Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1940 — Page 24

PAGE 24

SPORTS By Eddie Ash

ADVANCE TICKET reservations for the Indianapolis ~ Indians’ opening game on April 18 against the St. Paul

* Saints are beginning to roll in . Stadium.

by mail and phone at Perry

The Stein Club and Forty ant Eight of the American

Legion are running neck and

neck in signing up for re-

served seats. . . . The Stein boys ordered an even 100 and

the Legion boys matched them with a century reservation,

Business The Harry Sargent Paint Co. is down for 50, American . Club 35, State Auto Insurance 25, Banquet Ice Cream 15 ahd Tom Joyce

12.

That's a pretty fair push and indicates the city sports goers

> hope to make the 1940 baseball sendoff a rousing affair.

» ” AND IT won't be long now. .

2 . The first squad of. Tribesters re-

ort at the Bartow, Fla., training camp on March 15, the second on De 18 and the first exhibition game will be on March 24 at Ft. Myers, Fla., Indianapolis vs. Cleveland. The exhibition opener is a Sunday date and marpe the Hoosiers

will get a look at Rapid Robert Feller’s bullet ball. .

Sunday ace gate attraction.

. He's Cleveland's

* Cuba to Glad-Hand Cincy Reds THE VISIT of the Cincinnati Reds to Havana for games March

22, 23 and 24 is being widely advertised in Cuba.

. La Tropical,

the Havana stadium where the New York Giants trained three years ago, already has sold every reserved seat, and its capacity has been

increased from 25,000 to 35,000.

Cuban railways and bus companies will run excursions from all parts of the island for the three-day exhibition series.

” 2

LAST SEASON was Ellsworth Dahlgren’s first as a regular with - the New York Yankees, and he drove in 80 runs with a batting mark

of 235, .. > in the shoes of Lou Gehrig.

This is not a very impressive record for a man following

Perhaps Dahlgren’s batting will improve, for he has been getting

"instructions from Lefty O’Doul in San Francisco. . .

O’Doul, who is

manager of the San Francisco Seals, was quite a hitter during his ° major league career and thinks he can make a hitter out of the

' Yankee first sacker.

Golden Glovers Give Free Performance

TIMES-LEGION Golden Gloves lads who were developed under Marion County Recreation Bureau WPA supervision, were to put on - a free show at the English Avenue Boys’ Club this afternoon between

2 and 3:30.

The boys were to jog through: light drills and then stage sparring

© matches, using heavy gloves. .

. «+ Willard Reed, Open 175-pound

~ ‘champ, was to work out with Keith Shelp, Open 160-pound winner. . . Dick Miller, Open 112-pound winner, was paired with A. C. Lee, Open 118-pound winner, and Joe Sgro, Open 135-pound champ, was paired with Sam Haslet, Open 135-pound runnerup.

- pounds;

Reed, Shelp, Sgro, Miller and Lee, along with Buddy Noel, 147 Lee Prettyman, 126 pounds, and James Hiner, heavyweight,

". will represent Indianapolis in the Tournament of Champions at Chi- - cago Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.

» 2

»

JACK FLINCHUM, the 17-year-old Ohio lad, continues to put over

. winners at Hialeah. . .

. The great riding feats of the young jockey

. in Florida this winter have made him the idol of the railbirds. However, his feats do not compare with those posted by Jockey Don

= Meade in Florida last winter.

=. Meade, who was restored to good standing last winter after two = years on the ground, won 36 races during the first 14 #lays’ sport.

“ Flinchum required 33 ‘days this winter to win 36 races.

=~ Jack loses his “bug,” or: five-pound

. Young weight allowance, on March 14,

and some horsemen say he won't be seen in the winner's circle as

often as nowadays. ” ”

BROOKLYN IS trying to make an outfielder of Pete Reiser, young

- infielder who was the star of ‘the 1939 training season.

