Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 December 1939 — Page 12

PAGE 11° FE

Whistle,” has been donated to the Clark County Historical

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FIVE COLLEGES | Fights Security Taxes

YORK, Pa. Dec. 20 (U. P.).— Fred Perkins, 61, veteran defier of

WHISTLE GOES TO MUSEUM SPRINGFIELD, O., Dec. 29 (U. Society P.).—The first whistle to sound the|™UuSéum. news of the signing of the Armistice - on Nov. 11, 1918, the “Liberty SPECIAL

Film Stars

were to be sold at public auction Jan. 8 to satisfy a claim of $105 in

HE

BACKBOARD

By TOM OCHILTREE

APPARENTLY THERE are uncharted dangers to this business of taking an interest in the athletic career of a nephew. That, at least, seems to be the experience of Oral Bridgford, Manual’s basketball coach. For Uncle Oral began to tutor his nephew in many of the mysteries of the hardwood game when the lad was quite]

Sr him how Caps Triumph

He showed handle the ball, how to cut for the| basket and how to get set for those] At P id long shots that so demoralize a de- | rovi cnc fending team. | The boy was an

excellent ve indianapolis. Jers lcers to Meet and took to basSpringfield Tomorrow.

ketball like a Kentuckian

takes to race . horses. | Times Special

And that is] PROVIDENCE, R. I, Dec. 20.— what is worry-|The Indianapolis Capitals, unbeaten ing Uncle Oral] |in the first two games of their cur8 now. For the | yont Eastern trip, will move on to B nephew is Dave ls field, N t Strack, a star SPT ingfie 1ass., tomorrow to face on the current|the Indians’ hockey team, Shortridge team.| The Hoosiers last night added If the draw two more points to their high total comes out that way, Dave may ij; the Western Division of the In-

worry Coach Bridgford's Manual|ternational-American League by charges when the Redskins defend scoring a 4-1 victory here over the

their City title Jan. 11, 12 and 13. [Rhode Island Reds. The previous

Oral Bridgford

Could Help| ‘BLACKLISTED Tennessee Professors Accuse Schools

Of Denying Academic

If They Are in Right Seats, Freedom to Faculty.

Volunteers Are Sure To Gain Ground.

NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 29 (U. P.). —The American Association of University Professors today accused five colleges and universities of

denyi i - By HENRY M'LEMORE enying academic freedom to fac

ulty members. The association, representing 535 | 20, —If {institutions and 15313 members, | Tennessee wins the Rose Bowl put these schools on its censured | game against Southern California |list: University of Tennessee, on next Monday entire credit must not grounds that a professor was dis- | be given to Coach Bob Heyland and missed simply because the president | his assistants, ‘nor to the team’s said he was not a good man; Mon- | |love for alma, mater back in the tana State University, on grounds | Smoky Mountains of Knoxville, ithat five professors were asked to! | Assists, and very generous ones, resign because they opposed certain | | too, must be given to Ann Sheri- pnp Joli cles of the school's ad-| Myrna Loy's pert ministration, and freckled nose, Jean Arthurs| St Louis (Mo) University, or | ‘natural prettiness, and Brenda ETOURds that § Jhstienl prof | Jove 0 ae yo | association said he had supported |

; a the Loyalist Government in Spain| going to provide much inspiration |, © had advocated birth control; |

for the players on the Tennessee yas Chester (Penn. State Teach.- | team. lore College, on grounds that two

During a party at the ranch of nen were dismissed because the director Clarence Brown, and later | esident said they were not “suf-|

at a dinner Charlie McCarthy and | ficiently co-operative”; John B. | Mortimer Snerd gave the team at gtetson University, Deland, Fla., on | Edgar Bergen’s house, I heard a 1ot| grounds that three law professors | from the boys on the subject of ere dismissed and the dean of the | their favorite movie stars, law college was demoted as a re-| Priscilla Okay by Him |sult of inter-departmental policies. | Sam Bartholomew, the blocking The North Dakota State Board back, was musing as to whether of Higher Education was removed | Priscilla Lane would be at the Rose from the list of institutions sched- | Bowl game. uled for censure. “If I thought Priscilla would be| An official of the association said!

