Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 316, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1928 — Page 10

PAGE 10

P laying the J?ield 5556 WITH BILLY EVANS ®

AMONG major league managers, I don’t think there is a greater chance taken in the game than John McGraw of the New York Giants. That goes for his transactions on and off the ball field. Well do I recall an important world series game in which Mc-

Graw’s team in the seventh inning was ti ailing by a run, only to have his first ma n up reach first base in saf 1 1 y . What would McGraw do—play for a run or try to win the game bv getting a couple? Hewing strictly to what is

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considered good baseball, McGraw would have played for the necessary run to tie up the ball game. At such a late stage, with only a few innings left, the theory is that the game should first b c tied before gambling on more than one run. In other words, you must tie any game before you have a chance to win it. a it tt It so happened the second batter up in the inning was a good hit-and-run man. This fact caused McGraw to gamble everything to win in that one inning. The batsman hit safely, sending the runner to third. Before the session was over the Giants had three runs, enough to win. tt u tt SAFETY first tactics in baseball never have appealed to McGraw. He prefers the most daring plays that offer greater possibilities if succesfully executed. There you have the big reason for the great popularity of McGraw over a period of more than twentyfive years. The public loves the chance-taker, one who is willing to gamble with a punch rather than resorting to science at all times for Victory.

Now for his methods off the field. Certainly no manager has ever dominated a team more than McGraw and always had the courage of his convictions, right or wong. It is a well known fact that there have been mighty few pennant winning ball teams that haven’t boasted a great second baseman. Two years ago, McGraw had none other than Frankie Frisch, probably the most valuable second baseman in baseball, all angles considered. In an important series at St. Louis, McGraw used some tcbasco language on Frisch and that evening Frisch departed for home. tt tt tt Because of Frisch’s greatness, a lot of managers would have smoothed over the breach, but not John McGraw. Quitting the team in the heat of the pennant battle because of a call-down was an error that McGraw refused to erase. tt n tt FOR sending Frisch to St. Louis, McGraw received the great Rogers Hornsby in return, outstanding star of the National League and regarded as just the player to combat the popularity of Babe Ruth in New York. That trade was a sensation, but this spring McGraw sent Hornsby to Boston for Hogan and Welch, and that set even more tongues to wagging. I have never been able to figure that trade myself, but I am willing *to believe McGraw had sufficiently good reasons. Now McGraw sets the fans talking again with Andy Cohen, a Jewish boy who made a most auspicious debut. However it is most difficult to believe he can Immediately fill the shoes of Hornsby. Perhaps later, but not this year. The Giants are certain to be handicapped by the passing of Hornsby. McGraw is of the opinion that Cohen will fill the bill. That is the best recommendation the youngster could get. And McGraw, by the way, has always had great second 6ackers on his teams. Helen Wills 111 With Bad Cold Bn United Pres* BERLIN, May I.—Helen Wills is “seriously ill,” she telegraphed the German Tennis Federation today. Miss Wills, who is scheduled to play in Berlin May 6, may have to cancel the match, her telegrams said. PARIS, May I.—An illness today had caused Miss Helen Wills, American women’s tennis champion, frois competining in several scheduled matches in Germany. She has a heavy cold, probably gained from the variable weather of the past week, and doctors thought it better that she should rest.

Amateur Roller Tourney May 21 Ft. Wayne, Richmond, Anderson, Brazil, Evansville, Vincennes and other roller skating centers of the State will be represented by entries in the Indiana amateur roller skating tournament, which will be held at the Riverside rink the week of May 21, it was announced today. Next Saturday night the weekly races will be featured by an employes’ race for a silver cup. Five of the fastest of the Riverside staff have entered, namely, Jack Huntsman, Charley Berger, Merle Davis, Clyde Addison and Jimmie Leach. ATHERTON - WINS~BOUT YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, May I. Happy Atherton, Indianapolis flyweight, won over Louis Carpentero, Toledo Filipino, by a wide margin in a twelve-round scrap here Monday. Athertoin will meet Corporal Izzy Schwartz, New York, recognized by the Gotham commission as the flyweight champ of the world in Ft. Wayne, May 9. The title will not be at stake.

