Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1945 — Page 23
10, 1945
“This
‘ington event" last
~ THURSDAY, MAY 1 p lies Ready For Sectionals
At 2 Schools
High = school track : and field}
athletes in the Indianapolis area
- went through final drills today in prepatation or sectional meets to]
be held tomorrow afterrioon at‘Tech and Washington fields, Winners of first and second places in the individual events and the
winning half-mile and mile relay
teams will qualify for the annual state meet to be held at Tech on May 19. ° "Shortridge and Washington are the defending champions in the local meets. The Blue Devils ended Tech's 10-year reign in 1944 with
a slender 36-356 vietory and enter
this year's carnival unbeaten,
The Blue Devils thus will rule as|
favorites in the event on the East side oval but may, expect plenty of trouble from an improved® Tech squad and Warren Central's Marion county éhampions. Three-Way Scrap Indications were that the meet at Washington would develop into a three-way scrap for team honors
between the hosts, Manual's Red-
skins and Howe. Frank Hines of Washington in the quarter and Ray Raker of Manual in the half-mile events were Mmdividual champions set to defend. their laurels. Four records fell in the Wash-
eps : Continental Track Captain
Frank Hines, fleet dashman for Washington's Continentals, will lead his mates in the sectional carnival at the West side field tomorrow. Hines, for three years straight city quarter-mile champ, has been-a consistent winner all spring. He also anchors the Continental mile relay team. ®
‘Ripple Bowl Plan Amateur To Have Meet (Loop Opening
year but most appeared safe this year as . did those in the Tech meet.
Athletic Divector Justin Marshall| Saturday and Sunday at Broad were made at the meeting of the |& run, failed to back up first an-|ing four with the Redskins last{at Baltimore was set tentatively for|”
of Washington announced that the | flag-raising ceremony at 23 o'clock]
Final plans for the opening of The weekly doubles tournament, | aya baseb pe Eo sponsored by the Indianapolis Bowl- (third amateur baseba eague, to ing Proprietors, Inc, will be held |play each. Wednesday evening,
Ripple Bowl,
- {Indianapolis Amateur Baseball asInasmuch as-the event will be|
'|lyn yesterday, there were only foun)
Same Holler, But Ditféret Cardinal Club
NEW YORK, May 10 (U. P).—
played with that same characteristic Cardinal “holler and hustle” that
But something else a lot mdte| important was missing. The world champions from St. Louis were only | a faint facsimile of the 1944 crew) that won the National league pen-| nant by 14%: games. And there was small wonder at that. | In the lineup that took a 6-4 beating from the Dodgers at Brook-
i |
1944 regulars, Infielders Emil Verban, George Kurowski, Sanders and Outfielder Hopp. There should be some improve-| ment when the incomparable Mar- | tin Marion returns to shortstop | fand utility man Al Schoendienst,| hailed as one of the year's best rookies should help, too. Both are lout with injuries. But beyond them | |it appears tha tthe Cards will have! {to sink or swim with what they {have now. At shortstop; third string George |
(Fallon, who works behind Marion |
| and Ray|
Johnny |
PIE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The spirit was there all right. They!
goin Headliner Sport of Kings Works at Thoroughh
]
3
NEW YORK, May 10 (U. P)i—
Racing, the sport ‘of kings and the! © |diversion of the common:man, was
sparked them to three straight ! * | pennants, | 3
Gene Gudgill, Dayton, O., welterweight, will meet Danny Williams in the feature 10-round bout on the Armory boxing bill tomorrow night. He has won five
| of six fights here, four by knock-
outs. Williams, formerly of Albany, N. Y., has taken residence and is working in Indianapolis.
| getting set today for nation-wide re. | {sumption after paying its wartime
a five\month shut-down. : 3 There will be at least two tracks, | {Narragansett in Rhode Island and] | Sportsman's park in Chicago in| operation by this week-end. By the! middle of next week two others, Pimlico at Baltimore, and Churchill Downs at Louisville, Ky., will have their belated spring meetings under- | way, preliminary to the rygning of the two great 3-year-old classics, the Kentucky ‘Derby and the Preakness. Turfmen moved at almost thoroughbred speed themselves in getting schedules arranged after the |announcement by War Mobilize | Fred M. Vinson in Washington yes- | térday that the government ban {against operation of the tracks had! been lifted. = : From the hard boots country of | Kentucky to the more sophisticated |
Two Optioned
To Nashville
Dave Odom, right-handed pitcher, \and. Schoendienst, kept First Base- and Infielder Bob Fletcher have
{racing circles of Chicago, California | and New York, the good news was!
