Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1939 — Page 15

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College Fives Are Toppled

Wabash and Ball State Are Victims in Conference Encounters.

By United Press

“wo of the four teams tied for top Konors in the Indiana Collegiate Basketball Conference were toppled ‘from the unbeaten classification last night. " The victims were + Ball State Teachers and Wabash College. -In a ‘game at Muncie, the Teachers were defeated by Manchester, 48 to 46. Wabash lost to Franklin in.a close

. ‘game at Crawfordsville, 45 to 43.

These scores left only DePauw and Butler with clean Conference slates. The Tigers won their sixth straight loop game last night by stopping. Earlham, 32 to 29. In a nonconference game at Evansville, the Purple Aces defeated Western Kentucky Teachers, 49 to 48. . Ball State took a nose’ dive from undefeated ranks after leading Manchester at the half, 30 to 21. The Cardinals were unable to meet the terrific pace set by _ the Spartans. They recovered once in the final half to tie the score at 41-41 but dropped behind again when Manchester con--verted two foul shots. Stryker was ‘high point man for Manchester with 21 points. Gardner scored 12 points to lead the Teachers.

~ Slip in ‘Second Half

The first conference licking of the year for Wabash also came in the second half. At half-time, the Little Giants were ahead, 26-25. The game was fast and rough, with the lead changing hands 12 times. It was anybody's game up to the final seconds. for Franklin with nine field goals. Berns led for Wabash with nine points. Evansville came from behind to subdue the Bowling Green combination by one point. Boerner scored 14 points for the Aces while Walters, with 11 points, was the leader for the Kentuckians. Tomorrow night's games send Indiana State to Eastern. Illinois and Huntington to Central Normal.

Basketball

The St. Philip's A. C. basketball five won its fourth consecutive game last night by trouncing Co. H of Ft. Harrison, 60-37. The A. C. team wants games away from home. Call CH-0306.

Tonight's See for the Sportsman’s Store Independent League at the Brookside U. B. Gym: Lo 30-—-Ft.. JHartison Medics vs. Burt’s Shoe 8: Ty oil vs. VanCamp How

9:30—Johnston’s Market vs. Rockets.

The Pre Oil outfit has won all its five starts and is leading the league.

Speedway

Play in the second half of the Sith Hassler Capital City basketball league will resume tonight with four net tilts on the evenings schedsule. Tonight's schedule is:

7:00—Drikold Refrigerators vs. Schwitzer- : C

ummins Sto

%:50—Fashion Cleanérs vs. Dutchs Standard Service. 8: 40--Mi; Jackson Tire vs. Lawrence Denzells.

9:30—Liehr’s Tavern vs. Furnas Ice Cream. In the Smith-Hassler Manufactur-

ers League last night at Dearborn

gym the Fashion Cleaner Aces upset the Schwitzer Cummins Buddies 18 to 14. Stokley Vancamps trounced the Polk’s Milk five 51 to 24. Wilkinson Lumber Co. eked out a 29-t0-27 win ovre the Linco Oilers while Beveridge Paper Co. shaded the H. P. Ransburg Co. quintet 30 to 23. Kugelman, with 10 points, was outstanding for Beveridge.

V. F. W. Post 908 would like to schedule games with city and state teams. Write John Pesut, 5232 E. 10th St.

The Hill Flashes, victors in 10 of 13 starts, are seeking games with city and state teams. Write H. W. Brooks, 2922 Highland Place or call HA-4560-J after 4 p. m.

Last night’s results in the Em-Roe Speedway League: Indiana Farm Bureau, 40; Junior I. O. 18; Ball Printing,

‘Gréyhound Bus, Aces, walter Cleaners,

Friday night's schedule for the

Liberty Magazine 30; Walt’s

. Em-Roe Girls’ Big Six League at

the Hoosier Athletic Club:

%:30—Seven Up vs. Linton Radio. 8:30—Real Silk vs. Hoosier A. C. Bo Br cavlsyment Compensation vs.