Yankee Star Hopeful of Meeting Compston in 72-Hole Match

Jack Sharkey Puis Delaney Away in Ist Boston Heavyweight Batters Bridgeport Jack to .Canvas at Start. BY FRANK GETTY, United Press Spurts Editor NEW VORK, May I.—Jack Sharkey of Boston has catapulted himself back into the front rank of heavyweight contenders with a terrific two-fiisted attack which wrote “finis” to the heavyweight career of Jack Delaney of Bridgeport. While Baron Von Huenefeld, Captain Koehl. Major Fitzmaurice—crew of the Bremen—and 5,500 other spectators looked on, startled by the sheer ferocity of the big Lithuanian’s attack, Sharkey beat Delaney to the canvas and knocked him out after one minute and thirteen seconds of fighting in the first round Monday night.

Savage Swings Cutting loose with savage overhand swings to the jaw at the opening bell, the Bostonian drove the bewildered Bridgeport boxer about the ring. Delaney, ducking and on the run from the first second of the fight, landed just one blow, a right which raised a bruise on Sharkey’s collar-bone. With the crowd stirred to Instant uproar by the speed of the attack, Sharkey landed a succession of rights to Delaney’s head and jaw and Bridgeport Jack’s knees sagged and he clutched for his opponent. As he did so, Sharkey drove a terrific right and left to the body and sent his lighter opponent spinning to the canvas. Clubbed to Canvas After that, it was a massacre, with Delaney gasping and pawing in | distress as the Bostonian twice more clubbed him to the canvas. The last time the former light heavyweight king went down he groveled with his bleeding mouth In the canvas, eyes staring sightlessly, body trembling from the effect of the punches. He was counted out with his face still pressed to the resin, unable to j move.

Waserall CALENDAR

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pci. Kansas City II 5 .(>BB St. Paul Jl 8 .847 INDIANAPOLIS 0 5 .848 Louisville 8 9 .471 Milwaukee 8. ft .471 Columbus 7 41 .38!) Minneapolis '.. 8 10 .375 Toledo 6 11 .353 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct.l W. L. Pet. New York 10 3 ,769!Chicago . 7 10 .412 Cleveland 12 6 .667 Washings.. 5 8 .385 Phila 6 4 .SOO Detroit .. 7 13 .350 St. Loui. 11 8 .5791 Boston ... 4 10 .286 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct.l W. L. Pet. Brooklyn.. 9 5 .643 Chicago... 9 10 .474 New York. 7 4 .637 Pittsburgh. 6 8 .429 Cincinnati 9 7 .sG3ißoston 5 7 .417 St. Louis.. 8 7 .533!Phila 4 9 .308 Today’s Games AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at St. Paul. Toledo at Milwaukee. Columbus at Kansas City. Louisville at Minneapolis. AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit at Chicago. • St. Louis at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Boston. New York at Washington. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Philadelphia. Chicago at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at St. Louis. Brooklyn at New York. Monday’s Results AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 000 001 000— 110 1 Kansas City 104 001 14*—11 17 0 Meeker, Flshbaugh and Ferrell; Murray and Peters. Toledo 000 003 Oil—s 10 0 Milwaukee 000 210 000—3 5 2 Ryan and O'Neil; Eddleman and Young. Louisville 010 010 000—2 7 1 Minneapolis 000 003 00*—3 11 1 Deberry, Cullop .and Shinault; McCullough and Warwick. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 021 104 000—8 IX 1 Washington 100 030 000—4 12 5 Pipgras, Moore and Grabowski; Gaston. Brown and Ruel. Philadelphia 000 020 002—4 7 0 Boston 100 000 000—1 6 0 Walberg and Cochrane; Ruffing and Hoffman. St. Louts 010 010 620—10 14 1 Cleveland 000 000 003— 3 10 5 Blaeholder and Schang; Buckeye, Brown. Bayne and Autry. Detroit 011 040 000— 6 0 1 Chicago 115 300 00*—10 14 0 Whitehill, Smith, Sorrell, Holloway and Wooaall; Faber. Blankenship, Thomas and Crouse. NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 020 101 000— 4 11 2 New York 206 500 01*—14 11 2 Petty, Moss and Henline; Henry and Hogan, Haeffner. Boston 113 102 113—13 19 4 Philadelphia 000 201 003— 6 10 2 Robertson and Taylor; Ferguson, Willoughby. McGraw and Wilson. Chicago 000 050 020—7 10 0 Pittsburgh 003 102 11*—8 16 1 Weinert, Malone and Gonzales; Grimes Miljus and Gooch. Cincinnati 003 001 110—6 6 2 St. Louis 101 011 000—4 11 7 J. May. Kolp and Picinlclu Sherdel and Davis. Three Cards on Hospital List Bu United Press ST. LOUIS, May I.—Three Cardinal regulars. Chick Hafey, right field; Bob OFarrell, catcher, and Wattle Holm, third base, are on the hospital list. Hafey suffered concussion of the brain in a collision with a concrete wall Monday; O’Farrell Is nursing a thumb battered by a foul ball, and Holm will undergo an operation for removal of a tumorous growth back of his right shoulder. Walter Roettger, regular left fielder, will take Hafey’s place, Ray Blades filling in for Roettger; Davis and Manucuso are subbing for O’Farrell; High is in Holm’s berth at third.

