Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1936 — Page 17

Relief Hurlers Idle as Bruins Frample Foes

French Latest Member of ‘Big Six’ to Go Route; Stifles Phils.

BY LESLIE AVERY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, June 17.—The Chicago Cubs’ “Big Six” hurling corps stood out today as the sturdiest in the majors. With a half dozen starters winning regularly, Manager Charlie Grimm has his choice of three pitchers daily while still being able to allow the normal fourday rest period. In winning 12 "consecutive . games, the longest victory streak since the Cubs won 21 in a row last fall, the Chicago staff has compiled one of the most remarkable records in modern baseball. In those dozen triumphs, not one Cub twirler has _ had to be relieved nor removed from ~ the game for a pinch hitter. Lon Warneke, Grimm's fireballer, has won three while the Cubs were running up those 12 wins, Tex Carleton, Curt Davis, Bill Lee, and Larry French have won two each, and Roy Henshaw has one to his credit While these six hurlers were , holding the opposition to 76 safe- _ ties—less than seven per game—the . league champions blasted out 136, or more than 11 base blows per contest. And out of those hits, the " Cubs manufactured 34 runs com“pared to the 30 of opposing nines. The only blight on the winning streak is the fact that 11 of its 12 games were taken from second division clubs. Larry French won his fourth victory of the season yesterday and kept the Cubs’ string unbroken by turning back the Philadelphia Phillies, 4 to 1, which cut the St. Louis Cardinals’ league lead to two and one-half games. The Cards collapsed before the Boston Bees, 10 to 4. The Pittsburgh Pirates Kept a - game behind the Cubs with a 9-to-3 decision over the Brooklyn Dodgers, and the New York Giants triumphed, 5 to 2, over the Cincinnati Reds. In the American League, the leading Yankees fell, 8 to 4, before the Cleveland Indians, but lost no ground to the second-place Boston Red Sox, who were taken in, 4 to 2, by the Chicago White Sox, despite Jimmy Foxx’s home runs, Nos. 16 and 17. Gehrig clouted for the circuit twice for the Yanks. A pinch-hit home run by Carl Reynolds with two men on base in the tenth gave the Washington Senators a 9-to-8 win over the De“troit Tigers, and the Philadelphia Athletics licked the St. Louis Browns, behind Harry Kelly's six‘hit pitching.

Yesterday's Hero: Carl Reynolds of the Washington Senators, who, as a pinch hitter in the tenth inning, clouted a four-bagger with two men on base to give the Senators a victory.

Softball

Big Four Railroad is to meet “Phone 766” of Newcastle at Softball Stadium, English-av and La Sallest, at 8:30 tonight. Rival pitchers are to be Carl Martin for the locals and Joe Zimmer for the visitors.

Kahl will be behind the bat for the Railroaders, while Linder is to do the receiving for. Newcastle. Besides boasting of starting lineups composed of some of the outstanding softballers in the state, both teams are well fortified with reserve strength. The contest is to be played without a curtain-raiser and is to be a nine-inning affair.

The K. of C. League All-Stars are to meet the leading team of the K. of C. League (as of July 1 on the night of Wednesday, July 1, at Softball Stadium, English-av and :La Salle-st, at 8: 45. It will be an { exhibition game and the All-Stars ‘will be made up of one ace player of each of the other 15 teams in the loop. A regular -league game will be played as a curtain raiser at 7:45. The schedule for Sunday, June 21, in the 16-club K. of C. League follows:

Holy Cross vs. St. Mary's, at Willard, St. Sona vs. Little Flower, at Spade St. Francis De Sales vs, Sacred Bart, a

a ool A Angels vs. Our Lady of Lourdes, at Wa ‘Anthony vs. St. Catherine, at River0 Nowy, cai vs. Holy Name, at Colem aN soph v8 . Joan of Arc, at Rivers

e No. HE. Philips vs. Cathedral, at Brookside. LEAGUE STANDING

French

¥

i . 4 4 14% 3 3

id

Indiana National Bank, leading the Bankers’ League, will encounter the Union Trust squad tonight at. Spades Park. The team has annexed all ive starts in the loop.

1. gr ockwood A Cs defeated Shaw's Market, at Longacre ‘Park in a Smith-Hassler-Sturm : fiht League game. Ted Hunt was the winning pitcher and A. Mathe loser. This evening, are to play A. C. W. of A. at 5:30 at Willard

Park in an|

3-Way Brawl Tosses Arena Into Uproar

_Irisher Rages and Davis Wins; Buck Sprawls Out of Ring.