He in-

: : jured ‘his arm last ‘year and finds it difficult to throw with accuracy. + Art Nehf’s son is a candidate for the baseball feam at the Univer-

« sity of Arizona. . Nehf, the old ‘hurler, changed his’ residence from years ago.

Rose Poly and New York Giant Terre Haute, to Arizona several

It won't be a soft touch for the National League umpires this

year. . . .'Pirebrand Frankie Frisch 5 ‘to make it hot for the men, An blue.

and Lippy Leo Durocher are sure

von Sweepida’ § Ti Put His Money on Another Horse

. truth of the matter is that Owner © think enough of Sweepida to enter more than a sentimental saw-buck . The Hill bankroll, I'm informed | by an absolutely _ impeachable : source, went on Son Altesse, who ran the most bang-up 12th Santa Anita ever has witnessed . . . 3 The best horse in the race was i! Mioland, who finished fourth ‘and : closed faster than a bankrupt dodgting a subpena server , . . before : passing on to a happier subject, let’s te end one minute appreciating the ‘ ‘big grin that must have spread over . Col. E. R. Bradley's face when he * heard the news. Certainly there " will be no second Stagehand comg ing out of the West to worry Brad- - ley and Bimelech at the Downs in - May.

HAM Ef haf en 4 BIER Pci Ha oh

ChE ra w nti

Nervy, Anyway

If anyone ever doubted Mike £ Jacobs’ sheer courage, he knows : better now. , . . Jacobs’ action in announcing a Tony Galento-Max :* Baer engagement is parhaps the *. most outstanding example of geni: nine nerve since Horatio defended i: the bridge. . . . If that one catches i on I'm personally going to match i Prince Mike Romanoff with the : winner of the next one-punch em- * broglio at the Vine Street Brown . Derby and charge $1000 a ticket. . > Neither camp 1s pleased with the 5» E posipunement of the Ceferino Gar- © cia-Henry Armstrong’ middleweight © title fight. . . . Actually Los Angeles “ should be chided about the recep- = tion it is giving that bout. ., , The «two local bexers are being given less

© the sponsors of the newest ham 'n 5 - eggs plan. ,.. . They'd get more >. publicity if they were fighting on an : iceberg in the upper arctic. . = . The Chicago Cubs started train-

PHELIEE os than

= among the absentees: were Pitcher : Diz’ Dean, Outfielder Hank Lieber, = ££ Outfielder Augie Galan and In- “ fielder Stan Hack . ... Lieber, Galan 5 * and Hack are hold-Buts and Dean is a hold-up. .7.° The latest tip + is that Seabiscuit’ won’t really run until the. four bandages are taken off the rheumatic old boy’s four rheumatic -legs. . . arrives shortly to look over his new coaching job. at Loyola. . . « If he doesn’t gel any more co-operation than his predecessor, Mike Pecarayich, Mr." Smith will go to Siberia instead of" “Washington.

La Cava Coming Back

- Dean I CT ‘the U. 8. C. track goach, says Gil La Cava finally is

inn fhe

Ww

BE ik wh

RARE Brn

form. . . . La Cava, son of the film director ‘of the same name, ¢% holds the world interscholastic record at six feet, seven and a quarter b ches. : . ~ Is there any tennis tourament ‘that Bobby Riggs hasn’t

oy

. We've all been griping the .lack of !

; attention in their qwn town :thani.

ji ine at Catalina Island today and].

. Clipper Smith

getting back into his best high-{

By HENRY M’'LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent LOS ANGELES, Feb. 23.—Putting the sport shot here and there: One-sentence summary of the sixth Santa Anita Derby—the field was as short on quality as the winner was long on price

. + » the brutal H. C. Hill of Stockton, Cal., didn’t him in the Kentucky Derby or bet

on the gelding’s chances yesterday.

