Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1945 — Page 26
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VHE IN DIANAPOLLS T IMES THURSDAY,
Half i In ec TaTion Pennant Ouest *
Failure of Cardinals to Win 'Push-Over League Games May Cost Them the Flag
By CARL LUNDQUIST hits, on a homer by Leon Treade United Press Staff Correspondent way which provided both runs. : NEW YORK, Aug. 16.~Failure of Tommy Holmes took over the the St. Louis Cardinals to win con- major league home run lead, hitting sistently from teams that are two' to make his total 20 as. the pushovers for the rest of the league, Braves beat Cincinnati twice at probably will cost them their fourth 15% 339 | Boston, 10 to 5 and 13 to 3. Homers straight pennant. 54 142 .336|were key blows in both games as Last pight, for example, they Cincinnati's losing streak was ex= had a fine opportunity to gain on tended to 13 games. Morrie Ader= the Cubs in a double-header holt got a first-game Boston homer against the forlorn Phillies, How- while Chuck Workman got his 19th ever, all they could manage to do and Whitey Witelmann got his was to split, leaving them with a second in two days and third for , net loss of a half game against the the season in the second. Boston Cubs, who mauled the Dodgers. at made 31 hits in the two games.
Brooklyn, 20 to 6. Leonard Beats Tigers
The 1945 Cardinal record furnishes baseball with one of its ma- t Bui a Leonard main. jor oddities, Admittedly not up to tn Be ye ae Tins the standard of other Red Bird Aling them for the fourth straight time, 8 to 0, at Detroit to
teams, this one has done hetter than all right against the so-called put Washington within two and a half games of the lead. Four
better clubs in the league, winning 43 and losing only 23 against the errors gave Washington five unearned runs.
Cubs, Dodgers, Giants and Pirates. [But against the three laggards, the The White Sox got fine pitching
AUG. lo, i540
PAGE 5
edskins Pick
Maul Blues i in Both Ends (Of Double Bill—New Hurler Acquired From Boston Club
KANSAS CITY, Mo, Aug. 16—The Indianapolis Indians are rolling again. For confirmation ask the “Kansas City Blues. On Tuesday night the last-place Blues downed the league leaders in ‘both ends of a doubleheader but it was a different story last night. ! The Redskins bounced right back and annexed a twin bill, 5 to 1 and 11 to 6, an accomplishment which enabled the Tribesters to pick up a half game on the runnerup | Brewers, who won a single tilt overithe Tribe when they reach Minnethe Louisville Colonels in Milwau- |apolis. kee. Schecker, 21-year-old Brooklyn, N. The Indians now lead the Brewers Y., resident, won 18 games for Hart-
(ford last season and was with the 1 tw and they byj two and a half games _| Braves until June this year,
have won five games in eight starts gil on the current road trip. And In (First Game) INDIANAPOLIS 19 ‘clashes with the Blues this sea- | H son, the Redskins have annexed 15. | Geragh v Three more tilts remain-in the series out at Ruppert stadium, awe
Br dy : double-header tonight and a single he
encounter tomorrow. Jim Wallace, | Heltzel, ss
Now Pulling Together Loop Session
Involved in Umpire Case |
WASHINGTON, Aug.*16 (U, P)). —The major leagug meeting to work out plans for returning veterans became involved today in=an unexpected complication, the protest of an umpire, who charges he was fired because he sought to-get salary increases for his associates. The ‘umpire, Ernie Stewart, youngest arbiter in the American league, said he held conferences with Baseball Commissioner A. B. (Happy) Chandler over “dissatisfaction” among umpires over salaries paid. Chandler, he said, suggested that he make a survey of salaries and report back to him. League President William Harridge found out about his investigation, Stewart said, and’ ordered him dismissed. “It made him mad and he fired
Major Leaders
“ By UNITED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE
Boston
1p a
H 172 368 De 146 .363 Rosen, 0 Hack, Chicago
Olmo, Brooklyn .. 104 433
AMERICAN LEAGUE G AB R Cucéinello, Chl. .. 89 305 Case, Washington. 92 3M Stirnwelss, N, ¥,.. 101 418 Estalella, Phila, .. 93 Boudreau, Cleve. . 87 36 S——— HOME Holmes, Braves.. 20| Workman, Braves 19 {urowski, Cards. 18 Stephens, Browns 17
Ave, 334 316 313 108 307 308
NS © Lombard pt, 16 Ott, }¢ aan nis” ‘4 Adams, Cardinals.