BY HARRISON MILLER

Smiling Patrick O’Shocker, the Irish belter, today is exiled from this not-so-free state of scuffling fistiana, but behind the wrinkled brow of Erin's bad broiler lurks a smile of villainy, following a one-man revolt at the Sports Arena mai show last night.

It might have been an echo of the feudal uprisings in the hills of the Killarney region, or only a playmate’s bare toes that caused fair-haired Pat to go berserk. Nevertheless, the Titian-thatched hero

Change Made ‘|

in Slate for. Mitt Pragram Gustafson in Main Bout,

Following Broadcast of N. Y. Scrap.

Joe Louis and Max Schmeling have been secured to fight the “opening pre ” Roy Wallace’s boxing card at the Sports arena tomorrow night. Matchmaker Wallace has erected a radio and loud speaker at the ringside to intercept the broadcast of the heavyweight scrap in New York. The fight at Yankee stadium is scheduled to start at 8 (Indianapolis time), and the first of the ten bouts on this week’s amateur program will take the stage immediately afterward. McTerry Is Signed A change has been made in the

tossed the program into a climactic feature bout on the program. Jim-

stage of bedlam and drew an indefinite suspension from Honorable Samuel Murbarger, high commissioner of Hoosier tug and tussle warfare.

Davis Turns Indian Pat lost the decision, his first in three years on the local mat, but one wonders if either Big Boy Davis, the Olympic tugman, or Referee (Bring ’em Back Alive) Buchanan could be, classified as a victor. Official records will reveal that Davis won in straight falls of 27 and 10 minutes duration. Actually, the o’socker was disqualified after three quarters of an hour of incessant “brawling” among the three principals. Davis turned Indian last night and appeared in bare feet and Pat put the Indian sign on both Big Boy and Buck. He led off with a stomp to the right foot and crossed with a kick to the left. Davis retaliated with a jab to Mr. Patrick's snozzle that brought a stream of blood, and the trio was smeared with crimson war paint,

Pat Starts “Lynching Party”

Q’Shocker lunged into the ropes for a rebound tackle, but the tapecovered hemp gave way from its moorings at the opposite corner and something of the sailor surged through the Irishman who decided to hog-tie Davis with the ever-handy

rope. Buck, who wanted no part of a lynching party, received only a - rebuke and several jabs from Pat’s shillalehs and was sent hurtling to the front row. He returned reluctantly to the fray to call time out, but Davis wanted revenge and floored Pat with an assortment of swats not found in the state statutes for wrestling. Pat insisted that time had been called and refused to countenance the loss of the first fall or to leave the ring for intermission. :

Conference Is Futile

A hasty conference between Buck, Murbarger, Matchmaker Lloyd Carter, Pat and Davis almost had reached an agreement when Pat, Buck and Big Boy squared off in the vicious triangle and resumed the melee. Pat caught more of the blows than Buck and went down with Davis smothering him, which did not end the fight. Pat went after Buck, Davis went after Pat, and Buck went for a corner. An ardent John A. Public—one of the twelfth men in Dartmouth’s squad—reached through the ropes and claimed Pat’s leg and received a drop kick to the jaw in return. Handlers and seconds in the corners

my Gustafson, amateur middleweight champion of Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky, has been obtained to mix with Art McTerry, hard punching local Negro. Gustafson annexed the tri-state title in a tournament at Evansville last week. The match replaces the fight scheduled between Johnny Krukemeier and Dick Lybarger which was canceled when the latter fighter sprained an ankle, . The following card has been arranged, with one more bout to be

added: Len Stover, Tipton, vs. Jack White, unattached, light heavyweights. John Ressler, Tipton, vs. George Hartwell, unattached, heavyweights. Melvin Byrode, Chevrolet Commercial Body Plant, vs. Myron Brown, Ross Ad ®eal Co. light heavyweights. Billy Jones, unattached, vs. Bob Blue, South Side Turners, welterweights. ; Russell Johnson, Tipton, vs. Rural Tyler, unattached, bantamweights. Albert Hammonds, Greencastle, vs, Forest Brown, Fortville, lightweights. Harold McDermid, unattached, vs. Fay Jones, Greencastle, featherweights.

