Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1937 — Page 16
: Fritz Bingen (T. Berry). .... . ¥ tor H. b g. by Single G-Lady Th Tregantle, by Tregantle (Doug-
Southland, driven by Fred Egan, is shown crossing the finish line ahead of the field in the third heat of the Horseman's Futurity on the » 8
® = #
#
Streamline, Pat Review
Are Favorites in Feature!
Huge Labor Day Crowd Sees Famed De Sota Go Down To Defeat Before Southland.
Four races are scheduled on the Grand Circuit harness program at
the State Fair Grounds track this
afternoon including the Horseman
3-year-old pace, Governor's 2:15 trot, the 2:12 pace and the Horseman
2-year-old trot.
Frisco Dale, Avondale and Emmamite are favored in the first race while €raftsman, Streamline and Pat Review are the choices in the
feature Governor's trot. Lone Ace, Symbol Hal and Baldy C. Grattan will probably lead the field in the 2:12 pace event, and Promoter, Vesta Hanover and Gladys MecElwyn are the favorites’ in the Horseman 2-year-old trot.
One of the Margest crowds in the history of the Fair saw seven events of 20 heats in the feature Labor Day program yesterday. |
Southland, owned by C. W. Phellis, New York, beat the favorite De Sota, in the third heat to win the rich Horseman Futurity for 3-year-old trotters which paid $341.17.
Dominion Grattan Wins
The Claypool 2:09 pace, second feature event of the day, was won by Dominion Grattan, although a Hoosier pacer, Doctor H., son of Single G., triumphed in the final heat. The fastest time was the second heat, clocked in 2:01. Addie Hanover, owned by the E. J. Baker Stables of St. Charles, Ill, had little trouble in winning the pacing division of the Indiana Trotting and Pacing Horse Association Stakes. Walter McCord’s filly, Myrtella Henley, was second, and Ceora, third. Cicada, driven by Otto Zapel, won in the trotting division from Athlone Princess in a third heat. The Beattie & Covalt colt defeated Cicada by a narrow margin in the first heat and then lost the second. Both started slowly in the last mile and on the upper turn Princess picked up speed. Then she broke, and failed to regain her stride, and Cicada raced home the winner. Summary
2:23 Pace (half-mile track horses; heat plan; purse $400 Her Ladyship, .b f (4), by Abbe-dale-LaPaloma, by Walter Direct (Walton) Shirley Ann, b f (4), by General Watts (C. Hasch) Lee Berry, b g (3), by Berry the Great - (Amundsen): 4 2 Fanner G, b g, by Single G (WalSs
ers) Imperial Hedgewood (Campbell), Gypsy Volo {Phillips}, 6-6-6. Time—2:03%2; 2:05; 2:05. 2:21 Trot (half-mile track horses; 3heat plan; purse’ $400) — : George . g (4), by General Watts-Roxie Guy by David Guy (Walters) Calumet . Forever, b h, by Guy Abbey-Mary Brooke, by Justice Brooke (McCoy) 3 3 Billy Lincoln, so g, by Peter Lincoln (Curry) 4 2 2 Marie Azoff, b f (3), by Azoff (Dagler) i . D. (Gardner), 8-4-6; Emma Ruth G (Ross), 6-5-5; Flaxey Volo (Sturgeon), 7-7-7; Prentice (Palin), 2-dr. Time—2:08'%: 2:08%; 2:07%. i Horseman Futurity (3-vear-olds trot; 2-n-3 p —
3-
)—
5-5-5;
1
ing) PE 21 2 DeSota, b ¢, by Péter Volo (Bery) 3 2 3 Europa, b f, by Peter Volo (Ersine) 3 4 n
ne Earl's, Spencerian -(Caton), 4-5-5; Golde Rule (Sturgeon). -6. 3 “Time—2:04%: 2:03'2: 2:03%. 2-Year-Old Pace (Indiana Trotting and ls” Association; , 2-in-3 plan; urse )— Addie Hanover, b _f, by The Great Volo-Hanover’'s Bertha, by Peter Volo (Swaim) :
i Dell Frisco, b f. by Real Frisco (Ma-
honey) : Nellie Scott (Johnson), 4-4; Thais C. Brooke (Dennis). 5-5; Cochato Hal (Stureon), ' 6-8; Dale Cochato (Miles). 7-10; uby Guy (Phillips-Thompson), 11-7: Walter Henley (Measels), 9-9; Little Mac (Mc-
. 1. Time—2:06%: 2:06%. Claypool Hotel 2:09 pace (3-heat plan; urse $1500) — minion Grattan, b h. bv Oro Gratton-Minnie Bingen II, by 14
eral, b h, by Lew Axworthy
Ww Parshall) Peter-at. Law. bl g, by Peter Hen- a
, 3-5-dr. 2 AOL: 2 nna Trotting and -Year-Old Trot (Indiana Pacing Horse Association; 2-in-3 plan; 5 — da, br f. by Spencer-Harvest Tide, by The Halvestar 1zanal) 2 11 *s Princess, . by A ie pi 2 dtord’s Princess (Miles-Beattie . Patrol b ¢, by Gaylworthy (Col-
fer) .... . *'s Flaxey Guy, b ¢. by Al Guy (Beattie) 3 Tn
a T4-ro ney), 7T18-ro. 109%: 2:08%: 2:22. Tie 29 it i track horses: 3ur
; Pp $400) — hato. b g. by Hollyrood by Argot Hal (Gard- 1 3
. 4-5-dr.; 415.
