Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1941 — Page 14
, Pittsburgh
PAGE 14
SPORTS...
By Eddie Ash
HORSE RACING at three tracks Saturday failed to clairfy the standing of Kentucky Derby candidates . . and now the dopesters really are tearing their hair scrambling and unscrambling the feed box dope on the
big event at Louisville May 3. Disposed. a co-favorite in the Derby winter book, finighed last in a field of six at Jamaica with Curiuos Coin, another highly regarded candidate, and Omission winding up fourth and fifth, yespectively . _ in a race that was won by Mettlesome, a 3-year-old that was not named for the Blue Grass classic at Churchill Downs. Robert Morris, lightly regarded Derby candidate, further complicated the situation for the railbirds and prognosticators by winning a mile and a sixteenth handicap at Jamaica from a field of six older horses, which included the handicap good things, Hash and Fenelon. At Havre De Grace, Porter's Cap, winner of the Santa Anita Derby, had an easy assignment and won as he pleased in the $15,000 Chesapeake Stakes, defeating Little Beans, liked by some in the winter books. and another Derby nominee, Cis Marion. At Keeneland in the Blue Grass, Our Boots cheered his Derby backers by coming through with a great stretch run to win the six-furlong Elmendorf Purse in his first start of the season at the Lexington track Blue Pair, also a Derby eligible, ran third in the mile and the sixteenth Ben Ali Handicap at Keeneland Saturday. Red Dock and Viscounty, older horses, were first and second, respectively. ‘ Blue Pairs performance was considered creditable, as the description of the race revealed he had a rough trip and was blocked on two "Mes I hitlaway, another of the leading candidates for Col. Matt Winn’s “race of the year,” worked out at Keeneland and turned in a splendid exhibition. . . . He ran the mile in 1:38 2-5 and galloped on for the mile and an eighth in 1:51 3-5.
Happy Days for Michigan Fishermen
RUCKETS AND BONFIRES and the smelt a-running! that's the picture these nights for the fishermen in the vicinity of Escanaba. Mich . Any true angler will thrill to the stories of an annual smelt run as the silvery little fish are tasty and can be eaten and enjoved in endless servings. Rob Becker, the Chicago Tribune's fishing expert, marked Escanaba on his calendar this year and recently attended a night smelt fishing party there . . . and described the scene and incidents, in part, as follows: “Against the glow of bonfires, bright gasoline lamps and the winking of flashlights, the smelt fishermen of Escanaba held one of their biggest fishing parties of the spring on the banks of the Days River,
» » » » » ”
“THIS ROCKY. SWIFT STREAM is about 12 miles from Esecanaba. Tons of smelt have been dipped from it since the schools of these little fish began to move out of Lake Michigan on their annuai spawning run. But so numerous are the smelt this year that they still are coming into the Days River and several other streams near Escanaba every night. “When we visited the Days about 11 p. m. a carnival appeared to be going on at full blast. Fishermen were walking up and down the banks with their flashlights and long handled nets. Cars arrived continuously packed with men and women carrying milk cans, pails, sacks, nets and other equipment. “The stream was lined with men and women standing on the banks or in the shallow water with long handled dip nets. Behind them were piled up boxes and pails to hold the catches of fish. Every dip of a net brought in one or two pecks of smelt, for the run was good and appared to be getting heavier around midnight.
Smelt Buyers Stand By for Catches
“The most enterprising fisherman we saw on the river had backed his light truck across the stream and parked it so he could load smelt by just swinging his net over the back of the truck. “This smelt dipper was one of many on the stream who were fishing to make money during the peak of the night run. A smelt buver was nearby with two trucks, a scales and plenty of ice to keep the fish. “He was out to obtain 14 tons of smelt in one night, so the boys were swinging their dip nets to the tune of 30 cents per 100 pounds for all fish caught. “The market is glutted with smelt at present, so this price of 30 cents per hundred is way below the 3 to 5 cents per pound paid for smelt before the big spawning run started.