tions as regards use of special trains and cars to the tracks remained in effect as in 1944, the horsemen, track operators, trainers, hawkers, jockeys, stable swipes, and mutuel attendants figured it as the next pest news to the end of the
obligation to the government with |:
| Speed to Resume Activity—Deshy Certain
It Smells : To New York's ‘Little Flower
NEW YORK; May 10 (U. P.). —There was at least bne person: in the meiropolitan area today who wasn't happy about the lifting of the nation-wide ban on horse racing. 3 Mayor F. H. LaGuardia, a foe of all types of gambling, had this to say about it: “Sorry. Racing does no one any good. It has nothing to do with horses. bearing on improving the breed of horses as a bawdy house has on eugenics.”
Santa Anita Derby and San Juan Capistrano Handicaps would be run. The historic Hambletonian trot-
hailed with unrestrained jubilation |ting classic will be held at Goshen, ) Although the same wartime restric-|N. Y. in August and other har-| after the litigation is completed.
It has as much |
¥ A
red
Sa
ness meets were set for the Buf falo raceway at Hamburg, N. ¥, beginning next week, the Saratoga harness season on June 25, and the Roosevelt raceway at Westbury, N.Y.on May 35 ', 4 Of wie Chicago, getting its season under {way by Baturday, will have meets (ings at Sportsman's Park, Hawes 'thorne, and Washington Park. The | Sportsman's Park meeting will last Ynine days until May 22, and Line * | {coln Fields will operate at Haws |thorne from May 23 to June 23 | Arlington will hold its meeting af { Washington Park, June 25 to Aug, {2, and Hawthorne will hold its ows {from Sept. 7 to Oct. 13. A ses “4 | Sportsman’s Park meeting will rug { from Oct. 15 to Nov, 3. a There was only one definite une | certainty. That was in Detrol§ | where Circuit Judge Guy A. Milley | recently ruled that the. 1933 statq |racing act was unconstitutional His decision will be appealed as soon as he signs the decree. .No action toward application for dates at the ‘Fairgrounds track in Dee troit probably will ‘be taken until
Super Service
&A M. to 6 P. M.—Saturdays
Station Hours:
and Mondays 8 A. M. 10 § », M.
'man--Sanders reaching high ‘and peen sent to*the Nashville club of | war itself | wide for his throws. Rookie Catcher|the Southern association on option, oH Del Rice, spelling Ken O'Dea, who| Secretary Al Schlensker of the In- Derby Expected June 3 moved up to first string when dianapolis Indians. announced to-! Plans were almost completed for {the running of the 7ist Kentucky
| Walker Cooper was inducted, let day ’ the Dodgers work a squeeze play for| Odom won two games while los- derby on June 2 and the Preakness
[other time; and appeared a little un- | season and was credited with four the following Saturday, June 9. The steady in handling Pitcher Hairy victories against tree defeats for third big race for three-years-olds,
“What do you mean,'a Better
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4
would launch the program at the the only outstanding bowling acWest side school. Hermon Phillips, tivity of the week-end, a heavy enformer Butler and Purdue univer- | try is expected. Action starts at gity track coach, will serve as g p. m. Saturday and ate2 p. m. starter and referee. Six schools|Sunday.
sociation in city hall last night. "| gracheen, Right Fielder Augie | Hartford in the Eastérn league, He |the Belmont Sfakes in New York, The loop, to--bé known as ‘the Bergamo, playing the sun fleld|is 26 years old. (will be held either on June'23 or|: Twilight league, will play seven- without glasses, let an easy pop-by| Fletcher, a. rookie up from Ft. [June 30, metropolitan racing offiinning games and will ‘start at 6|drop in front of him for a single Worth, has been effective as a field- | ¢ials said.
p. m. P. R. Mallory, Kingan Re- that started a four-run Dodger rally. | op except on double plays and cur-| At Louisville, hotel owners report- |.
¥d
LT
ad
HTT
Iy
a era RR a
ALLL
Ee ASE ——————
will send~101 contestants.
