Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1945 — Page 6

THE INDIANAPOLIS INES et

_ TUESDAY, 7 ANE :

Logansport nicked the Indians, 3836, .aftet ‘two overtime. periods and

champions for strength. Vincennes!

| ifigburg, 51-32. * Muncie Central's favored Béar-

took title honors. with a 56-34 tri-|} pletely haywire at night when galvaged the consolation from Hunt- | umph over Royal Center.

‘Excellent attendance at: the tours,

naments was reported despite the

E Se - each’ frrmant

RE- WEAVING]

of Morn B HOLES BURNS .

legned, bo. aia from ew. the surprising Trojans of New Castle cats also succumbed to the jinx! fact that tem no dod from ; 5 peratures were near oy a % | rallied ng he last “half - to. thump wich Sogpen the home teanis, bow- | zero, proving .that it takes : more © LEON Ait £0. o i - e the Mi Middle’ 8 3 ! oipmo, 35- ing to Lafayette Jefferson by a 26-24| than a little cold wave keep Hoo. |. El Mass. Ave. i. First Block TE ’

tian, oe hot Vise

eount sty Fraaklon, had Slims

ators avy’ trom b

i a Ww ILLIAM S If Coons Should Call 1p Seaond Troe xi It 4-F B. ball d Li D SAYS... ... 4-F’s aseball an eagiie . ecisive Over Young Vols i in t = ‘ ee Football Probably Will Fold R Bowl Til 3 NEW YORK, Jan. 2—In one of your more indis- 00 d : ro a y 1 0 ; ose OW 1 { Before 93, 000 g | criminate moments you may have read in this space an WASHINGTON, eJan. 2 (U. P)—The green light which baseball, By WILLIAM C. PAYETTE : account of how How ard Ehmke “happened to pitch the. | football and other sports have.received from Washington was dimmed United Press Staff Correspondent t frst game of the 1920 world series against.fhe Chicago {cde by ihe request of War Maan Decor Jas . Byes tht © PASADENA, Ca, an. 3The Southern Cora Trojans ne SE + : . i az Cubs, WE, Major league baseball and professional football have operated for : Iwo Rose Bow] footval victories over Tennessee today. after whipping i i , 1dusted off the story last week when Connie Mack, the Veltatie the most part on 4-F matipower since Pearl Harbor. Of the 530 players | the Volunteers, 25 to 0, before a crowd of 93,000 fans in yesterday's C : “Mr. Cornelius MeGillicuddy of the Philadelphia Athletics; Youd Turse on the rosters of the 16 major | classic. ° { + men on the Pacific coast that his biggest thrill in more than <__ |league clubs for the'1945 season are | It was the second time that the Vols suffered a shutout at the & i } ked Ehmke to pitch this important ~ j years of baseball came - when he pic p i 223 players who ATR AEs. T ulsa Balances, g: hands of the Trojans—they were beaten 14 to 0 in 1940-—but they proved he game. “Sport. leaders awaited congres- -{ they were a fighting outfit from the a § ; Circumstances made it a thrill. . Ehmke hadn't pitched for sichal reaction: to Byrnes' sugges- » \ <0 rhe bread - : + : ars first’ touchdown until the final gun. weeks. In fact, he was supposed to be in disgrace: .-. ® UI tion_ before commenting for pub- : Even Coach Jeff . Cravath of RB | Fr t indictment was that, he had curled up in a September game against lication, . but~ several privately ex- OW 00 Southern California was. quick to ow ac e i the Yankees. ' Moreover, Mr... McGillicuddy had at least two pressed “the fear that if congress ’ v. L ; AY 50. ; : ld N v a : 2 . other pitghers who so much overshadowed Ehmke, even ‘then a should ~draft 4-F'Sinto war work MIAMI, Fla; Jan, ‘3 U. py “All Tennessee needed was experi- and attendance ay footba results Ek “castoff, that it wasn't even comical. + = The two, of course, ere fiiost Professional Spor Wil —tolt Tulsa's Golden itis balanced rior ite- ca Taga e: x Lefty Grove and George Earnshaw. forthe dutation unless the athletes'ifs “Bowl Book” today with a {coached and well drilled. We looked Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Cal.