5 » ” »
“When we stopped on the Escanaba River after midnight to see how the dippers were getting along we found that we could catch fish without the use of a net. The smelt were running so heavily below the dam on the river and crowding so close to the bank that bv standing on rocks where the water was only four inches deep it was possible to reach down with one’s hands and pick up fish. “Men who were dipping near the big bridge over the Escanaba were just finishing their job of getting 500 pounds of smelt, their order for the night.”
Baseball At a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Lost
» »
| (Second game: seven innings: agreement) Pet. | St. Paul . 110 001 2-5 11 1 1.000 Toledo ... 100 001 2—4 8 2 i Smith, Johnson, Struss and Fernandes; “soo | Whitehead, Nordquist and Harshany. A400 3% (First game; 3 Minneapolis we Columbus .. Hagaant, Nesseth, Kash and Denning: Pet {Brecheen, Barrett and Heath, Poland.
83% | (Second game; Seven innings: agreement) "600 Minneapolis 402 041 3—14 "331 Columbus 038 205 x—18 16 429] Kelley, Kash, Nesseth, Smythe, Tausch3g er, Fausett and Denning: Wissman, Win.333 ford, Creel, Brecheen and Heath, Poland. JA8%
Louisville Columbus ..... sv vias INDIANAPOLIS Toledo Minneapolis Kansas City ft. Paul Milwaukee
1% innings) 000 200 ceaeea. 000 101
RL D RID
001 §-7 8 3 100 0—3 9 2
New York Chicago St. Louis Brooklyn Boston
Cincinnati Philadelphia
lo SO LY 1G rh
NATIONAL LEAGUE iCineinnati ,.......... 100 003 201-3 13 Pet. Pittsburgh ........... 000
66% | Turner, 331 | Heitzelman 500
AMERICAN LEAGUE Wen, Lost
2 Bostom ...cvavseecunss Cleveland New York
Thompson and West: Bowman, , Lanahan and Lopes.
St. Louis (Ten innings) Philadelphia ey. Dh Washington .. a ne GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Kansas City at INDIANAPOLIS, St. Pau! at Toledo Milwaukee at Louisville Minneapolis at Columbus.
NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn at New York Philadelphia at Beston, Cincinnati at Chicago. Only games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston at Washington, St. Louis at Cleveland. Chicago at Detroit. New York at Philadelphia.
RESULTS YESTERDAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Milwankee ........... 000 200 000—2 Louisville ............ 202 000 0Ox—4 Lambert, Sullivan, Weiland and Hayworth: Harris and Glenn.
-333 philadelph 200 A—3 3 16% Boston 020 120 600 2—% 12 2 Blanton. Crouch, Beck and Warren: Saivo, Lamanna and Berres.
Brooklyn 000 004 321-10 15 0 New York Mo 021 500— 9 12 8 Grissom, Mungo, Davis, Casey and Owen, Guliana; Gumberf, C. Melton, W. Brown. Adams, Lohrman and Danning.
2 >
PRA 10B 9D
1
(Ten innings) Chicage veraaes 002 501 110 1-11 St. Louis ... 108 300 300 0—10
Passean, French, Pressnell . Cullough: Lanie o
and cg ir, A r, Nahem, White, Grodzicki and W. Coope
14 4 14 0 M
T
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Cleveland ..... shuaauh 002 110 000-4 troit ............... 50D 000 011-2 § 3
1. Heving and Hemsley; Rowe, McKain and Tebbetts, Jew FORK. +.ouvovsn 020 080 126—19 18 Philadelphia 110 200 100— 5 10 Ruffing and Rosar; C. Dean, Besse, Johnson and Haves, Wagner; Bos 120 031 043-14 15 1 Wa 200 002 040-8 11 2
t. Pan! 110 110 101—6 11 ©! Ryba, Hash and Peacock: Hudson, Anderlede cesaeneees. 000 110 000—2 & 4 gon, MacFavden, Dean and Evans, Early. Hims! and Fernandes: Wirkkala, Nerd- | . Quist, Marcum and Spindel
Butler Linksmen |Amateurs
SOFTBALL
To Meet Franklin The Bush-Feezle Downtown Mer-
{chants Softball League has comCoach Jim Hauss’' Butler Univer- pleted its organization for the comgitv golf squad, Little State champ- {INE season. The league will be comfons last year, is scheduled to open Posed of the Indiana Gear Co. J. D.
