Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1948 — Page 14

pa es

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.

s Pitcher Paul Eric kson From Pitts

The Indianapolis: Indians. antics are thrilling , at least Miss Roberta Lee Dean seems enthralled t's double-headér with St. Paul. Her Jadies' illiam Dean, her father.

a 4-year ‘as she wat ot : Might escort § is Mr. Wi

HURRAY FOR FLEMING — As larrupin' Les Fleming home run in the first game Dick Imel, 14, and brother Jack, a frenzied round. of cheers and 8pplause, The. boys | are requlars at Victory Field

when the Indians are home.

I5, join.

a

réunds third after his

the crowd in

handed auxi

iliary outfi elder.

TUESDAY, AUG. 5

yer

JIr¢

"NICE CATCH— Mr. Al Dunavent, 1628 Medford St. proudly displays a ball snared from a foul tip into the stands after an errog - “on the part of another fan. That is Mrs. Dunavent behind the bares |

Photos by John Spickietifre, Times Saf Pholosraphets

4 ghthander to Join

gue by: 10% Games Il From Saints

lead in the American Association base-

, & tall right handed|gross and net

Ellis, Marks Lead Golfers

Top Gross, Net IWGA Divisions

Miss Dorothy Ellis and Mrs. Louis Marks were |

To Harry

NEW YORK, Aug. 3

mission.

e-from-behind Indians that Paul outright

the parent Pittsburgh

divisions as women golfers teed off at Meridian Hills on the final leg of m the their two-day tournament. Miss Ellis matched the Broad- > | moor Country Club ladies par: yesterday with a 75. Bhe has no! handicap in IWGA tournaments but held second place in the low net class behind Mrs. Marks who posted a 103 yesterday and led

fielders to Ebbets Field from the far-flung farm clubs, but none of {them can do anything about Schmitz, The crafty left-hander beat the Dodgers. for the fifth straight ® time this season yesterday, win-| ning, 4 to 1, in 11 innings when|

vs. Richard ! AE

Mu Lg,

he sits division Aftas. susizacting her 29-stroke handicap.

«RW. O'Neel (Hill. 1 hv Jartrude Grovenberry (PR). art (PR

ohn

Hutchings, doing a fancy re“lief mound * job, blanked the Saints In the eighth and ninth.

rd (Tom Saffell drew a walk from's KEY “|Jack Paepke, ( Morris Martin, Cassini sacrificed '} Gu ™ Saffell to second, Pt

pitch. Beard drew a walk and ‘{Fleming was given an intentional|xain Pass. Siting the bases. Pine vis ey Rikard popped out and said When Buddy Hicks, St. Paul Eustis ortstop, messed up Castiglione's 3 roller, Saffell raced home with ay the winning run.

O'Neal Third in Meet Times Special 2%, rd 23, Femi Miss Alice O'Neal of Indianap-|sini 10 Turner a olis, 1048 city and state women's|X3in 4. Loves 3 golf champion, took third places in the Sally Sessions invitational|t, Tir Lopes golf meet Sunday at Muskegon;| Home Runs—Femin

Cassini ... Ganss

Ri topes tteridge

Lum g

e 20 and had been on the shelf

4;

i

Kalin 3, Sans Fue 2. Peters

Beard 11, Gutter

Hi

Margaret Lindsey of Decatur; Ill, she then lost on the second hole of a play-off. neapolis pro, was the Winner of the meet.

f

Bagrifics Cast

Hits ~~

fil.

y restoring Turner ahd ie placihp The Manager Shi Sho. ST. PAUL Lopes’ finished out the first (First Game) te,

aT.

» > 2

-

Soo“ omMD~OoRNoN op:

SPOT —- COW D=Q EB WOODHIWN DP

2% 8.

Atwsli hit inte tosent play

in INDIANAPOLIS Bh

Cassini, 2b eo. Rixara. we .

Fie

o~oomo~oo~ 8 Pose aroNs »

INDIANA

Two-ba

Tipton 2. Cas. a Tare nson. ga ome id. ikon. TipHy hits— , Polar, SacrificesMar i,

truck oul ts.

ngs, none RY none in 1%, ning pitcher—Hu!

wh ' x8) “who had eved } Ht ot; (160) malanagells rail Ii Indian Lake; (PR

ite as Saen a Rikard

asin Patty Berg, Min-|2 castigiione. Flom X astiglione = ng, ig, Beard, Ganss, Turner.

Tribe Box Scores

tals 4 YTwo out when wih INDIAN

mesa smesuaul

tonlhge Losing

SOME) Nort!