United Press Staff Correspondent LOS ANGELES, Dec.

|dan’s “oomph,”

At any rate, Indianapolis net fans night Indianapolis gained a 2-2 tie will be treated to a “nephew Vs.|with New Haven.

ncle” affair whe N g uhcte f n Tanual and Less than four minutes after the

back of the Southern California goal the censures were intended to pro- | posts,” he said, “I'd make ’em let!tect its members. me take that ball for once and Id

New Deal legislation who once went to jail for his refusal to comply with the NRA, carried on his small battery manufacturirig business today with his wife's au< tomobile and his son's jalopy after the Government had seized his two trucks. The trucks were driven away by four Internal Revenue agents and

unpaid social security taxes.

“I'll fight it out to the finish if it takes all winter,” said Mr. Perkins. “I'm going to borrow my wife's car, and there's a dilapidated roadster my son has, and a little old coupe one of my cousins owns. I'll use those for deliveries, This business is going to continue.”

SKATES SHARPENED

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Lr Rael, DELAWARE STREEY

STORE OPEN SAT. NITE 'TIL

ALL ITEMS ON SALE WHILE QUANTITY LASTS

Shortridge collide Feb. 9. ” n ” THE BEST you can say for Decatur’s Yellow Jackets is that they aren’t helping the prestige of

start of last night's game the Caps|8¢t a touchdown just to get that! scored their first goal, Syd Abel bat- | much closer to where she was sit- MERIDIAN ST. LOT

ting the puck into the cage on as- | ting.” Ta sists by Ron Hudson and Ken Kil-| Fd Molinski, the all-American rea. The Reds protested this one, Suard who leads a great deal of the claiming Abel was in the crease | Tennessee interference, hopes that

iil DAY SPECIAL

XMAS CANDY Cleanup

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ih 0'Clock

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CASH DEPARTMENT STORE

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MAIL, PHONE or C. 0. D. ORDERS, PLEASE

ALLER ALS

Silk & Rayon Remn'nts

SOLD FOR $80,000 when he received the disc, but the f Myrna Loy is on the right side of mn | score was allowed. the stadium that the Tennessee Late in the same period Glen quarterback will see to it that most| The real estate occupied by a| Brydson, a New Haven icer sent the | Of their plays go that way. He con- parking lot at 330 N. Meridian St. Caps on loan, scored the second In-|fesses to having pictures of her on has been purchased by the Fletcher

Hoosier basketball much. After dropping seven straight games to Indiana opponents they went across. the border into Ohio the

jl bleached and mangled, Ideal for dish cloths. Ea.

® Xmas Hard Candies ®Faney C reanly | anéd gums,

plain colors an mn prints. For linings, pillows, etc. EACH

® Brilliant Mix Laundered, N a tio nally Usable pieces 1 p o pular 5 lhe C brand, Sat- Cc Cc urday. Only bxs

other night and made it eight losses in a row at Van Wert. sists were given to Adam Wilder and Lloyd Douglas. * un = Wilson scored Providence's goal! BUTLER PLAYS the Southern/in the second period, and the Methodist basketballers in the | Hoosiers led, 2-1, as the game went Fieldhouse tonight, and it is my into the last frame. Then, with only guess that before it is over the Mus-|a minute and 14 seconds to play, tangs will be wishing they never |Coach Bun Cook tried a bit of darhad left the land of cactus, citrus|ing strategy in an attempt to tie fruits and cow ponies which are re-| the score. ferred to as criters. The Bulldogs, He took out Mike Karakas, vetshould tear that S. M. U. team eran goalminder who was sent to apart. [the Reds by the Chicago BlackOn tomorrow night's state college | hawks, and put six attacking players games, I'm picking: NORTHWESTERN OVER NO- | guarded, Herbie Lewis’ Capitals TRE DAME. Because the Irish are scored two quick tallies, Hudson in a slump. | driving home the first and Ken EVANSVILLE OVER KANSAS Kilrea the second. STATE. Those Purple Aces have a| Providence (1) lot of larger schools worried right Rarakes. now.

