Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 50, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1936 — Page 33

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By Eddie Ash FRESH WAR PAINT IS NEEDED m m m REDSKINS’ CONFIDENCE DROOPS

out the G-Men. . . . Red Killefer’s Indians have been bound and gagged. . . . When a team “blows” an eightrun lead it’s an alarming situation. ... So ring an alarm, somebody. . . . Hurry. ... If any Tribe player got any sleep on that train to Kansas City last night he must be immune to punishment.... Eight runs out in front and then lose, 9-8. . . . The boys still can’t take it in the late innings. . . . It’s tougher than tough to drop ’em that way. The Cincy Reds and Paul Derringer have kissed and made up.... Now it is explained that it was General Manager MacPhail, not Manager Dressen who gave the reason for Derringer’s suspension as "failure to slide.” ... So Paul was called in from the golf links yesterday and restored to good standing.... He’s too valuable to be shelved.... There’s something screwy in Cincy. ... The scribes have been barred from the Reds’ dugout. if a a a a a TRADER ROGERS HORNSBY now picks the Boston Red Sox to win the pennant. ... He had the Tigers. . . . Several experts have switched Rlnce the injury Jinx clamped down on the Bengals and Jimmy Poxx and Lefty Grove came through with startling early-season performances. Hornsby made Manager Cochrane pay through the nose for Jack Burns as replacement for Hank Greenberg. . . . Rogers had waivers on Jack from both big leagues and was on the point of shipping him out. ... But Cochrane had to buy Burns or recall Rudy York from Milwaukee. ... It was an early morning deal, 2:30 a. m. to be exact. ... It looks like they are giving Cochrane the works, and with no mercy.

a a a Kansas City nearly duplicated the Indians’ sour exhibition yesterday. The Blues stacked up a nine-run lead over Louisville and were compelled to come from behind with a three-run rally in the ninth to pull out ahead, 13-12. ... If Dutch /willing had lost that one he would have torn out the few remaining hairs on his bald dome. a a a THE Chicago Cubs are said to have the largest following of any one ball club. . . . But it’s a radio following of listeners-in. . . . The club is not drawing at Wrigley Field even with the best of weather on tap . . . And they are the league champs. . . . They didn’t lure the customers last year until well along in their winning streak to the pennant. JOE LOUIS will be 22 this month. . . . Max Schmeling will be 31 in September. . . . But probably will look like 40 after the Brown Bomber meets him in June. . . . Max Baer stopped the German in 10 rounds. . . . Joe Louis made Baer say “uncle” in four rounds. . . . Paulino, the Spaniard, went 12 rounds with Schmeling and lost the verdict. . . . Louis flattened Paulino in four heats. ... So the guess is one or two rounds next month. a a a Owner Schwartz of Bold Venture, Kentucky Derby winner, is trying to do something about the suspension of his Jockey Ira Hanford. . . The lad was put on the ground for IS days by Churchill Downs stewards and If the penalty sticks he will not be eligible to ride Bold Venture in the rich Preakness at Pimlico May 16. a a a MIDGET auto racers succeeded in stretching their “season” to eight months in Chicago. . . . They say next Sunday will be the last. . . . The boys have managed to come down to the final day to determine the indoor speed title. . . . 1 hat’s what you call expert accounting. ... Keep that Pittsburgh U., football team in mind. ... Coach Sutherland loses only three of his first 25 players and thinks so well of the orospects that the warriors will not be taken to the Pitt mountain camp until September instead of August. Tech Annexes City Frosh Track Crown Tech annexed the city high school freshman track championsVip at the Delavan Smith athletic' field by garnering 751-3 points yesterday afternoon. Shortridge ranked second with 62 2-3 points. Washington third with 36 points. Manual had 35 points and Broad Ripple 9. Robert Scott of Shortridge ran the 100-yard dash in 10:7 to set anew freshman record. GREEK NETMAN WINS ATHENS, Greece, May B.—Lazaros Stalios of Greece defeated Adriano Zappa of Argentina, 6-4, 0-3, 6-4 in the opening singles match of a second-round Davis Cup series in the European zone today.

