Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1950 — Page 13

, 1 did not see is—in Bartholo‘reaction. Would » political rally? you returned to y searching and » Hoosiers were at fact was very conversation I ve weré not only

the administra~ - ness—about two rted

fellow Senators ree years ago? inston Churchill ntentions. Why

others afraid of . tting yourselves. id people would t you would not

fellow Senators t realizing that American troops Korea? ur-- fellow Seng~— he blood of our hands of Secreoes this Senator it he has impli-

t say our repre~ nasters of hindwith foresight. w- Senators now prohibit the -im1 manufactured . we have laws of goods manu~

enner, that I do but let me also 1e the actions of tatives put the e welfare of the

ency as it exists actions to work orean War into s would bother an. If we look 1ce we will defiMr. Jenner, try Ww Senators put ty partisanship;

that their idols 30 years ago). stars. We were lic had us on a

ly movie star,

utpost of a terery that could f America and lom to live and

president of Aircraft, Ine.

ipionships away Ln beat Charles, nship until he’s

eavyweight champion. <ihg for peace, y to answer the RTT er

man (D. Ky.)

denny:

h?

FTE ANE

a

z Three Foreign re. full military: -

;ermany is due d the resulting

her than Ger-

ench don’t like. t all. The alterthe West Gerdefend themFrench are bethat possibility. J

n 1 these trends nd of West Gernt, however, a an army is not soon. 1%on the West themselves, livt of war-devas-towns, are less r militarization Jovernment and

ght again they he winning side, ks awfully big

’ 2 4 varrier to quick ament is that ns industry has stroyed and the rt of weapons. ant to rearm

stacle is Allfed I-sized German d up in an al- |

lin rather than

sons West Gers at, though highpt to be strictly Allies in size

ne of the -best sctricity. Every ded change for ece we get a i

v

— Yang re

ewsatan “ployed” “two pitchers; tie

mn

-—gliding out of the pennant picture.

two final frames.

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ad

Columbus Crowding

Tribe Keeps Second ‘Place Despite 7 to 6 Loss to Milwaukee

Redtkins for Runnerup

Spot, Wins Eighth Victory in a Row By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor

Still groping for a restart, the Indians will have two ~~ tries tonight instead of the usual one, and since they lost| by only one run last night, maybe the law of averages is/

coming to their aid.

It will be a twilight-night double-header with the

Milwaukee Brewers and the

Gregg and Johnny McCall for the Tribesters and Ray Martin and Dave Cole for

}

~ probable pitchers are Hal Tribe Box Score

MILWAUKEE

rere

A — Redskins manage to stay in the

. first division, what with three}.

SLLAIRHE defeats’ and. four, onl ~five—in—the--current- home As a matter of fact, the Indians : still were second today, three and a half games behind the league leading Minneapolis Millers. ‘Help’ From Louisville One reason. the Tribesters

Dgvent been evicted from the! LE nerup spot is the fact that on. = ".....Llouisyille is_doing some faster

Crowding the Indians for sec-|

ond place, however, is fast flying Platt. cf + Columbus. The red hot Red Birds Turner, ¢

; | Basgall, 2b even edged the pacesetting Millers! coosan. 0

{Pits Gerald ...

last night for their eighth straigh victory to pull within a single percentage point of Indianapolis.

Louisville was knocked down) sPriend. p

from third to fourth and St. Paul] bumped into trouble at Toledo] and was shoved out of the Amer-|

__jean Association's first division. { Dall

That Columbus team really has come up from the depths. On July! 1 the Red Birds were 12 games off the pace, now they're only three and a half and in a virtual tie with the Indians. Kicking in two runs in the "early innings cost the Tribesters last night's game as the seventh-| place Brewers won, 7 to 6. Both errors; by Nanny Fernandez and Monty Basgall, occurred in the second stanza, and both were wild throws to first. The

miscues, mixed with hits; sent the}

Brewers out in front.

Then when the Indians rallied)

in the late innings to fall only one run short of tying the score, the ladies’ night crowd of 3933 thought of “what might have been” but Tor the ragged play. Tribe Manager Al Lopez used 17 players trying to come from behind. The home boys did manage to perk up in the eighth and ninth by scoring four times in the

Twenty-Six Hits The Brewers collected 14 hits, the Indians 12; the visitors em-

sters thaee. :

Rookie Bobby Friend was sad-|_ =

dled with the defeat and Chet Nichols, also a rookie, received credit for the win! J With the Brewers leading, 3 to 0, Frank Kalin exploded a home run over the right field wall in

“the fourth and before the inning|c

was out the Indians got three more hits and another run.

jig Cwrin; stand Jcakison I

Hen ® ona

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+ %lsosaudacuen

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Totals ...........

