Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1936 — Page 7
MRS. J.L. JONES. FUNERAL RITES. SET FOR TODAY
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Says Playboy || Winning Plays of 1936
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Don Johnson
v | odd | Bowed Out in | Army p ulled This Quarterback Sneak for Touchdown Against Columbia, ‘Leads ; mn Big The Rev. John B. Fergu a Fixed Bout + : at Pin Barr age| Is to Conduct Services
Paces Barbasols With 703 Here.
Series; Team Collects 3190 Total.
BY BERNARD HARMON
Pin smackers of the city more than made up for their poor showings of previous sessions of the week during last night’s activities. Although no record br totals were registered, high prevailed in most league sessions. | Don Johnson cracked out the season’s twelfth 700 total, a 703 to pace the soloists and when four of his mates joined. him with series over the 600 mark, the Barbasol guintet | hung "up the highest team total of i the evening. It all happened in the + Beam Recreation at the Pennsyl--vania Alleys, Johnson using games of 236, 246 and 221 for his series, | | : as the team registered 991, 1171 and + 1028 for a 8100. . | Lee Carmin totaled 642, John |. Fehr 636, Johnnie Murphy 616 and Jess Pritchett Sr. 593 for the winners, while Don McNew’s 628 was best for the opposing Sterling ‘|: Beers, which suffered a shutout. It was the only triple victory of the | session, . : . |.-- Marott Shoes with Oscar Behrens dL 01 630 ) and nd os evenson at 649 asds nat aft | SEM 8 in winning twice Hght Ang vu Suwn fhe Lions Jett. over Hiller Office Supply. The team Schwenk, Cadet fullback, went |Dad games of 963, 1063 and 1012.
through ahead of Kasper and took | F8lIs City Hi-Bru led by Charlie | £8 out Hersey at the left, and Preston Cray 8 a and Joe d aliens 614 went down and took out Hudeskey = ae _—s n d Ser to- the right of the ball carrier. | BOWes Seal Fast, which had.
Sidney Luckman was sucked a bit, | Striebeck’s 658 and Lou Daugh-
wide of the play and Kasper hac | ©Fty’s 617 as its top scores. | little _ difficulty getting by him. Ayres Win Two |
‘The diagram illustrates the as- : signments well taken care of by Despite a 617 from Herman Bohne the West Point linemen. and a 605 from Jerry O'Grady, Lie- | ber Beer dropped two.games to L.| ®
7 . Ayres. & Co, which had Bud | Soldier Team Louis Well Received in Bes with 610 as its star. Four Will Take on Local Glove Exhibition
outstanding solo series emerged from the Bader Coffee-Packard Jugoslav Club se Spars in Two Bouts and ‘Sinks’ Opponent; Large : — 1 Crowd Sees Brown Bomber.
Could Have Had Real Ring Greatness but Refused | to Work at It. |
BY JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer | : EW YORK, Oct. 24.—Mr. Max | Baer has announced his re- | tirement from the prize ring. We'd i { feel happier about this if he had : ‘put it in writing. The Militant { Dafiydill bowed out under circum- ; : stances that were scarcely flattering | }- ‘ to his memory. The Toronto gen- | ; darmes caught him in a tank act. One Dutch Weimer went off the deep end for him. | To help ballyhoo the show the | promoters lured Mr. Arthur Donovan, the country’s ace referee to Toronto. When Mr. Baer arrived and learned this he promptly vetoed the plan. He wanted no part of Mr. Donovan in the ring, thus unconsciously paying the New York referee a high tribute. ‘Even when he was fighting in the interest of truth, purity and justice Mr. Baer found that Mr. Donovan | ~ ,was a severe taskmaster. Naturally he wanted no part of the gentleman in what appears to have been | a carefully arranged aquatic exhi- | bition. Swaggering, eccentric and bomi :bastic, Mr. Baer was anything but | a model athlete, and yet it was hard to steam up an angry fury ‘about him. ‘All the prize ring ever | meant to him was a quick approach to easy money, and all money ever meant to him was a calling card to gaudy frivolities. He was a Good Time Charley in italics. Mr. Baer might have gone along | to real greatness in the prize ring but he refused to work at it. He was impatient with the routine box"ing progress imposes. He could hit i as hard as Jack Dempsey with his Fight hand, an asset which came to him naturally. He never tried to | develop anythigslse. A right hand ‘swinger at the start he was still
