Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1940 — Page 16

PAGE 16

ii SU ih ESE SS 3 iii]

Southport Trackmen Defend

County Crown Tomorrow

Annual Meet Starts

Field; Schienbein, Livingston to Risk Titles

Ninety-five athletes representing six high schools will bid for solo and team honors in the 15th annual Marion

County track and field meet a Washington High School field. Ben Davis has the largest

Warren Central has entered 22. Southport will be repre-

sented by 19, Beech Grove, 10; New Augusta, 18, and Oaklandon, one. G. W. Gericks of Ben Davis, in charge of entries, said he did not expect any more competitors, although entry lists ‘in the mail Monday will be accepted. Southport, winner of the last three meets and represented by two record-holders, is favored to take the 1940 title, while Warren Central and Ben Davis shape up as the big rouble makers. Ed Schienbein, who holds both county hurdle marks, is running again for Southport, while Ted Livtiigston, another Cardinal, will be back for an attempt on his own mile mark. Officials for the meet are: Vaugn Woods of Warren Central, game committee chairman; A. E. Pitcher, Southport, awards chairman; Cloyd | Julian of Washington, referee and starter, and Henry Bogue of Washington, starter and announcer.

‘Pro-Am’ Carded At Pleasant Run

A “pro-amateur,” tournament Sunday among club members will top the week-end program at the

Pleasant Run Golf Course. I'ntries will close at 12:30 p. m. Sunday and the tourney will begin a half hour later. Low handicap players will be designated as “pros.” Pleasant Run's “official foursome” for the official municipal golf opening Saturday afternoon will include Roy Seiloff, club president; Clark Espie, Indianapolis district champion; Ed Mooney, club director, and | Tommy Vaughn, Pleasant Run pro-| fessional. °

Io [LE

| margin.

at 1:30 on Washington

t 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at the

list of entries, with 25, while

Tired Bulldogs Take a Rest

Butler teams, weary with defeat, took a mid-week rest today and prepared for four contests scheduled for the remainder of the week. The baseball team, which lost to Purdue yesterday, 5 to 4, will play Earlham here Saturday afternoon. Fourteen trackmen leave tomorrow for Des Moines, Iowa, where they will participate in the Drake Relays, Friday and Saturday afternoons. The Butler thinlies were handed their first dual defeat of the season yesterday afternoon by Miami University of Oxford, O, 69 to 62. The Ohioans were superior in the field events to gain the winning

Times-NEA Telephoto.

Flood checks were in order in Cincinnati where the Reds were washed out of their ball park by Ohio River backwater that covered the infield and boxes, and trickled along the third base line into the outfield. Games between Cincinnati and St. Louis were called off.

Butler was led by its cocaptains, William Southworth and Charles Marshall. Southworth triumphed in the mile and half-mile and anchored the mile relay team. Marshall took first in both hurdles and the high jump and finished third in the broad jump. Tennis and golf squads have one match apiece this week. The racquet wielders will invade Muncie tomorrow to play Ball State. A challenge round of play in the Fieldhouse today will be the basis for selecting the team members. The linksmen will meet Purdue at Lafayette, Saturday. To date the golfers have defeated Franklin end Wabash decisively while losing to Indiana University in three matches. Purdue took yesterday's baseball!

game in the sixth inning when John Emmert, second pitcher, scored from | third on a wild pitch. Summary:

Butler 000 400 000—4 8 38! rdue 002 021 VOx—3 7 8 Tex and Haack; Bailey, Emmert and] Young.

{ | = | a. |

i

| classified as muddy,

¢

XCELLENTE AND

PANETELA NIA)

:

[times as a two-year-old.

Flight Command Has Superior Breeding, Dislike for Mud

EDITORS NOTE—The ninth in a series on top contenders for the Kentucky rby.