-a

Beard, rf

Riddle

wahesrrnas

Main, p ... jRikard .....

Bockmén ... Lint, » .... REtBrR ... 0 iin Dallessandro, Ib ....

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“OOOO OON OID»

Totals ........... 7 "2 * Starting pitcher. Bockman singled for Friend in seventh, Fitz Gerald singled for Coogan in eighth, Peters announced as batter for Lint in eighth.

Dallessandro filed out for Peters in eighth, then played first base.

Riddle ran for Kalin in ninth.

Rikard grounded out for Maia In ninth. |

Milwaukee 021 002 11017

INDIANAPOLIS Runs batted in—Clarkson, Kalin 2, Basgall 3, Jaderiund, Montag, Logan, Addis, Fits Gerald, Turner. Two-base hits—PearClarkson, Logan, Lakeman.

Kalin.

Hits—Off Friend 11 in 7 innings, Lint 3 in 1, Nichols 11 in 7%, Main 0 In 1, Wall 1 in 1%. Hit by pitcher—By Friend {Jaderiund). Wild pitch—Nichols. Passed ball-Turner. Winning pitcher—Nichols. Losing pitcher—Priend. Umpires—Apple-

hans, Fette and Heinlen, Time—2:30. At-/

tendance—23420 (paid), ok

Indians ot Bat

AB R_H RBI SB Pct. . “sssiBell, Danny O'Connell, Danny i : sheiil 3 58 - : “| Murtaugh, and Clyde McCullough. Challenges Proximity | © 18 7 o ne Simmons, pitching one of his| vONKERS N. ee ikibest.games. of -the Year, gave-UPl__wiin H. Caie, i 1 40 1 MWiignly four singles and had trouble . 19 43 36 1 aml os Sa th inn h harness racing's classic Hamble «@ 71 3s 3 asonly In the eigh ning When|gonian, offered last night to race 4s 110 es 1 agafafter two were out he was|pi. |iitle pacer, Time, ot 121 s7 § amjtouched for two singles and a) ,gainst Proximity, the world's 4 1s 8 0 aswalk. Willie Jones started him|jeadine money-winning trotter, in #5 18 o ‘3uloff flying with his 25th home run, necia) $35,000 mile match race| 18 33 18 0 Mor the year in the fourth inning| "PCC . ; 6 66 38 3 am a on a winner-take-all basis. Beard ....... 2 1 5 o o off Glant Ace Larry Jansen. An-| at the U. 8. Harness Coogan ....... 187 33 14 2 .210/dy Seminick also homered in the yw iors meeting, Cane said he Two-base hits—Bassall 38, Platt 30. seventh when the Phillies made 0.14 back his pacer with $10,000 Peters 11, Ballinger 11, Kalin 10. PFits/three runs, Richie Ashburn driv- pa y

Gerald 9, Fernandes 9, Dallessandro 9,

But Milwaukee smacked two ip oo. "3 "sivara 7, Coogan 5, Wells 4

doubles and a single in the sixth for two more runs. Slow fielding in the Tribe outfield helped along the Brewers’ scoring. In the seventh it was another run. for the visitors which was

REIT e bunt run when Bob solid single. |

The Indians -tried to rally in; the seventh but a double play

stopped it. In the eighth, how- = ~ ever, they did some business,] PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 22 batted - Nichols out of the box (UP) -- Indianapolis’ hopes of

and tallied twice. This rally was

—taunched-by-Kalin—who-lined-out-his-—_champlon received a

his third: hit of the game. Mur-

Nichols. Four For Kalin Kalin also figured in the ninthinning splurge when he poked out a double for His fourth hit. But after two runs were in the rally expired with two Tribesters| lefton bese 1 Two Milwaukee errors put Relief Pitchers Wall on thin ice before he worked out of the hole. He deflected a hot drive by Culley Rikard to Bill Reed, second baseman, who threw to first for the game-ending out. l Bob Jaderlund garnered three hits for Milwaukee. The Indians left 11 runners on base, the Brew-| ers nine. : . i The paid attendance was 2420 and 1513 feminine fans took ad-| vantage of the ladies’ night “free” gate, - After tonight's twin bill, the Brewers will say farewell to Vietory Field for 1950 in a single tilt tomorrow, which will be observed as Eagles Night at the Tribe park. fiw

