Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1938 — Page 15
\ spares.
Ho
By Eddie Ash
TEMPLE GOES IN FOR GIANTS
ALL MEMBERS LONG ON HEIGHT
HE cherry and white colors of Temple University have been lowered by only one foe this season and at this stage of the basketball season the Owls are a strong threat in Eastern hardwood circles. . . . Coach James Usilton’s quintet won 17 games in 23 starts last season and the one defeat this year was by Georgetown University. . « « Noteworthy achievements are victories over Illinois and Stanford in games at Philadelphia. Temple stopped an Illinois winning streak and then put an end to the Stanford unbeaten record, completing each job immediately after the visiting fives had shown to advantage in New York. The Owls are bigger than most college quintets, Howie Black of the starting five being the shortest at 6 feet 11% inches. . . . Two sophomores have stepped into the lineup with three veterans and made Temple one of the smoothest combinations in the nation. n =
un n
” n EWCOMERS with Temple are Don Henderson, 6 feet 5 inches, and Ed Boyle, 6 feet 4 inches. . . . The veterans in addition to Black are Don Shields, a highscoring, 6-foot-5-inch basketeer, and Mike Bloom, who is the tallest player on the squad at 6 feet 6 inches. Reserves of admitted class are Bob Nicol, sophomore long-shot artist, and Jimmy Usilton Jr., son of the coach. . . . Young Jimmy entered Temple against his father’s wishes, but has proved himself such a clever hardwood pastimer that there is no criticism on the campus because
he's labeled a first-stringer.
Indianapolis Times Sports
TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1938
PAGE 15
Gosh, What a Relief
Football fans who gasped at the headline “Sutherland Quits,” relaxed when they discovered it wasn't the Pitt coach—merely a Justice of the Supreme Court,
PURDUE IN TITLE RACE DESPITE SETBACK
Lambert Five
Eastern sports writers say the Templars have not only height for controlling the ball, but far greater speed than one would expect from a squad so big. . . . The setback by Georgetown last night was marked down in the books
as an upset.
2 CENTRAL has averaged 48.3 points a game while rolling
up 10 straight victories. . .
. Opponents’ average, 27.5. . .
. Han-
over, Central's opponent tonight downstate, has split even in six
starts with 209 total points to 210 for opponents. .
. . Three Hoosier
college fives have yet to walk off the floor on the long end of the
score. .
. . They are Indiana State, Rose Poly and N. C. A. GU.
Ball State has an odd record with 337 points in nine games and
the same total for opponents. . . . DePauw, with 252 against 253, broke even in eight starts. . .
The Cards won five starts. . . Unde-
feated teams In Indiana College Conference competition only are
Indiana Central, Franklin, Wabash,
Butler and Valparaiso. . . . All
except Central have lost one or more to outside teams.
= - +
2 = =
URING the seasons of 1933-34 and 1934-35 DePaul of Chicago
played a total of 34 games and lost only one. .
. . Bradley Tech
of Peoria has won six straight this year, including victories over
Indiana, Nebraska and Utah. . is in its 37th season. .
. . The Eastern Intercollegiate League _. It's an “unbalanced” circuit of seven schools,
as follows: Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, Columbia, Yale, Harvard, Prince-
ton and Cornell.
The Eastern Intercollegiate Conterence is a different organization of six teams consisting of Pittsburgh, Temple, Penn State, Carnegie Tech, Georgetown and West Virginia.
” n ”
2 ” 8
OHN TARLETON COLLEGE of Stephenville, Tex, annexed its 79th straight victory in stride the other night by downing San Angelo. . . . The oldest inhabitant has a tough time remembering when the Tarleton Plowboys lost. . . . Anyway, they are undefeated in four years and last season’s record was 18 consecutive. John Tarleton 1s a member of the Central Texas Conference and
has won 12 consecutive championships
. . . Coach W. J. Wisdom also
is golf coach, director of athletics and business manager.
” # n
= ” ”
HEN the Navy defeated Duke University last Saturday the scorekeepers staged a race to keep pace with the substitutions. _.. The Middies used 17 players and the Blue Devils 11, total 28. . . .
Which was rather unfair to the pencil pushers. . .