By JACK GUENTHER United Press Racing Editor

NEW YORK, April 24.—Flight

Command's greatest claim to dis-

tinction is that he is the first son of the best racing filly the American turf ever has seen—the immortal Top Flight, who won $219,000 as a

2-year-old. On the paternal side

Although he scored only one stake victory—and that through a dis-

{qualification—Flight Command was

ranked as one of the half-dozen top juveniles of 1939. In John Campbell's Experimental Handicap, America’s counterpart of England's Free Handicap, the bay drew down 121 pounds, only nine less than the undefeated Bimelech. When the Kentucky Derby future books opened. his price therefore was fixed at 30-1. Now his price is 40-1 and he is given only an outside chance because he was slow to round into condition and because his only start this year was made in the mud, footing the colt apparently doesn’t like, That was in the Experimental Handicap and can not be taken as a fair guage for two reasons—(1) Flight Command ran away for three furlongs before the break, and (2) the race was won by his stablemate,

| Parasang, and he was not per-

servered with. Flight Command ran only four He won his maiden effort at Aqueduct by three lengths from three other colts who now are eligible for the Derby, Dusky Fox, Corydon and Devil's Crag. Although the footing was Aqueduct is never bothered by rain and actually always is fast. He ran last in the Mayflower Stakes at Suffolk Downs on July 15 and then was with-held until Saratoga. Here he finished second to Andy K in the U. S. Hotel Stakes but was given first money when Andy K was disqualified for swerving. In his final start, the Saratoga Special, he came home sixth and shortly thereafter was taken out of training. He ended the year with two official victories and earnings of $10,325. Flight Command’s final Derby prep will be made in the Wood Memorial at Jamaica Saturday. He is expected to go as an entry with his Stablemate in the C. V. Whitney barn, Carrier Pigeon. His Derby chances will be rated strictly off that event. The colt is of medium stature and good action. He has the natural truculence characteristeric of off-

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springs of th Fair Play line. He wintered in Kentucky where he filled out satisfactorily and has been in New York for the last three weeks, He is eligible for the Wood, Derby, Blue Grass, Withers, Preakness and Belmont stake,

Baer Serious,

Tells Why

By HENRY M'LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, April 24. —Max Baer is a mixture of sweetness and fight. In one breath the big fellow tells you how, on the night of May 28, he is going to back Tony Galento into a corner and give him the full { treatment. “I'll hit that loud-mouth everywhere and with everything. He'll get elbows, knees, thumbs, laces and heads. That's what he hands out, so I'll give it to him in a double dose. I was a butcher boy once, and I'll become a butcher boy again.” Then, almost as quickly as he had flown into a rage—a rage that (swelled the veins in his neck and bundled his fists into knots—Baer quieted down, and in an almost confidential whisper, told me why he was fighting again. Fightin’ for Others

“I ain't fightin’ for myself any more,” he said. “I got enough to take care of myself. I want to make a little extra for some others. Lissen, lemme tell you when I decided to take this fight with Galento.” The swagger was all gone from Max as he told me about a little old woman in her sixties—his Aunt Olive from Omaha. A few months ago, at his home in Livermore, Cal, he came in to find her there. She had come from Omaha to see his baby. “Get a load of this,” Max said. “She had sat up all night on a coach train to save Pullman fare, and had packed her own box lunch to save going into the diner. She had done all this to come out and see us and the baby. I took her purse out of her hands, and what do you think she had? Just enough to get her back to Omaha, that is, if she sat up all night again and packed her own lunch.

Playboy Is Gone

“I told my aunt right then that she was going home first class, and live first class from now on,” he said. “And so are a lot of the others who mean something to me and have been kind to me. It's a lot easier to take a punch on the jaw when you're 31 than it is to sit up all night in a day coach when you're 65.” It’s to make a little extra money with which to pay out the annuities he has that Maxie is fighting again, And for the first time since I have known him, and that goes back to the early 1930's when he came to New York to fight Ernie Schaaf in the Garden, Max seems to have what I can best express as “mental peace.” The roaring playboy is gone, Moreover, he has a genuine hatred for Galento.

once,” Baer said.

Southport Nine Takes Twin-Bill

SEYMOUR, Ind., April 24. —Southport High School's baseball team

i|grabbed both ends of a double- : (header from Seymour yesterday, 5 i|to 2 and 7 to 4.

