Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1945 — Page 36
FRIDAY, ( OUR BOARD
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES FRIDAY, OCT. 5, 1045
Greenberg Nominated For Hero Role
{Caps Rap Wings in Exhibition; Duke, Navy Sherritt Is Sold to Cleveland, Game H eads Lynn and Thibeault to Buffalo N ational List
By WILLIAM TUCKER
PAGE 36
Hankus-Pankus Hits Mighty Homer
Tigers Pl Play [fate Eiovers ° Nine Clashes On Cub Hurler 28 Ziashe
Earlham at Butler.
United Press Spogts Writer Notre Dame at Georgia Tech.
By BOB STRANAHAN NEW YORK, Oct. 5—The football Indiana at Illinois. Two items of interest to hockey fans came over the wires from |focus falls on Durham, N. C., tomorPurdue at Wisconsin. ; Detroit today. = | row when Duke and Navy meet in Central Normal at Valparaiso. " One was that the Indianapolis Capitals staged a last period rally the game of the day—and perhaps Wabash at Wooster, O. to beat the Red Wings in an exhibition game, 6-3. lof the season—with an early claim DePauw at Cincinnati (night). The other dealt with the sale of three players—one of whom was to the national gridiron title going
By ROGERS HORNSBY (As told to John P, Carmichael)
DETROIT, Oct, 5.—There is no question about the hero of that sec ond series game. Hank Greenberg |
Hank Greenberg, Detroit Tiger left fielder, crosses the plate
two runs ahead of him in fifth inning of second world series game with Chicago Cubs. ing him are teammates Roy Cullenbine (6), Roger Cramer (8) and Eddie Mayo (3). Detroit won thy game, 4-1.
the umpire and Paul Gillespie the Cub catcher.
after his home “Fun which scored CongratulatLou Jorda is
Bears, Colonels Smith 681, Huffman 664, Set
To Open Series Pace in Tenpin
MONTREAL, Oct. 8 (U. P,) ~The Newark Bears headed home today
world series Saturday with Louisville after winning the International league's Governor's cup last night. The Bears won the deciding game | 212, 234-664. of the playoffs from the Montreal! no other totals topped the 650Royals, 5 to 1. - { mark, ° The Koerner leaguers were Newark played steady baseball | in action at Sport Bowl behind Prank Hiller's four-hit Bertha Urbancic pitching, while Montreal cracked got the jump on open in the seventh, committing other feminine three errors as the Bears scored pastimers in their! three runs on only two singles. Bill race for the most Bteinecke led the Bears with three 800-series, hits and three runs batted in. Newark finished second to Montreal during the International league Sregular season, and Louisville was third in the American association, oo %0 301 510 0
000 000 1" 4 3 and ‘Bana? Roy, Banta and
with Gear in
2 loop at West Side, Miss Urbanelo Miss Urbancic
had 203, 224 190--617. She had previously rolled a 641, the top women’s series of the season, In $2 8 OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (MEN) Harry Harding, Automotive........... 642 John Ott, Universal 633 Geo. Skaggs, Marvin Shell 632 Al Kriner, Printeraft 631 Amos Muegee, Coca-Cola ; oo 830 Paul Butcher, Parkway Recreation. ... 6317 Lou Hildebrandt, Stewart-Warner ... 621 Prits Gruner, 8t. Catherine 618
Box Score
CHICAGO CUBS
> w x
Johnson, an... Lowrey, If .... Cavarretta, 1b Patko, of ...... Nicholson, rf ....... Gillespie, 0 ....v0, ‘“ Hughes, ss R68, Poi. Secory .. EsEsanany Erickson, P
