent disastrous slump by taking three out of four on St. Louis’ last eastern trip, made.it three straight
0lover the Yankees with the double-
header triumph. Poetic justice was achieved in the first game when Larry Rosenthal, cast off by the Yanks earlier this season, pinch hit a ninth inning homer with a mate on the bases to provide the tying and winnings runs off Ernie Bonham. Russ Christopher, who relieved starter Luke (Hot Potato) Hamlin in the seventh, was the winner. Don Black and Jittery Joe Berry collaborated on a six-hitter in the nightcap with the former being credited with the win when Catcher Frankie Hayes, who homered in the first game, singled the winning run across in the sixth. Walt Dubiel and Hank Borowy worked for the champions and allowed but four hits. Dubiel was the loser. The Boston Red Sox dropped to four full games off the pace when the Washington Senators came up with a six-run second inning and went on to win 7-6 in a single ame. The slumping National leagueleading Cardinals slumped further when they dropped two games to the Cubs for a record of 15 losses in their 20 games this month. Hank Wyse spaced nine hits in the opener for the first 2-1 victory as the Cubs handed Max Lanier, the league's ace southpaw, his sixth straight setback. The second game, also 2-1, was Claude Passeau’s 13th -{ victory.
I
Roaring—
They're Qut in Front Now
®* NEW YORK, Sept. 18 (U. P.).—The roar of the Detroit Tigers was heard far and wide today as the hectic American league pennant race "I settled down to a tooth and toenail Out in front by a half game and generally accredited as the “team to beat,” the Tigers completed their traveling for the season yesterday with a surprise twin victory over Cleveland and returned home to await
fight over the last two weeks,
It’s All Even in A. A. Playoffs
By UNITED PRESS
The American association's annual Shaughnessy playoffs enter their- final stages today with the locale shifted to Louisville and St. Paul with everybody even up at two games each, following yesterday victories by the Colonels, who whipped the Milwaukee Brewers, 8-8, and the Saints, who walloped Toledo 8-1. Only three more games, if necessary, remain to be played between the four teams to determine which two will participate in the final playoffs to determine a winner to meet an International league team in the “little world series.” 8t. Paul staged a 7-run rally in the sixth inning yesterday to wallop the Toledo Mud Hens 8-1, while Louisville came from behind to score four runs in the sixth and seventh frames to top the Brewers. The Colonels blasted out 13 hits oft of four of Casey Stengel’s hurlers. The Brewers opened with Earl Caldwell who was sent to the showers after the Colonels staged a 3run rally in the third inning. Charlie Gassaway was sent in to relieve him and pitched for four innings when another 3-run rally sent him to the locker room. Owen Scheetz then took over the mound and lasted a single inning when he was relieved for a pinch hitter. Charlie Sproul finished the game. Ernest Rudolph won the game for the Saints, allowing the Mud Hens but a single run in the fourth inning. St. Paul scored its initial run in the first inning and from then on the Sains went scoreless untdl the sixth when they exploded
into a rally that netted them'seven runs.
Bob Hamilton To Return Home
EVANSVILLE, Ind, Sept. 18° (U. P.).—Bob Hamilton, national professional golfers association champion, was expected to return to his home here today for an appendicitis operation. Hamilton plans to enter a hospital this week and hopes to recuperate in time for a November golfing tour on the west coast, he said before leaving here for Akron, O., where he appeared yesterday in an exhibition match. He said he will lose more than $2500 because of matches ne will have to cancel. :
Elmer Lunsford’s 699 Leads Bowlers
Four Sunday night bowling leagues were in action last night, with Elmer Lunsford of the Parkway mixed setting the scoring pace with 264, 256, 179—699. Vivian Weaver had a 567 to lead the feminine members. In the West Side mixed loop, Ed Kline topped the men’s scoring with 548 and Dorothy Hoeger led the women with 417. John Kingen had 597 and Arna Alstrod 494 to top scoring - in Coca-Cola mixed at Sturms, while W. Poland turned in a 571 to pace members of Link-Belt No. 3 at the Pennsylvania.
and fifth straight over the Giants, 1-0 and 5-4, while Pittsburgh and Cincinnati split, the Pirates taking the opener, 7-1, and Cincinnati edging out a 2-1 decision in the 10-inning finale. ‘Brooklyn and Boston also divided, the Braves winning the first game, 3-0. The nightcap went to Brook=lyn, 3-2. Dixie Walker, the major league's leading hitter, paced an eight-hit offense with a double, two
Philadelphia copped its fourth
: he CHICAG
“i 146 E WASHINGTON ST.
singles and a walk for the “bums.”
on Everything! Diamonds, Watches
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DUN.
