Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1945 — Page 14

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team’s hits.

bent: Night”

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Blues to Be Next Opponents

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By EDDIE ASH

Times Sports Editor

s six-game series with the Columbus Red | Victory field tonight and it will be observed night with a liberal part of the receipts going

to receive the Indians in the Saturday night. series now stands three to two ‘the Tribe's favors ane is an open date on the schedule and its next foe

tonight, will be the last- Rebel,

Kansas City Blues who got ‘ Jast night and defeated the ts in St. Paul in both ends of a deuble-header. The Blues are to open a four-game series here Friday. So far, in the current home stand, the Indians have won 12 and lost three and they still are out in front in the league race by a full game over the. Milwaukee Brewers, who

bawed to the Millers at Minneapolis |p

lage night. : Veteran Root Shines Old Charlie Root stood the Indiins on their collective heads last night and the Red Birds won, 4 to 1. "Although the fans hated to see # Tribesters lose, they had to give créilit to the 46-year-old manager- | pifeher of the Red Birds. The former Chicago Cub star held our lo-

f

open on the! Tribe rubber and Roman,

Columbus mound assignment. Bruns- » - » | Box Score ! Tomes,

COLUMBUS AB R | Sturdy. TY cLain,’ If

5 ws 3 3 3 . % Filipowicz, of 4 Huston, 3b ...

Young, 2b Root, p ..

| DOOD ree D Sl ono uownl Slouewensanud | eee OSE w ol ovcasoasal

Totals

=

INDIANAPOLI AB Geraghty Parks, It . Mack, 1b . English, 3b .. Wentzel, of .

wl ccoecococoa~am aleosrnovomonpll 2 al oceomunevuncal =! DR] ODP DOND wl ococovceomwoan

8 POoOmNpWwWwe» a

Detore batted for Hutchinson in 8th. Wilkie ran for Detore in 8th. Columbus 902 000 011-4 INDIANAPOLIS Runs batted Filipowicz, Sturdy Three-base hit—Brady. Sacrifices—Huston,

in—Rebel, Pratt,

Home run—Par

Hutchinson to Geraghty to Mack, English |

cal league leaders to six blows and Tribe's lone run was a homer by! Parks in the fourth. Pitching in the. stifling heat, the ;

veteran Root made some of the | son, 8 in 8 innings: Jiminesz, 2 fv 1 Bnuing |

vounger. Indians eat out of his; glove and only three Tribesters were left on base. Prior to the game, Charlie didn't think he could make

A. A. Stars

GEORGE A SAVINO, Minneapolis cattcher—Hit four-run homer in eighth inning as Millers beat Brewers, 6-3, >

REX CECIL, Louisville pitcher— Panned eight and scattered eight hits as Colonels trimmed Mud Hens, 8-1. In addition, he got two of his

"EDSON BAHR, Kansas City pitcher—Drove in winning run stopped Saints with five hits to win segond game, 1-0, after Blues also had won 7-inning opener, 2-0.

a —-

it in heat and sent a younger hurler

ta be about the coolest player in the ‘park through the ning rounds. Hutchinson Tries Ira Hutchinson, thé veteran pitcher obtained from the Boston Braves in the Ed Wright deal, made a courageous effort to come through bat you've got to get runs to win, d he didn’t get. them. was an interesting contest for crowd of 4180. Five double plays were completed . three by the| vigitors. The Red Birds tallied two markers in the third on three hits and a walk, and in the eighth they a run on two hits, a sacrifice apd a walk. The visitors’ last marker was chalked up in the ninth off Pedro Jiminez on two hits and two sacrifices, one a squeeze play. On Monday night, the Indians played the bunt game to the limit and last night Pitcher-Manager ~ Rpot of the Birds employed the sdme tactics and the visitors were credited with four sacrifices.

| dianapolis 3

to Mack, “Sturdy to Young. Young to { Sturdy. Left on bases—Columbus 8 In-| Base on balls—Off Hutchin- | Root 1. Struck out—By. Hutchinson | by Rot 4, Jiminez 1. Hits—Off Hutchin-!}

| Losing pitcher—Hutchinson Umpire:

Prince, Moore and Peters. Time—1:45.

infield. Parks got two of the Tribe's six safeties. Jack Sturdy, firstsacker, was the Birds’ leading hitter with three. Art Rebel, Columbus right-fielder, who hit a single and a double last night, was called up today by the St, Louis Cardinals, the Columbus club's parent club. He bats lefthanded. Tribe Manager Bill Burwell, who has joined the local 40 & 8 club of

Parks, | Two-base hits—Rgbel | |

McLain, Root, Sturdy. Double plays—Tomes to Young to Sturdy !