{Adams, Burford Printing, Vonn jte 1941 Indiana Conference card Hardware, Gibson Co. Ba niegut tomorrow afternoon against
the Ayres, Franklin Grizzlies at Franklin,
Harde Giebell,
A
(First game)
St. Louis at Chicago. cold weather.
| Officers of the league are: Jim The Bulldogs’ only meet so far Gaston, president: Harry Wolf, vice
: president, and Carl C. Callahan, this season was tune-up affair secretary-treasurer.
against the Northwestern Wildcats,| The league will play on Monday won by the invaders 13-5. Harold nights at the Softball Stadium, Braden, low medalist against North- starting May 12. . | Softball teams interested in playwestern, Bob Phillips, Jan Anson. |. o's cient softball on Wenariy and Charles Owen probably will be evenings at 5:30 p. m. or Sunday selected again to do the chores for morning softball on the city parks the Blue and White. {should contact Carl C. Callahan, at
Butler's 1940 record shows eight | RI-4453.
victories in 10 starts, including Army Takes Pirate
double triumphs over Franklin, Wabash and Earlham and single wins| PITTSBURGH, April 21 (U, P). over the Purdue Boilermakers and | —Oadis Swigart, rookie pitcher, toDePauw. Indiana and DePauw ad- day became the first man on the ministered the Bulldog defeats by Pittsburgh Pirate roster to be
identical 11-7 scores. | drafted.
THE
Leslie Pawson, 36-year-old Pawtucket, R. I, park foreman, breaks the tape at the finish of the Boston A. A. Marathon to become the second plodder in history to win the event three times. the gruelling 26-mile-385-yard course in a wilting 74-degree heat.
He covered
By UNITED PRESS Kansas City and St. Paul celebrated their first victories of the new American Association season today, each having swept Sunday doubleheaders after three consecu-
tive defeats. The Blues beat Indianapolis, 7 to 3 and 8 to 2. St. Paul defeated Toledo, 6 to 2 and 5 to 4. In other
Varga Captures State Tourney
John Varga took the Indiana State closed table tennis tourney trophy for men home to South Bend today. Varga defeated Sterling Mitchell of Indianapolis in the final match at the Riviera Club last night in straight sets. Mitchell teamed with Dorothy Elkin of Indianapolis to capture the tandem event from Billy Snyder and Mrs. Amelia Karsner of Indianapolis. Miss Elkin took the women's event by defeating Mrs. Karsner. Mitchell and Jim Sharpe of Indianapolis defeated Varga and Hershey Mills of South Bend in the men’s doubles finals. The senior veteran's title went to Matt Fairlie of Hammond who defeated Randall Willig of Indianapolis in the finals. Varga beat Fairlie for the junior veterans crown and Major Willis of Indianapolis won the boys’ event from Charles Dorsey of Indianapolis.
Our Boots Now
Derby Choice
NEW YORK, April 21 (U.P) —The nation’s future book operators, who don't deal in either sentiment or
thunches, disclosed rather pointedly
[today that Our Boots is the horse]
{to beat in the Kentucky Derby and that betting on him to finish
{in the money is just about the 13 3}
safest investment in racing. Revamping his line after the oddlest week-end of the Spring, J. J. Carroll of St. Louis movea the Ohio-owned colt back into his original position as favorite by dropping his odds to place and show down to 6-5 and 1-2.