Mrs. Julia L. Jones, 56 Downeys av, who died Thursday morning in
her home following an illness of one week, was to be buried in Mew morial Park cemetery today fole lowing funeral services at 2 p. m, in the Flanner and Buchanan Mors tuary. She was 46. The Rev. John B. Ferguson, Ire vington Presbyterian Church pase tor, was to conduct the services, Mrs. Jones was born in Brooklyn, N. ¥., and was a member of the Irvington Presbyterian Church, Pleasant Run Golf Club, Irvington Women’s Union of Clubs. Nature Study Club, Irvington Chapter of the Order of Eastern Star and the King’s Daughters of the Irvington Presbyterian Church. : . Survivors are her husband, W. Frank Jones, Indianapolis; three daughters, Mrs. Maurice W. Pick« ett, Mrs. Starling M. Fisher and Miss Doris Jones, all of Indianape lis; her father, Alfred H. Lofland, Indianapolis, and a brother, ‘John { Lofland, West Mount, N. J. :
MRS. MARGARET MULLERY, Indianapolis resident for 77 years, died yesterday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. William Drake, 231 -| Hendricks-pl, following an illness of two weeks. She was 79. Funeral services are to be held at 9 a. m, Monday in the Holy Cross Catholic Church, with burial in Holy Cross Cemetery. Mrs. Mullery was born in Madison and came to Indianapolis when she was 2. She. was married 63 years ago to Martin Mullery. Mr. Mullery died in 1917. Mrs. Mullery was a | member .of the Holy Cross Catholic Church. ; Survivors are three daughters, Mrs. Drake, Mrs. William Lynch and Mrs. Bernar Wulle; a son, Will : Mullery; a sister, Mrs. Anna Klein: = a brother, Mathew Coleman, and seven grandchildren, all of Indiane apolis. * MRS. ELIZABETH M. SHIRLEY, Indianapolis resident for 23 years, died in her home, 4201 Boulevardpl, yesterday following.an illness of two weeks. She was 56. Funeral services are to be held in the Friends: Church in Amo at 2 Pp. m. Burial is to, be in the Amo Cemetery. Mrs. Shirley was born in Morgan County and attended the public
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ARMY'S QUARTERBACK SNEAK TRAT
SCORED ON COLUMBIA FROM THE BIGHT -YARD. LINE ...... :
Williams
game, Kasper, West Point quarter, worked a quarterback sneak that scored a touchdown and sent, { Army on the way to a 27-16 vie-' 4 fory. Lined up in single wing: back formation against a 6-2-2-1’ defense of Columbia, the ball was snapped fo Kasper, who plunged through between his right guard and ‘tackle for eight yards and a touchdown. Monk Meyer, Army's brilliant back, went wide to his
BY ART KRENZ NEA Service Sports Artist Army’s big grid machine is running rampant through the East with an attack that no one yet has been able to/stop. The nearest it has been to defeat was in the game with Columbia, in which first one team and then the other went ahead until the Cadets’ power finally assumed command in the last quarter. With the score 7-6 in favor of Army early in the
John Blue (above), one of the veteran tenpin aces of Indianapolis, turned in the second 300 game of the current season during the weekly session of the Indianapolis League at the Pritchett Alleys Wednesday night. Perfect games are not new to Blue, manager of the Pennsylvania Alleys, for he had rolled five previous to Wednesday.. However, - It was his initial twelve-strike game in league competition and entitles him to a gold medal. Nad re . :
COLLEGE GAMES TODAY
Shaw, Mays | waren After Crown
‘Purdue at Minnesota. Midwest Driving Title at!
