Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1945 — Page 10
nant trend is definitely pointing . toward the Indianapolis Indians. They have won three out of four in _ their new home stand and they have annexed nine games in their - last 10 starts, And the home boys have moved within 5 percentage points of the league-leading Milwaukee Brewers. Helped by a double assist from the Kansas City Blues, who bumped off the Brewers twice last night, the Redskins eased right on the heels of the leaders by trouncing Louisville in the series final here, 5 to 2, giving them a gain of one and a half games. In other words, everything looks rosy at Victory field, the attendance has soared, the Tribesters are hitting in the clutch and now they are set to take on the Toledo Mud Hens in a four-game series starting under the lights tonight at 8:30. Pedro Jiminez, the Cuban, is scheduled to work for the Tribe on the rubber. It Won't Be Long
The Hens have been easy for the Indians this season and it's a safe guess that the Tribesters will take over the league leadership by maul-
vibe Gains;
ing them again.” In a recent series t Toledo the Indians won six in a row, and in 12.clashes between the clubs this season the Redskins have won 10. Bh » While the Indians aresengaging the Mud Hens the Milwaukee Brewers have to go against the tough Saints at St. Paul; and in a recent series at Milwaukee, the Saints won three out of four. Before a ladies’ night crowd of 5405; the Indians swung their haymakeér on the Colonels in the sixth inning and scored five runs after being goose-egged for five stanzas. Pitcher Rex Cecil of the Colonels had the Redskins eating out of his glove for five rounds and struck out six. - He allowed only one hit, a single by Bob Brady, in. the second. He retired the home boys in 1-2-3 order in the first, third, fourth and fifth before the Indians got te him. Barath Homers A home run over-the scoreboard by Steve Barath, Louisville outfielder, in the fourth off Wes Flowers made the situation look good for the visitors. But the picture changed in the sixth. Heinie Heltzell, first up for the Tribe, drew a base on balls on four pitches. The strain
Opens New Series
ers forced Heltzel at-second and it was close at first as the Colonels tried for a double play. Play was delayed - while the Colonels argued with thejumpires but they lost the decision. Ben Geraghty flew out and then the Tribe fireworks opened up.| Artie Parks belted a hit to right! and it got through Jack Aragon for a ‘triple. Aragon, a catcher by trade, slipped and fell and the ball rolled to the wall, wisi” The blow scored Flowers with the tying run and a double by Joe Mack scored Parks. Bob Brady was given an-intentional walk and then Stan Wentzel walloped- a triple to center, scoring Mack and Brady. A single by Bob Dill scored Went-
ager Bill Burwell has the boys constantly on the alert, The team is something on the order of the 1928 pennant winners on making hits count and in taking advantage of the breaks in their favor. It will be Shrine night at Victory field tomorrow and a large crowd is sure to turn out. The Shriners always put on a grand show.
In the sixth inning last night, when the Indians sewed up the| contest, a shoe-tying match developed. With Pitcher Flowers on first, Parks tripled and Flowers was winded after running from first to home. Perched on third, Parks stalled to give the wind-blown Flowers a chance to recuperate. Parks untied and then tied his shoe. laces
ze] and Pitcher Cecil “blew his top” and was banished by Umpire Ru-| dolph. . | John Lund took over on the| Louisville mound and fanned Norm | Wallen for the third out. The] Colonels picked up their second run in the eighth on a single, double and a long fly, their final threat. They outhit the Indians, ning to six, but mistakes which did not| show in the box score beat them. ~ |
Flowers received faultless support both by the infield and outfield. It's|
was collecting its toll on Cecil: Flow=
a great defensive team and Man-
& ¥ » LOUISVILLE rips Koney, 2B .....aveee Genovese, el 4s. 0% 4.'0 0 Browne, 1b 4 009 4 0 0 LaPoreit, ss «4 6-1 3 06.0 Barath, If «331130 0 Lipscomb, 3b 4 6 3 3:0 0 Aragon, hi 0. 3 1.3 08 Milles, ¢ 4 8 1-81 .0; Cecil, p . 3-0 0--G:1 0 Lund, Pp «... «0-0-0 0 0 Polly + 16 6 0 0 Lawson. p «0 0 0H 0 | Callahan o- 0 0-0 6 © Totals ..ovuavanes 3 32 9 4 6
Polly bagged for Lund in seventh Lawson in ninth,
In Spite of Wea
olright after it apparently has shaken olit all today is that the tottering Tigers still are in first place. A browse through the books reveals that they are suffering from a “o/serious case of base hit anemia. That wasn't surprising since the pre|vailing belief has been that prize pitching has kept the club up in the | KIMBERLIN.
