Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1936 — Page 22

Public c Links Champ Paces Local Players

Reed, Cork, Denny, Diddel and Gronauer Advance; Pettigrew Strong.

By United Preas TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Aug. 19.— Sixteen survivors, including Leon (Bud) Pettigrew, Pendleton, the de-

fending champion, faced 36-hole matches today in the thirty-sixth annual’ Indiana state amateur golf tournament, Pettigrew, an Indiana University sophomore, was paired with Keith Young, Lafayette, in today’s round. The 21-year-old Pendleton youth survived two 18-hole matches with little difficulty yesterday. : He defeated Frank Yaw, Terre Haute, 1n the afternoon match when the latter called it a day after he was 7 down at the turn. In the morning round. Pettigrew defeated Floyd Hughes, aso of Terre Haute, 6 and 5. Five Indianapolis entrants still were in the running today as play in the round of 16 began. They were Bill Reed Jr., city public links champion; Fred Gronauer, Pleasant Run title holder; Harold Cork, William Diddel and George Denny. Johnny Simpson, Washington, three-time. winner of the amateur championship, was to meet Steve Rose, Terre Haute youth, in another of today’s matches. Matches in both brackets were:

UPPER BRAGKET

Bud Pettigrew, Pendleton, vs. Keith Young, Lafayette; Johnny Simpson, Washington, vs. Steve Rose, Terre Haute; Bob Hamilton, Evansville, vs. Mike 8Stefanchik, Gary; Harold Brewer, Lafayette, vs. Dick Taylor, Lafayette.

LOWER BRACKET

Phil Talbot, Bloomington, Harold Cork, Indianapolis; Reed Jr, Indianapolis, vs. Fred Gronauer, Indianapolis; Miles Standish, French Lick, vs. George Denny, Indianapolis; Bill Diddel, Indianapolis, vs. Fritz Cox, Terre Haute. Results of second-round matches follow: Steve Rose, Terre Haute, defeated A. Hulman, Terre Haute, 1 up. Johnny Simpson, Washington, eliminated Dick Keil, Indianapolis, 1 up in 19 holes. Dick Taylor, Lafayette, won over Curtis Rush, Bloomington, 2 and 1. Fred Gronauer, Indianapolis, defeated Ralph Stevens, Evansville, 4 and 2, Bill Reed Jr. Indianapolis, deposed R. L. Phillips, Terre Haute,

vs. Bill

2 and 1.

Fritz Cox, Terre Haute, defeated Paul Carr, Indianapolis, 6 and 4. Harold Cork, Indianapolis, triumphed over J. O'Connor, Indianapolis, 1 up in 19 holes. George Denny, Indianapolis, defeated Bill Kendall, Terre Haute, 2 and 1. Miles Standish, French Lick, eliminated Dick McCreary, Indianapolis, 4 and 3. Bill Diddell, Indianapolis, turned back Bobby Dale, Indianapolis, 2 up. Bud Pettigrew, Pendleton, defeated Frank Yaw, Terre Haute, 7 and 6. Keith Young, Lafayette, defeated J. E. Bixler, Lafayette, 1 up. - Bob Hamilton, Evansville, defeated Bill Ehlers, Frankfort, 6 and 4. Mike Stefanchik, Gary, triumphed over Keith Owen, Terre Haute, 6 and 4. Harold Brewer, Lafayette, eliminated Sam Simpson, Indianapolis, 7 and 6. Phil Talbot, Bloomington, defeated Willard Kayser, Terre Haute, 7 and 6.

SCOUTING IN A. A.

Ira Thomas, scout for the Phil adelphia A's, is swinging around the American Association looking for talent.

Used to catching every day and warned to watch his

rane, manager of the Detroit, . Tigers, finds it tough to. sit in the dugout when things are going ‘wrong. He is working now and then for a few innings as relief backstop.

ey

New Titlist Due in Sandlot Meet

A new champion is assured when teams competing for the Indiana Recreation Association-WPA amateur baseball tournament meet in the finals at Muncie Aug. 28-30. Hesner’s Harwood nine of Evansville, the ’35 champion, has been eliminated in the district finals at Evansville, losing, 12-10, to the Coca-Colas of the same city. Other district winners to date are Bringhurst, Seymour Cubs, New Point and New Albany. . Tourneys in Indianapolis, Bluffton, Kokomo, Elkhart, Hammond and Brazil are to be completed this week-end.

