Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1940 — Page 17

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average for the year.

Tom Harding, Butler University’s All-State halfback, throws a scare into Alex Tony, West Side A. C. trainer. . . . The fleet Harding, a heavyweight, will compete in The Times-Legion Golden Gloves tourney.

Bill Northern (left) and Janes Hiner, Washington A. C. huskies, - use the medicine ball. - Bill is a Hem heavy, James, a heavy. :

Times Photos.

Earl Paul (left) and Sam Haslet don the pillow mitts for a round of Golden Gloves tourney training. ..., The former ally from Northeast Community Center, the latter from English Avenue Boys’ Club. :

SPORTS By Eddie Ash

A STUDY of the records reveals the reason Manager Bill McKechnie of the Reds was high on Joe Beggs and was anxious to obtain him from the Yankees in the deal for Lee Grissom. . . . Since he broke into professional ball, Beggs has pitched 1018 innings in the minors and majors and has walked only 248 batters, an average of one pass per 4.11 innings. : " |McKechnie is very partial to pitchers with control. . .. He believes any man who has a fair amount of stuff and who can get the ball where he wants to, can become a winner as soon as he learns the weaknesses of the batters

to whom he pitches. In accepting his contract with Cincinnati, Beggs ‘wrote that he

is chopping a lot of wood in the Pennsylvania forests this winter, will

be in tip-top condition and down to his playing weight of 1€J pounds when he Yenupts at the Tampa training camp Feb. 26.

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DOES M’KECHNIE believe that Johnny Vander Meér will come back? ... The answer is yes. . . . Bill believed in Johnny in 1938, after his poor 1937 season in the minors. If ne was willing to go along with him then, certainly he is willing to go along with him now, particularly after seeing what the boy did in 1938. Bill believes that as long as a fellow is sound, he can repeat performances. . . . He believes in Vander Meer, like he believed in Paul Derringer in 1938, after the big fellow won only 10 games in 1937. . . . Derringer has vindicated Bill's judgment. . .. Now we'll see what Vander Meer can do.

Rizzuto, Priddy to Advance in 1941

RETURNING FROM ga trip that extended to the Pacific Coast, here it was reported he was negotiating for a working agreement ith the Hollywood club, George Weiss, secretary of the New York fankees and head of their farm system, announced that Phil to and Gerald Priddy, the sensational infielders of the Kansas f ty American Association club, have a job ready for them in 1941— with the Yankees. Whatever worries other farmhands may have, these two need have none concerning the future. . . . Their advancement into the majors is already mapped out and no less an authority than Weiss is certain they will make good immediately.

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WEISS ASSERTED that neither would be traded or sold. “You can’t just sell that kind of players,” he declared. “You can develop. many good players, use some of- them and sell others. But you can’t sell kids like these. If you do, you may as well quit scouting for outstanding talent, because these are the sort of prizes you are always hoping to come up with, but rarely do. “The kids both are great natural ball players. I would guess that they are ready right now. But the Yankees don’t need them, and another year of playing every day in a Class AA league will do them

more good than playing part time, or sitting on the bench with the

Yankees.”

+A, A. Schedule Ready in February

THE A. A. schedule for 1940 is in the hands of the printers at league headquarters at Columbus, O., and will be released early in February. The championship season will open Thursday, April 18, with Kansas City at Toledo, Milwaukee at Columbus,. St. Paul at Indianap~ olis and Minneapolis at Louisville. . .". The campaign closes Sunday, Sept. 15. Opening and closing dates ‘are five days later than in 1939.

The chief change in the schedule comes in the West, where only

three trips will be made, instead of the four used last year. . . . Eastern clubs will continue with the four-jaunt system, while the inLtersectional games will also be on the four-trip basis.

