Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 December 1939 — Page 22
PAGE 22
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
They're Not Jingle Bells—It’s the Butler and I.
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SPORTS...
By Eddie Ash
THE NEW RULE in the American League which forbids the New York Yankees to make a trade in their own loop was received with three cheers by Babe Dahlgren, Lou Gehrig's successor at first base. Babe knows now that the champions cannot get Rudy York, George McQuinn or anybody else in the league to take his place, and with that appreciation should develop 8 new confidence and lift himself in the 13940 batting records. The fancy fielding first sacker batted only .235 last season, but a glance at the loop's statistics reveals that power is hidden in the low percentage.
Dahigren drove in 88 runs and belted 15 homers, 18 doubles and six triples. . . . He had a total base record of 200, which is pretty fair.
LEAGUE BALL clubs usually win more games at home than on the road, but the Yankees reversed the situation in 1939, a fact which will surprise a lot of dopesters. . . . They won 54 and lost 20 on the road, while their home record was 52 and 25. The champions were tops in the West, where they made opponents suffer by taking 35 out of 44, with nine in Cleveland, eight in Chicago, seven in Detroit and 11 in St. Louis. . . . It was a grand slam over the Browns. The short right field barrier did not win the pennant for the Yankees this year. . . . They pounded the horsehide in all parks, including Cincinnati's in the World Series.
Bennie Stephens (right) and Wilbur Fox (below) are two former collegians in the lineup of the Akron Goodyears, who play the Kautskys at the Fieldhouse tonight. Stephens was all-Big Ten forward at Yowa, while Fox helped Ohio State to a Conference title.
Pair of Goodyear Goal-S
All-Am
It’s a Cinch, Both Sides
If You Take Unbiased Look At Game, Though, You'll Call It Tossup.
By J. E. O'BRIEN
Down at Bloomington, Indiana University students are proclaiming, between complaints about the short holiday recess, that the Hoosiers are a dead cinch to slaughter Butler's basketball team by 20 points. Out Fairview way they say their goal-getters are going to knock the socks off Indiana (which is a pretty heartless thing to be thinking of doing on the night before the night before Christmas). They mean it. Most of them look for the Bulldogs to win by 20 points, and one cute | little brunet in English 10la even said “30 points” without batting a big brown eye. However, to take an unbiased
* ericans . ® After 3d Win jim, i sume hme ne |
{it a tossup. Okay, mister, quit | | thinking about that electric train |
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Say of Tilt
Orr THE BACKBOARD
By TOM OCHILTREE
LIKE THE guy who ate the first oyster, you'll have to give the Continentals credit. The doings of the West Side boys form about the brightest spot in the otherwise gloomy local high school basketball picture. It took the Washington team one game to get organized, but since that time it has been rolling
along with the speed of a fullrigged ship in a following Vols’ C afego Takes It Easy
gale. Some of the credit goes to those Excused From Scrimmages; Trojans Tune Air Game.
two fancy Continental football carriers, Boris Dimancheff and Billy Howard. Like so many of their hardwood teammates, they wasted no time in reporting to Coach Rowland W. Jones after turning in their pads and cleats. Howard is a forward and Dimancheff a guard on the starting five. The other starters are Courtney Gerrish, forward; Harold Negley, center, and Boris Adjieff, guard. part in scrimmages before the Rose Remaining members of the squad | Bowl game with Southern Caliare James Tullis, Carl Peterchefl| fornia in Pasadena, Coach Bob Ney
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Dec. 20 (U. P.) —George Cafego, sparkplug of the Tennessee offense, will not take
> " . . . y Young McCosky Delivers in First Year YOUNG M'COSKY. Detroit. cannot be overlcoked as a future great. . . . In his freshman year the youngster played in 147 games, batted .311 smacked four home runs, 14 triples and 33 doubles. . . . And stole 20 bases. Only two first-year American leaguers outranked Barney and they were Ted Williams, Red Sox, and Charlie Keller, Yankees. . . . He topped both in total hits, 190 to 185 for Williams and 133 for Keller. . .. And, like Williams, the Tiger kid has color to go along with his ball playing. Clint Brown's feat of pitching in 61 incomplete games and wearIng himself to a frazzle in the relief role for the White Sox, certainly won no keen appreciation from his manager. . . . Jimmy Dykes tried hard to trade the workhorse to the Browns recently.