Kansas City and St. Paul Make Comebacks After 3 A. A. Losse
| Charley Harris of Louisville kept
Well, Anyway, Just One
Last Mile of Twenty-Six
Indians Lose
2 Games to Kansas City
Tribe Pitching Problem Becoming Very Acute
Well, at any rate, the Kansas City Blues depart this man’s town after one more game, scheduled this afternoon, 2:30 p. m., and it was “ladies’ day” to boot. Therein is some consolation for the Redskins, they don’t have to meet the Blues again until May, in Kansas City. But hark, the lark, in the event of a postponement today the Blues will stay right here and play it off omorrow, which is an open date or both Indianapolis and Kansas Cit. It was difficult to fathom who was going to pitch for the Tribesters today unless Iron Man Ray Starr volunteers. He hurled a shutout against Milwaukee last Thursday and worked the last two innings against the Brewers Saturday. Glenn Fletcher, the Indians’ “other” pitcher, worked Friday and is much too young to return to the mound after two days‘ rest. The assorted seven hurlers who comprise the remainder of the staff came to grief over the week-end, that is, all except young Ben Wade who only saw one inning of toil and did all right.
Blues Are Not Brewers
While breaking their losing streak at three straight, the Blues also
games, Louisville beat Milwaukee, 4 to 2, in its fourth straight victory. Minneapolis beat Columbus, 7 to 3, in the first game of a doubleheader, then lost, 14 to 186. Vedie Himsl of St. Paul did a sixhit pitching job in the first game, while his mates collected 11 off the hurling of Wirkkala and Marcum. In the nightcap, St. Paul survived a last-inning rally by the Mud Hens to win by a one-run margin. Smith, Johnson and Struss allowed Toledo eight hits, while St. Paul got 11 off the pitching of Whitehead and
| Nordquist.
| Milwaukee's eight hits scattered, |and the infield took care of most of them. Lambert, Sullivan and Weiland pitched for Milwaukee, and
the Colonels got seven hits. The Millers won their game in an| extra inning with four runs, after tying it up in the ninth. Each team
snapped the Indians’ winning streak
S at three, but the Blues set out
to prove that they are not the Brewers and the Redskins are convincéd of it. As Indianapolis fans suspected all along, the Tribe's mound staff is the team’s weakest department and there is a crying need for replacements. The Blues simply picked on the weak link and went on from there, 7 to 3, in the first half of the Sabbath twin bill, 8 to 2, in the seven-inning nightcap. Had the Indians won the second game it would have been very easy to alibi for the defeat in the first because the Blues had a barrel of luck on wind-blown hits while the Tribesters got cheated by the elements. But since the home boys took it on the chin twice in one day it won't do any good to dwell on excuses. Cox Knocked Out
Bill Cox fell apart in the fifth inning of the first tilt and the Blues rallied for five runs. The Tribe was out in front, 3 to 0, and then 3 to 1, until that fifth, and after
got nine hits, with Hogsett, Nesseth|¢), t' 1 drty A] Gerhauser barred the and Nash pitching for Minneapolis,| 4, in the face of the Tribe hit-
and Breechen and Barrett for Co{lumbus. Otto Denning hit two homers in the opener. Columbus | overcame a four-run handicap to win the second game, and got 16 hits against the Miller's 13. Kelley, (Kash, Nesseth, Smythe, Tauscher land Fawcett pitcheq for the Mil{lers, and Weissman, Winford, Creel
land Breechen hurled for the Birds.