RUNS BATTED IN Olmo, Dodgers... 97|Holmes, Braves Walker, Dodgers. 96/Cavarretta, Cubs. Adams, Cardinals 91
18
. 88 Ra SR : i 84 Pulling together now for Uncle Sam are these former big league ball players who are performing as bluejackets at Sampson (N. Y.) naval training center. Behind Jim Konstanty, Reds pitcher, stroking the “crew.” is Outfielder Walt Chipple, Senators; southpaw Clem Dreisewerd, Red Sox; shortstop Huck Geary, Pirates; catcher Mickey Owen, Dodgers, and infielders Eddie Yost, Senators, and George
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saved the night by pitching a threehit, 7 to 0 shutout in the second game for his first big league triumph. Elvin (Buster) Adams got
a first game homer for the Cards
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the Tribe ace hurler -and who is {Jiminez, p leading the American association pitchers in ‘percentage with 12 vigtories and only three setbacks, is slated to ‘occupy thé rubber in one of ‘tonight's contests and the other mound assignment by Manager Bill Burwell is uncertain, Jiminez Is Winner
In last night's first game—the seven-inning. attraction — Pedro Jiminez hurled for the Indians and kept eight Kansas City hits scattered. He blanked the Blues after the first stanza although he, was in trouble much of the time and| the Blues had 12 runners stranded. The Cuban received faultless support. The Tribesters tallied two markers in the third, two-in the fourth and one in the sixth, collecting 10 hits. Bob Dill and Joe Mack got two safeties apiece, Dill and Heinie Heltzel doubles and Jiminez helped in the attack by getting one hit and one run batted in. Walter Nowak, Blues’ first sacker, pounded out three blows off Jiminez and one was for three cushions. : Six Runs in First In the second game, the Indians went on the war path in the initial inning and scored six runs on a walk and six hits. It was a grand splurge and the Redskins kept hammering the horsehide all through the struggle. They piled up 17 hits, including a home run by Gil English in the seventh. Tom Earley, who opened on the Tribe mound, was given. an eightrug lead before the Blues were able to cash in at the plate in the run department, The home pastimers finally got to Earley in the fifth for four runs, and when they launched angther rally in the sixth, Wes Flowers relieved Earley and from then on it was more or less of a cake walk for the league pace setterk. The Blues used two pitchers in the firgt contest, Joe Valenzuela and| Bill Davis, and in the nine-inning finale they called upon Orphal, Marleali ‘and Davis. . Heavy Bill in Twin Cities After concluding the long series hee tomorrow, the Indians will depart for the Twin Cities, where they! are booked for five games in three days in Minneapolis, and for five games in four days in St. Paul. The Tribe holds a 10-7 advantage over both clubs.
er ‘has been transferred from the! Hartford. Conn. farm club of the Boston Braves to Indianapolis of the American association, it was an1 ognced. Be Is expect ed | to report to
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88 Cooney, cf Devencen zi, If Ostrowski, Nowak, 1b Kreevich,
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TOLEIS ovvrrvsne 29 3 33 9 Serafini batted for Valenzuela in 6th, Indianapolis ™. ....cccae nine 002 201 0-5 Kansas City . . 100 000 0—1 Runs batted in—Nowak, Mack, Wentzei, Geraghty, Dill, Jiminez. Two-base hits— ill, Heltzel, Ostrowski. Three-base hit —Nowak. Stolen base—Nowak. Sacri fice | —Heltzel. © Left on bases—Indianapolis Kansas City 12. Base on balls—Off Valenzuela 2, Jiminez 4. Strikeduts—By Jiminez 3. Hits—Off Valenzuela 10 in 6 innings, Davis 0 in I. Hjt by pitcher— By Jiminez (Zak). Losing pitcher—Valenzuela. - Umpires—Paparella and Hurley. Time—1: (Second Saute) | INDIANAPOLIS 0 012 100-11 17 | Kansas City 000 041 100— 6 10 Earley, Flowers and Brady; Orphal, Marleau, Davis and Crompton, Danielson, =
A. A. Stars
DICK LANAHAN, St. Paul pitcher —Hurled Saints to 10-to-0 triumph over Toledo, allowing only four hits.
fielder—Batted in three runs on four hits to push Brewers to 11-to-4 triumph over Louisville. HALE SWANSON, Minneapelis
Kels to 3 to 2 triumph over Columbus.