Tottering Tigers Boost Lead
By CARL LINDQUIST, United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 17.—It is risky to pick flaws in a pennant favorite
k Stick Work
a serious slump, but the wonder of
6 to 2. Leroy Schalk hit a three- |
Callahan” batted for ! race. But, it was a shock to learn ; TEBIARAIOLYS & o a x|that the club has only three de- | Geraghty, 2 A © 1 1 3 olpendable starters at present and Za 4 1 1 3 8 Dlthat it is without a top flight relief +9 ‘yy 1:3 1 oppitcher. 3 1 1 3 8 3 Since competition began with the ..3 0 0 1 5 oleastern clubs on June 27, starting 3 ? 3 : 3 : pitchers have been able to go the » 3 sAB route in only seven out of 19 games 000 100 010—3|8nd the co-ace of the 1944 staff,
Runs Batted In—Barath,
rowne, Parks, Wentzel 2. Two-Base Hits—
Do! apace. sville 8, Indianapolis 4. Cecil 2, Flowers 2, Lawson 2.
50 Struck Out—By Cecil 6, 1, Flowers 2, . Hits—Oft 5
innings. i] pires—Prince, Rudolph and Steengrafe. Time—3:04.
Deer, Sullivan Paired for Bout
Arnold Deer, rough and ready Indianapolis middleweight, will clash
with a well-known Chicago middle
when the local mauler takes on ; Hl
to be staged at the outdoor Sports Arena Thursday night, Matchmaker Lloyd Carter of the Hercules Athletic club has announced. ; Carter also matched Raymond Glenn, local junior 'lightweight, against Bobby Lee of Chicago for action in a four-rounder on the bill.
at the 225-pound mark.
The semi-final skirmish’ is billed | single.
—5| Paul (Dizzy) Trout,<hasn't started
to{is down with lumbago in a Detroit n hospital and he is an extremely big
"!for the remainder of the season.
. Sullivan over the six-round |
ORO hee pie Ta il produced a 9-10-4 vicloty over
ad]
The headling collision is slated
and finished a winning game since May 9. Trout, who didn’t accompany the team on its current trip,
question-mark in the team’s plans
Three Frontline Twirlers
That leaves the team with Hal Newhouser, Al Benton and Frank (Stubby) Overmire as its front-line pitching strength. There are several relief men, none effective. Only Zeb Eaton has been able to gain a victory in the three-week competition with eastern clubs. Even so, the pitching would have been good enough to get by if the hitting had
{
run homer to give Johnny Humphries a victory over the A's ace, Russ Christopher, in the opener. It was Christopher's fourth straight loss. Bobby Estalella hit two homers | for the A's in the second game. { Cleveland made all its runs in the sixth, two of them on a homer by Pat Seerey. to top the Red Sox at Boston, 3 to 2. Allie Reynolds won his ninth game. ; Cubs Rally to Win
The Cubs-scored twice in the-last of the ninth to beat the Giants, 4 to 3. It was Chicago's fifth straight win and 16th in 17 games. Singles by Harry Lowrey and Paul Gillespie after a walk and an error produced the deciding tallies. Ray Starr re-
and“ did it in slow motion. The Colonels got wise and Pitcher Cecil sat down on the mound, removed his thoes and matched Parks in the, phony business of fumbling with the shoe laces. He decided that if Flowers was going to get a rest, he was entitled to one, too.
Tribe Secretary Al Schlensker, the former truck gardener de luxe, last night passed out some luscious tomatoes picked at random in his victory garden. He claims he is the local tomato king and just wanted to prove it with his huge red ripes.
" » »
A. A. Stars
TONY -SABOL, Kansas City infielder—Banged out three hits; one of them a double, drove in three runs and stole a base as Blues won opener from Brewers, 15-3.