Paepke cut loose with a wild Tribe Batting

249 43 68 3 0-Base Hits—Castt lone 25, Rikard Bea: Saffell 17, Castterid Oo 4,

4,

ner 4, Peters 2, Gutter! gs, Ganss,

Mich., with 81-70--180 to tie Miss|t*! § Beard & Skat, osnaii oy

t. Pa 60 12 Ao] d 13% Washing ‘olumbus Venants 522

Saffell

(Susana Game) An

a. STA NHD oo~oooow~wod’ CUPID DWP

in seventh. 10!

04 Be than one hit.

gong:

n, fell 8

{third baseman Tommy Brown set up the deciding run with a fumble on an easy grounder by Roy Smalley. A single by Hank ‘Schenz and a double by Eddie Waltkus produced the big tally ‘and a long fly by Andy Pafko gave the Cubs an insurance run. Give Schmitz Lead

In the first inning, Waitkun and Pafko gave Schmitz a 2-to-0 lead with homers off pitcher Rex ‘Barney. Schmitz, who now has an 11-9 mark for the season,

{has given up only seven runs inf

47 innings in his five triumphs against the Brooks. . Schmitz gave up nine hits yes84 terday but his control was well$i nigh He yielded only $3008 walk and only one Dodger ibatter, Bruce Edwards, got

The honeymoon ended for Giant Manager Leo Durocher at ss{the Polo Grounds when the Car3% dinals bopped and re-bopped the 87 New Yorkers in a 21-to-5 car8 nage that included 20 hits, 12 He for extra bases, It was the big$1/gest run production for any 87 team ‘in the majors this season, §1 Stan Musial, Whitey Kurowski,

homers. The Cards also got. eight doubles, two each by Enos Slaughter and Nippy Jones. Third string catcher Del Wilber, who had. gotten only one pre{vious hit all season, batted in five runs to set the pace with two singles, a double and an infield out. Scotty Thomson, Whitey Lockman and Bill Rigney hit Giant homers as Murry Dickson coasted to his eighth : victory.

Reds Down Braves The Cincinnati Reds came out

Rickey, who personally tries to keep the sun from setting on tormer his Brooklyn empire, brings pitchers, catchers, infielders and out-|

defeat of the year, 7 to 5. Bill Kennedy pitched five innings for St. Louis and Joe Ostrowski four with Kennedy the winning pitch-

"Pittsburgh and Philadelphia {were not scheduled in the National League. Yesterday's Star — Dodger hex artist Johnny Schmitz of the Cubs, who beat the Brooks for the'fifth straight time yesterday, 4 to 2, in 11 innings.

Milwaukee Loses 12th in Row:

While the Indians were running their victory skein to seven straight at Victory Field last night the Milwaukee Brewers continued to go in -the opposite drection. The Brews dropped their 12th straight decision to the Louisville Colonels, 4 to 1. In other games the Kansas City Blues downed the Toledo Mudhens, 7 to 6, at Toledo, and Minneapolis won, 8 to 5, at Columbus. The Colonels gave Shorty Coleman a three-run lead early in the gfme against the Brews. Coleman scattered four hits and allowed Milwaukee's lone score in the fourth. Louisville eollected nine hits off three Brewer moundsmen. Kansas City needed 10 innings to defeat the Mudhens in a see-saw battle. Homers by Al Rosen and Speed Garrison were the big blows for the Blues. George Corona hit for the ciréuit for the losers. Five of Minneapolis’ eight runs crossed the plate on round-trip hits. Jack Maguire's homer scored two and ' Red Rhawn’'s clout brought in three. Killer Cain went the route for the winners and yielded eight hits, one a three-run homer by Bill Howerton,

of a six-game lofing whip the league leading ston | Bgaves, 3 to 1, in a night game. The loss, which kept the Braves from gaining on the Giants, left) {them still five games in front. The Reds got only five hits and three walks but hit timely.

a Johnny Vander Meer allowed

Boston eight hits and seven walks but also struck out eight.

In an American League night

‘383. game, the only action in that}

Joon: the St. Louis Browns hand-|, ed Pitcher Sid Hudson of the Washington Senators his 11th

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

10% Ya

144% pA 3 : 3 aB

1 1 1

16%; 19%

oodo~oooo~on

Cincinnati .. Chicago *

SCHEDULE TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

(All thes A nig! St. Paul at APOE a: 300. jiilwaues at Douisvit Xan City a lean.” aes 5 & umbus -pe AMERICAN LEAGUE aL S2hes at night) Boston at uis. Poleaeinhia a Chicago. } Qiexslana, New York AL Detr: NA LEAGUE

{All games at night) Eltisturgh at SPRiladelphi a.

i

14 000-8 at Brooklyn.

uns, batted io-Atwell Beard. 3 Hay: lok, "Bouslas x) .

tin,

rgense ori- anapott 9. Base bal ot 4 8 on reCas jone!l, Martin 2 uteht 3 Pau ih Martin's

in 10 Losing pitch

gm Bagby [Kansas City... Paepke 3. [Toledo Snub 2.

