Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1943 — Page 17
linois Stows
e eptance of Probable Bid N. C. A. A. Tourney Up to Meets Chicago Tonight
By TOMMY DEVINE - United Press Staff Correspondent
CHICAGO. March 1 (U. P.).—An invitation to the National Col-
te Athletic association’s annual
for the University of Illinois’ brilliant basketball team today, but accepte of the bid depends on the outcome of a vote by members of the
* Tilinois tucked away its second straight Big Ten championship Sat
urday .night .in record breaking lon, rolling over Northwestern 4 before 19,846 wild-eyed fans “the Chicago stadium. It was Tilinois’ 11th consecutive confefence triumph. ach Doug Mills’ dazzling quinmeets cellar-dwelling Chicago tonight at Champaign, but the ‘game is an anti-climax to Illinois’ “all-conquering conference season. Maroons haven't won a Big Ten game since 1940 and hardly belong on the same floor with the
‘league champions. i Big Ten Record ¢ ilinois’ 86-point total against
i Northwestern set an all-time Big Ten record. The highest previous total ever made in a league game was run up by Wisconsin early last “month when it trounced Chicago, b-74-30. Illinois took the lead over Northwestern in the first minute of play > es then steadily pulled away from the Wildcats. At half-time the Champaign quintet was in front, 40-23. It pushed its point total to 78 with seven minutes of the game ) yemaining and then Coach Mills poured a stream of substitutes into the game. “Ken Menke and Art Mathisen were the offensive standouts with © 22 and 21 points respectively. Andy © i Phillip, the conference’s top indi- ~ yidual scorer, bagged 16 points to “boost his season's total to 215. Phillip devoted a large part of his|, time to “feeding” his mates and . acting as a decoy on set-up plays.
Up to Players
After the game Mills said plans _ for post-season tournament participation depended on the players. “We haven't discussed any postgeason plans and won't until after the Chicago game,” he said, “but if we get by that one then the tour- _ namént question is largely up to the ~ players. I'll leave it pretty largely to them if they want to compete inthe N. C. A. A. meet. The metro- ~ Politan invitation tournament is definitely out. We won't consider a bid to that one.” “How did Mills feel personally
Se
about competing in the N. C. A. A.|
tournament? “If we can have our squad intact then it would be all right, but some of the players may be getting military service calls before late March. ~ I don’t want to put my team in the event if we lose our key men.”
Beaten Last Year
Illinois was the Midwest's representative in the N. C. A. A. affair . last season, but was beaten in the first round of the Eastern play-off, ~ 46-44 by the University of Ken-
i!
: ‘Wisconsin assured itself of a first ~ division finish when it topped Purdue, 53-45, in Saturday’s secondary * feature. Johnny Kotz paced the " Badgers with 17 points. Michigan put on its greatest offensive show of the season to thump Chicago, 67-33. It was the Maroon’s 89th straight conference loss. Jowa staved off a late rally to edge Ohio State, 43-41. In addition to the Illinois-Chicago game four other conference confests are scheduled tonight. In them Wisconsin faces ‘Minnesota, Ohio State plays Towa, Indiana meets Purdue and Northwestern tangles with Michigan. oad Big Ten standing:
RRPID DUD
‘BUFFALO, N. Y, March 1 (U. ) —Hospital officials today reportthat James J. (Jimmy) Collins, , manager of the first team to win modern world series and one of ’s greatest third basemen, was still in “poor” condition, He entered Millard Fillmore hospital
1 Wecnesday seriously ill with :
onia, nding physicians gave Collins
became manager of the Red Sox in 1901 and two later guided the club to the
shuts ty me Jere Ehdpstalmie
03 N. ILLINOIS ST i
NA'S OLDEST CREDIT JEWELERS
RADE 2 TIRES
5.50x10—10.40 7—1026 ] 6.00x16—=11.13 B— 9.63 | 6.50x16—13.83 7.00x16—17.97
iE bo i; DELAWARE
& MADISON
) LOAN:
WE or DIAMONDS * SIT LLL [A
29| Of Gary.