. Even big league
baseball clubs in spring exhibition games don’t go that far running in
Army won by a lopsided score. .
and Johns Hopkins employed similar tactics as the Soldiers . Twenty-four players saw action. . . ,
Army and Navy play their games on Saturday afternoons.
Overweight Battle Gave Fans a Break, | Joe Says
By JOE WILLIAMS
Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Jan. 11.—There can be no solid justification for an overweight boxing match in which a champion and challenger appear, especially in the big town where as a rule it is more simple to make
attractive matches than elsewhere.
When one is made it is usually due to one of two things, if not both:
(a) Timidity on the part of the®
champion, (bh) Ambition on the part of the promoter to make two . matches grow where normally one would take root. The recent match between the two ferocious Freddies— Steele of Tacoma and Apostoli of San Francisco —was probably a combination of both. dai It cannot be said the result a of this match was completely satisfactory to either man, Steele saved his title and lost much of his reputation. Apostoli won the fight but didn’t win the championship. He had been forced to come in overweight. This meant that even if he knocked out the champion—which he proceeded to do—he couldn’t win the title. But from the point of view of the customers the match was supremely satisfactory. They saw a dramatic fight, They saw a fighter whom they esteemed a great champion hammered to a purplish pulp. They saw a young, strong bull-like Italian hammer and laugh his way to a smashing triumph. If Steele was a great fighter, Apostoli proved himself to be a sensational fighter.
No Hardship Worked
It isn’t often the customer gets a“break like this. The overweight mateh was designed as box office bait. Many of the confirmed fight addicts sensed it as such and remained away. They were the losers. If an overweight match has any virtues at all it lies in the possibility that it may somehow produce a tremendous show. The sustained fury of the two Freddies ‘was all of that. As a matter of cold fact the circumstances of this match didn't work a real hardship on anybody, not even on the cruelly beaten Steele. He had to meet Apostoli sooner or later. The beating he took may not make him a better fighter but it at least will destroy any false estimates he may have had of the graduate bellhop. He knows better than anybody else whether he fought up to standard, whether the foul in the seventh took something out of him, and Just how good he must be to
the Go Gate the een ot Mah the
As for Apostoli, he becomes a bigger fighting figure than ever, and as such a correspondingly better gate attraction. He finds himself in much the same position as Max
Schmeling; he knocked out the No. 1 man. That was Joe Louis’ ranking at the time Schmeling stopped him even if he didnt hold the heavyweight title. Louis’ title never will mean a great deal to him in the eyes of the public until he evens matters with Schmeling. Steele's position is the same. As far as the public is concerned Apostoli is the top kicker and will remain that until Steele is able to prove it was all a mistake, Theoretically, the challenger is limited to 121% per cent of the gate. The champion getting 37!2. Schmeling will never fight Louis for that and since it’s the only heavyweight fight in which there is national interest he will be able to write his own ticket. The same will apply to a return match between Apostoli and Steele. Who wants to see Steele against anybody but the man who stopped him?
Joel Hunt Named Georgia U. Coach
ATHENS, Ga. Jan. 11 (U. P).— The University of Georgia today welcomed a new set of football coaches, headed by Joel Hunt, formerly backfield coach at Louisiana State University. He succeeds Harry Mehre, resigned. Elmer A. Lampe, football coach and athletic director at Carroll College, Waukesha, Wis, was named end coach and basketball coach.
31 Contracts Mailed To New York Giants
NEW YORK, Jan. 11 (U. P).— Thirty-one contracts were in the mail today en route to the National League champion New York Giants. They were posted last night with announcement that the first squad of 19 players would report to Manager Bill Terry at Hot Springs, Ark. Feb. 13, for a preliminary session before the regular training camp opens at Baton Rouge, La., Feb. 28. In addition to all pitcher and catcher candidates, first baseman were ordered to
=
vy
Drops Thriller ! To lini, 51-43
Indiana Edges Minnesota; Michigan Rallies to Beat Ohio State.