At Tech, the meet will get under in operation on local drives last|News, Ft. Harrison and Naval Ar- first day as a Cardinal Sie Movee |
way at 2:15 o'clock, Athletic Di-| rector R. 'V. Copple said. Homer Allen, Purdue track mentor; willl be the referee and starter. Four-| teen schools will have 176 athletes vieing for places. |
Records Are Listed |
Here are the records at which, the schoolboy athletes will be shoot-| ing tomorrow: AT TECH y-Yart Dash—Gray
(Tech), 00.8
220-Yard Dash—Gray (Tech), :22-1921. | 410-Yard Dash--Dalrymple (Tech), :50.4.! 880-Yard Run-—Sears (Tech), 2:00.1—| 1928. . | Mile—Monroe (Tech), 4:32.4--1939, ! 120-Yard High Hurdles — Wilkinson (Broad Ripple), :15.5--1038. { 200-Yard Low Hurdles—Meloy (Tech), 123.3--1037.. | High Jump-—Pedlow (Tech), 6 feet 1%] inches—1043. | Broad Jump—Hollls (Warren Central), | 22 ‘feet 41% inches—1931, s Pole Vault—Hants (Southport), 11 feet | 10% inches—1934, { Shotput—Weher (Plainfield), 50 feet 10 inches—1936, : Half-Mile Relay ~~ Shortridge, 1:32.90 —
38. Mile Relay—Technieal, 2:%31.6-1938, i AT WASHINGTON 100-Yard Dash—Toney (Howe), :10.1 —|
| 220-Yard Dash — Calderon (Manuel), | 222. 71089, A40-Yard Dash ~~ Nahmias (Manual), :51.8--1088 ’
880-Yard Run — Gerrish (Washington), |
2:02—-1940, | ! Mile—Masearl (Manual), 4:32—1042. | 120-¥ard High Hurdles—Alff (South-| port), :15.6-1943, | 200-Yard Low Hurdles—Alift (South- | port), 28.5--1943, { High Jump — Jones (Washington), 6 feet la inch—-194. Broad Jump—Butz (Franklin), 21 feel—| sd. Shotput—Sadler (Shelbyville), 42 feet 2 inches—1041. | Pole Vault—Byfeld (Washington), 1" feet 634 Inches—1943. | Halt-Mile Relay-—~Washington, -1:33,4~|
1044. Mile Relay—Manual, 3:35.6—1944,
2 Found Guilty
In Eastern Cage Bribery. Charge
NEW YORK, May 10 (U. P), —| The conviction of Harvey Stemmer
and Henry Rosen for conspiracy.
ihing of five Brooklyn college, basketball players, was -eited today by Judge Louis Goldstein. as a warning to ‘those chiseling and crooked gamblers who infect our
and
Only four regular leagues were
liables, Lukas - Harold, De Wolf Elvin (Buster) Adams, playing his| rently was hitting .227 in 16 games.
ed an unprecedented rush of re-
[mueh to do with the popularity as
night. The Sears-Roebuck mixed |mory are members. The league is tolled at the Central with Frank to open next Wednesday. Johns copping men’s honors with{ Ed Dersch, who.was with the In576 as Nola Waddell led the|dianapolis Indians during their women with 415. In the Standard [spring training period and. later Life Insurance mixed at the same |sent to Newark of the International alleys, Leon Ligon was top man league, was reinstated as an amawith 485 and Donna Alles the teur at last night's session. Dersch, women's leaders with 393. {a pitcher, will play with the MalOur Lady of Lourdes ladies league [lory team in the Manufacturers and at Pritchett-Hunt-O'Grddy alleys | Twilight leagues. wound up the season with Jessie Culligan taking the final night's honors with 483. Old Crown Ale . was the leader in the final team For Chicago Bout starlings with a 66-39 record. Reed| CHICAGO, May 10 (U. P).— McGuire led the individual aver- | Heavyweights Elmer (Violent) Ray age race with 143. and Larry Lane have been signed In the Allison Plant 5 ladies’ loop |for a 10-round match at the Chicago at Fountain Square, Eunicae Koch |Coliseum June 1, Matchmaker Jack was high for the evening with 502.|Kearns said today.
The Sports Parade
By JACK CUDDY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 10.—One guess is. as good as another as to why wartime baseball. with it's" lowered standards of play is so fascinating to the fans, but the fact that it is so unpredictable probably has as
Heavies Signed
nificant, since they had played about the shme humber of games at home at this time a year ago.