& metal pre-war springs.
= fill a cat’s eyes; and a dull luster at
tournament was a virtual certainty
Detroit Tops Rangers, 5-1, In Rough Tilt
By UNITED PRESS Doug Bentley of the Chicago Black Hawks took the lead in the National Hockey league individual scoring race last night as he scored twice and made an assist in his team’s 4-4 deadlock with the Boston Bruins before 16,261 fans. The three points shoved Bentley ahead of Bill Cowley, Boston center, with 65 points. Doug’s brother, Max, got one goal and two assists to tie Cowley for second place with 64 points. Toronto's Maple Leafs meanwhile tied Chicago for third place by downing the Montreal Canadiens, 4-2, before 11,880 fans, as the league-leading Detroit Red Wings defeated the New York Rangers, 5-1, in g rough game before 14,857 fans, o Boston jumped into a 4-1 firstperiod lead on two goals by Boyd and a pair by Hollett and H. Jackson, Max Bentley scoring for Chicago. Doug Bentley tallied twice in
goal tied it up, Glen Harmon scored for Montreal and Reg Hamilton for Toronto in a close first period. Mel Hill and Jack McLean put Toronto in front in the second and Billy Taylor matched Bud O’Connor’s finalperiod goal. Stewart and Douglas sent Detroit into a first-period lead against the Rangers, Motter matching Hextall’s goal for the Rangers in the wildest second ' period ever seen in the Garden. Orlando and Bruneteau clinched it for Detroit in the third. The standings:
17
Montreal 5% New York
Regional Pairings
The 64 state high school basketball sectional champions crowned Saturday night move into the 16 regional tournaments this Saturday in afternoon games at 1:30 and 2:30 and the winners meet at 8 p. m. to determine the 16 semi-finalists. The regional pairings:
AT ANDERSON
Central of Lawrence and Greenfield. Plainfield and Lapel. AT BLOOMINGTON
Linton and Brazil. Martinsville and Wiley of Terre Haute, AT CLINTON
Crawfordsville and Hillsboro. Greencastle and Clinton.
AT EVANSVILLE
Boonville and Central of Evansville. Tell. City and Princeton.
AT FT. WAYNE
Central of Ft. Wayne and Auburn. Warsaw and Kendallville,
AT HAMMOND
Michigan City and Remington. Clark of Hammond and Wallace
AT HUNTINGTON
Monroe and Bluffton. Andrews and Dunkirk.
AT LAFAYETTE Frankfort ami Monitor. Lebanon and Oxford. AT MARION
Sheridan and Marion. Wabash and Kokomo.
AT MUNCIE
New Castle and Burris of Muncie. Winchester and Richmond.
AT NEW ALBANY
Jeffersonville and French Lick. Bedford and Seymour. AT PERU
Logansport and Pern. Monticello and Burlington.
AT RUSHVILLE
New Salem and Batesville. Kitchel and Aurora.
~AT SHELBYVILLE
Center Grove and Greensburg. Morristown and Madison. -
AT SOUTH BEND
Bourbon and Rochester. Elkhart and Central of South Bend. ; AT WASHINGTON
Jasper and Decker, Sullivan and Washington.
BEDSPRINGS USE WOOD Only one-fourth as much metal is used in the new wartime wood bedsprings as was used in the all-
- CAT'S NOCTURNAL SIGHT - At night the pupils practically
the back of his eyes reflects the almost invisible light, giving him
the second and Allen’s third-period
Andy Phil
llinois' score was 10 points over
Andy Phillip (47), Illinois, Big Ten scoring champ, scores. during game at Chicago in which Illini beat Northwestern, 86 to 44.
the conference. Phillip brought his season total to 215 points, a
lip Scores
previous one-game team high in
I. C. 4-A Games
for the A. A. U. team crown. Now they shoot for the college title in the intercoliegiates, where 31 colleges have entered a total of 402 men. Frank Dixon, the streamlined Negro freshman, sent the N. ¥Y. U. squad off on the right foot when he
sis. | Won the feature A. A, U, event—the 54 mile—in 4:09.6. A blasting bell lap
made up 15 yards on defending champion Gilbert Dodds, the flying parson from Boston, and sent Dixon through the tape two strides in front. Feature of Meet
Dixon’s second mile triumph in four starts was a feature of the meet, in which two new meet marks were hung up and three champions made successful title defenses.
