Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1950 — Page 20

~+lined-out-te Brancato

St. Paul's Season-long Whammy on Redskins |

Fails as They Bow 2-0

Mo RAPS A By EDDIE ASH, “Ih

their hotel and mulled ove

the Indians had lost its punch.

On the other hand, the Lopez-

sfty Joe Muir is slated to pitch op me boys. He probably

for the home will be opposed. Taylor, one of flippers.

the Saints’ bes

i f its ut St. Paul pitched one © Nicholas Wo last night, Phil Haugstad, a plent

16-game winner in regular sea son. He

championship campaign. Main to the Rescue

¢ ’ ntest, played in Last night's co Brae a oped into a the league's home run king and nd was high- “Freshman of the Year.” clutch relief the bases loaded in the third in-

threatening weather crowd of 3070, devel ! red hot ball game a i lighted by great pitching by Forrest Main. After hits in eight innings, Elmer dle weakened in the ninth. Antonello, first” up,

ulled up rs double to the scoreboard,

Mr,

had 11 setbacks. Taylor posted a 13-9 record through the

aints to four holding the Sain jour Bill singled and at third on Al Bran-

Riddle Wins With Assist From Main; =

Red Birds, I

Times Sports Editor. -

1

AS wk CE Speer a : po du 5 ry we he BT Pall Sine au

r “what might have been.” Shorn of some of their cockiness after the Tribesters hung a 2-to-0 shutout on them last night in the playoff series opener, the visitors from the North decided the season-long jinx they held over

t Running Catches

In the outfield, however, Don! and Antonello showed y of speed by coming! through with running catches to

hold down the Indians’ score.

dling the contest. Lou Limmer, St. Paul firs sacker, was held to one hit.

ning, Larruping Lou tried to hi

Riddle struck him out. Riddle was the winning pitche and Haugstad the loser. Pp

Tribe Box Score

putting the tying run in scoring! BT. PAL ry : Po ager Lopez hustled out of Hhiolus - Sannin 4 : 0 3 0 the dugout and called Main In Pendleton, ss ...... 30 0 1 0 from the bullpen. It was a tense Limmer, 1b AF situation. Main bore down and Tioton, It ........, 3001 0 " struck out Earl Naylor, pinch Andersen, e rx tivh ve 3 0 0. ‘ ° tter. : B ‘ ver Jugter Nicholas smacked the ball mausstad. > nei de 4 : 0 straight back at Main and thelomrk -............. 33.4003 big hurler made a good stop and (Bahr, p ........... 0 0 0 0 3 caught Antonello trying to score. Naylor ............ 1-0. 00» Then Monty Basgall made a good Totals Ep -

stop on Jack Cassini's grounder and threw to Dale Coogan for the

game-ending out. Coogan Smacks Double “The Indians scored early in

: but were unable to tally gun i ‘again. Leo Wells got a single 85 Pras, v leadoff man in home first and a Daliessandro. rf .... 4 double by Coogan put him on Fernandez 3b third. Frank Kalin was erased Gearbart, cf on a short fly but Dom Dallessandro made his fly a long one p,q, ",

“and Wells scored after the catch, _after Lloyd Gearhart opened the "Tribe's second stanza by belting a double off the left field wall and scored on a single by Basgall “after one out.

Edson Bahr pitching the seventh balls—Off Riddle 5, Haugstad 1. Struck

and eighth for the Saints, Saints Load Bases

But the home boys had their{in 2; Main. 0 in 1. Hit by pitcher—By "bad moments as they captured Heusstad Gearhart). Winning pitcher—| “the first battle in the best-in- Middle. Losing pitcher—Haugstad

the! Wells. 5s

which Nanny Fernandez, -

Ozark walked for Haugs'ad in seventh. Naylor struck out for Baar in ninth, INDIANAPOLIS AB R

| Coogan,

{ Turner, ¢

i Basgall, 2b

Main, p

| Sono ~mo~oomud |

1

w Bi ooo o~0co00o0 9 ~

'

Mi DODD OR = Sl ~Sscoomooacad>

-» -

Totals

St. Paul | INDIANAPOLIS

sarveeravee 3 ood

tunities to run last night but men were thinking up new ways managed to find a way to steal to make it two straight tonight.jone base. The veteran Eric yo iton caught the Tribe napping in Ithe second inning and made a debv Hoosier Harry|layed steal of second.