Gutteridge 3. Three-base ‘hits—Kalin 5, Basgall 5. Peters 5, Coogan 5 Bockman 4, Pits Gerald 4, Dallessandro 3, Rikard 3, Gutteridge 2. Home runs—Basgall 13, Platt 13, Kalin 10. Bockman 9, Dallesandro 8, Fernandez

“8

Pat: Stewart Wins

g

U. S. Girls’ Match|

having a U, 8. Girls’ Lawn Tenyesterday when Pat Stewart won

: g : rl : 00d , Bi ray Wall a righthander, relieved an easy, 6-0, /6-2, second-round oll. Batrost”

vietory over Edith Shipley, Philadelphia. Miss -Stewart drew a

first-round bye. taphens. » 8 5 = Meanwhile, defending titlist 4 HIRE Maureen Connolly, a Diego, Rissnts Yankees iad Beak, ed Sox 88 Cal, and second-seeded Laura! RUNS Noe Lou Jahn were sweeping to vic- Brome gd, Sox {ifbeer Fos pox tory with other top-ranking play- - Le ers, x i PIT G The 15-year-old California girl|Zigul- Tigers H r, Phil 10-3 advanced with a 6-4, 6-2 triumph if o. lanes 11.3 overta ites 18:3

over Nancy Corse, Chevy Chase, Md. Miss Jahn, Clearwater, Fla., got past Frances McBride, Plainfield, N. J., 6-4, 7-5.

Additional Sports Pages 14, BALL GAME or for That Jose Svening Snack DANUBE

"RA

1946 TO 1950

CHAMPIONSHIP STOCK CAR

—— LABOR DAY; SEP. 4TH == 8:30 P. M.

CE

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A100

Dizzy Trout Wins His 11th, Stops Browns, 7-1

By CARL LUNDQUIST

odgers’ Double Ste

ce Brewers | ’

United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Aug. 22—Speed,

crm HB-B 40-3 DAH FRG + The victory was sorely needed]

|because lefty Curt Simmons of] the red-capped league ° { Phillies, pitched a 4 to 0 four-hit {shutout over the New York Giants ito keep them 5% games in front {in the pennant derby. i Russell came home with the big tally in the business end of the burglarly while Snider went down to second base. The rally began with two out in the fifth inning, Russell working a walk off pitcher (Willie Werle then whirling to third on Snider's single. It was Brooklyn's 13th “victory in 16

"|meetings with the Pirates’ this

year, Don Newcombe edging Werle in the pitching battle to

a 2 to 0 lead-in the second inning, Roy Campanella's double being the big blow. | Bell, O'Connell Single | Pittsburgh tied the score with itwo runs in the fourth on Johnny Hopp's double and singles by Gus

| | 1

that old trademark of the Dod-| v/ gers when they ruled the National : League roost, asserted itself in a

0 vital victory over the Pittsburgh 0 Pirates yesterday when Jim Rus-| 0lsell and Duke Snider worked a ‘p/double steal for the winning yun!

leading |

win his 13th game. Brpoklyn ie]

Bill M (second row} are

Eiler, Turner and Fleck are ex-Shortridgers, Nash is a Neeley starred at Manual as a pitcher and outfielder, catchers at Manual and Tech, respectively.

Second Baseman Skip Walker, Third Baseman Kenny Eiler, Center Fielder Claude Neeley (front row, left to right), and Pitcher Gene Nash, Right Fielder Herb Green, First Baseman Steve West, Pitcher Horace Turner, Right Fielder Dick Fleck, and Catcher

a

members of the Riverside Class AA Junior Bataball champions

former Tech star, West went to Park School

hh

Proposes $35,000 yin Lake Shore Pro-Am

fon, Tipton, Ind., to victory in the 64. Hamblen had a 68.

Trotting Special

Good Time's Owner |

ing in the others with a double, ; Tigers Win In the only American League game, Paul (Dizzy) Trout of the Tigers won his seventh straight game and his 11th of the year, also allowing only four singles

put in goring position by a7 Rikard 3, Peters 3, Coogan, Wells. as he defeated the Browns, 7 to 1. passed Ss { PITCHING - Vic Wertz gave him a fine workFriend stepped aside for a| w ing margin in the first innin + L IP R BB 80 ; 18 pinch hitter in the seventh andj, .. ~~ 51 wu n 2s 3 so/when he smashed a three-run the Brewers tallied their seventh 1 5 10 homer, his 25th of the year, while run in the eighth off Royce Lint, s 80 67 7sllater on Hoot Evers also hit a and it-turned out to be the win- 3 : 1 3 1 4 homeér good for three tallies. per, oe nmr ae ere “3 Y 60 $i iq Inthe only other game inthe The Brewers bunfed three 4 20 s/majors, the St. Louis Cardinals times in a row on Lint and two 8 1 ousted -the Bo ; SRA FANT rE oo) fener tS) NEE

Bo J] > League by beating them, 9 to 2.