————————— ee em gin ay
Motors clash, won by the former, 2 to 1. Leppert had 621 and Leo Hale, 619 for the winners while John Blue tossed a 627 and Dad Hanna a 602 for the losers. Arch Heiss toppled 658 leading Mar-mon-Harrington to an odd-game decision over Coca Cola. Stevenson warmed up for his : Beam Recreation appearance with a fling at the Construction League maples at the Pritchett = Alleys,
- Notre Dame at Pittsburgh. Butler at Wabash. Indiana State at Evansville. Manchester at De Pauw. Central Normal at Defiance, O.
Tilt Features: Capital City Loop Chart; Plainfield |
BY PHILLIPS PECK night and. Roxborough said the Blend - finesse with power and Bomber was only a few poinds
just that at the finish. |
at Pendle ton. | balarced fighter, or
| technique and you have an ideally / away. from his normal the case may | We
fighting | ight,
where he turned in games of 220, 233 and 238 for a 631 that was good ! tor city-wide runner-up honors.
| |
Franklin at Earlham. Oakland City at Ball State. Holbrook at Rose Poly,
Stake in Roby Race |
schools in Amo. She was a member of the Friends Church in Amo, and was a former member of the
FI HIS fact helped to explain his : miserable performance against the two-handed Jim Braddock. He " ‘never had a chance against Joe
| be_you have Detroit's famed Brown | In regard, fo Jorge Brescia, ArThe Soldiers of Fort Harrison and | Bomber, Joe Louis. . gentine heavyweight whom Louis the Jugoslav eleven, unbeaten this| * The Sepia Slasher made his first knocked out in New York recently, season, will meet at the Riverside 'apnearance “before a local au- Manager Roxborough said it was a
Rolling 'in the anchor position for Tomorrow. Utility Insulators, lve boosted that’ : team to a double win over Johnson- | Maas Lumber Co. Oscar Behrens Zimes Special
Woman's Department Club’ here. Survivors are the husband, Alva K. Shirley; a daughter, Mrs. Ralph
Valparaiso at Hanover. Other Leading Games
NG
- {racts were signed for the simpie
manner in which he weng out was
Louis from the moment the con-|
reason both his hands were in bad shape. He knew it, his manager knew “it, and if the boxing commission knew it, they considered it a state secret. In this fight the glossy screwball took the count on one knee and the customers went away uttering certain pointed remarks about the ‘quality "of his intestines. True, the
hardly heroic, yet he took quite a pasting that night. The celluloid yecords show he stopped more than punches—and weren't we writg hysterical lines about the murerous effect of the Brown Bombers ts at that time? . Being what he is, Mr. Baer will be uch happier in retirement—and so |
the customers. !
cided in the encounter ' between these -powerful elevens.
gridiron tomorrow afternoon in the | feature clash on the Smith-Hassler- | Sturm Capital City League sched- | ule, | Ultimate winner of the league championship probably will be de-
The Jugoslav team has beaten Plainfield in a league game and won a non-league contest with the Sheboygan (Wis) club. The Soldiers boast. triumphs over Leon Tailors and the Olympics.
One Other Loop Tilt
Only one other league game is on tap tomorrow, Plainfield taking on Pendleton at Pendleton. Other members of the circuit line up as follows: } Olympic vs. So-AtHics at Chris-
“sweat.” j Brown Hits Canvas
troit Negro.
Bill Brown, the first victim, hit the canvas three times in the opening round under the jabs of the DeIn the second heat, Louis exploded his right hand flush ory Brown's whiskers and the Windy : City puncher dropped like a pole- ' Tierre won a four-round decision
tian Rark and Leon Tailors at Cin- axed steer directly in his own ‘tom Jack Tudor in the opening
|
| dience at the Armory last night and | fighter being pushed. along too fast, demonstrated to approximately 3500 spectators, who. paid $2515, why he is the most outstanding young Brescia is a splendid young fighter heavyweight in recent ring history. | but he was put in against Louis too Two sacrificial lambs, imported |soon. I sincerely hope that the defrom Chicago for the slaughtering, | feat will not set his fighting prowere tossed into the gquared circle with : Louis but failed fo provide enough opposition to enable the Dark Destroyer to work up a
sorry case of a young and promising
Likes South America “His prospects are very good.