stake horses in California that we've forgotten about the famine at Miami and New Orleans. . . . olds aren't running this early and the good older hides all have broken down. . .. If it keeps up the tracks may have to take a tip from the Indianapolis Speedway race and install repair kits aleng the rail. Eric Tipton won't see the Rose Bowl again this year. . . Connie Mack hasn't invited the former Duke half back to train with the Philadelphia Athletics regulars at Anaheim, Cal. . . , Tipton is being routed to Toronto. . . ., Headline in a local newspaper—{ ‘Arturo Godoy Heads Stage Revue at Paramount Theater.” . . . Oh, well, Tommy Farr wasn't even a dancer, 8 8 8

Maxie: ‘Baer . . the old wine ‘and dance man,

5 A. C. Waits Meet

The I. A. C. squash team will meet the Pendennis Club of Louisville, Ky. here Saturday afternoon, March 9. The Louiscville outfit was: vic-

torious in a previous match this si x J Massey,

The truth is that the good 2-year-|F. B.

1P. Sireibeck, Rrinterat

{Illinois F ive Wins

§ | first game of the Central

Gaffed Galois

Eddie Mader . . . some punches for the Kins,

Fight Tonight

For Finns

TEN-ROUND MAJIN EVENT Eddie Mader, New York City, vs. Eddie Boyles, Cleveland. Heavyweights.

TEN-ROUND SEMI-WINDUP | Buddy Millard, Indianapolis, vs. Young Harry Wills, Cincinati.. Heavyweights.

FOUR-ROUND PRELIMINARIES

Joe Leta, Cincinnati, vs. Young Tony Canzoneri, Indianapolis, Featherweights. Art Shipley, Covington, Ky., vs. Willard Troutman, Indianapolis. Welters.

Gib Jones, Chattanooga, Tenn. vs. Noble Bowers, Indianapolis. Light heavies.

Wesley Kemp, Indianapolis, vs. Ti. ger Kiggins, Indianapolis Middle. weights.

Indianapolis fight fans will have an opportunity to do their bit for the Fighting Finns as they atten the local Finnish Relief Fund boxing show tonight at the Armory, one of more than a hundred such events promoted in various citiés

under Herbert Hoover's Finnish Relief Commission. The local promoters have proniised an entertaining card of fistic events, with heavyweights hogging the spotlight in the 10-round feature and the 10-round semi-windup. Four four-round preliminary matches will start things off. Outstanding tonight will be the fiist local appearance of Eddie Mader of New York, the fighter who whipped Tony Galento and later secured: a draw with the Two-Tonner. Mader’s opponent, Eddie Boyles of Cleveland, boasts a good record: of wins over some of the beter known. pugs here in the Middle West. The show is to get under way promptly at 8:30. Reserved seat tickets will be on sale af the Claypool Hotel drug - store ‘and the Lemcke Service Shop until 6 o'clock, after which thé seat sale will be transferred to the Armory boxofice.

Bowling

The bowling triumvirate today stacks up like this: 1-=Roy Byrd, 705, Alpha. 2-=Wayne Clarkson, 676, Parkway Recreation. 3-=Vaughn Cooke, 639, Printcraft. Last night's leaders; Roy Byrd, Alpha 3 Wayne arth Parkway Vaughn Cooke, Printcrait a, Universal ....... . Benefiel, date nate cevesles oe Shaw, Parkw J. Barrett, St. Philip's F. Pavey, Parkway Heaton, Universal Sellman Printcraft thright, Parkway Longworth, Universal Woirhaye, Universal Downs, Schwitzer Cummins .... Mundt, Universal J. ‘Pearson, Parkway R. Stuart, Parkway Ross, Ayres Kelley, Intermediate theenccssonne Sauter Sr., St. Catherine's ‘ee Fegeler, Universal } Chase, Parkway Hale, Intermediate .. H. Duke. A Burns,

tkins Printeraft Sutphin, Universal ........... Otting, Deer Plumbins Merle Barrett, Indpls, Water . Dave Kelleow, Lager Fauch, Parkway vis . Livingston, Related Foods . Matthews, Intermediate H, oirhaye, St. Catherine's.....;.. McManus, Intermediate .......... : Lauck, Koc . veo ond ve Godwin, Intermediate ’ Jim Reed, Related Foods ... H. roman St. Catherine's . Lauck, Koc oh ome Rafferty, An Catherire’s’ Farr, Lager

