Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1939 — Page 25
| Deaths—Funerals Indianapolis Times, Friday, April 21, 1939
Advertise In TIMES WANT ADS
You Like Sure Things? Then Put Yanks] ITo Coach and Study]
P etillo Expects Times Special ° : ° EVANSTON, IIL, April 21 Borris In Class With Death, Taxes, Mac SaysFaster Grind
Jefferson, Negro halfback on the '35 Winner Comes champions, or that three or four of their men will 35 to Town
Northwestern University football| team for the past three years, has be removed from combat by accident. Man for For Speedway. man no team in the majors belongs on the same
Evidence Heard in Ring Quiz
MUNSON—Mary C., age 82 years. notheg of Mrs. Srwin C. Maar, Mrs. Clay e Mores uson, Mrs. Carl Warren, hursday morning at Tesidence, 86 exter Ave. Services Saturday, 3 Nn. m. CONKLE FUNERAL HOME, 1934 W, Michigan St. Friends Invited. Buriaf Washireton Park. Friends may call a funeral home.
TEN EYCK—Emma Jane (nee Creech) wife of Charles A. Ten Eyck, mother of Audrey Roe, sister of Arthur Creech of New ‘Albany, Ind. Lola Muegge and
For Quick Results Phone Riley 5551
accepted a position as foothall coach at North Carolina State College,
Greensboro, N. C. He plans to study law in addition to his coaching
By HENRY McLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent
EW YORK, April 21 (U. P).—If I were a car
Committee Told of Alleged Donations to Writers And Politicians.
SACRAMENTO, Cal. April 20 (U. PJ) —A special assembly committee investigating boxing and wrestling affairs in California was adjourned today until next week, having heard witnesses testify of alleged rich annual contributions to unnamed politicians, candidates for office and
sportswriters. Lou Daro, Los Angeles wrestling promotor, acknowledged spending from $25,000 to $30,000 annually for “promotional advice and publicity” but declared his publicity was not always favorable and that payments and presents were not made to secure good press notices, Daro said he placed a high value on advice and tips from sports writers. He denied all allegation by Chairman Chester Gannon of the assembly committee that he was “the tsar of wrestling in California.” His brother, Jack Daro, testified he had made contributions of unstated amounts to judges, district attorneys and sheriffs but said he could remember no names. He was asked to send a list of his campaign contributions to the committee, Joe Malcewicz, San Francisco wrestling promoter, said he broke into the promotion game under a contract to give Lou Daro 50 per cent of his profits and a § per cent “public relations” fee, Malcewicz said he had a fund of $15,000 for the entertainment during the past year and a $10,000 advertising and publicity fund but said “I never paid a sportswriter a penny in my life.” The committee announced plans to study conditions surrounding the one-round knockout of Roper by Louis.
Reliables to Open With Chicago Nine
The Kingan Reliables will open their baseball season with the Chicago Palmer House Stars at Perry Stadium Aprii 30. Manager Reb Russell has a roster of veteran semipro players this year and he reports that prospects for another successful season are bright. The Kingans last year won the state semipro championship. Russell will have in his outfield combination Vic Wyss, Charles Uhlir, Ed Powers and Woody Payton. Slated for infield berths are Charles Weathers, Johnny Wyss, Lou Cato and Fred Cato. Luke Allison and Lowell Young are holdover catchers from last vear and moundsmen are Lefty McGill, Ted Percifield, Lefty Kertis and Ray Staples.
Orphaned Foal
Is “Bottle Baby”
BELLEVILLE, Ill, April 21 (NEA). An orphan of the turf is thriving in a shed . .. in a Bellevilie residential section. It's a bay filly by Insco, the sire of Lawrin, Technician and other good ones. The dam, Sweet Yvette, died 12 hours after the foal on the Freeburg, Ill, farm of William C. Reichert. Insco passed on some weeks back. With the baby thoroughbred quartered in the yard of their home, Reichert, his wife, and their son take turns in handling the bottle every three hours. Reichert remains near every night. He hopes to be rewarded with a winner. “Babe Ruth was an orphan,” he muses.
Bookies Pay $75 To Work One Day
NEW YORK, April 21 (NEA) —A bookmaker pays $75 a day to operate on New York tracks when the program consists of six races . . $10 more when there are seven events. You can figure it our for yourself what they expect to make from the man in the street. There were 94 hookmakers milling abou: among the grandstand crowd at the big Jamaica opening and hardly a person was able to resist their siren song. In that section it wasn't necessary to find the bookjes. The bookies found the bettors. There were 18 more in the clubhouse grounds. Many others who applied for working privileges were turned down.