The records went to Cornelius Warmerdam, the Flying Dutchman from California, and speedy Herb Thompson of Jersey City, N. J. Warmerdam pole-vaulted 15 feet 37% inches while Thompson won the 60-yard dash in 6.1 seconds, equaling the world indoor mark. The
Rice, who scored his 60th consecutive triumphes by winning the three-mile straight year; Hank Dreyer in the 35-pound weight and Josh Williamson in the high jump.
Hits Nightly Ceiling Warmerdam, in setting the new
the 29th time—only man ever to better that height. The field dropped out at 14 feet and Warmerdam then hit his nightly ceiling before missing out at 15 feet, 8 inches as he attempted to better his indoor world record of 15 feet, 7% inches. The little mechanical man from Notre Dame, J. Gregory Rice, had no competition. The running machine lapped the field three full times as he won in 13:53.5. Dreyer scored his sixth victory in 10 years by tossing the 35-pound weight 55 feet, 3% inches. Williamson deadlocked with Bill Vessie of Columbia at 6 feet, 6 inches in defending the high jump crown. Skimming over the 60-yard high hurdles in 7.4 seconds, Bob Wright of Ohio State took this event while Hal Stickel of Pitt won the low hurdles over the same distance in 6.9 seconds.
Kahn Tailoring
quintets.
place. Mouldings, Inc., from the Moonlite Alleys shared the top spot, !
the huge total with a 664 series that was climaxed by a 290 game. Three new teams reached the top 10 in the championship class, Wayne Park Garage getting 2842, good for sixth place; Lyons Department Store a 2823, good for No. 7 spot, and Pivot City Ink 2779 and ninth place. Mouldings, Inc., from the Parkway loop, last year’s handicap division winners, turned in a 3116 in this year's event. The series was good for third place. Team No. 7 from International Harvester with 3107 took fifth place, Indiana Asphalt with 3094 wound up in sixth place, Lyons Department Store with the aid of ‘its handicap |® took eighth, Eli Lilly Checkers had a 3076, good for ninth and National Refining crashed the top 10 with 3073.
239 W. WASH ST. lished 42 Years
3 nocturnal sight.
Entrants in the minor events were
new record, and he has one more game to play.
N. Y. U. Is Favored to Capture
By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, March 1 (U.P.).—First college ever to win the national A. A. U. title in the meet’s 55-year history, New York university was favored today to capture the team title in the 22d annual IC4-A indoor track and field games at Madison Square Garden this week-end. The Violets made a tremendous impression Saturday night when they nosed out the New York A, C., team champion for 11 straight years,
defending champions were Greg.
run for the fourth
A. A. U. records, cleared 15 feet for un
Ist Place in City Pin Tourney
Despite a light schedule that rung down the curtain on the team events of the 37th annual men’s city bowling tournament, some nifty scores were turned in, resulting in replacements among the top 10
Kahn Tailoring rolled games of 854, 841 and 880 and added a 59-pin handicap to wind up with a 3165, which was good for a tie for first
having taken the lead the previous the leaders in doubles and singles week. Fred Mitchell, captain of the | competition, Tailors, sparked his aggregation to!
This Week-end
More Measles
SOUTH BEND, Ind., March 1 (U. P).—South Bend Central high school officials announced today that John Gassensmith, alternate forwardguard of Central’s favored basketball team, is out with measles and may be unable to compete in the regional tournament Saturday. Greensmith’s condition still is undetermined, but it was viewed as “improbable” that he will recover in time for the second week of elimination play. Coach Johnny Wooden has depended on Gassensmith to substitute for star forward Jim Powers.