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OLLIE BEJMA, the former Indianapolis Indian who “found himself” for a big year with St. Paul in 1938, did not carry his devastating war club to the American League. The South Bend product was held to a .251 average last season and the White Sox are about to give up on him. Joe Gallagher, a star slugger with Kansas City in 1938, found big league pitching hard to solve in 1939 and the big fellow wound up at 277 for the lowly Browns. . . . However, he did not receive a tru test on account of injuries, and saw service in only 85 games. ... He garnered 11 home runs.
Rookies Due to Get Call for and well tell you why.
and Bill Gingery, guards; Robert land said today. Danger—Explosives! | Goodyear Cage Crew.
Alkire, center, and Martin Dragon,| “We probably will give his ine forward. Dimancheff is the team|jured knee more time to rest,” Neycaptain. land said. “We think and hope It is one of the smallest teams|!h® rest will cure the injury by in this locality. The two tallest Same time. boys are Neglev, who is 6 feet, and |, CAafego suffered a knee injury late
Alkire, who is 6 feet 1 inch. Alkire in the regular season.
First let's look at Butler. Already the Bulldogs have won three games. . | The scalps on the Hinkle wigwam The Kautsky All-Americans, win- include those of Ball State, Pittsners in two of their three National| burgh and Iowa. If you're willing Professional Basketball League to count last season, the Butler vicgames, will take on the Akron, O.| tory string adds up to 11 straight. |and Petercheff are juniors and the| LOS ANGELES, Cal, Dec. 20 Goodyears, another league rival, to-| Then there's Jerry Steiner. If any [rest are seniors, which is pretty|(U. P.).—No contact work and a night at the Butler Fieldhouse.| one player can blow up the Hoosiers, [typical for an Indianapolis team. [long aerial drill featured the second Game time is 8:30. | it will be this half-pint jug of T. N.| But for speed, you can loqk & long | dav of practice today for the The Goodyears boast plenty of | T. Jerry has scored 22 points in the tyme for a team that has an edge| Southern California football team's |last year's Big Ten talent, and| Bulldogs’ three games, but that!,, the Continentals in that respect. | Rose Bowl game against Tennessee Coach Ray Detrick has indicated hardly tells the story. [This Friday the Washington team| NeW Year's day. Coach Howard ‘he may start at least three of the| Besides being a red-hot in the | journeys to Sevmour for a South | Jones concentrated on his three | youngsters against the Indianapolis | Blue offense, Steiner on defense is Gentral Conference tilt. and the 10-| backfield aces, Grenny Lansdell,
Caps Given Painful Ice Lesson by Springfield Y D g crew. Veteran Chuck Bloedorn is|the sort of guy who would swipe a| 5s bett ‘t leav hei Amby Schindler and Doyle Nave, Se | expected to be at one forward post, | policeman's badge. He and Bob gy } = aia Yoav nell! during the forward passing instruc
After the painful hockey lesson handed them by the Springfield | With Jake Nagode of Northwestern Dietz get their most fun out of pil- | mpev) need all their tricks for that tion. Indians, the Indianapolis Capitals grimly prepared today for their next Or Ben Stephens of Iowa as a pos-| fering the pill and scooting for the| ..° NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 20 (U. P) series with the team they already class as their arch rivals—the Cleve- |Sible starter at the other. ‘goal. Branch McCracken's best bet | —Bob Glass, left halfback of the ‘land Barons. | Guard Ray Morstadt is the other |iS to send the ball down the floor . . . . (Ginger) Reeves, a bas-| Tulane team which meets Texas On Saturday night the Capitals and Barons are to face off at Cleve- veteran likely to get the call, and |PY registered mail. ketball official, is to join the as A & M in the Sugar Bowl game land and then the two squads are to meet here Christmas night. ‘he is expected to pair with How- Please Keep Off vette police force within the mext 980. 1, was hospitalized today with From every angle last night's affair, which Springfield won 2 to 1, {ard Vocke, a St. John's of Brook- | Another toughie in blue is guard few weeks. Well, he should be able an injured leg and the Green was a debacle for Indianapolis. In the first place there were only 1884 lyn product. Gene Anderson of Pur- | Charlie Atkinson. Big and fast, to use the same whistle for both | Vave's chances sank accordingly. | customers in the Coliseum, slimmest crowd the ice sport has drawn here. due, Wilbur Fox of Ohio State and Charlie regards both backboards as | jobs, anyhow. ATLANTA. Ga.. Dec. 20 (U. P.).—
