Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 April 1943 — Page 27

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Detroit Red Wings Win Stanley Cup

Take Coveted Trophy in Four

“Straight Games; Rough Play Features Last Tilt at Boston

_ BOSTON, April 9 (U. P.) —Detroit’s National Hockey league stylists _4_ staged a shutout ending to the 1943 Stanley cup playoffs last night by| : capturing their fourth straight game from the Boston Bruins, 2-0, before

12,954 at Boston Garden. . Detroit last won the Stanley cup in 1937.

Stolid Carl Liscombe was perhaps the individual star of the game

Y

- cessful last ditch stand in the

‘goalie countered with a stiff right . that caught the unidentified fan in

as he sparkblugged a dozen attacks = 8 8 for the Red Wings and scored one Summary: of the goals—a feat that made him BOSTON (0) DETROIT @) Joint holder of the series point total Brimsek oo Clog .viuienis Mowers record of 14 points. The record|Hollet........ Left Defense ......Stewart was set in 1939 by Boston's Bill Clapper cesses Right Bt Defense cenend lando Gowiey and Eenunllod last season by| a. Jackson..... Ie ft Wing a e n 0SSO. Demarco...... 8 vss essvey er 2 wines made up in roughness Boston Spares — Crawford, Schmidt,

what they lacked in team play andj were cheated of at least one goal that seemed destined to pass Johnny Mowers but bounced off the

net post. The first nine minutes of play

was marked by roughness and stiff board checks. During the 10th minute Bep Guidolin and: Jimmy Orlando were penalized for roughing and Don Gallinger and Joe Carveth for high sticking during a melee near the boards. All four were off the ice for two minutes.

Outskates Bill Cowley

Detroit’s initial tally came at 16:09 when Carveth outskated Bill Cowley while Boston’s defense was far up the ice and slammed one through Frankie Brimsek’s legs. Wares was slightly hurt during that period and left the ice but returned to open the'second period. He was on when Liscombe tallied after a solo down the ice during which he outskated Defender Jack Crawford : and drove in a 15-footer While going away. Boston made a valient but unsuc-

period and had a half-dozen near conversions. But luck and Mowers were against them and proved an unbeatable combination. Midway in the third period, Adam Brown slashed at Jack Shewchuk with his stick and the Boston defense countered with a punch. The crowd booed as Shewchuk followed Brown to the penalty box and spectators littered the ice with paper, horns and hats.

Throws Wild Punch

One of the hats fell near Mowers who batted it across the ice and then whacked”it into the seats on the edge of the rink. A fan threw a wild punch at Mowers but the

e face. Players and officials halted the near riot.

Schewchuk, Boyd, Gallinger, Guidolin, H; Jac , Chamberlain. Detroit spares: Hal Jackson, Howe, Grosso, Wares, Carveth, Simon, Brown, Douglas.

Score by periods: £0)

BOSON sccacsrcreseinie 0 0 . 0-0 Detroit ,..0ccecsssionrie 1 1 fp First Period Scoring—Goals, Detroit: Carveth (unassisted), 12:09. Penalties: Guidolin (roughing), Orlando (roughing), PCarveth (high stick), Gallinger (high stick), Grosso (cross check), Guidolin

(charging), Chamberlain (interference). Second Period Scoring—Goals: Detroit, Liscome (unassisted), 2:45. Penalties: Stewart (interference), HH. Jackson, (slashing), Hal Jackson (interference), Stewart (cross checking). Third Period Scoring — Goals: none. Penalties: Guidolin (high stick), Brown (roughing), Shewchuk (roughing), Stewart (tripping), Orlando (holding). Referee—Bill Chadwick. Linesmen—Sam Babocock and Bert Hedges.

were banished almost simultancously for tripping and holding Flash Hollett as he was carrying. The Bruins staged a final but unsuccessful drive for a score during which Mowers sustained a cut above his right eye. He was patched up and finished the game without leaving the ice. Detroit stalled in the final minutes and Boston couldn’t pass center ice. Brimsek had 18 saves, Mowers 30.