—Souths A Ghost Wri ter S eaks * > |are. .permitted. to participate in|glorious 26-to-12 revenge victory worse during the first half than I've|C'D CAUfornia- 25, Tennessee 0 ws a ! Des Suetis-Coll sports ‘during their off-time. = "< | yesterday ‘over Georgia Tech in the ever seen us look.” = 000). } IN MY account of the surprise selection quoted a nid - Byrnes Stand ‘Qrange Bowl, which squared ac- Bus Stephens, the Knoxville] Sugar Bowl, New Orleans—Duke “then Mr. Cornelius’ assistant, as saying Ehmke was pi > p : ; SR coms for the loss suffered to the freshman, fought like a fiend. He|29, Alabama 26 (73,000). ed of hours before the opening game and that only three persons knew Byrnes, however, in’ answer to same team in the 1944 Sugar Bowl couldn't carry his team to vict te £5 he was going to start: Mr. Cornelius, Collins and Ehmke, ~°, . I questions said he had not’ ‘“consid-|game, . “-. alone. ‘but’ any made ‘all the fbn Cotten Bowl, Dallas ~Oklahoma e now quote ‘a letter from the able Bob Paul of Philadelphia. It goes: ered” stopping other Sports, as he| Staging ‘the first football upset of the 'southérn sportswriters said hy M. 34, Texas Ciistian 0 ol ¥ “I read with interest—and surprise—your story, But that's has racing. 1945, before 30,000 fans the Tulsans Bboiit Nim come trie. He Tugged the oo a 2 - § 2 not the way I heard it. Byrnes took the: ‘stand that if a struck for a touchdown in the first ball 15 times and averaged just a orange Bowl, Miami, Fla —Tulsa m = “Back in 1929 I wrote a baseball column for The Philadelphia 4-F can compete against the best|four minutes and léft no doubt riotch shor of Six Yards wry against 26, Georgia Tech 12 (30,000), A bi 5 News and I well remember traveling on the ‘Athletics’ special train athletes ‘in the nation. a place thereaft er that they wollte, conquer One ‘of ts cOuriry's eaviest Hines Shrine Game, San Prancisco.— 1] > to Chicago for the series. should be found for him in which |the wily Engineers without difficulty. and cagiest backfields. - West All-Stars: 13, [East All-Stars? idl — “You quote Collins as saying no one expected Connie to start he could contribute directly to - the| Coach Henry Franka, the young > : (65,000), ion es anyone except Grove or Earnshaw as of when ¢he special tt Bile, war effort, | mentor ‘who has sent Tulsa to four One Trip to Bench ‘Sun Bowl, wm Paso, Tex —South- t in 3 delphia. - That's correct, or partly so. o Know Ris Jay R 1 a He said that some men who were | |Bowl" games in as many . years, He missed only three plays during [western 35, Mexico 0 (18,000). =~ | mi = shaw thought either he or Grove for Ei g h ° Ep rote to that classified 4-F were able to hear the| crossed up the opposition with a the entire game in one quick trip to| gpaghett! Bowl, Florence, Italy—- ( 4 Lt this because I was: ghost writing or karnshaw a WIo signals” of a quarterback in a hud- style "of play totally unlike that ihe. bench. It was Stephens’ kick, pifth- Army 20 12th Alr Force 0 € 7 ‘effect under his by line. dle and therefore should be able to | which had held the Oklahomans in the first of the day, that Jim Calla~| (25 000) ' ! 