| The holiday season was re-/ Floyd Ebaugh all are candidates for | personal property and deeply re- Bat i ) . | sponsible for that, but for losing the the starting pivot assignment, and sents the attempt of any opponent| ¥ 2 ve Coutgia Tech Tonal prasery Two Local Quints NATURALLY IT is hard for a| : 14 Injuries today In Action Tonigh
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JIM TABOR, Minneapolis graduate, broke into the list of first-year phenoms with the Red Sox. . .. While he batted below .300 he smacked 14 home runs, eight triples and 33 doubles. . . . Moreover, Jim pilfered 16 bases. . . . His batting mark was .289,
e the Capitals have only them- any y | : r , Ronite | | gam e Capitals have only t any one may get the call. [to muscle in. Who you putting | while the rest of the team worked
| selves ¢ bie | y op ‘ | i ” ? |partis ’t 8 - selves to blame and Manager Herbie| (Coach Ward Myers is expected | on him, Branch? Bill Menke? |partisan to keep perfect self con on an offense, which featured screen
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Sun-Kissed Trojan Five Mee is Pu rdue Ton ight | Top bowling honors today went
{to Red Stuart, who bunched games of 222, 235 and 217 in the City {League at the Pritchett plant last {night for a 674 total. | The runnerup was Joe Beatty, {with a 671 in the Fountain Square |Recreation League. He showed games of 211, 225 and 235. Third ‘spot was taken over by Leo Ahearn, who fired 214-212-238—664 in the {Commercial League at the Fox-
Bowling—
TONIGHT'S COLLEGE CARD Southern California at Purdue. Huntington at Central Normal Carroll at Indiana State.
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By UNITED PRESS Those sun-kissed Trojans of Southern California will play Purdue tonight at Lafayette in the first of a three-game basketball inva- R gion by West Coast teams. \ \ a8 ‘Hunt plant. Washington State will come into § \ | Yee Tiet ‘oF “00” pizimien: the Purdue fieldhouse tOMOITOW S& \ RE, te cE es night, and Oregon, defending Pa- && | Beatty, Fountain Square Recreation... cific Coast and national collegiate champion, will visit the Boiler- { makers Saturday night. } Ralph Vaughn, former Frankfort Ind., high school ace, is expected to be the big gun in the Trojan attack. Other likely U. S. C. starters are Morrison at forward, Sears at cen- \ ter. and McGarvin and Lippert at 3 guards. The Purdue lineup will in- § clude Igney and Sprowl, forwards; Fisher, center, and Beretta and. Yeager, guards.
Manchester Nears Top
Manchester was only one game § behind Anderson in the Indiana § College conference hardwood race, as a result of the Spartans’ 73 to 3¢ triumph over Taylor last night. In other college games last night Evansville showed a world of power in dishing out a 72-43 pasting 0 isville; Carroll College droppe . ag to 31; St. Joseph's | Ralph Vaughn, the former dropped a 30 to 27 decision to Illi-| Frankfort Hot Dog, hasn't cooled nois State Normal, and Wabash| off any since he departed his Hootook its third og EG sier homeland to ‘gain ‘more fame oO i Bro © to 2. 8 | as a basketball wizard with SouthManchester's regulars saw action| ern California. He'll be in the game against Purdue at Lafayette
for only 16 minutes last night, six| tonight and against Notre Dame
of them in the first half, but they | for Ralph.
a for CHRISTIE ~ WOOL SHIRTS
Assorted Colors § 3
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{ Bill Lee, City ... | W. Brehob, Pritchett Recreation | Weber, Power & Light | Schuck, Penn Recreation
Up
Bruins and Leafs Share First Place
By UNITED PRESS Boston's Bruins shared first place in the National Hockey League today with the Toronto Maple Leafs, atter beating them, 3-2, in an overtime game before 14,000 last night. Goals by Woody Dumart and Bobby Bauer, both on passes from Milt Schmidt in the overtime, clinched the victory. The New York Rangers ran their unbeaten string to 10 games by defeating the Montreal Canadiens, |5-2. Four players—Phil Watson and Ott Heller of the Rangers and Lou Trudel and Polly Drouin of the
Canadiens — received major penal- B ush= Feezle ties for fighting in the first period. | Eosemmm—mn136 £E. Washington St.