Jacobs Swings To Outdoors

NEW YORK, April 9 (U. P)— Promoter Mike Jacobs said today that he would switch his ring activities outdoors with a bout between

Champion Beau Jack, Bob Mont-

gomery or Sammy Angott as his initial offering at the Polo Grounds. Armstrong, defeated by Jack in a non-title bout, agreed yesterday to fight any of the three on June 11. Army regulations which curtailed night baseball here apparently will] I not affect boxing, Jacobs said, inasmuch as ring lights can be well-

Later Jack Stewart and Orlando

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Henry Armstrong and Lightweight Pe

|

eighth inning, but St. Joseph's tied

Al" Btrioheck, Untvoreat Er Univers

Warming Up

Hutchings May Hurl 1st Game

(Continued from Page 26)

on Moore’s drive, misjudged the ball and it rolled to deep center. Indianapolis collected seven blows to 13 hy Cleveland. Oris Hockett and Manager Lou Boudreau walloped three hits apiece and Edwards got two, one a triple with two on.

Bagby in Rare Form

| Three Cleveland pitchers took three-inning hitches, Paul Calvert, Vernon Kennedy and Jim Bagby. Indianapolis failed to get a hit off ‘Bagby and no runners reached base. He is their ace righthander, winning 17 and losing nine in 1942. Calvert pitched for Wilkes-Barre last year and won 17 against only seven setbacks, Kennedy won four land lost eight for Cleveland last season. In the resumption of the Indians vs. Indians series today at 2:30 Al & 9 Fi h Bronkhurst and Chief Hogsett were Grudge 18 t tagged to hurl for Indianapolis and probably Joe Heving, Allie Reynolds We A Trexler, southpaw, Pep, recognized by the New, York| Fiicher er, soulpaw, restate boxing commission as world’s|Ported to the Indianapolis club featherweight champion, goes after |yesterday evening and was to be in his 64th win in 65 starts tonight|uniform today. He won 19 games when he battles Sal Bartolo of|for Little Rock last season. Two Boston in a 10-round non-title bout| weeks ago he announced he was at Boston Garden. through with baseball for the dura-Pre-fight odds made Pep a 2-1{tion but changed his mind after favorite, but there is little id choose | Indianapolis hiked its offer. between the two ring warriors. Pep, 20, is four years younger Dicker for Pitchers tha Bartolo and has a two-inch| Tomorrow and Sunday, Indianapadvantage in reach. Bartolo will|qiig plays the Chicago White Sox probably scale a pound more than|at Lafayette and Cincinnati meets ep. is exA behind-the- -scenes feud lends roan pity ora some a “grudge” angle to the bout, Bar- pitching help for the two-game tolo contends that both: Pep and series Lafayette. Indianapolis is Jackie Callura of Hamilton, Ore, also ering with Cleveland to holder of N. B. A. recognition, are land a pitcher on option for the afraid to put their titles at stake. regular season.

He also claims that Pep’s impressive record was registered against a And the Hoosiers still are combing

“well-selected” list of opponents, |the country for a Class AA first

baseman and are willing to pay St. Joseph's

the price. Wins, 1-6 wrist and sore shoulder, Third Base-

Ragged play on the part of the Bushmen yesterday was attributed to lack of work. It was only their MUNCIE, Ind, April 9 (U.P.).—|man Mickey Haslin is not ready to St. Joseph’s college outlasted Ball|cub loose and Utility Infielder Carl b. pas ge all Fairly had but one workout prior to State in a 10-inning baseball game yesterday's game. marred by 13 errors yesterday, scor- |" «give us another ten days outing single runs in the ninth andj... ang we'll look like a different 10th innings for a 7-t0-6 .victory.|pau1 club” said Skipper Bush, The Pumas of St. Joseph's got off| > ) to an early 5-to-1 lead, but fell Two Caught at Plate apart in the seventh when Ball] The Hoosiers had two runners State scored four runs, The Car-|caught at the plate, both on throws dinals added another run in the|from the outfield by Oris Hockett. Norman Schlueter was nailed at the dish by Buddy Rosar in the fourth stanza when he tried to

Tex Hughson of the Boston Red Sox shields himself from the chill winds with earmuffs, blanket and two baseball gloves. The Brooklyn Dodgers farther cooled him off and won, 5-1, at Ebbets field.