F our Matches On Mat Card
The four-bout mat card, featuring a double windup, has been com-
tomorrow night. Opening contestants are Harry Kent, 230, Portland, Ore. and Ray Eckert, 235, St. Louis. They meet for one fall, or 30 minutes. In another tussle, Sergeant Bob
Kenaston, 192, a Marine, returns to
face Bad Boy Brown, 188 a new{comer from Chicago. It also is for {one fall, or 30 minutes. A pair of rival engagements have been lined up for the feature, with | Billy Thom, 180, head mat mentor at Indiana University, getting another {chance at Frankie Talaber, 185, of |Chicago. Thom dropped a disputed {verdict to Talaber two weeks ago. It is for one fall, or 60 minutes. In the final, Dorve Roche, 220, the
210 000—3 9 3 slashing his win price 0 3-1 and Decatur, Ill, grappler, will try to
leven up with Ray Villmer, 224, St. Louis. They have met three times
pleted for the Armory wrestling ring |
| ters.
As a matter of fact, the Indians were held to two blows in the last
Isix frames, and in the fifth Ger-
hauser fanned the side, 1-2-3. The Blues collected 12 hits to seven by Indianapolis, and five of the winners’ blows were doubles, wind-
| blown or otherwise.
Pete Sivess relived Cox in the fifth and finished out the Tribe mound duties. The big thrill for the home fans in this game was an inside-the-park home run by Kermit Lewis with one on in the first stanza. He belted the sphere to the flag pole in center, and in the third frame his single batted in the Tribe's third and last run. Jake Wade, southpaw, opened on the Indian rubber in the second fracas and he was derricked before (Continued on Page 15)
St. Joseph Downs Bulldog Nine
The St. Joseph Pumas came from behind in the last three innings to defeat Butler 4-2 on the Fairview diamond Saturday afternoon, in the Bulldogs’ season opener. It was a pitcher's battle all the way with Joe Luegers of the visitors besting Bud Tex and Bob Fletcher by a matter of five errors on the Bulldog infield. Luegers gave up only four safeties as did Tex and Fletcher. The invading pitcher also chalked up 10 strikeouts.
Butler University’s track and tennis teams absorbed their second
in 14 months, with Ray taking the| defeats of the season Saturday, the first two matches and Roche the| racqueteers losing to Indiana 8-1, third. It is for one fall, or 60 and Coach Ray Sears’ outfit bowing
minutes.
§ minor events program while Ray
Hoosier Bowlers
{to the Purdue Boilermakers 94-37.
Take ABC Alleys
ST. PAUL. Minn, April 21 (U. P). —Two of the 1940 titleholders appear on the American Bowling Congress program today. Fred Fischer of Buffalo, who won the all-events crown at Detroit last
year with 2001, will appear on the! (Following is the ninth dispatch in the
| United Press series covering prominent contenders for the Kentucky Derby.)
Brown, 1940 singles winner, will eee By JACK GUENTHER
bowl with a Terre Haute, Ind. five. The team-pley lineup includes the United Press Staff Correspondent Solvay, N. Y., Recreations, three of| NEW YORK, April 19.—When the {whose m'mbers were on a Solvay | long-shot stabbers gather at Church|team which won second place in the ill Downs the afternoon of May 3 {1939 A. B. C. They have added Mike and start seriously scouting about |Blazek, Conneaut, O.. one of the for another Donerail, Bold Venture |eight men in A. B. C. history to hit or Gallahadion, a colt who is cer(300, and Frank Smith, who has tain to receive careful consideration scored 711 in singles in a Congress before any decisions are reached is play. Rocky Palladino’s oddly-christined The standings: \ Littie Beans. ak ATi Re TO tart: | On the record the bay three-year. Chapin & Gore. Chicago, 3033: St. Paui old with the prosaic name doesn’t Rouse Alleys, Shakopee, Minn., 3023 Koe- | appear to be an overly strong derby ay Man — Harry Ledene Jr.William threat, but then neither did the Thompson, Minneapolis, Gly: Piney lothers. In starting 10 times last Kenet-Joseph Bodis. Cleveland, 1313; Elmer | season he finished out of the money 130 only once, but on a class basis he is a dark number with a chance only in an off-form race. Since
Koch-Ned Day, Mil kee, Ge Bobmeyer-Nelson Burton. St. Louis, 306. more than half the derbies have been of that sort, he can’t be
Singles—Ed Mady, Minneapolis, 730: Anthony Sparando, New York, 338: Martin Carlson, Rockford, Ill, 730: Hilla Kallas, Milwaukee. 2%: Victor Buchholz, Mankato, Minn, % Kelly, South Bend, a counted out until the winner streaks under the wire. Last season Little Beans won five straight starts before he finished third in a sixth attempt.