8 & heat a first’ sergeant or a war plant|gond stead through the regular sea- nar . blocked: and scooped to ios bt ] veals Hot N (ews ped up Fi Utility Player Reveal foreman. |son. Instead of concentrating om a Little Don’ “Gutteridge, who plays plenty of. sevond ‘base tor the [make it 6 to.0, but Stephens came (Rivers Bowl, Marseille, France ob od “BUT the next morning—and this was fully 28 hours before the “And some of them -¢the 4-F’s),ground-gamé, the oil country boys| st. Louis Browns, is practically dwarfed by 6 ft. 10 in. Charley Halbert |back a couple of minutes later with] Re way Shop anon 37, Amy » | : start-of the game—I had breakfast with Bevo Lebourveau wno was are colot blind,” Ye added. “Well, chose to throw the ball, and passes| of Phillips and Bill Hubbard, 6 ft. 6 in, Kansas State Teachers, as he [a 32-yard run from the shadows of| . ars a ’ on! ‘playing utility outfield for the Athletics, Bevo hadn't taken the they don't seem to get mixed up on|accounted for two of their four calls jump-ball in game he officiates at Pitt$burg, Kas. Tie own ‘goal posts to’ pat. the ball Vulcan ‘Bowl, Birmingham, Ala.— | 3 final trip with the Athletics because of an injury and -therefore ‘he the color’ of their sweaters.” As for touchdowns. - - . ~=1in midfield.” Then he heaved a long Tennessee State 13, Tuskegee 0 (10,= CH : and Ehnike (left behind, too) had seen much of each other while those trick knees, if they don't get Ho . pass to Allen Law, a substitute half- 009), nte i the Athletics’ were finishing on the road. = . tricky on the football field, they . B S | } + St L d back, on the Trojan 19, but an off-| Flower Bowl, Jacksonville, Fla, a } “As I say I had breakfast with Bevo. Suddenly he asked: ‘When _'. | probably won’t in: Verdun.” N I ! T i owes eq as > ars eq side penalty called it back. Texas College 18, Gteenshore, A & u be, do you file your next Sorys St oD & egre 0 IS 04s ofe Jn . Like the first, the~Trojans’ final|T: 0. (5000). ph i “When we get to ayne. In a couple ‘of hours.” § oo - : | S + P h | P Ei + ; 5 fir y “ “That's swell. Here’s a scoop for you. Everybody thinks Connie A / es R 0 | / n . -nil P In. ven Jouhdown was 8 Siwiher, Hh fe 2. i Is going to start Grove or Earnshaw. He isn't. Ehmke's the. guy. gg : Of 5th A : : * Capt. Jim Hardy to young MacLach-| Yond the Volunteer 10-yard line, : “Don’t kid me. It's got to be one or the other. Ehmke? He rmy Joe Fulton and John Fehr hold Stricker, fifth, with 776 (93) 869, and |, over the goal line as- the gun making one touchdown himself, and] TV == won't ‘even get-in the series. . U 34 Points the one-twe- positions in the stand. Oscar Behrens, mn. with 834 @n went-off. A 2-yard toss from Hardy completing’ two pay-off passes for et 3 “well, take it or leave it. Ehmke’s the guy.” P FLORENCE, Italy, Jan. 2 (U.’P.) ings of the 17th -annual St. Philip] 861. 4 'o-end Paul Salute. in the. end Zone. his 10th of the season and a new ven ; S —Cpl. John Moody, a 230-pound Bich + O. E. Hudler, fast year's - winner, ! {gave the Trojans their second tall Southern California record. L He Decided to ‘Take It’ ~ = DALLAS, Tex: Jan. 2 (U. P.)~|Negro from Freeport, Pa, was the Dadian SY oepiane WNC 20 ted in his quest to repeat, getting aire i Seat YI Southern Cilifornia capped 8 i «I DECIDED to take ii. I knew Bevo and had confidence in wim. Sudden. first period touchdowns,|toast of the 5th itmy today for his pd ay forty of the 100|® B argy 15 Standou powerhouse 73-yard drive reminis-, : The t pulled into Ft. Wayne, I gave my copy to the Western two of them in a I b Kl all-out efforts which were largely | 0 Schwomeyer and Gene Harp-| Hardy was the Trojan hero. After| cent of the best days of the Thun«| bor e train in a row by Oklahoma entrants rolled their quartet of} , leepless migh “ ! | x Union representative and—by