Newton, American Sportsman, Backs Tommy Armour in Challenge. NOT YET ACCEPTED Americans Practice on British Courses. BY GENE SARAZEN (Written for the United Press) (Copyright, 1928, by the United Press) SANDWICH. England, Mav I. Another American professional, Tommy Armour, has challenged Archie Compston for a seventy-two hole match, but thus far the great English player has not yet accepted. Silas Newton, an American sportsman, backed Tommy in his challenge of the conqueror of Walter Hagen, the match to be played for a thousand pounds sterling, about $5,000. Tommy is in great shape and hopeful of meeting Compston who displayed such marvelous golf against Hagen, giving Walter the worst defeat he has taken since he became one of the leading professionals. Most of the American professionals now here are getting acclamated for the coming Eritish matches. Hagen arrived today to start practice over these pretty courses. Monday, Armour, Jim Barnes, Bill Mehlhorn and Larry Nabholtz played the Prince’s course to familiarize themselves with the various hazards and the roll of the grounds. They showed up well. I went around Monday with Lord Alastair Innes-Kerr. The course was soggy as it had rained all day, but I enjoyed the match greatly. Another Challenge Bii United Press NEW YORK, May I.—The Lakeville Golf and Country Club at Great Neck, L. 1., has cabled a challenge to Archie Compston, the British professional who recently defeated Walter Hagen, for a match with MacDonald Smith. The match | is proposed for thirty-six holes and a side purse up to $5,000.

Butler Basket Team to Oppose Pitt , Carolina The University of Pittsburgh and North Carolina University, two prominent basketball teams in eastern and southern court circles respectively, have been added to the Butler court card for next season Pittsburgh, sensation of the 192728 season, will open the- Butler schedule here on Dec. 13. North Carolina will appear at the Bulldog field house, Jan. 1. The Butler schedule to date: December 13—Pittsburgh, here. January I—North Carolina, here. January 11—Franklin, here. January 25—De Pauw, here. February B—Wabash, there. February 15—Notre Dame. here. February 22—De Pauw. there. March 6—Wabash, here. March 9—Notre Dame, there.

AH Around the A. A. By Eddie Ash

Kid Warstler. Tribe shortsiopper, collected four hits at St. Paul Monday, one a triple. The team piled up a total of twenty safe knocks. IVarstier accepted eleven chances in twelve. It was an off-day for Burwell. for he usually is a puzzle to the Saints. He was not charged with the defeat, however. Swetonic being the vlctin. Heimach got credit for the St. Paul victory, giving him five victories without a defeat. The Monday defeat dropped the Betzels to third place. Kansas City hopipng back on top and St. Paul climbing into second Place. Huck Betts, who blanked the Indians in Indianapolis sometime ago. was knocked out of the box Monday In the third inning. Manager Betzel handed fifteen chances without a miscue. Grimes and Rawlings poled homers Monday and Toledo slapped the Brewers. 5 to 3. Rawlings also crashed a double and single. Ryan held Milwaukee to five hits. Earl Smith’s homer with two mates aboard enabled the Millers to down the Colonels, 3 to 2. A great throw by Harris, Miller outfielder, featured the field play. He nailed a runner at the plate and prevented a tie score. Kansas City swamped Coiambus. 11 to J. Wamby cleaned the sacks with a triple in the eighth. Moore and Rigney each got four hits for the winners and Rehg poled four for the Senators. Pitcher Hubbell and Manager Kelley of the Millers are doing “time 1 * at the request of President Hickey. He gave them “days” as a gesture of punishment for their actions in the disputed Indian-Miller francas of Saturday. President Jim Perry of the Indians is convinced he “got the works’’ put to him by Tom Hickey, A. A. president, when Hickey overruled Umpire Powell after the amp awarded Saturday’s Indian-Miller game to the Indians bv forfeit. It is reported Hickey called President Belden of the Millers and Manager Kellev into conference and ignored Owner Perrv in the matter. And after Hickey saw Powell, the umpire is said to have crawfished. Hickey hires Powell. Perry is protesting Hickey’s action to the league directors, where he'll be out-voted, no doubt, and the disputed contest ordered played out as directed by Hickey. The Indians are “out” their share of the Saturday gate receipts as a result of Hickey’s ruling, a move that is certain to weaken the authority and prestige of A. A. umpires and put more starch into the backbones of managers like Kelley of the Millers. Allen of the Saints. Lelivelt of the Brewers and Stengel of the Hens. But Jim Perry is right in asking for a showdown on Hickey’s ruling even if he gets nowhere with his protest. There’s nothing like trying. And his scrappy attitude will give the Tribe players that much more spirit.