Warren Central Wins

Morris Milburn won the broad jump, tied for first in the pole vault and took second in the 100-yard dash as he Jed the Warren Central track team to a 811-6 to 345-6 victory yesterday over Howe at the Warriors’ field.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

“I just want to swing on him :

WEDN

Big 10 League Comes Up With A Cage Card

Season Runs From Jan. 6 to March 3

Big Ten agreed to play ball—basketball, that is—with their Chicago cousin, it didn't take long for the Western Conference office to come up with next year’s schedule. They did that today, releasing a 60-game card that will run from Jan. 6 to March 3. As usual, each Conference team will meet every club at least once and will play home-and-home series with three rivals. Guess Who Purdue Chose!

Purdue, the champion, has chosen Indiana (naturally), Wisconsin and | Illinois for its three two-game series. Indiana, second runner in the last race, but national champion on the books, will do double duty against the Boilermakers, Ohio State and Iowa. On opening day next Jan. 6 Pur-

After the nine big brothers of the

due will take on Illinois in one of three games scheduled. Indiana | doesn’t get into the melee until five | days later when the Hoosiers will! pay the Illini a call. After that, Purdue meets its op- | ponnents in this order: Wisconsin, Chicago, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana and Northwest ern. Here's Indiana’s—

Indiana will have its opposition dished up this way: Illinois, Northwestern, Michigan, Purdue, Ohio State, Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio State, Iowa, Wisconsin, Purdue and Chicago. The first Indiana-Purdue meeting will be Feb. 1 at the West Lafayette fleldhouse, and the return engagement at Bloomington is scheduled for March 1. Here's the complete schedule. You might clip it if you want to take the chance of losing it among your golf scorecards and baseball rain checks: January

6—Illinoils at Purdue, Ohio State at Michigan, Wisconsin at Minnesota. 11—Indiana at Illinois, Jowa at Wiscon= sin, Michigan at Purdue, Northwest ern at Ohio State. 13—Chicago at Ohio State, Michigan at Illinois, Northwestern at Indiana, Iowa at Minnesota, Purdue at Wisconsin. 18—Minnesota at Chicago, Illinois Northwestern, Wisconsin at gan. 20—Wisconsin at Chicago, Northwestern at Iowa, Minnesota at Michigan. 25--Michigan at Northwestern, Ohio State at Wisconsin. 27—Chicago at Purdue, Indiana at Miche igan, Ohio State at Minnesota. February

}Chicago at Illinois, Indiana at Pure ue

at Mich-

3—Chicago at Iowa, Purdue at Illinois, Ohio State at Indiana. 8—-Illinois at Minnesota, Iowa at Ohio

State. 10—Illinois at Chicago, Iowa at Indie ana, Wisconsin at Northwestern. 15—Northwestern at Chicago, Illinois at Wisconsin, Minnesota at Indiana, Michigan at Iowa, Purdue at Ohio

State. 17—Michigan at Chicago, Iowa at Illinois, Indiana at Ohio State, Minnesota at Northwestern, Wisconsin at Purdue. 22—-Chicago at Wisconsin, Illinois Michigan, Indiana at Iowa, at Minnesota, Ohio State at North

western. 24—Chicago at Minnesota, Ohio State Wisconsin at Indiana,

at Illinois, Purdue at Iowa, Northwestern at March

Michigan. 1—Purdue at Indiana, Iowa at Northwestern, Michigan at Ohio State, Minnesota at Wisconsin. J—Indiana at Chicago, Minnesota at Iowa, Northwestern at Purdue.

at Purdue

Amateurs

SOFTBALL

The Bush-Feezle Night Factory League, opening May 14 at Softball Stadium, has elected the following officers: Doc Morgenthaler, president; Fred Engles, vice president, and Dick Collins, secretary-treas-urer. The opening day schedule: Ti00 Indianapolis Glove vs. P. R. Mallory Local 1001. 8:15—Stewart-Warner Corp. vs. Eli Lilly. 9:30—Kingan’s vs. International Harvester. The Bush-Feezle Softball Association will meet at 7:45 p. m. today at 136 E. Washington. Teams that have not paid their forfeit fee in the twilight leagues should attend.

The United Auto Workers will practice at 4:15 p. m. tomorrow at Belmont Stadium. Attention: Carl Stacy.