Kokomo Awarded 1937 Amateur; Play Changed

By United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind, Aug. 19.— The Kokomo Country Club was awarded the.1937 tournament of the Indiana Golf Association at an executive meeting of the organization last night. A change in the 1937 playing schedule was voted. The tournament will be cut to a five-day meeting, ending on Friday. An 18-hole qualifying round, which 64 golfers will survive, will be played on Monday. Two 18-hole rounds of match play are set for Tuesday and two more for Wednesday. Only the semifinals and finals will be for 36 holes. Present officers of the association were re-elected unanimously. They included Gilbert A. Young, Lafayette, president; A. H. Flanigan, Crawfordsville, vice president, and | J. J. Mosler, Indianapolis, secretary treasurer.

DENIES MATMAN SLAIN

By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 19.—The wrestler, Wladez Zbyszko, reported killed in fighting at Barcelona, Spain, is alive, his attorney, Sidney Neller, reported today. “My client is in London fulfilling engagements, and was not slain in Barcelona as has been reported,” Neller said.

CARDS SIGN COLLEGIAN Times Special . PROVIDENCE, R. I, Aug. 19.— Joe Cusick, former Holy Cross baseball captain, signed a contract with the St. Louis Cardinals of the National League and departed today to join the club immediately.

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

18 Child's nap

{i HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 1 American LIT IZIA TIEIC kin. tawrnaker. Eel ESP CT ia is — of 13 Part of lock. JC|RIE|A T INIE] 20 Blooksuck14 To depart |LIEIABEPIAIC AINIA ing insect EISISIAISIH TISEL i by boat. - SHEMSS 21 Junior. 2 SIH 0 T Vv L 23 He is a == » oe title. 1ITIEIR D by profession Cred! ARI [AJNDIE AT] (pL. 17 To side-slip. |S]| 25 Equable. 18 To fetch, Vv PRI SIT] 26 Transaction. 19 Senior. I} 27 Mischievous. 20 To graze. BIOILIOl 29 Part of leg 21 Demons 32 To wait 22 ElIL upon. 24 Pared, 38 Mister. VERTICAL 3) Hithen 26 Eyes. 37 To flit. 27 Striped 39 Heavy string. 2 Enlarges. 38 Watered fabric. 40 Distress 3 Sin. silk. . 238 Roof edges. signal. _4 Found. 39 Group of 29 Spain. 41 To bathe 8 Questioned tents. $0 Uncooked. «2 Fibber. 8 Girl 40 Slovak. 31 Toward sea, * 7 To proffer, +1 Falsehood. 32 Definite 44 Prophet 8 Morindin 42 Sheltered “article, 15 Verse. dye. place. 33 To weep 6 Laborer, 9 Parts of type. 43 Insect. 34 Insight. 17 Macaw 10 To enclose. 44 Silkworms 35 One who 49 He is a mem- 11 Sea eagle. 45 Railroad. inherits. ber of the 12 Constellation, 46 Postscript. . 36 Corpse. U. 8. A Orion. 47 Preposition 37 Hair dye. House of —— 17 Observes. 48 Like. i 12 IS S © 7 18 7]

Amateurs

The championship of the local tournament of the American Baseball Congress: will be decided Sunday with three games. Bowes Seal Fast and Wincel ‘A. C. are to clash in ohne semi-final tilt at Garfield Park; and American Valve will play Rector’s Grocery at Mars Hill. Both games are slated for 1 p. m,, and the titular - contest will . be staged between the two winners at Mars. Hill at 3.

Hoosior A. C. will travel to. Mechanicsburg Sunday. Lefty Lee will be on the mound for the local nine.

Bennett Coal will play at Greenfield Sunday at 2:30.

Crane’s Midgets . annexed. two games, defeating Douglas Park Juniors, 4 to 3, and trouncing Brookside Boys’ Club, 16 to 5. Players are to report for a game Friday.

A game is wanted for Sunday by the Southern A. C. nine which defeated Salvage Equipment, 15 to 5 Call Drexel 3697 and ask for Henry or. write Edward Brill,: 2644 Mad-ison-ay, Indignapolis,

Indianapolis Cubs are without a game. for Sunday. Write Arthur Royston, 1510 Comef-st, Indianapolis, or call Drexel 4002. Muncie and Knightstown notice.