With Tribe at Bat

G. AB. H. Pet. Matthews 8 20 10 .500 Hftnev 15 58 27 .465 I Florence 7 18 7 .388 I Layne . 7 26 10 .385 Holke 15 58 22 .379 Russell 13 49 18 .367 Spencer 12 42 14 .333 warstler 15 60 19 .317 Yde 8 13 4 .308 Anderson 11 33 8 .242 Schupp 5 13 T. .231 Burwell 5 15 3 .200 Mueller 9 30 4 .200 Betzel 15 49 9 .184 Leverett 3 6 1 .167 Connolly 6 3 0 .000 Boone 2 4 0 .000 SwetoniC 4 0 0 .000 Speece 33 0 .000 Meyers 2 10 .000 Released player 5,... Club average 523 170 .325 LEAVES FOR EAST liu United Press CHICAGO, May I.—Sammy Mandell, lightweight champion, who will defend his title against Jimmy McLarnin of California on May 17. Left here for the East to finish training.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Hope to Bring Braves Up in Race

i — : t —-— nPn Ira / cooßbg play J? —mi •• \ U>HO KfrOUJSr] { , drp AklD FARtfS-L, e*- wBK , '"’’TiT j - WfA QHtoTS AIOCO cotYH n ™ / §sb 'LIIm ** J W \ Those ‘ lowly” Braves who were Wytl' ' J3?im* one °', the mmum ‘ o! the flf tYo / spring training season in the j H SOSroM.y Southland are down once more gmfflffflßH J V mL \ j/ with the “tail-enders” and several M6£. SLAtTfeRV eXACrey DOUOW (Vi \ Os pulling the Beantown club Tf-lE MOUTH ABOUT , back into the pennant race in W&hty s TSf the National League. Rogers Hornsby, known to thousands of baseball fans at “The Rajah,” is back 111 the lineu P after a short illness and his stick work should x -JT help the Braves start winning f consistently. Eddie CDoc) Farrell, W "'ho performs at shortstop and vXt, ■ —j— aa % rounds out the keystone sack e combination, is another steady performer.

Tribe Slips After Gaining Lead and Saints Win in Extra Rounds Monday Defeat, 11 to 10, Twelve Innings; Anderson’s Errors Damage Hoosiers: Fred Haney Hurt.

By Times Special ST. PAUL, May I.—This is the first of May, but the Indians of Bruno Betzel are in no mood to sing tra la. They lost a hectic struggle to the Saints Monday in twelve innings, 11 to 10, after having a lead of 7 to 3 in the fifth stanza. The Apostles added one marker in their half of the fifth and then the Hoosiers cracked wide open in the eighth and St. Paul staged a five run rally that put the locals ahead, 9 to 7. Tribe Tics in Ninth Still battling, the Betzelites tied the count at 9 and 9 doing a comeback for two runs in the ninth. In the twelfth the Tribe put over a run in their half to regain the lead, 10 to 9, and then Swetonic took the Indian mound and the Saints fairly devoured him in a very few minutes. Davis singled, Haas walked, Foss sacrificed and Gaston doubled, scoring Davis and Haas with the game-winning runs. Swetonic’s efforts proved “sweet” for Nick Allen’s crew. Johnny Anderson, a hero in Minneapolis Sunday, was a “bustll here Monday. He went hitless and committed two errors in the eighth that kept St. Paul in the game. He dropped a fly ball and followed that boot with a wild throw to the infield, the two errors giving St. Paul two runs after they already had scored three in that round. Speeve Does Well It was a bad day for star pitchers, both Betts of the Saints and Burof the Indians being bombarded freely, the former being knocked out of the box in the third inning. Speece relieved Burwell after the eighth and held the locals scoreless in the ninth, tenth and eleventh. He dropped out in th? twelfth to permit Spencer to pinrn hit and Swetonic, the third Tribe hurler used, got "greeted” mentioned previously. St. Paul used up four twirlers, Betts, McQuaid, Polli and Heimach. Being defeated wasn’t all of the disaster that struck the Indians Monday. Fred Haney, sensational third sacker and hard hitter, was injured sliding in the fifth inning and he was unable to continue, Connolly relieving. .