now I was all worked up. mysell— [A and Ms resotircefil Cowboys, responsible for the. 20-to-0 football| games over the week-end and finished first in the men's event.a sleepless aight with.a stomach ail-| dering Herd with -a touchdown as| or cautioned him not to let another living soul see the story. . You told the story today of the most one- victory over the 12th air force in| yesterday, with the remainder slated of “the - doubles Joan Sager on and a fever of 101, the triple-| the fourth period opened, marching Th ; know how juvenile you get about. those things, don’t you? sided football game in Cotton Bowl|the New Year's day Spaghetti Bowls ti xt Saturday and Sine at’ the Illinois. The pair had 1188 threat quarterback sparked his team the distance in 10 plays. Hardy dr history, a 34-to-0 - victory over sg football game or action next Saturday and a 139 handicap for 1327. Schwo- all afternoon, flipping. passes that! packed the ball ovér from the 11- rt vs ) . . day. ; - i” i “MAYBE Eddie Collins dn Erica Ehmke was.gaing to pitch Texas. Christian eleven A ee More than 20,000 servicemen and fn hi “| meyer turned in-632 and his part- | caught Tennessee flat-footed, slant: yard line and Pat West made the ell After a E Fulton totaled 911 in his four! 556. ing th mts out of bounds be-.d 1 until the morning of the game, as you wrote. all, why heart after that initial : Foren were on hand. for. th = ine {ing three punts out of bounds be-|day’s only conversion. tt should Conniechave to tell him? But the fact is Ehmke knew Bb a paest ? Shit initial ofensite ot ce which vet to be a ren Eanes sda pangs Rfor ya James and Garnie Caldwell Won » — I - and the top spot. He had ‘games o “week before “the Athletics left for. Chicago. : The crowd of 31, 500 fans saw an offensive demonstration by Moody, |254, 216, fy Pon. Fehr, 3 team- | jie Tq oa ia — '‘B # f R | S | : ; | : : - interesting display of offensive foot- (a 30-year-old ordnance soldier and |mate on the Bowes Sealfast quintet; which they added a 231 handicap. us wv equ ar eason s el-1 > y : +{ ball, 1 by Bobby Feninors, who, Jopmes star at ‘Morris Brown .col-inaq a larger total, but his lack of| Lucille Hornaday, with:s419 .and| et ; : AR was . the nation’s leading ground-|lege. He scored two touchdowns and | handicap relegated him: to the run-|Leona Allee with 263, combined] S S hr {n Es Duke Edges Alabama After getter during the regular season. He| two extra points and shook the air|nerup post. He had 194, 258, 226, their scores and took 263 chairty| ensati on I n r I lhe ame Par : Scored two touchdowns and directed force line from stem to stern. 246—924 and a 16 handicap for 940. pins for 1160 and ‘top honors in! : le drive for a third before Toach| An Italian burro was brought in| Henry Franz, who held thie lead| the women's event. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 2 (U. P.).—Bob Waterfield, termed by Wi d e ee in ugar OW {Jim Leokabaugh hauled out his to represent the army mule for the| sunday night, is now in third place.| The doubles, a weekly program many the “bust” of the 1944 collegiate football season, was the toast a 3 regulars and let second stringers half-time festivities. There were two| He ‘rolled 778.and received 115 free spansored. by the bowling proprie-| of the town today as a result of his brilliant .punting, passing and ° ~ “(fun over a pair of scores in the queens, both of them WACs, and|pins for 893. Elbert Thomason is| tors, will be held at Ptifchett’s next running exhibitiofi which led the West to a 13-7 upset victory over the 6 NEW - ORLEANS, 7 2 (U. oe