Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 65, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1934 — Page 21
JULY 2G, 198 J.
Battered Yankees Defeat Browns, 5-4; Tigers Lose Encounter to Red Sox, 9-7 Ruth Expresses Fear Ruppertmen Are Ruined as He Paces Floor of Hospital Where Combs Lies Injured: Chapman Leaves Game With Bad Knee. BY THEON WRIGHT United Pr- Stiff Correspondent NEW YORK. July 26 —‘ This is the end of the Yankees." Babe Ruth who made the Yankees, muttered these words as he paced up and down the '■'orridor cf a St. Louis hospital yesterday. Betor.d a drrr Jav Earl Combs, ten-year veteran of the Yankees. His head was swathed in white; he had cracked his skull against a concrete wall, running for a fly ball.
CPTING •■rffPAR /y 7)r_rA TTf/Z/rr. * ~ d"'*' "■ 'T'HIS is another story about a A golfer who made a hole In one. but the score was three. This time it was Henry Stude who performed the feat on No. 12 hole at the Hillrrest Country’ Club course The shot is a difficult one over the lake, and when Stude made hr first effort, the ball plunked into ♦he water. He took the one stroke penalty, reteed a ball and hit it again. This time the oall struck the green a few feet short of the pin, fork a bounee and rolled into the cup. a a a At the same course a couple of years ago. a young woman player Just taking up the game and playing the same No. 12 hole, took two lusty swings at the ball and missed. The third swing connected and the ball went into t ne cup. She. too, wrote a three on her score card. a a a THE Hillcrest women held a novel tournament this week with two young misses, Anna Mae Jones and .Julia Rowe, as sponsors. The event was called an N. R. A. tourney. Every one won a prize. Why? Because every one brought a prize. The women chose prizes in the order in which they finished in gross scoring. Mis. W. H. Bridges was first, with SO: Mrs. W. H. Hutchinson, second, with 94: Mrs R. A. Staudt, third, with 96; Mrs. Gordon Clovd, fourth, with 102; Mrs. E. C. Harvey, fifth, with 108. and Mrs. A S. Rowe, sixth, with 118. a a m THE pro-amateur next Monday will be held over the Greenfield Country Club. Max Buell, tournament manager of the Indiana P. G A, announced today. The event will he an eighteenhole handicap event, with pros drawing their amateur partners. There will be only one other draw-your-partner event this summer. It will lx* held at Hillcrest. date to be announced later. Those who like this method of play are urged to attend Monday. This will be the last | tournament until after the state open at Evansville. Aug. 9 and 10. a a a Buell said the P G. A. officers were well plased over the twentyteam turnout last Monday at Highland pro-amateuress event. Plans tor a couple ol similar events next year are being made already. a a a Sunday at Anderson Country Club course Bob Tinder, course pro. will team with his brother. Bill Tinder, pro at Grandview municipal course at Anderson, in a match against Neal Mclntyre. Highland pro, and Buell. a a a HIGHLANDERS are getting ready for their big event of the season—the annual “Highland Fling.’’ The golf committee, composed of Ralph Burdick, chairman; George E. Pierson and Harry Schroeder — urges that all Highland players register their names as soon as possible. In this event, something like a derby, the players are arranged in forsomes and those who like to pick winners and really bark up their judgment, may do so to thp fullest extent. Individuals or foursomes may be selected. The winners will bp determined on the low net basis. In grouping the players into foursomes. efforts will be made to have each total nearly the same in handicaps. a a a HILLCREST will entertain the Blue River Country Club team of Shelbyville Sundav at the local course Because of this, a mixed two-ball foursome included in the season program calender has been postponed, along with thp junior tournament qualifying round. Hillcrest recently opened a drive for junior members, admitting youths under 21 years of age on the $5 a month basis. For this reason the junior qualifying will be held at about the same time as the club championship qualification. man The terrific heat wave hanging over c:tr has the golfers groggy. Play a* all the courses, private and public has dropped off considerably. Any let up is expected to find an unusuallv large number of links devotees who have been hanging up attendance records all spring and early summer to rush