Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 April 1940 — Page 6

Er

wd

ae ~ Ea the’

RL OE TIN TE DN LL REE ES Re

a an Rah

GC ll i 8 =

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

0, 4

MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1940

SPORTS...

By Eddie Ash

WEEK-DAY daylight baseball ends in Indianapolis today. . . . The night opener will be on Thursday, May 186, when the Columbus Red Birds make their first visit of the season to Perry Stadium. : Some credit for the Brooklyn uppising goes to Ted McGrew, Indianapolis, one of the Dodgers’ leading ivory

hunters. . . He's established himself as a sharp-eyed big league scout. . . . The surprising Brooks will be in Cincinnati tomorrow for a three-game series against the defending champs. This is Derby Week at the Downs and hundreds of Hoosiers will be in Louisville Saturday for the turf classic. . . . The event attracts heavy support from Indiana . . . always has, down through the years. Horse fans are invited to send in their Kentucky Derby selections to this department. . . . No coupons, no prizes. . . . Write your own ticket and name as many horses as you like. . . . Address Derby Editor, Sports Department, The Times, Indianapolis, Ind.

Friday Is Deadline for Selections

IT'S a chance to prove to your friends that you had the feedbox dope in advance of the race. . . . The deadline for receiving selections will be Friday . . . and on Monday the names of the leading sharpshooters will appear in ink. In the old days the Indianapolis ball club usually played in Louisville Derby Week and the highlight was a double-header between the Indians and Colonels on the day after the Derby. . . . Many Indianapolis fans remained over in Louisville and challenged Colonel fans in rooting. Louisville rooters usually were ready with a collection of. noisemakers and the din set up by the rival sections kept the ball teams at high pitch.

It might have been true that pitchers were ahead of the hitters, but there was nothing strange about Alfred Lovill Dean beating the Yankees twice within eight days . . giving the world champions only one run and 10 hits in 19 innings. Chubby Dean is not a left-handed first baseman who became a pitcher. . . . He is a left-handed pitcher who became a first baseman. When Dean reported fresh from the Duke University campus in 1936, Connie Mack used him at first base to take advantage of his batting. Young Dean—he is not yet 24&—obviously was miscast, and it has taken him this long to find himself as a major league pitcher, which is not unusual.

Coached by Jack Coombs at Duke

CHUBBY DEAN, who was so eager to play professional ball that he didn’t complete his sophomore year at Duke, where his older brother, Dayton, is business manager of athletics, certainly is not overdue as a big-time pitcher. This is especially so in view of the fact that his progress was retarded while he fooled around at first base, for a pitcher Chubby Dean has been since he was a kid in rompers. He pitched for Mt. Airy, N. C., High, and North Carolina's Oak Ridge Military Academy. . . He pitched for the town team of Mt. Airy, N. C,, his home town. He pitched a no-hit, no-run game for the Duke frosh. . . . He Pitched semi-professional ball in the North Carolina Coastal Plain League, . . Jack Coombs coached him as a pitcher in college. Had Connie Mack pitched him from the start, or saw that he pitched in the minors for a couple of years, he undoubtedly would have had one less pitching headache long before this. 2 » » 2 = 8

AND IT is fortunate for both Dean and the Athletics that the collegian wasn’t a capable enough first sacker to hang on there longer than he did. Bucky Walters of the Reds, greatest pitcher in baseball in 1939, wasted seven years as a mediocre third baseman. It ordinarily take a pitcher five years to find himself. Until John McGraw and the Giants paged him, a brief inspection by Detroit was all the brilliant Carl Hubbell had to show for six seasons in the smaller circuits. . . . Tyrus Raymond Cobb told Hub to forget the screwball which made him the greatest pitcher in the business . . . said it would get him nowhere in a hurry and ruin his arm . But at 37 the Meeker Master is still very much among those present. 5 LUKE HAMLIN, who copped 20 games for Brooklyn last season,

worked nine years with the little fellows, before and after Detroit looked at him in "33 and 34, , ped A of

” ” 2 # ”

Bob Klinger had been in the minors nine seasons when he from the Cardinal chain in time to come within & gnat's eye helping Pittsburgh to a pennant in "38. Fritz Ostermueller of the Red Sox and Bill Posedel of the Bees served eight-year apprenticeships. . . Walter Higbe of the Phillies and Jack Knott of the White Sox required seven years to make the big league grade.