EDSON BAHR, Kansas - City pitcher—Checked A. A. champions in the pinches to gain 5-4 decision in second game.
CLIFF FANNIN and HARRY Toledo pitchers— Limited Red Birds to two and four hits, respectively, as the Mud Hens won double bill, 5-0 and 5-1.
JOE VITTER, St. Paul infielder —~His home run helped Apostles | beat Minneapolis, 7-6.
Bill Heinlein
Meet Favorite
MARION, Ind., July 17 (U, P).— Bill Heinlein of Noblesville held the favorite’s role today as qualifying play. in the 1945 Indiana P. G. A. tournament began at Meshingome-
lieved Claude Passeau to gain his first victory of the season. The runner-up Cardinals kept pace at St. Louis with a 2-to-0 shutout by Harry Brecheen over the Braves. Brecheen, who has been out with arm trouble was making his. first start since June 23. He
held up, but right now it is the weakest in either league.
| Yanks at New York yestertiay, [Tiger lineup has a season average lof only .248. Second Baseman Ed‘die Mayo is the hardest hitting
‘regular at .287 and the rest scale
who is tapping a bare .179. Two walks, and doubles by Hank (.205) Greenberg and Roger (.276) Cramer
|
for six heats and will pit Ted ' seventh.
Christie, Chicago junior lightweight
against Robert Beamon, former lo-
cal Golden Gloves luminary.
Summer Practice
SOUTH BEND, Ind, July 17 (U, sames ahead. Veteran Al Hollings-
P.).—Eight lettermen from the 19
Notre Dame football squad and 102
other. gridiron aspirants have re- the Browns.
ported for summer practice, Coach The his second straight after losing 1
players will practice for flve weeks |in a row, a two-hit, 7-to-1 triumph |
Hugh Devore said today.
and reassemble for fall drills on which gave the Athletics a split | H after the White Sox won the opener, | walker, Dodgers ..67
of Clubs, Results, Schedules
Sept. 4, Devore said.
Standing
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION § 'S Y A . Won Lost pet. | RESULTS YESTERD ¥ & Lou crrenss 44 hit 3l- J i Milwaukee ............... 31 3 600 MERIGAN ASSOCIATION ashington . INDIANAPOLIS .......... 58 35 rH A 4 Shirley ‘and Hayworth, Mancuso; Wolff Louisville ... . 48 41 539 | (First Game—7 Innings) and Guerra. . 3¢ -Paul . 40 3 H06 Milwaukee ............ 000 030 0— 3 2 : oledo ...... .42 46 477 Kansas City ...... ... 144 000 x—15 1: { : Minneapolis .........00000 39 46 +459 | Burkhart. Lindquist, Davis and Stephen- | Detroit Cire navrene io 10 Ao § 13 : Columbus “........civ0e0ie 39 49 443 gon; Pringle and Steinecke. New York caves Kansas City ... ..... 30 53 -361 (Second Game) | Overmire and Swift; Zuber, Page, Roser NATIONAL LEAGUE (Milwaukee C0 101 000 101— 4 8 1|and M. Garbark. Pet. | Kansas City ........ 320.000 00x— 5 10 0 Chicago +623| "Pyle and Stephenson; Bahr and Daniel [Cleveland ........... 000 003 000— 3 11 At. Louis 70 son | Boston: ..... . 000 000 200— 2 9 © Pitopurgh ‘519 hle—- | Reynolds, Klieman and Hayes; Heflin, New York 4 APist Gano) 57 Ryba, Ferris and R. Garbark. onan i 83) Columbus Cee ome 0 3 2 Le ties i ‘ora! Fannin and Lyon; Root, Cunningham, | - GAMES TODAY Philadelphia .... , 250 | o 4 : . : Strommen and Gracey. AMERICAN LEAGUE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won Lost Pet (Second Game) . » Betroll 14 32 319 Toledo core 020 000 201— 5 8 g, Toledo at INDIANAPOLIS, night, 8:30, Washington ......co00vi0 40 34 341 Columbus. .. 2 000 100 000— 1 4 | Columbus at Louisville, night. New York ..7. 41 36 ‘532 | Kimberlin and Crandall; Sumey, Strom-| jg. cq City at Minneapolis, night. Boston .... . 41 36 .332 men and Bucha. Milwaukee at St. Paul, two, night. Chicago 40. 39 506] — : . Kt. Louis . 37 AR A403 Paul i . 20 960 818. 3 1 3 - Cleveland ....... 36 30 .430 Minneapolis ( 024— {AN . Philadelphia .... ........ 26 51 308 Lanahan, Tauscher, Weaver and Narron; NATIONAL LEAGUE
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and Livingston, Gillespie
oigno, Gerheauser, Beck and Lopes.