Willie Pep in

BOSTON, April 9 (U. P.

it in the top half of the ninth and won on Boyle's double, a passed ball and a wild pitch in the 10th inning. Sco

score from second on Hutchings single and Gil English was tossed out at home in the sixth when he tried to come in" from second on Stewart Hofferth’s single, Hofferth was stunned when he collided with the wall as he caught Hockett’s foul in the sixth.

Warm Up, Whit

62 bp Given At Indiana U.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., April 9 (U. P.)—The Indiane university athletics committee has awarded 62 varsity and freshman letters in

basketball, wrestling, swimming and gymnastics, Athletic Director Z. G. Clevenger announced today. Clevenger said that eight members of Indiana’s 1943 Big Ten championship wrestling squad and 11 members of the Hoosier basket ball squad, which dropped only two games out of 20, were among 29 new varsity lettermen,

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Selection of ‘Corn College’ [Player From All-Americans Jolts Pro Football Experts

By TOMMY DEVINE United Press Staff Correspondent: CHICAGO, April 9.—The presence of one “corn college” player in a bevy of all-America stars drawn in the first five rounds of the National Football league’s annual draft served to jolt the gridiron experts today. The “unknown” who popped up among the “big name” stars was Irv Comp from little St. Benedict college at Atchison, Kan. who was the second choice of the Green Bay Packers.

/

While other teams in the pro circuit were scrambling. for talented backs like Frankie Sinkwich of Georgia's Rose Bowl outfit, Coach Curly Lambeau of Gren Bay pulled the surprise of the selection meeting by picking Comp. Comp is a 205-pound Milwaukee boy. He attended the University of Wisconsin for part of his freshman year and then transferred to St. Benedict's where he played for four seasons under a pair of former Notre Dame stars, burly Don Elser and Marty Peters. Elser and Peters were the ones who “tipped” Lambeau, himself a former Irish star, on Comp’s ability. When Lambeau investigated the gridder he found portly Steve Owens of the New York Giants also on his trail. Comp, currently working in a de-

'fense plant, considered both offers

and then agreed to sign with the Packers. -Comp in 4-F Lambeau went into yesterday’s draft meeting gloating over his good fortune, but his optimism was shortlived as President Elmer Layden ruled Comp had not been “exposed” to a draft period and therefore had to be put up for “grabs.” While that was a jolt it didn’t stop Lambeau for long. He picked Dick Wildung, the burly University of Minnesota tackle, who won allAmerica honors last fall, as his first player and then took Comp on the second round. Comp figures to be available for football next fall. He is in 4-F because of a serious defect in his visjon. Lambeau pulled another surprise with the selection of Wildung. The great Gopher tackle was the only lineman chosen on the first round of the draft. The other nine teams picked backfield men. Frankie Sinkwich, all - America halfback and winner of the Heishman award, was the first player chosen. The scramble for backs was indicated by the fact that 18 of the first 25 selections were ball Sartiers;

Pasha to Meet Chappelle Again

A return match between two rival performers, Ali Pasha of Calcutta, India, and Maurice Chappelle of Newark, will serve as the semiwindup on an all-star mat | bill at the armory Tuesday night. ‘Their previous tussle a few weeks ago was of the “blood and thunder” type and ended in a draw. ‘The popular Chappelle, after a slow start, had his opponent Yon the run” at the finish. It will be a highly skilled grappler vs. a “hill billy” matman when Coach Billy Thom meets Farmer Jones in the main event. The bewhiskered Jones, featuring an easygoing style, has won all of his local

,jbouts. He is from Montgomery

county, Ark. and has gained the favor or armory patrons. Thom is head coach at Indiana university.