Baseball at a Glance

N GAMES TODAY

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas City at INDIANAPOLIS. Milwaukee at Louisville. Minneapolis at Columbus. St. Paul at Toledo.

AMERICAN ASSOCIATIO Ww. - Minneapolis rH Kansas City INDIANAPOLIS Louisville St. Paul M 'waukee Toledo Columbus

600 S556 414 44 JA 100 333

OD Or Or Or mop

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Cleveland at Detroit. | New York at Washington. Boston at Philadelphia. Only games scheduled. Pet. |

S98 66% S56 556 JA

= Major Leaders

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, Chicago at St. Louis. mly games scheduled.

Cleveland

Washington St. Louis Philadelphia

395 222

“TOUGH Ove woo 0

Chicago

| | BATTING nid Player and Club G AB «3% | Wright, White Sox. . 9 36 500 | McCosky, Tigers ... 35 500 Young, Giants 8

Brooklyn Cincinnatl ....... esesieasane 5 Chicago Pittsburgh New York

R HH Pct 5 16 444 0 15 .429 3 13 .419 6 10 .417 : A 9 12 400 viS.3 HOME RUNS ~86 Judnich, Browns.. 3 Johnson, Ath 143 Foxx, Red Sox . 3'Kuhel, hite | Heath, Cleveland. 3 Rolfe, Ott, Giants ... 2/Gordon, { Camilli, . 2Trosky, Cleveland Gilbert, Dodgers . 2 Boudreau, Clevel’nd v Goodman, Reds... 2'McCosky, Tigers... 2 (First. Game) 3 2

000 081 90 (10)—13 ye 3! Cutt Browns Pie TUT 300 010 02 0 — 6 1% 1) RUNS BATTED IN HITS Himsl and Jackson; Marcum, Kimberlin, Foxx, Red Sox .. 13'Leiber, Cubs .. Wagener, Barnes, Dobernic and Spindel. Lavag'to, Dodgers 11 Wright. White Sox 16 (Second Game) Nicholson, Cubs . 1liCramer, Red Sox 15 000 101 0— 2 6 0 Doerr. Red Sox.. 11 McCosky, Tigers . 15 LM. Camilli, Dodgers. 9 Todd, Cubs ...... 14 Wirrk- |

Philadephia Boston

BADD WO

letics 2 Sox 3 RESULTS YESTERDAY ‘3 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Toledo Fisher kala and Mackie.

(First Game) 3138 121 080-16 19 © C I R I$ © 020 300 000— 5 8 1 \PO ege esuirs Gonzales and Denning; BarMartin, Curlee and Cooper. (Second Game

Minneapolis Columbus Smythe, rett, Lowery,

Minneapolis

BASEBALL Chicago, 2; Purdue, 1. Eartham, 7; Butler, 6. John Hopkins, 7: Haverford, 3 ayy, 1.

Milwaukee Louisvi Makosky,

Weaver and

) 00 1— 0 Columbus one 000 =3 3 0 Hichacek. | 9. N 00— T 2 , 9; A ot 060 111 dox— 8.10 3 Shi Bhat West Virginia, 4; Ohio U., 8. alters, , 1-8; Nebraska, 5-2. (Second Lacrosse Teach-

Evans and Rolandson; Sunkel and First Game 5. (Fir: 10" 5ho | Wineries x Oni ny : io oho nois, 17; o State, 6. Blaeholder and Garbark; s ct e 3!

) Wi Tea : Nh b= 5b blue ifora Teachers wd rity vit aay So ™ lacholder an ankins; vis, Dr Hughson and Walters.