back to the links. a a a THE Indianapolis public links team, composed of Dave Mitchell. South Grove: Walter Chapman and Charles Boswell. Coffin, and Bill Reed Sr and Mike Poliak. Speedway will depart early Saturday for Pittsburgh, where during the next week the’ will participate in the National Public Links tournament as Indianapolis tram representatives. The tram plan.' to go in autos and arrive in time for a practice round or two before the event opens on Monday. The tournament is a huge affair, attracting between two and three hundred public links players from all over the country. It is promoted by the public links division of the United States Golf Association, of which Ganson Depew Buffalo. N. Y. is chairman fiiTh is i.ast~night AT OAKLAND. Oil - Nh Gamers. ITt. Mex.vo C'tv drus(sr.d Fr n .ie Hammer, in OxkUnd -le Frank Uaikrv is*. San Le • dro. knocked oj: Tiger Jack Fax. HI. Terse Ha *. Irsd. ill. A1 Serrasie. 14< Oekla.id oee-.sMned S irr.y Bor W ilaon !** Oaelaed <*: Ai A brers. I*3 Oakland. technically ki*aeked out Jar* Ferrara. I*4 ■Jaaland Pit ODcad. 13*. Bar. Frar'iseo. deciriored Johnny Todare. 1S Oek’and 4>. Gee see Casper. 174. Oakland. knocked cut Mickey Krause. 127. Oakland ill.
Combs will be out of the game f r the rest of the year, perhaps for life. And all over the country fans are asking themselves—“ls this the end of the Yankees in this year’s race?” A roll call of injuries such as few clubs have suffered in major league history is plastered over their record this year. Ben Chapman has a “Charley horse" that he got colliding with Frank Crosetti going after a fly ball. Lefty Gomez has a sore pitching arm. Tony Lazzeri has barely recovered from a wrenched cartilage in his knee, which kept him out for the month. Bvrd's Homer Wins Ruth himself is playing against doctor's orders—that welt ort his leg, where a terrific drive off Lou Gehrig's bat caught him less than two weeks ago. And yesterday Chapman left the game after the first inning, his knee gone bad again, fifth did it. with Hoag and Lazzeri Gomez, Ruth—and now Combs! Where do the Yankees go from here? Yesterday, in the face of their luck, they beat the St. Louis Browns, 5-4. Sammy Byrd's homer in the sixth did it. with Hoag and Lazzeri on base. They are now but a game behind Detroit—but how long can it last? Detroit suffered a relapse after a long winning drive, losing to the Boston Red Sox, 9-7. Roy Johnson drove the winning run home with a double in the ninth, and sent the Tigers tumbling backward. Cleveland made it two straight off the Athletics, taking advantage of Bert Flohr's wildness to start a rally in the fourth after Philadelphia had taken a three-run lead. Cleveland won, 8-3. Braves Take Two George Earnshaw gave Chicago's White Sox their first shut-out victory of the year, 4-0, over Washington. The Swarthmore giant gave only seven hits, and in the ninth when the Senators started an uprising. hp retired the side on strikes. The Boston Braves took a doubleender from the Cincinnati Reds in the only National League games, 2-1 and 7-3. Art Whitney's homer and Moore’s double won the opener, while Marty McManus slammed a homer in the nightcap with bases full to win. Chick Hafey got a homer for the Redlegs in each game. The Giants and Cards were washed out, as were the Cubs and Dodgers in Brooklyn. Wet grounds halted play in Philadelphia between the Phils and Pirates, who have declared a double-header for today. WOMEN SWIM STARS COMPETE AT DETROIT By Time* Special DETROIT. July 26.—A four-day aquatic carnival featuring some of the nation's best women swimmers and divers opened here today under auspices of the Women's National Swim committee. Among those competing are Dorothy Poyilton. Olympic and national platform diving champion; Janice Lifson. 17. New York metropolitan champion; Katherine Rawls, springboard title holder; Martha Mansfield. 18. Chicaeo star, and Alice Bridges. Whitlin. Mass., favored to take the backstroke event. Heats of the national 100-meter free style were to be held this morning. Finals of Legion Play to Be Here The championship in the state American Legion junior baseball tournament will be determined here Friday and Saturday when the regional winners meet in the final round. Carbon and Lafayette will meet in the first game at Perry stadium Friday at 1:30 p. m. Southport and Ft. Wavn will clash in the second game at 3:30 p. m. The championship game is scheduled for Saturdav.