Abe Abraham, Consolidated Finance + 615 Russ Fehr, Pittman Food Mki., mixed 615 Riley Chilton, B. C. Atkins erseres BYE Joe Moore, Stevens Mortuary pis Chas, Fisher, Grotto 61 Ns Herb Hohlt, Vegetable Growers.. fal Totals 1 4 3 John Pickering, Holy Trinity... Becory batted for Wyse in the seventh. | Al Slaughter, Shrine ‘a ane Becker batted for Erickson in the ninth | H. M. King, Elks “er » | Mike Bisesi, Moon-Lite Major DETROIT TIGERS Frnest Ross, 1. 8B. Ayres pf AB R Hugh O'Gara, Sturm Recreation »} Russ Anderson, P. R. Mallory ae Bbb Shell, John Koch. Furniture ..... " Dick Weber, Mitchel-8cott 580 Oren Medlin, Indpls Virgil Minker, Indpls. Power & Laght N63 R. Roth, Bullding Trades 5 Gaylord Overman, Riviera Club C. Power, American United Ins, mixed D. Yaver, Broad Ripple Amer. Legion 531 [Were Hughes, Merz Engineering . Love B03
| oooooo0o~ves GN O00 uDw PoooNwRenwnald COOONDOODOD NP» oocoocooooson
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Qo
Webb, #8 ..0.0000 040 Mave, 2b Cramer, of feeeay Greenberg i" eo Cullenbine, rf York, 1b . Outlaw, 3b ,. Richards, o. . Trucks, p
Power & Light 563
ANS ADD
1 al oo~coo~wownx —D DDD ad ooas2aScam
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Totals ..osvirrnngrss
Chicago ooo0loe Detroit
LODOO4 8-1 ! Marion Drives in Runs batled
in-~Nicholson Cramer Greenberg 3. Two-base on, cramer |W inning Marker
Hack. Home run—Creenberg. Sacrifi ’ Johnson, Left on bases—Chicago 8, Detroft MEMPHIS, Tenn, Oct. 5 (U. P.). —A single by St. Louis Cardinal
7. Bases on balls off Wise 3, Trucks 3 | Erickson 1. Struck out by—~Wyse 1 Trucks] {Shortstop Martin Marion "in the after Dixie Walker,
4, Erickson 1. Hits off--Wyse § in 6 Erickson 2 in 2. Losing pitcher Wyse Umpires | -Jorda (N) plate, Passarella (A) frst, |8ixth | Brooklyn, had doubled gave a group of major league all-stars a 3-to-2 victory aver a team of Southern and
Conlan (N) second, Summers (A) third Time, 1:47. Atlendance, 53, 838. {former Southern acsociation players Car] Callahan of Bush-Callahan|here last night,
I. U. Grid Tickets Sporting Goods store announced Ace Adams, New York Giants, today that tickets for the Indiana allowed the Memphis team eight hits home games had been sent here iin going the route on the mound for and could be obiained at the store, the ma jor league team,
224 ht 4 °2 =
inning
Seems as Though Somehne Got There
First—( hicago “Hotels All Sold Out
CHICAGO, Oct. 5 (U, P) There were 135.400 rooms in this city's 1385 hotels today but somebody got there first.
World series fans curled up in the railroad stations and wandered |
the streets, The optimistic haunted hotel Even the Turkish baths hung out The Stevens with 3000 rooms afield as Sterling, Ill, more than half way across the state. The, Those lucky enough to navel management planned to set up a tickets were asking—and getting few cots in the grand ballroom just|as much as $100 for a set of three | fn case it had accepted more reser- grandstand seats regularly priced | ¥ations than it had rooms. [at $18, A Hotel Sherman room clerk State's Attorney William J. Tuohy offered a slim hope, {revived a little-used statute provid
“A fellow bringing his own cot @An get space in a hallway,” he said ne A $3000 fine for the sals of |
The Blackstone was booked solid tickets for more than face value and | through Nov. 29. sald it was the duty of police to There are between 4000 and 5000 “Yrest all scalpers. seats In the bleachers at Wrigley In the eyes of the collector of infield. The line began forming yes- 'ernal revenue, however, scalping is terday. Two intrepid fans set themselves
lobbys. “no vacancy’ sent
signs its rejected applicants as Jar)
' They plan to hold out until Satur-|Pays the government 20 per cent.
