Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1937 — Page 6
20 MAY
BIG YEAR
By Eddie Ash |
START NEXT SATURDAY
FOR DERBY WAS 1928
‘Indianapolis Times Sports
You've
ng crews
PAGE 6
HERE is a roebiey that as many as 20 Blue Bloods
of the turf may face ‘the ~ of the Kentucky Derby next went postward—22—in 1928
barrier in the 63d renewal Saturday. . . . More horses than in any other spring,
and three times only three 3-year-olds accepted the issue,
in 1892, 1899 and 1905. . . . Top prize money w
$55,375
collected by Reigh Count in 1928, and smallest was $2850
that
ristides drew down for winning the first
unning
of the classic in 1873..... . The distance used to be a mile and a half, but in 1896 this was out to a mile and a quarter. . .. Fastest time for the current route was Tw enty Grand's
.2:01 4-5 in 1931. ... The year
Regret won she defeated 15 -
other/starters and was the lone filly to annex the Derby.
Gos The prize money that season was only $11,450.
®
2 2 2
A
FAVORITES have won the Blue Grass feature 29 times, finished second 17 times, third twice and unplaced 14
times. . . . The longest priced
winner was Donerail, 1913,
$184.90 for $2. .-. . Miss Mary Hirsch, whose No Sir is - entered in the 1937 renewal, is not unduly excited about it. . . . Says Mary, “No Sir is a dead fit horse and he may be running when most ‘of the other Derby contestants are stopping. Anyway, 1 do not intend to swoon if he wins
®or sob if he loses.
know one must expect anything to happen.
I've been in the sport long enough to
1 look for No
Sir to show something in that last quarter.
«- ® =
® n, N all-star’ boxing show Js fo be
and the price of a seat in the first two rows will be $100. . .
f = » ” - staged in Los Angeles on May 24 Its
© a benefit and the movie colony is expected to shell out the heavy sugar,
to sit at the ringside.
. Bob Pastor is to battle Bob Nestell, Henry
? Armstrong will collide with Wally Hally and Izzy Jannazzo is to tackle
Glen Lee.. .. The Pastor-Nestell heavyweight match Frank Battaglia, well along in years, will get a
widespread interest.
is “attracting
shot at the middleweight crown when he meets Champion Freddie
* Steele in Seattle on May 11.". . Harry
Balsamo, New York's hard-hitting
middleweight who was sent against seasoned opponents too early in his
oh career, is coming back up the trail.
He has scored four knockouts
and won a decision in us last five starts.
a
8 n\n
Shanty Hogan, the Washington blimp who reduced 40 pounds since
last season, recommends the following method to take it off: nothing, drink not thing, sleep little and worry a lot.” catcher has agreed to forfeit half his salary if his weight soars to . And he loves to eat and sleep. °
240. . .
2 8 a
“Eat . The bulky
" ” 2
T Preakness classic is to be run at Pimlico on May 15 and Balti-
more is going to make the most _ arranging a celebrities will be invited.
of it. . Committees are at work
“gigantic” ball on the eve of the race and hundreds of . Alfred G. Vanderbilt, young and active
turfman, is-in charge of the affair and it is going to receive an enor-
mous ballyhoo. . ter the Preakness.
” ®
\ FTER being fined §50 ibe
. The best of the Kentucky Derby horses usually en-
” 2 2
for umpire baiting, Manager
Grimm of the Cubs saw his injury riddled Cubs. win a game from
the Pirates. . .
dinner, at any rate. ... Joe Savoldi,
now a wrestler, is experimenting with the boxing gloves. . . Australia taking fistic lessons between matches.
