Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1937 — Page 16
NEW YORK DROPS STYMIE RULE
ot Sure It Belongs Qut
Some Championship Match.es Have Been Won on Strength of This Item.
BY JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK, April 12.—Mr. Jack White, the lean faced comic, whistles a chanty through his- bridgework about trugging over the hill to the poor housé and comments bitterly: “It wasn't tough enough as it was, they had to put a hill in front of it.” A great number of fairway ferrets seem to feel this way about golf and the stymie. Their attitude is tHat golf imposes enough annoy- = ances in a routine march from tee to green without inviting added ones. At any rate, “out with the stymie” has been the battle cry of the agonized duffer for years. To these haggard (souls the New | York State Golf Association has just tossed a gnarled bone of solace. The association has ruled that for one year, as an experiment, the stymie must be computed on a basis of 12 inches instead of six as heretofore. This means that any time a ball stops within 12 inches of the hole or within another ball, thus creating a blockade on the green, it may be lifted without penalty. Under the temporary suspended regulation six inches was the mandatory limit. By its action the association seems to confess, on the one hand, the stymie is undesirable and, on the other, that it should be retained. It is something like a , judicial opinion which holds burglary with a sawed-off shotgun is a felony while the same offense with a pearl handled revolver is a misdemeanor. Either In Or Out Either the stymie belongs in golf or it doesn’t—and there is an increasingly large number of addicts who insist it doesn’t. Still making the stymie more simple to raster may be a step in the right direction. If it is the idea of the association to extend this process of simplification by degrees until in the end the stymie will cease to exist altogether the experiment is not without significance, merit or hope. It is interesting to note that the fight for the abolition of the stymie originated in America and has been carried on almost exclusively by players in this country. Yet in two historic international matches America profited by the stymie. This being so it can not be said the opposition was" inspired by personal or selfish reasons. And in both instances England, foremost = supporter of the stymie, was the sufferer. : Bob Jones was playing for the Britisly Amateur Championship in 1930 at St. Andrews. Up to that time this was the only major golf title the Georgian had failed to win He drew Cyril Tolley in the quarter final. Tolley was the defending champion and was at the top of his
Williams
game. Golfers don’t need to be told |in the first derby ever run. He has is | followed pretty close for he has yet to finish lower than second place
Jones and Tolley finished the 13 in any of the derbies since the first.
that when the beefy Britisher very good indeed.
all square, and walked over to the |
first ‘tee to begin their extra hole | With Clara Scholl, won the Miami |
activities. They both had fine drives down the middle, and were on the | rim of the green with their seconds; | Tolley, away. laid his approach putt | to within 12 inches of the pin; |
oP Ars ore mie A pr TS ne : F
i
SS LR
This Skater Has ‘Polish’
| |
{
|
The young- man shown above, “polish” because he hails from Warsaw, Poland.
field of roller skaters who will take
Thursday night) as the Transcontinental Roller Derby gets under way
for a 21-day run.
From Football to Roller
| allowed to see him for a week.”
Bill Roskopf, is bound to have He is one of the off at the Fair Grounds Coliseum |.
International League.
By United Press |
Doctor Says Tris Speaker Will Recover
‘Gray Eagle,’ Injured in Fall, May Be Scarred, Physician Reports.
By United Press CLEVELAND, April 12—Tris Sppeaker, immortal “gray eagle” of baseball, in serious condition after a fall from the second floor of his suburban home, will “pull through,” his physician said today. | Dr. Edward B. Castle, physician to the Cleveland club, with whom the hard-hitting, fast-stepping outfielder made his fame, said after reexamining the 49-year-old veteran that “it was a very, very close call.” Speaker suffered a fractured skull, a fractured left arm and multiple face gashes yesterday when he tumbled head-first from -his ' secondstory porch while erecting a flower box he had made himself. | He landed on a stone walk edged with jagged cobblestones. “His face will be scarred permanently, but otherwise he’ll come through,” Dr. Castle said. “Only Mrs. Speaker will be
A fire rescue squad rushed Speaker to a hospital where a two-hour operation was necessary, the physician said, to “reconstruct the left side of his mouth.” Speaker” brought a world championship to Cleveland in 1920. Earlier he had played.with the Boston Red Sox and later with Washington and the Philadelphia Athletics. He also managed the Newark Bears of the
National Boxing Tourney Opens
BOSTON, April 12.—A record field
LET'S GO
ET this straight. The conserv ferret out your pet fishing
By G. H. D.