Hero Parade
Bt I'nitfd Trfss George Earnshaw (White Sox)— Shut out Senators, 4-0. Roy Johnson (Red Sox' l —Double scored winning run in ninth. Marty McManus (Braves'*—His homer, three on bases, beat Cincinnati. Sammy Byrd (Yankees'*—Drove in winning runs with homer, two aboard.
FRAMES ONLY— * 1 25 WITHOUT LENSES Here is an offer that should instantly appeal to every one who wears or needs glasses. FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY WE ARE MAKING THIS OFFER. Latest, most up-to-dare style. Will improve veur appearance and grace your far,?; guaranteed against tarnishing Positively guaranteed to fit you perfectly and give complete satisfaction or no cost. Other Mountings and Frames at Special Low Prices During ThTs Sale LICENSED OPTOMETRIST IN CHARGE DR. RITHOLZ OPTICAL CO. INDIANAPOLIS 124 W. Washington SL Claypool Hotel Bldg. Cnast-10-4 ua*t. Oim 1,900.400 W ear Dr. Klcholi IVrfect-VUion Gl#*e*.
Swim Teachers at Riviera Club
* _ $0
♦ Standings ♦
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION \V L Pet. Minneapolis 54 42 .56:? INDIANAPOLIS 49 15 ..>2l Louisville 49 16 .516 Milwaukee 59 4S .510 Columbus 47 4S .491 St. Paul 45 49 .479 Kansas Cltv 45 51 .469 Toledo 44 54 .440 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. 1 W L Pet. Detroit .. 57 34 .626 St. Louis. 40 44 476 New York 55 34 .618 Wash 43 43 ,467 Cleveland 50 40 .556 Phila 35 54 .393 Boston 49 44 .527 Chicago... 31 61 .337 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L P-t.l W L Pet. New York 58 33 .637 Pitts. ... 41 45 .477 Ohieasto . . 56 35 .615 Brooklyn.. 39 52 .429 St. Louis 53 36 .596 phila. 39 52 .429 Boston... 46 48 489 Cincinnati 29 60 .326 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Toledo. Louisville at Columbus. St. Paul at Kansas City. Minneapolis at Milwaukee. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cleveland. Boston at Detroit. New York at St. Louis. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (two games). St. Louis at New York (two games). Chicago at Brooklyn. Cincinnati at Boston. Results Yesterday AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Louisville 401 021 000— 811 1 (Jolumbus 000 010 012— 4 8 3 McKain and Thompson; Teachout. Cross. Sims and Anglev. Minneapolis 000 003 500— 816 3 Milwaukee 220 223 21x—14 16 3 Ryan. Chandler. Tauscher and Hargrave. Young, Braxton. Walkup and Susce. St. Paul 019 000 000— 4 10 2 Kansas City 400 100 00x— 5 9 0 Fette and Guiliani; Page and Crandall. NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game). Cincinnati 000 100 000— 1 J J Boston 000 010 lOx— 2 5 1 Johnson and Lombardi: Betts and Spohrer. . (Second Game) Cincinnati .......... 001 100 001— 3 * 2 : Boston* 1 * ••••• ■• • • ••• 001 005 Olx— 710 2 Stout. Kleinhans and O'Farrell; Smith and Hogan. St. Louis at New York; rain wet grounds. Chicago at Brooklyn; rain. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia; rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 000 000 000— 0 7 1 Chicago 211 000 OOx 413 0 Stewart. Burke and Sewell: Earnshaw and Madjeskl. B( , ston 330 000 012— 9 9 0 Detroit 060 010 000— i 12 2 W. Terrell. Welch. Rhodes and R. Ferrell; Auker. Hamlin. Rowe and Cochrane. Philadelphia 012 000 000— 3 11 J Cleveland 000 132 02x— 8 u u Flohr. Cascarella. Wiishere Dietrich and Berry. Haves; Hildebrand and Pvtlak New York 110 003 000— 5 8 1 St Louis 100 030 000— 4 9 2 Broaca and Diekev. Jorgens: Wells and Hemsley.