Big Season Looms on Grand Circuit

Harness Inaugural Set for Cleveland This Month.

Times Special NEW YORK, N. Y., June 17.—The sixty-second edition of the Grand Circuit, major league trotting horse loop, will be launched at Cleveland June 29 on a schedule which carries it from late this month until early in October to 10 cities. At least 11 weeks of racing is assured, according: to E. Roland Harriman, president. The Cleveland inaugural is to present such favorites as the $400 Matron Stake for 3-year-old trotters; the Rainy Day Sweepstakes, juvenile trot; the Tavern “Steak,” for fast aged horses, and other events carded by W. E. Seeley, president of the sponsoring North Ran-

.dall Trotting Club.

The impetus whicnn the Cleveland meeting gives to the Grand Circuit is expected to see the harness horse loop enjoy its best season in many years. From North Randall track, the cavalcade of trotters will invade Historic half-mile track, at

outnumbered the combatants and Goshen, N. Y., for that town's first

quelled the revolt as the loud speaker blared forth with, “The Notre Dame Victory March.”

Kuss Gains Draw

The supporting matches set the stages for the final bout, with Am Rascher, Laverne Baxter and Otto Kuss preceding Referee Buchanan on excursions to the laps of ringside fans. Kuss gained a draw with Dick (Texas Tornado) Raines in the semi-windup. Rascher, former Big Ten grappling king, pinned Laverne Baxter of Canada in 10 minutes with a body press. :Marshall Blackstone of Chattanooga out slugged Casey Berger of Phoenix and won with a body slam in 18 minutes of the curtain-raiser.

SAVAGE GAINS DRAW

SAN DIEGO, Cal., June 17.—Steve Savage, Sunland, Cal, drew with Louis Dachiajalupe, Italy, in the main event of the mat show here last night.’

Em-Roe Wednesday League game, and Friday night will clash with * | Victory Cleaners at 8 at Softball Stadium in an Em-Roe All-Star Night League fray. Rockwoods have won 17 games in 20 played. For games, call Drexel exel 5611-W.

Ferndale Girls desi desire games with local and state Seams. ite J. A.

Holcomb & “Hoke, formerly the Cathedral Boys Club, has extended its undefeated record to 18 straight games and wants to schedule games with Rockwood, Real Silk and other tity clubs. The team is leading the Em-Roe Tuesday League with six triumphs. For games call Lincoln 6134.

book a game for Saturday afternon at 2 at Riverside de No. 3. Schick at Harrison 3000.

of two 1936 big time cards. Goshen’s initial meeting, 21-25, sports a $25,000 card. From Goshen, the horses swing into Maine, at Old Orchard Beach, Juy 27-Aug. 1. Goshen again entertains Aug. 10-15, this time at Good Time mile track, where the Hambletonian Stake will be raced on Aug. 12. Altogether, $100,000 in

July:

purses will be raced for at Goshen !%if

in August. The schedule following Goshen is: Springfield, 111, Aug. 17-22; Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 24-29; Columbus, O es Oug. 31-Sept. 5; Indianapolis, Ind. and Syracuse, N. Y., both share the week of Sept. T- 12; Reading, Pa., has Sept, 14-19, and 'Lexington, Ky. closes the loop, Sept. 26-Oct. 3.

Bow and Arrow Is Hawthorne Choice

Times Special CHICAGO, June 17. — Bow and Arrow, Col. Edward Bradley's gelding, rapidly has ascended to the favorite spot for the $15,000 added Chicago Derby at Hawthorne Saturday. Bow and. Arrow, which finished third in the Latonia Derby after being an also ran in the Preakness, paced Holl Image to the finish yesterday in the Dixie Trial Handicap over a mile and sixteenth. The gelded son of Whichone completed | J the course in 1:46 and returned $5.60, coupled with Baby Talk in the betting. Ei K. Bryson’s Carvola was third.

LARGEST SQUAD TO GO Nn YORK, June 17—The largest squad in the history of the| Olympic Games will represent the United States in Berlin. A total of 395 athletes, both men and women, are to be taken to Germany.