THEY CATCH THE GLORY
NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Seven of 5 catchers who have managed or league bascball teams have
pn pennants,
F ans Get Peak At Greyhound
Mile Dash Friday.
Greyhound, reined -and trained by Sep Palin of Indianapolis and owned by E. J. Baker of St. Charles, Ill, is at the Indiana State Fair
Grounds preparing for his trial against time on the local harness track Friday afternoon. ’ The American trotting champion and winner of the rich Hambletonian Stakes in 1935, was withdrawn from the $16,000 All-Amer-ican Handicap at Syracuse, N. Y., to be raced Thursday, and shipped to Indianapolis to try for two records in one dash of a mile. The Indiana State Board of Agriculture guaranteed Owner Baker $5000 to bring Greyhound here to stimulate interest in the Grand Circuit meeting as well as please thousands of State Fair supporters and sports followers in general. The world record for trotters over the mile is 1:56% and was posted by Peter Manning in 1922. This mark will be Greyhound’s goal here Friday, and if the big gelding is successful, the local track record of 2:00% also will be lowered. While training for the test and to keep him accustomed to crowds, the 5-year-old Greyhound is paraded before the grandstand every afternoon at the Fair Grounds.
Title at Stake ' In Mat Feature
| Joe Banaski, 178, excowboy from Oklahoma who held wrestling’ light | heavyweight title from 1931 to 1933, will attempt to regain it to-
4 | night| at Sports Arena where he will
swing into action against = Billy Tho! , 175, head mat coach and assistant grid mentor at Indiana University. The bout is for two falls. Thom, who recently annexed the championship crown, will be appearing here for the first time in defense of his honors. Dorve (Iron Man) Roche, 220, Decatur, Ill, and Chris Zaharias, 219, Pueblo, Colo., clash in the other feature. Chris recently was reinstated by the Indiana Athletic Commission. The Roche-Zaharias bout also is for two falls. Tom Mahoney, Detroit, and Rube Wright, New York, open the card. In the event of rain, the show will
3 | be moved indoors to the Armory.
Denson to Perform On Fight Program
Johnny Denson, two-time Indianapolis district Golden Gloves middleweight champion, will ‘make his third start as a professional boxer in a six-round clash on Thursday night's mitt program to be staged at Sports Arena.under the auspices of the Hercules A. C. His epponent is yet to be announced. Denson is now boxing in the light heavyweight division. ’ Wendall Bubp, state middleweight
2 | champion, will meet Tommy Merritt,
Union City, and Sammy Slaughter, Terre Haute Negro middleweight, and Archie Moore, Indianapolis, will clash over 10-round routes in the double windup. :
Iowa Youth Dies Of Football Injury
CLARION, Iowa, Sept. 7 (U. P.).— Irvin Nielsen, 17, ‘ quarterback on the Clarion High School football team, was listed today as the first fatality of the 1937 foothall season. Nielsen struck his head on the ground while attempting to block a ball carrier. He died two hours later from concussion of the brain and other injuries, . 4 3
Trot Champion Preps for
‘Not so little either.
lis a nut.