when | she turned in her third of the sea- | Dezelan's over the son, while rollingiget underway at 3 p. m. tomorrow. Indiana Action will be resumed at 2 p. m. thei Bowes Sealfast
permissable so long as the scalper | stamps the amount of the purchase | up in camp chairs at the box office. | Price on the back of the ticket and |
Competition
Tenpin fans who never heard of the Koerner Optical mixed. league ;, good shape and most of the Cubs for the opening game of the little | will know of its existence after scanning last night's individual per-| weren't getting their bats around in | formances, for the two top totals were turned in by members of that loop. | time. Herb Smith, the little man with a mighty delivery, cut lobse with | 245, 223, 213-681, and a fellow-leaguer, Robert Huffman, turned in 218, Although several better known leagues were in action,
the Kernel Optical league. and a 603 in the Johnson Coal loop. Two other members of women's circuits passed 550, Catherine Fitzpatrick getting 585 fn the Bowes session and Anna Bateman 561 in the Coca-Cola Jeagite at Pritchett's. The weekly bowling proprietors doubles tournament, scheduled at week-end, will
Sunday. Glen Maxwell Central alleys manager, is in search of three men’s teams to complete a league that rolls each Thursday night at 8:30. Interested parties are requested to call him at RI-0036. » » J OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (WOMEN)
Ruth Egenolf, Koerner Optical, mixed 538 O Winings, Pittman Food Mkt., mixed 533 Velma lison, Brightwood Puel...... 526 Thelma Kriner, Kirby Mortuary 2 Jo Berkopes, Sexton Real Estate ..... Agnes Priesoff, Antlers. ...
A. Kumpart, Amer. United ns., mixed a |
Albert Bhort, Budweiser Beer...... Roxie Bruder, Hillcrest . Betty Haynes, Kingan & Co “ [Aon 3 McCoy, P. R. Mallory. .... Ann Mengo, Ranier Furniture
Tiger Jim Tobin
In Tavern Brawl!
DETROIT, Oct. 5 (U, P)—Jim | Tobin, Tiger pitcher, was involved {In a tavern fight in Detroit early [Tuesday morning, police records revealed today. Tobin was slugged on the head with ‘a beer boftle, knocked down and kicked, but escaped without serious injury, about 36 hours before he played in the first world series game, a police report said. Working in the relief role Wednesday, Tobin was belted for a “home run and two singles in the seventh inning. Tobin declined t6 give authorities the names of his assailants and sald he would not prosecute. The owner of the tavern gaid Tobin got into an argument with several men in the bar. They waited for him outside and caught him as he left,
Feller Starts Tour
In California
NEW YORK, Oct. § (U. P.).—As Bob Feller launches his 30-day barnstorming tour for some quick (change, his fans are hoping he {makes 4 mint, They have established the Cleve{land fireballer as the game's great- | ost gate attraction since Babe Ruth thung up his spikes, and their ad|miration for his blazing fast ball | has been enhanced by Bob's sterling {war record. He is starting the tour {in California. Because this is a time of readjust ment, Feller was able to obtain spe cial permission from Baseball Coms« missioner A. B. Chandler for this tour. He hag a great deal of finan[cial ground to make up, and addi tional Jesponiaibilities coming up.
Trot Champion Two 3 Seconds Off Record
LEXINGTON Ky. Oct. § (U. P.). ~The Acorn stage, offering a $5500 purse for 2-year-old trotting fillies,
{him out at first and then started
not only hit a three-run homer to win it, 4-1, but before the Tigers eve? came to bat he had thrown out Stan Hack at the plate. That was an important break against the Cubs, because with Hack home with
Series Figures
DETROIT, Oct. 5 (U. PP). Financial figures on the first two world series games: Paid attendance, 108,273. Total receipts, $442,177, Players’ share, $225,560, Leagues and clubs, $150,433. Commissioner's share, $66,341.
Franklin at Ball State. Indiana State at Illinois Normal.