PANTS $9.45 4

Oxford 4 Gray ‘manosma’

LEON

Mass. Ave. a New PANY

In Amateur Day Show

ALPH GATTI, above, former Indiana University mound ace, will be on the firing line for the U. S. Tires Saturday in the opening game of the double bill on the Amateur Day program at Perry Stadium. Gatti, who has not lost a decision this year, will hurl against the U. S. Corrugated Box club in the Silver Jubilee

aniversary celebration of the

State Golfers

i | Tune Up for

Indianapolis - Amateur = Baseball Association. Real Silk, leader of the Co-operative League, - will clash with Chapman-Price, one of the foremost contenders in the Manufacturers League, in the second tilt of the bill. The Tiremen are leading the Manufacturers

loop.

Standings and Results

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Milwaukee Minneapolis Kansas City mi

5 28 28 31

37 40 AMERICAN LEAGUE

W. L. Pct. New York 36" 15 564 iWashing’'n. 29 28 .509 Boston 34 22 .607/Chicago-.. 26 27 .491 Cleveland. 28 26 .519|Phila. ... 20 33 .377 Detroit... 29 28 .509{St. Louis. 16 36 .308

NATIONAL LEAGUE

St. Louis. 3 15 Sigicincinpati 3 Chicago Pittsburgh 3 2 .5821Phila. .. New York 30 24 .556/ Brooklyn .

25 31 .446 .. 20 37 .351 20 38 .345

Amateurs

Beech Grove Reds will travel to Fortville Sunday to play the Merchants. Fortville thumped the Greenfield Merchants, 13 to 3.

Bargersville Hoosier Tomatoes have an opening Sunday. The team lost to the Nashville club, 6 to 3.

Write Eddie VerbIyek, Bargersville, | Tole

Ind.

Road games are wanted by the Garfleld A. Cs. Crane and Tucker formed the battery in a 5-to-3 triumph over Pivot City club. Write Art Crane, 233 E. Iowa-st, Indianapolis, or “call Drexel 2400 after 6.

New Palestine Red Birds have organized and want a game for Sungay. Write or call S. N. Potter, New Palestine, Ind.

Roy Steele Red Sox, will travel to Stilesville Sunday. The Sox downed Edinburg, 7 to 6.

Hope Merchants will be host to Minton Ice Sunday. A game is wanted for June 28. Write Tipya = Shepherd, Hope, Ind.

The standing of the Co-operative |

League follows: A Ww. L. 6 Mallen] eo .. .3 5 3{Walt’'s Term’ 'n'l 3 5 B Sail’ Lilly 0 8

Roy_ Steele ... Beal Silk

Bennett Coal “team is scheduled to practice this afternoon at 4:30 at Ellenberger. All players and on are urged to report. A good shortstop is wanted.

Nick’s All-Stars Negro squad will

travel to Goldsmith to protect an undefeated record Sunday.

MAJOR LEADERS

G Sullivan, Indians .... S. Martin, pardinals. « Radcliff, White Sox.. Gehrig, Yankees ... "bd Gehringer, Tigers .... HOME RUNS Foxx, Red Sox... 16 Trosky. Indians.. 14/Goslin, Tigers. . Gehrig, Yankees. 14 Dickey, Yankees. . © RUNS BATTED IN

Giants 54 Medwicr, Card rds. : S8/Bik kien. RUNS

yankses 66|Rolfe, Yankees .. 49 . Tigers SBT Gostin, Tigers.... 49

er, Tigers S7iMedwicks Cards. . ne rig, Yankees.

Ott, Giants

Gehrig, Gehri . Ma

Gehr Jordan, Bees. . Moore, Giants

0

W. L. Pct. 27 28 .491 |.

Games Today GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Juncapolis at \ Indianapolis (two games, St. Paul at Louisville,

Milwaukee at Toledo. Kansas City at Columbus.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Washington at Detroit. Ne Fork at Cleveland (2). ost

Ne Philadelphia at St. Louis.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Chicago at Philadelphia. Cincinnati at New York. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Boston (2).

Results: Yesterday

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ‘ (First Game) :

Kansas City . 000 030 010— 4 Columbus 110 001 o3n— 6 R] 3

Niggeling,* Moore 2nd Madjeski; Ma Potter and Quetsi i i ( Sink ‘Game)

000 100 010— 2 10 1 014 001 04x—10 17 3

Page od Breese: McGee, Stout and

Chervinko.

- . (First Game) 3 ; 403 ga 00014 19 19 3 Hatter and Detore; Flowers, Smoll and Linto (Second Game; on Innings by Agreement.)