Grand Circuit harness program at the second and DeSota third. @
Japan Decides To Go on With Olympic Plans
TOKYO, Sept. y (U. P.) —Despite troubled international relations the municipality of Tokyo has decided to adhere to the original plan of being host city at the Olympic Games in 1940. A round table conference for all persons concerned was called tonight for tomorrow. Tonight the Olympic organizing committee held a conference at the Peers Club. Prince Tokugawa, chairman, presided. After tornorrow’s meeting a definite statement of policy is expected. The organization committee, after its conference, said it had decided to continve preparations for the games. The committee understood the Government had not’ decided against holding the games, but would appropriate 4,300,000 yen ($804,000), which it previously had promised.
Stumph, Young Tie in Handicap
C. Stumph and W. Young each broke 47 out of 50 targets to share first place honors in the handicap shoot at the Indianapolis Skeet Club yesterday. Other scores: C. R. Maier, 45; C. Edwards, 44; C. L. Booker, C. O. Free and D. Young, 43 each; Lennis and Kring, 42 each; Phares and Coridan, 41 each; C. Ridlen, Gerard Dawson and C. Morrow, 40 each; Desautels and Richards, 39 each; Donahue, 38; P. Nugent, 37; Carmin, 33; Koehler, 32, Reeves, 24. . : Stumph won the 25-target international shoot. Carmin, Maier and Coridan tied in the 50-target trap event with 46s. Desautels won the - 25-target straight trap event while Griffin and Burnside tied for the top position in the skeet trophy*challenge. Davis scored a 44 to win the 50target skeet shoot.
Hunt Defeats | Nippon Star
Advances to Quarterfinal at Forest Hills.
FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept. 7 (U.P.).—Joe Hunt of Los Angeles reached the quarterfinals of the National Singles Tennis Championships today with a brilliant 3-6, 6-1, 6-1, 6-1 victory over Jiro Yamagishi, Japan’s No. 1 star. Hunt's victory placed him in the round of eight along with Robert L. Riggs, Los Angeles; Bryan (Bitsy) Grant, Atlanta, and Baron Gottfried Von Cramm, Germany, who advanced yesterday. Hunt next meets the winner of the match between Don Budge, Oakland, Cal, and Yvon Petra, France, scheduled later today. Hunt, seeded fifth on the American list, was extremely wild in the first set in which he scored only one placement point. Then he settled down and played such a powerful game at the net that Yamagishi’s defense crumbled.
Miss Rawls Takes Fourth Swim Event
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 7 (U. P.).—Katherine Rawls, 20-year-old Miami Beach, Fla. star, won her fourth event and took the individual honors at the close of the National Women’s A. A. U. Swimming Championships in Fleishhacker Pool yesterday. She swam the 880-yard free style in 11 minutes 44.2 seconds. Gloria Callen, New York, was second; Doris Brennan, Olneyville, R. I, third. Mrs. Elizabeth Kompa Wright, Elsie Petri and Elizabeth Ryan, the New York Women’s Swimming Association trio, retained the championship in the 300-meter medley relays. Their time was 4:04.1. The Los Angeles team of Eleanor Lewis, Billy Steitz and Iris Cummings was second.
State Fair. That’s Follow Up
GOLFING
NEA Service
pattern, but their substituting
imitators.
outcopied. Japanese vaulters rank next to our Seftons, Meadows, and Varoffs. After getting American form down pat, they introduced slender poles to make up for what they lack in height. “Torchy Toda wanted me to play an exhibition match against him in Tokio, ‘hecause my short stature is ‘similar to the Japanese build, and thus they could use me as a model in designing a Nipponese' swing,” says Sarazen, who is taking his first pleasure junket with the missus. They are the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Al Lasker. 3 tJ ® 8
“JAPANESE can't learn much from tall, long-armed chaps who hit in a vertical arc.“They are mimics rather than .origingtors and go wrong trying to copy unsuitable styles. “You've got to fit your swing to your physical make-up. “Henry Cotton’s upright posture and vertical stroke is the ideal technic, but it wouldn't suit a short, chunky fellow, : “As a class, American golfers are too much on the flat side. “Ill admit that my arc is too flat. I fight against this flattening tendency. “Another thing that has always bothered me is a shut club face at the top of the swirig. I am 20 per cent closed at the top and must continually guard against shutting the club face still more, because that would mean a spell of hooking. “Harry Cooper wing so many winter purses because he is more upright than other American professionals and keeps his club face well open on the uptake.”
