Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1945 — Page 26
=
* Jeading Milwaukee Brewers who di-
shy
Fans Expected To
Redskins Bow [Manual Gridders Try Equipment for Siz
Again as Root Rations Hits
COLUMBUS, O, Aug. 30.—~The Indianapolis Indians lost another contest last night but they made it close and didn't surrender until the eighth inning when the last-place Columbus Red Birds pushed a runner around the sacks and won, 3tod 1t was the Tribesters’ ninth
straight defeat and they fell ansther half game behind the league
vided a double-header at Minne
To Ww. . Pet. GB Play Mil... 84 sw... Ind., 79 568 4'3 Lou... 1 561 512 St. P. 69 7 507 13 apolis. And the Redskins’ other close rival, the third-place Lovuisville Colonels, lost to the Mud Hens at Toledo. i Charlie Root, Columbus’ 46-year-old manager, flipped ‘em up for the | AAG Red Birds in the series opener last | night and held the Indians to four |
rt eni e wr autv Floyd Meets 4g Veteran Line
s Zoo | It was the annual Columbus | By HARVEY HARRIS | Manual football fans are looking
Night out at the Red Bird stadium forward to one of the best football
Root Fans Five
and a crowd of 3936 was on hand | to see the Birds snap a five-game seasons the school has had in many losing streak. The home pastimers collected eight hits off Pedro|” 1. reac0n for this bright outJiminez, {look is a combination of burly maOld Charlie Root struck out five terial and a new coach. Tribesters and didn't issue a single| Last year Manual was reputed to base on balls. Two errors on the have had the best line in -Indianap-
Columbus infield helped the Indians olis. Most of the boys who com- |
to their first run in the second {prised this unit are back in school stanza. The run was registered on again this fall. They're tougher a double steal by Stan Wentzel and and wiser for their varsity exHeinie Heltzel, the former scoring. perience. 5 ; The Indians’ other marker was| Walter Floyd, recently appointed chalked up in the sixth on a triple |New grid pilot at Manual, comes to by Bob Dill who tallied after the the school with faith and knowcatch on Artie Park’s long fly. Dill | ledge. He has faith in that line got two of the Tribe's safeties. jand the football wisdom necessary : ’ {to develop a comparatively inexThe Birds registered two runs in| rienced backfield the fifth on three hits, a walk, a? : . steal and a scoring fly. The en-| Floyd Meets Team counter was tied at 2-all when the! Yesterday, Floyd saw 55 of the Birds batted in the eighth. Manual aspirants for the first time | when they reported for their uniHazen Doubles forms. The team will start its first After one down Vaughn Hazen practice sessions Saturday. | doubled and scored after two down| Six lettermen comprise the] on Warren Huston's single—and nucleus of this year’s squad which] that was the winning run. The will open its season Sept. 21 in a| Birds have now defeated the In-/night game at Columbus. Heading! dians nine times in 17 clashes this the list of candidates ure Tom season. Cross. junior tackle; Melvin Dilk, In the second of the series tonight senior center; Ray Shadday, senior Jim Wallace, the st"~ southpaw, is center; ' Wayne Morical, senior slated to pitch for Indians and |3uard; Arvel Ringham, senior guard, Roman Brunswick tur the tail- and Ernie Zeiner, senior end. enders. | Around these returnees ~ Floyd On the long road trip the Indians [vil try to build a combination for] have dropped 16 games while win-| Wingback style of play and T-|
. ning eight. Five games remain to | formation for use against possibly |
lumbus and three in Toledo before | had to encounter in 10 years.
See AILStar Football Batt
e
a
3 Hoosier [Players in Starting List
Times Special CHICAGO, Aug. 30.~It's kick-off time in the Windy City, and approximately 90,000 grid fans will be on hand at Soldiers’ field tonight when the play-for-pay Green Bay Packers, National Pro.league champions, meet the College All-Stars. It's the 12th attraction in the charity series in whith collegiate stars from all sections of the country take on the professionals, Choice PROBABLE LINEUPS Green Bay : All-Stars Don Hutson . Ted Cook (Ala)
TR
_ THURSDAY, AUG. 30, 1945
le Tonight
Meets Chaney
Buford Ray .T. Bob Zimny (Ind.) Bill Kuusisto LG. DD, Tassos (T.A.&M.) Charles Brock T. Warrington (Au.) C. Goldenberg .G. D. Barwegan (Pur.) Paul Berezeny . Bill Willis (Oh, St.) Joel Mason . Bill Huber (N., Dm.)