Only games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
(First Game)
Chissfe anis Hanns . 108 100,010 6 11 Philadelphia ... 020 000 000 2 4
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away and Rosar: (Second Game) Shisago olan aa 100 000 000 1 3 Philadelphia ........ 101 001 22x 7° 7
(Firsi Game)
Ullrich, Holbordw and Evans.
down to’ Shortstop Skeeter Webb,
produced three first inning runs for 10 rounds and will pit heavy-|and an error leaked in another. weights with Colion Chaney, hard| Roy (.261) Cullenbine got a homer punching local 190-pounder, signed | but Bobby (.237) Swift led the atfor action against Lindy Elliott, |tack with three hits. Charley (Red) | Chicago ring giant. Elliott stands|Ruffing, making his first appear6 feet, 3 inches and tips the scales ance for the Yankees after three |years as a G. I, got a pinch-hit ‘Overmire’s win was his
Unpredictable Bobo Newsom won |Holmes, Braves ... 9 | Workman, Braves
Humphries and Tresh; Christopher, Gass- |
Grove and Tresh; Newsom and George.
St. Louis ..... .. 201 003 010— 7 8 ©O Washington . ....... 000 000 030— 3 8 2 Hollingsworth and Mancuso;
Niggeling,
gave up six hits. Tom Seats. shelved as a starting
assignment, beating the Pirates at Pittsburgh, 8 to 4.
homer by Augie Galan.
not scheduled.
Yesterday’s star — Lefty Harry Brecheen ‘of the Cards, coming back courageously after arm trou- | ble that threatened to end his career, who beat the Braves with a six-hit, 2-to-0 shutout.
Major Leaders
By UNITED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE
| : G AB R » | Senators Lose Pair Holmes, Boston .... 81 340 81 .38 & i Cavarretta, Chicago. 78 297 65 110 .37 The victory, coupled with double Rosen, Brooklyn ... 74 308 6¢ 111 36 , Olmo. Brooklyn 76 307 45 101 2 deflation of the Senators by the Kurowski’ 8t. Louis 175 204 53 96 .32 | Browns at Washington, 7 to 3 and, AMERICAN LEAGUE . h igers three full G AB R H Ave 3 to 1 put the Tig > | Case, Washington 70° 288 46 95 33 | Cuceinello, Chicago. 73. 256. 35 84 32 y ( { Stephens, St. Louis. 73 280 50 87 44 worth and youngster Newman Tex) Estalella, Phila . T7278 34 | Shirley pitched the twin wins for stirnweiss, N. Y 77 315 58 08 ! \ { HOME RUNS Lombardi, Giants.15/Adams, Calds 1
15/Kurowski, Cards ..1 .15:DiMaggio, Phils ...1 Stephens, Browns .14| RUNS BATTED IN | Holmes, Braves ...T0lAdams, Cards .... Imo, Dodgers ..
(Second Game)
| ’ | New York at Chicago. | Brooklyn at Pittsburgh, night |. Philadelphia at Cincinnati, night, Boston at St. Louis, night.
010 000 200 3 12 2 Chicago 001 001 002 4 8 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE Mungo and Lombardi; Passeau; SUArT| peiroit at New York (postponed, rain
Cleveland at Boston
|sia Country-club. | Heinlein, state open champion, (headed a field of 29 professional | golfers expected to make a bid for ythe crown won last year by army Pvt. Bob Hamilton of Evansville. Hamilton will not defend his cham- { pionship. | Eight pros arrived yesterday and {participated in a pro-women’s event,
Even with a 12-hit attack which pitcher by Manager Leo Durocher won by a team led by Lt. Ed Lawthe| when the Dodgers were winning, |son, golf. instructor at Camp Atter-
ATE
Fa J >»
B -
wv
Charles Schultz . « . meet medalist.