By EDDIE ASH Times Sporis Editor The Hoosier Big Three swings
| back into grid action again tomorrow to top a nine-game football menu calling for Indiana elevens!'
to see duty, On the home front, out at the
play their second tilt of the postwar season by taking on the Earlham Quakers at 2 p. m. The Bulldogs lost by a narrow margin, two touchdowns to one, in their 1945 lid-lifter against Eastern Illinois here last week. Bo McMillin’s Indiana university
the first run, Grimm's men had a! chance to pile up“another big first | inning. Hank Wyse didn't look like he had any speed or stuff from the beginning. He wasn’t getting the ball over and when he did it seemed to hang. The Tigers decided to wait
swinging at first pitches once they found he wasn't fast. I noticed that he was smart enough, however, to brush ‘em back from the plate with the first pitch to each man, - Virgil Trucks looked exceptionally fast. He and Hank Borowy of the Cubs are the only men so far who
| would stand up in pre-war competi-
seem to have the kind of speed that
{tion. Trucks was hitting the corners
Still Play Deep
Once more, however, the Cubs showed superiority in speed and if the Tiger fielders don't quit playing ‘so deep they hiay find themselves 'in more hot water. Both Hack and Cavarretta got extra bases because Roger Cramer was playing too deep for them although Cavarretta, especially, hits down on the ball in a way that it may be spinning away from a fielder when it lands. The Tiger fielders seem to think that's what happens. My prediction before the series was the Cubs in six games and it figures that way more than ever now. There's no question but what the Tigers have the power to break up & game whereas the Cubs have
Michigan
Hoosiers, who were surprised by Northwestern last Saturday by
Illinois squad at Champaign and the dopesters figure the contest a toss-up, although recent reports indicate the Hoosiers are in better all-round physical condition than the Illini. Kickoff Time
The kickoff at Champaign will be at 2 p. m. Indianapolis time. In previous encounters Indiana downed and: Illinois defeated Pittsburgh and lost a heartbreaker to Notre Dame. Purdue's Boilermakers also engage a Big Ten rival tomorrow by playing the Wisconsin Badgers at Madison, It will be the Western conference opener for both teams although both have seen previous action in two skirmishes and both against the same elevens, Marquette and Great Lakes, and both conference teams won. Kickoff tomorrow will be 2 p. m,, Indianapolis time. Notre Dame is to engage in the leading intersectional attraction of the week tomorrow by tackling the Georgia-Tech Yellowjackets on their home grounds at Atlanta. Close Tilt Indicated The game will be played before a capacity crowd of approximately 35,000. The contest stacks up like a close struggle and is being “picked both ways” by the grid sharps who study past performances and the caliber of available first-string timber. At any rate, it looks like a tough
an edge in consistent hitting and| | in speed and ‘defensive play. That is borne out by the results of these! two games and the championship + probably will be settled by Chicago's | pitchers.
in the fifth with two out. Eddie, Mayo was up. Had Wyse been able to get the ball aver with anything] on it, Mayo could have been an easy | third out. But Myse walked him, which permitted Cramer to get his|
Greenberg.
Sallee Annexes |
Honors in Meet
Low gross honors in the Optimist | club's final golf tourney of the] season yesterday at Hillcrest went |
Jack ‘Thibodeau was second with |
{for third.
Net Argus with an 84 on a 24 handicap.
laurels were won by Joe|
assignment for
Hugh Devore'’s green, young Irish. Game time is booked at 2 p. m. Indianapolis
a inst Butler here, Coach Owen ‘J. Huntsman of Earlham is pin-
The break in that second gamely ;, g hopes of a victory over the| ock came after “Skeeter” Webb's single| Bulldogs on a squad of some sey had to break a 3-all dead]
returning |
| players, including five (lettermen. : In the backfield are Bob Martin 170-pound senior from Richmond; | Dudley Fry, 178-pound junior from | Ridge Farm, Ill, and John Mott, |
second hit and set the stage for| |180-pound sophomore from Towa
| City, Ia. The only letterman in| [the line is Bob Thompson, New Castle, 165-pound center. game will be Earlham's first start
| this season.