. Which enabled him to ‘work up a sharp appetite for
the old Notre Dame fullback and . He's in . The 23-player-
deadline in the American League has been extended ‘from May 15 to May 23, on account of the late opening. :
Packard Quintet Posts Season Bowling Record
1 By BERNARD HARMON
Packard Motors bowling team today held the season record for a single game score, having posted a
1233 in their second try in the Beam Recreation League matches at the Pennsylvania Alleys last night. John Blue's 289, Chuck Markey's 246, Dad Hanna's 237, Leo Ahearn’s 236 and Walt Heckman's 225 made the record game possible. Flanking _ their high mark with games of 1010 and 1002‘ the team totaled 3245, which was easily good for Honors of the evening !and a three-time wvictory over the opposing L. S. Ayres & Co. five. ‘Hanna totaled 692 in his three “games. . Blue had 667, Markey 648, Ahearn 642 and Heckman 596. The pacemaker had 245 and 210 to go ‘with his 237. For. the Ayres team Jack Hunt's 672 and Joe Michaelis! 622 represented the top scores. Harry Wheeler took city-wide solo * honors when he turned in a- 701 for the Marott Shoe Store. which shut rout Sterling Beer. © Wheeler had games of 221, 234 and 246 for the big series. ~ Carl 'Mindach helped the winners along with a 606. Three Bowes: Seal Fast members passed the 600 mark to give the team an easy three-game victory over Marmon - Herrington, ( Whizh {faited to land a man in the honor class. Dan Abbott with 650, Ed Striebeck with 645 and Fonnie Snyder with 631 were the Bowes’ heavy hitters. _Barbasols Win Three
Barbasol,- with Don Johnson's $38, Lee Carmin’s 606 and Jess Pritchett's 604 as its feature counts, took three games from Hiller Office Supply, which had Hank Shriver’s 647 and Tom. Selmier’s 622 as its lead ing contributions. No 600 scoring developed in the ~ Falls City ® Hi-Bru-Green River h, won by the former, 2t01. In the J. W. Bader’s Coffee's twogame victory over Lieber Beer, Jerry. O'Grady of the losers was outstanding with a 683. He had games of 237, 267 and 179. John Bader set the pace for his team, getting 615. The Barbasol's and - Packard's triple victories assured them of first and second places in the team \ standings. The loop winds up its season next Friday night and both teams can lose three games and - hold their positions. Don Johnson's big series kept him out in front in the individual average race.
Dobbins Posts 650 Total
Art Robbins’ 650 series, rolled ‘in the “Construction loop matches at the Pritchett Alleys, was the outstanding fel uns total f other league play. e had games of 224, 203 and 2h leading Carey Glass Co. to three victories over Spicklemier Fuel & Supply. Bill Tarrant’s 617 and Roy Parson’s 602 were other honor counts of the session. Tarrant paced the Jungclaus team to two wins over Vonnegut’s, while Parsdn’s Johnson-Maas five dropped two tilts to Central Supply Co. In other team, clashes Modern Home Insulators blanked Architects, while - Utility Insulators and Railroad Federal won twice each ‘over Ready Mixed Concrete and Brandt Bros. A 234 finish gave Al Burkhardt a 624 total and honors of the Big Four Railroad League, rolling at the Fountain Square Alleys. He was in action with the General Superintendents, who tightened
for the 10 games played follow: G.
tories over Freight Shop. The winners featured a 1031 final game. The usual heavy scoring of the Insurance League failed to develop in last night's activities att Pennsylvania Alleys. Jimmie Hutt Sr. was the lone member of the loop to pass 600.” He had a 622. through the aid of a 234 nightcap game. Hoosier Casualty turned in the lone shutout of the session, Fidelity & Casualty being the victim. : : Others Post 600’s
George Godwin set the pace in the Washington League matches at the Illinois Alleys with a 617; Buses had a 611 in ‘the Grotto matches at the Indiana, and Becker paced Central Leaguers, in session at the Central, with a 588. In the Dr. J. E. Kernel Optical Ladies’ League at Pritchett’s, Laura Alexander putdistanced rivals with a“ 572, but despite the top series, her Marott ‘Shoe team took three beatings from Falls City Hi-Bru. Eva Dawson's 566 and Margie Riddle's 558 were the only other outstanding totals of the circuit. % Two local teams are to take a whirl at the maples in the annual Kentucky Derby Festival tournament in Louisville tonight. : Barbasols find Bowes Seal Fast are to go into*action on the 10 o'clock shift. Six other local entrants are to roll on May 15. The event is being staged on the Madrid Recreation Alleys.