FISHING
ation department is not trying to hole. They only want to know
approximately where you caught those bass, their length and weight
and most of all they want you to s
end 10 or 20 scales from each fish.
Seriously, every fisherman with the best interests of the sport
at heart should help in this important survey.
Fish scales have growth rings,
Here's the story: like trees. A trained fishologist—
the Greeks have a name for him—peers {hrough his microscope at a fish scale and tells you instantly when that fish was hatched.
Skates Is Story of Star
One of the fellows upon whom the experts are betting in the Transcontinental Roller Derby which opens at the. Fair Grounds
Thursday, is Wes Aronson, football skater.
Wes was born in Portland. Ore.
cago when he was just a boy and grew up in the Windy. City schools. Sub-
sequently he became a star half-< back on the Roosevelt High School
Coliseum player—insurance salesman—roller
He moved with his parents to Chi-
off today in the 35th annual tional
Wednesday.
boxing shows, all champions. them titles A. A. U, Golden Gloves,
of 220 top-flight “simon-pure” boxers, representing 26 states, the District of Columbia and Hawaii square naA. A. U. championships—a three-day affair that hits its peak
In this biggest of all amateur contestants are bring with in sectional Dia-
They won
Srid team and was named on the all-city eleven in his senior year. He was all set to go to Notre Dame when the selling bug bit him and he tossed over the chance to gh to college for the chance to sell insurance. this business that he began to fre-
quent roller rinks and became something of a “good skate.” Met Joe Kleats While whirling around the Chicago rinks Wes happened to meet Joe Kleats, dean of American skate champions. Joe took Wes under his wing and the two entered as a team in the six-day skate race when it was booked in Chicago. From the six-day affair which was ruled too strenuous, the present
transcontinental derby idea evolved. Wes followed right along, took part
In March of this year Wes, paired
It was while he was in |
Chief Saunooke
To Face Hewitt
Chief Saunooke, 325-pound giant from Cherokee, N. C., will return to the local wrestling arena tomorrow night for a match with Whitey Hewitt, 240, Memphis, as a semi-
windup on the all-heavyweight card at the Armory. Both grapplers are undefeated here. Headlining the card will be & return bout between Dorve (Iron Man) Roche, 220-pound former coal miner from Decatur, Ill., and Frank (Rebel) Speer, 240, Atlanta, former Georgia Tech football player. toche and Speer battled in a onefall bout last week, with Roche gaining the nod with less than four minutes of the time limit remaining. The match tomorrow night will be a regular 90-minute tussle.
als, “brain-child” of the New England A. A. U,, have been held here since 1933—the year Joe Louis was eliminated by Chicago's Max Marek. Boston cradled the first tourney in 1903. 1
Shortridge Golfers
pete in the final tryouts for the Shortridge High School golf team this
{ mond Belt, or other tourneys and {hope to leave Wednesday with gold | belts emblematic of national supremacy. Besides the gold belts that will go to the winners and silver belts that will pe the reward of runnersup, an incentive will be the opportunity to be chosen on the United States team invited to compete against teams from South and Central America and Mexico. This is the first time the Nation-
Hold Final Tryouts
Eighteen candidates were to com-
afternoon at the Riverside
roller derby. He had already won the Chicago derby in February, tcamed with Ivy King, rated as the fastest woman skater in the world. Much of Aronson’s success is at-
Tinies Special
Indianapolis Lifters Win A. A. U. Crowns
course. The Blue Devil linksmen will open their season April 22 in a match with Columbus. Candidates taking part in the tryouts today were Robert Phillips, Charles Owens, Raymond Ballweg,
He can tell other things too, most, because when you send that
but the fish's age interests him scale to the department you also
send dope on the length and weight and where and when caught. From this| data Dr. Will Scott and his assistants at Indiana
University are compiling the first
study of its kind ever made, ‘we
are told.” The conservation department is cheering them on. Here's
what the studies will show:
If the rings on the scales show all fish from a certain lake take
six years to attain a certain size,
three years, the conservation department will reason thusly: water has too many fish or too little food.