The officiating was. “big league,” with four umpires han-|

He's With

the ball into the next county and

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 n

a 833 J. A. Coxe professional - [casting reel ‘with leather carrying|,

t|

t

ri

0 " 0 e———— i — 0 0 ol ol 0 0

| fo help beat St. Paul, 210.0.

Wham! In the eighth inning of last night's playoff opener at Victory Field Dom Dallessandr Bahr's pitches on the fat of his bat and bounced a drive high off the scoreboard in left center, good for a double. For a fleeting mo- | ment it looked as though the drive would clear for a homer. Dim Dom collected two of the Tribe's seven hits and batted in one run

E ® ° ._ — gee Re mw NK 8 'W Times Fishing Rodeo to Get winner in iimes risning Koaeo 10 Ue By ART WRIGHT K The champion fisherman in The Times Fishing Rodeo Satur-|iob. day at Yellowwood Lake will receive the L. Strauss & Co. trophy. |p Millard Fishing Tackle, Deposit. N This annual award will go to the man, woman or child pulling ning lures. in the best catch of the day and will be in addition to the top,

o' merchandise award. 9

The Sportsman's Store, 126 N. Pennsylvania St. today added cis sau Foo ® mio So

——

a

..

of

_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES *

3

i i i

Comp Ti Waris High Revd.

Be AR

___ Diagram Photo by John S8picklemire, Times Staff Photographer

Strauss Trophy

and K. Taxidermy Co Michi- Standard Foods, 2340 E.

job iT Y.—|N. Illinois “St.—Phantom

Monroe Bait Co. Monroe. Wis —Gift|

|cheeses. |_0. C. Tuttle Devil Bug Co Montague N Y.—Assorted De

Ree fly

case to the growing list of prizes.

Goods Co., 136 E. Washington St.,| The South

{ton. Bacrifices—Riddle 2. Double play— Bend Bait ‘Co. sent in a supply The Indians were held to three weils to Basgail to Coogan. Left on bases nf the Oreno Good Luck tokens hits after the second inning, with —8t. Paul 11, Indianapolis 7. Base onitp.+ were so popular at other

|out—By Riddle 5, Haugstad 3, Main 1

| Hits—Off Haugstad. 8 in 8 innings: Rid-

Times Fishing Rodeos, 12 Angler's Prayer plaques and a rup-

{dle, 8 in 8 (and to 2 men in 0th); Bahr, 1 ply of Nip-I-Diddee lures,

Um-|

seven series. The visitors were retired twice with the bases load-

ed, in the third and seventh. Al-| together, the Saints left 11 run- Hennessy Said,

ners stranded, the Indians seven. Sullivan Said, Padden Said

{pires—8Serafin, King, Duffy and Padden [Tyme—1:89. Attendance—3070,

Duffy Said,

Dallessandro collected two of the Tribe's seven hits, one a double off the scoreboard. St. Paul's infield spent an idle

night on assists. Except for the Put plenty of

|

{| It wasn't exactly an Irishmen's picnic at Victory Field last night the shillelagh

pitchers, the infield had but one, throwers were around.

by Cassini. x { - Tribe infielders were on their St. toes and the lone error of the editor; Ted Sullivan, the Tribe's utors pf prizes:

game was a dropped throw by Coogan when a runner sideswiped him, Wells at short, Basgall at|

second and Fernandez at third who said to Duffy and Padden, "538 of Cam-O-Flage

turned in some fancy plays to frustrate the St. Paul hitters. The weather here was bad

enough but in Minneapolis it was 1st his job as a Western Union Heddon Re Co Detroit. Mich. —Reg- |"

rougher and the Millers and Columbus Red Birds were unable to start the other half of the playoff semifinals. League Official Present Walter Kolish, league secretary, represented the American Asso-,