Ex-Champ Takes Treatment for Eye Infection
LONDON, Aug. 15 (U. P).—Tommy Farr, former British heavyweight champion and the only Briton to last 15 rounds with World's Champion Joe Louis, has finished taking penicillin treatments which | & cured his right eye, but he an-
|
nounced he never would return if
fighting. The Brighton pub-keeper was suspended head downwards for .n hour and a half every day for 21 days, while penicillin filtered through his nose and around the infected eye. After the treatments were finished, the 31-year-old fighter turned down several offers to return to boxing. “1 spent a small fortune on saving eyes,” Farr explained,
{in any way.”
Leagues Are Free
To Pay Bonuses
DURHAM, N. C,, Aug. 15 (U. P) —Mainor baseball leagues are free to pay bonuses to any player for sign-
ing a contract, or to give a player aj|
percentage of the sale price of his contract, President W. G. Bramham of the minor leagues has announced. All minor league clubs from class AA to E inclusive now are permitted to pay bonuses to ball players. regardless of whether they are first year players; free agents, or members of the contracting club. Heretofore under minor law, ly AA could pay bonuses, The only exception was that club above class D could pay a bonus to a first year player without previous experience for signing his first pro contract,
league
or class
any
Boston .....
COSTS NO MORE TO DURICAP
NOT RATIONED,
coo~cooM
LOU FLICK, Milwaukee out- |!
pitcher—Fanned six men to hur]
“and 1 S
Fallon, Cardinals.
CHICAGO, Aug. 16 (U. P), — | Many of the athletes who are ready to make the coming decade an=I |other “golden era” were scheduled {today for immediate discharge from the service. After world war I came the greatest decade in sports history, the “roaring twenties,” brimming, with
7.|the exploits of Babe Ruth, Man O'
War, Red Grange, Bobby Jones, Jack Dempsey and Big Bill Tilden. And today, with some of the na- { tion's brightest pre-war stars pre|pared to —doff their service umiforms, a new sporting era was dawning, one which may not match
‘| the “golden era” in individual glory,
but is certain to outdo. it in allround brilliance, The first big-name star to pocket his discharge orders since the surrender of Japan was Lt. Ben Hogdn, the mighty Texas mite who will be mustered out of the AAF Sept. 5. Hundreds of America’s other top athletes, many of thém in the service for almost three years like-Ho-gan, are expecting their discharge instructions momentarily, A tipoff on the approaching mass return to the playing fields are the 526 major league baseball players now in the service. The National Football’ league lists an identical number in service garb, which alone
Big Names Prepared to Doff Uniforms as New Era Dawns
totals 1052 men, not counting the hundreds of collegiate, amateur and other professional stars, Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Bob Feller, Stan Musial, Johnny Vandermeer, Dick Wakefield, Pete Reiser, Johnny Beazley and Charley Keller are a few of the baseball greats who will pick up mitt and ball again. DiMaggio, Feller and Keller possibly may return to their clubs before the end of the 45 season, according to the services’ point systems. There's George McAfee, rated the greatest running back the gridiron ever knew; Bill Daley, Norm Standlee, “Bullet Bill” Osmanski, Glenn Dobbs, Hugh Gallerneau, Sid Luckman and Pat Harder, all ready to don shoulder pads and cleats again. The ring will welcome back Heavyweight Champ Joe Louis, Gus Lesnevich, Billy Conn and Tony Zale, Ed Oliver, Jimmy Demaret and Horton Smith are anxious to grasp a golf club again and glazed ice awaits such hockey stars as the “Kraut line” of Bobby Bauer, Bill Schmitt and Woody Dumart, Goalie Sam lopresti and New York's Colville brothers Neil and Mac. Many of these men, while in service, said, “military life gives athletes a new keenness for competition”—an early prediction of coming performances.
Baseball
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w
Lost
Pet. INDIANAPOLIS $1 | Milwaukee | Louisville 3 JFau)
597 56 D2 59 | Bpeeapolis ‘
| Columbus
A237 Kansas City A08
AMERICAN LEAGUE Pct.
| Detroit : | Sashington .
cago Cleveland {New York | St. Louis . Bosto Philadelphia ?
28 S14 8 S10 S00 A432
NATINONAL LEAGUE Pet C Riekfo oh ouls ...
FH sans 565
Pittsburgh 522 Boston -460 | Cine innati | Philadelphia “73
SCHEDULE TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION All Night Games INDIANAPOLIS at Kansas Cily 7) Louisville at Milwaukee, Toledo at St. Paul Columbus at Minneapolis.
{ {
AMERICAN LEAGUE ew York at St. Louis night), Boston at Chicago (night), Washington at Detroit, Philadelphia at Cleveland (night).