vear, but will try to figure how the ance the fish population,
I - 4 N the other hand, they reason
z "
grow much faster than the average. supporting
superfine and capable of stream now holds. We will stock
whereas they should make it in That We will not stock it this food supply can be made to bal-
2 2
, here is a stream where the bass The food supply must -be lots more fish than the that stream at once.
8
You have! fished water where the natural fish food was so
plentiful that the fish sneered at
where fish kite greedily but seem undersize.
your lure and you know spots In both cases the
natural balarice has been disturbed, to the detriment of the fishing. Dr. Scott's studies help the department restore that balance,
incidentally investing your license returns and better sport.
money where it will give larger
So you see you have a definitely selfish interest in this work.
The least you can do is push it alo
ng. Here's how again Scrape a
dozen or so scales from any keeper game fish you catch, stick them
in an envelope along with a note
telling the weight and length of
the fish and where caught, and mail to the Conservation Department, Fish and Game Division, Indianapolis.
® 0n 2
" 8 2
ND this is important. Don’t wait until you catch a five-pound A bass or a 13-inch blue gill hefore sending in scales. Scales from smaller fish are even more important to the survey. Scales from
all keeper game fish are needed.
2 8 a
# 2 2
It’s hard to believe, but the Conservation Department rescued 67,000 game fish marooned by recent high waters along White River
between the Riverside hatchery and the ball saw something jump out there last summer.
gin»
»
park. We thought we
2 2 5
Marvin Hedge, the champion distance fly caster, is leaving soon for France to show them how he gets a fly out 150 feet. If we ever
cast 100 feet it will be from the t
op of a tall building and with a
hurricane -to; help. That man could just about stand on the bow of a Mississippi sidewheeler and comb both banks.
Hartz to Seek Third Car
Victory in
Race Classic
Harry Hartz, whose cars have taken the checkered flag twice at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, is after his third victory thir year -in the
500-mile classic and is putting his Coast comet.
faith in Ted Horn, blond Pacific
Horn drove Hartz’ car last year and finished second. However, Harry says that if he had permitted his driving star to run at top speed Lou Meyer would have finished second and Horn would have won.
“Horn drove a swell race, followed instructions from the pits to the letter, and I hédve signed him to drive my car this year,” Hartz announced. “This time he has enough experience under his belt to figure out his dwn strategy and I'll probably let him go on his own instead of running him according to the pit blackboard.
Error Made in Pit
Hartz explained that, due to a miscalculation, the pit figured Horn a lap behind during the last stages cf the race and was content to let him run second, whereas Horn was actually in the same lap with Meyer and, if allowed to shoot the works, wculd have beaten Lou to the checkered flag. “Ted was disappointed and so was I,” said Harry, “but it was just a tough break: | This time, with the new eight-cylinder machine, he ought to draw down first money if he gets .the breaks.” Hartz rolled out twa [previous winners, Billy Arnold, another youngster, in 1930; and Fred Frame, courageous veteran, in 1932; Hartz himself finished second
Net Clash Verdict To Be Out Today
Coaches Johnny Wooden of South Bend Central High School and Shelby Shake of Mishawaka High School will receive the decision of the Board of Control of the State High Schopl Athletic Aossociation today over a near fistic clash between the two coaches at a basketball game. Both coaches and several spectators at the game between Central and Mishawaka recently were called to Indianapolis to present evidence before Arthur L. Trester, Commissioner of the Association, and other board members. The board has authority to mete out pendlties to the coaches or the schools involved. The board has arrived at a verdict and will notify the coaches today, according to Trester.