(Summaries, Page 16)
By STEVE SNIDER United Press Staff Correspondent
CHICAGO. Jan, 11.—Purdue—the team they said couldn't be stopped —met its master at Illinois. While Northwestern fattened up
its average against Iowa with its third straight victory in the 1938 Big Ten baskeball race, Illinois outspeeded Purdue and whipped the title favorites at their own razzledazzling game, 51 to 43. For one night at least, the Illini were faster than the fiery Boilermakers, who left a trail of panting, defeated teams from Lafayette to the West Coast on a recent tour. The Illini had better basket shots and, except for one wild flurry late in the second half a far superior defense. Michigan clung right behind Northwestern and remained the only other unbeaten team in the Conference by rallying in the second half against Ohio State, 38 to 28. Indiana bumped Minnesota, 39 to 38, Wisconsin defeated Chicago, 50 to 27, and Northwestern whipped Iowa, 36 to 28. Purdue, however, still ranked with | Michigan as heavy favorites for the | Conference title, while Northwestern, with a softer schedule than either, was conceded an excellent chance of slipping in while the Con- | ference giants are battling each other. Dehner Starts Things
From the opening tipoff, it was apparent Illinois was to have its big night. Lewis (Pick) Dehner, gangling center, rolled in three points in rapid-fire order and the Boilermakers were in trouble and held the leall just one time, 10-8, early in the game. ‘ While Dehner, Capt. vohie Boudreau and Tom Nisbet kept pouring in field goals during the first period which ended, 29 to 13, the Illinois defense kept a strict guard on Jewell Young, Pundue’s Conference scoring champion, Johnny Sines and Gene Anderson. This trio finally began to click in the second period as Young opened up with long, left-handed shots. He hit three straight and Purdue moved up, 43 to 36. Boudreau and then Dehner led counter attacks which ended Purdue's hopes. Dehner, a junior who will give Young a terrific battle for scoring honors this year, dropped in 18 points, Young 14. It was Purdue’s first setback in 10 games. The contest was rough all the way and 41 fouls were called, 23 on Purdue. The Boilermakers were weak at the free throw line and missed 11 times while Illinois garnered 19 points on free tosses. Purdue led in field goals, 17 to 16.
Townsend Stars Again
Northwestern, still riding on its defense, popped in 11 points before Towa could connect and led throughout. Ad Vance, star sophomore guard, held Iowa’s chief scoring threat, Benny Stephens, to two field goals scored in the last 50 seconds. Jake Nagode, again the key to the Wildcats’ offense, topped the scorers with 11 points, Michigan's versatile Johnny Townsend had to retire for a short time while his teammate Dan Smick matched body-checks with Jim MecDonald, Ohio State guard, but when McDonald began to tire, Townsend returned and helped the Wolverines stage a long rally in the second half. It was Michigan's second victory. Indiana’s guards—Marvin Huffman and Ernie Andres—baffled both Minnesota's offense and defense. The pair accounted for 27 points between them and held Johnny Kundla and Gordon Adingten of the Gophers to 10 as the Hoosiers scored their second victory over a Conference cochampion. Indiana previously had beaten Illinois. The standings:
Tr 118 83 123 129 94 ie 131 66 62 61
Pet. 1.000 1.000 667 667 500 500
Michigan Wisconsin Indiana Purdue Towa ...veivnnnnns Miineis Minnesota Ohio State Chicago
000 900 J000
WI SW ws SD
GAMES SATURDAY Wisconsin at Purdue. Michigan at Minnesota. Northwestern at Indiana. Irwa at Ohio State. Chicago at Miinois.
Basketball Scores
STATE COLLEGES
Indiana, 39; Minnesota, 38. Tlinois, 51; Purdue, 43. Notre Dame, 57; Canisius, 33.
OTHER COLLEGES
Michigan, 38; Ohio State, 28. Northwestern, 36; Iowa, 28. Wisconsin, 50; Chicago, 27. Tufts, 55; Middlebury, 23. George Washington, 46; Elon, 29. Georgetown, 39; Temple, 22. Dartmouth, 56; Cornell, 38. Nebraska, 29; Colorado, 18. Glenville, 60; Salem, 28. Detroit, 34; Kentucky, 26. Centre, 41; Berea, 34. Southeast Missouri Teachers, 60; Kirksville Teachers, 26. St. Bonaventure, 44; Niagara, 40. Oklahoma Aggies, 30; Drake, 23. Bethany, 55; Geneva, 47. Transylvania, 32; Eastern
Lewis (Pick) Dehner . .