Dick Siebert, Indianapolis former first sacker, picked up in form for the Philaceiphia Athletics, played 101 games and batted 2%4.... Lewis told them so in no uncertain ‘ty send out the follow ,| Besides the aforementioned trio, trol in a game like that Butler-Iowa He got six homers, three triples and 23 doubles. terms. 5 With Five M | Starters: YORE Tone RA Tony Hinkle has Byron Gunn, Lyle affair the other night, but at that | Secspun 5a eh Vici Slee . . . dn IN} iy core Wi ve Men , mon : ia | Neat, Bill Hamilton and a benchful the Bulldog fans seemed to overstep | Re j Big-Time Talent in Pro Net Game Orie 3h coins UF Sem oi iy: a Dy SIA, BBE eat: we Latont Neg Pal Do i Plthe attack of Missouri, the other BIG LEAGUE basketball—both collegiaie and pro—is offered Indi- Cathedral and Sacred Heart are | yo time remained when the Mas-| The Kingan Knights and Shawnee | chance to see. But those reserves| They started to ride the officials, | L6am in the Miami Orange Bowl, anapolis’ sportsgoers this week. . . . Of course, you know that Butler getting the jump on other city high |... carts team tied the score. But A. C. will meet in & 7:30 curtain- Dave been sitting alongside Tony Nate Kaufman and Winston Ashley, New yours Day, to prepare a speedged Iowa of the Big Ten and is now geared to tackle Indiana U. [school basketball teams this week, | (10 salt in the Wounded prides of raiser. long enough to soak up a liberal from the opening tip-off and tried cial defense. Saturday. . . . And the Fieldhouse probably will be the scene of light- both having games this evening. lin | the Capitals was the fact that the| basketball education. = Ito distract the Towa players when| CLEMSON, S.C, Dec. 20 (U. P). ning warfare on the hardwood, starting with the ovening tipofl. | Cathedral will entertain Frank in| Indians scored the winning goal in! Easy there, podner, we're coming tjey were shooting free throws. | —Clemson's first-string football But tonight the pros go on parade as the Indianapolis Kautskys [of the South Central Conference |, . overtime despite the fact that | La Porte Handed to Indiana. | Maybe if some of the Butler fans team had little difficulty today in go to bat against the Akron Goodyears. . . . Both squads are jammed | While Sacred Heart journeys 10... were short handed because of The Hoosiers have four victories oq cean some of the expressions stopping plays of Boston College, with big-time talent out of the major college ranks, and while these |Lawrence to meet the Castleton "oi Fi stored away, having beaten Wabash, | +" 0 parrassment on the faces of | their Cotton Bowl opponent, as ex-play-for-pay athletes don't have to become “inspired” to burn up the High Cin five. Both games start) Tp. fret period was colorless. rst Cage Loss Cifletung ai, aa and | oir own players sitting on the ecuted by the Tigers’ third team in floor, they know what it's all about and perform accordingly. at 8 oc Hg dll be the first| BOth squads were in a surly mood . is a ~ gg i |sidelines they would have toned scrimmage. Tonight's game will be the frst! ;, the second period. In one wild| a iy the Potr Jamner lsings down w diets, COLUMBIA 20 (U. P) x of two for Franklin with Indian-| .. pe along the boards, Ken| By UNITED PRESS It's a tast-breaking rip-snortin’| & —The I a. I F004 THE NATIONAL LEAGUE looks stronger than last season and |apolis teams. On Saturday night |e. Capitals center, received a| Another of Indiana's favored high |outfit that's wearing the Crimson | " » ball team had “A one hard works the championship pace is sure to be stepped up. . . . The pros stress | the Gizlie Cubs will entertain theo. over his left eve. Then, Bomber | school basketball teams was re- this campaign. The latest word is| Add new similes: As rare as a ,.