Burkhardt, Atki G. Kelsey, Al ha aefeeve J. Barrett, Sf. Philip's’ Reynolds, Printcraft .. devenes Glen Camphell. Universal . i Vossen, Diamond Chain Gueissers Intermediate Min 2D agrond Chain i Jiivercal . Pavey. Parkwa Springer, Intermediate Pullin, Intermediate Benner, Related Fouds 3 . ester Atherine’s .. G. Zix, Printcraft y

Watness, Atkins ........, . Rudback. Universal ............. Mulry, Parkway ,

In Deaf Meet

victory over Wisconsin toddy in the States basketball tournament for schools for the deaf, heing Played at the Silent Hoosiers’ gym, T. Burris sank seven field goals and three free throws to pace the

with 10 and nine points respectively, were high for the losers. Illinois held a 28-12 edge at the half. The Hoosiers were to make their first start in the afternodn session against Missouri. “Wisconsin was to meet Ohio in the third daylight tilt, while Illinois will tangle with Missouri and the Hoosiers will engage Ohio this evening. The Hoosiers, winners itl eight of 10 games this season, were expected to be in top shape for the tournament. Team members are: Grimes, Hanyzewski, ‘Henderson, B e.r g,

| Western

“- i19 | together,

5 {signs 2 N. I. H. S. C. western division. They like to get together with their

The Illinois team scored a 50-31!

victors, while Fitch and Boettcher]

But ba Yost Eye on All

There's Still Some Tiffs To Be Worked Out

By J. E. O'BRIEN

is in the awkward position today of trying to keep one eye

team and the other tothe

er’s Circle Tower office. id This afternoon the I. H. S. A. A. Board of Control was to meet

cle traffic and draw opponents for the sectional, regional, and final tournaments. The pairings will be put down in black and white this evening and released to Hoosier citizenry in = tomorrow’s Times. This evening Mr. Fan’s team and lots of others will get in their final licks before they start playing for keeps next week.

“Most Titles Decided

Most of the league titles have been decided, but championship ar-

guments still are to be settled in

the Southern and Northeastern Conferences and in the western division of the N. I. H. S. C. Washington’s Hatchets, unbeaten down South, will entertain Glenn Bretz’s Bloomington five, while the Vincennes Alices, now the leader

laccording to the complicated point

system, plays Evansville Bosse. But paradoxically enough, Vincennes’ only chance to take the championship is for both the Alices and the Hatchets to lose. Auburn, current pacesetter in the Northeastern Conference, takes on Hartford City tonight. Should Auburn lose, the title will have to be cut four ways, with Pt. Wayne North and South and Hartford oy getting a slice.

Big Doings Up North

Tomorrow night's the big night up Calumet-way. ~ East Chicago Washington visits Gary Froebel, and the Senators will have to cop this one to get a half portion of the division = championship. Otherwise it’s all Gary Lew Wallace’s. : Chief among the non-conference engagements is tonight's tussle between Central of South Bend and Elwood. The South Bend ’Bears only defeat this month was a two-

wood dropped a 30-29 verdict to the club. That's good evidence of what can be expected in this affair. Coach Burl Friddle’s Ft. Wayne South Side Archers, whose tournament support is gaining rapidly, wind up their card with a two-game downstate ‘road trip. Tonight the Archers will meet New Albany and tomorrow will move a couple of miles to engage Jeffersonville.