EE San ve
Francis Schneider Raps Maples for 659 Series
Francis Schneider today was the pacesetter in local bowling compe-
tition with a 221-182-256—8659 series League at the Central Alleys.
rolled in the South Side Merchants
S. B. Smith turned in a 653 total to top the North Side Business Men's loop at the Parkway drives, Barrett getting 632, Binnion 626, and
Kollinger 611.
Coke, Red Horse Gintuplets and Aristocrat Bar triumphed twice. The Meier Coal scores: S. B. Smith C. Heolmock J. Wilson A. Group ... R. Kirby ....
225— 653 196— 551 206— 542 162 153— 451 222 183— 387
Totals 948 393 963—2804 Cliff Wagoner's 614 was high in the Service Club League at the Parkway establishment. J. C. Perry Co. was a triple winner and Kautz Stationery, Pacific Mutual and Bayuk Phillies gained a two-out-of-three edge. Walter More led the Bell Telephone circuit at the Indiana Alleys with 640, Vance Oathout and S. D. Hale each connecting for 631. Business Office No. 1 and Business Office No. 2 made clean sweeps and Accounting, Western Electric, Dis= bursements, Maintenance No. 2 and Long Lines No. 1 annexed two games. Lead Kiwanis Loop
Tom Selmier’s 639 and a 622 by Walter Roeder were outstanding in the Kiwanis League at the Indiana. Fran Schmitt fired a 633 to head the St. Joan of Arc loop at the Uptown Alleys, Joe Argus Jr. hitting for 625. General Tire and Hatfield Electric scored triple victories and Tom O'Hern Insurance, Fitzgerald Coal and St. Joan of Arc No. 1 were ahead twice. In the Uptown Ladies League, E. Schneider took first place with 502. M. H. Farrell Granite and Coca-Cola swept their series and Klee & Coleman marked up a pair of triumphs. Charlie Cray rolled a 629 to show the way in the Reformed Church circuit at Pritchett’s Alleys, Bud Schoch getting 606. Carrollton, Immanuel No. 2 and Trinity were three-time winners and First Reformed No. 1, Second Reformed No. 1 and First Reformed No. 2 captured two games. Shutouts Scored
Tony Rea’s 618 was best in the Transportation loop, Simmons turning in a 606. New York Central and Canadian Pacific shut out their opponents and Pennsylvania, Chicago & Northwestern, Atkins Saw Line and Indiana Railroad registered two=out-of-three decisions. Jess Pritchett shot a 616 for top position in the Optimist League and BEd Menges, opening with 254, had a 612 total in the Evangelical loop. Jess Smythe’s 560 paced the State Highway League and a 526 by Ray Roarch was high in the Fulton Hosiery circuit to conclude the competition at Pritchett’s drives. Harry Gresham came through with 636 to lead the Fraternal League at the Illinois Alleys, Charlie Smith getting 623, Larry Rudbeck 620 and Tom Fegan 609. C-V Beer, with 2868, Real Silk, Gibson Co. and Arteraft Roofing made clean sweeps while Palm Garden and United Dental won twice. The C-V scores: Godwin 201 180 595 Enyert ......coveiee 168 179 210 366 7. Heckman ........ 161 154 181- 536 Noggle ceeaness 191 191 19% 5% W. Heckman ...oov00 181 204 R207 592
2 216 148 147
A 439 by Gerkensmeyer was best in the Fidelity Trust loop at the Illinois plant. . At the Hotel Antlers, Davis had 619 and Perrin 610 in the Indianapolis Automotive circuit, Bader Coffee annexed three games while George's Barbecue and Pavy's Tavern earned a brace of victories. John Bader’s 574 was outstanding in the Elks loop at the Antlers Alleys. Paul Ray ted the Indian polis Church
But at the Foun-
Winter's Cut Rate Liquors won three games and Clif Meier Coal, with 2804, Beck Coal &®
tain Square, Turk was high with 609. A. & J. and Holy Cross A. C. took three games while F. J. Curran and Freund's Pharmacy registered two-out-of-three verdicts. Don Johnson included a 258 game in his 612 series in the Court House League at the Pennsylvania Alleys. Union Title swept its series and Treasurers, - Burford Assessors, Lawyers, Prosecutors and Township Assessors were in front twice. A 600 by Moschenross topped the Kroger loop at the Pennsylvania establishment and Gladys Lane led the Sewart Radio girls circuit with 473.
