Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1947 — Page 21
AY 7, 1047
old
ss Stakes shaped jockeys who rode four positions im
ness and all were ugh ‘the mud at
orse, was withe Stables decided Border, and four ve disappointing rday in the $7500 teenth Survivoe a warmup for
nsidered one of nders, was withe John Gaver, who of Bimelech had workouts in New rain and sube k conditions. { the Survivor the Cedar Farms, nod in a threeh. Neither the , Walter M. Jefe n or Mrs. Ethel vernor, the thirde , are eligible for ith were gaining inish but lost out each other going
» Money ness eligibles ran y. Repand, the fourth, Tailspin 1 seventh, Tide Vide Wing ninth
© starters for the | to be Jet Pilot, On Trust, Cose Proof, Riskolater, rom the Derby, Mityme. cratched (3 the doubtful s A g trial, yesterday White said he horse “had the
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As Leo and Laraine Yell
By CARL LUNDQUIST, United Press Sports Writer
n Duro yesterday and yelled his head off Brooklyn and together they helped pull the Dodgers home to an uphill, T-t0-6 victory in their first meeting with the Cardinals since they were knocked out of the National league pennant in last autumn's post season playoff series.
The suspended Dodger pilot, barred from.baseball for a year by Commissioner Happy Chandler, was accompanied by his movie actress wife, Laraine Day, who did a little yelling on her own and shattered a bag of peanuts in her acquired enthusiasm for the great old American game, : First Big Test
It may or may not be significant that the Dodgers beat the Cardinals in this highly important first test, whereas last year with Durocher at the helm they dropped 16 out of 24 games to the Cardinals including the pair which knocked them out of the pennant,
The tail-end world champions, who now have the inglorious record of three victories against -12 defeats, needed this one badly as a “shot-in-the arm” and it looked as if they would get it when they scored six runs on rallies in the third and fourth off starter Joe Hatten and Hal Gregg.
But they déidn’'t reckon with the
"elutch hitting of Pee Wee Reese,
whose average: is-a- measly 184; and sophomore Carl Furillo. Reese .gave the Dodgers the victory when he hit his first homer of the campaign in the seventh after Furillo had tied
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NEW YORK, May 7.~It was a highly debatable subject in Flatbush toddy whether Lippy Leo Durocher’s oral support from the grandstand s more inspiring for the Brooklyn Dodgers against the §t. Louis Cardithan his moral support from the bench. Ty
er, who is temporarily unemployed, went .to the ball game
like practically every other fan in
it at 6-all with a bases-loaded triple. Bucs Bow to Braves
The plight of the Cardinals {is pointed up by the fact that last year they went all the way to May 26 before losing 12 games and at that time had 20 victories. And they picked up three victories in their first four games. Yet it was the “slow start” of the Cardinals in 1946 which nearly cost them the pennant since they didn’t hit their flag stride until after July 4. | The Braves knocked Pittsburgh out of second place and moved up into a tie for the spot with Chicago, by handing Kirby Higbe his first beating as a Pirate, 6 to 0, as Johnny Sain pitched a four-hit-ter in the season's first night game at Boston. Higbe, jraded Saturday by the Dodgers, was knocked out as Boston capitalized on homers by Bama Rowell and Earl Torgeson. The Cubs came from behind to top the Phils at Philadelphia, 3 to 2, when Tommy Hughes weakened in the late innings to suffer his fourth straight loss.
Reds Snap Giant String The Reds ended a four-game losing streak by outslugging the Giants at New York, 11 to 6. The Giants, who had won three straight, committed four errors as Cincinnati made 12 hits off six pitchers. Ray Lamanno’s three hits for the Reds drove in four runs.
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| Minneapolis
FINDS RANGE—In the same park in which the "Dyer shift" stopped him cold in the 1946 world series, Ted Williams treated himself to two home runs yesterday as the Red Sox edged
the Browns in St. Louis. Ted belted a game-tying homer in the ninth and then belted a three-run homer in the |1th,
row at St. Louis with a 6-to-5 victory over the Browns when Ted Williams hit a homer in the ninth to tie the score at 3-all, then put his team ahead to stay. with a three-run homer in the 11th. A two-run homer by Jeff Heath in the Brownie half left St. Louis a tally short. . The Tigers also used a homer to win, Eddie Lake smashing it in the eighth to produce a 3-to-2 victory over the Yankees at Detroit. Relief Pitcher Hal White held New York scoreless with two hits for the last three innings to gain the vietory. ‘ Bill Dietrich came back to Chicago to plague the White Sox who cast him adrift after 10 seasons, blanking them on five hits as he pitched the Philadelphia A's to a 3-to-0 triumph. The defeat ended a four-game Chicago winning streak. :
By United Press National League
Quatine Pittsburgh Ta % 5 Line, urgh .. Walker, Brook! nes 1 “ 14 R w York ..