Although Sarazen agrees with the
Tennis Tourney Like Greatest Show On Earth, Joe Finds, and Tells You Why
By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—A major tennis tournament, such as is now
going on at Forest. Hills, is like a
Barnum and Bailey opera. You need a revolving neck, well oiled, to see it all. So trying to see all you— * Well here’s Jadwiga Jedrzejowska of Poland playing Edna Smith of Cleveland — dear old Cleveland! It’s just too bad. Edna should have stayed home and gone to Euclid Beach. Or out to Ruth King's, for cocktails.”She would have had a more enjoyable afternoon. Zoom! Zoom! Zoom! and Edna is through. Jadwiga is a husky little thing. She suggests a cameo likeness of Man Mountain Dean, unbearded. Mr. Dan Parker is among those who think she can throw the Man Mountain. Leveling, of course. Nobody in the press box knows exactly how to pronounce chunkywunky’s name. But this is not a new problem. Precedent, thankfully, lends a helping hand. In most cases where animated alphabets enter the arena, the sports writers evolve a code of their own making. Thus when the wires from Forest Hills chip “yah yah,” that means Jadwiga Jedrzejowska.. It saves time, it saves misspelling—it saves everything but the opposition. Up to now nobody -has been able to evolve a:code, a formula or a technique that can stop “Yah Yah.” The experts say she is on her way to win the championship. (Personally, as an encore, I'd like to see her wrestle Jim Londos.).
Then There's Mr. Beasley
On your way to the main match of the day, Baron Gottfried Von Cramm versus J. Harold Surface Jr.,
Joe williams
you meet up with Mercer Beasley,
the tennis coach, currently the sponsor of Frankie Parker of the Davis Cup team. Mr. Beasley is a wrinkled faced little guy with glasses, who, in the movies might readily be a standin for a dried apricot. Some tennis people don’t go for him. They say he is too full of theories. They say, in shprt, he
¥
Mr. Beasley, it is assumed, reads all this, hears all this, and sits quietly on the sidelines, puffing nervously at a cigaret, watching at least 15 of his pupils play in the national tennis championships. This is his answer to the charge he is stuffed with cockeyed theories, that he is wacky. But it isn’t his answer personally. He just sits there smoking and watching. If you happen to know about -it—well, you are informed. If you don’t, it doesn’t make any difference to him. He is, at the moment, watching a match in what is called the grandstand section in which he is not personally interested—not to the extent that either of the participants is his pupil—Bgbby Riggs of California is playing one of the Japanese in what might be called a war to end all peace. You sit with him for a while and then you say, “Let’s go over to the stadium ‘and see what Von Cramm is doing.” And he answers, “No, I want to watch Riggs. I think he has the makings of a great player. I have a feeling he is going much farther in this championship than most people suspect. I want to see what he does in this match and how he does it.” . . . Riggs wins, wins easily against a fairly good player, and Mr. Beasley says, “The boy has all the shots, but what I would like to be sure about is his condition. I'm not sure of that.” . + « The match with the Japanese player is not sufficiently spirited to explore this point. So finally you get to the stadium where the Baron from Germany is playing the slender, curly-haried blond from Kansas City—dJ, Harold Surface® Jr. This is the Hubbell against Gehrig thing of the day, the Joe Louis against Max Schmeling. You are just a slight bit annoyed in the beginning about the J. Harold Jr. stuff. : You always wondered why people split their names like that. When they did it in tennis you were particularly annoyed—and yet you knew it was none of your business and certainly none of your concern
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as a sports writer. It just so happened you had noticed that tennis players and tennis. people in general took on such an imperious attitude that you said to yourself, “Where do those guys get off?” Pretty soon you were saying, “Well, what difference does it make?” Because J. Harold Surface Jr. turned out to be an awfully nice person and Baron GCottfried Von Cramm registered a very distinct and articulate dislike to the-the-the-classification. I'm not sure of the word. Anyway he said, “This is probably done for what you call the gate. I mean this Baron thing. My name is Gottfried Cramm. checks that way. I sign my letters that way. I sign my hotel register that way. I am never called ‘Baron’ except on the tennis court and then only by your announcers. I suspect this is being done to—what do you say—to kid people—to lead them to suspect they are seeing a curiosity of some sort. I think it is all very silly.” : And so the match went on and the Baron—as everybody insists on calling him—won after quite a struggle. - J. Harold dropped the first two sets. Won the third and seemed well on his way to winning the fourth, leading four-love in games when— Well, it was a question of whether the Baron came up or J. Harold dropped back. Anyway, from then on it was what the Bulgarians call a shambles. J. Harold lost two services in a row—somebody said his service was worse than at the Orange Inn at Goshen on Hambletonian Day. But his was sheer flattery—and presently the score was five-all. The Baron took the last six games without seeming effort. The futility of J. Harold being mirrored by the fact he took only two points in the last four games. To those
who don’t follow tennis very close-|
ly this is akin to getting two noiseless fouls in the last four innings.