300 Coaches Attend Purdue Grid Clinic
Times Special
| ment.
OUT OF GOLF
Rep. Cannon Wants Action On His Charge
Says Cummings Is Not Going After Investigation of Club Owners.
By United Press WASHINGTON, April 12.—Rep. Raymond J. Cannon (D. Wis.), who has gone to bat for baseball players, today charged Attorney General Homer S. Cummings with a balk. Cannon warned that if Cummings doesn’t “start pitching” in a day or two on his demand for an investigation of baseball players’ contracts he is “going to do something about it.” 2 It was a week ago that Cannon fired a letter at Cummings, demanding that the Department of Justice prosecute major league club owners for “violation” of the Sherman antitrust laws. He charged that the “reserve clause” in baseball players’ contracts, which prevents their selling their services to another club, is in restraint of trade in violation of the antitrust laws. Cummings referred the letter to the antitrust division of his departAntitrust division lawyers found a decision by former Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes in 1922 holding that baseball is not interstate commerce. Cannon learned his letter had been filed away with several hundred other manded action. a I don’t hear from that bunch in a day or two I'm going to start something,” he said. “So they think I'm a crank and a trouble-maker, do they. I'll show ‘em. I'l investigate them, that’s what I'll do. Yes sir, I'll investigate ’em. They can’t do that to me.” : Cannon indicated he may ask a Congressional inquiry. Cummings smilingly commented he might do a little investigating on his own, from a box seat when the major league baseball season opens here a week from today. But Rep. Cannon is determined not to be denied. It is a shame, she said, the “miserly salaries” that major league owners pay their players. “Why,” he said, “did vou know that a lot of major league players don't even get $5000 a year.” [Cannon “doesn’t give a hoot,” about any Supreme Court opinion written 15 years ago. “Why, the Court's probably changed its mind since then,” he said. “They do that often.” : espite Cannon, major league owners went right ahead today with plans to open the season next week. Mo st of them declined to comment 0 |
complaints. He de-
his charge.
——
isconsin Agent to Be Here Tomorrow
oseph Mercedes, Wisconsin “good will ambassador” who is visiting 11 Midwestern and Eastern states to advertise his state's recreational advantages, will bring his traveling showhouse to Indianapolis tomorrow. Mr. Mercedes will be a guest of the Indianapolis Hunting and Fishing Club at a meeting in the Washington Hotel. He is to show motion pictures and discuss the recreation possibilities in Wisconsin. When he arrives in Indianapolis, Mf. Mercedes is to tender an invitation to Indianapolis residents to
- ye
-e
EDITORS. HEAR 0TH SIDES OF COURT BATTLE
Bridges Gives Views of Foes Of Reform and Minton Defends It.
! Republican and Democrati¢ Party leaders and editors returned to their homes today after a week-end spent in discussing the proposed Supreme Court reform and inter party affairs. At a banquet Saturday night, the Indiana Republican Editorial Ase sociation members and G. O. P, leaders heard Senator Bridges (R. N. H.). He declared President Roeosevelt’s Federal Court proposals raise a ‘crucial issue in the framework .of government.” . More than 1500 attended the ban= quet in the Butler Fieldhouse. Meanwhile the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association and party chieftains heard addresses by Governor Townsend and Senator Minton approving the court plan. More than 1000 persons attended the dinner in the Claypool Hotel,
Interparty Problems Listed
The editorial sessions brought to the fore the following interparty problems: 1. Demand of Republican editors for a reprganization of the state or= ganization, with a renewed effort to oust Burrell Wright as state com=mittee treasurer. 2. Quéstion of Democratic state organization support for Senator VanNuys if he seeks re-election in 1938. Senator VanNuys, who opposes the President's court plan, did not attend the banquet. Senator Minton | favors the President's re=form proposals. : Vote Morgan Support The Republican State Committee earlier voted to support the present state chairman, Ivan Morgan. Mr. Morgan said the vote referred to the “constant bickering about reorganization of the state committee.” Mr. Wright could not be reached early “hen for - comment on the
editors’ demand for his ouster. In discussing the Supreme Court issue, the New Hampshire Senator told the G. O. P. editors that “in plain language, the President wants the power to appoint judges wha will decide favorably for his policies of social and economic reform.”