veves
OR oy Louis ... Binks, Philadelphia .. Mullin, Detroit Appling, Chicago .... 14 HOME RUNS Mize, Giants ..... 8/Keller, Yankees .. Miller, Reds .... 6
. CALENDAR
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RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Milwaukee ......... 040 000 000— 4 7 1 Columbus ....... ... 002 000 010-3 6 2 Pyle, Livengood and Brady;
Rundus, Studener and Conroy. -
Louisville Fischer and Westgum;
Ostrowski and McGah. Kansas City at Toledo (postponed, rain,
, AMERICAN: LEAGUE Philadelphia 000 102 000-3 7 0 Ohicago ceii.. 000 000 000—0 5S O Dietrich .and Rosar; Haynes, QGebrian and Dickey.
New York .......... 100-001 000— 2 7 1 Detroit .. coo. 000 001 11x— 3 13 1 Reynolds and Robinson, Houk; Trucks, White and Swift, Tebbetts.
(11 IRhing) v Boston iv 7-080 001 036 80 Bt. Louis .. ..... 000 100 02-—- 5 11 1 Parnell, Klinger, Johnson and Partee, Wagter; amer, Sanford and Moss, Barly.
Only games scheduled. “ NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago veveve... 000 010 200 3 13 O Philadelphia evaded 000 300 000 2 8 0 Borowy, Chipman,
Kush, Schmitz and Schefling; Hughes,
Rowe and Seminick.
Cincinnati ......... 203 040 002311 13 2 New York .......... 200 010 030— 6 90. 4 Walters, Gumbert and Lamanno: Kennedy, Budnick, Thompson, Ayres, Andrews, Trinkle and Cooper.
8 louis .;......... 000 330 600-6 7 2 Brooklyn ........... 011 013 10x T 11 1 Munger, Brazle, Wilks, Grodsickli and Rice, Garagiola; Hatten, Gregg, Chandler, Casey and Edwards, pittsburgh .......... 000 000 000— 0 4 1 ROR. «iss v vary 010 002 03x— 6 8 0
Higbe, Bagby and Howell; “Sain and Masi,
SCHEDULE TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis at INDIANAPOLIS r m.Y, p Milwaukee at Toledo (night),
Kansas City at, Cofumbus (night), 8t. Paul at Louisville (night).
(8:30
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York at Clevéland, Washington at Detroit, Boston at Shitago. Philadelphia at Louis (night).