Footballs s Big
Time Is Near
NEW YORK, Sept. 18 (U. P). — The fledgling football season reaches
full stature this week-end with big time teams the nation over squaring off against each other in the earliest complete slate of major college games bn record. Encroaching into the baseball season, the Saturday program provides games involving conference title hopes in the Big Ten, the Pacific coast, the southern and southeastern loops. On the basis of the way they ran over opening day opponents for touchdowns last Saturday, this week's top game is likely to be the Big Ten conference opener between Illinois and Indiana, although nefther has been touted as a likely champion. Illinois defeated Illinois Normal, 79 to <0, while Indiana ran over Ft. Knox, 72 to 0.
Seahawks to Try Comeback
Purdue's Boilermakers, only major college team to go unbedten and untied last season, are underdogs in their first test Saturday when they play Great Lakes. Great Lakes won its opener in the grand manner, beating Ft. Sheridan, 62 to 0. In other major mid-western tests, the deflated Iowa Pre-Flight eleven seeks to bounce back against Minnesota’s civilians, while Michigan goes to Milwaukee to play Marquette in the first night game in Wolverine history.
sm m—
Sacred Heart high school is fielding a football team for the first time in its history. The boys lost their first one to Pike Township, 26-0, but are confident of better going in the five games to be played. Friday they go to Franklin Township. The classic of their season is scheduld with Cathedral at Victory field on the night of Sept. 29. Other games are: Oct. 6, Plainfield at Delavan Smith field; Oct. 13, Westfield at Delavan Smith, and Oct. 28, Silent Hoosiers at Delavan Smith. The squad includes: I. Nord Mappes and Jim Kemmerer. 2, Left to right, Jack Condon, Bob Wroblawski and Harold Weingardt. 3. Roland Conway. 4, Chick LaRussa, the cap-
tain. He was blowing up a ball to start the season.
(Continued From Page One)
side along with his executive ability.
He graduated from Earlham college with an A. B. degree and then received an A, M, from Columbia in school supervision and school administration. Then he began his career as an educator and director of athletics. He became a high school teacher, a coach of basketball, football and baseball.- Later he became principal of schools in Alexandria, Martinsville and LaPorte. He was a summer instructor at Indiana university, Earlham, Iowa State college and Bal] State.
Elected Commissioner
He was elected a member of the I. H. 8. A. A. board of control in 1911, the first year of the state basketball tournament. He became secretary of the association two years later, in 1922 was elected commissioner, a job he held until his death. Since 1922 he and the association had been under fire repeatedly and the status and tactics of both had been argued in state legislatures but he always was uncompromising and always victorious, Under his guidance, upwards of 750 high school teams participated in the annual basketball classics. Mr. Trester was, after he took the I. H. 8. A. A. job, strictly a spectator sportsman, He was a familiar figure at tournaments (he always said turneys), sitting in the stands along with the fans who had battled to get tickets.
Event for Him ~
The drawings at his office in the Circle Tower for the “tourney” always were events for him, members of the association’s board of control and the sports writers privileged to gttend. He was a big m He kept in trim by abstinence from smoking or drinking, and nightly took a stroll in the neighborhood before retiring,
Arthur L. Trester, High School Athletic Chief, Dead
Van Buren, Ind.
Orleans.
the Indiana Superintendents’ association and the National Education association. Funeral services will be. held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill
Chicago Bears Beat Giants, 20-10
BUFFALO, Sept. 18 (U. P.). ~The The Chicago Bears, the 1943 professional champions, used a fastbreaking T formation to defeat the New York Giants 20-10 in an exhibition football game here yesterday before nearly 21,000 fans. The Bears scored in the first period on a pass from Johnny Long to George Wilson but their offense bogged down at that point and they were unable to score again until the last quarter.
ing ground gainer last season, sparked a 63-yard touchdown drive in the second period and Ken Strong booted a field goal in the
10-7 lead. Two last period counters on passes, the first on a series from Long to Abe Croft and Connie Berry, and the second from Gene Ronzani to Berry clinched the game for the Bruins,
MOND L(
- BUY DIAMONDS 4 Sos Sussman, Inc.
U3
|
AA SYR
Mr. Trester was married on Nov.
T¥ A CENTER EXIT 2
WHENEVER PossinLe | “PLEASE ALIGHT 8Y THE
000R /.