Major Leaders (Friday Games Included) 7% BATTING AB.
27 19
« H. Ave. 16 .593 11. 579 24 12 .500
Watker, Tigers... R. Ferrell, Red Sox Cronin, Red Sox. Sewell, White Sox. .20 10 .500 Travis, Senators...16 8 .500
HOME RUNS
Mel Qtt, Gianis ......... FEE Bob Johnson, Athletics ......s.. 3 Heini¢ Manush, Dodgers........ 2 John Mize, Cardinals Gerald Walker, Tigers Burgess Whitehead, Giants
RUNS BATTED IN
Joe Cronily, Red Sox....... isees Earl Averill, ‘Indians Zéke Bonura, White Sox John Mize, Cardinals Stanley Bordagaray, Cardinals. . Gerald Walker, Tigers. . Lary
TRIBE BATTING AY ERAGES
Fred Berger, Oscar EcRhardt and Danny Taylor lost ground in the hitting department yesterday, but they are the only Indians batting above .300. Figures on the regulars
AB. 37 42 13 36 11 31 9 4 12 18 5 37T 10 40 10 19 4
H. 17
Av. 459 310 .306 .290 .286
Berger ‘Eckhardt . Taylor Parker .... . 10 Sherlock ....... 10 Lewis : 5 10 10
+ 10. 10
.270 .250 211
S
Fausett ........ Riddle
RENT A NEW 1937 your ‘trip—regardless of
CAR nis
DRIVE-IT-YOURSELF (Inc.)
their hold on the top position in the team Siandings with two vic-
Opyasite Lincoln Hotel
39 Ky. Phone 7i88
278’
We make rates to fit |:
}
Of Last Year Ordered Back
Bob to Leave Detroit Camp Tonight; Louisville Has Tribe Dazzled.
The Detroit Tigers today cancelled their option on Pitcher Bob Logan and the lefthander has been ordered to report to the dianapolis club. Mickey Cochrane,
Tribe management this morning that he had advised Logan to leave Detroit for Indianapolis tonight. Lefty Bob was sold to the Tigers on a trial agreement and they had until today to reach a decision. In the event Logan pitches in old form his return is sure to bolster the Indians’ staff. He won 16 games and lost 9 for the Redskins last year and turned in an earned run average of 3.82 a nine-inning game, a record which placed him among the Ametican Association's leading hurlers. \ Indianapolis still has a pitcher coming from the Tigers in the Paul Trout deal and Manager Cochrane said he would name him Monday or Tuesday, after obtaining waivers. After -skidding from a secondplace tie with Louisville
manager of the Bengals, wired the | |;
to al
fourth-place tie with Columbus, the Indians have three games over the |
position hefore departing on a tour
| of the Western half of the league.
The hustling Colonels will be met again today in a single tilt at 2:30 and in a double-header tomorrow,
was expected to toss ‘em up for the Tribesters: this afternoon and
letes from Derbytown.
Marrow in Rare Form The Colonels blanked the Redskins yesterday, 4 to 0, and beat the Tribe’s No. 1 pitcher, Vance Page. It was the third straight shutout registered by Louisville. Before coming to Indianapolis Bert Niehoff's tossers won two consecutive shutouts at Toledo, with Dick Bass and Walter Signer doing the honors, and yesterday Buck Marrow joined them by dishing out nine goose eggs to the Hoosiers. Marrow won 11 games and lost 14 last year, but he looked like a different chucker on the Perry Stadium. mound yesterday. He used a curve ball with good control and had the Indians breaking their backs popping up or bouncing out to the infield.