# » #

RUSSELL BEVELL, 21-year-old infielder drafted by the Reds from New Orleans of the Southern League, has improved his batting percentage each time he advanced in his profession. In 1937, with Gainesville in the Class D Florida State League, he batted .268, fen graduated to the Ciass C Springtield Club of the Mid-Atlantic ague, There he hit .321, moved to New Orleans in the Class A-1 Southern League and compiled a .326 average. . If he continues that improvement with each promotion, Bill McKechnie Sealy will have something. # ® ”

JOE CALLAHAN, East Boston boy heading for the Hub Beehive pitching staff, got a flying start toward a 1940 job when he stepped in against the Giants last Sept. 30 and ‘hung up a neat 3-2 victory for his first major league triumph. Pretty good for a youngster just up from the Evansville, Ind., club and great for a fellow performing his first. triumph with his hometown neighbors watching him work. Rae Blaemire, husky Gary, the Giants’ catching staff, won batting streak at Nashville last

Ind, boy with aspirations of making his chance in the big leagues by a summer which netted him a .327

Basketball Results

HIGH SCHOOLS Sacred Hpart, 23: Pittsboro, 19. La Porte, 39; Riley (South Bend), 30. ‘ Stilesville, 28; Stinesville, 23.. Salem, 87; North Vernon, 22. Batesville, 45; Sunman, 28. Jackson, 47; Butlerville, 20. Attica, 30; Otterbein, 22.

Swarthmore, 54; Dickinson, 36. Middlebury, 43; Union, 30. Rochester, 46; Hamilton, 30.

Long Island, 89; Blue Ridge, 31. Morris Harvey, 49: St. Francis. 35. New Hampshire, 55; Maine, 89. Western Maryland, 27;

Virginia Tech, 33; Hampden Sydney, 18.

Dover, 29; Perry Central, 28. Mallott, 35; Newtown, 23. Holton, 50; New Marion, 13. Columbus, 46: New Albany. 45. Columbus B, 26; Clifford Yarsity, 25. Sauin Si Side Ft. Wayne, 47; Fi. Wayne Central, 37. Lapel, 3% Fran 30. Hagerstown. a: Dunkirk, 88. Farmland, 54; We bster, 38. Lynn, 29; Green Twp.’ (Randolph), 26. STATE COLLEGES Indiana Central, 47; Hanover Manchester, 41; Valj paraiso, 38. Wabash, 41; DePauw, 21. pr 29; Kokomo Junior College,

OTHER COLLEGES Bro | Georre Wisma tan; 49; Navy, 29.

scuse, 27; = State, 24. ST Joseph Philadel phia), 43;

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a isbor h, 73; Carnegie Tee h, 42. hs Washington and Jefferson, 43; Waynes-

Erni & Columbia. 53. | aml n, u, ur; | St Vincent, 41: uns units, 23 25;

isners, io 29; BERhS, 23.

Catholic, 28. Oklahoma A. and M., 42; Washhyta, 29. |B Dartmouth, 59; Pennsylvania, 45 . ordham, 23; St. Jos seph’s, 2 Tatts, 51; Massachusetts Tech, at North Carol ina, 8s WL i ppalachian, ; Catawba. Presbyterian, 33; South ete, 23. : Wofford, 5 Furman, 37. Eishine. 29. Tempnle, dor LaSall e, 37. North Dakota Aggies, 385; Moorhead Teachers, 33. parks Business 00ege, 45; Eastern Illinois Teache itn 50; East Stroudsburg

45; Bake Potomac State, 56; w River Dregon State, 33; Washinoren Berea, 38; Transylvania, . astern (Ky.) Teachers, vi ~ Bethany, 37; McPherson, 28. Wheaton, 52; jul jars, Hi

Duquesne. 40; Bra y, 35. Illinois Normal, ow Western Illinois Teachers, Iowa Weslevan. 34; Penn (Iowa), 32. Dubuque, 43; Parsons, 82. . PROFESSIONALS Kautsky All-Americans, 44: Oshkosh, 40. Chicago Bruins, sit, 28,

tate, 81. * Louis-

11 Shooting For County | Cage’ Title

Fireworks Start Tonight at Ben Davis; Cards’ Crown at Stake.

The basketball elite of Ben Davis and Beech Grove High Schools dine early today, for tonight at 6:30 o'clock they meet in a game on the Ben Davis court. And thus starts the fireworks in the 21st annual Marion County tournament, a threeday engagement with a Saturday matinee. Two other games will gomplete the first night's schedule. Lawrence

plays Speedway and Decatur Central meets Oaklandon.