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Fred received a leg injury, and he is the third member of the Tribe to be sent to the hospital list on that account this season, Matthews and Layne being others, and Spencer received a torn hand in the last game before the team left home. Indianapolis polled twenty hits Monday and St. Paul seventeen, but three of the Indians' four errors figured in the St. Paul scoring. It was a tough fracas to lose. Danny Boone was due for Tribe mound duty in the second tilt of the series this afternoon.

St. Paul Series Opener INDIANAPOLIS AB R H O A E Warstler. ss 7 2 4 7 4 1 Haney, 3b 2 3 2 0 0 0 Connoily, 3b 3 n o l l o Matthews, cf 5 2 3 1 1 1 Russell, rt 5 1 3 1 0 0 Anderson, If 4 0 O 2 1 2 Yde 1 0 1 0 0 0 Mueller. If 1 0 0 0 0 0 Holke. lb 6 O 2 14 0 O Detzel. 2b 6 1 1 4 11 O Florence, c 6 0 3 4 1 o Burwell. p 4 110 6 0 Speece. p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Spencer O 0 0 0 O 0 Swetonic, p 0 0 0 0 o 0 Totnls 51 10 20 *34 25 4 Yde batted for Anderson In ninth. Spencer batted for Speece in twelfth. •One out when winning run scored. ST. PAUL AB R H O A E War.ntnger, ss ..... 6 1 1 4 3 0 Morehart, 3b 6 12 15 0 Funk, cf 6 2 3 6 0 0 Roettger, lb 6 1 2 15 1 0 Davis, rs 4 2 2 4 0 1 Haas, If 4 2 2 4 2 O FOSS. 3b 4 110 3 1 Gaston, c 6 0 1 2 0 O Betts, p 1 0 1 0 1 0 McQuafd, p 2 0 0 0 4 1 Scarritt 1 1 1 0 0 0 Polli. p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Heimach. p 1 o l o l o Totals 46 11 17 36 30 3 Scarritt batted for McQuaid in eighth. Indianapolis 104 020 002 001—10 St. Paul 201 010 050 002—11 Two-base hits—Matthews. Haney, Russell, Yde, Haas. Scarritt, Heimach, Gaston. Three-base hits Warstler, Betts. Sacriilces—Spencer. Connolly. Russell, Foss. Stolen base —Funk. Double plays—Burwell to Betzel to Holke; Betzel to Warstler to Holke; Betts to Wannlnger to Roettger; Haas to Roettger. Left on bases—lndianapolis, 10; St. Paul. 8. Bases on ball—Off Bury/ell, 5; off Swetonic, 1; off Betts, 1; off Heimach. 1. Struck out—By Burwell, 2; by Speece. 2. Hits—Off Burwell. 12 in 8 innings; off Speece, 3 In 3 Innings; off Swetonic, 2 in 1-3 inning; off Betts. 7 in 2 innings( pitched to 5 batters in third); off McQuaid, 6 In 6 innings; off Polli. 3 in 2-3 inning; off Heimach. 4 In 3 1-3 innings. Winning pitcher—Heimach. Losing pitcher—Swetonic. Wild pitch—McQuaid. Umpires—Connolly and Shannon. Time —2:16.