Hot Time at Ft. Wayne Meanwhile, back in Ft. Wayne a couple of red-hot affairs will be raging, Bob Nulf’s North Siders, victors in six straight games, will entertain the Huntington Vikings, while those Giants of Marion will meet Ft. Wayne Central. Huntingburg, which has confined itself for ‘the most part to" southwestern Indiana competion, comes out of Dubois County to piay Burris at Muncie. The Burris Owls, apparently in a late torrid streak, have won four straight since dropping a 28-24 contest to Elwood. Coach Pete Jolly’s Central Bearcats, however, are going to bid for some of that Muncie basketball business this evening.” The Bearcats’ foes are Alexandria's Tigers, and the job at hand is the breaking of Alexandria’s nine-game victory streak. That triumph, too,

669 | would ease the slaps handed Cen-

tral this month by New Castle and Marion. If you like ’em close, don’t overlook Lebanon's visit to Lafayette. Both clubs look good, and the fact that they may meet again in the reginal only helps fan the flames.

3 | Lebanon defeated Lafayette, 36-29,

in an early game, but that was be-

¢30| tween the two 1939 Thanksgivings.

Jaspers Plays Petersburg Another tournament preview will

iy be run off at Petersburg, where 5 | Jasper will pay a call, 2 2{clubs will be thrown together in

These two

the sectional on the same floor, Evansville Central and Bedford will play their usual windup game this time at the Stone

City. Bedford has lost Tecent

Ilgames to Vincennes, North Vernon,

Seymour and Martinsville, but are expected to be a bit too tough for Mark Wakefield's young Bears. Logansport and Frankfort will

5{meet in a North Central encounter 3|that means more to both teams

than it does to the league standings. On the South-Central schecule are the Columbus-Greencastle and Rushville-Greensburg affairs. Intra-league warfare shows little of slackening © in = the

neighbors, and there are no less

Sn than four league games tonight.

These are Hammond-REast- Chicago Roosevelt, Gary Emerson-Whiting, Valparaiso- -Gary Froebel and Gary Horace’ Mann-Hammond Tech. If you haven't found anything in this long menu to satisfy, you might try Greenfield-New Castle or Mitche]l-Salem ‘or no less than 30 or 40 others. But quit trying to peek into Mr. Trester’s office.

Park Closes Season Here Tomorrow

Eight "Park School basketball seniors will make their final appearancé on the home floor tomorrow evening when the Reichel five takes on New Point High School. Last-year men on the Park squad are Capt. Alder Breiner, Harold Miller, Arnold Sanders, Jim Chapman, Norman Williams, Bill Elder, Don Davidson and John Lathrop.

ROOFING =; 1 19 ln “liosnng, vom. STRIP SHINGLE $3.70

slate surfaced, ‘per square ,.....

Travis, Gall, Pation, Brewer and L.

BLUE POINT prise

od

The Favorites |

Mr. Hoosier Basketball Fan|

on his favorite high school. i

key hole of Arthur L. Trest-|

eight. floors above Monument Cir- |-

semi-final |.

point loss to Mishawaka, while El-|

8 8 =

Indianapolis’ seven-hoy Y. M. C.

.which has won the crown the last

Coming Up! oming Up! You'll know tomorrow. Complete pairings for the Indiana - High School Athletic Associa- ' tion’s sectional, regional, semifinal and final basketball tour= naments will be carried in The ' Times tomorrow.

Hinkle Plotting For 2d Title

Coach_Tony Hinkle spent today briefing the case of how to arrest or check DePauw University at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow night in the Fieldhouse and thus gain full legal pos-

‘session ‘of his second consecutive

Indiana College Conference cham-| pionship. Victory tomorrow ‘will give Butler its 16th consecutive loop triumph. Included in the Bulldogs’ victory march is a 47 to 21 licking admin-

schedule, ‘The point a minute Hinklemen wind up their season’s practice .today with a light offensive rehearsal. DePauw will be the seventh and final conference game. this year although the team will not close its season until Monday night when Notre Dame drops in the Fieldhouse and stakes its victory claims. Hinkle may call for a light workout Sunday afternoon.