Milwaukee * 100201 0— 4 7 0 Toledo 000 000 0— 0 4 0

Braxton and Detore; Fritz and Cohen.

hoard

St. Paul 200 000 040— 3 13 i Louisville 000 000 000— 0 7 Fette and Fenner: Peterson, Shaffer Ln Thompson.

NATIONAL LEAGUE 000 000 103— 4 9 2 112 041 10x—10 17 1

Winford, Munns and Davis; Chaplin and |

Pittsburgh Brooklyn Lucas and Todd: Mungo, Jeffcoat, Leonard and Berres.

~.-..000 000 531— : 12 1 5 0

Ean ;

000 000— 2 7 4 108 000 31x— 5 8 2 olinesworih and Lombardi: Hubbell and Danning,

$neinpall New Yor

000 120 001— 4 13 1 100 000 000— 1 10 1 oo and O'Dea: Kowalik and Wil-

AMERICAN LEAGUE 000 010— 2 3 0 011 1% 00x— 4 0

Grove, Wilson, Ostermueller and - roll; Cain and Grube Be ro

Boston Chicago

--. 000 330 100 9 13 3 031 000 000— 4

Hei ue and Hayes; Knott, Hogsét! eS drews, Mahaffey and Giuiani, © iy (Ten Innit Innings) 003-911 1

030 02i 001 001 3103-8 13 2 ehill, Cascarella and Bolton; Brida Sullivan and Hayworth, - Se: New York 020 000 200— 4 10 2 Sicvelany 400 301 00x— 8 13 0

Gom Broaca, Kleinhans and Dick 3 Blachoider, 3 and Pytlak 273

JOBS FOR SANDLOTTERS

Scout Aloysius (Wish) Egan of the Tigers signed two Detroit boys—

Open Tourney

Test Fort Wayne Links in Pro-Amateur Event; Heinlein Favored.

By United Press FORT WAYNE, Ind, June 17.— Almost a hundred professionals and and amateurs will tee off at the Brookwood Country Club course here today in the annual pro-ama-teur tourney—forerunner and tuneup for the Indiana State Open golf championship tomorrow and Friday. With a record number of entries

foreseen by Max Buell, state P. G. A. tourney manager, it appeared today that Bill Heinlein, defending titlist of Indianapolis, is the man to beat. Heinlein, who grabbed the crown last year with a par-shattering 281 over this same course, carded a brilliant 69, three under perfect figures, in his last practice round yesterday. .

Pettigrew Shoots 73

Bud Pettigrew of Pendleton, state amateur champion, demonstrated that he is in the running with a 73. Tony Sarachino, Fort Wayne pro, carded a 70, missing a 68 when he took a bad six on the home hole. Neil McIntyre of Indianapolis, a prime threat, didn’t extend himself in shooting a 71, one under par. The record of 280, established by Johnny Watson of South Bend in 1930, ‘is not regarded as endangered, as the course this year is considerably tougher than previously.

Schoolboy Makes Good

Freddy Link, 13-year-old caddy, whose friends pooled enough money to pay his entry fee, will be the youngest competitor. Freddy showed the fans he's in earnest yesterday by shooting nine holes in par. Leading candidates to succeed Heinlein include Frank Champ of Terre Haute, who set the course record of 67 last year, Ralph Stonehouse of Noblesville, Russell Stone-

‘| house of Indianapolis, Bill Tinder

of Anderson, John Vaughan of Indianapolis, Walter Murry of Gary, Wayne Timberman of Terre Haute, Bob Simmons and Louie Bola of Kokomo, and Pug Allen and Bud Williamson of Fort Wayne.

Ninth ‘Man’

MAGINE the chagrin of Manhattan University’s husky oarsmen when they learned that a girl was in the crew from Rollins College, near Orlando, Fla. that defeated them on the Harlem River. Here is the history-making young woman — Sally Stearns, coxswain who set the beat for the row to victory.