British Amateur Golf Title Holder Sails
NEW YORK, April 21 (U. P)— Charley Yates, British amateur golf champion, sailed for England today to defend his title next month. The young Atlanta banker was accompanied by Bill Holt of Syra-
cuse, who also will play in the|!
championship, and Francis Ouimet, captain of the 1938 Walker
Cup team. Ouimet will not play in| |
the British championship.
“I was hitting the ball well in the! |
Masters at Augusta,” Yates said. “I have hopes of following in the footsteps of Lawson Littie and winning the British title two years in a row. I've played almost every week-end during the winter to keep in practice.”
First Tourney Set
The South Grove Golf Club will hold its first tournament of the season—a best-ball pro-amateur affair Sunday afternoon. The tourney, scheduled to start at 1 o'clock, is open. to any player. be drawn by lot, and no handicaps will be used.
|
Partners will}!
American League. second place.
first place belongs to the Yankees
a quiet, easy victory.
lous.
Irish Pastimers Host to Teachers
Times Special NOTRE DAME, April 21.—Notre Dame's baseball team will try again tomorrow to get a good start on its spring schedule, this time against Western State Teachers’ of Kalamazoo, Mich, on the Irish diamond. Norvall Hunthausen will probably start for Notre Dame on the mound. Two of the Notre Dame nine'’s first four games have been postponed, one of them with the Teachers’ because of snow in southern Michigan. Western Teachers’ has not yet played a game, its first three tilts having been prevented by unfavorable weather, Meanwhile the Irish golf ‘team will also only hope that it is to open its 1939 schedule here tomorrow against Illinois,
Amateurs
BASEBALL The Bohemian All-Stars, Negro nine, will practice Saturday and Sunday at the Northwestern Park at 2 pp m. Games are wanted for April 30 to May 14 State teams note. Write Carlin Rowlett, 839 W. 11th St.
The Bowers Envelope team will practice at Riverside No. 5 Sunday at 1:30 p. m. All players are asked to report.
The Moose team will practice at 1:30 p. m. Sunday at Brookside No. 1.
The Falls City Hi-Brus, who will open their seasosn April 30 at Kokomo, will practice at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow and Sunday at Riverside No. 1. The Hi-Brus will begin defense of their Industrial League title on May 6 against the Lilly Varnish nine at Riverside.
The West Side Merchants are seeking a game for Sunday at Grande Park. Contact Bud Kaesel, 516 Somerset Ave.
The General Exterminating team of the Municipal League will work out at 1 p. m. tomorrow and Sunday at Riverside No. 1. Tryouts are asked to report.
The Baird's Service team will practice at 1:15 p. m. Sunday at Riverside No. 8.
Model Dairy will practice at 1 p. m. Sunday at Riverside No. 5. Tryouts are asked to report. State nine seeking games are asked to write Bill Rider, 1939 Carrollton Ave.
SOFTBALL The Tish-I-Mingo Redmen will practice at 9:30 a. m. Sunday at Spades Park.
The Shamrock Club will drill Sunday morning at Softball Staium. For games call RI-3218 and ask for Hugh.
The following players are asked to report for the Liehr Tavern team’s first workout at 11 a. m.
.iSunday at Broad Ripple Stadium:
Martin, Curtis, Culivan, McKibben, Davis, Montfort, Taylor, Cleveland, Wright, Barnett, Stahby, Reed, Berling, Williams, Lentz, Hostoff, Walker, Heightchew and Huston.
Washington Host
Washington will be host to the track teams of Rushville and Crawfordsville in a three-way meet at the Westside track this afternoon. The Continentals have been undefeated in five meets this sea-
Best Ball Match
Tommy Vaughan and Larry Laughlin paired to defeat Jess and Bob Creuch, 1 up in a best ball match at Pleasant Run yesterday. Leach shot 18-holes in 76 for first
honors. Vaughan and Laughlin had 78 and Crouch came'in with 81.
penter, and out of work, I would go to the Yankee Stadium and apply for the job of building the extra bleachers for the 1939 World Series. Because the Yankees are in. The National League may have a time determining the victim to be sacrificed in late September, but there is no doubt in the The fight is strictly confined to It may be the Red Sox, it may be Detroit, or it may be the irrepressible Clevelands, but
They proved that yesterday in their opener. Faced by the Red Sox, the only club that is given a chance to beat then, the Yanks won, 2 to 0. It was With Rufus (Red) Ruffing doing the pitching (and try and name me someone who can do it better than the three-toed man from Illinois), the Yanks just bieezed. Funny thing about the Yankees—they win as they have to. pitching is bad, they take a firmer grip on their bats and slug their way through. If their pitching is good they sort of relax snd get just enough base knocks to win. Look up their scores of last year. average something like 10 to 8 or 4 to 2. The Yanks are obliging. They'll either hit with you or pitch with you. They don't care, just so they win, To say that any club will bother them is ridicuTo bet that any team will is to play the
Take the life fielder. All the outfielder.