Nice for Southport

In a most enviable position today are the Southport Cardinals, present wearers of the crown. The Cards don’t see action until 9 p. m. tomorrow and so theyll be able to get a

‘| bleacher-eye view of how the other

boys stack up. New. Augusta drew a bye and won't have to make a first-round appearance. One: ‘hundred thirty-two athletes of ‘the 11 schools participating have been certified for action.

Hildebrand Keeps Score

Thomas Baker of Anderson and George Bender of Indianapolis will do the officiating and Oral Hildebrand, the Yankee pitcher, and Bill Adamson of Decatur Central will keep the score straight and official. Timers will be C. J. Stembel of Ben Davis and Clyde Spears of Warren Central. Four games will be played tomorrow night, two Saturday afternoon and one Saturday night. The schedule:

TODAY Game P.M. 1 6:30—Ben Davis vs. Beech Grove. ; 7:30—Lawrence vs. Speedway. 8:30—Decatur Central vs. Oaklandon.

TOMORROW

P.M. 8:00—Castleton vs. Warren Central. 9:00—Franklin Township vs. Southport last of first-round games.) 6:00—~New Augusta vs. winnew of Game 1.. 7:00—~Winner of Game 2 vs. winner of Game 3.

SATURDAY PM.

2:00—Winner of Game 4 vs. winner of Game 5. 1:00—Winner of Game 6 vs. winner of Game 7. 8:00—Final title gome between winner of Game 8 vs. winner of Game 9.

10

Central Tennis Rankings Made

New officers for 1940 and rankings for 1939 were announced today by the Central Indiana Tennis Association. Representatives of association affiliates met here last night. Re-elected were Frederick W. Hunt, president; Frank Grove, vice president, and Wilson Mothershead, treasurer. Clair Hilliker was named to succeed Dick Drane as secretary. C. W. Flynn, Indiana Amateur Tennis League secretary, and’ Mr. Hunt were named to continue as local representatives of the Western Lawn Tennis Association. x The rankings for men’s | singles and doubles and women’s |singles, based on tournament play in 1939,

follow:

Men's Singles—I. - Ralph Byrne Frank Grove, Terre Hau i 3, King: go on; 4, Andrew Bicket: 5, a James Wood, Terre Haute; Raymond Vongpreckelsen: 3 Si, , Ral rafford. Stanley alle

en’s Db. Wayne Burns: > diay 2) E C. Wood, Terre Haute: 3, Kingdon an Bicket; 4. Paul Crabb and Malless; 5. Rai h Burns and John Alexander. Women's singles—1, Muriel Idams; 2, Helen Fechtm ade Lauck:

imann and

eorge Enos: 7. Florence (Wolff! 8. Beatrice Brittain; 9, ‘Mrs. Sia) Hilliker; 10, Anna Klein.

The association decided to rank boys and juniors as well as women next year on the basis of tourney performances this season.

WASHINGTON, Jan. 18 Bueky Harris indorses the Tigers’ refusal to let Fred Hutchinson play basketball. The Senators’ pilot says the pounding on his feet when he played on the hardwood took’five yea s off his

baseball career.

{ville O'Fallon,

City Awarded Sectional and Regional; Winner to Play i in Anderson Semi-Final

‘Sectional and regional tournaments and the usual state finals of the annual state high school basketball competition will be held in Indianapolis, the I. H. S. A. A’s listings of tournament centers showed today. An estimated m5 teams will participate in this year’s play, which will extend over five weeks. Games in 64 sectional centers are scheduled for Feb. 29, March 1 and 2, with the winners competing at 16 regional sites on March 9. Regional victors will be paired March 16 at four semi-final centers —Anderson, Logansport, Muncie and Vincennes—with the four survivors meeting in the finals at the Butler Fieldhouse on March 30.

Tech Awarded Sectional

Tech High School was awarded the local sectional, at which 16 Marion County teams will play. Howe High School, making its first start in the big Hoosier show, will compete with 10 Hancock County teams at: Greenfield.