Paddle Players Sail Tomorrow
NEW YORK, Jan. 11 (U. P)— Four men and three women players accompanied by Morris Bassford, vice president of the U. S. Table Tennis Association, will sail for London tomorrow to defend the titles captured last year in world championship competition at Baden, Austria. The women’s team, headed by Mildred wilkinson of St. Louis, third ranking player in the nation, will try to retain the Corbillion Cup, emblematic of world teal supremacy. Aiding her will be Mrs. Clara Harrison, Cleveland, and Betty Henry, South Bend. Sol Schiff, New York, will lead the men’s team in attempting to repeat last year’s victory In the Swaythling Cup competition. Jimmy McClure, Indianapolis, also will be a member of the squad, and the other two men players will be selected from John Abrams and Louis Pagliaro, New York, and Garret Nash and George
wom mo r————— | % ] £ |
5 Major Tilts
In Prep Loops On State Card
Southport Faces Artesians at Martinsville; Tipton Goes to Marion.
With five major games scheduled, another week's round of activity will get underway in® Hoosier high school basketball tonight. Southport’s Cardinals will journey to Martinsville to meet Coach Glenn Curtis’ Artesians and attempt to duplicate Shortridge’s conquest of last Friday. . Tipton, Central Conference pacesetter, will go to Marion tonight to tangle with the Giants, now tied for fourth place in the strong North Central circuit. Another North Central club will also play host, Anderson taking on the Connersville Spartans. . Coach Agchie Chadd’s Indians share fourth place in the North Central with Marion. Coach Mose Pruitt’s Spartans, in a net recession, are down to seventh place in the South Central. Plymouth strives for its first Central win at Huntington, which will be after its fourth victory. Hammond Tech can move into the first half of the Western N. IL H. 8. C. standings by trouncing Washington at East Chicago. A Washington victory would mean little to the East Chicagoans. Other games this week: Tomorrow Night
Linton at Bloomington. Muncie at Jeffersonville. Lafayette at Lebanon. Tipton at Noblesville. Friday Night Anderson at Crawfordsville. Washington at Bedford. Martinsville at Bloomington. Lafayette at Muncie. North Vernon at Columbus. Franklin at Connersville. Elwood at Wabash. Newcastle at Frankfort. Froebel at Horace Mann (Gary). Greencastle at Rushville. Greensburg at Shelbyville, Logansport at Kokomo. Marion at Richmond. Mishawaka at Elkhart. Bicknell at New Albany. Vincennes at Reitz (Evansville), Tipton at Rochester. Saturday Night Anderson at Greencastle. Jeffersonville at Vincennes. Seymour at New Albany. Rushville at Newcastle. Princeton at Washington.
Action Assured Mat Fans Tonight
A pair of top-ranking lightheavyweights, Billy Thom, 182, wrestling mentor at Indiana University, and Walter (Sneeze) Achiu, 180, Chinese matman, cle~Y in the headliner on tonight's grappling bill at the Armory. It is for two falls out of three. In other struggles, Milo Steinborn, 224, well-known German “strong man,” faces Orville Brown, 233, Kansas, and Pete Peterson, 224, Minneapolis, opposes Jim Morris, 231, Memphis. Armory fans who enjoy plenty of action are expected to get that very thing in the Achiu-Thom encounter. Billy, recognized in some states as light-heavyweight champion of the world, will be facing one of the most formidable opponents he has ever taken on. Achiu is fast and tricky and has a good record. Billy has met just about every style of wrestling in his 10 years in pro ranks, but realizes he will have to “step on it” if he turns in a victory tonight.
BADO EARNS DRAW NEW YORK, Jan. 11. — Janos Bado, Hungary, and Firpo Wilcox, Oklahoma, drew; John ™urphy, Ireland, and Kimon Kudo, Japan, drew; Ram Singh, India, pinned Hans von Blumberg, Germany; Jim Londos, Greece, pinned John Sullivan, Ireland; Sammy Stein, New York, and Billy Hanson, Sweden, drew; Jesse James, California, and Henry Kukolvich, Poland, drew in bouts here last night.
Hendry, St. Louis.