English Runner Holds Big Lead Bn United Press SPRINGFIELD. II!.. May I.—Andrew Payne, the Claremore, Okla., youth, who set the pace for the Pyle cross-country runners recently until Peter Gavuzzi overtook him, was lagging Gavuzzi by nearly five hours today. Gavuzzi, the Southampton, England, entrant, finished second in Monday’s 26-mile run from Virden, while Payne came in tenth. John Salo. Passaic, N. J., Finn, won the lap in 3:01:50. TIGERS RAP MUNCIE De Uauw Scores Fourteen Runs in Last Four Innings of Tilt. By Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., May I.—De Pauw i University baseball team walloped j Muncie Normal here Monday, 18 to j 8. The Tigers scored fourteen runa i in the last three innings. The locals were holding a four-run advantage j at the start, of the seventh, but a J homer by Lamphear scored three | runs and another was chased over j on an error. Six runs in the eighth and four j more in the ninth submerged the j Ball Teachers beyond all hope, j Score: De Pauw 002 002 464-18 15 7 I Muncie 200 230 000— 8 6 10 1

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Heeney Begins Light Training; Is Overweight By I’nitcd Press NEW YORK, May I.—Back from his vacation in London and Paris, Tom Heeney, challenger for the world's heavyweight championship, began light training at the St. Nicholas gymnasiuip today. Weighing 211 pounds, Heeney plans to gradually work down to 195 or 196 at which weight he expects to meet Gene Tunney in a fifteenround b.out at Yankee Stadium probably July 26. Heeney is undecided about training outdoors, and may not establish quarters at Atlantic City as first announced. “I never trained outdoors.” Heeney said, “and I don’t know that I’ll start now. For the time being I’ll train at St. Nick's. It was good enough for me when I first came to this country and it’s good enough now.” The New Zealander frankly admits he has no special plan of battle mapped out for Tunney. “I haven’t bothered to give it a thought,” he said. “I’ll get to that when I start to train in earnest. I know Tunney’s got a good straight left and a right cross, but I don’t think they’ll bother me.” Boilermaker Nine Thumps Gophers R.u Timet* Special LAFAYETTE, Ind., May I.—Purdue University baseball team batted out a 6-to-2 victory over Minnesota in a Big Ten game here Monday as Eb Caraway held the Gophers to five hits in nine innings. Bjorgum, Minnesota hurler, got off on the wrong foot and the Boilermakers pushed five runs over the home plate in the iniitial frame. One base on balls, two hit batsmen and five hits mounted up the score in the first. Score: Minnesota 011 000 000—2 5 4 Purdue 500 100 00*—6 7 4 Bjorgum and Tanner; Caraway and Eickman. BUTLER BEATS CINCY Butler University tennis team defeated the University of Cincinnati squad here Monday at Ellenberger Park, 3 to 1. Results: Wilson (B) defeated Franz (C). 6-1. 6-2 Oexman (C) defeated Christopher (B). 6-1. n-3. prbison (B) defeated Arnold .(C), 6-4, Wilson and Christopher ißi defeated Franz and Oexman (Cl. 8-6. 6-3.

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Chuck Wins Slow Scrap From Byrne Wiggins Ahead on Points at Armory; Allen Vs. Duffy Next Week. The box fighters didn't do very well at the Armory Monday night, and the fans suffered most of the punishment. The customers packed the hall with appetites whetted for wild action and still were waiting for it when the last bout ended. The glove throwers in the main go and semi-windup scraps had an off-night. Chuck Wiggins got The Times’ decision on points over Jimmy Byrne in ten rounds ot tame boxing and in the eightrounder Cecil Hurt gained an edge over Charlie Shine, the only knockdown of the five-bout program occurring in the first round of the semi-windup when Hurt sent Shine to the floor for the nine count, Wiggins,*’ substituting for Joo Packo, was content to go along and stay out in front of Byrne by scoring two shots to one. The Kentucky bruiser was minus some ol his aggressiveness' and naturally got out-pointed when he tried to spar with the veteran Hoosier. Some blood was lost by both, each attacking to the face, Byrne’s efforts to get to Chuck’s paunch being expertly warded off by the latter. In other bouts Times’ decisions were: Tony rhitlins got the edge over Otto Atterson in six rounds. Elmer Bezenah outpointed Danny Budd in six rounds. Buddy Bezenah outpointed Lou Sanders in four rounds. Eddie Webber and George Grammeil refereed. In next week’s Legion main go, the show to be held on Tuesday night, Paul Allen, Chicago, will tangle with Jack Duffy of Toledo. Allen is a former Illinois University student. QUAKERS BEAT~ANTIOCH By Times Special RICHMOND. Ind., May I.—Earlham tennis team defeated Antioch College Court team here Monday, four matches to three.

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