Milwaukee . Louisville

Herring,

Nahem,

ers, 3. Towa, 4: Wisconsin, 3 (10 innings). TRACK fami University, 961%: Ball State, 31%. » 3 wn, 294. Southern California. 6512; Ol ic Clu (San Francisco). 49; U. C. L. We hb Titornia, 501%,

Wanford, 80%; ashington, 77; n, *

Takes 3d in State Bowling Meet

AMERICAN LEAGUE

(10 Innings) 2

Smith, Humphries a emsley; McKain, Gorsica, Conger, omas and Tebbetts.

—2 6 2 6 0 rd |

Corcoran, tournament manager of |

Dodgers Can't Keep It Up, Kirksey De

cides

is grasped first with the left shzft. The right hand, you

This is the first in a series of interviews with Indianapolis golf pros designed to aid the duffer as well as the low scorer. Today Russell Stonehouse of South Grove discusses the grip. Other fundamentals and the use of various clubs will be discussed in future articles.

By J. E. O'BRIEN DON'T FORGET that left hand, is the first advice of Rus-

sell Stonehouse, South Grove professional, to the beginning golfer or the fellow who is taking his clubs off the top closet shelf for the season. That southpaw may not be as valuable to you as it is to Mr. Vernon Gomez, but if you start slighting it, you won't get down in

To get a proper grip on the golf club, the club close to the fingers, slightly over the top of the up to the shaft so that the palm faces the hole.

Help Your Golf Game—No. 1

Don't Forget Left Hand, Says Stonehouse

Here’s the way your hands should look wh gripping the club. The “V's” formed by the first finger of both hands point in the general the left shoulder. Both hands are placed snu to give power and control.

hand, with the thumb will note, is brought

golfing position, and the club is grasped with the left hand. The thumb is close to the fingers, slightly over the top of the shaft. If the left hand is in proper position, the shaft is lying diagonally across the base of the first and middle fingers and across the palm below the ring and little fingers. “Thus you get a combination finger and palm grip,” Stonehouse explained, “with the greatest pressure being exerted by the last three fingers. The thumb of the left hand should rest slightly to the right of the top of the shaft. The ‘V’ formed by the thumb and first finger will point in the general direction of your right

probably will spend lots of time with the mosquitoes in the rough. “The importance of the left hand is what makes golf appear such a complex game,” Stonehouse pointed out in his explanation of the grip, one of the first links fundamentals. “The left hand gives control to the shot—in fact, the left side predominates the whole swing.” Of the three types of golf grip in use today, Stonehouse teaches the overlapping. Other types are the outdated “baseball” grip and the interlocking, but only in rare instances would Stonehouse prescribe either of the latter two. To get the proper grip, he demonstrated, the clubhead is rest-

the fairly respectable 80s and

By HENR United Press Sta

even though the din of 100,000 fans

even of a proverbial pin when they are about to stroke a putt or tear off a tee shot is enough to send them into a mental frenzy. We say “myth” because Fred

the Professional Golfers’ Associa- | tion, claimed today that silence is not necessarily golden during the progress of a golf match. Furthermore, Mr. Corcoran hopes to prove his point on May 12 on the links of the Shorehaven Golf Club, South Norwalk, Conn., during an exhibition charity match for the South Norwalk Maternity Hospital.

And Maybe Tunney

|. A strange foursome will be composed of Jimmy Demaret, Gene Sarazen, Babe Ruth and one other player—perhaps Gene Tunney.

But golfers—well, the myth is that the noise made by the dropping |

shoulder.

ed on the ground in the normal

Who Said Quiet? P. G. A. Plans Budge Pockets To Raise a 4-Star Racket

Titles, $500

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va, April 20 (U, P.).—Don Budge won $400 and the U. 8S. open tennis singles crown yester-

Y SUPER

ff Correspondent

NEW YORK, April 29.—Ball players are at their best when the day when he beat Bruce Barnes stands are jammed and the cheers and jeers roll across the diamond of Austin, Tex, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4. like the angry muttering of a volcano. ] Fighters have no trouble stabbing their lefts and crossing rights | Weisshuch

Frank Hunter defaulted to bill of California in the | consolation finals. Hunter won the first two sets, 6-4, 6-2, dropped the next at 6-8 and then defaulted.