Indianapolis (4) ..Goaly... Left Defense. ..... Pos Peshnnees Right Defense ........ OUAIT asst vuns» Center GITOUX + oso ss ives Right WwW ine Sherwood........Left Wi

—Score by Dy

Indianapolis Providence a1

Providence Spares—Jarvis, Shill, Carse. Ambois, Chad, MacKenzie, Wilson. Indianapolis Spares -— Wilder, Douglas, Brvdson, Lewis, Thompson, H. Kilrea, Whitelaw.

Franks Bowman | Jones

* & @ When the basketball fates turned against Noblesville’s Millers, they really did a thorough job of it. Five years ago the Millers had won 28 consecutive victories. Now they've lost 25 in a row, which means they haven't won a R free —Bill regularly scheduled game in two |River seasons. But don’t worry, gang— there will come a day.

Hudsor \ e

Mann,

Shaver. Linesman—Gus

Fi Period Scoring—1, Indianapolis, Abel Haden K. Kilrea) 3:28; 2, apolis Brydson (Wilder Douglas), Penalties—Starr, Jones, Whitelaw. Second Period Scoring: Providence, Wilson (Giroux, Starr), 13:43. [Penalty BECAUSE HOOSIER teams Brydson. abandoned it so many years ago, Hudson (K. Kilrea), 18:55; 5, Indianapolis, most state basketball fans regard |X. Kilcea (Abel Hudson), t8.01. PeAalties the zone defense as being about as| i di ' '" up-to-date as horse-hair sofas and stereoscope pictures of Niagara] Falls, For that reason the contention of | Gordon Graham in the Lafayette Journal and Courier is particularly interesting. He writes: “Zone defenses are likely to be! rndianapolis ... slow death to basketball if they are | gjracuse, permitted for many years. There Pittsburgh is some reason why a professional] hockey game can gross $25,000 in Chicago while a pro baskethall game. De ees is hard pushed to gross $1000.” | 3pringheld He used as an example the recent | © nifadelphia Washington State-Purdue game] which the Boilermakers won by a] score of 38-26. Washington State, | according to Mr. Graham, lines up| three big players in front of the basket and stationed the other two just a few feet further out. Aec-| ‘Wi Pl tually they had built a wall in front| inning ays of the basket “so that it was next | to impossible to get inside the foul circle.” by “Set shots from a medium dis- | tance are the best mode of attack| against this setup,” he contended. | “If you are hitting, you beat the daylights out of it .. . if you aren't, | you are in for a tough evening.” His sum-up is that a team with a small lead risks suicide by trying to arive into such a wall and probably will lose the ball by trying to shoot over the defenders’ heads. The only answer then is for the of-| fensive team to stall even if it has only a two-point lead in the open- | a 3 2] | ing minutes of play. { Path of Path of Dribble And he doesn’t have to add, of ployer pass course, that such a brand of basket- ws) ball makes the fans wild with anger, | »2 for the chief charms of the game] are speed and plenty of scoring.

# # ”

Period Scoring—4, Indlananolis,

Hockey

INTERNATIONAL—AMERICAN Western Division T 3A Pts. 30 20 | 19 |

dy » POOD"

8 Eastern Divisi 8 Pts.

a 333x" 3 0 00k 3

16

LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS

Indianapolis, 4: Providence, 1, Hershey, 1; Pittsburgh, 0.

No games scheduled tonight.

(Seventh of Series)

2 = 8 Temple University uses this dou-

TIP INS: If that Greenwood stays |Ple_bivot to good advantage. at the form peak it now has, it may Guard No. 1 passes into Pivot No. trip someone important around | * and immediately cuts off pivot to tournament time. : Kentucky | the right, continuing down to set University reportedly regards Bark-| Wp Mock, on Dot ward No. 5's guard. er, an ex-Yorktown star, as one of} ensive Guard No.

ivot to left, takes pass and drib- | the best freshman basketball pros-| indi i pects to arrive at that institution in! |bles sharply as indicated, setting

2 cuts off |

dianapolis goal. On this score, as. | his dormitory wall,

{on the ice. With the locals’ goal un-|

Summary: | better impression on California. No

1 taken a mile.