BASKETBALL
A REE STATE COLLEGES Wisconsin, 53; Purdue, 45. Notre Dame, 45; Michigan State, 42, © Hanover, 87; Central Normal, 64, Western Michigan, 68; Ball State, 47. Valparaiso, Concordia (Milwau-
kee), 35. OTHER COLLEGES
Towa, 43; Ohio State, 41. Illinois, 36; Northwestern, 44, Michigan, 67; Chicago, 33. Gress Lakes, 46; nnesota,
A oraham, 68; Army, 42. Navy, 48; Virginia Military Institute, 37. ; Ride Island State, 85; Providence colege, atom, 61; St. Louis U., 40. Davidson, 49; Clemson, 32. Toledo, 57; Ohio 45. Gettysburg, 34; Bucknell, 32. Albright, 44; Muhlenberg, 35. Dartmouth, 66; Pennsylvania, 43. LaSalle, 51; Long Island, 46. Washington and Jefferson, 45; Waynes-
burg, 27. DePaul (Chicago), 68; Bradley Tech, 38. West Virginia BS verdly, 82; Pitt, 6a, Syracuse, 77; Rice, 40; Texas Aggi North Dakota State, %; 2 orth Dakota university, 29. U. C. L. A, 42; California, 40, Hiram, 43; Kent State, 35. Oregon, 54; Washington State, 39. The Citadel, 44; South Carolina, 38. Norfolk naval training Stet “62: wil. liam and Mary, 34. Washington and Lee, 46; Virginia, 35. North Carolina navy preflight, 57; North Carolina State, 54. Xavier (0.), 61; Dayton, 39. Wittenberg, 73; Otterbein, 56. Cincinnati, 50; Miami (0.), 41. Arkansas, 54; Texas Christian, 39. Marquette, 38; Detroit, 30. Washington (Seattle), 59; dane, 39. Missouri, 42; Kansas Stats Princeton, 41; Cornell, Camp Grant, 51; Biron Wesleyan, 36. Southern Illinois, 53; Northern Illinois Normal, 51 (overtime). Nebraska, 4&1; Iowa State, 36.
Gains Tie for
41 (over-
(stymied in their efforts to unseat
when a pin boys’ strike caused postponement of the schedule until March 13 and i4. The Sport Bowl will house the five-man events in the 1944 tournament while the Pennsylvania will be the scene of the minor events. The selections were made through the votes of the various team ecaptains.
Hockey Standing
AMERICAN LEAGUE 3
Cleveland Washington
RESULTS LAST NIGHT
{junior heavies and meet in the
: are on the four-bout program. Yvon
Farmer Jones
On Mat Menu
Farmer Jones, the “hill billy” performer from Montgomery county, Ark, will be going against a rough and tumble matman when he meets Steve Nenoff of Cleveland tomorrow night in the armory wrestling ring. The bewhiskered Jones has won his first two local tussles and has become a favorite through his easygoing style of grappling. They are
semi-windup. Two brothers, both heavyweights,
Robert, the Montreal matman and a former heavyweight champ, meets
other supporting tussle.
Bobby Managoff, of Chicago, in the main event. The latter also was “tops” in the division. Larry Robert is to oppose Ralph Garibaldi, an Italian out of St. Louis, in another match. The popular ‘Sailor Olson of Chicago collides with Ali Pasha, bearded grappler from India, in the They are
junior heavies. The show is to open at 8:30 .
Duke Favored
RALEIGH, N, C, March 1 (U. P). —Winners of 12 of 12 conference games, Duke’s Blue Devils were top seeded today for the 22d annual Southern conference basketball opening Thursday. George Washington, winner of eight out of 10,
Warmerdam
Gets Trophy
NEW YORK, March 1 (U. P.)— Cornelius Warmerdam, holder of the world indoor and outdoor pole vault records, was en route back to his teaching job at Piedmont, Cal, today after receiviing the James E. Sullivan Memorial trophy as the year’s outstanding athlete. The cloud -busting California school tedcher, only man ever to clear 15 feet, received the trophy
from National A. A. U. President Laurence Di Benedetto of New Orleans at a luncheon in the New York A. C. yesterday. The athlete was praised as a “great champion and an inspirattion to American
was séeded second.
youth.”