gram back,” Roxborough said. In other houts on last night's card Smokey Maggard, Cincinnati (0. 1light-heavyweight, and Noble Wallace, Indianapolis, hammered at each other for-an eight-round draw; Kid Carson, Indianapolis, Negro middleweight, knocked out Al Fayne, another local Negro, in the sixth round; Karl Martin, Indianapolis middleweight, defeated Jack Berry, Cincinnati, by a technical knockout in three rounds, and Norman
prelim.
also preceded his Beam appearance with a big series in the Construc-
tion, getting a 676 from games of
234, 229 and 213. His Brandt Bros.
featuring a. 1019 opener, shut out’
Modern Home Insulators. , Other High Scores Four other honor counts ‘emerged from the loop. Lieber had 639, Ab-
bott 634, Horn 619, and Hurrle, 617. William P, Jungclaus ‘and Central
Supply’ ' scored triple wins over
Stewart-Carey Glass Co. and ReadyMixed Concrete, as Spickelmeier Fuel and Architects downed Von-
negut’s and Railroad Men's Fed-
eral Savings twice in other matches. Two. other mighty sc ng feats were turned in by leaguers in action at the Pritchett Alleys, Carl Hardin pacing the Hillcrest “members with a. 673, as Glen Tumey outdistanced
Northwestern at IHlinois. Columbia at Michigan. St. Mary’s (Cal.) at Fordham. Dartmouth at Harvard. Carnegie Tech at Holy Cross, Detroit at Manhattan, New York. Miami (0.) at Ohio U. Georgetown U., at New York U. Brown at Pennsylvania. ‘| Michigan State at Marquette.
CHICAGO, Oct. 24—More than 30,000 spectators are expected to attend the first annual Roby Sweepstakes at Roby Speedway tomorrow afternoon when 16 drivers face the barrier in the closing event of the outdoor autd™ racing sédson. Tyehty-Hive entries alréady Haje Navy at Princeton, . been received for the event. and 4 Mirtiand iat Sine half dozen others are tentative. The |. ‘g. MEE (Texas) ot race is the only race of the season | Boston U., at’ Villanova. over the derby distance of 100 miles.| W- snd L. at Virginia. bE ’ Bucknell at W., and J. The Midwestern driving cham- Drake at Washington U,, of St. Louis, pionship will be decided in the race | Rutgers at Yale. with a bitter driving battle expected | Penn State at Cornell. to be waged by Wilbur Shaw, now | Lehigh at Gettysburg. leading Rex Mays by a narrow mar- Boston College at Providence. gin of 12 points, with Chet Gard-
Auburn (Alabama Poly) at Georgia. ner.in third place 226 points back | Xc*3% A. and M. at Baylor. of Shaw.
Florida at Kentucky. Arkansas at Louisiana State.
/
Western Maryland.
Wheeler, Detroit; two half sisters, Mrs. Luella Hodson, ‘Amo, and Mrs, Elva Hunt,”Paonia, Cal, and two half brothers, Will Hadley. Amo, and Nealie Hadley, Paonia.
CHARLES OSBORN, R. R. 16,
Box 34, a resident of Indianapolis
18 years, died yesterday afternoon
in his home following an illness of three weeks. He was 63." Funeral services are to be held at 2:30 p. in. tomorrow in the York's Chapel in Elwood. ‘Burial is to be in Elwood Cemetery. - Mr. Osborn was born in Fairfield and was a member of the Fairfield Masonic Lodge. He was a teller in the Union Trust Co. 11 years. Survivors: are the widow, Mrs. Clara Osborn of Indianapolis; a nephew, A. T. Brier of Elwood, and & cousin, Mrs. Virginia Jones of Indianapolis. :
| cinnafi in a Midwest League con- corner.’ "The contest board of the A. AA
5 = = ~ foo i — a rivals of the Bankers circuit with Catholic U., at Mississippi U. T OSSIBLY you are the type who, ee league-leading Broad Rip- | avi ak mel, uy Wy : . : 'a 661. Hardin had games of 216, |under whose rules and sanction the | Texas at Rice. =" oi OBERT K. > ANGLE, Indianaps s Jiems as have to 46 with the | esi unoeaien In three Smith | No.'Z praed by Brown's oper. VI€A@list Playoff 25 sna 22 ana Tumey 221 209 and | Roby race is hele, wil award 120 Gonri Tek at sander, Thursday in his home, 848 N. Ruralo
mews items as have to do with the ames E. Sullivan Nrophy, This is fa. piece of bric-a-brac annually voted through the A. A, U. to some | outstanding amateur athlete. The fact that it is voted through the A. A. U, ought to be sufficient to
Hassler, Sturm Senior loop contests, | meets Holy Cross at Ellenberger tomorrow in the headliner of the circuit’s four-game [schedille. Others are: ! Hoffa A. C. vs.! Beech Grove at Rhodius;. Fashion Cleaners vs. St.