Defeat Termed Challenge
Senator Bridges said defeat in the last campaign was “a challenge to keep on fighting for the principles of progressive ideas without upsetting our| economic balance.” Governor Townsend, after approving the| Presidents Court reform, urged Indiana Democrats to preserve party unity, ° The Governor declared his ministration had paign pledges. He present State budget. “We |will not wreck Social Security| by being miserly. We will not let qur State institutions rot in order to|please any selfish interest,” he said. | Senator Minton, after pledging continuation of his fight for Supreme Court reform, said: “There is nothing wrong with the ‘ Constitution, but there is something wrong with the Court as it now is constituted.” He declared a “terrific fight” is ‘now going on within the Court.”
adredeemed camdefended the
| Griswold Speaks
Rep. Glenn Griswold, Fifth Dise trict, sppke for the Indiana congressional delegation. 2 He upheld the President's silence on “stayin” strikes, and following a declaration that he “held no brief for the stay-in strike,” said: “I can find some excuse for them as I go back over some of the hearings on labor relations.”
TERRE HAUTE, Ind., April 12.— Edward Hofmeister, 132-pound class,
| Adve
visit Wisconsin this summer by presenting Mayor Kern with an official invitation.
Charles Rogers, John Wolfe, Paul Hahn, Burgess Hurd, Robert Maynard, Frank Jaggers, Raymond
three times in the 500-mile race, and fourth twice. Back in 1922,
LAFAYETTE, Ind. April 12—
Jones, going for the hole, was six |tached to his ability to body block. More than. 300 college and high
inches short, but he laid the Brit- It is just possible that this is an
isher a complete stymie. Studied Situation
Tolley stood there and studied the situation for several minutes. Then he shook his head despairingly, walked over, extended his hand to Jones and conceded the match. He was criticised for giving up without a try but, an old hand at golf, he realized the futility of the assignment. He knew this was one shot. nobody could make, so he simply picked up. z Thus a magnificent battle in which the two champions had matched shot for shot all the way around for the full 18 holes and the one extra hole was decided by the freakish circumstances of the American’s ball stopping directly infront of the Britisher’s approach to the | hole. He had a putt he couldn't possibly have missed, but because of the peculiar sanctity in which the stymie is held he was denied even the formality of tapping the ball into the can. In rebuttal the pro-stymie cult said: “Well, the same thing could have happened to Jones.” And nobody denies that. It happened to him often enough when he was roaming the fairways. But isn’t that a ridiculous way for a championship + match to end? All it proved was that Tolley wasn’t lucky.
McLean Stymied
Jock McLean came close to bringing the American Amateur Championship back to England last fall. It would have been the first victory for an invader from Great Britain since 1911. That was the year Harold Hilton beat Fred Herrshoff on the 37th green in the final match |
| outgrowth of what he learned on
the Roosevelt High Schocl football team.
| Werner Is Awarded
Motorboat Trophy
Art Werner, Indianapolis, today
' held the trophy for scoring the most
points during 1936 as a professional outboard racing pilot. the award yesterday at a meeting of the Hoosier State Motorboat Association in the Washington Hotel. J.-C. Kensill, Ft. Wayne. was presented the trophy for being the 1936 high-point amateur. : The following outboard racing schedule was announced by the association: May 2, at Louisville, Ky.; May 9. at Montpelier; May 16, at Memphis, Tenn.; May 23, at South Bend: May 30, at Westlake, Indianapolis, and June 6, at Huntington. . The National Outboard Association will sponsor the program at Westlake. Gar Wood, noted speedboat pilot, has been invited to serve as starter for the event.