NATIONAL LEAGUE
8. Louls at Brooklyn. Sineinnaty at New York . (postponed, rain). Chicago at Philadelphia, Pittsburgh at Boston (night).
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i |stop clouted a double in the third
p| Brewers nipped Columbus, 4-3, in
Victory Over
The Redskins dropped into the
in the'eighth by the downpour. The Kels ped off the tough Louisville Colonels in a 6-0 shutout, 80 tonight's “prize” to the loser will be the dungeon dugout. Ompire-in-chief Art Meler gave the home boys every opportunity in the world when he allowed play to
the second inning on. ' But the veteran Lloyd Dietz was the master of the situation and the Apostle right-hander was at his best when the Redskins threatened. His one bad mistake was to throw a fast one to Ernie Andres in the third inning and the Tribe third-sacker re-
the scoreboard to account for the only Indianapolis tally. Saints Go Ahead Bob Ramazotti's single, an infield out and Lew Riggs’ one-baser sent St. Paul out in front at the expense of Stan Ferek in the first inning, The visitors laid on the tall Tribe
of the third. started it off, this time with a double. Bud Kimball was hit by a pitched ball and Riggs moved the runners along with a neat sacrifice. Eric Tipton was passed purposely to fill the bases and then Jack Paepke jammed a double into center field to score the three. He was out’ trying to stretch the hit into another base
Kimball's single, another sacrifice by Riggs and a hit by Tipton produced the fifth Saint counter in the fifth inning. This came off Aldon Wilkie, another leftie, who re-
pitcher had given way to a pinch hitter in the third. : Follows Wilkie Glen Fletcher followed Wilkie to the mound in the sixth and had the Apostles well in hand until hostilities finally were halted. St. Paul went down easily in the eighth and Roy Weatherly lofted a high fly to
were too wet to continue. The customers already had started filtering out and a half hour later the call-off was made official, with the statistics reverting back to the seventh. Brightest spot of the evening for the home forces—except Andres’ homer—was the continued hitting by Johnny Riddle. The Tribe back-
and then came up with a sharp single in the seventh. Kansas City and Toledo were rained out, but the Milwaukee
the third A. A. game played last
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES rene opel es ® Prize In Tri Apostles Splash to 5-1 GE
By BOB STRANAHAN The unpopular cellar spot in the infant American Association baseball race is at stake at Victory field tonight when the Tribe meets the Minneapolis Millers in the first series of the season. yn
back to St. Paul in a dismal, drippy game last night which was halted continue through the drizzle from »
sponded with a lordly smash over|2
lefty with great gusto in their half Sa Ramazotti again 8
placed Ferek after the starting Weatherly
Kimball in the Tribe's turn when |7e% Meier finally decided the grounds Plate]
4 CARA SRB IGA ig 5 JAA 5
& : 4
Indians
seventh slot by virtue of a 5-1 set~
ST. PAUL AB RHE O A EB Douglas, 1b 4 070 8 1.0 3 3 319 S31 0.00 01 8 Y iA woo Hee 3 90.1 3.00 009 0 0 Ww wit 6 39 v3 9: F100 i} 3:0 0 1:36 s N 8 3 O AB 3 0. 4 0:3 0 0 0 0 0 0.5 0 0 01 0 # 1. ‘L 9 1.5 4.0 T° 7-18 0 0 0 0 ® 0 0 0 ®e 0 2 o 10 0 ¢ ® 0 0 0 Talkie Sos uiein 3 1.51 1 0
xCuintini batted for Ferek in 3d. xxCastiglione batted for Wilkie in Sth.
8, PRM i. vn. cues eviivies came 103 010 0-5 INDIANAPOLIS ............. 001 000 0-—1 Runs batted in—Riggs, Paepke 3, Tipton, Andres. Two-base hits — Ramazotti, Paepke; Riddle, Home run—Andres. crifices—Riggs 3. on bases— St. Paul 6, Indianapolis 7. Base on lls—Off Ferek 2, kie 1, Pletcher 1, Struck out—By PFerek 1, Diets 2, Wilkie 1, Fletcher 3. Hits off—Ferek, § in 3. in-
nings; Wilkie, 2 in 2; Fletcher, 1 in 32. Hit by pitcher—By, Ferek (Kimball); Wilkie (Tepsic); Dietz (Moran). Wild pitch— Dietz. Passed ball—-PFranks. Losing pitcher ~—Perek. Umpires—Meier, Telegan and Austin. Time—1:50. Attendance 1714.
Blue Larkspur, Noted Sire, Dies
LEXINGTON, Ky., May 7 (U. P.).—Blue Larkspur, one of the most noted thoroughbred sires. of recent years, died yesterday at the
the age of 21.
who were outstanding brood mares,
at the time of his death, which was
night.