Mack Says No

CHICAGO, Jan. 18 (U. P.). —Stan Hack, Chicago Cubs: third baseman, today was the sixth member of the club to reject his 1940 contract. Hack returned his contract with a note saying that he thought he should receive more money. A spokesman for Owner Phil Wrigley said he believed Hack’s contract called for the same salary he received last year. Other holdouts are Dizzy Dean, outfielders Hank Lieber and Augie Galan, Pitcher Clay Bryant and Shvtisiop Billy. Rogell. :

the Indianapolis, Anderson, Danville and Greenfield sectionals will fight it out, with the winner going against winners of the Rushville, Franklin and Crawfordsville regionals at the Anderson semi-finals. Twenty-eight changes in tournament sites were made. New sec-

At the local regional, winners in

Hanover Falls For 1st Time By UNITED PRESS The number of leaders in the State College Conference basketball race was reduced to thrée today as Hanover’s Panthers fell for their first time this season before a determined and powerful Indiana Central five. Central took an early 8-0 lead from Hanover, was ahead 26 to 14 at the half and kept right on going away for a 47-29 victory. It was Hanover’s first defeat this season in all types of competition. Clarence Tull of the Panthers dropped through 17 points for the - losing

cause while Brenneman scored 12 for the Greyhounds.

Wabash Beats DePauw

In other games last night, all conference battles, Concordia tripped Kokomo 29 to 28 on a last minute free throw, Wabash scored a surprising 41-21 triumph over DePauw, and Manchester rallied in the closing five minutes to down Valparaiso, 41: to 38. St. Joseph’s put its share of the league lead. on the line again tonight for the second time this week, entertaining Oakland City while in the second game of the evening Central Normal plays at Huntington. DePauw was ahead of Wabash only once during their contest, leading 11 to 10 at one ‘time in the first session.

Rhode Shows ’Em How

The Little Giants rebounded however ‘to an 18 to 15 edge at

|the half and managed to control

the ball during the second half to pile up their advantage. Rhode, a substitute for Schievley, Wabash’s regular center, paced all scoring with 12 points while Shalley, Moore and Lynch tied for DePauw’s honors with four points each. Lead by Koepke, high scoring forward who counted 19 points, Valparaiso took an early lead on Manchester and was ahead, 21-20 at the half. With five minutes to play the Valpo five still held a narrow lead, but the Spartans staged a closing rally to win. Wolfe, veteran guard, dropped | 14 counters for Manchester.

Vie Saturday for

Badminton Title:

Eight badminton clubs will mee here at 2:30 p. m. Saturday at thelx Athenaeum Turners with the In-diana-Kentucky-Ohio nts at stake. Teams entered are Ft. Wayne, Louisville, South Side Turners, Evansville, Dayton and the Athenaeum Turners. Representing Indianapolis will be C. Falkner, Robert Cooper, Or-| Bo! Robert Schwalbe,!y Cassel Thrasher, F. Martin, Pat

Taylor, Kathleen Thrasher, Billy =

Cooper ‘and Florence Koenig. Individual competition will = be held in singles and doubles for men and women, doubles.

Southport ‘Wins

Times Special MUNCIE, Ind, Jan. 18—Southport High School's wrestling team remained undefeated ba after

scoring a 22-14 vietory 0 ? | grapplers,

Covington, Cincinnati, Buley,

as well as mixed|r

Seek OK on

Chi Sox Sale 4

CHICAGO, Jan. 18 (U. Py Thomas J. Sheehan, attorney for the widow of J. Louis Comiskey, said today he had been informed that the First National Bank of Chicago would seek permission of the Pro-|.

bate Court to sell the Chicago White |

Sox baseball club. He said the petition would be filed with Judge John F. O’Connell today and that the heirs would contest the proposed action on the ground that it was contrary to Comiskey’s wishes expressed in his will. Spokesmen for the bank claimed thdt the best interest of the estate would be served by the sale, he said. Comiskey, in his will, said that it was his opinion that the bank should not sell the club before his youngest surviving child was 35, but that should circumstances arise which would make the sale prudent before that time the trustee would have such authority. Comiskey's youngest child is his son, Charles II, 13. Under the terms of the will, the bank was to operate the club for eight years provided the stock had not been sold

