Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1942 — Page 9

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 98 1040

Golden Glovers Will Throw Plenty of Leather Feb. 6

a

No-No Turner Is Now an

All-Star Man

The Best

No-No Joe Turner, playing his |

first year of professional hockey for | the Indianapolis Capitals, will rep-, |resent the Caps in the American

| Leagues All-Star game, Feb. 3, at!

Cleveland for the benefit of the | American and Canadian Red Cross

| Funds. | | Young Turner, who has scored | three shutouts this season, was the | choice of sports writers and radio’ announcers. Other Capital players mey be added to the team when] the fans’ votes are compiled later this week. The writers and announcers were to vote upon six players in their division but the squad as announced today by President Maurice Podoloff of the American Jonge nsisted of four extra players be cause of ties.

The Cast

The Western team selected clugad Joe Turner, goalie; Bill MacSing Cleveland, right defense; Allum, Buffalo, and Pete et, Pittsburgh, left defense; Harry Frost, Hershey, right wing: Les Cun ngham, Cleveland. center; Norm Cleveland, and Gordon Bruce, Her rshev, left wing. | The Eastern team selected by the press and radio representatives was Alike Karakas, Providence, goalie: Eddie Bush, Providence, and VicMyles, New Haven. defense: | Eddie Shore, Springfield, left deLou Trudel. Washington, wing: Norman New center, and Pete Kelly

id, left win

None for Philly Fhiladelphia

games this season,

Jan —A poll

Frain ers aine

28.

tre I'S operating in Qs the winter n the Kentucky

a horse with nine not win

Sexton

us will

un

cu the winter book. nost widely publicized x racing. Yet, as d sav not one player gives it a

ever

that the book enefit of law 3 therefore, conon what the bors call the If it were possible to | te the book openly the play 4d involve millions. It would | tion from every two buck ' in the country

i ! i in.

we

"nin 34113

HFe a

wo

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TY per

right

ms urns

£500 Is Big Stuff A LARGE PART of

book play comes from owners and } ttaches who | s have prospective even they eir colt wi ing da av the bet: S |

aven the winter § Spri ngfi e { rainers and stabl 1a i that the operato their

because

victors in only eight failed to place s on the squad. Bush will not be able to play in the all-star clash. He was traded to the Detroit Red Wings of the National League last 2 week

™ 1Ur

a man

five zames this season and the Caps lost those five In addition to his three :No-No had three one-point trijumphs. |

} Toe rner has missed

3 $b shutouts,

The Caps (Turner) only game be- has peinted almost everything in| iman's Store, 126 N.

fore the all-star contest will be Sunday night against the Cleveland

before the race, ar : the race, and Barons at the Coliseum.

congenial sucker is the juicy baby r 300 to 1.

» >

2-Year-Olds Don’t Last first that ever that | ahh

i i i

dish

ad

Net Scores

STATE HIGH SCHOOLS

Marion, 4%; Huntington, 34% Andrews, 30; Jackson of Wells Counts, Goodland. 31: Kentland, 33. Hillsbore. 37: Wawynetown, 34, Sunman, #0: Whitewater, 19. Mt. Summit, 33: Mays, 32. Silver Creek. 12. Henrvville, 38 Roanoke, 41: Pleasant Mills, 33 Casuga, 29; Wallace, 21. Alamo. 43: Marshall, 1%. New Ross, 34; Linden, 38.

Mr. Sexton reminds you

few wir 33

the Der rby two-vear-old

nter book

favorites iavorites

and, second,

I & ~Remember 40, "n Chico in "39, I 37, Singing Wood in 34, Ladysman 33, Top Flight in 32, Equipoise Bla Whichone in 10 and Hig in 8» There to

uve.