offensive Splendor of two final period. _ {two bands led by a drum majorette| fourth with 786. (96) 882; Tim| Saturday and Sunday.” | Bast in the 20th annual Shrine benefit game yesterday. lio: He great football teams, ‘playing every minute of their collective lives de-| | in tights, who was booed roundly - Waterfield, only good enough to make most second All-Coast teams mil = pended upon victory, gave football fans material for months of conversa- Sa | D when she put on a G.I. overcoat to ; : : this year after being touted as the 5 tion today in an aftermath to Duke's 29-to-26 triumph over Alabama in| aliors own cover her cold bare legs. N 0 M ore Red Hot Ti S After best in the West for his play before | the most colorful renewal of the Sugar Bowl series. 0 hi N $ § cose eT J P entering the service, was rothing DePaul (Center Ik DI i ‘Even, in“a loser’s role, all hands concerned had most praise for nerve- | I o errers ockey Sta ndings ht . Sf _ |short of sensational as he sparked| \ 3 * less Harry Gilmer, the brash fresh- | : CLEVELAND, Jar, 2 (U. P). AMERICAN LEAGUE T d P : G B he West to victory before 65000) Poison to Mini ine “ ; 5 f— y hi ans. man, from Birmingham whose it La Due. La Belle {omc takes nasal sscion's bosee- Wesiern Divison 0 ay as ronies vo to barns ec. pack. tic sightn 13 e précise passes, daring runs pad ue, d € € {ball team wop its 10th straight vic- INDIANAPOLIS. 15 8 9 97 Ge "5 : ~ 7 > yards around“end for the winning| CHAMPAIGN, 1. Jan. 2%(U. PI. il £ heady quarterbacking put ™ {ory defeating last year's Big/paart = 18 L Ih ah hl By LEO H. PETERSEN touchdown, brilliant Bobalso turned! pe.) \yivergityes Bue Demons # favored Duke eléven on the de- In Mat Feature en chapmpiotis, Ohio State, 60 to 50; st. Lovis 5 193 50 99 13 United Press Sports Editor in some of. the most phenomenal, ne & fensive almost from the start. | here. last night. Eastern Division | ~ NEW YORK, Jan. 2—Horse racing, sports’ biggest industry, ‘becomes | punting ever seen on any gridiron: [of Chicago avenged-a- defeat of twa. nts i * The little guy tossed eight passes| The initial wrestling show of the Dick McGuire, Great Lakes guard, | Buffalo Yo 1 3 ee oa ht a war-time casualty today. East Scores Early weeks ago at thé hands of the Uni= ut, and Had a 100 pet cent completion! new year will be offered by Match- was “high scorer with eight field Hershey ....02 11 13 § 102 90 3 Race tracks at Fairgrounds, New Otleans and Tropical park, Miami, The East made its inital touch- | vetsity of Illinois basketball team | ar average, accounting for 142 yards. maker Lloyd Carter of the Hercules [goals and four free throws fora 20- Providense 11 16 # 106 117 2 .¢ well as a number of dog tracks-in Florida; scheduled their final pro- down in the first fodr minutes of by defeating the Tllini last night, 63) o C 3 Two of his flips went more than|A, C. tonight at the Armory where | point, total. geno Risen, center, Cevelasa CORE 1A3] MigHY gras for this afternoon and tonight in compliance with a request from play when Frank Dancewica flipped |, 56. ing 3 - 50 yards apiece, both of whicli| Monty La Due, an undefeated grap-| “c°r® for Ohio" State. All pro- | . gis ASE | War Mobilization Director James F. Byrnes that ‘all animal tracks be a pass to Jack Mead, the Wisconsin i : 3 He set up touchdowns, His running'pler, takes on the popular Rene cans of the game wen to the Great | TONIGHT Hershey at Si. Louis | closed by Jan. 3. lend for a 34-yard gain and a touch-| George Mikan, DePaul's giant hec and play-calling sparked Alabama's La Belle of Toronto in the main go. es Welfare