Ski Champ Dies After Accident

NORTH CONWAY, N. H., April 9 (U, P)—John L, Neal, 17, of Springfield, Mass., winner of the

|national olympic ski jump crown at

Lake Placid, N. Y., a few months ago, died at a hospital here last night of intérnal injuries sustained a few hours earlier while skiing in Tuckerman’s ravine,

AMATEUR NOTES

Dos Morgenthales has been elected pret dent of the Bush-Feezle night factory soit. ball ashe whi May 18.

gam! and the Jr Stewart Warner Kingan A. A, U. B. Tire against International Harvester and P. R. Mallory against Hii Lilly.

The Pure Oil baseball team will pracice 5 11:30 a. m. Sunday on Riverside 3 diamond.

Addi players are Noa and all tryouts will be welcome.

TIGII ERIE AOI VALUABLES EWE I

FAIRBANKS.

Wi BW

DRAFT STATUS

| Hitchcock Reports Some of

Agricultural Workers

Over Cautious.

Farmers who do incidental hauling of live stock and various agricultural commodities will not endanger their agricultural classifications by such temporary activity if they are in all other respects qualified for 2-C or 3-C deferments, Col. Robinson Hitchcock, state selective service director, said today. It was explained that certain local boards and some registrants have interpreted selective service regulations to mandate that a registrant with a farm deferment may not even temporarily deviate from what is generally considered fulltime farm work. Consequently, some registrants who formerly - hauled live stock and foodstuffs for themselves and. their neighbors as occasion required have now stored their trucks because they fear such activity . might "endanger their farm deferments.

Extreme Caution

Col. Hitchcock further stated that extreme caution has reflected on the possible crop production in a few Indiana communities. Some farmers, he’ said, are reluctant to commit themselves to tomato acreages because they fear that local trucks will not be available to haul the crop to markets or canneries. After a conference with L. Marshall Vogler, state head of the U. S. D. A. war boards, Col. Hitchcock said, “I do not believe it is the intention of national selective service regulations to create caution in farmers to the. extent that their activities will be lessened. “Obviously, a good farmer can carry on his full-time farm work and in addition can haul his own produce and that of his neighbors to market without decreasing his work on his own farm,

Must Be Vigilant

Local boards are required to exercise vigilance to see that a registrant deferred for agricultural reasons is regularly engaged in agricultural work, but they may use discretion in allowing a farmer to haul seasonal crops, milk, live stock or machinery required in farm work. This type of hauling is so closely relatéd to agricultural production that it may be considered an essential adjunct of the agricultural effort.” : He also pointed out that men primarily engaged: in custom hauling and having only incidental agricultural activities are not eligible for agricultural deferment or 2-C and 3-C classifications, On the other hand, he said, these men may be considered by local boards for occupational deferments in class 2-A if they are contributing to the war effort and if satisfactory replacements cannot currently be found in the community.

McNear Returns

Eastman's Checks

PEORIA, April 9 (U. P.) —George P, McNear Jr., president of the gov-ernment-operated Toledo, Peoria & Western railroad, said today four checks for past due obligations of the road had been returned to the government because they were sent “with conditions which could not be accepted.” The checks, totaling $162,005, had been sent by Joseph B. Eastman, director of the office of defense transportation. “One of the conditions made it clear the ODT is trying to evade payment of compensation for the T. P. & W. properties which have been taken by the government,” McNear said. “We could not accept the checks under such conditions and returned them to Mr. Eastman.” McNear, on March 30, asked Eastman to pay various past due obligations of the road and charge them against the compensation he said was due the road for its properties which were seized a year ago when MecNear refused to arbitrate a threemonths’ strike,

CORRECT PRISONER LIST WASHINGTON, April 9 (U. P.).

night|_The war department announced

today that Staff Sergt. Frederick J. Dewig, son of Henry OC. Dewig, Haubstadt, Ind., is a prisoner of war in Germany. It was announced previously that he was held in

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Deaths—Funerals 1 CLLR RAL RL HE 72