8 - ” All of which dds up to the fact that the Giants are in first place with 13 victories in 17 games. It's hard to beat that extra base punch in the pinch and along with the homers, the Giants are “bat-happy” in the other slugging departments. They lead with runs batted in, 65; hits, 164; two-bag-gers, 31, and runs, 101.
anything else. Nothing seems fo go according to the script and the fans love it. They come expecting to see a pitchers’ battle and stay to cheer for a fence-rattling melee of extra base hits.
tJ » " But to get back to the business
quests for reservations, despite the {over from the Phillies, over-charged Raed oat ot * ite} itn | fact that the office of defense trans|a single and it wént for three bases, | Rin 1 Ys I Bain oo | portation specified that the: derby \two runs coming home in the same oh BR a nie ‘was to be a “street-car’ affair for inning, {tae is WEre ~Oreec, 10 SUATE| inca] . residents only. The Brown Tigers Beat Yanks third position in the American as-| said it was accepting. no : : sociation standing with the surging : a The Detroit Tigers met their first Toledo Mud Hens. * : test against the visiting New York : H 1 ¢ 8, Yankees, one of the clubs expected || a ae) Mime polis to give them trouble, when Paul| 7 ht to Hiove irito the deadlock | Guild greeted the lifting of the ban (Dizzy) Trout gained 4-to-1, seven-|’ EE a moved hele to o en as “wonderful news.” President hit victory. It was his fourth tri- ih z hhgniead De {Sterling Young said most of the a series with the Tribesmen at 8:30 umph of the season andthe eighth), ight , time in a row he has beaten the : {work immediately.”
Yankees since Aug. 25, 1943. Rudy He A anon Wy Iie said, were in Florida when the York's two doubles and a single J Fa ’
. ; (ban was ‘instituted but that they : | join the club today following the . paced he eet a ue ony PIBYET deal with ‘the Boston Braves. had gone north to other tracks with
? : their stables this spring in antici- | three games all last season, picked | a Wright Was expecied 30 be ation of the lifting of the ban. : . ; | Manager Bill Burwell's pitching & , ’ {up his third 1944 triumph for the| oice against the Millers seeking! Other tracks which set definite White Sox beating the Athletics at| . :
’ : | dates for opening were Del {1 | aware Chicago, 6 to 4. {his third victory. Wright beat the
pa . : {park at Wilmington, Del, May" 29: Pinch-hitter Paul O'Dea’s ingle] So umbus Ret Jinks rise. Inga Garden State at Camden, N. J., July {gave the Indians a 2-to-1 victory ini Cas a likely starter for Manager | 13; Beulah park, Ohio, May 19; and the ninth over the Boston Red Sox| pi poan | Fairmont park, East St. Louis, Ill, |at Cleveland. Allie Reynolds shaded | RU. { May 26. °
Jim Wilson in a duel for his sec-! i Bell Stops Hunter Santa Anita, the beautiful ova. |
ond victory, a six-hitter. | The itte i $ { : oe rs a In Cleveland Scrap at Arcadia, Cal, was slated for| : | CLEVELAND, May 10 (U. P..— resumption early next week, posover the Boston Braves, getting 13 ! £25 % hits off four pitchers. Elwin|Tommy Bell, Youngstown (O.) wel- sibly by Monday, but last-minute (Preacher) Roe, with relief help terweight, was past his first hurdle | details remained to be worked out. from Xavier Rescigno, was the win-|t0day in an elimination series for u| Oficial said the $100,000 Santa ner. : shot at a title match against Cham- Anita Handicap and the $50,000 The Phillies snapped Paul Der-|Pion Freddie (Red) Cochrane of : Newark, N. J. He stopped Chuck] . Hunter of Cleveland in the -fftn| Broad Ripple us
ringer's four-game winning streak, round of their schieduled..10- 10g : * 7h ey | Blanks Manual
topping the Chicago Cubs, 5 to 2; béut last night. Stay Unbeaten
at Philadelphia to end a six-game Bell floored Hunter three times for Broad Ripple high school's base-
Game Rained Out
ed conditions,
Santa Anita Soon
losing streak of their own. Bill Lee held his old team mates to five hit. . 5 counts of two; four and five before | To Referee Jackie Davis stopped the
for his first victofy. Vince DiMagPhils. “a fght.
reservations because of over-crowd-| & -
At Miami, officers of the Jockey’s|;
| jockeys would be ready to “go to. Most of them, |;
iil
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No better evidence of the topsyturvey situation seems to be avail-| able than a check on the way the two major leagues are reversing themselves in the hitting. of hom? runs, - | » » ” The American league, long the | haven of the “héavy hitters—the Babe Ruths: Ty Cohhs, Joe Di- | Maggios, Lou Gehrigs and Charley Kellers—is depending on air-tight | pitching this season whereas the | National is cashing in on the | blows over the fences and into
proud city that New York is not' tne pleachers.