Eastern League :
'Hopesto Continue
NEW YORK, March 1 (U.P) .— The Eastern baseball league, one of organized baseball's nine remaining minor leagues, today started a salvage job on its Williamsport and Elmira teams in hopes of continuing with eight clubs in 1943. Both clubs considered surrendering their franchises because of financial difficulties but President Tommy Richardson was sent to the rescue at a meeting yesterday. He will visit both places this week in an attempt to “keep them going.”
HAIRPINS GO TO WAR
Curtailment in the manufacturing of hairpins will save an estimated 57 tons of metal a year.
PRIORITY PLEAS FILED HERE NOW
WPB Change Is Effective Tomorrow on Form PD-1A.
Indiana businessmen and others needing priority assistance were directed’ by the war production board today to file applications for priority assistance on form PD-1A with the nearest WPB district office instead of the Washington office, beginning tomorrow. The four WPB offices in Indiana are located in Indianapolis, South
Bend, Evansville and Ft. Wayite. The action is another step in the decentralization of war production board activities. It also authorizes the Chicago regional WPB office, which serves Indiana, to assign preference ratings on PD-1A certificates to deliveries of materials values at $100 or less beginning March 15. WPB officials said that the preliminary value limitation of $100 would be progressively stepped up as the field offices assume greater responsibilities and that within six weeks more than 80 per cent of all PD-1A applications would be handled entirely by the regional offices. Alpert O. Evans, priorities chief for the Indianapolis WPB office, said that under the new procedure, which will simplify greatly the problems of businessmen and others needing priority assistance, the In-
responsible for seeing that all PD-1A applications are properly filled out.
Forward to Washington
The Indiana offices, Evans explained, will then forward them to Washington, or to the regional office in Chicago if they fall within the value limitations set by the order. Another WPB order, effective March 8, empowers regional offices to authorize construction under conservation order L-41 and to assign preference rating to deliveries of necessary scarce materials to building operations, costing less than -$10,000 except industrial and certain other listed types of construction. Applications for authority to begin construction under this procedure are also to be filed with the nearest Indiana WPB district office. : Requests Are Fewer In the early days of the priorities system, form PD-1, later supplemented by PD-1A, was the principal instrument in the assignment of preference ratings to orders for scarce materials. Later, the production requirements plan, now. being superseded by the controlled materials plan, provided the means for distribution of the great bulk of material required for military and essential civilian production. Consequently, the receipt of the PD-1A forms has dropped from a one-time peak of more than 60,000 a week to only a little more than one-half of that number at the present time. The fact that CMP provides central control over the distribution of scarce materials to claimant agencies makes it possible to decentralize handling of PD-1A’s.
DR. CISLAK TO TALK ON COAL TAR USES
Dr. F. E. Cislak, research chemist of Reilly Tar & Chemical Co., will speak on coal tar in the war program at the Indiana section meeting of the American Chemical society tomorrow noon at Hotel Severin. Dr. Cislak will tell where various coal tar compounds are being used in war operations, which materials are critical and why and what substitutions are being made.
MESSICK LEADS COMPANY H., B. Messick Sr., Indianapolis Assurance Co., was top man in the
company in new sales for January. The company serves 200 local firms
diana field offices of WPB will be].