” Budge added $100 to his bankroll TOUS Mejore the lives Hove | Bu he teamed with Barnes to win

rings in their ears.

en both are thumb and direction of

gly together of the

“Now that the left hand is in position, the right hand should be brought up to the shaft in such a position that the palm faces the hole,” Stonehouse continued. “The right hand is placed over the left so that the ‘life line’ of the right palm covers the left thumb, and the little finger overlaps the first finger of the left hand.’ Here again the “V” formed by the thumb and first finger points toward the right shoulder. Stonehouse emphasized that both hands should be placed snugly together for the most control and power in your shot. Even in this first golf fundamental, there's plenty of room for mistakes and faults. One

From beneath, the proper grip looks like this. Note that the little finger of the right hand is overlapping the first finger of the left hand. Most is bei fingers of the left han

tendency, according to Stonehouse,

EN ROUTE TO LOUISVILLE,

say so.

over his shoulder and then give him a few lefts and rights with his hooves. But this time it would be all right if Dit took a peek at my story, because he worked like a good thing in winning the Wood against a field

A band will follow the boys

| tunes as “Take Me Out to the Ball {| Game” and “St. Louis Blues” while |critical shots are being made. A {brace of fiddlers will take up strategic posiitons around the greens and rip off rhythms while putts are being dropped. The gallery will be instructed to act just as it would at a ball-game. And a public address system, loaded in a huge truck, will fill-in with play-by-play descriptions of the match, offer advice to the players when they are getting ready to wield a mashie or niblick, and speel the band when the musicians become tired. “And,” Corcoran said, “I'll bet the Scores turned in will be no different | from those during a regular tournament when it is a sacrilege to speak |above a whisper and creaking shoes are a one-way ticket to the gate marked exit.” Corcoran said he picked Ruth for

2| the exhibition because the Babe al-|

ways was at his best before packed stands and loved nothing better

. 16| than to belt one over the fence in |the winners and runners-up in each Everett Marshall on May 7.

an enemy ball park where hostile crowds were riding him.

Please Don’t Grab!

He hopes to get Tunney on his lineup because Gene and Dempsey

around and blare out such tingling |

| |

|

the history of boxing. the doubles title from Vincent And he picked Demaret and Sara- Richards and Berkley Bell, 6-3, 6-4, plained the idea to Demaret, the| laughing Texan replied, “Swell— ! you can do anything you want, only | just give me room to swing. I don't want anyone grabbing my club at the top of my backswing.” match. Because when Demaret| More state-wide interest is being | starts ao Rat os iv Ni) Play | Shown in the appearance here tocoran figures to have the 7 al » the merry Texan's favorite song, | MOrrow of “The Angel” than in any| The title is “Careless.” wrestling encounter staged locally EC WANS in the past five years, Matchmaker Paddle Meet fall, one hour added attraction on the regular mat bill at the Armory tomorrow night. Fans in Frankfort, Anderson, Bloomington, Crawfordsville and Kokomo have arranged special table tennis tournament, to be held ville and Franklin. in the Paddle Club Courts, 307 N.| “There is an unusual amount of i. : ; interest and the advance sale is RE St, g in ow Wider on the increase,” Carter said. way at P, I HEX a rg. | Rudy Kay, a rugged 225-pound Topping the events Will be & yucky from Chicago, meets “The of HVE ¥ Heh Diayens wil be onths ago. He scored easily over (the men’s doubles and he mixed | panno O'Mahoney last week in doubles. A veterans field will be | Milwaukee. (held for all players over 35 and a| Two front line heavies, Louis boys event for all players not yet 16.| Thesz, St. Louis, and Jim MeMillen, | Jim event. | protested a verdict that cost him All players that are residents of the bout with Louie last week. Marion County are eligible and| In other tussles, Jack Kennedy those interested are asked to mail opposes Alabama Bill Lee and Len |entries to the Paddle Club Courts Macaluso meets Marvin Jones. The

zen because both those golfers are 12-10. Corcoran hopes that Demaret will | Lloyd Carter: said today. Set Saturday ? , ne parties to attend the grappling men's singles with a consolation for | Angel,” who scales 276 and is 5 Of interest to the women will be | Chicago, top the bill in a return| lor ‘call LI-0606. show will start at 8:30.