T Paepre Win: Columbus

Chicago Cincinnati at Boston St. Lovis at New York. York.

RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION . {10 Inge : 00 002 2— 7 10 ato 001 1— 6 14 Madison, Man Johnson and Buk} Wilson and Mancuso. Minneapolis - 8

Cain and Wheeler; Stanceu, "! uteninson and Garagiola.

te w L P t. OB Louisville 3¢ 85:

|C!

St. 1 iNew or

> Major Leaders

By United Press NATIONAL LEAGUE

Lows .. 56 388 81 13 | Musial, St. ris; “ | Dak, ‘Boston ,. 50 302 8 Pafko, Chics, 0 55 Ashburn, Ph 62 1 Holmes, Boston ... 53 AMERICAN LEAGUE atm, So oe © Boston .. yun ov 98 7

lia, ; tehell

Kiner, Pirates. - JM Bauer, Reds Mize, Giants. .

1 5 a 1 3 Kaite a Brae. nn bs 36 Dinaggio, Yanks. M

Baseball Standingse Resa

Milwaukee i

tL. 9 ” HE Welteroth, Candini, n sad ; Kennedy, | Ostrowski and Moss. me schedu Jay. gw NATIONAL LE: UE 4 Innings:

Brookivn

Sehmits and Scheffing. inner. Tine and Cam

. 00 and Wilber:

Ttung, {Syinkle kennedy, Dreisewerd and Cooper,

010 001 010 3 : ~ 000 000 100 1 rier Moer ‘snd Xamanne; Biektord,

Bhoun, Hogue and Mas! Only games a.

Schmitz Jinx Continues/Seek Peace in the Dodgers

Drop Fifth Straight Decision to Cub Hurler;

Cards ‘Murder’ Giants, 21 to 5, on 20 Hits

By CARL LUNDQUIST, United Press Sports Writer (UP)—Boss Branch Rickey, who files all) the Over trying to help his Dodgers, might try dive-bombiag Johnny Schmitz of the Cubs on his next trip—it could be his most effective

Pro Cage Feud

Walk Still in Dark About Black

By BILL EGGERT The grapevine propagandists {that have been rapping the four National League teams’ entry into ‘the Basketball Association of America this year had something basic to squeal about today. g A terse message from urice| Podoloff; BAA president, con-/ firmed earlier reports that the BAA and the National Lengue were out to make peace in th inter - league player - Arn

Podoloff announced . in New| York today that the two leagues have agreed to honor each other's list of players under contract last |sedson, Locally, that would mean that Charlie Black, lanky forward wooed from the Anderson Packers by Indianapolis last Wednesday, would have to be returned to

the Packers.

Other Agreements However, if such an agreement has been made President Paul A. {Walk of the Indianapolis’ club says he has not been notified. Walk, as owner ‘of the local league entry, also is a member of the BAA board of governors who are notified and ‘vote upon such agreements. Podoloff also confirmed the fact that all players who have jumped leagues willbe returned to their original clubs and that each league would honor the other's territorial rights for one year. Podoloff’s announcement could

Halt temporarily the player - snatching until some agreement, if any, is approved by the BAA board of governors.

Back-of-Hand Talk

The local professional basketball fans know that a feud is going on between the two leagues. They also should know that there is - much back-of-the-hand talk, mostly by National League team owners who are attempting to stall the BAA's expansion this year. This “knife throwing” is typical of one league losing four of its best drawing attractions to a socalled major league. Similar circumstances are recalled when

.|baséball was groping for a sound

{footing and when the All{America Football Conference invaded the National Football

. | League's backyard several years

ago. Ike Duffey, Anderson Packers 35 owner, has stated that he isn’t

33 concerned’ over losing Black to

Indianapolis and although he said

gs TeCently he could seek an injunc: 2¢/tion against Black playing here

he did not plan to seek it. Since signing with Indianapolis, Black has stated that he is much happier to be with the local club than with Anderson. He wants to stay in the “big league,” He says he had not signed a 1948-49 contract with Duffey or any other

1| professional club for the season

{before inking his name on Walk's { proposal.

Basketball]

duel. h BALTIMORE —

Wampler Shares At Tam O'Shanter

Fred Wampler of Purdue and In-

Mat Heavyweights

‘=. CHICAGO, TIL, Aug. 3 (UP)— Tangle Tonight

dianapolis and Bob- Seyler of the University of Miami, led a field of 20 amateurs into the opening rounds of the All-American open at Tam O'Shanter here today after firing par 72's yesterday Each had a card of 37-35, over She rough course. Par is 36-36— The tournament has attracted a fi¢ld of more than 140 professional golfers who will battle through 72 holes for prizes totaling $30 Ben Hogan, National Open and PGA champion, is not entered.