NATIOBAL LEAGUE Fitishurgn at New York (night), hicago at Brooklyn. Cincinnati at Boston (2), St. Louis at Philadelphia.
—
| RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN LEAGUE 22 301 oon—8 11 000 600 000—0 4 Leonard and Ferrell; Tobin, Houtteman and Richards, Swift,
Washington Detroit
(First Game) . 8
. DOO 000 100-1 000 40x-—D
Boston Chicago Woods Tresh,
wt Byrba and Steiner;
(Second Game) 000 000 HH— 0 7 Chicag 0050 20x—-11 12 0 Neill and Holm; Gr rove and Tresh,
500 New York 455 St. Louis . 438
i
n 4 Wilson, 1
nu Dietrich and |
Calendar -
Philadelphia Cleveland Christopher,
020 000 6160-3 13 1 103 310 vox—8 10 © Bowles and Rosar, Astroth;
: Gromek and Hayes.
000 001 300— 4 4 3 030 104 02x—10 15 © Ruffing, Bevens, Page and Robinson; Shirley, Jones and Mancuso. 4 | St. Louis Philadelphia 010 150 10x—% 8 Jurisich, Creel, Crouch, Byerly and Rice; Krause, Karl and Seminick. (Second Game) 210 010 300-7
NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) 000 320 000—5 8 1
"0 Philael his 000 000 000—06 3 2 Gardner and 0’ Dea; Schanz, Monteagudo and Spindel,
«333 —————— Chicago ......c.e000. 502 802 003-20 19 ©
Brooklyn 202 000 002— 6 9 4 Borowy and Gillespie, Livingston; n; Herring, Buker, King and Peacock.
|
(First Game) 600 100 004-11 15 2 . 100 032 102— 9 17 _¥ Gables, Gerheauser Voiselle, Emmerich,
Pittsburgh New York ....... Butcher, Rescigno, and Salkeld, Lopez;
402 Fischer, Feldman, Brewer and Lombardi,
erres., (Second Game) 010 002 000—3 12 1) . 000 000 002-2 4 Zabala, Fischer
Pittsburgh New York | Strincevich ‘and "Lopez: and Kluttz. | ra i (First Game) Cincinnati ... . DOT O01 030— 5 11 Boston 102 230 20x—10 13 Riddle Modak, Libke and Lakeman; Logan, Hendrickson and Masi, Hofferth. (Second Game) 000 000 030— 3 8 1 000 010 5x13 18 © Lisenbee and Unser; Wright
:
| Cincinnati Boston Heusser, {Tne Hofferth
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 200 000 000— 2 § 3 Minneapolis . 300 000 00x— 3 8 | Mazar and Bucha; Swanson and Blazo,
Arirst Game) Toledo . «. 000 000 0-0 4 2 St. Paul ' 013 510 x—10 12 0 Whitehead, Peterson and Lyon; Lanahan and Lewis. (Second Game) . 100 100 010— 3 9. . 100 110 001 4 7 Lamacchia. and Crandall; Tauscher and Narrow, i — 011 000 101— 4 8B Milwaukee 000 500 33x—11 13 Diehl, Widmar, Simonds and Walters; | Lindquist and Stephenson.
|
Toledo ... St. Paul Rudolph, |
Louisville 3 ”
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In Streams, Lake | inch large mouth bass were released fhis week by the Fish and | Game division of the Indiana de-
partment of conservation. Harry Young, hatcheries superintendent, said releases were made in Shakamak lake, the lower and
|
[the Indianapolis Water Co. lake. | Further releases will be made next | month, he said,
me,” Stewart said. “He said I had been discharged for causing dissension and being disloyal.” Chandler said that “the case is something that Harridge will have to decide under baseball rules.” Harridge was indignant, Formerly in A. A.
“If that's the statement he wants to make public then that's perfect with me,” Harridge said. He indicated he would make a statement for the league later, Stewart is a former American association arbiter, Meanwhile, the post-war comsmittee of major and minor league officials recommended that players now" in military service be eligible to play in the world series if their team wins the pennant, provided they return between now and the end of the regular season. The recommendation will be submitted to full vote of the major and minor leagues for adoption by resolution, which is expected without dissent. Chandler said the question of whether the world series will be played wasn't brought up because it was a foregone conclusion that such was the case, “We simply are proceeding on the assumption that the world series will be played,” he said. The recommendations regarding the world series also will apply to the post-season minor league playoffs.