tournament. McLean was 1 up at the time. He hit two slick shots that carried his ball to within 10
| feet or so of the pin. Fischer, after
two shots, was 30 feet away. On his approach he was five feet past the cup. McLean made a great bid for a birdie and almost holed in three. His putt caressed the tin and slid 14 inches past, Shooting next, Fischer
at Apawamis. 'missed but his ball stopped on the
The only reason McLean didn’t carry the championship back with him was that Johnny Fischer of Cincinnati laid him what the merry
morticians call a dead stymie at 2
time when the visitor appeared to
have the match safely stored away |
in his Bond Street duffle bag. This grisly break developed at the 34th hole on the last day of the
“GOOD THINGS TO EAT Fried CHICKEN DINNE Tues., Thurs. &
Sundays : 30c
Country Fried Chick- . Cream Gravy, Two Vegetables. Hot Biscuits
RS
~~ Bo . / ww
en
PLATE LUNCH—2 Vegetables, Tas, Bread, Butter, Drink .... : c 15.LB. T-B INE STEAK—Salad, Bread, Butter, French Fries, 40¢
14 S. CAPITOL AVE. 3 Doors South of Wash St
NERVOUS
and Drink. : | Early aging creeps up . .
|lip of the hole, squarely in front of
McLean's ball. It was a stymie to end all stymies, and, as later events proved, it was the turning point in the match.
G0 7 DIZZY...
MINERAL STARVED |
. when involuntary naps occur too frequently . . . when memory slips . . « physical activity slows down when blood pressure rises.
He was given
and Walter Weber, 112-pound class, both of Indianapolis, today held individual titles in the Indiana-Ken-tucky A. A. U. weight-lifting championships. Terre Haute gained the team title in the tournament held here Saturday. Other individual winners were: Irvin Age, Louisville, heavyweight; Paul Hughes, Terre Haute, 118pound; Chet Wilson, Terre Haute, 126-pound; Emil Louis, Terre Haute, 165-pound; John Fane, Louisville, : 148-pound, and Chet Teegarden, In- | diana University, light-heavyweight,
'Ex-Roller Skating Star Dies at 61
Times Special -RICHMOND, Ind., April 12.—Fu- | neral services are to be held tomer- | TOW for Arthur (Kid) Haughton, | former roller polo star, who died at | i his home here last night, He was 61. Mr. Haughton was a native of | Massachusetts and one of the first | Eastern roller skating stars to play | with the Richmond team in the old | Western Roller Polo League. He {played with the Indianapolis team lin the old Central League.
[ | | [ | | { |
© DIE FAST
To kill bed bugs, their eggs and young, use
Peterman’s Discovery. All-purpose insecti- | [j
cides can’t do the job as well. Spray Discovery into all cracks in wall and floor. Put it in | mattress seams, bed springs, behind baseboards, moldings, wherever bed bugs breed and hide. Bugs suck it in and die. 25¢, 35¢ and 6oc a can, at your druggist’s.
’ A
1
Ly F415
. a
Garlic builds and fortifies the system against the onslaught of old age ailments by supplying the body with rich vital minerals and purifying the blood stream of toxins.
What a blessed reliet form of D. Gosewisch's lets ./. , like putting new spark plugs in a r . . . ike live blood corpuscles rushIng "into the veins. Nerves get steadier— blood | circulation normalizes—eyes brighten —new energy is replenished.
‘taking garlic in the
There's only one—the original-—D. Gosewisch’s Genuine Garlic Tablets. Ne after taste or odor. Its superiority cannot be mistaken. Make this test: Break open a tablet—note its purity and delightful taste. Avoid disanpointment—refuse -adulterated obnoxious substitutes.
One month's supply $1.00. (180 tablets) a ‘20%’ saving coupon in each box. At all Haag Drug Stores.