Fight Results

By United ew

medal play ,000.

T SPRINGFIELD, ay vo New York (8. Sioured gre acobs,

176 New Yor Arghie Moore, 174, “St. (pointed - ‘ed Lowry, 175, New

York"

ARRE, Pa. 153, Luzerne, Pa, outpointed Herb Krom owits, 158, Broo 10), rr ORK (Croke Park) Jerry Cour'sal, 148%, Newark, N. J. Sutpointed Ruby | Kessler, 148, New "Yor! . (8)

be just a gesture on his part to| =

GoLpBLUME

—-Rocky Casteliant, One

Two top contenders for a s at Lou Thesz's newly won heavyweight mat title will co! at the outdoor Sports Arena night when Al Lovelock, Bf Windsor, Can., faces “Jumping Joe” Savoldi, of Three Oaks, Mich. Ed (Strangler) Lewis will ret. eree the bout. Lovelock currently is ranked 3s Canada’s second best hea (weight, directly under Bill W son, the Canadian champion. Savoldi once held the worlll’s crown and hopes to climb bak on the throne if he can arma shot at Thesz. The complete program follo: ich. ping clock 530. ise.

‘wo falls out of thres or 99-minufe Heavy weights.

“Sky-H Lee, El Paso, .T Warren Bockwihker, ’ 250, St. pl fall 30 minutes. Ra naioh Gunkel, 3 Lafa Oaribaidl, , Bt. {fel ha ’ Heavy! yweights. fact The he” Guakal-Gurivaid bout starts the Pp. m.

rl e v. is. Mo. ‘One

Stop, relax and enjoy a cool bottle of Cook's beer. It’s the sure short cut to taste and thirst satisfaction. Cook's has the real beer flavor ~ "cause it’s fully-

Kraeusened. That is, it’ ‘ “aged for months the natural Old World way. Order Cook's AS hy beer—it's refreshing. 4% EW. COOK COMPANY, B=

Pig of - Dependable « Moderate Prices

*Woif Sussman, inc.

239 W. Washingten $t.

INC, Bvansville, Indians Remon for fine beer since 1853

GOLF BALLS 39% — 00 : BLUE POINT 222,

§ Delaware, Madison & Ray Sts.

%® PLAY GOLF +=

LAKE SHORE

NO DEPOSIT

i of EN TT

in 1-way Glass Bottles

S...NO RETURNS

Take lictle refrigerator space. Quick to cool. Get handy 12-bottle pack. From your dealer.

FLARE NELLY

or = =i rs = :

Game:

Americ Small Bor

By LEO F

laney of San Fra second throw, uppe 55 feet 8%, inches. son came back on

with a heave of 56 to set a ri 11th Medal

"\50-meter shooting

with a total score Two of the three qualified for the men’s 400-meter McLane of Akror dover boy who set of 4445 in the Saturday, won his today and Bill Sno finished second in Bill Heusner of failed to make th tenth of a second. Sprint Sta; America’s three Cliff Bourland of Mel Patton of Sot nia and Barney caster, Pa., all qu 200-meter dash fin Patton finished Ewell third in t which was won b) Herb McKenley, mn maica. McKenley 21.4 seconds, Pattc Ewell at 21.8. Bourland won | ease. Lloyd Labea was second, Suzanna Zimme; land, O., qualified finals of the wom backstroke. Kar Denmark, who n Yank in the first } Olympic record of seconds, beating t! 1:16.6 set by Dina land in 1936.

Fall in Yi Muriel Mellon o finishing second in Barbara Jensen of finishing third in } fied for the semifi Is yachting, the win a single race in the: running i classes. Races Ww each class for seve yacht with the be: for the seven rac . All three Ame) for the 110-mete: semifinals, to be each winning h heat. Bill Porter ern was timed ‘a Clyde (Smackover kansas at 14.8 ar of UCLA at 14.2. Draves Little, black-hai nalo Draves of Lo! from behind on th day to win the OI springboard diving as the United St first three places. Mrs. Draves wo tiful one and one somersault on th four optional div Zoe Ana Olsen of and won by a point, Pat Elsene cisco was third. It was the Unit gold medal in ti piad and the th title. In the final po Draves had 108.7 Olsen 108.23 .and 101.30. Mrs. Drs today’s competitio lead compiled in four compulsory ¢ Seventeen-year-sobbed quietly o shoulder when {I cision was announ filled 8s she 'ss best. have no wanted to win ve The U. 8. ba which was expe: aside all opposit difficulty, had an v shave and was f from behind in ti

defeat Argentina, It was the thir

~KAMM 2 SC