Bob Sass will he at one of the outfield posts when his Caterpillar Diesels of Peoria, IIL, clash with the local Kingan Knights in softball games “at Municipal stadium tomerrew and Friday nights. The Diesels were 1943 Illinois: champions and runnersup in 1944. The Caterpillar Dieselettes, girls’ state champions of Illineis will follow the men’s team, being scheduled for games against Curtiss-Wright girls on Saturday and Sunday nights.

Portland Girl Is Meet Medalist

CHICAGO, July 25 Carol (Babe) Freese of Portland, {Ore,, today: held medal honors in | {the All-American Women's Open | {golf tourney.

She came within a stroke of tying |

*~ ITam O’Shanter’s course record yesterday with 37-36—73. This was one shot better than the card of Peggy Kirk of Findlay, O Some 90 of the nation's leading pros sought 40 places in the men’s open today.

Pick Kingan Foe Tonight

| of Miss Mary

(U. P.3}.—|

and|, ve to start throwing again in the

the American Legion, said that old Charlie Roots twirling last night truly was the cat’s whiskers. Burwell, 49, a world war I veteran, said, “Well, you never can tell. I might

event of a pinch.” But at the moment, the Indians are in a choice spot. They are out in front and have 18 games remaining in the current home stand.

Martin, Partner Win Tag Match

The Manufacturers league team that faces Kingan Reliables in the top game of the annual amateur day baseball -program--probably willbe decided through the toss of a coin at tonight's meeting of the amateur association in city hall . Through a victory over LukasHarold in a postponed game, played last night, P. R. Mallory moved into a tie with Atkins Saws for the leading position in the loop. Allison’s, now in second place, has an opportunity to make it a three-way tie through a victory over U. S. Tires, who they play at Riverside tonight. The game is part of Sunday's postponed twin-

Wayne Martin, Hollywood, and Pat Riley of Chicago teamed up at

the Sports Arena last night to de:

feat Steve Nenoff. “Russian strong- | man,” and his running mate, Mary tino Angele of Akron, O. in the tag-team match that featured - a mat card staged before a I

lerowd. . Approximately 600 grap- |

pling followers were turned away. Riley grabbed -an early advantage

for his team by gaining the first |

fall in 18 minutes with a toe hold |

with an arm stretch after 12 min-| utes of the second session. Martin then clinched the issue by downinz Angelo after 15 minutes of the final with a leg breaker. In a supporting bout, Balk Estes] of Hammond threw Angelo Martinelli of Boston with a jack-knife |

The Indians had 18 assists and the fans saw plenty of action on the

hold after 22 minutes.

Baseball Calendar

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

INDIANAPOLIS Milwaukee Louisville ... ft. Paul .. Toledo Minneapolis ... Columbus Kansas City .......c0cuns

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Chicago St. Louis ... Brooklyn ... Pittsburgh .. New York Dinginyay

511 | “ass Ae | 269

AMERICAN LEAGUE | Pet Detroit 566 | Washington 530 Chicago 51s | Boston carp hnEmTaNARR IES SIs PR Sie 506 Ase 366

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SCHEDULE TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (All Games at Night) Columbus at INDIANAPOLIS, 8:30. Toledo at Louisville. Milwaukee at Minneapolis, Kansas City at St, Paul. NATIONAL LEAGUE No games scheduled.

AMERICAN LEAGLE Ne games scheduled.

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Milwaukee 4

Minneapolis

Speer and Stephenson; Webb and Serine

NATIONAL | LEAGUE 000 100 002 3 | Chicago 200 000 24x— 8 : Barrett, Sproull Chapman and plat)

{ Chipman and Gillespie.

022; 200 H0— 6 11 L200 000 200 4 Adams and’ Kluttz;: Fox,

New York . 0 Feldman, E

213 000 000 6 13 100 140 001 7 10 Gregg. Buker and Sandlock, rrett Docking and Rice, O'Dea

| St. Louis |

Andrews; Ba |

| (Eleven Innings) | Boston 022 000 120 WM 5 | Pittsburgh 010 000 031 018" 9 Javery, Andrews, Hendrickson and Hof- | terth; Butcher, Sewell, Cucurullo, Gables | and Salkeld.

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AMERICAN 1. LEAGU E . coo 000 000 000— 0 «400 110 00x— 6 Appleton, Zoldak Mancuso; O'Neill and Holm, -~

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but matters were brought to even| terms when Nenoff nabbed Riley |

] |was scheduled to

bill. One of the first-place teams will face the Reliables and one will take ‘on the second-place Municipal team. Who the runnerup in the Munici-

pal will be also is undecided at pres-

ent. The standings as of midnight tonight will determine who plays, and Bob Elliott's De Wolf News now is second. However, Larry Stipich’s Leonard Cleaners are scheduled to {face Williams Tool & Engineering lat Garfield this evening and a victory for Larry's boys would give them a tie with De Wolf for the | runnerup spot.