Bowling—

Four leagues and 150 teams have

entered the annual City Bowling |¥

Tournament, and the outlook ‘is good for an all-time record field, Oscar Behrens, secretary, said today. The event will be held Feb. 3 to March 10 at the Fox-Hunt Alleys. The entry list will be opea until midnight Saturday, the list at present being about three times as big as last year’s. . The four leagues that have entered in a body are Indianapolis, Commercial, Shell Oil and Indianapolis Automotive. Entries may be - filed with any bowling alley proprietor, Mr. Beh-

‘rens or Dick Nordholt, asistant tour-

ney manager.

Don Woodard of the International Harvester League wears the daily bowling crown today, having rolled a 721 series last night at the Sturm Alleys. The 600 ranks: Pan Woodard, Intl Harvester .. :

Logan, Mutual | Hard

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Soran Sides U an tiv. .- Fox, Indianapo Percv, Intl. Harverster Bons Indianapolis eation Hayes. bi NWR Recreation: .........

* || Butler,

tional -eeniers are Bloomington, Decatur, Delphi, nHammond, Lawrenceburg, Michigan City, Mitchell, Nappanee, Owensville, Oxford, Paoli, Petersburg, Pierceton, Tell City, Tipton and Winamac.

Prices Unchanged New regional centers are Bedford,

| Brazil, Crawfordsville, Franklin, Ft.

Wayne, Indianapolis, Jasper and Peru. Semi-final tournaments have been transferred from Indianapolis

port and Evansville to Vincennes. No changes have been made in the price of tourney tickets. Sectional season tickets will cost from $1 to $1.50, depending on the number of sessions. Regional tickets will be 75 cents, semi-final tickets

oe $1, and fihal tickets will be The deadline for entries is Feb. 16, and drawings will be announced shortly afterward. Following are the sectional centers with number of teams by counties assigned to each: Anderson--8 Madison

Attica—8 Foun Unta ‘3 Warren Vermillion (Perrysville). ond 1 Batesville—9 Ripl :

Bloomtiela—10 &reeine. 5 ™ oomington organ onr: Bluffton—9 Welis. oe Boonville—-10 Warrick Buller 1D DeKalb, 8 Steuben. 1 Whitley (Churubus inton-—8 "Vermillfon (see ' Attica), 10

Connersville—7 - Fayette Franklin, Union. Jette, 8 3

C tawiordsville—12 Montgomery. Janville—11 Hendricks. 8 . ; ] tur—9 ams.’ °

De Carroll. (Reitz) —3 Vanderburgh, 7

eT w Wayne (North: Side) —13 Allen, 3 Whitley (Columbia City, Coesse and ets ferson. Center nD Frankfort—11 Clinto Frankline-11 Johnson, z Brown. Greencastle—8 P: 1 Marion

nam. Greenfield — in I ock, (Howe). Greensb burg —8 Decatur, 4 Jennings (Zenas, North Vernon, Vernon -and But-

lervile), ond—168 Lake (Calumet: Twp. wr. Point, Dyer, Edison, Griffith, Hamm ond, Hobart, Lowell, Merrillville, Wirt, Roosevelt, Technical, Washington and Whiti g). Hartford City—8 iiing 8 Blackford and sufficient Randolph to cut Winchester tourney to 16 teams. Huntington—14 Huntington, 2 Whitley (South Whitley and Washington Center). Indiana; of (Tech)—16 Marion (see Greenfield). : Jetfersonville— (See Paoli) 6 Clark, 2 yd Harrison Kéndallville—8 , LaGrange, 8 Noble. ‘Kokomo—10 H pe Pi Py er ati Lawrenceburg—6 Boarooin, Switzerland, Lebanon—9 Boone Logansport—11 “Cass. Marion—8 Gra Michigan City 15 La Porte. Mishawaka—12 St. Joseph. Mitchell—11 agence, Monticello—10 Whi Muncie (Gaston) =15 Delaware. Nappanee—11 Elkhar New Castle—12 iy Owensville—10 Gibson, Oxford—11 Benton. Paoli—4 Orange, 5 Washington, « 3 Crawford and enough Harrison to reduce, | .. it necessary, the Jeffersonville tourney to e