KING*^V SCORES ■H ADDED^%^/’‘^^^^SiEsraßi| ./V together .. . \7 \/|| * KIMCb 1 tnese points mean /7a- / 9 1 vor.' When King of X iff ' I with a// these points ... costs so'* j|| ■*E“TwCIf . I little, why don’t you try it? Next B time call for King. Just see how much t, ui better top-score whisky tas tesf vUGCK King S BROWN-FORMAN Distillery Company low m Louisville, Kentucky VM. GREATEST NAME IN WHISKY ■IIIVCi |y Kl NC of K&ntUcku KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY/

Locals Claim Strong Lineup A. B. C. Ball Club Drafts New Players for Twin Bill With Sterlings. After three weeks of intensive training, the local A. B. C. baseball team was pronounced by Manager Ed Dickerson in top shape for its season opener and Indiana-Ohio League debut Sunday afternoon at Perry Stadium. The local all-star Negro nine is to oppose the Sterling Beers, also of Indianapolis, in a double-header starting at 2 o’clock. The twin tilt will be the first of the campaign for both teams and the A. B. C.’s first appearance in the popular semi-pro league. Two College Products With Sam Thompson, Casey Walker, Don Jarmon, Booker T. Holbers Pedro Burgh and Jim Cockerham in the lineup, Manager Dickerson expects to finish high in the pennant race. Holbert and Burgh are new pitchers from Piney Woods College. Thompson formerly managed the Atlanta Black Crackers and in ’34 was voted the most valuable secondbaseman in the Southern Negro League. Walker is a hard-hitting outfield graduate from the Homestead Grays and Brooklyn Royal Giants. The Sterlings have bolstered their lineup with Mike Bouza, who started in the outfield for the Indians this season; Charlie Weathers, leading hitter in the Municipal League last year, and Ray Cato, from the House of David. Bulldogs Conquer Greyhounds, 9-8 Butler University will travel to Crawfordsville tomorrow to open the important four-game series with Wabash College after taking the lead yesterday in the rivalry with Indiana Centra) with a 9-to-8 at the Fairview diamond. Inman Blackaby halted a Greyhound rally by setting the last two batters down in the ninth inning after the University Heights team had tallied three times to threaten a lead built by the Bulldogs in the fifth and sixth innings. It was Butler’s second triumph in the series. A home run by Laymon with Staller on base featured the Butler hitting. Corbett hurled effectively until the ninth. Score: Indiana Central 010 200 203 8 8 3 Butler 000 332 Olx— 9 10 4 McNamara. Keene and Collier; Corbett. Blackaby and Costas.

Indianapolis Times Sports

BETTING HEAVY ON FIGHT OF VETERANS

McLamin Is Early Choice at 7-5 Odds Daring Canzoneri to Spot Foe Nine Pounds Tonight; 20,000 to Attend. By United Prcet NEW YORK, May B.—Two of the ring’s most valiant warriors of the past decade will meet in Madison Square Garden tonight when Jimmy McLamin, former welterweight champion, battles Tony Canzoneri, lightweight titleholder, in a 10-round nontitle bout. Between them they have engaged in 212 battles—McLamin in 74 in 12 years and Canzoneri in 138 in 11 years—and both of them are nearing the end of the fistic trail. Yet nearly 20,000 persons will pay approximately $94,000 to see “BabyFaced Jimmy” and “Bull-Shouldered Tony” flail away at each other. McLarnin will weigh 144, Canzoneri 135. It will be a big fight. McLamin rules a 7-5 favorite, but the odds are certain to fluctuate considerably before they enter the ring although It is guesswork to say whether they’ll go up or down. Some of McLarnin’s partisans are laying 1-3 that he knocks out Tony, For McLamin, It is the type of match he dearly loves. He will have a nine-pound pull in the weights, and face a smaller man who’ll come to him. If it was certain that McLarnin was in fine condition and hadn’t gone back too far during the year he was out of the ring, he’d be a 10-to-l’ shot. But McLarnin hasn’t shown up too well in his workouts, although this may be discounted somewhat on the score that in his prime he always looked terrible in the gym. Canzoneri has been active since regaining the title last May in a match with Lou Ambers, but in his last four bouts he looked like an old man even in victory. In several of his last 10 bouts in the past year Canzoneri had to take a lot of punishment from boys who couldn’t have hit him with birdshot in his prime.