Two Colonel Homers ;
Hits were eight for Louisville and seven for Indianapolis, but there was a marked difference in power. Berres bounced a home run off ‘the left field wall with one runner lon base in the fourth and Moose Foster cleared the same wall with a 365-foot drive in the sixth. Both drives were given an extra push by a strong wind. Only two of the four runs off Page were earned, Berres’ tall smack coming after the side should have been retired, a wide .throw by
damage. Page was a little shaky at the start and two singles and a walk accounted for orie marker for the Colonels in the: first canto.
;, Caroms Off Wall ¥
Berres’ home run was inside the ‘park. Danny Taylor backed against the wall and tried for the catch, but was short and the pellet bounced back and rolled toward center field. Berger was tardy in getting over from center to chase thesSphere and the Louisville catcher completed the circuit of the sacks. Page dropped out -for a pinch hitter in the eighth and Jimmy Sharp worked the ninth and pitched out of a deep hole. Louisville loaded the bases on two singles and, a walk with one out. The young lefty then fanned Rosen and Ogorek skied out to Taylor in left.
°
Sigafoos. Simons, 1 Foster. 1b Tremark. Matheson, 5 Berres. ¢ Marrow, -
Totals .
N
ol onoO~NOON IT —- 00 CA pt 4 1 J be =| > wl NowWoHoNUIO!Y
ton » -J
INDIANAPOLIS
o
COOH OD a — COHWHION-O& comnu—oooat” coomoconcoad
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—
Totals Mettler batted for Page in hs eighth. Louisville 0 201 000—4 Indianapolis 800 000 000—0 Runs batted in—Foster (2). Berres (2). Three-base hit—Ogorek. Home runs— Berres, Foster. Sacrifice—Sigafoos. Double plays—Matheson to Ogore to Foster; Marrow to Ogorek to Foster. bages—Indianapolis, 6. Louisville. 7. on balls—Off Page (2), Sharp (1), row (1). Struck out I3 Page (3), row (3), Sharp (1). 8 innings; Sharp. 2 in 1, Losing pitcher— Page. Umpires—Borski and Dunn. Time of game—1:4
LIGHTING FIXTURES
- HATFIELD ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMPANY
Meridian and Maryland e oF lo o
MEN’S SUITS
Refitted, relined, remodeled. Real Talloring with Satisfaction
TAILORING CO. LEO 235 Mass. Ave.
with action scheduled to start at 2|: p. m. Emmett Nelson, righthander,. |
endeavor to check the galloping ath- |:
Parker after two down causing the St. Pa
Hits—Off Page 6 in |
/
&
SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1937
Costly Shel Game
probably seen those pape
thin shells the colleges send their row
out in but you probably
never would guess that each one of
: them costs
about $1 400.
LEFTY LOGAN IS RETURNED TO INDIANS
In- |; ;
week-end in which to improve their |
Technical Takes First For 4th Straight Time
The powerful track and field team from Technical High School, well balanced in nearly every department, walked away with its fourth title in the annual city high school meet yesterday at its own field, with a total
of 94 points.
Second place wen: to Shortridge, with 60, while Washington was not far behind with 50 points. Manual garnered 16 points and Broad Ripple
got ‘5,
The second and third- place teams furnished the stars who set four
Calendar
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION : L. Milwaukee Louisville Minneapolis Indianapolis
3-1 Poe WD
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Pct i Phil delphia 6687 |Chicago .
.600/St. Louis . .571|Washingt'n
W. L. New York. 5 2 Detroit .. 2 Boston 2 Cleveland .4 3
N ATIONAL LEAGUE
L. Pct 1 "875 Boston ee 2 .714/Brooklyn . 2 .714:Chicago .. 4 .500/Cincinnati .
WwW. St. Louis . 7 Pittsburgh 5 New York 5 Phi’'delphia 4
Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Louisville at Indianapolis. Toledo at Columbus. St. Paul at Minneapolis. Milwaukee at Kansas City.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston at New Xo Chicago at Detro Washington at I deiphis, Cleveland at St. Louis.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York at Boston. St. Louis at Chicago. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati.