Towa State at Missouri, Nebraska at Oklahoma. Duke at Tennessee. z North Carolina at Tulane. : Oklahoma A. and M. at Tulsa. West Virginia at Centre. Dayton at Cineinnati( night). Bowdoin at Colby.
bunched are the first eight men in the list, any one of them could take over the title by winning the event.
Record -Entry Is
ence, He retired into his shell for, | three rounds and wore himself out | ducking, side-stepping, and retreating around the ring in an effort. to; keep from being knocked out. Louts, using 16-ounce gloves, merely toyed with his opponents,
st. Funeral sgrvices were to be held at 2’ p. m. y in the Montgomery Funeral Home, followed by burial in Crown Hill Cemetery. He was 73. Mr. Pangle, a retired steamfitter, was a member of the Third Chris tian Church. Survivors are the widow,
Eight Washington League pastimers passed the 600 mark in its session at the Illinois Alleys, Noah Mishler leading the field with a 663, from 193, 226 and 244.
In Big Four Loop
at Pleasant Run
———— tet.
Four public links stars will compete over an 18-hole route af
but spparenty If su’. There are Beers va. Dantordis. Gulf Series | C08, (0 Cut loose ut any" time | Flessant, Run, tomorrow sftersoon| poe mig Pour Ralroad League Likely in A. B. C.| mize ee Wiliam 5. Twining, Amber, Pa e who take it seriousl at Garfield 9» and was content to display to the they were tied at the end ‘of last | ePers passed 600 in their ses- 1Ke y mn . es. NJo| Bates at Maine. Wiliam 8S. Twining Ambler, Pa, som Ye ‘ thousands of ring fans the amazing ey "16-man team event. ‘The |Sion at the Fountain Square Al- ld : Montana at Montana State. and a brother, L. G, Pangle, Tulsa,
The outstanding amateur athlete| Standings of the senior loop fol- footwork, perfect co-ordination and Hoke Joann team evens Tie quartet with a 633, Berry had 627, roger Okla. :
’ Virginia Poly at North Caroling State.