YOU CAN’T SMOKE CLAIMS Consider these facts about America’s largest-selling cigar When you read claims about cigars ... of DON’T LET CLAIMS FOOL YOU this and that kind of tobacco —just ask Mere claims for a cigar are easy to make yourself these questions. but you can >f smo ke claims. The real test of a Why don’t these cigars give me some real cigar is the pleasure it gives you. Does it pleasure in smoking ? Why all the rawness please and satisfy your taste ? and harshness the bitter, bitey taste the When you stop to think that PHILLIES pleases waste of cigars thrown away half smoked? the tastes of more mm than any ot h er cigar in The answer is this America isn’t it only reasonable to assume GOOD TOBACCOS ARE NOT ENOUGH that PHILLIES will please you ? •ill raw tobaccos—even the finest contain -q-tji bitter oils and other harsh elements. If these are not removed, they cause harshness, bit- t -■ Ordinary methods either fail to take them out taste of the tobacco. In one case you get get cigars that are flat and insipid. BAYUK'S EXCLUSIVE PROCESS Bayuk solved this problem. It invented Thu fictu „ shows an important unit in the exclmi „ a process that not only removes the Bayuk Process for extracting the bitter oils and other harsh, bitter elements from the tobacco, harsh elements from the fine tobaccos used in phillies. but improves the real tobacco flavor. rbii Pn “~“•"* h.P*™ protection-enable, j ; r J you to enjoy the full flavor of fine tobacco without No other cigar manufacturer uses any hitter> bi , ey> hanh laste _ Bayuk invita you t 0 this process. It is exclusive to Bayuk. visit the factory and see this process in operation, PHILLIES

FRIDAY, MAY 8,1936

City Pros Go Gunning for Chance in Open

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TEE TIME

INDIANAPOLIS will have a direct interest in the approaching National Open, at least until qualifying eliminations are completed.

Three local pros have entered Uncle Sam's grandest golf carnival and are slated to match strokes with 140 other candidates in qualifications at Chicago Monday. The names—it’s vaguely possible you’ve heard them before—are Russell Stonehouse, of Riverside; Johnny Vaughan, of Pleasant Run, and Bill Heinlein, of Collin. They hope to be among the 15 low scorers at Chicago who will be admitted to the big-time finals in Short Hills, N. J., June 4, 5 and 6. The roster at Short Hills will

include 170 players—l 37 survivors of a starting field of 1278, and 33 exempted by the U. S. G. A. aa a , 'I "iii*; local trio originally was as--I signed to Cincinnati, where only 39 are competing, but the boys put in a petition for a change to Chicago, which was granted. Stonehouse wanted to go to Chicago for reasons of business. He is on the golf advisory board of the Wilson Equipment Cos. Vaughan (Turn to Page Thirty-Four)

When the curtain goes up on National Open golf qualifications in 24 cities Monday morning, the attention of Indianapolis fans will be centered on Olympia Fields, Chicago, where three local municipal course pros are to battle for spots in the tourney field. Presenting, left to right above, Messrs. Bill Heinlein of Coffin, John Vaughan of Pleasant Run, and Russell Stonehouse of Riverside—the Hoosier Capital top-rate trio. Chicago’s list of 143 candidates is to be cut down to 15 for this section’s entry in the classic at Short Hills, N. J., June 4, 5 and 6. It’ll take fancy golfing, boys, but you’re used to uncorking that brand.

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Traynor Nears 2000 ■ Pie Traynor, manager and third sacker of the Pitlsburgh Pirates, will reach the 2000-game mark in the majors if he plays in 64- contests this season. He was the best in the big leagues for several years.

PAGE 33

Additional Sports on Pages 34 and 35

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Prep Athletes Go on Parade at Tech Field Sectional Track Meets Held Over State; Local Entry „ Is Record. 5 BY HARRISON MILLER Champions and runners-up of. eleven individual events and two relay races today were to qualify for the state high school track and field championships next week at the Butler University cinder oval. Representatives of the Indianapolis sectional were to be determined today at the Tech Higft School track with the first contest? starting at 2. Trials in the 100-yari dash and the high Jump were # send 202 athletes into competition* for individual and team honors. The entry list is anew record in number of participating athletes. 14 Other Meets With 15 schools shooting for top laurels at the East Side track, other sectional centers will select their champions. A total of 16i2 prep teams are to be in action to-, day. Kokomo is the defending champion. At least two new marks are to be established in the books this year. The obstacles in the two hurdle races have been made easier. The low hurdle event has been changed from 220 yards to 200, and the timbers will be three inches lower. ThY race over the high timbers (Turn to Page Thirty-Five)