Card Grid Game
School officials announced yester-
to Hartford Sallee with a card of 80.!day that a game had been arranged | i and, an 81 and Ray Robertson had 82 Shortridge high school teams for | Oct. 16 at Shoriridge field. The] Warriors had two open dates on| their schedule and Shortridge one.
between the Warren Central
America honors.
unduly inflating Pfohl, Brown, a| former Notre Dame star, went allout in praise. *“Pfohl's one of those things a! coach dreams about,” he said. “There are not a half-dozen teams in the country that are as confident as we are about having a contender for All-America.” The record shows that Brown has a reasonable point. Pfohl, nickname “Stormy” while in high school at Goshen, Ind. scored 26
| broken-field runner, heavy enough (195 pounds) to be | He is 19 years |
Hoosier State Gridder Tears 'Em Up for Merchant Marines
KINGS POINT, N. Y., Oct. 5 (U, P.).—Although he breaks most of | the football, coaches’ customs by doing it, Lt. Earl Brown of the U. 8.| merchant marine academy team went on record today with a firm vote | for his halfback, Bob Pfohl, formerly of Purdue university, for All-
Unworried about pointing out his star to opposing teams, or about |
Fairview bowl, the Butler Bulldogs |
being held to a tie, face another | Big Ten foe tomorrow in a strong!
from | The |
| Gordon (Moose) Sherritt. He goes to the Cleveland Barons.
Vie Lynn, combination wing and’,
| defenseman, and Left Winger Larry : {Thibeault became property of the :
Buffalo Bisons. They were bought outright at a reported price of $10,000. Sale of Sherritt probably was the biggest news—or maybe blow—to| Caps. ice fans. : Indianapolis Idol The big defenseman wasn't exactly a boon companion to most of the other players on the club, but he
was an Indianapolis idol. Last! spring the Coliseum customers vot-
ring as a memento. What hap{pened to that diamond Is the Moose's own business. | The sale price of Sherritt wasn't’ revealed. Neither was the reason for the disposition. Maybe it is in the new policy of rebuilding the club almost from the ground up. And perhaps there is something else behind it. Players Grumble Just before the playoffs last spring some of the players grumbled about Sherritt’s tendencies to start a roughhouse and then back out of it. And Coach Johnny Sorrell once pointed out—rather sternly, too, for the mild-mannered skipper, that a
any good in the penalty box.” The sale of Lynn wasn’t so surprising. When he was on loan to St. Louis last winter he became embroiled in the wildest melee seen on the local ice. That was the time General Manager Dick Miller was pinned over the boards after Lynn had taken a whack at him with a stick. Before it was all over, most of the members of both teams were engaged. Match penalties followed.
Star at Buffale
Although Thibeault was a star on the title-winning Buffalo team of 1944, his play with the Caps last season wasn’t so impressive. He was in 31 games, scored two goals and had 12 assists. Last spring Miller let it be known that he expected a wholesale over= hauling of the club. How right he was is seen in the sale or trade of such players as Bill Thomson, Fido Purpur, Red Kane, Dick Kowcinak, George DeFelice and Connie Dion. The Caps never were behind in last night's affair before 4339 customers in Detroit's Olympia, but
to win from the National leaguers. Five minutes of play had elapsed lin the final session when Winger ‘Don Morrison took.a pass from his {brother Rod and flipped what turned out to be the winning marker past Goalie Harry Lumley. Just to rub it in on the parent lelub, the Caps scored two more be-" |fore the game ended. Jimmy Con-| acher and Hal Jackson were on the | firing end of these goals.
Defenseman Hugh Millar got the! Bukovich and Jerry Brown made]
ed him as the team’s most popular|% player and gave him a diamond?
guy certainly ‘‘dida’t do the team]!
Moose Sherritt
Vie Lynn . . . sold to Bisons.
Larry Thibeault . . , to Bisons.