Lefty Glassburn and Norwood Barnett will form the National Wholesale Grocers’ battery when they meet Tri Ball A. C. at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at 4600 E. 30th St. BASEBALL

Prospect Tavern will practice at 5 p. m. tomorrow at Riverside 7 Players are to report or call Manager Lonnie Hightshue at BE-3908-M.

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Michigan, | §&&

Times Photo. Here is Ira O’Banion of Wash-

ington coming home in the rain to win the 440-yard dash in yesterday’s track meet with Crawfordsville. The Continentals defeated the Athenians, 7914-37%.

80 Teams Roll At A. B. C.

DETROIT, April 24 (U. P.). = Eighty of the remaining 1038 Class A teams of the American Bowling Congress tournament schedule attempt tonight to surpass the leading Monarch Beer quintet of Chicago. Teams from all sections of the nation and Honolulu will roll with hopes of beating Monarch’s top score of 3047. Joe Falcaro's Schlitz team of New York last night was just seven pins short of the third 3000 series of the tourney, but took third place in the standings with 2993. Ray Brown, Terre Haute, Ind. held the leadership in the singles with 231-278-233 for a 742 series, good enough to win 32 previous A. B. C. singles titles.

Little Giants Win as

Rain Stops Game CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. April 24 —A downpour stopped the Wa-bash-Earlham baseball game after four and one-half innings here yesterday, but the Little Giants had collected a pair of runs in the third to score a 2-0 victory.

- |—A proposal for a two-day hard-

Net Meet Here

Dec. 31-Jan. 1 Is Proposed

8-Team Tourney Would Replace ‘Big 4’

KOKOMO, Ind. April 24 (U. P.).

wood tourney which would bring together eight North Central High School Conference fives at the Butler Fieldhouse Dec. 31 and Jan. 1 was studied today by conference coaches and principals. The tourney would replace the annual “big four” meet involving four of the league teams. Plans for the tourney were announced at a meeting of coaches and principals last night but definite action was delayed pending a conference with Arthur L. Trester, commissioner of the Indiana High School Athletic Association. ; H. H. Anderson of Indianapolis Technical, J. R. Mitchell of New Castle and Orville Hooker of Marion were selected by principals of the schools to confer with Trester regarding the tourney. : It was believed that permission for the meet would be granted since the I. H. S. A. A. sanctions similar events at Vincennes as well as the annual Wabash Valley Tourney involving more than 100 schools. Schools expected to be represented in the tourney are Kokomo, Marion, Frankfort, Muncie, Anderson, Logansport, New Castle and Richmond. The only conference schools not expected to compete are Indianapolis Tech, whose participation would prevent play in the Indianapolis city tourney, and Lafayette, known to be opposed to all tcurney play. The tourney would replace the annual “big four” series which brought together Anderson, Muncie Central, Logansport and New Castle.

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MRS. HOSTETTER OF ROCKVILLE IS DEAD

Times Special ROCKVILLE, Ind., April 24. —Mrs. David B. Hostetter, life-long resident of this vicinity, died yesterday at the home of her son, Curtis Hostetter. She was 74. She and Mr. Hostetter, who died five months ago, observed their golden wedding anniversary Oct. 17, 1938. Survivors are four sons, Howard, Bainbridge, Ind.; Ralph, Greencastle, Ind.; Davir H. Ft, Wayne, and Curtis of Rockville; a daughter, Mary, Indianapolis; flve grandsons, five granddaughters; one great granddaughter and a brother. Funeral services will be conducted in the Roachdale Presbyterian Church tomorrow afternoon by the Rev. V. D. Reagan, Indianapolis, a former pastor.

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TRY A WANT IN THE TIMES

CULLIVAN—Owen, 94 years, father of Mrs. Margaret Page, rs. Agnes Alexander, Mrs. Marie Pyle, Miss Rose Cullivan, Indianapolis; rs. Alice Shame baugh and iss Katherine Cullivan, Jacksonville, Fla.; Frank and le livan Jr., brother of Cornelius C. Cullivan, Terre Haute. Also survived by randchildren and one Fr S-grahdeli] 3 dled at the home, 354 W. 30t t.. Mone» day. Funeral Thursday, 8:30 at e Kirby Mortuary; 9 a. m., Holy Angels Church. Burial Holy Cross cemetery. Friends invited.

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