GOOD HEALTH!
And a long life depend on a clean |
colon and healthy kidneys! : Dr. Pencheff's Botanical ‘Laxative compound and kidney tea taken according to directions will promote hea th, - Z office .00 —8
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£5 PENG A AER eas not you? cg be
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By HARRY GRAYSON
; EW YORK, Sept. T.—Japanese golfers seek Gene Sarazen as a golfing trench mortars for sand wedges in their bunker blasting operations may result in the Squire of Valley Ridge Farm changing the itinerary of his current round-the-world trip. The Nipponese long ago established themselves as the world’s greatest Just the other day, the well-proportioned Jack Medica bowed to a little brown man in a swimming race in the Land of the Rising Sun. The remarkable University of Washington paddler found himself
I sign my
Sports Editor :
46>
majority that Cooper is the finest shotmaker on this side of the Atlantic, the squatty Italian does not class Light-horse Harry as a great golfer, There’s more to tournament golf
than perfect technic and flashy execution. ! ;
Sterlings Play Star Negro Nine
Indianapolis Sterling Beers, Indi-ana-Ohio League champions last year, will battle the Homestead Grays of Pennsylvania, 1936 Negro world champions, under the lights at Perry Stadium tonight. Action is to begin at 8:15. . ]
The Sterlings have in their lineup some of the leading semipro players in the state and the Grays are wellstocked with Negro National League talent. Several members of the Homestead team play winter ball in Cuba and Florida and the squad as a whole is one of the strongest outside of organized baseball. Manager Hoffa of the Sterlings will present his best roster in tonight's tussle. The team has been active all summer in Indiana-Ohio competition. * Lefty Kertis and Joe Fornell will form the Sterlings’ battery against the Grays.
Baseball
The Fall Creek Athletics defeated the Printing Crafts Club yesterday, 13 to 3, at Riverside 9. Bear hit a homer in the fifth for the winners, while King clouted one for the Printers in the eighth. Hershberger, Fall Creek hurler, yielded only six hits. The score:
Prin 010 001 010— 3 6 4 Fall 350 011 03x—13 10 2
Wellman, Perkins and Foxworthy, Wellman; Hershberger and Burroughs.
The Athletics nosed out the New Bethel Blues 6 to 5 Sunday afternoon at Garfield.
The Seven Ups would like a game with a strong state nine for Sunday. Write or wire Bill Rider, 921 E. 19th St. or tall TA-6028 during the day.
The Beanblossom A. €. wants a game for Sunday at Rhodius. They defeated Fields Tavern, 10 to 3, recently. Call Ralph Davis, BE-0897.
South Bend Team Wins Indiana Title
KOKOMO, Ind., Sept. 7 (U. P.)— The Conservative Life team of South Bend today held the Indi-
ana Amateur Baseball championship after defeating East Chicago, 7 to 6, here yesterday. : A home run in the ninth inning by Borowski, Nofre Dame star, broke a tie after Tony Wukovits of
with two mates aboard in ‘the
The score:
South Bend ..........004 000 201—7 6 3 East Chicago 02 300 000—6 10 6 Shaw, Nowicki, Cichran and McCauslin; Greslo, Gardina and Juras.
TO IMPROVE HIS JAB? ~ NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Lou Ambers, lightweight champion, is taking trombone lessons from Russ Morgan, local orchestra leader.
. KNOW WAY AROUND CINCINNATI, Sept. Cuyler, Chick Hafsy, and George Davis, the Cincinnati Reds have the oldest set of outfielders in the ma-
South Side Recreation at 6:15 o'clock
|roll tomorrow night to start the
‘NN + XN Fordham University will
South Bend slammed out a triple | seventh to knot the count at 6 all. |
7—In Kiki|
Jor leagues. The average is 35 years.
This photo, showing a portion of the grandstand, gives a pretty I bill of racing at the State Fair. Events held over from good idea of the size of the crowd which yesterday enjoyed the bargain | to rain, were run off along with the regular Grand Circuit program,
A
FAIR
7 |
Times Photos. Saturday, due
Curtain Goes Up Tonight On New Bowling Season
Commercial Circuit, One of City’s Oldest, to Begin Firing On Illinois Alleys.