STATE COLLEGE SCORES

Manchester, 36; Central Normal, 34 Tri-State, 38; Notre Dame Reserves,

in

vy

OTHER Solas jo Nerthern, 68; Giffin, 33 Roancke, 45: Hampden- Pi dnts, =n Indiana (Pa) Teachers, 31: Edinboro. 3} North Carolina State 60: Davidson, 13. Wake Forest, 36; North Carolina, 20 Phy a} Michian College, 44; Grand Rap-

Tech, 19; (On- |

was x ther Whirlaway was the j har in 1940. Our Boots disBold But cham“His im the to

n King Cole, an and Attention > was the Afr

far thie so did 0 Qe | Lawrence | tario), 34. Parsons, 89: Central, 31: Akron, 3%: Youngstown, Salem. 34: Marshall, 33. Mt. St. Marys, $6; Western Marsiand, 39 | ‘ Emory and Henry, 54; Lynchburg Celeze, {i New Mexice Teachers’, of Celerade,

Assumption

+. 28 29.

“a Penn (fowa) Towa Weslevan, 39.

argues Sexton

Derby sco h

re merely makes

old champion

35.

Adams State]

29

13: 32

McPhersen. 38: Bethanr, Central, 48: William Jewell, 38 Arizona State Teachers (Tempe), Arizona, {1 New Mexico University, 4: 36: Dana. 32.

Mines, 38. aT. Teachers, 32: Nebraska Weslevan,

FE

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F

ent New Mexico

Omaha University,

Simpson, 8: Upper Towa, 39.

PROFESSIONAL National League Chicage, 1: Fort Wavwne,

Record Threatened

NEW YORK, Jan. 28 National League scoring record of 900 goals 168-game schedule will be eclipsed this season if hockey players continue their present clip.

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The Indianapoils Times

12: Phelps,

Neo-Ne . . . an All-Star.

Painting Over,

'Blimp' Returns

ODENTON, Md. Jan. 28 (U.P) — —With most of his troubles behind him, Catcher Babe (Blimp) Phelps, one of the few ball players who; ever “tiffed” himself right out ot a {four grand World Series cut, today, looked forward te happy and sue- | cessful season in the uniform of the’ Pittsburgh Pirates. The ex-Brookiyn catcher who is good-natured but noted for his;

“strange moods” and “stranger ail- |

ments” forwarded his signed contract to the Pirates yesterday and

plans to report on the dot at Pitts-|

burgh’s San Bernardino, Cal, spring training camp. Phelps weighs 215, only 10 pounds over his! playing weight. Likes Pirates Fhelps quit the Dodgers last June! 12 and hasn't been in a baseball uniform since. His troubles all started last February when he failed to report with the rest of the! { Dodgers at the club's Havana training camp ard they continued apace! nmtil Larry MacPhail Babe and slapped a $300 fine on] him, “I'm glad to go to the Pirates” Phelps said. “TI don’t want to play any place I'm not wanted.” Since he left the Dodgers, Phelps |

Odenton that he could slip up on! with a bucket of paint and brush. “The hunting’s not so good faround here,” Phelps said. “So I've been painting to kill the time. I

painted my house, the garage and] imy other house next door. ‘painted my mothers

Then I house, the! parsonage and part of the Methodist | Church. I got so tired of painting I thought Id develop painter's colic.” During the World Series last fall Phelps kept up his painting and “just heard an inning or so at a time.” A False Rumor

*T was pulling fer the Dodgers, ‘of course,” Phelps said, “on account {of Dolph Camilli and the other boys {that I like. And talking about Ca- | milli, I think he’s just about the best ball player in the business. I heard a false rumor during the winter from the pastor's daughter that Camilli had been traded to the Pirates too. I was kind of sorry it wasn't true.” As soon as the weather improves | Pheips said he planned to start working out with his nephew, James a semi-pro player in this section who pitched a couple of

| innings against the Baltmore Orioles

in an exhibition game last summer, Phelps said that he thought Leo Durocher was a “swell guy” and that he treated his men right. As for his new manager, Frankie Frisch, Babe said he didn't know him very well but “imagined he'd pe easy to get along with.” He picked the St. Louis Cardinals as the team to beat in the National League pennant race, adding “thtey sure had tough luck last year.”