Tryouts for the the Indianapolis Flashes’ junior team are to be held at 7 p. m. tomorrow at the St. Paul Gym. Players seeking Tryouts are

+ asked to report.

Hill Flashes are are to play the Packards in a Commercial League tilt tomorrow night at the Senate Avenue Y. M. C. A. For games with the Flashes write H. W. Brooks, 2922 Highland Place, or call HA-4560-J after 4:30 p. m.

Missing Pug Found; Was Hunting Ducks

POTTSVILLE, - Pa., Jan. 11 (U. P.).—Mait Raymond, wandering|A middleweight-to-heavyweight boxer, was removed from the missing per-

. sons list today.

The protege of Tommy Loughran, whose bout with Wally Sears at|ie

Philadelphia was twice postponed

because of his absence, was located at a Pottsville dance hall. He said he had been duck hunting.

18 DePauw Frosh Survive Final Cut

‘Times Special

GREENCASTLE, Jan. 11.—Eight- |

een freshmen have survived the final basketball cut at DePauw University, it was announced today by Coach Tom Clinton. Among those on the squad are

. George Farmer, Huntington; Wil-

liam Lynch, Bloomfield; Prancis Marley, Upland; John Marshall, Valparaiso; Joe Prewitt, Martinsville; Harvey Rhue, Greenfield, and Dick Wilkinson. Marion.

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Ferrell was high scorer|,

Jim Johnson, left, Avenue Boys’ Club ‘amateurs who

Jan. 20. — ENTRY

Golden

112-Pound 118-Pound 126-Pound 135-Pound

Class Class Class

Class

Name (print) ......

900000000000

Address (print)

Club or Unattached .

mittee.

dianapolis, Ind. Phone Riley 0772.

Three Indianapolis bowlers rolled series of 670 or better in competition last night. Of these, George Lohman, rolling in the City League at

Pritchett’s Alleys, wis high man with 685. His individual games were 255, 185 and 245." Closest to the mark of Lohman was made in the Pennsylvania Recreation loop by Edward Greaver, who had games of 237, 237 pnd 212. for a total of 681.The only other howler t finish in the front ranks was Fred Yager, rolling in the Commercial League at: the Fox-Hunt Alleys. Yager hit a 670 for his team, the Spencer House Cafe, and turned in game marks of 214, 246 and 210.

The Shooting Stars

George Lohman, City . Edward Greaver, Pennsylvania Fred. Yeager, Commercizl ave Burton, Herf-Jonss. Oscar Buses, Cit Lou Meyer, St. Philip's Burrell, Parkw Hendricks. Pritchett oh ig vias Moxley, Pennsylvania vues Ed Barnhorst. St. Philip's’ oe Faust, Pennsylvania "a Rudy Kempe, Commercial .. Schoen, Community .. “ Pfeiffer, City Hindel, Pennsylvani D. Hornbeck, Con tiaental Baking. “eis Glass, Gyro vie Veen H. Deal, ‘Pennsylvania Hokman, Pennsylvania John Annis, Allied Printing

Rug I Parkwa Leppert, © Community

wee 0B art Do Harbison. "st. Pailip’ s A ©. Paul Moore, City eve Turk, Pritchetts ... Al Schoch, Commercial ....... doesnee McClintock, Foyntain Square nny Lone, ity

££ = csseees Bi PY yivaiis sen mbert, I. Cess R. Thomas, Pritchetts Jane ull, yro ‘ives ork, Pennsylvania . cesehsvases Carl Buergler, Commer: Sal sin ars +» 605 Haislup, Fritohel t : . Kiefer. Prite

John Barrett, St Philip's A c.. Bradley, City

Pete Riester, City oii oes see Lich, Penns lvania sie inna yaewen . Ellison, Parkw : d Wilmoth Pritchett valine eine Lou Fouts, Commercial

| Central Alleys will sponsor a 200 scratch handicap sweepstakes the week-end ‘of Jan, 21-22. Handicaps ‘will be figured on two-thirds of the /difference = between the bowlers laverage and 200. Combined averages up to and including those of Jan. 13 will be used, The handicap series will consist of four- games of

| ‘Auto ann BNI E

20 Months to Pay |

WOLF SUSSMAN,

239 W. Ral, ST. Established

Ne

and Sam Haslet are English

the big honors in The Times-Legion Golden Gloves meet! which opens at the Armory on Eyiday. Right,