Yesterday’s Results
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Toled 000 011 000— 2 7 1 Columbus 110 010 00x— 3 12 2
Coffman, F. Johnson gard Reiber, Tresh; Macon and Chervinke® > St. Paul at Minneapolis, wet grounds.
100 200 030— 6 0 .400 000 001— 5 1 0
Kleinhans,
Milwaukee Kansas City ....
Pressnell, Zuber "and Helf; Stine and Hartje.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
00 000— 2 7 1 014 400 02x—11 14 1
Jeffcoat, Peterson 11 and Mancuso.
000 a1 010 1 :
Brooklyn New York Birkofer, Butcher, and Klumpp; Hubb
Boston... Philadelphia Turner and Lopez; Sivess and Atwood.
igs 7 Sy
Chicago 111 001 300— 7 17 3 Pittsburgh 00 002 000—-2 10 Parmelee and O'Dea; Tobin and Todd
Bauerg, Blanton,
Cincinnati
Schott, Brennan and Lomba and Ogrodowski.
BUSINESS EouSATION Strong Accounting, ookkeeping, Stenographic and Sec
arial . courses. Day ‘and evening sessions. Lincoln 8337. Fred W. Case, Principal. Central Business College
Architects and Builders Building Pennsylvania & Vermont Sts., Indpls.
1wW. anton (T).
RTS Lr
AND LINOLEUM COMPANY 139 WEST WASHINGTON STREET
Opposite Indiana Theatre
SG¢ : Ethical Pharmacy
Specializes in FyescHplionsw-calleq 2 for red
and deliv Just call—that’s Ay LI-9322 Dugan Hoy Co., Inc. Trusses Bx Pit Lady V Fitter os
34 W. Oho’ L19322
>
ooo 566
© new meet records and tied one. The
Tech half-mile relay team set up a new mark in that event. Main threat among the recordbreakers was Dave Crockett, Shortridge hurdle ace, who beat his own record in the high hurdles and then came back to knock four-fifths of a second off the low hurdle record.
>| The new time in the high hurdles
is 16 seconds flat, and the low mark
d lis 237,
The summaries:
100-Yard Dash—Karns (T), iin aid Shaffer (T),
Ti .Mile Run—Monroe (T), Strong (8). Johnson (W), Harvey (T), Sprowl (W). Time, 4:41.3. 440-Yard Dash—Thienes (8), (Ty, (T), Stewart (W),, , :52.4 (tied for meet record). 120-Yard High Hurdle—D. Crockett (8), Kersey (W), D. Wilkinson (BR), Devine (T), Oyler (M). Time, :16 (new meet record). Half-Mile Run—Vogler (T), Cline (8), Lyday (T), Rash (S), Carson (S). Time,
105.17. 220-Yard Dash—Wilson (T), Dawson (Sy, Shaffer (T), Menchhofer (W), Dalzell (S). Time, :23.8. 200-Yard Low Hurdle—D. Crockett (8S), Meloy (T). Kersey (W), Reed (T), Oyler (M). Time, :23.7 (new meet record). High Jump—Christensen (T), Carter (Wh, Carson (8S), Kays (T). Height, 5 feet 7 inches. Shot’ Put—Rehm (S), Adkins (T), Crawford (T), Milam vy, Read (W). tance, 47 feet 4 inches Pole Vagh—carter (W), n Spiller (T), Irwin (W), 11 feet 133 inches. Hen, Broad Jump—Christensen (T), (W), Schlake (S), Smith (M), Adkins (T). Distance, 19 feet 8 inches Mile otay Sher (Evans, Hyman, Lingeman. Thienes). Tech, Washington, Manual, Bread Ripple. Time, 3:32.9 (new meet record).
Wilson (T), Hunter 8) .
Delrymple Ziegner
J. Dis-
. St mebniner Hicks (T (new meet
Half-Mile ‘Relay—Tech (Wilson, earns.)
Shaffer). Shortridge, Washington,
Meloy . Time, 1:34.5 (new meet record).
Manual.
AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia 0 002— 5 9 y5to0r
Turbeville, Gumpert, a er: W. Rerrell and R. Ferrell,
001 000— 1 5 2 5 000 00%— 4 6 2
Washington Makosky 2 Glenn; Newsom
icker, and Hogan. (Ten Homan 200 000 2— 4 10 1 100 000 0— 2 10 2 mi Hayworth; Brown
St. Louis at Chicago, rain.
FOR GRADUATION GIFTS
Normerly CROWN “JEWELRY CO.
an WEST MARKET ST
ave at 10] EAL er Vi
363 North lllinois
301 East Washington OPEN EVENINGS
Good Foods, Prompt Courteous Service Make Luncheon a Pleasure At Any of Haag’s Cut Price. Drug Stores
AUTO LOANS
and Refinancing 2¢ Months to Pay
WOLF SUSSMAN. Inc 230 W. WASH. ST.
atablishe d 34 Yenrs i RIP CLL
Southpaw Ace High School Boys Si ng ‘Broken Records’
Pd
—Times Photos.
Only competitor in the city high school track and field meet, held yesterday at the Tech field to . break two records was Dave Crockett, shown at the left above, as he clipped two fiffhs of a second from his own 120-yard high hurdle mark and made the new record 16 seconds for the event. Coming in second, at the right, is Robert Kersey of Washington. The lad in the lower. photo, shown getting a big kick out of his high jumping, is Kenneth Christensen, of Tech, who won
the high jump with a leap of 5 feet, 7 inches, just one-half inch
under the city record. AN
INDIANA NINE BEATS PURDUE TEAM, 3-0
By United Press LAFAYETTE, May 1.—Behind the five-hit pitching of Babe Hosler, Indiana opened its Big Ten baseball season yesterday with a 3-to-0 victory over Purdue. The Indiana infield performed flawlessly and set back two Boilermaker threats by double plays. Score:
002 000 001— 3 7 © .. 000 000 000— 0 5 6 Holser and R. Grieger; Arnold Bredewater and Arthur Bredewater, Krause.
Jerome Herman Is First Big Leaguer to Win T ree! Contests in 1937 Season.
Carl Hubbell Tums In Second Victory, the Eighteenth in His Continuous String; Mancuso, Ott, Ripple, ~~ © Moore . Help Out. | :
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent i; NEW YORK, May 1.—Dizzy Dean’s whip-lash right arm is rapidly’ winning back a place in the baseball sun for the loquacious St. Louis Cardinals’ pitcher who almost talked himself into retirement last winter, Dizzy’s winter antics which got him in bad with everyone from Boss Sam Breadon on down. apparently taught him a valuable lesson. He is letting his right arm talk for him from now on, and it speaks a more
eloquent language.
Behind Deans masterful hurling ©
the Cardinals charged on to their seventh triumph in eight games by | defeating the Cincinnati Reds, 7- 1 The Cards now top the National League by 1¥; games. It was Dizzy’s third straight win, the first Major League pitcher to win three games. After 20 scoreless innings Dean finally was solved for ‘one lone run. In three games Dizzy has pitched 28 innings, al= lowed 23 hits and-one run. He's registered 22 strikeouts, and allowed only 4 walks.
"Johnny Mize, big Cardinal first baseman, and French Bordagaray, the player not good enough for Brooklyn, did the damage. Mize hit a homer and drove in two runs. Bordagaray hit a double, driving in two runs. Joe Medwick went hitless for the first time this season.