De Bacco, Bergna

Take Bike Lead

CHICAGO, Jan. 28 (U. P.).—The

{team of Angelo De Bacco and [Charley Bergna stole two laps from

Terchy Peden and Charley Yaeccino, previous leaders, to lead the field today after 57 hours of the 44th International Six - Day Bicycle Race. Standings in the 57th hour at 6 a. m, were:

Teams Miles Laps Points A. De BaccoBergna ceeena 964 Yates-D. Peden ...94 Torchy PedenYaccino .........9%4¢ Letourner-Audy ...964 Logan-Anderson ..964 JacobyCarfagnini ......9%14 Kuehn-Eiler ......94 Pesek-Abt .........964 Rodman-J. De Bacco .......00.. 988 76

Irish Seek Comeback

Cathedral High School basketball squad will be host to Noblesville tonight, in an attempt to get back on the winning trai! against state foes. In their last game with an out-of-town five, the Irish lost to Lebanon, 3% to 18.

LOANS :

272 267

“a

260 151 103

209 108 100

| Training for

a (Quantity and quality leather ia id

suspended |

weir The CHICAG

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

————

Amateur Boys

|

Some High-Sticking

3rd Session

Golden Gloves trainers report that their proteges are taking the hard! drills in stride this week although] the next Times-Legion amateur’ fistic show is not to be staged until next week, on Friday, Feb. 6. As one instructor explained it. “the boys know they've got to make this next hurdle to reach the finals, |and get cut in on the titles and prizes.” | It will be the tournament's third | chapter in the slambang classic and] ‘the fourth and last is to be held lon Feb. 13. Out of the fourth event| {will come the Open and Novice class champs, and the Open class kings Iwill form the Indianapolis team to |compete in the annual Tournament

lof Champions in Chicago late next! month. | Action In Two Classes | |

Action will be waged in both, | ‘classes on Feb. 6 as 31 eligibles rejmain in the Open bracket and 38, in the Novice. Barring a a) : shrinkage, that night's menu at! 3 Butler Field House will offer both

(ing. The tournament committee hopes | to reduce the field to finalists only, by the eliminations on Feb. 6 and lit's possible that several lads will} ‘have to fight twice, depending upon} ithe luck of the draw. ; All bouts will be over the cus- | tomary amateur distance, three] rounds. two minutes to the heat, to! a decision of the referee and two

i

“Yeh!

hit for it to count a goal”

Track Doctor Helps Airmen.

Times Special | BLOOMINGTON. Jan. 28-—Dr.|

Sid Robinson, Indiana University | physiologist, who has for the past ten years been testing the oxygen

consumption of the country’s great distance ruaners, is going to turn his attentions to America's aviators for at least a year. Dr. Robinson, himself a former American Olympic runner, will go to Harvard University for a year’s research work in aviation physiology, to be carried on in the Harvard fatigue laboratcry. Dr. Robinson has experimented with such great runners as Glenn Cunningham, the former Kansas | whirlwind, who holds the world mile record; Don Lash, ex-Indiana

We thought Eddie Kuntz may be officiating this game, also, . because the lady above i® saying, "How many times does he have to be

University world two-mile champion; Gregory Rice, of Notre Dame, current two-mile titleholder, and | the numerous footracing stars de{veloped on the I. U. campus by E. !C. (Billy) Hayes, who directed Dr. {Robinson to the 1928 Olympic squad [when both were at Mississippi State | College. Last November, Dr. Robinson used |the National Collegiate Athletic As|sociation cross-county meet as his | “laboratory.” He took blood samples (of 30 of the 94 runners entered in {the 1941 race at East Lansing, Mich. The blood samples are being studied to determine how much sugar and lactic acid the boys had left after running over four miles. In this way, the I. U. physiologist can learn what effect a strenuous run has on the human body, and in the future better prepare aviators for similar athletic strain.

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judges. Ten clubs have representatives in ‘the running after surviving two shows and interest in the tournament still is city-wide with all sec- | tions having a chance to share in ithe Feb. 13 finals.