Boxing

National Guard Armory, Indianapolis, Jan. 20, 27, Feb. 3, 10 Auspices Bruce Robinson Post American Legion Sponsored by The Times

CHECK WEIGHT WITH UNDERLINES

ENTRIES, LIMITED TO AMATEVRS 16 YEARS OF AGE AND OVER

Serdrnrssashenseenets

12000000000 00000000000000000000000°000000000000000000000008

Any previous touthey competition? Yes or No

The Times. Bruce Robison Legion Post and Indiana A. A. U. do not assume any responsibility in case of injury to any contestant. must have consent of parents or guardians.

A. A U, regisitation fee of 25 cents will be paid by tournament come

Mail entry blanks to Golden Gloves Headquarters, 119 E. Ohio St., In-

ENTRIES CLOSE JAN. 17

3 Bowlers Smash Pins For Better Than 670

5 Klee and Koleman..1083

J] Ajax Beer

6 | Bittrich’s Meat a, at Mar-

6 5|Eddie Brehob Service 876 Charley: s Restaurant 338

609 Rust Jewelry ....

3 Inland Blue

are going after

Sharpen Up for Gloves

Punchfest

Times Photos.

Both lads fight in the open class whose division winners will represent Indianapolis in the Tournament of Champions at Chicago. Jim is a middle-. weight, Sam ‘a lightweight.

They have been perclicing for several weeks.

BLANK:

Gloves Meet

147-Pound Class 160-Poung Class 175-Pound Class Heavyweight

s000000800000000000

00000000000 0000p0000000

All contestants

singles across eight alleys. For reservations bowlers may call Riley 0036. c Sunday is the last day for local reservations to be made for the annual A, B. C. tournament to be held at Cleveland. Only 88 alleys are available now for an Indianapolis entry list that numbers 120 teams. Reservations are expected, however, for the remaining teams later. INDIANA ALLEYS.

Indiana Recreation League

Dr. Pep er 885 971-2851 Seven 902 '898—2684

Seven 957 975—2862 938 840—2663

914 900-2840 896 906—2643

1132 1096—3311 980 987-2841

988-3020 900—2788

Marmon Herrington! 874

Adams Ath. Assoc.. 111

Indpls. Paint & Var. 103

"943 998-2829 926 9322796 IND. ATHLETIC CLUB ALLEYS

L A. Cc. League Sobol's aervice Shop 849 927 831 886

Adams Hats

900—2676 804—2521

885 895—2545 910 782—2541 PENNSYLVANIA ALLEYS

Koenig & Priedrichs 765

Pennsylvania League

951 941

897 949

933 839-2639 833 846—2471

956 890-2857 . 875 902—2652 .M. and M. League

817 , 196

10292856 893—2792

9792772

Old Gold -Cigarets . 958 Edward Boren ++ 867 ev. 792 ..1011 875

Indiana Garage °

727-2391 783—2352

809-—2442 774-2254

Chassis Alignment]

J. C. Mills .Pies . 2 , 8 Inland Reds es im

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Roche, Bruns In Mat Draw

Dorve Roche, 222, Decatur, Ill. and Bob Bruns, 220, former Northwestern University athlete, wrestled for 89% minutes at the Armory last night and could do no better than break even on falls. Roche won the first fall in 56 minutes with a body clasp and then at the moment when he seemed to be well on his way toward throwing Bruns for the second and deciding fall, the Chicago lawyer pinned Roche with a body press. Only a half minute was left to wrestle, so the match was declare a draw. In the semiwindup Coach Billy Thom of Indiana University’s wrestling squad forced Walter Strattin of Ohio, a former weight lifting champion, to concede by using a step over toe hold. The match which was for one fall went 21 minutes. In the opener Roy Dunn, 217, of Oklahoma, whipped Jim Coffield, 219, of Kansas City, in 12 minutes with a flying scissors.