Picard Absent at Orleans Open

NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 23 (U. P.). —Henry Picard, winner of the 1939 tournament, was one of the féw name golfers missing as the third

started today. . Picard, anticipating an addition to his family, remained at his Hershey, Pa., home while a record gallery gathered to watch 232 pros and amateurs tee off in the first 18 holes of 72-hole medal play on the 6727-yard course, An estimated 3000 fans watched Gil Bourdeaux, New Orleans: amateur, and Marvin Stahl, Lansing, Mich., pro, deadlock for first place n the pro-amateur best-ball match yesterday, with Ray Saal, New Orleans amateur, and his pro partner, Jimmy Hines of Great Neck, N. Y. Both tandems turned in 83.

3 Games Carded For Amateurs

for tonight as the warfare continues at the Pennsy Gym in the Central States city basketball tournament. Edwards Press will meet the El Lillys at 7:30 o'clock, Pure Oils and Inland Containers play an hour later and the Stewart-Warner Rangers will hook up with the Roy Steeles at 9:30. In a.game last night the Omar Bakery came through with an upset and downed the Texacos, 39 to 27. Other results: Mt. Mt Jacksun Tire. 28; SoSinved, 23 ES irepractore

36. Wiedemann Beers, 32; Pharmiecs, 25

Headquarters for

SKEET SHOOTERS Specials on Skeet Jackets

GOODS co.

EM-ROE SPORTING,

© 209 EW. Wash.

istered to DePauw earlier in the

annual $10,000 New Orleans Open \

Three games are on the schedule}

Y Juniors Go to State Meet At Huntington Tomorrow

A. junior swimming team will make

its bid for the state championship tomorrow against an expected eight ~or nine other teams at Huntington. A favoxite to take the title this year is the host Huntington outfit,

eight years and hasn’t lost a meet

in 65 starts. The strong Vincennes combination, which placed second

last season, also is favored. Capt. Wilbur Groseclose and Rich-

ard Pang of the local team are ex-|

pected to score individual victories at the meet. Groseclose, who has gathered 127 points this season, will swim the 40-yard free style event, the 40-yard breast stroke in the medley relay and will be entered in the fancy diving event. Pang, a 13-year-old splasher from School 9, will perform in his specialty, the 220-yard free style, and also will anchor both relay teams. He ranks second among local scorers with 84 points. Other members and their events follow: Robert Corn, 40-yard backstroke and starting swimmer in both relays; Charles Ford, 40-yard breaststroke and 10G-yard- sprint; Steve Kass, 160-yard relay and 100-yard freestyle; Charles Magee, 160-yard relay and 220-yard freestyle, and William Stump. “The local team has scored vie=

tories this season .over Indianapolis

Athletic Club, Ft. Wayne, Kokomo and New Castle. It lost to Huntington, Hoosier Athletic Club, Vincennes, Ft. Wayne, Kokomo and New Castle.

Toons Off for Some Championships

Times Photo.

Coach John Schattner shows members, of his junior Y. M. C. A. swimming team the correct take-off as the squad works out for the state championships to be held tomorrow at Huntington. Kneeling (left to right) are Charles Ford and Steve Kass. In the back row (left to right) are Charles Magee, Bill Stump, Wilbur Groseclose, Richard Pang and Robert Corn.

Where to Go— *

TONIGHT Boxing—Finn relief show, Armory,

8:30. TOMORROW Basketball — Butler vs. DePauw, Fieldhouse, 8:15. SUNDAY Amateur Hockey—Sportsman’s Store vs. Indiana Fur Co., Coliseum. . MONDAY

Basketball—Butler vs. Notre Dame, Fieldhouse, 8:15.

College Cagers

Return to Wars

By UNITED PRESS Indiana’s college basketball teams return to the wars tonight after a 24-hour rest with three games scheduled, one of them in the conference. Huntington appears at Valparaiso in the conference scrap while Oakland City goes to McKendree and St. Joseph’s to Loras in the other pair of contests. Tomorrow an even 10 games are listed, "six of them in the conference,

Favor Budge, Perry

MIAMI BEACH, Fla, Feb. 23 (U. P.).—Don Budge and Fred Perry, seeded No. 1 and *2, respectively, were favored to win their semi-. final matches in the $2500 Southeastern Professional Tennis Tourna{ment today.