representative of the Business Men's |p
New business for the Indianapolis Life Insurance Co, in 1942
was 6.7 per cent ahead of 1941. The gain of insurance in force for the year was 18.8 per cent
and brought total insurance in force to $127,397,767, according to A. Leroy Portteus, vice president. The company paid $1,768,171.94 to. policyholders during the year, bringing total payments to policyholders since organization up to $27,813,43437. Approximately two-thirds of this amount has been paid to living policyholders. The company has paid $7,060,475.03 in dividends to policyholders. Since it is an old line legal reserve mutual company, there are no stockholders. Assets and surplus both showed the largest increase in 1942 of any year in the company’s history. The total assets are now $31,050,957.47, while surplus totals $2,004,834.34. Assets have increased 110 per cent in the last 10 years, while surplus has increased 161 per cent. “The gain in assets is practically double and the gain in surplus is over three times the fine record made by life insurance companies as a whole,” Mr. Portteus stated. “The company points with pride to the work of its representatives throughout the various states. They are rendering splendid
Business of Indianapolis Life Insurance Co. Gains
greater than the previous year
A. Leroy Portteus
service to policyholders and the insuring public in a way that will most effectively help the buyer to fit life insurance into his needs in a scientific manner. “Many life insurance men are now in the nation’s armed forces, but those who remain at.hkome are doing a fine job not only in: servicing life insurance and selling new business, but also in the sale- of war bonds,” Mr. Portteus stated.
SHORT TO SPEAK ON ELECTRONIC DEVICES
Brooks H. Short, research engineer at General Motors’ Delco-Remy division at Anderson, will speak at the Indiana section meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers at the Lincoln hotel at 8 p. m., March 12. Mr. Short will discuss the applications of electronic devices in industry. A’ graduate of Purdue in 1934, Mr. Short taught electrical engineering there and at Clemson college in South Carolina before joining Delco-Remy in 1937.
JOBLESS PAY HERE LESS THAN USUAL
Job insurance payments in Marion county increased in January although far below the usual January load, William C. Kelley, Indiana area claims manager of the employment security division, said today. Eligible claimants in the county received $37,676.50, compared with $155,829.50 in January of 1942. . The January state-wide total of $365,136.50, according to Col. Everett L. Gardner, division director, was a 2¢ per cent increase over December but was only one-fourth of the amount paid in the same month last year. “War employment” was described as the major factor in the January rise. January payments to construction workers, most of whom had been working on war projects, were double the December benefits. One-fourth of the payments went to construction workers. Th? division head also pointed out that civilian business activities were affected in a limited way by the war.
' SHIPPERS TO MEET Shippers and receivers of freight together with railroad officers from
Kentucky will attend the 20th annual meeting of the Ohis valley transportation advisory board at the Deshler-Wallick hotel, Columbus, O., March 8 and 9.
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TWO WILL AID FARM EQUIPMENT MAKERS
A field service unit of two farm machinery consultants who will aid farm equipment manufacturers in Indiana in all problems of production has been established in the war production board office at 226 W. Jackson blvd., Chicago, the office of war information announced today.
W. D. Barry, chief of the field service section of the farm machinery and equipment division of WPB in Washington, said it would be the duty of the consultants to expedite production of farm machinery and equipment. The consultants are E. S. Stewart and A. O. Teckemeyer, both of the priorities division of WPB in Chicago. Aid from the field service unit extends only to manufacturers of
| farm equipment. Problems to which
it will give help include the pro=curement of materials and inter pretation of the new controlled materials plan. Other states serviced by the office are Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin.
EY 3 HAZARDS THAT LIFE INSURANCE OVERCOMES
The Hazard of Living Too Long— Outliving your income and earnings, ?. The Hazard of Dying Too Soon— Before accumulating an estate for your family. The Hazard of Indefiniteness—Life insurance plans tell you how much § you need to save. You know where Youre re going and when you'll get
1
Our representatives are trained to serve you in a competent, conscientious manner. MA-9488, or TA-1591, INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE CO. Over $127,000,000 in force EDWARD B. RAUB, President
{00 FARM RECRUITS
war board announced today that farmers living in central and northern Indiana can get experienced farm help by making application to their local farm security administration office or the nearest U. S. employment office. More than 100 farm workers have already been placed on farms in central and northern Indiana by the farm security administration and the U. S. employment service. The recruits are taken from southern Indiana after the USES first determines that they are not
needed on farms in their own area, and are given a week's intensive training at Purdue university, before being placed. The “short course” includes intensified training in the use and maintenance of equipment and machinery in use on most farms in the northern and central regions of the state, as well as in the farming
GET INDIANA JOBS
The U. S. agriculture department «
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A. LEROY PORTTEUS, Vice-Pres.,
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