today.
you ever saw. If their
They'll | enough to carry
him most of last
Net Favorite
ld a
Ss
? Wayne Sabin
ASHEVILLE, N. C,, April 31 (U. P.).—Bobby Riggs of Chicago and Wayne Sabin of Portland, Ore,
were favored to win their semifinal matches in the Western North Carolina Invitation Tennis Tournament today and meet for the title tomorrow. Riggs, No. 1 amateur of the nation, meets Johnny Doeg, veteran New Yorker, today and Sabin, No. 2 in national rankings, faces a fellowtownsman, Elwood Cooke.
Kearns Stumped By Commissions
DETROIT, April 21 (NEA) —Jack Kearns cannot promote a scheduled Bob Pastor-Roscoe Toles match in Detroit until he is cleared of his suspension in Illinois resulting from
an investigation of the Jimmy Adacago some months ago. Boxing Commissioner John J. Hettche says he will not grant Jack Dempsey's old manager a license until he is exonerated. And Louis J. Giffels, general manager of the Detroit Olympia, asserts that Kearns cannot operate under the club’s license unless he is approved by the Michigan commission.
Tech Nine Whips Broad Ripple, 7-3
After pitching perfect baseball for six innings, Charles Shipman, Tech hurler, was forced to leave the mound in favor of Charles
Broad Ripple 7-3 on the Rocket diamond yesterday afternoon. Robert Jordan and Earnest Demlow led Tech stick swingers with 2 for 4. The Rockets got to Shipman in the seventh inning, driving in three runs on two doubles, and a single gone vo bases on b5ls;
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fleld with the Yanks.
line of the team-—that axis that
starts with the catcher and ends with the center-
Yanks have in that shot through
the middle is Bill Dickey; Red Ruffing, Joe Gordon and Joe DiMaggio. In short, the best catcher, the best pitcher, the best second baseman, and the best I'll even go farther than that in describing DiMaggio. He is the best man in baseball
8 8 8
EPORT on Gehrig: He looked pretty bad. True, he took the same old cut at the ball at bat, but in the field he was slower than almost any man The long grind has got him. He'll stay on first, however, as long as the Yanks can win with him. The minute they start losing with him he'll be replaced by Henrich. My guess is that he will be on first all year, because the Yanks are good
him along. After all, they carried year. ~
Anyway, the Yanks are in, and if you bet on them in the future book go right ahead and spend your profit. They are in the same class with death and taxes when it comes to sure things.
Blue Devils Take 26 to Muncie
Coach Don R. Knight will take 26 of his Shortridge trackmen to Muncie with him tomorrow for the annual Muncie Relays. The Blue Devils were third last year with 19 points. In two meets this year the local thinlies have turned in impressive victories over Kokomo and Jefferson of Lafayette. Coach Knight said late last night that it was not definitely decided just who the 26 men would be. The Shortridge rhinies lost their first meet of the season to Washington’s frosh, 99 to 39, yesterday at the West Side field. The Blue Imps were allowed first in only the quar-ter-mile, mile and high jump.
A’s Get ’Em Cheap
PHILADELPHIA, April 21 (NEA). —Nine Athletic recruits of 1939 were signed as free agents and a like number were drafted.
duties.
Dynamic little Kelly Petillo came to town today to drive in the Speedway race Memorial Day and right away predicted that all speed records for the 500-mile grind will be broken this year, Petillo said an average speed of 121 miles an hour will be required to win—Floyd Roberts took first money last year with the record time of 117.2. Petillo also forecast that the qualifying speed record will be lifted this year to 128 miles an hour and the fastest lap record boosted over 131. The present qualifying mark is 125.769 miles an hour, set last year by Ronnie Householder, and the fastest time ever made on one lap is 130.492, by Jimmie Snyder in 1937. What will Kelly drive this year? “I've got what amounts to a completely new job,” the 1935 winner said. “I saved my old steering wheel and the transmission. But the rest is new. I'm using an Offenhauser four-cylinder. It's got 270.50 piston displacement. And I'll be ready to roll in another day or so.”
Bozeman Is Ahead in Cue Series, 400-361
CHICAGO, April 21 (U. P.).—Jay Bozeman, Chicago, held a 39-point lead today over Joe Chamaco, world three-cushion billiard champion, in their 600-point match series for a $1000 stake. Chamaco won an afternoon game yesterday, 61-50, in 61 innings and Bozeman won an evening match, 50-31, in 45 innings, to take a lead of 400 to 361.