Byrd Is Upset by Ait: Medalist Wins 1st Test
By HARVEY HARRIS = At least one upset was chalked up in the Indiana Junior golf tourna- |
Gordon Byrd of Muncie, runner
finals, bowed 4 and 3 to the sharpshooting of Warren Artz of Terre
Haute. The 17-year-old Artz, captai
ment today as the youthful linksmen swing into match play at Broadmoor to determine their champion in the 20th annual meet.
-up to Arnold Koehler in the 1945 |
n of Wiley high school’s links team
this spring, was 2 up at the turn|
|and ran the match out by winning rallied to win No.. 12 and squared three of the six holes on the in- the match on No. 17. : He required
ward trip. lan extra shot on the last hole, Their cards: however, to lose to the 17-year-old Par out .......ee.. 444 344 435-35 downstate swinger. Byrd ....oiesss0e.. 665 445 545—44! Schultz had a medal score of “78 {ATEZ ....ecnveseees. 555 554 445—42 to his rival's 79." The cards: ‘Par In ceceeees.ses 435 543 |Schultz—Out. 454 474 535—41 {BYrd .eieaiiiennnn. 336 554 {Roberts ..... 544 455 436—40
vv 635 453 Artz, 4 and 3 . | Another upset victim was Jack] Hesler of Crawfordsville who was | nosed out by Ned MacWilliams of
[Sou Bend, 1 up.. Hesler was one {of the leading qualifiers in the state
amateur last week and had been {figured as a good bet in the junior. Charles ‘Schultz of New Albany, {medalist in the meet yesterday with la T4 advanced ihto the second round with a 1 up’ triumph over Dick Roberts of Anderson. | The two were, all square at the) turn, then Schultz won the No. 10] and No. 11 to go 2 up as they started the back nine. Roberts
the’ RT TR HR aa RE Sa dy a we to win his second straight starting|three under par. Second-place honors went to teams | The : The Dodgers|captained by Marion Smith of In-| Northeast made 12 hits, including a two-run tdianapolis, Fred McDermott of Lake teams in their respective sections ” \ 2 Tippecanoe, and .Bob Simmons of [in Junior Baseball, will play tonight | Philadelphia and Cincinnati Were fy. Wayne, who tied with scores of [at 8 o'clock at Victory field before! = 133.
Le pard ef
22.
Cardinals the
" Riverside Trojans,
the Tribe-Toledo encounter. .
Schultz—in -., 335 543 554—37—78 Roberts ..... 544 543 545—39—T79 John Hare Jr., Park school junior and one of the pre-tourney favorites, advanced handily with a 6 and 5 triumph over Norman Dunlap of Terre Haute. Hare, who was only two shots over Broadmoor's 35 par, had a 3 up lead at the end of the first nine,
Favorites Survive In most other instances favored players were winning first round tests. Second 18-hole matches were on the -docket for this afternoon. Results: : Bob Buchanan, Indianapolis, de-
leading
H Ave. night. 132
305: McGill
Chicago at Philadelphia (postponed for
3 Twilight League Games On Schedule for Tomorrow
A trio of games is on the Indianapolis Amateur baseball association’s | Twilight league schedule tomorrow The three games will be 8 played at Riverside park.
501 . The Kingan-Reliable-P, R. Mal-
= lory clash on diamond 2 should be a real battle, although the East , siders proved easy prey for the 8 ‘meatmen in their initial mid-week
3% ‘30a engagement on June 6, when Lefty
limited them to a lone 2 bingle for a 7-1 triumph for Kingan. 2! The Reliables lead the Twilight 2 Joop with five victories and no de- | feats, while Mallory’s only loss in
AM Ifiy ries Ww the Kingan reverse. 69 Elliott, Pirates ....62 five tri i ga.