Nick's Negro All All-Stars have an opening . Sunday. Write Daniel Mason, 1045 8. Capital-av, Indianapolis.

Walter Drugs want a game for Saturday at Mars Hill. A road

game also is sought for Sunday. Call Belmont 4016.

FRENCHMEN LOSE IN . CASINO TENNIS PLAY

{Hoosiers and

Birds Battle in Twin Bill

Turner and Ryba Slated. in First; Tribesters' Regain™ Fifth Place. ~~ -

Indians and Red Birds traded positions over night and the Hoosiers were back in fifth place today as a result of thumping the Columbus tossers in the second of the series, 15 to 2. a A twilight - moonlight double header is scheduled this evening and action in the’first tilt will begin at’ 4:15. The night contest 1s carded at 8:15. Jim Turner is slated to perform on the Tribe rubber in the twilighter today and Mike Ryba, also an ace right-hander, is due for the Red Birds. Stewart Bolen, veteran south-

paw, is expectéd to do the. chucking for the locals under the: lights.

Berger and Winsett Connect

Red Killefer's Braves went on a batting rampage last night and colected 17 blows, including a towering home run by Fred Berger and doubles by Taylor, Eckhardt, Sherlock and Page.” Long John Winsett was best for the visitors with a double and homer. It was Winsett’s forty-fourth circuit wallop of the season. . Vance Page kept 10 Columbus hits fairly well distributed, fanned five Birds and. issued no walks. Macon, a lefty, and Fisher, right-hander, worked on the visitors’ mound. The ‘Hoosiers staged a wild sixth inning, tallied six markers in the one frame and followed with three in the seventh and four in the eighth. "The locals also scored in the third and fifth, The Columbus runs were . chalked . in the sixth and eighth. The Red ‘Birds had an off-night in the field and miscued five times compared to one error on the part of the Tribe. Tribe Bats Around Buck Fausett was first up and last up in the “big” sixth. Everybody took a turn at the plate in that frame and the Birds were

“| pushed right out of the picture.

Berger's home run leading off the fifth was a mighty poke that cleared the wall: with room to spare at the scoreboard in left center. Winsett's blast soared over the right field barrier in the eighth. Danny Taylor, the Indian’s new fly chaser, got two safeties and ‘pulledshis batting average above the 300 mark for the first time since|N coming down from Brooklyn. He also turned in a fine.catch on Owen in the sixth to retire the side when the Birds had two runners on the sacks. Sherlock and Eckhardt /got three 2 apiece. fo pace the. y3ribe a at-

la

. Game in —

TEE TIM.

BY PAUL

sag BOXELL

PROMISING AMATEURS As selected by Joe Kirkwood, international - trick shot artist, during his recent visit here: “The most promising amateur in the world today to come under my says. Mr. Kirkwood,

: Jimmy, much publicity anywhere outside his own country. And his. native land is Australia, which would hint that his selection by Kirkwood might be a matter of patriotic partisanship, The internationalist himself was born in Australia, and calls that country his home. The hint is not necessarily true, however. Mr. Kirkwood was asked to name the most promising amateur he knew, not the most capable at the moment. Who knows but that . he has discovered something in this youth’s game which will blossom rapidly within the next few

a steady rise to power? If this young man, who has yet ‘to win a major honor, steps out one of these fine years and wins himself a British or American amateur crown, or both, we'll have to sit right down and write Mr. Kirkwood a letter—“Great

stuff, Joe!” ; 8 2 8 HE fancy shot artist tags Sandy - Somerville, of Canada, most promising on this side of the globe. Which seems a less probable prediction than the Ferrier forecast. It appears to this scribe the Canadian already has reached his pinnacle, There's no “promise” of going higher. Somerville has been knocking ‘about .a long time and

has achieved a fair bit of success, notably as United States and Canadian amateur champion. At any. rate, Mr. Kirkwood, ‘as a loyal subject, kept ‘his selections within the British Empire.