GAME FISHERMEN will have to store their rods and reels tomorrow until June 16 if they don’t want any run-in with the law. The season in Indiana closes at midnight tomorrow on bluegills, red-eared sunfish, crappies, rock bass, silver or yellow bass, large or smallmouth black bass, Kentucky bass, white or striped bass, wall-eye pike, pike or pickerel or

Fishing Season Ends Tomorrow M

cool under pressure. Corcoran said that when he ex- M : Bill D | get in a trap just once during the “The Angel” is in a special one- . show. Other reservations have been The seventh annual eity closed | jade from fans in Muncie, Noblesall first match losers. Other events | feet 8% inches tall. He is unbeaten (since coming to this country a few [the women's singles and the mixed tussle. It is for two falls out of |doubles. Trophies will be awarded three and the winner will meet idnight

that included an even dozen other Derby eligibles. He won it the way a good horse should win, meaning that he was out in front and .stayed there.

Why Go Faster?

The fact that his time was ordinary—he did the mile and one sixteenth in 1:454-5—must not be counted against him, There wasn't any use in asking him to travel any faster, and Jockey Leon Haas wisely made no effort to hustle him along. He did call on the coit for | a turn of speed near the far turn, when he held a lead of oniy a length over Sonny Whitney's Flight Command. By the time Dit pounded into the top of the stretch he was three lengths in front and could have walked in and won. He was near a canter when he showed his silks to the judge. Dit must be rated as the only Eastern hope in the Derby with an outside chance to lick the mighty Bimelech, Andy K, Flight Command, Carrier Pigeon, Woof Woof, Robert E. IL.ee, Devil's Crag and Red Dock.

Dit must not be given too much of a chance. Bimelech, making his first start of the year at Keeneland on Thursday, won a mile and oneeighth race in the smashing time of 1:50. He wasn’t driven even as much as Dit was in the Wood, yet he breezed the distance in a time that was only three-fifths of a second off the track record and was faster than any turned in for the distance at the track in 1939.

Looks Like One-Hoss Race

The last time Bimelech worked the Wood distance of a mile and a sixteenth was in his last race in 1939, the Pimlico Futurity. Packing more weight than Dit did Saturday, and never hustled, he worked eight and one-half furlongs in 1:45 1-5. And Pimlico is a much slower track than Jamaica. The record for the mile and one-sixteenth is 1:44 at Pimlico and 1:42 3-5 at Jamaica.

From here—it must be Ohio—the 66th running of Matt Winn's julep classic shapes up as a one-hoss race with only three others capable of staying within sight of him. Those other three are Mioland, Charley Howard's Oregon-bred router; fellow passenger Dit, and W. L. Brann's Pictor. The latter, a half brother to Challedon, showed in his winning of the Chesapeake that if it comes up mud he'll be there slinging it in a lot of faces. And it is time for the rains to come, because not since Omaha's Derby in 1935 has the weatherman turned on

Dit Seems Only Eastern Bid Able to Threaten Bimelech

By HENRY M’LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent

way Dit looked in winning the Wood Memorial on Saturday I wouldn't

A very honest-faced porter named George has just informed me that Arnold Hanger’s Derby hope is on this same train, and I am not the sort of fellow who cares to risk having 1150 pounds of horse read

5 of 8 Wins Gained From

2 Weaklings

And the Yanks Aren't Finished Yet

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent

NEW YORK, April 29.— Baseball's two biggest topics today were: 1. Can the Dodgers keep it up? 2. What's happened to the

Yankees? The answer to question No. 1 is, “No, the Dodgers can't keep it up.” They've won eight straight games and have a perfect record as they moved into the west today to open against last year’s champions, the Cincinnati Reds, now riding in sece ond place. The Dodgers have & good, hustling ball club but it must be remembered that five of their

eight victories have been over the Phillies and Bees. They are cer tainly the league's two weakest clubs, and the other three over the Giants, probably a second division club. No. 2 Is a Hard One