Mallory Team Confident
Frankie Baird's Mallory outfit has been going big of late and since DeWolf handed .the highly touted !meatmen their initial season's beat1/ing in a Municipal game Sunday, 3 the East siders feel confident they tcan dish out a little of the same medicine. 0 DeWolf, feeling like the cock-of-the-walk after halting the Kingan victory string, will take on Naval
| 0
Beauty Softens Sorrow . ..
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FLOWERS TELEGRAPHED ANYWHERE I A.
Armory on diamond No. 4. The newsmen. have had tough sledding in mid-week encounters and have yet to win a game. But now that they have accomplished what 10 other- teams have failed to do, they should get going and reverse mat{ters in the Twilight circuit. Start at 6 P. M. Ft. Harrison; with a two-and-two record, takes on Lukas-Har-old, which is also without a victory in the Wednesday ‘loop. The sol diers will mix with their opponents on diamond No. 1. All games start at 6 o'clock with the following€umpires in charge: No. 1, Kennedy and Sanders; No. 2, Smith and Faucett; No. 4, Ratliff and Winchell, The assoclation’s weekly meeting also is scheduled tomorrow night. It will be held at Gammon’s, 6153 W. Washington st., at 7 o'clock. All team managers are urged to -be
day” will be made. —B. H. 0 OO
LOANS
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_ TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1048]
wis Junior Golfers Swing Into Match
v
Ploy -
beats runner-up.
Martin, Turk
Wayne Martin, young Hollywood wrestling star and former grid and
Oklahoma, opposes Ali Ali of Turkey to headline tonight's: three-bout wrestling. show at the outdoor Sports Arena. Steve Nenoff, back in this territory after an absence of several months, is in the 8:30 opener against Morris Nenoff is out
Softball Notes
Speedway stadium has been chosen as the site of the annual tournament of the Marion County Girls’ Softball tedera- | tion. The event will get under way July 30 on a two-defeats-and-out elimination basis. July 25 is the deadline for entries, according to Roy Galbreath, federation president, who is accepting applications at the Pepsi-Cola bottling plant,
Tonight's-Bush-Callahan. Pactory league schedule at Municipal stadium follows: 7-—International Harvester vs. Bees | 7 Mallory; 8:20—El Lukas-Harold: | 9:40—U. 8. Tires vs. A,
i Lilly vs. R. C.
Tomorrow's schedule of the BushCallahan Wednesday Twilight league is as follows: National Starch vs. Arnett Cleaners at Garfield No. 1; Indiana Bell Telephone vs. South Side A. C. at Brook-
Meet Tonight
of New York City. Jose Manuel of New Orleans and Pat Riley of Chicago meet in the semi-windup, Ali Ali used rough and tricky tactics to dispose of Irish McGee here last week, while Martin was here two weeks ago and drew in a short tussle with the veteran Billy Thom, The Hollywood matman ‘is being rated the best newcomer to local rings for the past several years,
* + . Injuries Not Serious PHOENIXVILLE, Pa., July 17 (U, P.).—Physiclans at Valley Forge General hospital said today thas the injuries Lightweight Champion Cpl. Bob Montgomery suffered in an automobile accident were nos serious and would not affect hig boxing career,
—BASEBALLVICTORY FIELD Indianapolis vs. Toledo TONITE—8:30
For information or reservations 2 Call RI. 4488
side No. 2; Buzz Buckets vs. Shermsan38th at Riverside No, 3.
| AMATEUR NOTES ~~ ieaven “Wille Tasior; “Tofumissns and, 2 and 1.
Dick Heiier, La Porte, defeated Bud Marsee, Mishawaka, 2 up. Robert Rochford, Indianapolis, de-
feated Bob Enochs, Columbus, 2 and 1. Hubert - Hoke, Bloomington, de-
feated Preston Murphy, Hammond, 3 and 2. Richard Kennedy, defeated Jim Rouhselang, Bend, 1 up. Don Orr, Crawfordsville, defeated Duane Reichard, Crawfordsville, 3 and 2. Bob Cleveland, Crown Point, defeated Jack Leer, and 3. Frank Resfoth, Indianapolis, de-
Indianapolis,
{ olis, 6 and 5. Ken Hoy Jr, Indianapolis, defeated Ron Roach, Indianapolis, 4
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