Calendar

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

on, Lost. Pct. Milwaukee ..coccosvovesss 19 50 .812 St. Paul ....cce00000i0000 72 58 .554 Kansas on cescascasnses . 8 a nNeapolis -..cccceceeese ‘ INDIANA APOLIS .....%00., 66. 67 496 gotumbus . 65 492

ceesretece

Touisviuie Teena ie. .50 AMERICAN maa, w. .L. Pct.) ork 74 40 Sis

N. Wash, 513 Cle Ay . 84 i Bostoin. 3. 57 .509 Detroit. 63 343 St. 43 72 “374 Chicago. 61 8 521 Phtindel. 397 342

NATIONAL LEAGUE

on Louis $48 ‘Sliler 5% 3 Tai York 46 59 Boston. 51 61 .485 Chica 0 47 .584|Brooklyn 45 68 .398 Pittsgh.. 58 56 .509(Philadel. 40 72 .357 Games Today

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus at INDIANAPOLIS - (two games

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NATIONAL. LEAGUE

| By United Press COLUMBUS : . NEWPORT, R. 1, Aug. 19—The| AB RE 0 A u| Ghlctso st Pittsbu eld of French _ | Bushy 2b + ..c.aiie.. 5 0 0 2 5 1| Philadelphia ‘at Boston, being Tor the Wop Tasos (Bly 1 8 1 EE | TORS Salil men’s singles cham = | gutiop. ff; 004 0011 0 0 Teh'S singles cha) pionship Was Ie-| Morgan, 1b ....... 4 0 1.13 1 1 Results Yesterday e: ay when the vet- Gutteridge, 3b. 4 0 1 1 3 oo AMERICAN ASSOCIATION eran Jacque Brugnon ‘and the |Q¥en. PL 18.333 (even, Innings) youthful Yvon Petra were defeated.| Macon, p .......c. 3 -0 2°0 1 1|St Paul ........ 1 001 000 00— 6 10 2 Joe Hunt of Los Angeles scored | Fisher, p ........... 1 0 0 0. 1 o0/|Kansas ity eesdie p+] 303 000 01— 7 14 32 the biggest upset of the tourney Chervinko ......... 1°0.0 0 0 0 pette, Hutchinson and Fenner; Smith, when he scored a straight set vice Totals ........... 37 2 10 24 14 § Moncriét, Moore and Madiesk, tory over the seasoned Brugnon. Chervinko batted for Fisher in ninth, (Ten Innings; ‘Tie, Rain.) The score was 6-3, 6-1, 6-3. ~ INDIANAPOLIS "| Minneapolis ...... 0 000-000 — 1 : : Petra was the victim of Johnny BiterTonk. 2 43 BR 0 A'E|Wivalis Dickey; i woe on Detore. Van Ryn of Philadelphia, who was | Fausets.’ 3b... 5 3 3 3 3 1 : the master throughout in winning | Eckhardt, rf ...... 5 3 3 0 0 0f{Toledo ..ccoccovcesee 300 400 78 3 6-3, 6-4, 6-0. Eugene Smith of Taylor, Te 3 3 3 488 Doe reese 010 030 002— 6 14 2 Berkeley, Cal, was given a good [Riddle e ...[ 5 1 2 "4 1 ofmonen and Linton; Peterson, Tising and battle by Burke Wilkinson, former Berger, gon 1.2°0-4.0 Harv player, but won out 6-2,|Page, p .......... 4 4 1 0 1 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE 5, 8-8. Ee TT ee oe i a wm First. Game) Totals eoe.evveenns. 41 15 17 27 12 1 4 Wilmer Hines of Columbia, S. C., Columb Brooklyn ..ie...cee.. 101 100 000— 3 10 © extended Wayne Sabin of Los An- Indianapolis 220. N en 003 ots 13 New York rh e353 V0 Whe 5 3 geles lo four sets before succumb- (2), | Mancuso. : ing 1-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-0, sett » Ton: Deg ee vies 4 -I%0- | Brooklyn ..,.. Weeks 220 000 1 513 3 , Sher- New York ......... 241 004 00x—11 3 0 . Left | _ Frankhouse, Winston, Brandt, Clark and ar y Bowling 8. | Phelps; Gabler, A. Smith and Mancuso, . 1 (First Game)

Final plans for the bowling season |

in the Indianapolis and Beam'’s Recreation Leagues are to be completed tonight at 8 at a meeting at 421 S. Delaware-st. The deadline will drop on entries tonight, according to Fred Schleimer, secretary of the leagues. Captains of teams wishing to enter must attend the session or call

| Lincoln 5301 during the meeting. ‘| Schedules are to be

drawn. The Indianapolis League will bowl on Wednesdays at the Pritchett Alleys. Beam's Recreation loop is to be im ection on Fridays at the new Pennsylvania Alleys.