The answer to question No. 2 is not so easy. The Yanks miss Joe DiMaggio. Joe is laid up with an injured leg. But the Yanks have been withe out DiMaggio nearly every year about this time and have done all right. The Yanks aren't the same ball club they were. Their hitting is feeble—four runs and 18 hits in their last three games. In addition their defense is bogging down. The Yanks are in seventh place now. A total of 181,840 persons wite nessed yesterday's games, with the Dodgers-Giants fiasco drawing 51,« 659, the day's top throng. Dolf Camili’s homer with a mate on base in the ninth gave Brooklyn its eighth in a row. Whit Wyatt, although allowing 10 hits, stopped the Giants. Pete Coscarart hit a two-run homer off Harry Gumbert, getting his in the fifth with Dixie Walker on base. Ernie Lombardi’s hitting and Gene Thompson's pitching featured the Reds’ 8-2 victory over the Pirates. Lombardi had “4 for 4, with a homer and three singles, Thompson let the Pirates down with five hits, and was aided by three double plays.

Cards Rally to Win

Don Gutteridge’s homer with two men on enabled the Cardinals to come from behind and beat the Cubs, 7-5. The Cubs drove Bill McGee from the box, and Dusty Shoun received credit for the win. The Bees defeated the Phillies, 3-2, for their first win in seven starts. Lefty Joe Sullivan held the Phils to seven hits. Cleveland scored a 11-9 victory over Detroit. Both sides used four

exerted by the last three on

is for the beginner to get both hands too far under the club. Then again, he might get them too far on top. Both these mistakes will result in lost power and control. Another mistake is what Stonehouse calls “too much right hand.” In this instance, the left hand is being slighted, with the result that the club is thrown out of its natural arc on the swing. “Here’s where your hooks and slices are born,” Stonehouse declared. “This mistake either results in an open face shot, which produces a slice, or in a closed face, which makes for a hook.”

NEXT-The stance.

April 20.—Even {if I didn’t like the

Butler golfers scored their third match victory Saturday, winning over Purdue, 11 to 7. Tomorrow the linksmen entertain DePauw here, and play Earlham at Richmond Sate urday. The tennis team, which has not won a match this year, plays Wae bash at Crawfordsville Thursday, and DePauw here Friday. DePauw’s baseball nine will play here Wednese day in an Indiana College Confere ence game, Only one dual meet is scheduled for the track team this week. Coach Ray Sears will select a traveling squad to run against Western State, Mich., Saturday, at Kalamazoo.

otiinimt—

WRESTLING ARMORY Tues, April 30—8:30 p.m.

"The

ANGEL"