fund. Hope that racing would be per- [about 300 American. horses arrived | dow: “Tom Hughes, Purdue kicking | center, scared 28 points before, he all Sigal Setve of 66 yards, although The 8:30 ope sends = Lon A 1d p. C I: mitted’ to ‘continue on a limited St Hb Yor ark ers vate the | * | specialist, toed the point and the Toules oul of ne Same alter 31 te e didn" row & pass in* that Chaney’ «of Vincehues . against! Arno aces Cola R d Wi oO M 7 is Sai | East led, 7-0. minutes of play. John Orr, center, . advance, — Frankie Hart ofChicago, while the T to V € m 8S 0 € ls al ly geadiine oe 0 “een cloe site- Boe deh The East generally was in com-| Was high scorer for the Illini with hin / r a e u fain ot seer veg Fe wining sown Aur Team to Victory = {00 on Leaders. When Byrnes refused 1 modi hi cpend Sunday 10x 3 tuo-asy pro (mand, of things for the rest uf he| 13 DePaul ld a he nat, 10 to 3. JEL : counted in the clutch stages of theiof Bostbn and Al AM, Turkish| Royal Crown Cola basketball Y request. The office of defense | gram over She, New Year folidas. m the third period ‘and then col FOR i SA Lh Ss TaVELS Bi uci 5 fourth period, scored the -winning toan, — Ali-has never lost e team. won the: championship game | Sanstorision ais, Piohibited he lected both touchd : th > ’ ’ marian, Alt has T 10SL 8 T®8* in the holiday industrial basketball By UNITED PRESS shipment of horses without a gov= : x SEhoAWnE: In. Je ‘DIAMOND RINGS ws 3 touchdown on a §l-yard marchiylar match at the Armory. tournament last night at the Y, M.| The Detroit Red Wings, ptishing|ernment permit after. 6 p. m. E. W. _FIGHT RESULTS fourth period.. #8 after being denied seconds earlier|” La Due, who is out of Manches- | 3 sv bv Sy 1 tie Kiugan| lover. the- National Hockey' league |. Inet Saturday and i ar Lian - . The West got its first touchdown | a= Hh ve ; when Alabama’ ® line held with ter, Mass, has been here three | pr ents, 39 to 26, in the title game. | lesser lights in an effort to overtake power commission withdrew thel. =o Toe’ pentane. 136 ai. | CAT in the fourth period and, with TERMS! ap on y - Duke a half- yard out. Lt {times and has won each match. | | The Colas were led by Bill Arnold, | the Montreal Canadiens were within wage ceilings “under ' which’ the | waukee, AUER ~Jys 8 Ron Shapiro, 135 time fading fast, put on a brilliant T EL ind 1] pt Gilmer grounded the ball or an | He was against stiff opposition. He| center, with 16- points. one point of the league leaders to-|tracks hired their employees. | New York (10).* / |46-yard drive that failed on the - 4u ELITE na’ intentional safety to -piake thelis rated a front line. grappler in| It was the 15th victory of the [4a¥, closing in with a 4-to-2 victory| The ODT explained ifs action was RE Jon Pinnazzo. 184 Bal. |four-yard line when Kennedy fum4 score 26°to 22 and gave the Tide|Eastern wrestling circles. La Belle A the hapl Chi Bla BALTIMO bled Bob Kell Notre Dame 1 Ox i Jo That season for the Cola quintet against |OVEr the hapless cago ck+| necessary “because ‘a small-number | timore, decisioned-Ossie- Harris, J66, Pitts- bled. y, x | hy a free kick from its'ewn 20, allis a favorite with local fans, one defeat, Each player on the | DaWks last night. of horsemen were attempting to cir- burgh (10). - {kicked out, but the West pounded LINOLEUM - uip! 3 strategy backfired when Duke — awarded a medal] «The standing of the teams: cumvent Byrnes’ request. Reports| PROVIDENCE, R. ET Cngtles smith, 139, | right down the field again, with Wa- |} . . Cola team was ] 2 . 