TEE TIME ~ +

BY PAUL BOXELL

gate closes on the stroke of 7 tonight. Aspirants to positions on the Indianapolis public

cials at the variousgclubs of the city. Tourney managers predict a near-record list of contenders to shoot for the honors involved as. Russell well as a round of prizes. The greater part of the funds to send the four-man team to Farmingdale, Long 1sland, tourney site, is to come from the entry fees, which are two dollars an individual. The park board has waived greens charges. President Ken Hoy, of the local association, announces that pairings are to be made tonight afler all entries have been gathered. # " EJ HE 72 holes of qualifying strife will be waged over four municipal courses beginning this Saturday at Riverside. The second round will

| follow on Sunday afternoon at

Pleasant Run. The remaining 36 holes are slated for the ensuing week-end, with South Grove under fire Saturday and Coffin the windup scene on Sunday. Since some contenders can not play on Saturday, arrangements are being made to enable several foursomes to get in their entire 72 holes on the Sunday schedules. Special 18 hole rounds will be allowed in the mornings preceding the afternoons’ play. Out of the elimination whirl will

Zell Eaton Moves Into Limelight of Western Tourney

Oklahoman Cracks Record in Hlinois Open.

By United Press DECATUR, Ill, June 17.—If Zell Eaton of Oklahoma City puts his mind to it in this week’s Western Open, the scheduled renewal of the famous Tony Manero-Harry Cooper duel of Baltusrol and a title defense

| by Johnny Revolta will be lost in

the smoke of his blazing assault on the fairways of the Davenport Country Club. This toothpick-waisted, sunbronzed youngster of 22 figured early yesterday he’d better put his mind on the Illinois Open title, and within three hours he’d tucked it away with a/ record 66 on the final round for 139. Revolta smashed home with 68, but the best he could land was a tie for second with Tommy Armour, Chicago. Byron Nelson, Ridgewood, N. J., and E. J. Harrison, Little Rock, each posted 142. “I sort of figured I'd better breeze right on in today if I wanted to stuff that $500 in my pocket so I just started breezing and look what happened,” Eaton said. “My irons were working good and those putts on the last nine just fell in without much help.” '

Nearly Perfect Golf

Those irons gave Eaton his 66, six under par and three under the course record. Almost 275 yards from each tee exactly in the center of the fairway on nearly every hole, Eaton hauled out an iron and laid his ball eight to ten feet from the hill, His 31 on the home nine must have been one of the most perfect rounds ever played. On four of the nine holes he was under par. On the par five fifteenth he holed out in three. Not once was he over par. Revolta, however, will rank as a favorite to retain the championship. His 68 yesterday indicated he'll be at his peak for the Western and he’s never better than when under pressure.

Last year the final four included Dave Mitchell, then the defending champion; Bill Russell, Bill Reed Jr. and Bobby Dalz. Russell eventually became city champion. . n ” FJ ETHPAGE STATE PARK cone tains the exact course to be used in the national .. .San Ane tonio holds the Harding Cup, ine dicative of the team championship . each qualifier may accept trave eling and living expenses between his home and Farmingdale and not more than six dollars per day while there without impairing his amateur status, according to the U. S. G. A. « «+ Frankie Strafaci of Brooke lyn is defending title holder... substitutions will be allowed for dise trict qualifiers who are unable to compete in the championship, pro= vided the player withdrawing, his sub, and the local management notify the U. S. G. A. not later than July 19... Bethpage State Park has prepared to provide caddies for all conteste ants . . . Arrangements have been made for accommodation of contestants at the Whitman Hotel, 161st-st and 89th-av, Jamaica, Long Island . « « For reservations, address the hotel . . ,

” 2 = The schedule for individual championship play at Farmingdale: Monday, July 20—First qualifying round, 18 holes. Tuesday, July 21—Second qualify~ ing round, 18 holes. The 64 lowest scorers for the 36 holes will move into the match play rounds. Wednesday—9 a. m., first round match play, 18 holes. 2:30 p. m., second round match play, 18 holes, Thursday—9 a. m., third match play, 18 holes. 2 p. m., fourth round match play, 18 holes. Friday—9:30 a. m. and 2 p. m, semi-final round of match play, 36 holes. Saturday—9:30 a. m. and 2 p. m., final round of match Play, 36 holes,

Tobay Pro -amateur tournament at Brookwood Country Club, Fort Wayne, serving as warm-up for an nual state Open, which begins on same course tomorrow. Columbia Club’s annual tournament and outing at Ulen Country Club, Lebanon. City Medical-Dental societies ane nual entanglement at Broadmoor.

ARIZMENDI BEATS HALLY By United Press LOS ANGELES, Cal, June 17. Baby Arizmendi, Mexican feathers weight fighter, earned a 10-round decision over Wally Hally of Los. Angeles in the windup bout of the local show last night.

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