One opening remains in the roster of the Indianapolis Automotive League which will hold its initial

meeting of the season tomorrow [Logan

night at 8 at the Antlers Alleys. Captains and members are urged to attend the meeting.

MAJOR LEADERS -

LEADING 1 BATTERS

Averill, Cleveland = ar ae, ANS. Seatherly, clove. 53 231 1% 3 ankees. . 115 oat ys a v Appling, White Sox 103 396 80 147 mn HOME RUNS Gebrlr. Yankees. Yankees. tote. Giants ...... 38 ky Red Sox. Geviand Rei "Hers : wel RNS BATTED IN Fhe Tans JiR ee

5 pars fr or mn Eee. Gif rane we ” 7 ‘was. di SLi

Pages i

and

WITH TRIBE AT BAT : AB H Pct Eckhardt ........... 451 159 .353 Bates ......... cesses 194 65 .335 Flowers ............ 130 43 Siebert ............. 382 125 Riddle ...cccc0. . 409 131 Berger ...cececee.... 538 170 Bolen ......ce.000.. 65 20 Taylor PEA A J 49 15 Crandall .......,.... 157 4. Bluege ...cco0000000 459 131 Sherlock sesesscsesss 514 146 Fausett [ERE RENE SN LN ENN 594 167

Turner escssevsonane 101 28 Tinning Seseesensossae 76 -20 Trout .............. 43 11 Page ese ese csesssssen 5 18 Soest scnsvesan 79 17 Payne .. vessese Xk 0 Gallivan ...... cree ME Sharp ......cicveie. 1zZ ° TRIBE PITCHING 7 G. Turner Sav sss ansenen 29 : Logan ess svssssvevse Page *Sessccsscesssce 29

Tinning desTeeanssce 29 Trout Serene snttsene 32

Bolen reso tea nish 31 Gallivan

vessnse yess 18

Sharp cresstesesdane 25 Payne :

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Sona aeb era. era

———————————————— . OLSEN WINS ON FOUL By United Press

| Boston Philadelphia

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Si Johnson and owaki; R. Davis,

Brennan and Campbell. AMERICAN TEiGor.

ser essncesnnen

prove and Ri Ferrell; Rhodes, Fink and

(Teh Inning Innings) 212 102 101 0—10 21 2 008 213 010 1—11'16 0

Hildebrand, Hudlin, Galehouse, Allen and Sullivan; Cc. Brown, Fein, Cain and

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seasons and start the amateur on |

- night

Next: Wally Nelson, local pro who has been teaching and scouting young up-and-comers nigh onto 22 years, selects his - most promising Indiana product and declares one single handicap is keeping this particular ama teur from cleaning up the ny Wally also is going .to make a national choice along the same lime, : ® x = ATCH: play in Pleasant Run's annual club championship tournament has been slowed to a trot this week. ‘Several contestants tripped off to Terre Haute for the state amateur before ‘getting in their first-round matches, among them being Defending Champ Fred Gronauer and Bob Yohler, a prime favorite. Scores of first-round matches now .completed are: Peters over Wettle, 2 and 1. Fisher over Schuman, 7 and 5. Stricklin over Exist, 1. up in 21 holes. « M. Brown over E. Dorsett, 5 and 3. Reeve over Rader, 5 and 4. R. Martin over Davis, 3 and 2. Shorenstein over Lutz, 1 up. M. Taylor over Bardgett, 3 and 1. Kohlman over Chandler, 2 and 1. Erner over Spahr, 2 and 1. Espie over J. Crawford, 1 up. W. Smith over Dowd, 6 and:5. A club meeting is scheduled for Monday night in the clubhouse,

» » 8 AX BUELL today held the honor of being the first man ever to win the Indianapolis Manu-

| facturers and Food Distributors’ golf

championship. Max fired a 76 at Speedway in the tournament yesterday, which is the first to be ever staged by the organization. It’s: to be an anyual after this. Champ Buell was not exnetly a dark horse since his mantle piece already has been decorated this season with the Indianapolis District titular trophy. Dan Boone finished a close seccnd at 77, while Don Nichols and Ed Sturgeon shared red ribbon honors with 79s.

Win Sa Boost Giants in Hot Chase

’ Second-Place Terry Crew

Takes 8 Straight in. Longest String.