Indian. 1

(vention of

53 | doubtedly will be gE §

i | « : | scored a 34-29 victory over Kingan|| Nhite

| Trust Co. as trustee for uridisclosed | Vols Behave investors, records in Probate Court One of the severest taskmasters in| disclosed. his profession, everyone believed| The property, which includes 101 | that the Major would march his feet of frontage on Meridian St. be-| boys out here and hold them to such |tween the Chamber of Commerce

strict training that they would see building and the Indianapolis Ath- | {little or nothing of the social life of | letic Chub,

was sold for $80.000 in California. Much to everyone's sur-/ connection with the liquidation of | prise and pleasure, Maj. Neyland assets of the estate of the late (has been the most lenient of any Gavin L. Payne, investment broker, | | visiting coach in years. The boys| Four-ninths interest in the prop-| have been beautifully entertained,| erty was held by Mr. Payne, two- | and have stored up memories that|ninths by Mrs. Payne and three-|

are likely to last longer than that ninths by Charles S. Becker, real (of the score on New Year's Day. [estate broker. |

Seemingly the team has appre-|

8 og Re Sov cme os NEW HORSE KICKED; | FARMER WINS wl

ever behaved any better, or made al Times Special

WARSAW, Ind, Dec. 29.—“The| horse I bought as a gentle and kind animal turned out to be a ferocious! kicker,” a Warsaw farmer testified in Kosciusko Circuit Court. “He kicked me.” | “The horse was gentle,” testified

Maroons’ Coach "The horse le” tes 1 ristol farmer who so the To Be rr fo Jury believed the former and |

awarded him $275 damages.

matter how gay the party, the members of the team have kept strictest training as regards food, drink and hours. Given an inch, they haven't

Los ANGELES, Dec. 20 (U. P)

J rk Shawghnessy. conch of the AGED POLICE BADGE | v of Chicago football team NOW IN NEW HANDS

cree it disbanded, said today he is “not leaving Chicago but will remain a | there as a professor of physical edu-| LAWTON, Okla, Dec. 20 (U. P.).| cation. —A police badge worn by Lawton| Shaughnessy, here for the -con- |Peace officers for 22 years and a vet-| ihe American Football |¢ran df half a dozen gun fights has Coaches Association, said: changed owners after being in the] “I've been approached by no one possession of Police Chief D. Mon- | concerning a job at another school. |crief for the Int 12 years. After the convention, I will return| The badee, valued at $75, first to Chicago and go on teaching phys- | Was worn by can Froneberger, for- | ical education.” mer sheriff and police chief here. | Though Chicago abandoned intercollegiate football after its most disastrous season in the Big Ten, the Bowlers! boys, will still play the game. “We're only giving up games with | A Good ‘other schools, and football un-'} Resolution coached and for

(played as an intramural sport,” IMPROVE

Shaughnessy said, Your Scores

Basketball through

PRACTICE Liehr’s Tavern and Link Belt will | meet in the final game of the Em- | SAVE MONEY—USE COUPON in holiday tournament at 9 o'clock | LERS, 350 N. Meridian St. | this evening at the Hoosier Athletic | iN ‘RAL, V. Ohio ¢ |{Club. In the semi-finals, Link | FOX-HUN RY > N, i207 °F. heh | Belt vanquished Pure Oil, 37-35, and |} 1NbiANA NV. ino etn St. ‘the Liehr five downed Stewart- KWAY. Illinois at 31th St. w arner, 43-40. ITCHE’ 3 Natviand: The semi-finals and finals in the |} 5 ¥ astern Ave, |Em-Roe girls’ tourney also are] (scheduled this evening at the same gym. Midnight Club end Hoosier A. | C. will meet at 7 p. m., and an hour later R. C. A. will take on Central] Christian, with the winners playing | at 10 o'clock, L

CN N. Minois st. , 4169 College Av EAE SE GEER AEE ES AES - This coupon entitles any white person ta roll three practice games for 50 Good any time of day or eve{except for league play) until in, 6, (Fill in below.)

i ———— Address Richardson Rubber eliminated

Up to $1 Women's Cotton and Rayon

DRESSES

35¢...