¢ to go today before heading for expert passing and when they fire at the basket are pretty sure of |Tech five, ‘ Doran, Indians’ left wing, was sent covering from its first defeat today | that the Hoosiers in their first prac- sports writer with a kind word for, nriami to meet Georgia Tech in the hitting it. Coach Joe Harmon has indicutad sprawling during a rush. His knee'as La Porte swallowed a 34 to 26 tice this week went down the floor | Arthur L. Trester. Orange Bowl, J wi 1. The 36-man It's on the order of a clinic just to watch them perform and young |the Cathedral starting pg > was injured. Both players were back | Whipping suffered from Valparaiso once and nearly blew over the north team lenves Thursday. works out plavers can pick up countless pointers at the league tilts. include Kenny Sn ot v am on the ice, however, for the third on the Slicer floor last night. bleachers and press box in the . | Friday at Birmingham, and arrives | Obergfell Ls » nd - land overtime periods. The La Porte club, which was| Bloomington fieldhouse. AS PURDUE prepares to in Miami Saturday ? Fy an x arnnorst a mM “The Capitals’ lone score came in picked as an outstanding contender| Big Bill Menke does most of the|against the basketball team of the y ex] at guard, the second period. Bill Thomson, for the title in the eastern division driving when the Hoosiers answer University of Southern California in| COLLEGE STATION, Tex. Dec. Indianapolis right wing, took a face- of the Northern Indiana High|an alarm, and Bob (Moose) Dro | Lafayette tonight there is a note of | 20 (U. P.).—The Texas A. & M. off in a corner near the Indians’ School Conference, previously had |rings a mean firebell. It would take concern in the Boilermaker camp. [football squad was given new plays goal, batted the disc to Lewis who beaten Knox, Plymouth, Rensselaer, | two more columns to list everybody | Fred Beretta, Purdue captain and today for use against Tulane in the promptly fed it back to him and Rochester and Hobart, while Val- else McCracken has available. We'll defensive star, has rejoined the New Year's Day Sugar Bowl game Bill angled in the shot. {paraiso had beaten only Gary let it go by saying he has enough Boilermaker aggregation after|at New Orleans. Thus far the big Lamb Like a Lion Horace Mann and Whiting and had material to start a DeMille mob spending four days in the hospital Maroon team has not looked good : [lost to Brook, Gary Froebel and scene. with an infected foot. The infection! in practice, but Coach Homer Nore When Scotty Bowman, Indian- East Chicago Washington. There you have both sides, |has healed, but everyone is worried ton hopes to remedy that when he apolis, drew a two-minute penalty | rn another major contest Gary |brother, and if you still want to over whether the layoff has dulled starts two practice sessions a day for cross checking in the second pgorace Mann outscored Frank- give 20 points, you're screwball |Fred's playing edge temporarily. | tomorrow, period, he discovered that there was fort's defending state champions 25 enough to be out at the Fieldhouse less than two minutes left in this | to 16, in the second half but still| Saturday night with about 10,000 stanza. He walked out of the bOX oct as the Hot Dogs squeezed others. and into the dressing room, and | through to a 34-33 victory. Five thousand are going to be RH here hoe drama took on a note of Washington won its second South-| hooting their heads off for Butler, comedy. t Joe Lamb. eM conference battle, dowing Bick- and another 5000 for Indiana. If RW To set the stage Joe Lamb, ,.n “9g to 20, while in the only| there's anyone there keeping his| Springfield's big forward, broke his gina. “conference games Columbus|trap shut, it probably will be some | stick stopping one daianapolis | tripped Greensburg, 43 to 39, n a|sourpuss worrying about the short " AY Oh oe oot. | South Central struggle, and North |in his Christmas tree lights. 831 | foials got to them. Lamb was| vernon edged Lawrenceburg, 24-23, rn ois | cracking Thomson over the head|." 3 Southeastern clash. i {with his stick. Lamb drew a minor two-minute | LE re oy aunta dis misconduct penalty for this. vron Basketball Scores | Bi vards, Speedway Ss arriving at the box he found that| } |\Greaver, Penn Recrention iT as ga ¢41 Bowman had left. Figuring his STATE COLLEGES E " i i . 637] 7 i hi Tors ar Norman ae ose h'’s | Earl Whitley, Commercial +--+ 837 used by sailors, and for this he had |,.] ’ » 30; St, ph's, Ratliff, Fountain “Square Recreaticn. . 633 | to stay in the doghouse another 10 Carroll, 36; DePauw, 31. Jones, Pritchett Recreation 633 minutes. Evansville, 72; Louisville, 43. wes | Three Go to Jail
39 | side was being cheated, he addressed
Rupert Green, Indiana Recreation. ... &33| the referee in language generally
Ed Stark, City Ju Penn Recreation
Manchester, 3; Taylor, J.