5 te 5 Seared on Yo JURRIRG ‘Dlavs afer Southwestern in along with a team trophy LT P6|pom Agua Caliente, Mex, said | hone 4 New declsioned Sammy Mam-|terfield passing to Howell for 28. ad 3 t the pant hi George Clark ye Montreal Lo } 3 n ; Then on a fake lateral, Waterfield a 3 vic uchdown. : Toronto .... 5 FF * i 4 Ke Cla: was the. victim, earlier n|1sa8y Triumph |Les Horvath Gets Boston 11: 1 B k + b | | R 2S UU Its en at oot the To for - al : ; the fourth period, of a pass inter-| EL PASO, Tex, Jan. 2 (U.P.).— S Test CRIGRED “rnvvnnersinn NF as e a es : ning touchdown. Kekeris kicked the Se A ception by Hugh Morrow, 17-yeai-| Southwestern university had two SCIFE€€N 1€8 : extra poi ’ LS 2 point. prom ld ‘Bama freshman, who. grabbed consecutive Sun Bowl victories to fs] - HoLLYwoOD, Jan. 2 (U. P)—|Cleveland Barons A home Baa Greta te Sm———————— 6 Ft, 9 Ft, 2 Ft, Widths W : down *thrust in front of | 2 Te ers 28, Buck k 25 ( lat: ; : p ha re nae orden] crédit today, after swamping Mexico| Les Horvath, All-America football Keep Rollin New Castle 30, Logansport 37 (double| Battie Groin Buck Cree 3 (consolation). Beech Grove Tilt Large Selection of Inlaid a rao] auons] university, 35-0, in thei star from Ohio State Snversiy.. p g overtime). 5a or Russiaville Tourney Beech Grove Boosters basketball lmmediate. installation! Ac Carver, and raceti bac Yar@siinternational New Year's day f0ot-| will be given a screen test tomorrow,’ CLEVELAND, .Jan. 2 (U. P)~— Roky Anderson 32, 36 (consolation, | Russiaville 35, Forest 31, team is to play Lukas-Harold at the FREE DELIVERY! " for what looked like the winning hal classic. | Selznick. International “studio offi-| The Cleveland Barons, hottest team | double overtime). Tris Dadieus 33. ou Lohan inion). |Beech Grove high school gym to- : Ng n touchdown. Te Pirates hung up two new] cials said. foday. tn in the American Hockey league New Castle 33, Kokomo 29. (Snal), Rs aT West. Middleton 38 (final). morrow night... The game is sched= Jordan Linoleum Co. . i All cords by virtue of their win, be-) The Buckeye halfback, in Cali-|race chalked up.-their 14th victory Vincennes Tourney Rochester “Tourney uled to start at 8 o'clock. |} 207 W. Wash. §t. Opposite Statehouse | | erat QUICK RELIEF FOR coming the first host team ‘ever to! fornia for yesterday's East-West in 16 starts today, gaining it with: LAL A JHpntingbure. 3: | Royal ‘Center: 40, Winémac 36 To {be Victorious in the 10- -year. history | game, recently. was awarded -the|a third-period rally which pro-|Vincennes 51, Huntingburg 32 (consola-|NOTth Manchester 83. Rochester 48. oo. - Nort HEAD - | of the Sun Bowl and shattering‘the | Heinsman' trophy, presented annu-|duced. two goals and a 3-to-2 deci- wank on 2 Central 39 mns¥. North Manchester 5, Royal Center 34 on Everything! | ” scoring “mark set by Hardin-Sim-|ally to -the "nation’s qutstanding|sion over the Buffalo Bisons last Muncie Tourney {final}, Dunkics Tourney : Diamonds, Watch ‘Watches: 3 form " COLD mons 'in- 1937. " | football star, I night. Frankfort 38, Marion 31. Duikirk..30, Albany 36: : | s x A, Laf 28, Muncie 2 1 3 Central (Muncie) 31. Marion 23 (consola- Poftiand 3. Reghey (final). . Musical Instruments, ical struments, Cameras be . MISERY H ighly- Regarded Anderson Indians Upset” Effin 0. sacks 1 se, faniry 5 Sug Clothing, Shotguns, Ele. 2 Lg Greensburg Tourney Bluffton 40, Berne 38. y EE ao weil are Sheloyvile Ju Coundravitle 31, . Bacon’ Bee pasion. ident: Loan The HIC "AG JEWELRY 4 ogged, nosefeelsraw, | | ushville 42, Greensburg Hartford City 37, Bluffton (final). the State « JNC. po membranes swollen, Twice | in Own igh School, Basket Tourney Greshaburg 49, Connersville 34 (consola- , : reach for cooling COLLEGES 146 E. WASHINGTON ST. a Montholatum, Spook ) ; Shelbyville 44, Rushville 28 (final)... . 