Fast colors and washable, Broken style and size assortment up to 44, Hurry for these,

$2 to $2.95 Women’s

Rayon Dresses Repriced and regrouped for quick clearance, Broken size range,

Misses’ All-Wool

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Girls’—=Up to 59%¢—

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Clearance! $4.95

GIRLS’ COATS, LEGGING SETS

$ 3 00

Warmly lined chinchilla and fleeces. Some with fur trims.

Legging sets in 3-4-5 years, Coats, 7 to 14,

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3-Piece sets — coat, $s] 10¢c to 25¢ Dress man’s samples; 2 to Toilet GOODS cum and Bath Powder. Reg. $2.00 Value e 6 CUPS eo 8 SAUCERS e 1 MEAT PLATTER

[Shawnee A. C., 43-29, in the holiday | (gold medal tournament last night | lat the Pennsy Gvm. Honor Brand |

snooker, it rom billiards at a cost of 10c each for 30 minutes of play, Hi: Players must have con- , bon and hoid table thirty | minutes or longer to re- ¢ ceive benefit of reduced

Knights in a protested game. Salvation Army Green Shields advanced when the Irvington Whippets failed to appear for their game. Tonight's schedule:

rate, 7:00—DeGolyer Printers vs. Corner Cafe. 7:50—Eastern Coal vs. Indianapolis Fountain Square, 1105 Prospect

Flashes Uptown, 4169 College Ave.

8:40—Cathedral ©. Y. 0. vs. R. C. Cola. Parkway, 34th St. at Illinois 9:30—Mt. Jackson Tires vs. kv.

~ WINTER IS | HERE!

36x6 Opaque

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Men's Better Quality BROADCLOTH DRESS SHIRTS

A Neal from Christmas sellly tailored om soiled or en, Sizes 14 to 1

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All Remaining

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These reductions do not apply to WHEEL GOODS which we carry the year ’'round.

Women’s 79¢ Val. TUCKSTITCH

PAJAMAS

39:

Limited quantity of these better quality pajamas. Assorted colors, Broken sizes, Imperfects.

Women’s 50c¢

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69-

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Boys’ Fast Color

WASH SUITS

Long and short i he

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years. . . . What has become of SA second pivot for Forward No. 3.

No. 3 then has twe choices: he | idea to ‘make the packboards gH can shoot after a short dribble or | vex. Some suggestion like this al-|,.c¢ to No.*5 who drives in after ways is made the first week in No- No 1 has set up his block.

vember and forgotten before the]

season is more than a month old.

SALE tet Suits

£>-Topcoats & Overcoats Hi-class Out - of = N : 4 Pawn Garments— 2'i-Yard Panels, Pai and Thoroughly steri- WOMEN'S lized and cleaned (on white shoes) ... —must hot be con- 3 FANE

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NORTHLAND SKIS, $7.25 © , / ICE SKATES

NEXT: Oklahoma A. &. M.

Aa

Wom. ’s—Misses’—Child’s BOYS’ STORM a Ty Le Be GALOSHES RUBBERS Black or brown. Sizes to bi Boys’ Cord AN ri, pn 79¢ 6. oy qual. 3 719¢ K | D D ! e AL L o

Men's Work or Dress Style MEN’S DRESS Navy blue, over- 5 0

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sizes Cleth and rubber. 6 to 11.

MEN'S HEAVY WORK YOUTHS AND BOYS’ 4-BUCKLES

1 to 2 $740

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Red rubber soles. Sizes 6 to 12. Cc

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1 203 E. WASHINGTON ST. ommeme JL

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Garment Phantom nets in white, 5

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