Hubbell ‘Wins Again
King Carl Hubbell turned in his second triumph—No. 18 including last year’s 16 straight—by pitching the, Giants to a 11-2 victory over Brooklyn. = Mancuso, Ott, Ripple and Joe Moore hit homers. Heinie Manush’s homer with a man on accounted for the Dodgers’ two runs. The Chicago Cubs came out of their slump and pounded out 17 hits in walloping Pittsburgh, 7-2. Roy Parmelee scattered 10 hits and won his first game in a 'rChicago uniform. Paul Waner "made his 165th: triple, surpassing the previous record among present day players held by Pie Traynor. The Pirates
made a triple play on Joe Marty's |g
roller with the bases londsa in the seventh. Jim Turner. Thtiatapas rookie, pitched the Boston Bees to a 10-2
victory over the Phillies. Vince Maggio hit a homer with one on. = Washington snapped the N York Yankees five-game tS streak, 4-1, behind Buck Newsom's five-hit- performance. ' Newsom fanned eight men. Joe Kuhel's double drove in two Washingto runs, and tke other two came in when” the Yankee infieldhgot itselt tangled up. ’ Detroit moved within half a game of the Yanks by winning a 10-ine=. ning battle from Cleveland, 4-2. Hank Greenberg’s single and Gerald Walker's double drove in the two - winning runs. pic Wade, Tigér rookie, allowed 10\ hits and walked 10 men, but received credit for the victory, The Indidns'had 16 men left. on base. Blasting out 10 hits Ale Boston Red Sox crushed the Athletics, 15-5. Manager Joe Cronin led the attack with five hits. Jimmy Foxx, who has been laid up with sinus trouble, made his 1937 debut and hit a homer with two, on. Wes Ferrell won his second game, allows ing 10 hits. wy
pe
BULLDOGS WIN, 8-1, B FROM GREYHOUNDS
Butler scored an ‘8-to-1 victory over the Indiana Central Greyhounds in a college baseball game yesterday. Norvall Corbett, Bulldog moundsman, yielded’ only five scattered hits. Score: he . 010 000 000— 1 3 i) utler 1 030 10x= § 1 Potter and Claytomr; Corbett and Wilson: The Bulldogs will meet Earlham in a double-header today at Riche
mond. » }
Carter
DRIVER Joe Thorne Rex Mays Unnamed Unnamed . Floyd Roberts: Ted Horn Unnamed Unnamed Bill Cummings Chet Miller Louis Meyer Billy Winn Billy Devore Deacon Litz Russ Snowberger Ken Fowler - Frank Brisko Shorty Cantlon Henry Banks Unnamed Zeke Meyers Ralph Hepburn
CITY New York
Los Angeles
Indianapolis Detroit
Detroit Los Angeles DuBois, Pa.
Chicago Detroit
Philadelphia Los Angeles
{ Unnamed
Unnamed Unnamed Wilbur Shaw Unnamed Tony Gulotta Bob Swanson Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed
Indianapolis
Detroit Los Angeles
Glendale, Cal.
Van Nuys, Cal.
Huntington, Cal.
Wilmington, Del. Patterson, N. J.
Royal Oak, Mich!
Incomplete 500-Mile Entry List
Entries Close at Midnight Tonight
CAR NAME Unnamed | Bowes Sealfast Belanger-Miller Sparks Sp. Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed * - Teter Sp.. Unnamed Unnamed Kimmel Fr: Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed ) Burd Ring Sp. Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed ~ Stewart Sp.
CY
DRIVE Front Rear Rear Rear Rear Front Rear Rear Front | Front "' {Rear Rear Rear Rear Front Rear Front Rear Rear Rear Front Rear Rear Rear Front Rear Rear Rear Rear Rear Rear Rear
NTRANT oe Thorne " Bill White Murrell Belanger Joe Thorne ! Kelly Petillo Harry Hartz Arthur M. Sims Ray T. Brady Mike Boyle Mike Boyle Mike Boyle : James M. Winn H. E. Winn : Deacon Litz Russ Snowberger Lucky Teter ° Frank Brisko Bill White Louis Kimmel Joe Thorne Joe Thorne Joe Thorne. Joe Thorne Joe Thorne Mrs. Leon Duray’ Wilbur Shaw a George Lyons Joe Lencki +f Paul Weirick Stewart Carew D. H. Sanders
8 4 4 4 4
i 8 6 4 8 4 8 4 8 8 8 6 4 2 6
8 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 8 4
NN
.
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