“¢lation headquarters at last

night's contest here while President Bruce Dudley journeyed to Minneapolis, home of the pennant winner. . Major league scouts at the local game were Fred Hunter, Philles; Pat Patterson, Cincinnati, and Stan Feezle, Pirates. Hunter is an old-time Indianapolis first baseman. He served as scout for the Boston Red Sox 16 years. If you want to know. just how | good the Phillies are, get in a chat with Hunter. The speed merchant - Saints didn't get many “right” oppor-'

Look. 'em over: Joe Hennessy, Paul Pioneer Press. sports

busineds* manager, and Umpires Jim Duffy and Pat Padden. Said Hennsessy to Sullivan,

“leave us play despite the threatening clouds over head.” Hennessy, who in earlier years

messenger boy because he carried

the messages home instead of de-' =

livering them, is a right smart expert now. “I attribute my success in life

to--my failings as a messenger

boy! Hennessy said. “In this league, with night ball all the time, I. seldom get home. That cuts down the percentage of ‘opportunities to make mistakes.'” “But we'll still knock you off,” Hennessy said.

Want Net Tilts

Kresge's basketbali team would like home-and-home games this year. Call Mr. Necessary, RI-2473.

Football oe

High - School New Havea 7. Portland 8

Columbus 27, Greeasburg 7. Anderson 14. Connersville 0.

“[

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF w i

; t-of Seven Series) INDIANAPOLIS ,....... 1 H St. Paul ae 1 Minneapolis 0x0 Columbus . ‘ie 0 0 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE "PLAYOFF (Best of -Seven Keries) Ww LBaltimore ....................1.5 8 Montreal’ .....:......cuneuins 0 1 ersey City .......... . 1 0 hester . "in 0 1 THREE-1 LEAGUE PLAYOFF ¢ (Best-of - Five sorry ow y Ww. L or BETO eg — ———— ob Dareiils en 8 1 RESULTS LAST NIGHT Terre Haute 5. Danville 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE p Bettall ........:.... 86 iw Cp New York ........ B86 . 50 632 V3 . .. 88 5] 628 1 Washington 5 % 4 08a ’e 3 v CRIGSBO. vx. +v-21... 53 “86. 1 3° Phy lguls sasasinannn 50 86 368 36'% his oo 4T 92 338. 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE § w. Pet. G.B.] 2 a p J 50 5% oy % 540 $l S11 13a fa . 3 8. 3% #2 RESULTS YESTERDAY | ER! ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF | A at uneapoils, postponed, | F110) JE PLAYOFF |

box & Aleve

ff

Cea Mah ops

4 :

| New or as |. Werle 8-13) (12-

man. Losing pitcher, Poholsky, Home run ~Blaylock Se

Sn—

AMERICAN LEAGLU. i Wahipsion THICAN co By = T ol Sa

. 002 010 OO Harris (7) and Okrie. 855) t13-4y and 8Bwi Ang Bearden (3-8). erta, ’ ; 110 00g 000 3 13 0 ) and Batis; Wignt (8-15) ‘ 000-0 3 0 400 020 00x 6 % © Coleman 57 and Tipton: Widand lollar. Losing - pitcher, } 0

Detroit Bearden, “h Trout pitcher Stewart

wift Home runs—

jzzuto. Berra, Doby, Easter (2) NATIONAL LEAGU! : Cincinnati ... 000100 0001 3 1 Broskly: ‘ 000 190 03x— 3 1 1 a wel (14-15: and Praumesa: Erskine 14-4: an Pittsburgh .+ "000 000 000--x 010 000 11x 3 7 1 and McCullough; Jones 14) and Westrum. 3 ut

ck. Brae a 1 ston AL He gw Ep 0 1p Rush (12-18) and Saxatski. alker Bickford (19-10) and Cooper.

, AMERICAN TION PLAYOFF ames ) St. Paul at 18,

Colymbys A.