Larry Craig Ch. Mitchell (Tulsa)
Irv Comp h Chas. Trippi (Ga.) Lou Brock .H. Ed Shedlosky (Tul) Ted Fritsch F.B. B. Kennedy (W, St.) |
seats for tonight's event were sold out long, ago and the $6 ducats! were the first snapped up. All that remained unsold today were some $1.20 seats. The spectacle is sponsored and staged by the Chicago Tribune and all re|ceipts above expenses are donated Ito war charities. Head coach of the All-Stars fis {Bernie Bierman, University of [Minnesota. Curly Lambeau is the, {master mind of the Packers. The professionals rule a slight favorite | in the betting. On the Air The kick-off is set for 8:30 when | 239 stations of the Mutual Broad-| casting Co., go on the air. The entire game also will be broadcast by | short wave to America’s servicemen | throughout the world. Three Hoosier college players are | slated in the Stars’ starting lineup. | They are Bob Zimny, Indiana, tackle; Dick Barwegan, Purdue, guard, and Bill Huber, Notre Dame, | end. Other Hoosier gridders who are members of the college squad are Corwin Clatt, Notre Dame, and John Tavener, J. C. Coffee, Jim Dewar and Ed Bell, al] of Indiana university, and Nick Scollard of St. {Joseph's college and Indianapolis. { Chicago's hotels are filled with
It was equipment time yesterday at Delavan Smith athletic out-of-town visitors and’ national | field as this group of Manual lettermen sized up the clothing situa. tion in preparation for the team’s first workout of the season Satur. day. Above (left to right), Ernie Zelner, end; Wayne: Morical, guard; Tom Cross, tackle, and Ray Shadday, center. Below, check. ing out part of the football toggery was Manual's new mentor,
Walt Floyd,
who is seeing that Melvin Dilk, center, doesn't get
his clothes mixed with those of Arvel Ringham, guard.
{ fundamentals the next two weeks.
believer in co else.
Although he’s not about that line, he will admit that |
he has one of
{walls in the ci [160 pounds.
Floyd, who succeeds the late Clarence Bruness, will try to combine the skill his players attained under the former Manual coach's
and calisthenics for, Floyd is a firm nditioning above all
saying much Following the Columbus encounthe biggest forward | ter, Manual will oppose Howe, Sept. ty. His boys average]
i schedule is: Oct. 5, Washington;
| The backfield will be composed Oct. 12, at Southport (night); Oct. be played on the road, two in Co- | the toughest opposition Manual has|for the most part of boys who |19, at Tech; Oct. 24, at Broad Rip-
{played freshman and reserve foot-|ple; Nov. 2, Shortridge, and Nov the Tribesters return home to meet| The team will concentrate on|ball. They lack varsity experience. 9, Cathedral.
Louisville in a night double-header | on Labor day. The Indians now trail Milwaukee by 4; games and are one game ahead of Louisville.
—
Box Score
INDIANAPOLIS AB Shemo, 2b .......... 4 Dill, rf ‘es ih Parks. If .... oih Mack, 1b woh Brady, ¢ . 1 Wentzel, cf English, 3b Heltzel, ss Jiminez, p
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ' Pet. Milwaukee ' L600 {INDJANAPOLIS .......... S68 | Louisville 7 h +361 {St, Paul : j ANG Minneapolis ... ......... 66 i A Toledo A614 g Kansas City A19 o Columbus A03
AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Pet 0 Delrois . Re Hy 3 0 Wasanington .. . 69 0 St, Louis Etre eaanns 65 0/New York . # 61 0 Cleveland 2 wo: Chicaga . sassannsaris 0’ Boston deni eesin . AR Philadelphia or 3%
Soo~Po9~oN I NAD DO =D mw
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“3 COLUMBU Hazen, of AB | NATIONAL LEAGUE Sturdy, 1b ... 0 Won Huston, 2b . Bucha, « . . Bartosch, rf ..hee... 1 McLafi, If Townes, s8 Rhawn, 3b ..