‘Major League Leaders By United Press ~ NATIONAL LEAGUE Pct.

| AB { Musial, St. Louls s 1 $s i 361 , ur . i ohnson. Bin 10 Ri

~ Brooklyn Cinn

| Purl Kl: .323

Pos N 3 Kk .: r. New York .. Zaria. Boston :

if Ralph Verhurst, Proximity's owner, would put up a similar sum, Cane said the Yonkers Raceway would put up an additional $15,000 to make a $35,000 purse. Cane also offered to include| other crack pacers and trotters in the race at an entry fee of $10,000 each. He said if six or more started, the Yonkers track would add $40,000 to the purse and make it the first $100,000 harness horse race in history.

NEW YORK, Aug. 22 (UP)—

WAAR Sola ate : y “Hansen UUHENT to" thelr, Minneapolis farm club of the! American Association after ob-| taining waivers on him from oth-| {er clubs in the majors. Hansen, | {who had recently been plagued {with a sore arm, had been used

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Carn. TV Word Right Rind

al Drops Pirates, 3-2

ill-Champs

Left Fielder Myron Moriarity, and

and McQueary and Moriarity are senior weekly pro-am tourney at Lake

A best bal score of 63 hel 4 | Shore yesterday. Paul Gross and | {Floyd Hamblen and Charles Kil. Warren Miller took second with!gigshanded and Logan had signed!

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Racial Bar Lifted:

‘Althea Gibson = hy ST ass "In Field of 52 CHESTNUT HILL, Mass. Aug.

22 (UP) — Australia’s talented | NEW YORK, ‘Aug. 22 (UP)— tandem of Jack Bromwich and

For the first time in history a| Negro will be competing for a na-| Frank Sedgman looked like a tional grass courts tennis cham-| good bet today to beat American pionship next Monday when the aces Bill Talbert and Gardnar U. 8. Women's singles play begins Mulloy in doubles play of the —at-the famous WestSide Terme Davis-Cupchallenge-round starts... “Club ih Forest Hills; N. Y. ling Friday at Forest Hills, N. Y, That was revealed by the U. §. The two torrid Aussies gave a Lawn Tennis Association today Possible preview. of the Interna. when it announced that 22-year- tional cup outcome yesterday ald Althea Gibson of New York|when they routed the veteran was included among the 52 en-|Mulloy-Talbert duo 7-5, 8-6, 3-6, trants accepted for title play. 16-1 to win the men’s crown in “Miss Gibson was accepted onthe finals of the U. 8. national her ability,” executive secretary doubles tennis championships at Fdwin 8. Baker of the USLTA the Longwood Culchel Chin. a sald. "Her name came up for cons: g a * —sideration—by A com=+Margaret 0. du Pont of Wilming- an] — mittee in tHe normal process and ton, Del, and Louise Brough of the committee considered her rec- Beverly Hills, Cal, teamed to win ‘ord strong enough for her to com- their Ninth Straight women 8 le { " y pinning a 6-2, 6-2 defeat on pete yor tie Fational- title. Shirley Fry of Akron, 0. and ; I d {Doris Hart of Jacksonville, Fla. Johnny Logan Calle !who also were runners-up in 1949, 3 Aussies Won Last Year To Active Army Duty | Bromwich and Sedgman unST. LOUIS, Aug. 21 (UP)-- goubtedly will play in the Davis {Johnny Logan, 30, former St. Cup round against Talbert and - (Louis professional basketball ‘Mulloy who will be represénting |player and ex-Indiana University'the U. 8. in that competition for |athlete, has been ordered to ac-ithe third straight year. : tive duty as an Army tank com-| Bromwich, a wily. 31-year-old mander. veteran teamed with Billy 8idA captain in the Army Reserve, wel] last year to win the Davik {Logan of Richmond, Ind, sald to- Cup doubles match from Talbert day he is to report in 21 days. and Mulloy. : Logan captained the St. Louis, What made the victory more Bombers in the Basketball A#so- outstan Was the fact that ciation. The club since has been! Bromwich and Sedgman played a semifinal match about three hours earlier,

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