last year was Jesse Owens, the Ne-! low: Times Special
gro inter gna ! Oat Jumper, Hu | Broad Ripple ........ E evercrunes 3 § " him Deaton, ile won ne, Bl a oo Xe 04 ih Tin Shap, Sher NEW YORK, Oct. 24. —Fears that| Washington State at Oregon, a =| KNIFE WIELDER SENTEN CED disclosed that Owens was on th | Pasion Giessiers 1.000000 bo 1 Manager . Tells Plans Pleasant Run, ~~. |Superintendents and Accounting | New York is situated too far East Southery Palitorpis ai Stan meistian; | BY United Press. wn : as on the |. ily! Cross ooo. a 11.1 “«. | registered “three-time victories EIT Rew Missy) State at Tez CY BOONVILLE, Ind; Oct. 24.—John * pay roll of the Ohio State legisla- | Fails City >... oe o- 3 1| After the exhibition, John w.| Prizes including the Vonnegut 16- | “3 ty way battle was waged for | [OF the American Bowling Congress| Oregon State at U. C. L. A. Richard McKinsley, 43, ‘accused of ture as a page and for some reason | St Roehs .....coooobueiii, 9 3 1lRoxborough, co-manager of Louis MAD team trophy, will be awarded | pon iC or®Y, Pate Was w Kernel | tournament to be a success were be- | Utah at Utah State. is Jn Pt reed © $his heinous etime eliminated him. Beech Grove... 1"! I 3 6] wyp’ Julien Black, discussed fue. | after the DO soe, Vonnegut | Ladies League at Pritchett’s, Helen | lieved groundless today with the amy a Yormunt, Knife Jast Saturday, Loder wan sen The balloting for this year's award | MATMEN IN DRAW plans: for his sensational ‘young Cub Will go-to Pleasant Run, w ¢ | Kritsch getting 555 to lead rivals, as number of entries already registered | Oklahoma City at Wichita. tenced to 80 days on the state penal 1s under way and it has been sug- | NEW YORK, Oct. 24—Ivan | heavyweight Coffin will get the trophy for win- |p) .o mount “totaled 551 to take the : ot’ Tufts at Williams. farm and fined $100. Eat a y sing the round robin match Play | runner.up position. Sunshine Clean. | 10° the 1937 event at a Tecrd high | yerns College at Xavier (New Orleans). '
gested that even if Owens, who was
Podubny, Russian matman, and Abe|, From here the Louis entourage series during the summer. for mid-October.
— ENT a
Bu United Press COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 24~Lou Darrell, Los- Angeles wrestling promoter, yesterday was named as president of the International Athletic Promoters, an organization incorpora for $50,000. Ray Fabiana, GAME Philade! was chosen vice presiol dent; Ed White, Chicago, secretary, and Alf Haft, Columbus, treasurer. The organization plans to bring wrestlers from foreign countries to the United States and send matmen abroad in exchange.
‘the hero of the Olympic Games, A ers, Knit Shop and : : Goldberg, Los Angeles, wrestled to | will return to Detroit and then go George Pete and Bernie Bra 5 p and Bowes Seal Fasts Bowling leade re ! expend ; tops h again - | : : ge rson y w Is a xpending flops th poll he will be ig {a draw in a bout here last night. In Shite: On Jey, 20, Lots of Coffin will receive awaras Jor farmed in ume victories, tht Svery olor i an tempt lo sur. New Mat Group Is We make Sites fol . Owe - or another on in| winning high point and low. meda : pass the mark of 15, ual | * ile ERT oy oy aly is Snider F “ Ni d New ‘Orleans Jone of the few be is honors in ‘the match play series Shop 2519.10. feature. team. per. entries established ai. Sista Formed at Columbus |§ at oir trip, ae A r j : on. rough expre zes won unday’s play . x ast spring. — gardless ud using to yun in a track meet at air INimro disfavor with exhibitions. also will be presented. — do not close until Feb, 1. | NEW |
tockholm Jast August. . It may be | tance or fime! r and pertinent to say some- || : ning. about that suspension and the machinery .of the A. A. U. at ta time. The meet in- question
The Armory is to be cotiverted
Ame tcans Share in into a bowling academy for the annual pin ¢ and will be fitted
Irish Sweepstakes Re Ta Tied —— _ | model and 2,650 seats for spectators. WINS FIFTH her A.C. basketball | the Meri Church its fifth victory
“We try to make as few of these : re Loui ives litt Be 8 W 1 CAR 1! sa “Louis derives little nefit { from exhibitions and there is al- | Says I estling ways the risk that he'll be injured | g lin some way.
“Then, too, exhibitions are de- | Easier on Neck : cidely impairing to his mental condi- Than Pro Grid
By NEA Service : NLEVELAND, Oct. 24—In _recent years a number of | college gridders have. || professional 1
By United Press DUBLIN, Oct. 24—Fivée Americans drew residual prizes of $4,482.50 Er i a plats e.on ne : S
EE ———— eps. BOHRIG GAINS VERDICT PASSAIC, N. J, Oct, 24—Johnny outpointed
Bobrig, liton, X. J. outpointed |
their eight-round last night.
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