nook
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0 CHIRARD +..2 saree ivssrnrn 1B o St. Louis .... i o Brooklyn .... o New York ... » | Pittsburgh o Boston 0 Cincinnati _. Philadelphia
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Totals 2) INDIANAPOLIS ........c00. 010 001 000—2 Columbus ................. 000 020 01x—3| Rurs batted in—Rhawn, Hazen, Parks, | Huston Two-base hits—Parks, Hazen. | Three-base hit—Dill. Stolen bases—Went- | 2el, Heltzel, Hazen, McClain. Double plans) —8hemo to Heltzel to Mack, English to Shemo t. Mack. Left on bases—Indian-| apolis 4, Columbus 3. Base on balls—Oft Jiminez 1. Btrikeouts—By Root 5, Jiminez fs Mpires--Paparells and Hurley, Time— 1:25,
SCHEDULE TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Columbus (night Louisville at Tolado (night) Milwaukee at Minneapolis (night), Kansas City at St, Paul AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston at New York. Cleveland at Chicago Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGLE { Chicago at Pittsburgh. { Only game scheduled - RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Louisville 010 001 OHO 1 TONIGHT ~— 8:00 — Moonlite at Toledo 110 000 03x—% 12° | Moonlite alleys. | Cecil, Widmar, Simonds, Humphries and TODAY —10 a. m.—Stevens Mortuary at| Walters; Lamacchia and Crandall, Dezelan alleys. (Openings for two teams.) ————— TONIGHT —7:30—Koerner Optical mixed! (First game; 7 innings) at Sport bowl. (For information call GA- Kansas City 100 010 6-2 5 0 5336.) §t. Paul 200 00% x5 6 0 TONIGHY «— 8:30 — Speedway ladies at! Valenzuela and Crompton; Weaver and Speedway alleys. (League to roll Monday |Ramek, Lewis nights, Openings for teams.) TOMORROW — 8:30 — West Indianapolis | Kansas City Business Men at Speedway alleys. (Open-|Si. Paul ings for teams—835 scratch.) ——————————————————
BOWLING MEETINGS
TONIGHT--7:30—Eagles ladies auxiliary at Hotel Antlers alleys.
Ma jor
(Second Game)
000 206 000-2 8’ 1 000 030 02x35 7 0 Orphal and Danielson: Sunkel and Lewis
mus | rolled right aoe
AY iam
Baseball Calendar
(First Game)
Milwaukee Minneapolis Acosta and Pad
(Second Game)
Milwaukee
Minneapolis . Pyle and Stephenson; Lucier and Savino
AMERICAN
(Fi Washington Philadelphia
Leonard, Haéfn
and George, Rosa
(Second Game) 3 Washington
Philadelphia
Wolff and Guerra;
and Rosar,
) Boston
New York
‘Jockey Dies
{Racing officials were expected to make a full investigation today into 2 the death of Jockev J. S. Harrison who was killed whea his mount,
101 020 020—6 9 . 031 000 000—4 3 den; Kash and Blazo,
000 610 6—1 9 6 od 20 03x—5 ¥0 020 03x—3 8 1 on him in a steeplechase race at Belmont park yesterday. Harrison
died of ,a fractured skull,
.EAGUE rst Game)
FE STUBBLE TROUBLE?
L000 100 000 V 4 1 NG . 000 000 000—0 4 ©
001 000 HHO—1 1 2 000 000 11x—2 12 1
Marchildon, Berry
PIN CUSHION
Johnson and Holm: Zuber and Garbark. KE. VU
5 Detroit 5 St. Louis
Mueller, Bento
004 000 000-4 9 2! 110 200 01x—5 8 1]
n and Swift; Jakueki,|
Muncrief and M: ncuse.
Cleveland at Chicago, postponed.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Chicago Pittsburgh Prim, Strincevieh and 1 St. Louis Cincinnaty Donnelly, Burk ennedy and Lak I'hiladelphia Brooklyn Barrett and Spi
Only games se
| rm QUT -OF - PAWN ny |
sus #1023 |
SUITS
Nm—03 8
Vandenberg and Rice,
® Fairbanks
100 000 0012 000 000 H600—0 9 1 Williams; Lopez. i 000 001 H00—1 8 71| 101 000 10x—3 16 © hardt and O'Dea, eman 010 M00 00-1 R’ 001 000 01x—2 5 0 ndel; Davis and Sandlock |
Rice; |
heduled,
BLADE AT ANY PRICE! JEWELRY
ik 18 for 2S
+ WASH, STo/ | @u944, CONSOLIDATED RAZOR BLADE CO. INE
An eight degrees
Law and ’ Organiza
Registrat
INDIANAPOLIS EVENING DIVISION
* Indiana University School of Law
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24
Admission requirements, two full years of college work. . . . Courses offered in Fall Semester: Contracts, Introduction to
Labor Law, Procedure, Private Corporations, Taxation, Trade Regulations, and Trusts. . .