Softball Gossip
Chevrolet Body softball club, leader of the western division of Em-Roe Factory League will clash with Citizens Gas Company. pacer setters in the eastern division, tomorrow meht at 8 o'clock at Citizens Gas diamond. Shelbv Service and Indianapolis Democrats will tangle in the feature game of the Big Six Softball League tomorrow evening at Willard park A win for the Shelbv squad will place both teams in a tie for league leadership. All Shelbv Service plavers are asked to be at Kansas i and Meridian at 4:45 or at Willard park at 5:15.
: THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
A name which shone as brilliantly as those of Ethel Lackie. Gertrude Ederle, Sybil Bauer and Dorothy Moore, is that of Euphrasia Donnelly of Indianapolis. She splashed her way to an Olympic berth in 1924 and swam third on the 400 meter relay team that set a world’s record and lowered the Olympic record by thirteen seconds. Miss Donnelly, right, and Jeanne St. Pierre, left, are in charge of the swimming classes at the Indianapolis Riviera Club this season. This is the second year at the northside club for the two instructors. Miss Donnelly is the only woman from Indiana to represent Uncle Sam in Olympic swimming.
McCauley Added to Wrestling Bill Three Bouts Complete Mat Show Tomorrow. Ira McCauley, Dayton (O.) middleweight, was signed today to complete the card for the wrestling show at the Illinois street arena tomorrow night. He will meet Ben Bolt, Sioux Indian, in the opening bout at 8:30. In the main event Bobby Pierce, Oklahoma university coach, will tackle Duke Rupenthall, of Milwaukee. Ruppenthall recently lost a close battle to coach Billy Thom of Indiana university, who is junior middleweight champion. Pierce is gunning for Thom’s title. The semi-final tomorrow will bring together Stanley West, Chicago light heavy, and Turp Grimes, Columbus (O.) veteran. The main go and semi-final will be for two best falls in three, and the prelim will be a forty-five-minute special. Jimmy McLemor? is the matchmaker. The arena is located at 911 North Illinois street.
-that’s RED TOP —the finest quality maltt m M gives greatest satisfaction and best results I H
mmmsmms ?ii O< NEIa>(BORHOOt> THEATER*;!!