White, Robert Shank, Stanley Flora, William: Niven, Robert Smith, Robert Stackhouse, Perry Courtney and Sol Blickman.
successfully in many
lets are tasteless, free from harmful drugs of by good druggists everywhere, Ia only 50c. Super-size box
Send stamp for liberal trial treatment and
Blood Pressure Sufferers. PATTEN CO., 54 W. Illinois St., Chicago.
Genuine Garlic Tab- | &
Richard Gilliom,
Bulldog Nine to Play 2 Games This Week
Butler University’s baseball team is to journey to Terre Haute tomorrow to open its 1937 season in a contest with the Indiana State nine. On Saturday the Bulldogs will go to Bloomington for a game with Indiana University. Butler split even in two games with Indiana State last year but dropped two decisions to the Crimson nine. The Bulldogs have two tilts scheduled with Indiana again this year.
INDORSE 16-TEAM TOURNEY Times Special : CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. April 12.—Montgomery County basketball coaches voted 11 to 1 for the return of the 16-team basketball tournament plan at the regular monthly conference here Saturday, They took a similar stand last year.
May Sufferers Expect Relief
from HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE ?
Yes, many sufferers may expect relief from High | BI Pressure and the | attending symptoms of | headache and dizziness | if they will continue to take Essence of Garlic | Parsley Tablets accord- | ing to directions on the package. Who says this ?
: > well-known | ici (name on request) who used Dhysician
froesies, ALLIMIN Eason Table make it possible relief quickly and oto” The, ih odorless and absolutely every kind. Sold arge only $1.00. © bez
TRIAL TREATMENT
klet of valuable informatioh for Hi Address van
—Advertisement.
SPECIAL
TODAY $ 5
— rints
a Week! Un
43-45 S_ ILLINOIS ST.
omen’s DRESSES Smart Spring
he roared in just behind Jimmy Murphy; in 1923, Tommy Milton beat him out by split seconds, and in 1926 trailed Frank Lockhart over the finish line. | “I know what it means to finish second, that's why I want to have Horn finish first this time,” he said.
EMMERT WINNER IN STATE RIFLE SHOOT
James A. Emihert, Shelbyville, chalked up 476 points to capture the individual gallery titie in the ‘State Championship Matches of the Indiana Rifle Association yesterday at the Armory. Ed Dr. P, H. Makielski, Mishawaka, placed second with 459 points and August Belter, Shelbyville, was third with 457. A field of 125 competed in the state contest.
Hoosier riflemen
Cooling Relief For Itchy Skin
Call it mdgic if you like, but good | old Blue Star Ointment sure relieves | the itching of eczema, rash, tetter ringworm and those itch torturing skin conditions. Your money back if first jar does not satisfy. Try it.
BRIDGEWOR
Consult Us About
Expert Bridgework
Crowns & Fillings
nl Se] | §' For Gentlemen Who ™ |] 1b Seek the Finest I ! 3 YRING CO. J! 5 sahRER ol il
ANA
Disney & Barbisio Hats Shirts arid Neckwear
ARGUS & YAVER
86 N. Perinsylvania St. Opposite Loew's
Lowest Prices in the City
207 W. WASH. ST. S500
.STATE HOUSE
school coaches from 10 states attended the annual Purdue football clinic held here last week-end, it was announced today. - The two-day sessioin was brought to a close Saturday with a demonstration football game between two teams picked from the Purdue grid squad. Chuck Purvis, sophomore backfield star, scored two touchdowns as his eleven won, 13 to 0. Before the game, the coaches studied fundamentals for the various positions. The Boilermaker squad, which is in the midst of its spring drill, acted as models during the session, which lasted more than an hour.