Indiana University School of Law.
1346 North ‘Delaware
of
Announces Opening of
FALL SEMESTER, °
semester curriculum leading .to LL.B. and J. D. an. approved by American Bar Association , . ,
the Judicial Process, Use of Materials of Law, Business tions, Conflict of Law, «Evidence, Future Interests,
. Classes, 6 to 8:15 P. M. .. , lon, Sept. 24 and 25.
For Particulars, Call or Write
va ~~ RL 2808
strategy along with his innovations. |
Grey Hood, missed a jump and fell
interest in the game is reflected by | the number of college and,:high | (school coaches assembied here from many parts of the nation. A 200- | piece band will perform between halves.
Teams Matched For 3d Round | City Series Tilts |
Drawings for the third round games of the annual city amateur |paseball tournament were made in a
28. at home. The remainder of the | meeting of the Indianapolis Ama- tomorrow and Saturday.
|teur Baseball association in City | hall last night. 1 Ft. Harrison and Leonard Clean- | fers will clash on Riverside No. 2.
‘| With the tourney now operaiing on ing his car daily the past week at
{the two defeat elimination basis, one lof the aggregations will be ousted. { | The tournament's four undefeated |
NEW YORK. Aug. 30 (U. P)— | teams were matched, P. R. Mallory morrow’s entry list is already equal
being Scheduled to face Allison’s on | Riverside No. 1 while Gold Medal] | Beer and Kingan Reliables, defendling champs, meet at Rhodius. All ames are carded at 2:30.
| weights:
Blended Whisky, 86 Proof. he straight whiskies in this product are 51 months of more = old. 40% “straight whiskies) 60% grain neutral spirits.
' Clayton Worlds
A 30-round mitt bill topped by a heavyweight clash slated for 10 heats will feature boxing tonight at the outdoor Sports Arena with supporting battles billed for six, five and four rounds completing a lineup of five scraps. The featured attraction will pit 190-pound Colion Chaney, fast stepping Indianapolis product, against Clayton Worlds, left jab specialist from Chicago who made his first start here recently and handed
Return of Tommy Bridges
Could Be Real Shot in Arm
To Pennant Chances of Tigers
By CARL LUNDQUIST United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—If Tommy Bridges, the little guy with the great big curve ball is in good shape, what a sight it will be for Detroit Tiger Manager Steve O'Neilly'the day he starts taking his regular turn
on the mound. Nothing could be
a bigger shot-in-the-arm to their
pennant chances unless slugger Dick Wakefield popped up from the navy. The Tigers are better situated for pitchers than they were a year
ago when they lost the pennant on the last day of the season. Instead of just Dizzy Trout and Hal Newhouser they have Al Benton, one of the league's top percentage pitchers. However, Benton isn't winning now and that hurts. O'Neill used him in a different role at St. Louis last night, put-| ting him in to relieve starter Les Mueller in the third. The Browns | got to him quickly for two runs in| the fourth, and scored another in| the eighth to win, 5 to 4. Gene| Moore singled home Don Gutte-| ridge in the eighth with the de-| ciding run, Senators, A's Split Washington divided with the! Athletics at Philadelphia but re- | duced Detroit's lead to a single! game. The Senators got two un- | earned runs in the eighth to win |
Clarence Brown, highly regarded | ‘he opener, 3 to 2, when Catcher Detroit heavy, a ten-round, pasting | Charley George of the A's made
The complete card follows:
Main event—10 rounds—heavyClayton Worlds, 205, Chicago, vs. Colion Chaney, 190, Indianapolis.
Semi-windup—6 rounds— junior lightweights: Ted Christie, Chicago, vs. Herman Mills, Chicago.
Prelim — 5 rounds — welterweights: Jimmy Martin, Chicago, vs, Tiger Kiggins, Indianapolis.
Prelim — 5 rounds — middleweights: Kid Bartley, Indianapolis, vs, Mike McKessick, Indianapolis.
Prelim—4 rounds—light-heavy-weights: Vie Hutton, Terre Haute, vs. Jack Pumphrey, Chiacgo.
The official weigh in for all fighters slated for action on tonight's card will be conducted this afternoon at 2 o'clock at the State Athletic commission offices in the statehouse. Pumphrey, who meets Hutton in the opening bout scheduled for 8:30 o'clock, is the only newcomes on tonight's bill.