NORTH SIDE TAJ ROTT T T)irk' Fnw*ii I<l 1 A A Ginger Rogers "TWENTY MILLION SWEETHEARTS" -w imfj Illinois at 34tb K I I A Double Feature Sylvia Sidney • THIRTY DAY PRINCESS” NOW I LL TELL v 42nd ?.t College UPTOWN •VIVA VILLA” ‘‘MERRY WIVES OF RENO ... 2351 Station St. DREAM ’ffiSKfXJr ‘STAND UP ANP CHEER” - , IMth and College Stratford W • SIGN OF THE CROSS” • BLOODY MONEY” . _w, .. - Noble st Maes. VlFf C A Family Nile J lAlrf V J Double Feature “SISTERS UNDER THE SKIN” ; “KEEP JEM ROLLING” 4 w-w f-% |/>f/ illinoi at SOth GARRICK o fA'iSi" o ! -WONDER BAB” tnth t SMristvpjtem IRFX Family Nite Donald Cook ‘FOG" , nm si a *rn Sl Clair it M v>ayne Si tiI.AIK Double Feature 01. VJCnm Richard Barthelmess “MASSACRE” • WHARF ANGEL” EAST SIDE pi rpr-. 4 yy 1352 F. Wash. St. STRAN D y o z b 'i *&;• “A Very Honorable Guy” George Arliss “House of Rothschild” RIYOLI MANHATTAN MELODRAMA” IDI’IVI' 550: E Waih St. IKVIMI C.ark Gable Myrna Lot ‘‘MANHATTAN MELODRAMA” Plirnc/\V 4<M*i fc. Tenth 8V LMLKMLN Dj>?W Feature Lillian Gish HIS DOCBLE LIFE” ‘ DEATH TAKES A HOLIDAY” ray 4 /y/\ii 4 2445 E. Washington I At .I IMA Double Feature liiwuiii Anna S|fn “NANA” “SEARCH FOR BEAUTY" TIIVUIY/A 402® E. New York Stj TUXEDO Dn p“ b u 'f £&■" “GLAMOUR” “THE SLACK CAI"
Tennis Upsets Feature Play at Seabright Prusoff. Grant Eliminate Mangin and Van Ryn; Jacobs Wins. By Unitrd Press SEABRIGHT. N. J.. July 26.—Two Californians—Helen Jacobs of Berkeley and Carolin Babcock of Los Angeles—will fight it out Saturday for the women's singles title of the Seabright tennis tourney. They advanced to the final today. Miss Jacobs, American champion, breezed to a 6-1, 6-2 victory over Mrs. Mary Greef of Kansas City. Miss Babcock downed brilliant young Gracyn Wheeler of Santa Monica, Cal., after a three-set struggle, 3-6, 6-2, 6-4. By United Press SEABRIGHT. N. J„ July 26.—A blond giant from the Pacific Northwest and a pint-sized young man with a high powered racquet from Georgia dominated the Seabright invitational tennis play as it moved : into the semi-final rounds today. j Henry Prusoff, bespectacled Seat- | tie youth, whose terrific service and ■ deadly chops drove Greg Mangin. j fifth ranking player of the country, out of the singles play, scored the biggest upset of the play to date. Bryan (Bitsy) Grant, Atlanta, 1 Ga., furnished the rest of the fire- j works, wearing down Johnny Van Ryan, Davis Cup veteran, for the right to meet Berkeley Bell of New i York in the lower bracket of the semi-finals today. Prusoff meets: Wilmer Allison, Texan, in the other half. Allison, top-seeded player, defeated Wilmer Hines of Columbus, S. C., while Bell turned back John McDiarmid of Ft. Worth, Tex. Helen Jacobs led the women’s field of four, defeating Mrs. Dorothy Andrus of Stamford, Conn. She will play Mrs. Mary Greef Harris of ! Kansas City, while Gracyn Wheeler j of Los Angeles, who upset the Baroness Maud Levi, will mee Carolin Babcock, also of Los Angeles. Miss Jacobs and Elizabeth Ryan I of California and London, moved into the women’s doubles semi- j finals, while on the men’s side the | veteran Davis Cup team, Allison and j Van Ryn, gained the last four, together with Prusoff and Hines, Mangin and Bell, and Grant and Frankie Parker of Spring Lake J (N. J.),
GARFIELD TEAMS IN TWIN TANK VICTORY The Garfield Park teams made a clean sweep of the water polo program at the Garfield pool last night. The Garfield Red Cross League team toppled Willard Park, 4 to 2, and the Garfield girls team downed the Longacre girls, 3 to 2. In the feature loop game the score was tied, 1 to 1, at half-time, and Latham and Schaeffer came through with the winning goals for Garfield in the second period. A fast contest is expected at Riviera tonight when the Longacre squad attempts to knock Riviera out of first position. The girls game at Garfield was an overtime fracas, with Rosa O’Conner scoring the deciding marker.