Stage Than in the
A cold ordinarily goes through three stages. (1) The Dry Stage, the first 24 hours. (2) The Watery Secretion Stage, from 1 to 3 days. (3) The Mucous Secretion Stage. A cold is twice as easy to stop in the first stage as in the second or third. In fact, to let a cold run beyond Boe first stage may be to invite
ble. The Thing to Take! The preparation you want to take for all colds—any cold—is Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine (LBQ tablets)! Bromo Quinine tablets are eppressly a cold treatment! They are not a “cure-all.” They are re for colds and nothing else. Bromo Quinine tablets are internal treatment and a cold is an ¢n-
ternal infectionl. - 4 Effects in One!
a gt .
CHECK THAT COLD IN THE DRY STAGE!
It’s Much Easier Stopped in the First or hy or Third Stage!
important things in the treatment of a cold. First, they open the bowels. Second, they check the infection in the system. Third, they relieve the headache and fever. Fourth, they tone the system and help fortify against further attack. These four effects are what you want in a cold medicine.
Your Safe Bet!
Bromo Quinine tablets may be taken with confidence. They have been on the market for over 40 years and are the world’s largest selling cold tablet. Bromo Quinine tablets come in 35¢c and 60c sizes. The 60c size is the better “buy.” Almost 20 per cent more for your money. When you ask for Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine (LBQ tablets), insist upon getting what you ask
Follow Through and Spin Of Hook Result in Strikes
By JOE FALCARO Match Game Champion
(Fourth of a Series)
F your ball breaks too far to the left, move five inches in that direction to avoid splits. On spares, the reverse is true. If the spare lies on the left side of the alley, move to the right, and vice versa. The thumb is up and pointed toward the pocket on a straight ball, That kind of a ball has 18 pounds of pressure when it hits the pins. On a curved ball, follow through with the thumb down and from that direction. The third finger turns the ball . . gives it English, just as in billiards. It's the follow through and spin that gives the hook 53 pounds of pressure. Naturally, the hook is best. No good bowler throws a straight ball, Alleys are 60 reet long, and the ball breaks about eight feet from the pins. As in any other game, practice makes perfect. Join a league for the purpose of being in competition,
game, point of «all.
Joe Falcaro . . . the thumb is up and pointed toward the pocket on a straight ball.
Never look at the other while bowling yourself. complish nothing by somebody. Concentrate on your own That is the most important
bowler You ace looking at
As your average rises, get into a faster league.
a (NEXT—Your score.)
SCHAEFER TAKES LEAD
NEW YORK, Jan. 11 (U, P.).—
Additional Sports, Page 16
Jake Schaefer, Chicago, challenger
for the world's 18.2 balkline billiard
championship, held a 600-385 lead over defending champion Welker Cochran of San Francisco, today, entering the third block of their 4200-point title match. Schaefer won both of yesterday's opening blocks, 300-100 and 300-285.
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The WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION of INDIANA
announces the following classes in Adult Education are now open to the public im
years of age. These classes LOCATION Colored Y. M. C. A. Communal Bldg, Haugnyille Library Rauh Library E. Wash, St. Library E. Wash, St. Library Fletcher Community Cent, American Settlement School No. 49 Central Y. W. C. A. Flanner House Hill Community Center 934 Meikel Street 353 Farmers Trust Bldg. 353 Farmers Trust Bldg. School No. 66 American Settlement School No. 72
School No. 66 404 N, Delaware, No, 18 Central Y. W. C. A. 472 W. Washington St. Occidental Bldg. (Basemt,) 700 BE. 54t
1001 W. Washington 8t. 639 E. Market St, 735 N. East St. 829 N. East St. Hill Community Center American Settlement Mt. Carmel Church Central Y. W. C. A. Central Y. W. C. A, School No. 27 5644 Central Ave. Crispus Attucks Library Colored Y. M, C. A. Golden Rule Church Flanner House Hill Community Center Hill Community Center Central Y. W. C. A.
Rauh Library
Rauh Library School No. 2 Room No. 6, City Hall WwW. C.
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25th and Oxford West Parkview Church 308 W. Ohio St.
4 W. Ohio St, Wheeler Mission Broad Ripple M. E. Church tral ¥. W. GC. A. tral ¥. W. C. A, Library
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Sts.
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83 West Parkview Church Schoo y Mt. Carmel Church School No. 23 Flanner House Mt. Carmel Church School No. 63 , "lanner House School No. Hill Community
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