By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 19.—Bill Terry’s New York Giants are using the “winning streak” system in their drive toward .the National League top. Since July 15, when they started their surge from the second division, the New Yorkers have put together five substantial strings of consecutive victories. In the same period they have never dropped two games in a row. Twice they games, once it was four, straight, then seven straight. When the Giants handed the Brooklyn Dodgers a double licking yesterday, 5-3

and 11-5, it extended their fifth and .

newest winning streak to eight straight, a new high. They have taken 11 straight series from rival clubs, while winning 29 of their last 34 games. The double triumph moved the Giants to within 1% games of the pace-setting St. Louis Cardinals, who defeated Cincinnati in a night game, 4-1. It was Si Johnson's second victory since the Cards acquired him from Toronto. Chicago split with Pittsburgh, winning, 5-4, and losing, 3-1, to fall 1% games behind New York. Philadelphia terminated its losing streak at 14 games as Clyde Passeau shut sut the Boston Bees, 7-0. The leading New York Yankees of the American League lost their second straight to Washington, 9-2, but held their 111% game advantage as runner-up Cleveland lost to the Chicago White Sox, 11-10. Detroit and St. Louis divided a doubleheader, the Browns taking the first game, 10-7, and the Tigers the nightcap, 15-3. Lefty Grove pitched Boston to a 8-2 victory over the Philadelphia Athletics, his fifteenth victory.

ni CURIOUS WORLD + By William Ferguson

| ARE THOUGHT OF TODAY LAS VERY ORDERS, THERE. WAS

relatives.

NECTARINE TREE, OR YOU MAY GROW A PEACH TREE FROM NECTARINE SEED.

ABOUT 80, ooo ~ BIBLES

ARE SOLD DAILY.

No less than 5000 distinct species of dinosaur reptiles are known to have lived back in the Mesozoic age. small, rabbit-sized creatures to the huge Brachiosaurus, 80 feet in . length. They began in the Triassic period, and became extinct at the close of the Cretaceous period. Today, they have no living near

They ranged in size from

won five straight

| Colonel c Triumphs

h second; Lula May, third. Best tims,

Softball

Entries were to close tonight 4 the Smith-Hassler-Sturm store fi the local sectional tournament of th Amateur Softball Association America. The winner of the loci meet will compete in the state at South Bend starting Sept.

Eliminations will start here Monday and continue till Friday. ;

~ Big Four Railroad will oppose the American Securities team of komo tonight at Softball Stadium, Joe Zimmet's Newcastle club, which was scheduled to appear here can celed the engagement,

The Imperials have entered the state junior tournament at Porte land. The following players are to represent the local team in the twos day meet: Bauer, Faust, Mahanney, = Caskey, Dible, Buerglin, Bore Schumate, Eversole, Hook, Brunner, Smizer, Souders, McLinn and Roms inger.

Ei

sp K. of C. League schedule for Se ay follows: Holy Cross vs, Joan of Arc, Willard; St. John vs. Sty Philip, Spades; St. Joseph vs. St, Francis, Christian No. 1; Holy Angels vs. Sacred Heart, Riverside No. 2; Little Flower vs. St. Anthony, Coleman; Lady of Lourdes vs. St. Catherine, Garfield; Holy Trinity vs. Cathedral, -Riverside No. 3. St. Mary's team. drew a bye, and Holy Name will play an exhibition tilt at Brookside with a. student team from St. Meinrad Monastery of Spencer County. ;

State Champs on. Basket Clinic Bill

By United Press : FORT WAYNE, Ind, Aug. 10. An all-star team of Allen County high school basketball players will clash with the 1936 state champione ship Frankfort quintet here Aug. "27, as a feature of the first annual Fort Wayne ' coaching school, which opens Monday for a one-week stand. Only one of the Frankfort regu= lars will be missing from the lineup which overwhelmed South Side of Fort Wayne in the final ‘of the state tournament last March. Bo McMillin, Indiana University mentor, will conduct football in= struction of the school, and Ward Lambert, cage coach at Purdue, will be in charge of basketball.

in Salem Feature

Times Special SALEM, Ind. Aug. 19.—Colonel G captured the two final ‘heats of the. 2:26 pace here yesterday to win thes feature event on the harness pro= gram. Summary: ‘ 2:26 Pace, Purse $200—Won by Colonel C, Florena Scotland, second; Abbie Direct, third. Best time, 2: 12, 2:14 Trot, Purse $200—Won by Moko Montgomery, Miss Royalty,

2:12%.

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