Yanks Silent on DiMag Request

NEW YORK, Jan. 11 (U. P).— The New York Yankees had nothing to say today regarding Outfielder Joe DiMaggio’s statement in Los Angeles that he wants a $5000 raise this season. With_Owner Col. Jacob Ruppert seriously ill, Ed Barrow, Yankee business manager, said that inasmuch as the club has not yet sent out its 1939 contracts—they’ll probably be mailed next week—he had ‘no comment.” “We'll cross that bridge when we come to it and not before,” Barrow said. DiMaggio, a holdout last spring, said he planned to ask for $30,000, a raise of $5000. He had demanded $40,000 last year. Meanwhile, the New York Giants announced that outfielder Tom Winsett, bought last spring from Brooklyn and released to Jersey City, had signed his 1939 contract.

Casters to Compete

Five-man teams representing the Indianapolis Casting Club and the Marion County Fish and Game®Association are to compete in a casting tournament at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church Gym. Both organizations are to participate in a regular cast before the tourney. ————— SAVE AT YOUR NEAREST HAAG'S NEIGHBORHOOD CUT PRICE

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strong’s Victory Gets

Booed as He Defeats Baby Arizmendi.

LOS ANGELES, Jan. 11 (U. PY

; There were few cheers and sparse

praise today for hustling. Henry

i | Armstrong’s decisive but uninspired triumph over Baby Arizmendi. of ‘Tampico, [time since he smashed upward from

Mexico. For the first preliminary ranks three years ago the mechanical little Negro had the memory of being booed. ‘With his welterweight champion- | ship up for tke taking, Armstrong defeated the Baby for the third time in five meetings before a turnaway crowd of 10,400 in Olympic Auditorium last night. He won seven out of 10 rounds from the only man who has ever withstood his machine gun attack and laughed, and he won most of them by wide margins. But

: lit was a dull fight and Armstrong

was a dull fighter. The Negro fought the only way ‘he can. ‘He walked into Arizmendi in the first round with both hands flailing and he kept right on walking until his blood-streaked right

|arm was lifted in victory by Referee George Blake.

The best way to describe the pace at which the two little brown men battled is to say that that was the only time Blake touched either of them. There was not a single sustained clinch.

10 Hit Game Diz Bagged 9 Rabbits

With Baseballs, So He Says.

TTAWA, Ill, Jan. 11 (U. P.). —Dizzy Dean wouldn’t tell today whether he was throwing his slow ball or really foggin’ ’em through when he knocked nine jack rabbits kicking with baseballs recently. The rabbit story, a credit even to such an effervescent man as ‘Dean, was related in an interview heard over a public address system by. 1000 baseball fans last night. “Me and Si Johnson of the Cardinals,” said Dizzy, “were hunting rabbits in the . woods near Si’s home. All we had was a pocketfull of baseballs, but we got 10 of the 12 rabbits we saw.” “I,” said Dizzy, “got nine—Si one.” Si wasn’t present to confirm the markmanship.

All-Around Man

ST. PAUL, Jan. 11 (NEA).—Bob Reis, obtained by St. Paul, pitched in 16 games for the Boston Bees last season, played 10 in the outfield, three at shortstop, and one each at second and behind the bat.

Little Praise!

Welterweight Champion Is

| makes another strike,

Nova - Max

Baer

Bout in

i

May Virtually Assured

NEW YORK, Jan. 11 (U. P.).--It appeared virtually certain today

that those two clouting Californians, Madcap Maxie Baer and young

Lou Nova, will battle at Yankee Stadium on May 25 for the right to a September shot at Joe Louis’ heavyweight crown. Baer and his manager, Ancil Hoffman, resumed conferences with Promoter Mike Jacobs today regarding the proposed match. They had a lengthy huddle last night. Jacobs originally wished to match Baer and Nova for an indoor bout in the Garden during February or March. But Hoffman ands Nova’s manager, Ray Carlen, demanded an outdoor show where the gate may approach : $300,000. Hoffman told