OTHER COLLEGES Oklahoma A. and M., 51; Duke, 14, Case, 44; Oberlin, 33. Dubuque, 34; Centra! (Towa) College, 24. Kansas, 37; Southern Methodist, 26.
| Walt Holtman, City {larry Fox, Hoosier | Murphy, Community _. | Hohman, Penn Recreation T. Herther, Penn Recreation | H. Griftin, Penn Recreation | Fred Johnson, City .| Otis Jones, Commercial ! Hunt, Hoosier A. C. | Ranes, dway
gs Three penalties were called
i against Indianapolis in the third wos period, and the last one hurt. In ot Eddie Bush was sent to the| Manhattan. $1: MeGill, 20. : 632 | box for holding, and Tommy Fil- A RE 0 West Virginia State an | MOT on assists from Lams og] Wilmington, 31: Denison, 26. 20 | Roger Jenkins led the Springfield| gavier. 40: Centre, =8 #19 power play which brought the In- ws Teall College, (9; Loyola (Baltimore), nl p
a - i Tufts, 47; Vermont, 82. ib) disns oe Ra ed es St. Joseph's (Philadelphia), 36; Dayton,
| it looked like 34, .. 817 Indianapolis might vet win. Chuck | Syracuse. 2%: Cornell, 26. " 818| Corrigan, Springfield Wing, drew a| Arkansas db. Oklihoma, 88. ‘ald | two-minute penalty for checking! Concordia ‘Mporiend, Minn.), 30; Moorgis Into the boards, and time after “Ore on. 45; Baltimore, 40, e141 time the Capitals rushed down in| Wittenberg, 46: Scranton, $8. 813 attempts to get a marker. Michigan State, 32; Creighton, 30. .w12| Then with his team still short
Texas Tech, 39; Centenary, 28, Texas, 56; San Marcos Teachers, 43. ase | Nanded, Fred Thurier came down
Washington State, 55; Akron, 33. . Bi Bradley Tech, 48: Carnegie Tech, 42, ¢n8 | the length of the floor nudging the lgrrestern, Kentucky Teachers wBowling CNR | : reen), 3 outheast Missour eachers, | puck in front of him and counted sy s07 the winning goal unassisted.| Omaha, 46; Nebraska Wesleyan, 42. 6% Summary: Rice, 61; L. S. U., 51. cot og St. Mary's (Texas), 40; Rockhurst, 35 803 [Indianapolis 1)
(overtime), 41; Southeastern Oklahoma
Baylor, 34. .,» 46; Central (Mich.) State, 28. on (St. Louis), 37; Eastern Illinois Teachers (Charleston), 335. West Texas Teachers, 71; Drake, 80. Sori Hill, 33; Millsaps. 27. Hartwick, 63; Ame International, 36. U. C. L. A, 46; San Jose State, 33 Drake, 47; New Mexico, 39. Utah, 53; Oregon State, 37. Wichita, 38; Colorado College, 32,
STATE HIGH SCHOOLS Valparaiso, 34; La Porte, 26. Crawfordsville, 31; Greencastle, 24. Fortville, 52; Warren Central, R35. North Vernon, 24; Lawrenceburg, 23. Washington, 28; Bicknell, 20. Columbus, 43; Greensburg, 39. Frankfort, 34; Gary Horace Mann, 33. Morgantown, 25; 23 (over-
me). Culver, 24; Plymouth, 21. Trinity Springs, 29; Burns City, 19. Gilea, 48; Macy, 34. Roann, 27; Linlawn, 24, Pierceton, 28; Akron, 22. Twelve Mile, 26; Mexico, 24, VanWert, 36: Decatur (Ind.), 24. Brazil, 24; Wiley (Terre Haute), 21. Clinton, 30; Newport, 27. Rosedale, 30; Bellmore, 20. Otter Creek, 35; Blackhawk, 31, Wayne Twp. (Randolph County), 46; Jefferson Twp. (Randolph County), 2
Union C ip? 47; Lynn, 18, Male, 39; New Albany, 29,
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Aces Turn It On
Evansville was held to a 12 to 11 edge early in the game, but the
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hy field at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Hershey.