Millers Still p p pitchers. Jim Tabor’s homer gave the By UNITED PRESS Boston Red Sox a 5-4 victory over Minneapolis had a firm grip on the Philadelphia Athletics in 12 i _(nings, Chubby Dean, who starte Arst place Ih the American Asso | for the A’s, was replaced in the 10th ciation today after enjoying & py Eq Heusser, who was the loser, hectic Sabbath in the Columbus Jimmy Foxx drove in three runs. ball park. Gerald Walker's single scoring George Case from second gave The Millers batted out 19 hits Off | Washington a 3-2 victory over the four Columbus hurlers in the first | yanks. It was the Yanks’ third game of the double-header to win, straight loss. S27 hits 35 16 to 5, then barely snatched vie-| The Browns slugged ou ts tory f Red Do Tom Sunkel’s give the White Sox an 1l-to-8 Ty Jom thrashing. Walter Judnich and Hare four-hit pitching in the nightcap, land Clift hit homers. 2 to 1. In the second game, Sunkel was bested in the bitter pitching “ ° duel by Minneapolis’ Red vans, |B tl N who allowed only three hits. Ab u er N me Wright's homer in the seventh in- | ning furnished the clinching run for Minneapolis. H t t i | | The double victory gave the | 0S 0 L Sle Millers a one and one-half game lead over second-place Kansas City, which was able only to split its' Indiana University’s baseball clash double-header with Indianapolis. with Butler University this after= St. Paul and Toledo followea the noon on the Fairview diamond was Minneapolis-Columbus pattern in| t0 open a week's schedule of seven their double-header. The Saints athletic events for the latter school. swatted out four Toledo hurlers in| Coach Tony Hinkle planned to the first game with a total of 16 Use his sophomore pitcher, Bud Tex, the Oth inning to win, 14 to 6. The|the 7-to-6 victory in the opener between St. Paul's Fisher and To- dropped four in a row by one-run ledo’s Wirkala. Wirkala won, 3 to 2, / margins, the most recent being a Milwaukee and Louisville spit! 0-6 defeat by Earlham last Sattheir double-header, too. Louisville | won the opener, 3 to 2, and lost the nighteap, 5 to 3. Paul Dunlap’s home run with one on sewed up the second game for Milwaukee. Indiana Central Three Indiana Central College teams will see action this week— baseball, track and golf. The Greyhounds will play Hanover tomorrow in a college conference baseball game in the University Heights diamond. On Fri day the baseball squad will travel to Manchester College for another college conference game and the Indiana Central golf team will be host to the Ball State linksmen on the Lakeshore Country Club course.

The Wabash track team will come

Plus 3 Other Bouts

general adm seats, $1.50 ringeide. A

HERCULES A.

to the local campus Saturday for

yellow perch. Species that still a dual track and field meet with

can be legally caught include

Times Speci

{ §| KOKOMO, Ind. April 20—One:

St. Louis 230 Chicago 010

1 ree tax

the faucets at Churchill Downs.

210 201-11 1 roa iH To0— 8 Harris, Lawson and Swi vich, C. Brown and Tresh.

(12 _Xnnings) ER itz vec 000 300 4o1— 3 12 Poiiaderphia L 001 000 000— 1 10 Galehouse, ison, Hash and sautels, Peacock, C. Dean, Heusser and Hayes.

NATIONAL LEAGU 020 2 3 2 131 020 10x— 8 15 2 oy Tart and Davis;

adda facFayden, Sewell, Thompson and Lomba

his ........ 00D 000 200— 2 oo. 00h 300 00x —. 3 Highe, Smofl and Warren: J. Sullivan asl.

and

feage . ... Pi an adpett.

Bhs vo BEA) 8

ard 010 and Todd;

and Frarky;

; Lyons, Diet- change of leaders in the all-events|

division marked week-end activity in the state bowling tournament being conducted here.

P. Baltes, Gary pinman, went into|

third place in that classification with a 1920 total. He rolled 627 in the team ‘event, 626 in the doubles and 667 in the singles.

The Irish Again

PHILADELPHIA, April 29 (U. P). Pat O'Neill of the New York police force today held the championship of the Southeastern Pennsylvania Pistol and Revolver . Tournament

RR Eee

1

\

| carp, buffalo and suckers. | The state's open season on

| trout, however, wiil begin Wednesday and will end on Aug. 31. The law permits the taking of not to exceed 15 trout of all species in one day's fishing, and the possession of not to exceed two days’ lawful catch. Trout must measure at least seven inches in length. In northern Indiana streams, where water temperatures remain

Win at Antlers

Winners in the mixed doubles bowling sweepstakes, held during the week-end at the Antlers Alleys, were Hilda Foster and Abe Rader. Working on a 304 handicap, they tacked up a 1390 score to top the 78-team field.

Neptune Outboard Motors

$74.50 Tn tw $59.50

BLUE POINT JSiiSison

i

the Greyhounds.

INDIAN DAY, A

COMANCHE vs. Tom) EVERY NIGHT INCLUDING SUNDAY

OLLER DERBY

FAIRGROUNDS

COLISEUM

VS. INDIAN

THIS COUPON WiLL ADMIT yp PER YOUR ENTIRE PARTY AT 100 PERSON