a safe place to operate.” : Ptemmer and Rosen were found guilty by a jury of eight men and four women after five hours.of deliberation last night. The jury recommended leniency for Resen,
Thus far, as compared with the 1944 season, the National league | have hit 53 home runs against 39, | | an increase of 14. And what is |
| happening, meanwhile, in the |
gio got a two-run homer for the ——— It wis _the first bout ip an elimi- |
+ i | 4 of the reversed home run situation, ‘ yo io davis Star — Rookie Vie |natioh series being sponsored by|
which finds four National league ; = 7 clubs with increases over a year| Jombard, BT oe d Dodger ago, one even and three with de- | pion. Cardinals, 6 to 4, for his creases, That is surprising enough | second big league victory but in the American league the y. trend is even more striking. Only].
che club. ‘the Yank h ve . Bell now enters the second round | : . ees, AYE Mor St. Paul (Gains of the. tournament in which de]
homers than at the same fime a : : ! eets Jimmy Doyle of Los Angeles year ago akd their increase is not | Ineels Samm > S Jang | |
J : 3 . here June 7. impressive, nine against seven. The| Attendance Cup a |
Red Sox are even with five against five, and the others show decreases. | The Athletics. have five against six, | COLUMBUS, May 10 (U. P)—To Meet Tomorrow | the Tigers four against six, the President George M. Trautman of| The ‘Marion County ‘Softball asBrowns four against seven the{ the American association today an- dociation’s a ut White Sox two against four, the nounced the award of the presi- |, Cd a Sartant ae wl Kina| Indians one. against five -and the, dent's aligudance rophy -to° St. | an's eafeteria tomorrow night. | Senators one against six. |Paul for the second consecutive A successor to Roy - Galbreath, | Ce year. wo» J : The other National league clubs | St. Paul had a paid attendance | SCT Clary -treasurer,
{ mine an opponent for Cochrane, in| a bout “tentatively. scheduled for Cleveland's Municipal stadium later | in the summer,
who
Promoter Jimmy Atkins ‘to deter-|
resigned |
ball team stood unbeaten today in nine starts following a 4-0 triumph over the Redskins at Manual yester-
fact’ that Allstate Tires give consistently long wear, dependable trace tion and maximum safety on all kinds of roads.
The Rockets were. carded against Noblesvillé today. Bob Gossman set the South Siders down with a lone bingle in the seventh inning yesterday and Dee Baker led Broad Ripple’s hitting attack - with. a double "and two singles. The line score:
Broad Ripple 000 2-4 7 1 Manual 000 000 0-0 2 Gossman and MacDaniel, Martlage and aker PY
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Ben Davis high school's baseball teamh racked up its sixth triumph in seven starts yesterday, nipping Beech Grove on the Giant field,
7-3. s
Wendell Smith chalked up 17
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ALLSTATE TRUCK AND BUS TIRES SAVINGS!
American? There have been only have picked up 12 homers as com-
p { with increases are the Braves, who | of 11,150 Baseball fans on opening | 71 post to take over the presidency |
® We post inventories daily of sizes
|of the Marion county girls’ softball Strikeouts agaist Beech Grove in 51 homers to date as compared pared with six at this time last|10757 and Tol | federation, will he electéd. notching his 15th’ victory in 16 with 46 in the corresponding season, the Phillies with eight 8823. edo “was ing With) Other matters of importance, in- Baimes over a two-year span. Feld # Yas 4 KB OF 5. | gn tore 0 10k and ine Clln| Aoprocmatty 280 sh ured LSE SSE © NBS | BASEBALL RESULTS : with, three dgaimst - two.. The lout for the Indianapolissat-Coluti=| ob ry or Lon og sed. - Hil COLLECES" The most spectacular increase in Dodgers age even with six this year {bus opener in spite of cold weather. | 8030 Mans DIeLIC _88=| popruw' 11; Central Normal 0 (6 innings, the National has been by the re-/and six last, the Pirates are down sociation is president of the soft- rain)
who acted ag a go-between in the! (day. Louisville was second with deal with the players to “fix” a game with Akron university af Bos-! ton on Jan. 31. /AStemmer promptly was sentenced |
to a year in the penitentiary and |
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CO) HOME? ; ¥... SEE
“re
60”
Greenfield, Ind,
fined $500 with he must serve an each dollar of the fine that he fails fo pay. Rosen will be sentenced on May 16, )
extra day for
a ’ Games Sought The Greenfield Independents baseball aggregation requests games on the home-and-home basis. Write Lewis E. Palmer, 433 W, Main. st.,
STUBBLE
| 84.