~ re Stocked Up

With Trophies _

Stewart-Warners Beat Spokane, 36 to 27

The Stewart-Warner team had one whopping big trophy and no end of individual awards today as proof of the quality of Indiana basketball. This big haul in prizes came to the local independent team as the result of its 36-27 victory over the Athletic Round Table of Spokane, Wash., in the final game of the tournament of state champions staged last night at the Fieldhouse. The first half simmered down to a scoring duel between Sally Sude dith of the locals and big John Kosich, Spokane center. ‘Locals Are Pushed

S-W five all the way, Kosich hit one near the end of the first quarter to bring Spokane to within four points of the eventual winners at 9 to 5. Suddith’s long one sent Stewart-Warner away again, but two: fielders by Kosich and a pair of free throws by Hooper put Spokane right behind the Hoosiers again. Two field goals by Kearns near the end of the period brought the count to Stewart-Warner, 21; Spokane, 17, but that was the begine ning of the ‘end for Spokane.

personal route, and his height was missed at both ends of the floor. Spokane had its troubles getting in close and was as cold on long shots as the winds that blow in on the home town. Obde Bros. Help Out A pair of goals by the Obde brothers helped the Spokane cause late in the game, but Stewart= Warner went into what one loyal fan called the ‘‘merry-go-round” to control ‘the ball and preserve the lead. Cited as the all-tournament team were Bob Finnegan of Bismarck and Moose Nelson of Kenosha, fore wards; Jerome Carroll, Wichita, center, and Sally Suddith, Indian apolis, and Al Hooper Spokane, guards. Suddith was presented the Kay Jewelry award for the highest in dividual scorer and Kosich of the Spokane team was given the Dave Klor sportsmanship award. The summary: Stowari- War, (36). game. Cramer,c. . Suddith, 8. 'e Funke.g.. NA

Moire. g.

Totals ..13 10 14| Totals ...11 Score at Half—Stewart-Warner. - 22; Spokane, 17.

Y Club to Sponsor Archery Show

An ‘archety demonstration and exhibition of equipment, sponsored by the Y. M. C. A. Archery Club, will be held next Friday evening on the. Central Y. M. C. A. indoor range. Novelty exhibitions will be staged and experienced archers will demonstrate their techniques. The pube

Spokane (27). .

PP ; 3IRglandt.. see 2|Kosich,c. 3| Hooper, g:. dee 1{Kerms,

3|GObde, oBetern «0

Le gun 9 3

Pe

sdnanie] | covmoswn

Br had J

lic is invited.

Open Every Sat. Nite to 9 P.M.

Buy This Thrifty Way

Hundreds of business, professional and shop men buy here because Leon Clothes look better, fit better, wear better and are priced right plus the convenience of setting their own payments and payment dates. Find out how . easy it is to buy the Leon way.

LEON

TAILOR SHOP

TOPCOAT i 0'COAT

Leon Says: T his Ad Is

Unless You Read It and Take Advantage of My Big Values in

Tailored SUITS

SSS

>

>

SS

YOU'LL SAVE (up to to $13) and BE BETTER SATISFIED with a :

READY-FOR-SERVICE SUIT

FINER FABRICS — BETTER TAILORING—LONGER Vas

AKE. AS LONG AS 32 WEEKS TO PAY

TAILORING CO. : 7 Male Fie] Block. He

FOR oy

and :

COATS

TE Leon

"Gives You!

Choice oi over 900 « new Spring. rand’ Year-Round - Patterns. in a’ wide selection of ‘shades A n Fi : _ fabrics. © © % * 8 ow Correct styling for men a nd young men. * * : Skilled bench tailoring t hat ‘molds your. garment fo fit your . body. i 8

Expert fitting.

\

‘Although the Round Table crew .|never held the lead, it pushed the

Big Kosich was ejected via the

EEE

re —