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8:00 PM—CT ~Lv......... Kansas 11:85 AM~MT—~Lv........ Pueblo
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The “Royal Gorge” offers a variety of accommodations—~ standard and tourist Pullmans ~~ modern reclining seat chais
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Close Out Season
Bowling activities wound up for several loops last night. In the Triangle Ladies’ league at Fountain Square, Jacks Tavern won the team race with a“ 72-27 record. Ann Douglas was the individual average leader with 153. Thelma Kriner won the loop’s headpin tournament with a 260. : Eagle Creek Nursery topped the final standings of the Broad Ripple Businessmen’s circuit, winning 69 games and losing 30. Ed Erler led the soloists with a 188 average. : In the R. C. A. Mixed at Parkway, it was Hot Shots with a 58-41 record, and Mike Rae and Dorothy Maschek with individual averages of 172 and 148. P. D. Q's topped rival teams in the Wm. J. Holliday Mixed league final standings at the Central. They won 56 and lost 44. Bill Prieshoff with 176 and Dora Connor with 145 were individual average leaders. Lovisa Construction’s 69-33 record topped other teams in the Indiana Recreation, with Earl Taylor leading. the individuals with 187. The winner in the Stegemeier’s Grill league at West Side was Todd's Pharmacy, with a 77-22 record. LaVerne Biers had the high individual average of 174. The Christian church 12-team Summer bowling league is to open its 11-week schedule at Pritchett’s tomorrow at 7 p. m. All bowlers are requested to be present at 6:45 p.m. for preliminaries. Last night's league leaders: BOWLERS (MEN)
{Hoosier Hurler
|
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Wins Own Game
Pitcher ,Joo Normington- of Tne diana university won his own ball game yesterday when he drove in the deciding run to defeat Butler, 3 to 1 J The Hoosiers got runs across in the first, fifth and ninth innings, with Normington driving in the game-winning run in the fifth. Butler's only tally came in the sixth when Norman Williams was safe on an error and scored on suecessive singles by Charlie Maas and Jim Doyle.-
Flag Tourney Held
Twenty-eight women golfers participated in a flag tourney held yesterday at the Country Club of Indianapolis. Class A honors went to Mrs, Dawson Blackmore, Class B to Mrs. Forrest Teel and Class .C to Mrs. H. A. Burney.
Signs With Lions
DETROIT, May 7. (U. P.) —Kelley Mote, an all-Southern confer= ence end at Duke for two years, was signed today by the Detroit Loins. Mote, who captained the 1945 Blue Devil - team, was the 26th man to sign a contract for the 1947 season.
. . ple P. M. ...... 686 Jim Talbert, Broad Ripple B. M. ..... 626 Tribe Batting Harry Jackson, Our Lady of Lourdes . 625 Del Conger, Indiana Reen. ..... ..... 624 G AB R. H RBIAy. Wayne ht, Commercial . 622 Deininger ........ 4 7 1 4 3 5M Dorothy Erler, Broad Ripple B. MM... 614 Riddle ..........0. 9 26 6 12 3 .463 Phil Caito, Indiana Recn, .......... 813 Moran .... 15.56 10 18 9 .327|Mike Rae, R. C. A. Mixed ..... . .. 612 Wentzel ... 15 50 - 6 13 2 .260|Bob Wuensch, Our Lady of Lourdes .. 605 Brown .. 15 56 10 14 3 .250|Geo. Cravens, Link-Belt No. 2 ....... 603 Sastiglions . S 3 2 3 } 33 Bob Pruett, Allison Owls ........ ..... 603 Poland..." “eH 1.9.3 53 OTHER LEADERS (MEN) | Workman . .-9 31 3 7 6 .226/Chas. Manion, C. Y. O. Mixed ....... 566 | A .14 49 6 11 7 .235|E. Jones, Inland Container c+ 471 12 42 7 9 7 .214|Otis McAfee, Indpls. Bleaching Mixed. 540 | Guintini ........, 11 25 2 5 0 .200/Bill Prieshoff, Holliday Mixed ... ., 530 Barnhart ........ 9 38 3 5 4 .151|Rex aduke, Employmt. Sec. Mix. 504 | Home Runs—Weatherly 2, Riddle 2, 500 BOWLERS (WOMEN) | Andres, Workman. Dorey -Maschek, R. C. A. Mixed ..... 529 | Three-base Hits—Moran 2, Deiningsr. {Dora Connor, Holliday Mixed ....... 518 | -base Hits—Moran 6, Weatherly 3,|Mpyrtle Prenuiee. rR RD ALLL fos Brown 2, 1 2, Workm 2, ‘Wentz a ite, U, 8. er ... ses RE ain 1, Workman :3, ‘Wantzel| Doing _Jfuite: 3+ 8 Rubber ... ..l 501 Stolen Bases—Brown 3, Wentzel, Moran. OTHER LEADERS (WOMEN) ren Ruby Wakefield, plymt. Sec. Mix. 489 . . Martha Finke, Inland Container ..... 472| Pitching ; Martha Miller, C. Y. O. Mixed a W L IP H BBBO|:* ; 302% 3 1 11 Amateur. Baseball | 1 imu 3| The undefeated Plainfield Com- | 1 2 1% 1 6 ¢|mercidls want a game for next Sun9 1 10% 's § !8lday. Call Plainfield 3087 between | .0 2 19% 17 8 16/4and 7 p. m. «0-40 3 FT 3 ‘6f : erek anf 5s 3 0
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