IH
*
the proviso that!
| juvenated New York Giants, whoi{one with three against four, the {have biffed 18 balls for round-trip Reds have one against three and | tickets whereas at the same time the usually heavy-hitting Cardinals {last year they had connected for have only two as compared with {only eight. Despite the admitted seven in 1944. {advantage of playing in their pecu-| We wouldn't guess whether the liarly constructed Polo Grounds with |trend will continue and it would bé {its short right and left fleld bar- in keeping with the unpredictable riers, it is the increase that is sig- nature of things if it didn’t.
GAMES YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis coo 001 020 000-3 8 4 B68 Toledo . 512 011 00x10 12. 3 B63| Albertson, Lilienthal, Morel and Blaze; ‘471 Garver and Comyn. A62 | fh Dem—— 383 | Bt. Paul .....e..... 110 003 010 6 14 3 333 | Columbus . 241 000 00x— 7:13 0 | Webh, Werth, Weaver, Miller and Narron, Lewis; Burkhart. Root and Crum'ing. Pet. —— al a City at Louisville (postponed, 467 rain). angi 425 Milwaukes at Indiandpolis (postponed,
500 | rain),
AM enieatu——— ’ Ag AMERICAN LEAGUE" 35:4! Philadelphia . 00 101 020 4 T 3 383 | Chicago 7. : +... 021 201 00x 6 10 1 | Black and Hayes; Lee and Tresh,
Pet. Hew York 010 000 000 1 7 1 L625 | Detroit «oo. 010 030 00x 4 8 0 ante, Zuber and Garbark; Trout and wift, i
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | Won t Pot. | Louisville ; 9 600 Milw H83
INDI
Columbus Kansas City Minneapolis
BBW RD
Paul bearsasaeiiianiain, 4 AMERICAN MEAGUK ¥ Chicago Detroit
New York . Washington
New York Brooklyn Louis
Cleveland. ........ 000 000 101— 3 § © 20 Wilson and Walters; Reynolds and Mec- , ; ashi t ¢ St Louls tpomed,; pe ngton & 9 u s | main and cold weather). Avon
NATIONAL LEAGUE
"NO BETTER
Standing of Clubs, Results, Schedules
The Indians had ‘6713 for their rainy home opener.
Howe Golfers Win |
| Howe triumphed over Broad)
| {Ripple in a high school golf match | | yesterday, 18-0, at Pleasant Run.| Ronald Roach of Howe-was medal- |
ist with an 81. ;
Cincinnati 000 001 000-1 7 3 New York ......... 400 020 00x— 6 10 1 Carter, Fox and Lakenmian, Riddle; Feld. man and Lombardi.
GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
m,). St. Paul at Louisville (postponed, rain), Kansas Cily at Columbus (night). Milwaukee at Toledd (might),
AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia at\Chicage. Washington at St. Louis (night). New York at Detroit (postponed, rain), Boston at Cleveland (postponed, rain),
NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis at Brooklyn (night),
Pitishorgh at Boston,
Cineinnatl at New York (postponed,
rain). ‘ . Chicago at Philadelphia (postponed,
rain).
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Blue Devil .Frosh
Minneapolis at INDIANAPOLIS (8:30) - » :
OR. JOS. E. KERNEL | |
ballers. Anderson, 13, Manchester 13 (11 innings,
tie), Wakeman Hospital 8, Louisville 5 (10 innings).
Ben Davis 7, Beech Grove 3. Broad Ripple 4, Manual 0.
| i | HIGH SCHOOLS
Take City Crown
Shortridge high school's fresh-|-
men thinlies as" well as the Blue ~BASEBALL-
Devil varsity ruled as city chamPoa: any |" VICTORY FIELD The Blue. Devil frosh won the | Indianapolis vs. Minneapolis city meet yesterday at Howe by pil- Fn ing up 64% points. Tech scored | TONIGHT — 8:30 P.M, 48%, Howe 43%, Manual 35%, | For information or reservations Washington 18, and ‘Broad Ripple Call RI 4488.
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