Score Five in Eighth In last night's tilt, Mallory scored jonce in the first, once in the third land twice in the ninth. Lukas > |matched those runs, but was unable to even the winner's five-run| splurge in the eighth that proved | [the margin of victory. Joe Lease {and Ralph Gatti held the losers to| | four safeties. Announcement was made today | that the 40 & 8 teanr of the Municipal league had disbanded for! the season. The team ‘was in last place in the loop, having lost all of the eight games it played.—B. H.

'Banta and Fulton Advance in Meet

Maurice Banta defeated { Teeguarden yesterday at { side in the fourth day of play in {the city parks tennis tournament. 16-2, 6-1, while W. P. Fulton Jr eliminated Jack Yule, 6-2, 5-7, 7-5, in a 32-game contest. These were | men’s division matches. As the tourney moves into the semi-finals this afternoon Banta] play Roger} { Hooker and Fulton to face mond Von Spreckelsen.

Joe

Brook- |

Field Pared To. Quartet in Title Tourney

By HARVEY HARRIS Renewal of the rivalry between Miss Dorothy Ellis, defending cham pion, and Miss Elizabeth Dunn, eight

play in the 22d Indiana women's golf tourney at Meridian Hills to-

morrow. Miss Ellis, on her home course, advanced with a 6 and 4 conquest ,. Highland. Miss Dunn, playing. from Speedway, gained the round of four by defeat-| ing Mrs, Robert Laycock, Pleasant! Run, 5 and 4 Youthful _ Alice O'Neal of Woodstock, the 18-year-old Rollins col-| lege student and medalist, went into the semi-finals by winning from Mrs. E. D. Anderson of Anderson, 4 and 3.

| Anderson y.ovsoas:-

Dunn Laycock Dunn | Layeock

{ THURSDAY PAIRINGS 9 a. m.—0O'Neal vs. Shorb.

9: 15—Ellis-vs. Dunn.

Her opponent tomorrow will be Mrs. Calvert Shorb, south Bend city titleholder, who won from Carolyn Pickering of Highland, the golfing newspaper writer, 1 up, in a close match, Matches Par Miss Ellis. matched par in her outward trip against Miss Gorham, shooting consistently and {putting well. She went one down when thé’ Highland linkswoman sank a 10-foot putt for a birdie on No. 4 but squared the match on the next Hole with a par when her opponent needed an extra shot. in The Manual teacher won the next four holes on the out nine to take a 4 up lead at the turn, dropping an 8-foot putt for a birdie on the eighth green. Miss Dunn won the third hole with a par when Mrs. Laycock had a bogey and also toog No. 5 when the Pleasant Run woman was short with her second shot— a failing which dogged her all of the round. Holes 21-Foot Putt

The former champion holed a 21-foot putt for a birdie on No. 9 to go 2 up. Thef halved the first hole on the inward trip but Miss Dunn took the next with a 5 when Mrs. Laycock shot into three traps. No. 12 was halved but Miss Dunn won the next hole in par and ran out the match by sinking a 15foot uphill putt on No. 14. : Miss O'Neal and Mrs. Anderson virtually , matched strokes on the first nine in which they finished all even, but the young Woodstock star shot brilliantly as they rounded the turn, firing three birdies at {the Anderson woman. She dropped an 8-foot putt on No. 10 and followed that with a 20-yard chip-in shot on the next hole. Another 8-footer gave her No. 12 and the third birdie came on No. 13 with a 3-foot putt to énd the match. | Round Turn Even Mrs. Shorb and Mrs. Pickering rounded the turn all even and with | identical 41 medal scores. The { Highland girl chipped only a few inches from the pin on No. 8 to get a birdie and go 1 up, but her upstate opponent squared, things on No. 9 by also eoming up with a

| putt. | The first two holes of the clubhouse trek were ‘halved, but the | South ‘Bend woman won No. 12 by | sinkin 1g a-12-foot putt. Miss Pick- | ering took the next when Mrs. Shorb’s third shot fell into the | water. The next four holes were | halved, then Mrs. Shorb won on No. 18 when her opponent “pushed” her drive and required an extra!

shot to reach the carpet. : Officers of the organization for the! Ray-| coming year are, in addition to the " Ire-election of Miss Ellis, Mrs. Shorb,

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THE INDI NATOLIS TIMES

times titlist, was set for semi-final|

WEDNESDAY, JULY %, 1945

Defending Champ Re-Elected Golf Association Head

Dorothy Ellis , . . re-elected I. W. G. A, president, advanced in defense of her Yitle today,

from the pennant.