Jacobs, «Maxie and Lou could draw $150,000 if the fought in San Francisco. Why should they go into the Garden and fight for a smaller gate?” Carlen told Jacobs virtually the same thing over the telephone from San Francisco. Last week “Uncle Mike” was considering a possible indoor match in which Tony Galento, Jersey saloon keeper, would tangle with either Baer or Nova. But a chat with Chairman John J. Phelan of the New York Boxing Commission apparently convinced Jacobs that Galento would not be allowed to fight in this state for some time. Moreover, Hoffman and Baer prefer Nova as an opponent. They rate him second only to Champion Louis as a gate attraction.

Strikes to Spare

Twenty-fourth of a Series

By DON BEATTY World All-Events Champion ? A game consists of 10 frames. The bowler is allowed two balls in each frame to knock down the 10 pins.

If the player does not knock down 10 pins with two balls, he counts only the number of pins knocked down, and it is marked in this way (9—) on the score sheet. . If the player make a spare . . . knocks down all the pins with' two balls, he counts 10, plus.the number of pins knocked down with the first ball of the succeeding frame, The spare is marked in this way (/) on the score sheet. If the player makes a strike . .

-| knocks down all the pins wita the

first ball, he counts 10, plus the number of pins knocked down with the next two balls. It is marked this way (X) on the score sheet:

! "3 7 1 Tl

——

gC

If in the next frame, the bowler the score

7 |

sheet shows two X’s. But we still cannot count up, because only two balls have been rolled. Next the bowler Knocks down nine pins with his first ball and gets the other one with his second, making a spare. For the first frame, we count 10, plus 10 for the next strike and nine for the first ball in the third frame . . . for a total of 29. For the second frame, we count 10, plus nine and one for the next two balls for a total of 20. With the 29 in the first frame, this amounts to

29144

The bowler rolls another strike. For the third frame we count 10, plus 10 for ‘the next ball which was a strike.

1 21 3

PRD

In the fifth, sixth, and seventh

31] 4

U

L

8 | 2

LU

7

4 6

L

fraimes, he rolls three more strikes.

4

q

In the eighth frame, he knocks down nine pins, but fails to get the remaining one with his second. This is an error, and is marked this way (=).

4] 5] 6

71819

S

LL

In the ninth frame, he gets a 7-10 railroad, marked thus (O), then disposes of one of the remaining pins.

Since he gets a strike on the first

ball of the last frame, he is allowed to roll two more balls. He makes two more strikes. We figure up and mark the total score:

S|]6] 716191] 10

NEXT—Bowling etiquetté,

Boston Extends Lead in Hockey

y United Press s The Boston Bruins were on top

by five points today with the National League hockey season at the halfway mark. They picked up two points on the second-place New York Rangers last night by defeating the Chicago Black Hawks, 3-1, while the Rangers were losing, 1-0, to the New York Americans in an overtime game. Detroit’s Red Wings smothered the last-place Canadiens, 3-0.

‘race.

17 Sprinters Entered In Inaugural.

MIAMI, Jan. 11 (U. P.).—Hialeah Park opened a 46-day racing meet today and track officials hoped it would be a banner season. ‘The pronioters were not o enough, however, to meeting would surpa record attendance .and wagering when 514,395 persons passed $22,= 076,243 through the pari-mutuel windows. Feature of today’s opening proe gram, expected to draw 20,000 fans, will be the 11th running of the $5000-added Hialeah Inaugural Handicap with a field of 17 sprint ers. ‘Wise Prince, owned: by Felix Spa= fola, was top-weighted with 120 pounds for the six-furlong dash. Calumet Farm’s Count Morse was next with 117 and :Maemere Farm’s Go Home, a surprise third ‘in’ the Inagural ' last year, was assigned 116 pounds. Townsend B. Martin: will have Bigey and Galapas, winners of the Tropical Park Inaugural, in the Other favored starters were B. F. Whitaker's ‘Mythical

ing, which will be climaxed by the fourth running of the $50,000 Wide= ner Challenge Cup March 4.

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