MMERLE—Margaret, sister of Sister Mary "Matihiss of aon burg, Ind.; Thomas of San Francisco, Onl 5, snd Mrs, Anna Bischoff of Indianpassed away Wednesday. Funeral By Ch 1 Usher Mort 9313 W. Washington; 9 a. m. Holy oly Angels church. Friends invited, Burial St. Joseph's cemetery. Friends may call ‘at nary, Altar society will meet tonight at § p. m. for prayer. HUTZLER—Ethel Lynne, age 53; wife of Charles Hutzler, mother of Arthur utsler, Shuey . pl Ri Belle Spard e, sister of nne, sday morning, 104% , [oases bali at the New York. neral 1:30 p. m. Saturday at funeral home.! Burial Crown HilL, KAFOURE—Pvt. F. C. Raymo ond J., hus» band of ar ore Zethnaier Kafoure, son of P Kafoure, and Mrs. Julia 8., brother Pt Pvt. Edward Kafoure, Mrs. William Freije and Mrs. James Osman, died at Armarillo Air Field, Armarilla, Tex. Friends may call the Kirby Mortuary for information. - neral notice later. KEEN—Tom, 3462 N. Illinois, passed “away early Friday morning, husband of Senn. ette Ott Keen, fa Martin, dianapo Keen, Schenectady Flanner

the Monday, 10 a.

y in SRAIBe o of North Park Masonio invited.

- lodge. Frien of Mrs. Edith M. Gemmer, and beloved grandmother of Robert Gemmer, passed away early Friday morning at her home, 5020 College ave. Service at the Man ner & Buchanan Mortuary, Monday, 2 p. m. Friends invited, Burial Crown Hill. Friends may call at the mortuary after Saturday noon. MOODY — Minnie,” 645% Massachusetts ave., Apt. 19, entered into rest Thursday, Age 81 years; mother of Mrs. Laura Snyder and Mrs. Sarah Wanscott. Service Saturday, 2:30 p. m,, at Harry W. Moore Peace chapel. Burial Wesley: Chapel Semetery.

MOORE James Cols,

and Jimmie Moore, passed ray Friday morning. Frida may call at the day . Funeral services

Ky. For all Farley Funeral’ Home,

MYER—Cora, 3469 N. Nlinots st, widow of Harvey Myer; mother of Mrs. dia Marie Trimble, city, and Dwight Myer, Pittsburgh, Pa.; grandmother of Cora Jane Trimble, Dwight Jr. and Harvey Myer, and sister of Addie Johnson, Mor=ristown, departed this life Wednesday; age 60. Funeral Saturday, April 10, at oore & Kirk Northside Colonial Mortuary, College at Fairfield, 10 a. m. Burial Morristown. Friends invited. PRITCHETT—Louisa H., age 87, beloved mother of Christina E. Mitchell, Robert 8. Pritchett of Indianapolis, Charles A. Pritchett of Independence, Cal, John W. Pritchett of Bainbridge, Ind., Samantha L. Watkins of Colfax, Ind., Nancy E. Poer and Mary Monett of North Vernon, Ind., Isaac T. Pritchett of Coatsville, Ind.,, Amos H. Pritchett, Scipio Ind, passed away Tuesday. Prayer service at residence, 221 N. Gray, at 13 noon Saturday, followed by church service at the North Salem Methodist church, 3 Lk In. Burial North Salem cemetery. en may ¢ a residence an time. Shirley service. amy SCHIEWER—Emille, mother of Mrs. Charles Cowan, Alfred, Fred and Walter Schiewer, sister of Herman Zietlow and Bertha Stifel, passed away Wednesday. Services Saturday, 2:30 p. m., at home ter, Mrs. Cowan, on Ind ends Juvied Burial wn . call at home of daughter. J. OC. Wilson Service. ¢ UNDERWOOD ary Ann, beloved wife of | Go A, Underw and mother

April . Funeral notice

YELTON- Judish Ot little daughter of and Mrs. Yelton, sister of Davia Joe, PAL No Ritter, passed away . Friends may call at

Franklin, Ind.

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