American Loop Race Turns Into ‘Retreat’ From Pennant

By CARL LUNDQUIST, United Press Staff Correspondent ‘NEW YORK, July 25.—~You'd think it was the last place Athletics that the so-called American league contenders were trying to catch these days in a race that seems to be developing into a‘ full “retreat”

Take the pace-setting Detroit Tigers. They left home on an Eastern

Fight Show Is Called Off

The Sports Arena will be dark tomorrow night. Matchmaker Lloyd Carter of the Hercules A. C. had lined up what promised to be an interesting scrap between Colion Chaney, Indian apolis heavy, and Clarence Brown of Detroit. Brown was a one-time sparmate of Champion Joe Louis and has licked some pretty good boys. It looked like a real test for Chaney: Monday, Chaney told Carter he had sprained his back and couldn’s

keep the date with Brown.

The promoter attempted to line up Buddy Walker of Columbus, O,

as a replacement yesterday, but the match couldnt be arranged on

road trip four and a half games in front and won only four games,

losing seven and tying one. That they still are three full games in front is evidence of the backward trend in effect among the other clubs. The second-place Washington Senators came home after one of the most successful road trips in years and promptly hit a mediocre stride, winning six and losing seven. They climaxed the stand last night by dropping their third straight game to the Cleveland Indians, 4 to 0. Fire-Baller Allie Reynolds pitched .a seven-hitter for - Cleveland. Lambert (Dutch) Meyer paced the 11-hit Indian attack off Emil (Dutch) Leonard. Browns Shut Out

The St. Louis Browns, who picked

swing, fell out of the first division after squeezing in for a day. They lost a 6-to-0 shutout at Boston. Emmett O'Neill pitched a four-hit-

up a home run pitch to Frank Mc-

| up some ground on their eastern | Oth | after singling.

ter. Sigmund Jakucki, usually a control artist, lost mainly because! of his wildness.

league contenders have done little better, but the surprise team of the outfit is the cellar-dwelling Philadelphia crew, which has eight victories, three defeats and two ties in its home stand for the best record -in the circuit during the period. ‘Giants Beat Redlegs The Cubs, with Southpaw Bob Chipman back in harness, beat the Phillies at Chicago, 8 to 3, for their 24th victory in 31 games against

vice president; Mrs. Louis Randle, Indianapolis, secretary - treasurer, and Mrs. Robert Eager, Lafayette, representative, . Terre Haute was named to replace

| as representative Mrs. Frank Brug-

“The other so-called American | the ninth to score Marty Marion

Mrs. W. N. Cox of’

eastern teams since JGne 27. Bill Nicholson's three-run triple was the key blow for Chipman in his first appearance since June 20. The win kept Chicago's four and a ~half game ledd in the National intact. The Giants remained ahead of the Reds in fifth place in the National league, winning, 6 to 4, at Cincinnati. Harry Feldman served

Cormick which accounted for two Red runs, but after that happened in the second, he had little trouble. He also made two hits. . The Pirates won their fifth game in six from the Braves, 6 to 5; in 11- innings. Veteran Jackie Saltzgaver scored the tying run in the In the 11th he came across with the winning | run on a long. fly after leading off | with a triple. Relief Pitcher Ken Gables won his seventh game without a defeat. Augie Bergamo of the Cards {broke a second place tie with the | Brooklyn Dodgers by singling in

a T-to-6 victory. It was his third straight hit and enabled the Birds to climax an uphill battle which found them behind, 6 to 3,| at one time, No other games were scheduled,

Th A Em HANS

TIRES ® BATTERIES ACCESSORIES ETHYL GASOLINE

RECAPPING RINBL LE CORNERS

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.| birdie when she canned a 5-foot | N€r of South Bend whose two-year | term expired.

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such short notice.

Carter reluctantly called off the show.

Post Golf, Tennis Teams Re-matched

Fort Harrison's golf and tennis teams will play return matches with Camp Atterbury, Aug. 3, at Atterbury. The Harrison golf squad defeated Atterbury 16 to 11, and the two tennis . teams tied in meets here recently.

Dutch Champion Signed For Scrap

BRISBANE, Australia, July 25 (U.

{P.).~Bep Van Klaveren, Dutch box-

ing champion serving in the U. 8. army, will“ fight “Australian welterweight Topnmy Burns in Brisbane stadium Sept. 14. The match will be one of two pre-

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BASEBALLVICTORY FIELD TONIGHT, 8:30 P. M: indianapolis vs. Columbus

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