am Peru—11 Miam. petersburg—1 1 Subots, 5 Pik Pierceton—14 Kosciusko. 2 Whitley (Larill and Etna Twp. Plymouth—9 Marshall, 6 Starke. Rennselaer—5 Newton, 6 Jasper. Richmond—12 Wayne. Rushville—9 Rus Scottsburg—7 oe erson, 3 Scott, 1 Jennings (Paris Crossing). Stymani—9 Jackson, 2 Jennings (Scipio and Jlaydon Shel byvilleg Shelby, 3 Bartwiomev, Spencer—38 Clay, 7 Ow ullivan—11 Sully: Tell City—3 Per T stfe Haute (W 1

1 Ohio, 2

Emer iL Froeb Horace Mann, Wallace and Tolleston), Si or Vineennes—12 Rno 0X. Wabash—12 Wabash. Washingion—$ | Davicss 4 Martin, Winamac—6 P Winter Randolph.

Following are the regional centers showing the four sectional centers

that will be represented at each: Auburn—Kendailville, Butler, Pierceton and Decatur Bedford—Mitchell Jeffersonville, Paoli and Seymo Braz Bloomington, Bloomfield, Spencer

and Terre Hau Crawfordsville-_ Attica. | Clinton, Crawfordsville and Greenc Evansville (Reitz) Boonville, Evansville, Oyensvilje and Tel y. —Frankl in, Greensburg, Shelbyville nd Scottsbur, a Side) Hartford City, ffton and Hun

FO City, vaaRungton Hammond and Rensselaer. polis —- Indianapolis, Anderson, Danville Pad ‘Green Jas Fetersburs, Sullivan, Vincennes an

Fulto Plas Hatford City) — 16

7 Marlon—Kokomo, Marion, Wabash and

. Munsie—Richmond, Muncie, New Castle and Winchester. Peru — Delphi, . - Logansport, Monticello

an va eh-—Nappanee, Plymouth, Wina-

627 mac and Mis

Arges,

Fulton, Indianapolis Johnson, ' Indian own 2 Recreation. . Pearson, Indianapolis Raherson, Indianapol Myers, Uptown Recreation... . Boldt. Indianapolis C. fobals, Indianap Kagel. ‘Yob-son or : Ww. Lea itt, > A M. ...

, Indiana Shimer, Smangep, ¥-~ Chrisney, U Bremot, In

Uptown Recreation. anapolis

Ben Davis Wins Ben Davis High School outwres-

tled Bedford, 17 to 16, in a match Ba

ville — Connersville, Lawrenceburg, ushville.

ush 626 Batesville and R 623

Following are the semifinal centers showing the four regionals

: which will pe represented in each: Anderson — Indianapolis = ushville, :

Plymouth Muncie Auburn, Marion, Ft. Wayne and cie. Vincennes —Jasper, Bedford, Brazil and

Frapkjin and Crawfordsvill nsporiGiary, Lafayette, an

championship.

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to Anderson, Hammond to Logans- |;

h “Eareyelie-oxtord, Frankfort, Lafayette] and Leban

807! Semi-final survivors will play at 606 | the Butler Fieldhouse with the win6% Iners of the two afternoon games| 601 | meeting at 8 p. m. for the state

class will form the Indianapolis team that will participate in the huge Tournament of Champions at Chicago Stadium, Feb. 26, 27, 28. Prizes in The Times-Legion event will be awarded Open champions, Open runners-up, Novice champions and Novice runners-up. A consolation prize also will go to every boy who competes in at least one bout.

Three-Round Bouts

It is planned to get tomorrow night's action under way at 7:30, and boxing will be" continuous until about 11 p. m. The young glove throwers will do their slambang warfare over the three-round route, two minutes to the round, to a decision of two judges and the referee. No bout is permitted to go beyond three rounds and no draw decisions are allowed. A winner must be declared in ’h match. This rule governs: all} Golden Gloves tournaments throughout the country. Tourney officials hope to run off approximately 25 bouts tomorrow if time permits, All boxers entered in the tourney are requested to. report at the Armory tomorrow afternoon between 1:30 and 5 for the weigh-in and physical examinations. No boxer will be permitted to enter the ring before weighing in and passing the medical checkup.: Boxers’ instructors, or coaches; are to confer with A. A. U. officials

‘lat 5 p. m. at the Armory, ahd ref-

erees, judges and timers at 6 p. m.