(Editorial, Page 12) League competition will be inaugurated at local bowling alleys toe
night as the first groups from the
city’s vast army of pin enthusiasts
begin shooting for honors in the 1937-38 season. Outstanding feminine bowlers are listed to see action as the Graye (Gribben-Gray loop starts firing at the Hotel Antlers drives at 8:30 o'clock.
At the Illinois plant, the Com- ©
raercial circuit, one of- the oldest Icagues here, will begin its camraign. - The Pennsylvania Recreation loop, which has an 185 individual limit, will start activity at the Penns’7lvania drives. } Two leagues are slated to roll at the Fountain Square alleys, the
aad the Power and Light at 8:30. The Parkway No. 2 circuit, an 8:0 team average loop, will take the drives at the North Side plant. Prtichett’s alleys will be host to the City League, a 920 average circuit which was formerly known as the Patrick Henry loop. Tomorrow night the fast Indianapolis League will start its season at Pritchett’s with the Barbasol team seeking to retain the championship gained last year. The Barbasols will present their same lineup of Jess Pritchett, John Fehr, Don Johnson John Murphy and Lee Carmin and have bolstered the roster with the addition of Fonnie Snyder, who rolled with the Bowes Seal Fast squad last year. The Indiana and Uptown alleys will have their first league activity tomorrow night and competition is not booked for the Central drives until Friday.
The St. Philip No. 2 League will
campaign at the East Side. plant.
The St. Catherine's League will begin its season at the Fountain Square Alleys Thursday - night at 8:30 o'clock, Frank S. Wuensch, secretary, has announced.
Another team is needed by the Intermediate loop, which has ‘an 890 average, and rolls at the Uptown drives on Thursday nights. Information may be obtained from Pug Leppert at the alleys.
The Elks League also is to start Thursday night, rolling at the Hotel Antlers alleys. Officers are G. R. (Red) Haugh, president; Al Millingfon, vice president, and John Kleinhenz, secretary.
The Fraternal League will hold its final meeting at the Illinois alleys tomorrow night before beginning competition next Monday. Two more squads are required to round out a 14-team circuit, H. C. Mullinnix, secretary, announced.
TWO LEFT-HAND THROWERS AMONG FORDHAM GRIDMEN
NTEW YORK, Sept. T.—
have two left-handed passers on its varsity eleven this season. They are Fullback Mike learn anc Right Halfback Joe | Ciranski. Both played 'on the 1936 baseball team.
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Softball
Rockwood A. C. land Chevrolet Commercial Body, surviving teams of ‘Softball Stadium’s Pot O° Gold tournament, are to meet at 8:15 toe night at the Stadium.
_ The Rockwood team is undefeated in tourney play and can win the event with a victory in tonight's contest. The Chevrolets, defeated by the Rockwoods in an earlier game, can ' make another game necessary through a victory tonight, as the tourney is being conducted on a two-defeats-and-out basis.
Paul Pollikan or Kermit Flanagan is to be on the mound for the A. Cs, while Riley Lasley or Art Laxen is expected to do the pitching for the Chevrolets. Tomorrow night, the Los Angeles Red Devils, champions of the Southwest, and last year runnersup for the national championship, are to meet the Chevrolet team, which won the city championship in the recent tournament at the Stadium. The Californians are rated among the best teams in the country and with their pitching ace, Schoolboy Rock, on the mound, should give the local champs a real tussle. let Band is to play before Wednesday night's game. On Thursday night the Coast team plays the Stadium All-Stars, an aggregation of picked players from local leagues. With some of the hardest hitters in the city in the lineup, the Stars expect to make things tough for Pee Wee Price, another Los Angeles twirler, said to be the greatest trick pitcher in the game. The two games are being spon=sored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce which reports a heavy advance sale. .
The Salvage. Equipment Co. won their 15th consecutive victory over the W. Washington, St. Merchants, 36 to 4, in a Gus Hahich Sunday Morning League game. For games
call LI-1612. Chevrolet Commers
cial Body please note.
. The Triangles, junior softball champions, won the WPA tournament by shutting out the Wincel A.C, 3 to 0. The Triangles seek a game with the city champions.
Football
The Smith-Hassler-Sturm Senior League will meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the store. Schedules will be are ranged. One team is needed to come plete the league. : Any player wishing a trial with a league team is asked to report at Kansas and Meridian Sts. Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock or write Red Wincel, 1470 Charles St. 3
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