From Mat to Mask
NEW YORK, April 21 (NEA). — Mike Anton, the Brooklyn Dodgers’ batting practice catcher, once wrestled professionally in St. Louis,
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Martha Meyers, passed away Wednesday, April 19 at the home, 2449 Shelby St.
Fiends may call after noon AL THON the J. C. WILSON FU $530 Prostec Wi Ty services 2p at the funeral home. Friends Ynvited, Burial Washington Park.
Saturda, VOLZ -- Mary Elizabeth, age 80 years passed away Thursday at residence o son, Nobery A. Schoptaw. 819 Fon 2 Sens Fugtner pear, 0,8 ence. riends invite uriai Flora Park, CONKLE SERVICE, i ai
WEAVER—-Earl A., age 37, beloved husband of Christine Weaver, father of Harry, Catherine 1 Jr. and Margaret eaver; son r. and Mrs. Lon Weaver, brother of Fay and Georzs Weaver, Passed away Friday. Fine al Monday, 10 a from SHIRLEY BROS. CENTRAL CHAPEL, Illinois at 10th, Friends may call at the residence, 1111 English Ave. from 11 a, m. Saturday until 8 p. m. Sunday.
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WALTER T. BLASENGYM FUNERAL HOME 2226 8 DR-2570
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CONKLE FUNERAL HOME
BE-1934
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Deaths—Funerals 1 Indianapolis Times, Friday, April 21, 1939
ACHEY—Charles A. beloved husband of Margaret Achey, fathdr of Mrs. Mable Boyer of Columbus, O., Mrs. Lucille Helmerich of Huntineburg, Ind., Mrs. Ruth Stewart, Mrs. Dorot Robbins and Charles Achey Jr. of Indianapolis, passed away Thursday evening at the Methodist Hospital, age 66 years. Services Monday, 1 NK FUNERAL HOME, 1934" we ‘Michigan St.
Friends invited. Burial Washinaton Park Cemetery. Friends may eall at the funeral home
after 4 p. m. Saturday.
ANTRIM—Mary E. of 418 Centennial St. wife of Thomas S. Antrim, sister of Nancy Greenwald and Reginald Deakin, passed away Weunenasy. Funeral services Saturday, 1 CONKLE FUNERAL HOME, Vie34 SW. Michigan St. Friends invited. Burial Washington Park. Friends may call at funeral home any time.
BARNARD. -Fleds, wife of Harvey, sister of Mrs. Ed Fark Thursday FLANNER Saturday, 1 p. m. Friends invited.
DAILY—Elizabeth, age 46, wife of Lemuel Daily. sister of Caleb M. and H. Lee Lit-
and
; i} . Mr: ton of Indianapolis, Mrs. Nellie Sluder of Jasonville Ind., passed away Thursday, p. m. Funeral Saturdav. April 232, 2 m.. from SHIRLEY BROS. WEST SIDE FUNERAL HOME. 2002 W. Michizgan. Friends invited. Burial Washingion Park. Friends may call at funeral ome.
FARNSWORTH—Henry W., band of Julia, son of Mr. Farnsworth.
beloved husand Moines, . Waddell, Evanston, Ill, ices at the MORTUARY, ceri 130 ig m. Friends invited. Burial Crown Hill
FELTON Hush W. of Greenwood, hus-
trude Warman. Mountain View, N. J, and Harold Felton of Greenwood: stepfather of Mrs. Leona Hand, Indianapolis, passed away Thursday, April Funeral Sunday. April 22, 1 p. m. at the Greenwood M. E. Church. Burial Sharpe ville. Ind, Friends mayv call at the J. C. N FUNERAI, HOME in Groenwood after 6 p. m. Friday.
GIDDINGS—Sallie, mother of Edward J. Giddings and grandmother of Georgia Jean Giddings, nassed away Thursdav April Funeral services 2 3 the RAGSAL HOME, 1219 Friends invited. InterHill. Friends may call at the funeral home Friday afternoon and evening.
HAAS—Marie, age 31 mother of Paul Haas sister of James Cox, Libertyville, .; Julia M Kenzie, Cynress, Ill, and Nema Summers, Thompsonville, Ill: niece of Mrs. George Meeker of Indianapolis, Ind., passed away Wednesday a. m. Funerai and burial Saturday 1 p. m. in Orchard, Ill. Friends may call he the H H HOME
a. H 1505 S. East St., Friday
JOHNSON—James Walter, age 49, beloved husband of Etta Johnson, father o Mary Zeon a and Maurice Johnson, passed away Fri m. Funeral at the RAL HOME,
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ALTERATIONS, ladies’, men’s garments; clean, repair. press. reline. Reasonable.
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