120. | All-Events—Harold {Ind., 2013: Eddie Koepp. Cleveland, 1972; Nelson Burton, St. Louis, 1965; George Tishock, Milwaukee, If John Erben, Forest Park, 11. 1961.
Leaders Hold Spots In State Pin Meet
Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind. April 21 —Almost the same names lead the standings in the 32d annual Indiana men’s bowling tournament today after another week-end of attack by the pinmen. C. Parker or Bedford scored 661 to move into fifth place in the singles field. Hammond, East Chi- | cago, Muncie and Nappanee squads {rolled but could not molest the leaders.
of Mirafel became more widely known for what he didn't do than what he did. Shipped to Belmont Park, he became the center of what proved to be a comedy of errors.
GOODYEAR TIRES
AT REDUCED PRICES TERMS AS LOW AS
BLUE POINT
A WEEK
DELAWARE & MADISON
Although | this record, compiled in New Eng-| land, was excellent, the speedy son |
|
Little Beans Appears a Good Long Shot in ‘Gallop Poll’
Palladino claimed the horse had been entered in several stakes, but no trace of his name could be found in the books. After the track passed the buck, Little Beans went to Maryland. There, at Havre De Grace, he defeated Level Best and Porter's Cap in the Eastern Shore Handicap for what was his biggest score. He didn't fare as well in his next outing, finishing eighth, and was sent to Florida for the winter. In his only start there he knocked off Whirlaway among others and last week he ran second to the Older Son Altesse in Maryland. Bred by Sominco Farm, the son of Mirafel was bought at the Saratoga sales for $500—the lowest price paid for a thoroughbred who achieved himself creditably in stakes during the 1940 season. In all, he won $14,755. He is trained by his owner and has dropped to 20-1 in the future books after opening around 40.
Next-—Omission.
{4 Games Only
ROLLER DERB
Coliseum Fairgrounds
STARTS TONIGHT
7-11 Nightly. EN.
More Blues Game
ET
s
ion
Champ
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent
DETROIT, April 21 (U. P.. When a champ looks bad, there's something wrong. The Tigers, defending champions of the American League, are in seventh place, and the matter with them is they're not hitting. They've won one game out of four and had a close call in that one. What's more they aren't likely to get going until they discover a cure for their slump at the plate. Only one Tiger is hitting over .300 —Barney McCosky, who made three hits yesterday to boost his mark to 3567. Look at what the other Detroit wrecking crew is hitting: Hank Greenberg .167, Rudy York .143, Charlie Gehringer .091 and Pinky Higgins .077. The Tigers had half a dozen chances to beat the Indians yesterday but wound up losing, 4-2. They left 14 men stranded because their big
pop guns by Mel Harders' curves. After pitching himself out of trouble nearly all day Harder weakened in the ninth and had to be rescued by veteran Joe Heving, the ex-Red Sox, who retired the last three men in order. To add to the Tigers’ grief they have reconciled themselves to the fact they'll lose Hank Greenberg to Uncle Sam May 7. Manager Del Baker is saying very little about Greenberg's case and what he does say is couched in pessimism. “Nobody's going to replace Hank Greenberg,” he says. “You just can't replace a fellow like him. I may move Stainback to left and play Campbell in right but that's a bridge we’ll cross when we get to it.” Only bright spot in the Tiger picture is the way the fans are