He Waal RE LEAGUE LR

| schedule: 7, R

a Edwards. Home run, Kluesewsk!, |

GAMES TODAY |

8:15. 4

Rodeo Free | The third annual rodeo, staged -|with the co-operation of the State| Conservation Department, is free, to everyone, Fishing will start | at 6 a. m, and close at 3 p. m.| Anyone wishing to fish after 37 {p. m. may do so, but no prizes {will be awarded after that time. Any type of fishing equipment may be used . . . even the “bent pin” method. The only restric[tion is that boats will not be permitted, | Folldwing are the other contrib-|

| Pred Jooqast Co.. Akron. 0.—24 Arboast artificial lures a aw Line and Twine Mfg. C

>0., | | Ashawny, . 180 yards of Slipcast line. | |" Cortland Line Co., Cortland, N. Y.— ] silk casting line Sportin s Co. ; | Washington Bt Marine plywood car-top | iboat | Enterprise Mfg. Co. Akron, 0.112] ipl Pal-O-Mihe Jointed minnow bait. | Pluses eddon’'s Sons, Dowaglac. Mie i

don River Runts

ular and Flyrod Flatfish lures |

‘Wrestling at Times Can Be Backbreaking

! “Backbreaking” toil lsads to]

sion.” { It did for Wladek Kowalski of | Detroit last night in the Armory. | |Kowalski put Canada's Al Love- | |lock out of. commission with a

{backbreaker. in 32 minutes when |

{the Maple Leaf lad was unable to (continue. ; | Lovelock would have escaped {the injury if KO Koverly of Los | {Angeles had shown up. Koverly’s | stay-away tactics cost him a suspension by the state commis-| sion. ve : |

7°10 the tag team opener Ray

|Eckert and Whitey Whittler won {over the Great Humphrey and. {Tommy O' Toole.

Softball Notes Sweet 16 Tournament results last night at Municipal Stadium: East 10th erchants 10, Barons 4; P. Mallory 1 . U. 8, Tires 7, Tydol Dealres losers .<eliminated \ Tonight's. Barber Firestone vs | Meyer's Market: 8, Indianapolis TV vs Stop and Shop; 9, Allison Jets vs, Fran-_ i

oesco Cresp

ERR

Hawthorn Dinner

Complete! Served Every Evening STH 9PM

75¢ to $1.15

You'll like wus for lunch and that After the Show Snack, too! ‘Open continuously 11 A. M. te 1 A M. Til 2 A. M. Saturday. Large paved, lighted porking oree. ‘

{

‘gticcesa in the “wrestling “profes- t

1m ) ny reel. dus bait coolers. Charles PF, Orvis Co., Manchester, Vt.—| W. Emil Wilson, Shelbyville—Wilson| TV! tic DE box. ures. ! Koehler taurant Supp! Live it and Fishing Tackle,; Wright and

cosooonoo 110 000 00x—2 | Runs batted in—Dallessandro. Baseall, THE Bush-Callahan Sportin gif

Two-base hits—Coogan, Gearhart, Tipton, | Dallessandro, Brancato. Stolen base—Tip- added a tackle box.

of Maxwell House coffee

RG ST

»

Rr ARCA rr Ocean. City. Mig. Co. dus Corp. 431 N. Holmes Ave.—Two Ocean City automatic

< Orvis EB oth St ne - year's Suns pes Oliver Ave.—Box of assorted Blue 24-karat gold pl Eagle C Tr iver jures 3 hoo

o of the Indians caught one of Ed

. « 4604 E. 10th St.—-One |fan St—310 credit toward any taxidermy year's supply of Biue Bonnet margarine. Woodstock,

aVel's Jewelers and Optometrists, 119 and Mrs. Gividen was renamed

ibre glass cast onder executive secretary.

s “Junior Gladlure” spia- ing rod and Shakespeare Marhofl W i reel,

) True Temper Corp. Geneva, O.—5-Foot 0x of Swiss Colony . assorted. patural| True Temper Corp.. steel Castmaster rod., Davis, Co, Old Fo vil Bug wet flies. is Q andill r 2 t [T. H. Wood Co., Bouth Coventry, Conn. Louis uarandillo, Logansport,| 0.,..Philadeiphia.- Pa 1500 yards of Silverstreak nylon casting] and Chuck Faltus, St. John.