¥
Hartley Will Pilot
Racer Tomorrow
Ted Hartley, the midget racer pilot from Roafioke, who dashed to first place in both feature events at the Indianapolis Speedrome last week-end, will bid for additional honors again at the Eastside oval
The Speedrome’s 1942 champion, “Lucky” Purnell, who escaped without a scratch when his racer turned over Saturday night, has been test-
the Kitley avenue track. General Manager Ted Everroade announced this morning that to-
to last week's fleld when 26 drivers competed. The roster may reach 30 by the time trials for Friday's program opens, Everroade indicated.
two errors on one play at the plate. Phil Marchildon started his first! game since returning to the A's | from a German prisoner of war! camp, but relief pitcher Joe Berry| got credit for the 2-to-1 second] victory. Vic Johnson of the Red Sox beat Bill Zuber, 1 to 0, ending a five.) game Yankee streak, The Cubs went four and a half|
Kingan Knights
8 u H"
Major Leaders By UNITED PRESS AMERICAN LEAGUE
Cucecinello, Chi.... 98 333 Case, Washington, 962 377 Estalella, Phil, . 98 340 Boudreau, Cleve, , 97 346 Stirnweiss, N. Y.. 117 487
NATIONAL LEAGUE R
G Holmes, Boston .. 124 Cavaretta, Chi. Rosen, Brooklyn . Ott, New York.. Hack, Chicago ... HOME RUNS Holmes, Braves .. 26/Stephens, Workman, Braves 30/ ow, Gian Adams, Cardinals 19 RUNS BATTED IN Walker Dodgers. .106| Adams, Cardinals Holmes, Braves ..101|Cavaretta, Cubs .. Olmo, Dodgers .. 99| Elliott, Pirates ... 8
games in front in the National, beating the Pirates, 2 to 0, as Ray Prim and Hy Vandenberg collabe orated on a nine-hit shutout. Reds Beat Cards The Cards lost their second straight at Cincinnati, 3 to 1, Vernon Kennedy, an’ American league castoff, beat them. Eric Tipton's seventh inning homer clinched the Red victory. Brooklyn won its 14th game in 15-starts with Philadelphia, 2 to 1, on an unearned run in the eighth, giving Curt Davis his first win in three weeks.
Triumph
In Softball Meet Finals
Kingan Knights became the 1945 metropolitan area softball chame
pions last night when they defeated struggle, 2-1.
Allison Jets in a thrilling 10-inning
The Jets, surprise team of the tourney, continued their fine play in
forcing the highly favorite Knights to go
three extra innings to win,
They got off to a one-run lead in the initial stanza, when Jack Thomas,
first man up, hit Hal Mahaney's second pitcn for a home run. Fred Wagner duplicated Thomas’ performance in the second inning with a round-tripper that tied the count, Neither team was able to get a runner around until the gamewinning tenth. The Jets loaded the bases in the fifth with two down, but Hal Mahaney retired the side when he struck out Wilbur Condor for one of his 14 strikeouts.
Kingan got two hits in the ninth and was well on the wdy to a victory until runners were thrown out at third and at the plate. In the Kingan half of the 10th, Wagner was safe on Third Baseman Alvan Albright's error and advanced to second on Logan Kinnett's sacrifice. He moved to third on a fielder’s choice and scored when Rex Knight hit a hot grounder through third base, The Knights move into the midwest regionals which get under way at Municipal Stadium tomorrow night. They play the Wisconsin state champions in the 9 o'clock game, Butch Sellers, whe pitched for the Speedway VFW and El Lilly teams, received the Kingan sports-
Junior Baseball Champions to Be
{Decided Tonight
Championships in three divisions will be decided for Junior Baseball youngsters at Victory field starting at 4 o'clock today. The Tabernacle Young Tigers oppose Christian Park Hawks in the opener for the Class C diadem. At 6 o'clock, Tabernacle Tigers meet the Rhodius PAL club for the “B” title. The feature at 8 sends the Broad Ripple Cubs against Beech Grove for the Class A honors. A total of 132 junior teams fine ished schedules in the 25 leagues, President J, R. Townsend ane nounced.
——————————————— Bout Planned LONDON, Aug. 30 (U, P.).~Jack Solomons, manager of British heavyweight champion Jack Wood cock, sald today that negotiations for a bout between the title holder and Arturo Godoy in London this
manship medal.
fall still are going on.
What could say “welcome” more fittingly than [TEIXEIE
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