Irish To Conclude
Summer Workouts
SOUTH BEND, Ind., Aug. 16 (U. P.}—Pive weeks of summer workouts will end for Notre Dame football candidates with.a regulation game scrimmage Saturday in the stadium. Only students and Navy trainees attending the university will be admitted.
BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Aug. 16 (U. P.).—Summer practice was over today for Indiana university's foot ball team. The squad wound up its het-weather drills yesterday with an intra-squad game, On Sept. 1, Coach Alvin * (Bo) McMillin will launch twice-a-day drills,
Dartmouth Picks Two Grid Captains
HANOVER, NH, Aug. 14 (U. P). —Meryll Frost and Carl McKinnon, both ex-service men, will serve as co-captains of the 1945 Dartmouth
¢| Bob Steuber; former Chicago Bear
More than 25,000 three and four-|
upper Eel rivers, White river and|®
football team. Frost played with the Indians in 1941 and 1942 before | going into the army air forces, | where he saw duty in the Italian | campaign. McKinnon played one
Signs With Panthers
CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 15 (U, P.). { —The All- America league came up with another backfield star counted on for post-war duty in the established national professional league when the Cleveland Panthers announced the. signing of Halfback
|
and Missouri star, r— reed nee]
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Braves, Reds and Phils, they have won only 23 while losing 22, barely above the .500 mark. In contrast, the Cubs have only an even. break against the Cards, Dodgers, Giants and Pirates with 26 wins and 26 losses. But they have gone to town against the Braves, Reds and Phils with 44 victories and only 11 defeats, a percentage of exactly .800. If there is any hope for the Cards, now six full games behind the Cubs, it should be in the 12 games they have left with the league leaders. St. Louis has won seven out of 10 games to date and might well overtake ‘them if they maintain that pace. The Cards were shaky in losing the opener at Philadelphia, 8 to 5, yielding five runs in the fifth on just one hit. Pitchers Al Jurisich and Jack Cree] walked five batters, and hit another, and a passed ball plus a wild throw by Ray Sanders completed the damage. Four hitless relief innings by Anton Karl protected the victory for Jack Kraus. Rookie Glenn Gardner
Poole Hurls Single Hit Junior Game
Pitcher Eddie Poole’s bid for a no-hit game yesterday against the Blue Ribbon Ice Cream Class B. Junior Baseball league team was thwarted yesterday by George King who doubled in the last inning with two out as the Rhodius' PAL club won 5 to 0. Poole fanned 12 batters. Louis Burge held Burnette Insurance to three hits as Pure Oil triumphed in Class A Southport league playoffs, 4 to 1. The Athletes registered a tri-
Gillespie Hits Two Homers Dodgers.
the homers,
tory against one defeat.
Danny Gardella
and George Kurowski got his fifth homer in six games in the nightcap.
The Cubs made 19 hits, including four homers, in their rout of the Paul Gillespie got two of one with the bases filled, while Heinz Becker and Andy Pafko got the others. Hank Borowy scored his third National league vic-
The Pirates won two at New York, 11 to 9 and 3 to 2 to move with a game of the first division. They chased Bill Voiselle with six runs in the first although the Giants tied it at T-all in the seventh when hit his second homer of the game. Mel Ott also got a Giant homer, but the margin wasn’t enough because pitcher Harry Feldman weakened in the ninth to yield a walk and four hits for four runs. Nick Strincevich outpitched Rookie Adrian Zabala in the second game, giving the Giants only four
from Bill Dietrich and Orval Grove to beat the Red Sox at Chicago, 5 to 1 and 11 to 0. The Sox made 10 hits in the opener and 12 in the nighteap for. their 11th win in 13." ames. Steve Gromek won his 15th game as the recently consistent Cleveland Indians topped the visiting Athe letics, 8 to 3. Les Fleming, res cently back with the Indians, hit his first homer, The Browns sent thes reeling Yankees into the second division with a 10-to-4 defeat, the sixth in a row for the New Yorkers. The Browns made 15 hits, handing Charley Ruffing his first loss since returning from military duty.
Yesterday's Star—Pitcher Ell (Dutch) Leonard of the Senators, who won his fourth straight game
against Detroit, 8 to 0, moving his team within two and a half games of the lead.
umph in the Brookside Class A. league playoffs when Beanblossom | forfeited the tilt. Other games were scheduled to! begin today in tournament play at 1pm
Nagurski Plans Football Comeback -
MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 15 (U, P.). —Bronko Nagurski, 34-year-old former All-American and star with the Chicago Bears, said he would return to football if two operations on his knee joint prove successful. Doctors said Nagurski probably would regain full use of both knees.
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