McGill Co., Denver, Colo— tion will discuss a site for next a law fishing ks for everyone attending the rodeo.

'# Muncie; Sam Drake, Richmond;

State Pros Start Match Play

Hamblen Wins Medal With 70

Times State Service SYRACUSE, Sept. 13—Match play opened today in the 15th annual Indiana Professional Golf Association Tournament and Floyd Hamblen was the man to watch.

pnb

* - ir rs

4

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 13, 1050.) -

Playoffs

Football-50

To Be Times

lege Grid Scene

| The Times has added another

exclusive feature on football to its growing list of all-star articles for the 1950 season. The latést—FOOTBALL—'50 is |a nationwide sizeup of the U. S. college gridiron scene , . . starting Sunday on the SUNDAY TIMES sports pages. It will be a six-day series, full of Inside information and preseason dope . about the college |teams, coaches and players who (will make headlines during the {football season about to begin. | All of the major conferences and the 1] teams from the Atlantic to the {Pacific will be - previewed and their chances predicted in this

{ {

Yesterday Hamblen, a Tipton Xclusive sports feature.

{player for pay, took medal honors (with a two-under-par 70. This was four strokes better than De[fending Champion. Charley Hariter of Logansport who came in with a 74. An 81 was good enough for a berth in the championship as the starting field of 46 pros was narrowed to 32. The other 14 will {play in the President's Flight. [Match play will occupy today, to- | morrow and Friday with the 36{hole finals set for Saturday. | Tied for runnerup with even{par 72's were Noel Epperson of | Indianapolis and Johnny Watson of South Bend. Four others were tied at 73, Wayne Hensley of Anderson, Ivan | Gantz of Elwood, Wayne TimberIman of Indianapolis and Don Carmichael of Martinsville. Yesterday the pros elected Don | Fischesser of Connersville Counltry Club president for the next year. Lou Bola, Indianapolis |Highland, was named vice president; Gil Gividen, Indianapolis secretary - treasurer,

| New board members are Bill Highland; Tom Wright,

At a meeting today the associa-

Questions Answered Who are the new gridiron stars likely to receive All-American nominations this year? * What coaches are on new assignments this year, and how do they view their team's chances” . Are there anv “sleeper” teams expected to uj the pre-season dope? | How do the big college teams— Notre. Dame, Army, Michigan, (Alabama, Oklahoma, Califor ia, | Texas, and all the othefs—stack {up against their records of 1949 and other years? Six Top Writers Six of the country's top-notch {football writers and sports edi{tors of the Scripps-Howard News {papers in key areas of the U. 8. have co-operated to produce the roundup series, The writers and the areas they will cover are: Larry Robinson, of the New York World-Telegram and Sun, East. Roger Williams, of the San Francisco News, Pacific Coast. Tom’ Siler, of the Knoxville News-Sentinel, South and South east. Clark Nealon, of the Houston . Press, Southwest. ;

Citizen, Midwest, Chet Nelson, of the Denver

year's tourney.

Rocky Mountain News, the Rocky Mountain area,

independent =

Kaye Kessler, of the. Columbus

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tions to M: who retirec coach to b rector. Matty Bell the game's f has reflected football cosa general anc football in Matty’s long successor, Ri wishes for n For the tI a new cham the highly cc ern Conferen for ’'50 are Texas Long Cherry has returning fr lost to migh six points. Close beh Southern Me Russell can around the, Mustangs mae x

FOLLOWL be the gradu ing champio: Christian, ar though new at Baylor a Arkansas ar

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struggle to r lar as they : in this highAdjacent g Southwestern tion that is of the outsta each year. ) ferring to such national Oklahoma, N

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Coach Bud ing champio: were extreme uation, and must be mold ican Leon F this rugged c assignment, Wilkinson. is can do it, an see Oklahom tion’s best. be the close: years will be sas.

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