Tickets Available Downtown

There will be no advance inj 21% Ponder: prices for the last two shows. Re-| *Donald Gwin, Northeast |served ringside seats are priced at Center $1.10 and general admission stands| aia mero uke jat 60 cents downstairs and 30 cents] jupstairs. Service men in uniformsj lare admitted without charge. Rien kson, Crawfordsville Reserved seats for the Feb. 6 event wr Goodwin, Rhodius Community Cen.’ fare on sale downtown at the BushiFeezle Sporting Goods Co, 136 E.! *lim Buhr, { Washington St. and at the Sports-| “TRobert Beamon, Hill Community Pennsylvania ‘e:

The Times-Legion Golden Gloves| field as it stands for the next show! |at Butler OPEN CLASS | | Community|

—118 Pounds—

—126 Pounds— Northeast Community Cen-

Cen-|

Earl Pau!. Leeper Boxing School. Jerry Potts, Leeper Boxing School. —~—135 Pounds—

*Lerov Reed, Hill Community Center. *Bill Miles, Hill Community Center.

| St. | Golden Gloves tournaments are| under way in many cities at this! {time, in the Midwest, Northwest! Lewis Hewitt Leeper Boxing School {South and Southwest. It is esti- Conan ET RY (mated that 40 teams will be on hand !in Chicago when the Tribune Charities, ment of CueIOne & Stadium, Feb, 23, 24, | Indianapolis Ah Stier will {be making their tenth trip to Chicago this year.

—117 Pounds—

Don Schooler, FP. A. L. No. I ) ceptor Phelps. Northeast olqas Ss na- Lenter ne. holds it annual Tourna Jack Durham. Hill Community Center. | in Chicago James Sherron. Washington A. C. Clinton Brooks. Leeper Boxing School.

2 Community

—160 Pounds— James Glenn, Washington A. Billy Jones, Leeper Boxing schaol. Tonv Vogt, Leeper Boxing School, *Lee Carter, Fayette Community Center. *Owen Gilbert, Fayette Community Cen-

{

| ter

Butler Co-Captain | ou nus Out With Injury

Co-capt. Wilbur Schumacher of Butler may miss the benefit game against Chanute Field, here Saturday night. Schumacher, the team’s leading scorer, has been sidelined with a “football shoulder” he received in last Saturday's Ball State game. He missed the Michigan State contest last Monday night when the Bulldogs were beaten, 40 to 39. Chanute Field is 2 team comparable to the Great Lakes Naval Training School. Led by Bill Hapac, a former great at Illinois, the service men are the only team to defeat the Illini this year.

Can’t Beat Him Now

BOSTON, Jan. 28 —Blondy (They Can't Beat Us) Ryan of the 1933 New York Giants is working for the Internal Revenue Department here. |§

A Long Pedaler

NEW YORK. Jan. 28—Al Letout- |i ner, six-day bike race veteran, has is pedaled 200.000 miles in 17 years. |B

Hockey Oddity?

BOULDER, Colo., Jan. 28 —There are 12 Canadians, no Coloradoans, |g on the Colorado University hockey team. OF-PAW

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Here Are the Boxers Left

NOVICE CLASS —112 Pounds—

vi Kelley, South Side Communit Field House on Feb. 6: Cen y

“Bon Henry. English Avenue Boys’ Clu

Lier “Bill Sensei. South Side Community Cen-

Oliver Wilson, Nashingien A C —118 Pounds— Johnny Sherron, Washington

*Bill LaFollette,

unds— Rhodius

Fayette

—126 P *Fred Johnson.

Carpenter, Communi Leon Harris. *Willis McCoy. P, NO. Russell McDonald Bunreith A. GC. —135 Pounds— *Philip Fink, P. A. L. No. 3. *Frank Johnson, Washington A. C. Buddy Maxwell, Leeper Boxing School. *Warren Woods, ayette

Center —147 Puugieee *Gordon Hogue, A. L. 3. *Frank Rand, finn Conran Center, Johnny Poore, Washington A, C. Clarence Bell. Washington A. C *Edward Mitchell, P. A, L. No *John Favette Center.

Anthony,

—160 Pounds— *Herman Charles. Rhodius Communi

‘Kirk Skinner, P. A, *Kenneth Robison.”

Center,

No. "Hill Communi

Center 1Svivester Smith, Hill Community Center.

Carl Schmidt, unattache Bob Mavberry. unattached.

—175 Pounds— cJack Jording. Faveite Community Ce

“ohn Weatherford. Favette Community

Cente “Conrad Terhune, P. A. L. *VYernon Allen, P. A. L. No. —Heavyweight—

3.

ea hert McKinney, Rhodiu¢ Community

william Holmes,

Joe Haboush, Leeper Boxing School.

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