i$
SPECIAL BREW BOHEMIAN
12025 MARTINDALE AVE.
| ——
™
Have New Jobs
Detroit |
guns were converted into a bunch of |
supporting the club. The threegame series with the Ipdians drew 76,852, with 19,437 turning out for yesterday's game on a rainy, wind-
swept Sunday afternoon. Manager Joe McCarthy got his birthday present from the Yanks a day in advance. Marse Joe is 53 today so the Yanks unlimbered their heavy artillery yesterday and battered out a 19-5 triumph over the Athletics, routing Chubby Dean, who handcuffed them in the opener at Yankee Staduim. The Yanks made 18 hits, including two homers by Joe Gordon and one by Joe DiMaggio. Little Dom DiMaggio paced the unbeaten Boston Red Sox to a 14-8 victory over Washington. He rapped out four hits, three of them doubles, scored four runs and stole two bases. With one of the largest crowds— 56,314—ever to see a single game in the National League looking on, the Brooklyn Dodgers snavped the New York Giants’ five-game winning streak with a 10-9 triumph at the Polo Grounds. The Dodgers scored the winning run in the ninth when Babe Young fielded Dixie Walker's grounder and in trying for a force play at second hit Alex Kampouris, who was racing from first to second, in the head. Mel Ott hit two homers and Harry Danning and Joe Orengo one each for the Giants. Homers by Lonnie Frey and Harry Craft helped Cincinnati trim Pittsburgh, 7-3. Babe Dahigren’s homer with a mate on base in the 10th gave the Boston Bees a 7-5 victory over the Phillies. A walk to Bill Nicholson, Rip Russell's single and Clyde McCullough’s fly in the 10th enabled the Chicago Cubs to nose out the St, Louis Cardinals, 11-10.
aish is unknown in China . .
in the Same Old Game
> They are two of the season’s new managers but both are old hands at the game. Frankie Frisch (left) left radio to return to baseball as Pittsburgh's manager while Jimmy Wilson (right) gave up his coaching and catching post with the Cincinnati Reds to manage the Chicago Cubs. They meet when the two clubs clashed recently in Chicago,
Tigers Look Bad As Heavy Hitters Fold Up
Roller Derby Starts Tonight
The skaters line up this evenin at 8:30 o'clock at the Coliseum [Jan another Roller Derby hetween the Indianapolis and New York teams.
At the opening gun five skaters from each team will begin rushe ing around the track for 15 minutes when they will be replaced by five other skaters. The men will start the race and the girls team will come in at the end of the first 15« minute period. The starting lineup for Indianapolis include Wes Aronson, Bob Satterfield, Don Ogden, Whitey Kozlowski and Tommy Atkinson. Their partners will be Kitty. Nehls, Peggy O'Neal, Virginia Ogden, Vir« ginia Balzer and Annabelle Stewe art, an Indianapolis girl, The five minutes before the half« time period, “open house” will bé held on the track during which time the leaders have an opportunity te gain four additional points. The girls start this race and at one-and-one-half minutes the leader gains one point. The men then take the track and the leader at the end of the same period is credited with a point. Twa points are granted the-pers= son leading at the end of the last last two minutes. Doors at the Coliseum open at \7 p. m.
A rAlLORED To YOUR MEAsuR
SUITS «¢ TOPCOATS 2450 The
\Barthel nr
"Chop Susy was concocted in New York City by a chef employed by Li Hunp Chang . .. 2 »
From "Famous First Facts'' by Juseph Nathan Kane (By permission)
Chop Suey has caught public fancy so completely that it has become an American food tradition. Like all intriguing foods, it is more enjoyable when served with Wiedemann’s Fine Beer. The flavor of Wiedemann's fully aged
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Traditionally American.”
Ask for Wiedemann’s by name . . , wherever beer is sold
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Copyright 1941, The Geo. Wiedemann Brewing Ce., Inc.
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