EAST SIDE HAMILTON Crolby B*- 8 *- i * JzYi'lXX-i X\/i i Carole Lombard ‘ ONE IS GUILTY” “CRIME DOCTOR” - New Jer at E. Wash. Paramount sriir K”* “ONE IS GUILTY" “CRIME DOCTOR” ■y i nirpn 2939 E. Tenth St, PARKKK Familv Nite X itlVl\Lil\ Double Feature “EAST OF FIFTH AVENUE” “MADAME SPY” 2721 E Washington RflX Y Double Feature DA 1 Family Nite “A MAN'S CASTLE” “THE MUMMY" SOUTH SIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature Warner Baxter “SUCH WOMEN ARE DANGEROUS “UPPER WORLD” r-. . , r. g', n Prosoeet * heloj SANDLRS “tM^r “HELL RENT FOR LOVE” “THE MASQUERADER” . 1105 S. Meridian OR IF \ T A I Double Feature vX -L Barbara Stanwyck “GAMBLING LADY" “HELL BENT JOR LOVE’j . Proso’t t ( tint mat AVALON Do^ u V,us are “THREE ON A HONEYMOON” i “CALIFORNIA TRAIL” _ ~ 112# S. Meridian Roosevelt “THE SHOW OFF” “SHE MADE HER BED” GARFIELD SS “DESIGN FOR LIVING” “SEARCH FOR BEAUTY” WEST SIDE rw rot) 2540 W Michigan RAINY Double Feature Iz . aII Elissa Landi “SISTERS UNDER THE SKIN” POLICE CALL” npt f/\\trß *T W asb at Relmonl BELMONT ft... r. r?a I “CHANGE OF HEART" , STATE t EuS; jOArWlv Katharine Hepburn I “SPITFIRE” I **lol HE TELLING ME”
Lfrs co r; , EOBCE JL FISHING HDENNY^P?
JACK WENDLING, local lure] magnate, has a red face and a redder ear and here is how it came about. Jack was casting his product on i Shafer lake recently when a bass j grabbed it and headed out to # sea. I Jack had other ideas and the re- 1 suiting tension put somewhat of a ! bow in his rod and strain on his line. So when the bass let go or the hook came out that bait came sailing back straight at Jack's face and his frantic duck was too late. The hook went right through his ear ar.d there stayed until the barb was clipped off. Sort of a “hoist by his own petard,’’ or “nursing a viper in his bosom - ’ situation, you might say. a a a MR, AND MRS. WALTER JONES are bragging gently of a catch of fine bluegills last week. A gravel pit north of Spencer yielded the string of 17 and they weighed nine pounds. John Trimble, Morristown postmaster, found five Flatrock bass that wanted soft craws last Thursday. The string, taken near Porter's camp, weighed nine pounds. a a a WE are indebted to F. A Keizer for a clipping from the Princeton Democrat which describes seining operations for the removal of scavenger fish from Long pond, near Princeton. Motor boats drove the fish into one end of the body of water where 100 men were manning a 645-foot seine. About 3,000 pounds of buffalo fish and spoonbill cats were removed and donated to Gibson county relief headquarters. Some of the cats weighed twenty pounds.