HELP 15 MILES OF
KIDNEY TUBES
To Flush out Acids and Other Poisonous Waste
Doctors say your kidneys contain 15 Miles of y tubes or filters which help to purify the lood and keep you healthy. Most people pass sbout 3 pints a day or about, 3 pounds of waste. Bladder irregularity and irritation shows there may be something wrong with your kidneys or bladder. An excess of acids or J olbons in your blood, when due to functional kidney disorders, may be the beginning of nagging backache, rheumatic pains, lumbago, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting up Dighle, swelling, puffiness under the eyes, headaches ade dizziness. Don’t wait! Ask your druggist for Doan’s Pills, used successfully by millions for over 40 years. They give happy relief and will help the 15 Miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan’s Pills. -—Advertisement.
STOP...
. @® Burning Foot Misery . Overnight! Do you tind yourself bunching up your toes inside your shoss to pet a second’s relief? Do you look forward to the moment when you can throw off your shoes? Then give your feet glorious relief tonight. Rub a little Coolene into your feet between the toes, over the heels, round the ankles, on the sales. What a happy, cooling, soothing sensation! Do this every night. It will keep your feet pliable and always comfortable. Coe is a delightful, soothing unguent— vanishes instantly — Ivory white — cannot stain, Try Coolenetonight and wake up with a new pait of feet! 60c Coolene Foot Cream, 44c
A wr 3 Dependable
Drug Stores
I. U. WINS DOUBLE-HEADER Times Special OXFORD O., April 12.—Indiana University's baseball team today had a record of three straight victories for this season. The Hoosiers shut out Miami here Saturday in a double-header, 10 to 0 and 7 to 0.
For Limited Time Only
ANY PLAIN COAT SUIT OR DRESS
CLEANED and PRESSED
69c
Cash and Carry Any Combination
3 Garments $1.89 6 Garments $3.65
Fur Coats Cleaned and Glazed
$2.59
_ Slight additional charge for ‘white, fur-trimmed, velvet or pleated garments.
Guaranteed Workmanship
OCCIDENTAL
CLEANERS
312 Occidental Building
Phone LI. 2628
| You may
TIMES WANT ADS
For Quick Results Phone Riley 5551
Insert aiTimes Want Ad for less than 2c| per Word. Ask about our Free Want Ad Offer.
; Classification Finder
1 Announcements Apartments Unturnished Auctions: §...... Automobiles (c. Sale Auto Loans pe Automobiles wanted Business Opportunities .... Business Property for ~ale Business Services cards of Thanks . .. Cash’ Coal Mart Death Notices Dogs and Other Pcts . .. Farm and Garden . Fuewood dnd Kinaling Florists [oie LL Funeral Directors Furniture Buyers - Heip With Investment ... Horses, Cattle and Stock . Housekeeping Rooms Houses Unfiunished Household ‘Goods Houses and Apartments Furnished ... Houses for Sale . House Trailers ; Hotels l In Memoriams ... Legals 3 Loage NotigeLost and Found Lots ter Sale . .. Men Wanted .... Miscellaneous tor Sale Monuments] CEs. timers see Motorcycles and Bicycles Moving and storage Personals |. J - Personal nd fpr Loans ...
$0vsccssssve. tessessevs.
®vvscene. 00
Poultry an esos Radio and vsical Needs ... Real Estate| Exchange y Real Estate| Loans Real Estate! wanted
| Rent Busines:
Rent Suburbun, Farms . Rooms With Board ......cees. Rooms Withou! Board .......i.e.. Salesmen and Agents ......... 8Bchools and’ Instruction Securittes:'...... . ix... Suburban any Farms for Sale Swaps i x Tires and Accessories . Transportatiun sscessecssescasncne. Trucks ana [Tractors .. Typewriters . Wanted t~ |Buy ... Wanted to Tent ... Wearing Apparel ........ Women Wanted ... Work Wante. by sen Work Wanted by Women .......
Telephons Rl ley 5551
© BOX NUMBER ADS -
Advertisers who do not cure to use the names or addresses, may use a Times Boz Number. This service is free
BOX NUMBER REPLIES
nswer box number ads by well as by letter. Phone Rlley for} the Want Ads. Your name nd phone number will be placed the box of the advertiser,
hone a