26.
Cash, Unemployment Compensation... Ross Hewes, Sahara Grotto Bob Shaw, Parkway No. 2 Rader, Hoosier A. C. E. Johnson, Community ‘ LW >... Yedeunsen, Comunity \Yyeeesser. ose Giogpey LO L Eun Aces whipped into shape and held teele Is nner K. Kilrea C. Jackson a 28 to 16 lead mt Jie Rail From | Hocke yodbarey, (Indiangpolis) Lewis, Bowman there on it was a ransville. . Thomson. H. Kilrea, Wilder and St. Joseph took an early lead over at ecature y 00 RAR Ry Tilinois Normal, but the out-of-state Furst period: Scoring, none. Penalties, none. five came back to take a 12 to 6] | INTERNATIONAL-AMERTCAN LEAGUE Thomson Tews 1736. ‘Penalties (Indtun- ’ . olis) ; ; ja Yr aa lm 0 8) pa see wn cn en] op ng (ER Ei a nS PA Yy » - > sconquct. oa: or 0 Greencastle Carroll ‘used its u & leg oreaker to win the two INDIANAPOLIS 3 62 2 7s | 'Springtield\ Filmore (Lamb and Jenkins, a (deciding falls from Dorve Roche. | »aocuse : S(19:50. Penalties (Indianapolis) Bush for height, speed and ability to sink »| Pittsburgh 17! tripping. Bowman lor checking into the foul shots to down De Pauw. Both 221, Decatur, Ill, in last night's Giiand 13 boards ‘and Bush for holding. Overtime: teams hit 13 times from the field. wrestling feature at the Armory. 240. Penalties | Springtiold: Corrigan. fof But He rs Oe” De Pagw| Roche was the victor in the first) P| Tnalunipoi, Grant (SoHagtield: Ib 10 free throws while e Pauw session, flooring his opponent in 11 |} an Officials: Bill Shaver, referee; Don Egan, dropped only five of 17. minutes with a bar arm lock. Steele | I 1 : came back to win the sceond fall rir Birr’s Pro Cagers lin 23 minutes and wound up the Sho idg e Frosh . {third in less than a minute. To Play Ben Davis Thump Thorntown Referee Harry Burris awarded the | decision to Len Macaluso, 227, Buf- LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS Shortridge’s freshman basketball Times Specinl 'falo, N. Y. over Hans Schnable, Srrinefield, 2; INDIANAPOLIS, 1 (over-|tagm will travel to Ben Davis toTHORNTOWN Ind. Dec. wo _ Be Holand, Sle, Ye grap- | — morrow to face the Giant yearlings third-quarter assault gave Jim p or minutes. 18 opener in its second game of the season. Birr's All-Stars of Indianapolis a went to George Zaharias, 248, | H owe F rosh Lose | The Blue Devil frosh opened with a 53-25 basketball victory over the Pueblo, Colo, who downed Herbie! Howe's freshman basketball team 14-11 victory over New Augusta last Thorntown pros here last night. Freeman, 240, New York, in nine dropped an 18-17 decision to the Friday. After leading, 22-10, at the half, minutes with a body press. | Southport vearlings yesterday in the| Probable Shortridge starters are the Birr five turned it on to register| Promoter Lloyd Carter announced victor’s gym. Seay of Southport Don Rogers, Bruce Hilkene, Bruce Presents for the 28 points in the third session. Birr tat the next mat prgoram will be captured high-point honors with Christie, Meid Compton and Gene 16 points for scoring honors, 'held Jan. 3, | eight tallies, | Ballreall, |
whole family.