“DINOSAUR” |f% ■up 100% PURE mm j[Jl |IB§S PENNSYLVANIA UXe OIL~2 IU 5-Gal. Can 100% Pure Penn. Oil , $2.29 —s*Cffll. Can Texas Oil, $175 GOLDEN FLASH GASOLINE, Gal. i 70 OCYAHE—ANTI-KNOCK J| J Save about 1 tic per gallon over what you pay for the same high quality. ~ §RIDE DAYTON TIRES ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN! • Blue Point and Exide Auto Batteries — n . • Boys’and Girls’Bicycles S3 DUCO €£> DUCO *Crosley Electric Refrigerators 'IS poL * H dressing © Crosley Radios IPt _ _ IPt * Motorola, Arvin or Crosley J“C can 4iJC Automobile Radios Easy Terms! Lowest Prices in the City! f)) Radio Tubes fJQ *>•- f ttk L J Guaranteed 90 Puts—226. 227, r) 1 gfdfo A ■■/A W If 245. 230. 171 A. 201 A. KArH-WW ■ ; ; JQQi 1 * * “ ICy J-—r, BUYS A CROSLEY I REFRIGERATOR iBSUr M •Porcelain Interior ___ _ ' . IjjgHßsL i White Lacquer Exterior 'jgSLT S • Black Trimmings A " Sj • Convenient Shelrador Ik f - ' 1 H ® See Our Complete SB ‘j f 0 ,1 Year’s Free Service ” CROSLEY RADIOS A !1 $>8.50 Si i: $1 A WEEK! BLUEPOINT SSZnSS Ooen Daily and Sunday 6:30 A. M. to 10:30 P. M.
It requires almost a million miles ol wire to supply the needs of the Indiana Bell Telephone Company. Yet more amazing is the fact that these thousands of miles of wire are so combined and co-ordinated into one system that YOUR telephone may be connected to any ether—in fact, to 93 per cent of all the telephones in the world, This highly developed telephone communication system did not just happen. It is the result of a steadfast purpose and definite policy to establish, maintain and operate for the citizens of this state the best and most modem t one service that it is possible to provide. INDIANA BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
Operations were supervised by j Warden Hovey Pritchett and members of the Gibson County Game and Fish Society. Game fishing in Long pond should be benefited materially. HERB HOCH reports bass feeding on bugs at night on Manitou and Maxinkuckee lakes. The floating mouse and bass houn bug: proved it for him on Manitou, luring > four bass and two red-eyes one night last week. You can’t escape the fact that the game fish are going to feed in the moonlight while I it's hot. Herb says the Tippecanoe near j Winamac still is low but that bass are being taken on minnows and! soft craws. One thirty-two-pound j cat was caught two miles below the town. a a a A PENNSYLVANIA angling club has opened war on water snakes, those destroyers of fingerling fish. A 10-cent bounty for each dead snake resulted in the killing of 3,259 of the rascals in two weeks. One hungry reptile can gobble a dozen or two baby bass or trout in a day. Other conservation clubs might consider this move. OLDEST COLLEGE IN ILLINOIS DROPS GRID By United Press ALTON, 111., July 26 Shurtleff college, oldest college in Illinois, has abandoned intercollegiate football because it doesn’t pay. President Paul Thompson, however, said that if the students wanted to engage in intramural games among themselves he would approve of the sport.
PAGE 21
Nellie Flag Cops Arlington Feature By United Press CHICAGO. July 26.—Nellie Flag, a royally-bred filly, by American Flag-Nellie Morse, won the Biloxi purse from five star juveniles at Arlington Park yesterday. She led throughout the six furlongs, winning by two lengths and paying $12.54. The time was 1:12. C. V. Whitney's Today forced the Calumet Stable Miss Space all the way and easily took the place from Hal Price Headley's Fort Springs. CHOCOLATE GO TUESDAY NEW YORK. July 26.—Kid Chocolate's return to the prize ring against Buster Brown of Baltimore has been postponed until next Tuesday night at the Coney Island Velodrome. due to uncertain weather.
I Vacation at FISHERMAN’S, PARADISE BELLAJTO^ggIF^g The Beauty Spot of Northern Michigan • SPORTS—GoIf, tennis, saddle horses, shuffleboard. swimming, dancing—and the majestic beauty cf the limberlost, where hiking is a real thrill. • REST—Delightful rustic cottages, comfortable rooms in the lodge, and close to Nature cottages. • FOOD—More than you can possibly eat of Northern Michigan's finest food. • FISHING—A chain of the finest game fishing lakes in the I North. A variet y of gurgling trout streams. Fish galore. • RATES—S22.SO a week per person. American plan. For Free Booklet, Write— MISS LERA M. SMITH, Mgr. I Bellaire, Michigan