Tickets Available .

As usual, Novice. boxers outnumber the Open class, but the experienced group seems to be loaded with high-grade talent. Last year’s Novice lads have moved up and plenty of toe-to-toe bane is promised... The entry list came up to expectations and the current event stacks up as a'sure-fire success like the seven previous Times-Legion amateur fistic carnivals. Prices for tomorrow’s show are 75 cents ringside and the first row in the balcony. These tickets are reserved and are available at Haag’s Claypool Hotel drugstore. A reserved seat season ticket for the five shows is priced at $4.50. General admission price tomorrow is 40 cents, and these tickets will go on sale at the Armory box office shortly after 6 p. m. Reserved seats also will be on sale at the Armory tomorrow night.

Miss Dunn Is 4th In Augusta Meet

AUGUSTA, Ga., Jan. 18 (U. P.) .— Helen Dettweiler of Washington or Helen Hicks Harb of Long Island, N. Y. appeared sure to win the fourth annual Women’s Titleholders’ golf championship today on basis of their scores at the threequarter mark in the tournament here. Elizabeth Dunn of Indianapolis was fourth with a 285.

Marquette Might MILWAUKEE, Jan. 18.—Charley

Beaudry, Marquette sprinter and track captain, rides a bicycla to

25 Bouts Are Carded For Armory Opener; Starting Gong at 7:30

There'll Be Five Shows in Open and Novice Classes and There’ll Be No Draws—Only Winners; Survivors . In Open Go to Chicago ' Tourney.

The army of young boxers entered in the eighth annual Times-Legion Golden Gloves tournament knocked off training today and the fireworks will begin at the Armory “punch bowl” tomorrow night. It will be the first of a series of five shows with all competition on an elimination basis in both Open and Novice classes. The ultimate survivors in the eight weight divisions of the ‘Open

Where to Go—

TONIGHT Hockey—Indianapolis vs. Hershey, Coliseum, 8:30. Basketball—County high school tournament, Ben Davis gym, 6:30,

: TOMORROW Amateur Boxing—Golden Gloves tournament ory, 7:30. Baskethall—C high © school tournament, Ben Davis gym, 6:00, Cathedral vs. Shortridge, Shorte ridge gym, 8:00.

ton gym, 8:00. Roosevelt (Gary) vs. Crispus Ate tucks, Crispus Attucks gym, 8:00,

SATURDAY Basketball—Detroit vs. Butler, Bute ler Fieldhouse, 8:15. County high school tournament, Ben Davis, 1:00 and 8:00. Cathedral vs. Broad Ripple, Ripple gym, 8:00.

SUNDAY

Hockey—Pittsburgh vs. Tndianapoli, Coliseum, 8:30.

It’s No. 12 for South Siders

By UNITED PRESS Ft. Wayne South Side chalked up its 12th straight hardwood vice tory last night over Ft. Wayne Cene tral, 47 to 37, to remain the only

undefeated major prep basketball team in the state and also strengthe ening its hdld on the lead in the Ft. Wayne city race. La Porte sank South Bend Riley, 39 to 30, for the Slicers’ third straight victory in the eastern divi sion of the N. I. H. S. C. while Salem defeated North Vernon, 37 to 22, in a southeastern conference scrap.

Birr’s Five to Play Rens at Richmond Times Special RICHMOND, Ind. Jan. 18—Jim

Birr’s All-Stars, professional basket~ ball team from Indianapolis, and

the New York Renaissance will

meet here tonight in a charity game, Probable starters for tHe All-Stars are Birr, Vernon Huffman, Bill Geyer, George Perry and Ford.

Reweave Your Damaged Clothing

DAMAGE FINISHED Special “Evening” Delivery

Ondiana Weaving (6

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school every day.

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