Caps away in front with an unas- it 3-0. Eddie Bruneteau registered later Time trials start at 7 o'clock and
sisted shot at 14:36 in the first pe- |
» ®
riod. In the next two minutes Tony | in the first period for Detroit.
to the winner; Two “irresistible forces'—Navy with its multitude of renowned backs and Duke with a high-scoring combine that has rolled up 136 points in two games—promise enough action to superheat the fans even if its a frosty afternoon down in Dixie. No other game on the packed Saturday card offers such exciting possibilities, but plenty of football should be played at West Point, N. Y., and Atlanta, Ga. Cadets Face Wake Forest The terrific Cadets of the U. S. military academy take on a Wake Forest eleven that lost to Tennessee last week by a lone point but which should have, according to qualified observers, licked last year's Rose Bowl entry by three touchdowns. Nobody picks Army to lose, but the Demon Deacons, as they .call the southerners, should give the Cadets a stern test. In Atlanta, Notre Dame's surprising winners over Illinois meet Georgia Tech, not the great Yellowjackets of old, but nevertheless an alert gang under new Coach Bobby Dodd who can give the Irish a full afternoon. Another southern game of red-hot sectional interest matches Alabama and Louisiana State a} Baton Rouge. In the southwest, the big game is Arkansas vs, Texas Christian while in the midwest four Big Ten games headline the card—Ohio State-Iowa, Indiana-Illinois, Michi-gan-Northwestern, and WisconsinPurdue, Other Games Listed California and Washington col- { lide in the far west feature, { Other games include: East-—Holy Cross-Yale, Pennsyl- | vania-Dartmouth, Columbia-Syra-cuse, Boston College-Brown, Har- | vard-Tufts, Penn State-Colgate, | Pittsburgh-Bucknell, Kings Point{Ursinus, Villanoya-Marquette, | Temple- -N. Y. U, Princeton- Lafayette. South—Florida-Tulane, AuburnMississippi State, Mississippi-Van-derbilt, Georgia-Miami, Clemson-
Virginia-V. M. I, North CarolinaV. P. I, Maryland-Richmond, Southwest—Southern MethodistMissouri, Texas-Texas Tech, Texas College-Sam Houston, West—St. . Mary's Preflight-Sou-= thern California, Oregon State, St. Mary's-Nevada, U. G. L. A.-College of the Pacific, Utah State-Brigham Young, Denver-Oklahoma A. & M., Colorado-Utah.
Midget Races Carded Tonight
Bob Breeding, victor in his last two starts in the Mutual circuit, will be gunning for his third consecutive lat the Indianapolis Speedrome tonight, . | His main competition is expected ito come from Ted Hartley of {Roanoke and Bill Brereton of San | Diego, Cal. A field of more than 30 drivers is expected to enter the ‘race card.
{races open an hour later.
| {
points in the Kings Point opener against Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and came up with a 101-
yard runback of an intercepted pass—longest run since Merle Hapes | of Mississippi State ran 103 yards
in 1937. Pfohl is fast, clever, and a good
able to hit the line. old.
put still 1s |
|
Ex-Public Links Ace Ties McSpaden
TACOMA, Wash, Oct. 5 (U. P).— Rangy Ed Furgol former Detroit public links star, shared a four under par 66 with Jug McSpaden, to lead the fleld into the second round of the Tacoma open golf tourna ment today. Rising from comparative obscurity Furgol grabbed three birdies on the tough first nine for 34 and came up with three more for a 32 on the final lap in yesterday's opener. The stroke of the day came on the ninth hdle when McSpaden drove 280 yards from behind a tree
ZEPHYR
ICE SKATING
Afternoon 2:30 te § Evening 8 to 10:30
Sane 8 Schedule Pally Except. No 8k Ing on Monda Wy Thursday Nigh Nights of Hockey Games or hia cial Attractions,
Professional Instruction
Hedy Stenuf, World's Pamous Skating Star of “It Happened on Tee,” will teach at the Coliseum this ‘Season. For Private .appoiniment Telephone to the
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_ day when the park opens for the| The office of the collector of in. and $3000 Trotting Club stake open |i, jand within inches of the green.
first Chicago game of the series. [ternal revenue sald it would have to 23-year-old pacing fillies, featured
- Reserved seats were sold out a|25 investigators on hand at Wrigley the Lexington Trots today. L. Straus & Co. and Coliseum Box Offer.
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