11 re Dyin 0 Ripe thinout | By UNITED PRESS bowed to Wabash by-a 30-29 margin inated Marion from title hopes, Huntington Tourney Bronkiyn 80, ‘Texas’ Christian 31, LE 5 ick, stubborn mucus; Home teams fared unhappily: ian the first round after Ft. Wayne|38-31. South Side (Ft. Wayne) 20, Peru 28. DePaul (Chicago) 63, Illinol SINESS DIRECTORY LF Soot ri os Lr : . a Da ? Wabash 30 9. Puerto’Rico 46, 8t. Joseph's (Philadelphia) fy @ Soothes o ie six .majorgNew Year's day high/South had vanquished Peru, 20-25. Lafayette. went on to take am Peri 25, meen 37. donsolationy. a1, of BU 4 if reduce swollen school basketball tournaments and|The Ft. Wayne quintet subdued easy 45-26 decision from Frankfort Bouih hg (Pt. Wayne) 45, Wabash 3 Misigsdts 3. Lawrence ®; o (overtime), a - \ ; it on A 3 ston the “experts” revised their estimates| Wabash in the final, 45-34, whilé|at night' while the Bearcats were Ft. Branch Tourney Akron 51, Baldwin Wallace 39, - - i Hy or ele” y 0f Anderson's Indians today. Peru was making the day a dismal | beating Marion, 31:23. Trees Ft. Branch 30, Princeton 29. Temple 39, Wyoming dias 4 | SAXOPHONE 25 Crutches, Invalid Walkers | 18 . The highly-regarded Indians were | failure for Huntington witha 2522 consburg wha another. loser on| ores ile 6 Tatcka a. Wives Bentucky bo canitus 43 (over- $ and Posture Beds or 5 principal’ victims as all the home|consolation game victory. its home ocouit. + The Pirates were Owensville 43, Ft. ih ou th” Great Lakes 80, Ohio State 50. : INSTRUCTION Can Be Rented at 4. og 4 clubs disproved the Hoosier basket Vincennes bowed out of conten-|nicked by Rushville, 42-39, while! Rensselaer Tourney AT FIRST n ° t L - ball adage that the home court is | ion. in lia meet. by absorbing a 21- Shelbyville was Winfing the other Memintion 30 Brook 32. SIGN OF A INDIANA MUSIC CO, HAAG S - ; several-points advantage, {22 licking at the hands of old-rival|afternoon’ encounter, 34-31, from |Renssalaer 46, Brdok 23 (consolation). 115 E. Ohio St, — FR. 1184 - 3 A . Anderson, ranked second in the|put lightly-regarded’ Washington. Connersville. Remington 42, Morocco 39 “(final). : j | . fois 2 undefeated record Central of Evansville won. the| Shelbyville romped to, 8 28l o Dagny Tourney : - ' - | R : a Jr on ded rh JKokome--the| opéner in this meet from Hunting-|triumph in the tourney final arid|nehticelc do. Delphi’ 26. You Save Because We Save c Ey Ry in ut nets Te yes-|burg, 42-33, Greensburg won _ the - consolation, Flora 3, i B consolation). Men's ‘Suits & Overcoats ||| w, Buy Usable Wire : Ei x 5. Ne y.. But when the:shooting had! The Washington Hatchets went) 49-34. oe a Aas TABLETS, SALVE. NOSE DROPS 5 5 SOA at’10¢ per bundle of : 4 subsided} Kokomo had.won by an Batlle Groiiid Tourney “*e $ : 21 : 24”. Yer bn ; 4 : : on BS oma ) on to show that their afternoon vic-| Rochester, also host to another . . Stores All Over 3 od 4 pressl margin. New| tory was rio fluke by trooping to a) four-feam invitational, lost to North LAE PAWN ; CASE. CLOTHES . 5 on . Fat pe THAT SENSOR: 842-39 triumph over the Evansville| Manchester in the.afternoon, 53-45, M SUITS & TOPOOATS | N. te Ave 9 to ! o III : eo ! atternoon game on ier in the other, ny which had | Boot compared fa- | but won from Winamae in the con- en ’s 215 N, Sena . Open 1 . ) vorably with. Bosse's defendin Bh The Anderson meet went com. | g state solation, 44-39, North Manchester SAVE—BUY BONDS ;