YHIS SAVES LESS CONGESTION AND a,
30, 1916, to Georgiana Dickens of ~ His father, Melvin Trester, is 92. Besides his wife and father, sure vivors are two brothers, Ross of Hobart, Ind, and Walter of New
The commissioner was a member of the Indiana Schoolmen's club,
Bill Paschal, the league's lead-}
third period to give the Giants a
4 Teams Remain in Race for
City Sandlot Championship
The field in the amateur baseball city championship series was nare rowed to four aggregations after yesterday's trio of games. Two teams, L{U. 8. Tires and Mitchel-Scott were eliminated through second defeats,
Stewart-Warner, the tourney darkhorse, remained the only unde feated team when it racked up its fourth one-run victory, defeating U. 8, Tires, 14-13. The game was a slugfest from start to finish, the winners
g 17 hits off Norris Dunham Lefty” Ludlow, while Harold Durham was being tagged for 11. Stewarts scored five runs in the first and five in the third to assume a comfortable lead, but their oppon-
get!
jents threatened throughout the
game, winding up with clusters of three and four runs in the seventh and eighth innings. Although hit freely, Durham had 17 strikeouts which boosted his series total to 49 in four games.
Beermen’s Stock Soars
Gold Medal Beer's stock soared when they administered a 20-3 drubbing to eliminate MitchelScott. While Johnny Twigg and Ben Richman were holding the Scotts to four hits, their mates were slamming the ball to all corners of the lot for a total of 20. The Beermen lost little time In hopping on the Mitchel pitchers, scoring four times in the first inning. They scored in every inning except the fourth and eighth. Three Medal home runs aided in the scoring. George Coffman hit one in the fifth with a mate aboard; Hubert Boyd connected in the sixth to score a runner ahead and Twigg drove out one in the seventh with two runners on base. Twigg turned in a fine pitching
performance, allowing but three hits | Mallory
in his seven-inning stay on the mound. However, two of the safeties were home runs, one by Hal Chamberlain and one by Ed Alltop.
Kingans Beat Mallory
Revenge was sweet for the Kingan Reliables as they handed P. R. Mallory Co. its first tourney defeat, 13-4. The Mallorys spoiled a perfect sea~ son for the Meatmen two weeks ago in a second-round tourney game, but Reb Russel's boys were in a hitting mood yesterday, pounding four opposing pitchers for 14 hits, The winners got off to a fourrun lead in the initial inning and were never headed. Mallory's had narrowed the gap to 5-4 at the end of the fourth, but the Kingan sluggers went to work in the sixth, seventh and eighth to cross the plate eight times. : Frank Fletcher paced the Kingan attack with a home run that scored a runner ahead and a double that accounted for two more tallies. Bill Layton figured in all the Mallory
LR
scoring. He started rallies with hits in the first and second innings, scoring on each occasion, and drove in a run with another hit in the fourth.
Stewart-Warner Unbeaten
“Lefty” McGill started for the winners but was removed for a pinch-hitter in he fifth. He had allowed seven hits, Ochell Tuck, who took over in the sixth, held
his opponents to three hits and no
Following yesterday's games, Stewart-Warner is undefeated in four games, while Gold Medal, Kingan and Mallory's each have records of three victories and ong defeat, Yesterday's winners will draw among each ‘other for next Sunday's pairings, with the odd team meeting Mallorys. The draw will take place at the Indianapolis Amateur Baseball association meete ing Wednesday night.
Scores: - Mitchel -8cott ...... um 010 000 3 4 Gold Medal Beer 40x30 19 3 Smith, Moore. an top; and Stewart-Warner .... 508 220 000-14 17 U, 5 Tires ........ 301 020 340-13 11
Durham and Haydon; Dunham, Ludlow and House.
Kingan ...oceevenn, 0 002 330-13 14
vrases 110 200 000— ¢ 10
evga
Indians, 79; FL. Knex, 0. Indiana 7: Missouri State, 6 Western 20; Wabash, &
U.S. coast guard ( ), 33; Bates, § Richmond army i Ham Syd o, Bucknell, 25; Muh x I vu 7 Swarthmore, 3. - St. Thomas (St, Paul), 13; Gustaved Adolphus, 6. © SERVICE TEAMS } Great Lakes, 62; Fi. Sheridan, 6. 3
= WIGH SCHOOLS fEvanstitie). 6: Vincennes, § (tied, New Castle, 13; Seymour, Adsuts Bend Central, 7 South Bend pil Swi, WSs
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