Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1945 — Page 6
of bribery and conspiracy.
+ take”
Brooklyn Cagers’ Revelation of Taking Bribes To ‘Throw’ Game Stirs Wide Gambling Probe
{Continued From Page One) |
and its leading scorer; Larry Pearlstein, Jerry Green and Stanley Simon.
Heffernan said they would be | used as material witnesses against the alleged gamblers, Harvey Stem-|
mer and Henry Rosen, whom he]
said would be arraigned on charges |
1t- was the old story, Heffernan said, of college youths wanting easy spending money and not having it,| then suddenly being given a quick | way to acquire it, Barnett and Pearlstein were the first players to be apprehended. They admitted, Heffernan said,
GAME CALLED OFF
BOSTON, Jan. 30 (U. Tom Kanaly, gercral manager and acting president of - Boston garden, said todav that a
basketball game scheduled tomor- -
row hetween Rrooklvn college and Akron university would be canceled because of the disclosure in New York of an alleged plan to “throw” the game. “The Brooklyn story is shockinf and the game is canceled | immediately,” Kanaly said.
the deal would be subjected to
‘heavy losses if plans went through
that they received a series of mys-|a5 contemplated.
terious telephone calls by persons
There appeared to be no estab-
who said they could “make some||ished liaison with regular bookquick dough” by throwing basket- makers on the proposed “coup.”
ball games.
' They admitted getting in touch phy establishing Brooklyn college to players.
It was easy to see, however, that
eventually with Rosen and after a jose by a fixed number of points, |
brief discussion on Jan. 22,
each the professional bet takers could
of the five player§ involved Was | win wagers on boti teams.
given a $100 bill. The next day,
vided equally among himself and the others.
Barnett said, one ron’s players were of them received $500, which he di- the clear and in no way involved.” |
had made preliminary That amount was advanced on Brooklyn college to throw its game Simon 47.
Heffernan emphasized that Ak-| “absolutely in
The players also admitted they plans for
account, with the remaining $2000 against St. Francis college, one of | to be delivered after the game, they the weaker metropolitan teams, in| was he a proficient scorer,
said. Heffernan said the players told him that they had agreed not only | to drop the game, but that they | would do it by a “given number of | points.” | #Thus bookmakers not*involved in|
Looks Like Phog Allen Ww 5 on Butler Five
(a game at Madison Square Garden
Feb. 10.
P.)— |
the |
Shc ha isbn TORE AINE oe
xh
“But I certainly think it is a good thing that the police are vigilant to protect the integrity of the game land do clear other:teams which have {been unjustly accused of complicity
| with gamblers. “If the players not involved are {given a clean ‘bill of health by’ the school authorities, I see no- reason |why the game with St.” Francis {should not go on as scheduled,” he
said, $ | Police said the conspiracy was [revealed- “accidentally” while de-
| tectives trailed one of the alleged | gamblers as a fence for stolen | goods. When Barnett and Pearlstein made a visit to his home they fol[lowed them and picked them up {for questioning.
| They implicated both Stemmer and Rosen and the other three]
Although Brooklyn has not been one of the stronger metropolitan | teams this season, the Kingsmen have won seven games While losing four. | Barnett was the team's third highest scorer with 88 points. Green was next with 75, Leder had 59, and
|
Pearlstein was not a regular, nor
The | Raskin,
Brooklyn said he was
coach, Maurice | “crushed over /
Promoter Ned Irish, who arranges the whole affair.”
all scheduled Madison Square Gar- |
den games, said:
“They were fine, splendid boys,” {he said.
“It is too bad such a thing had could have made them do such a
to’ happen,
Right Track in the First Place |
LAWRENCE, Kas. Jan. 30
(U, P. —~Forrest versity of Kansas basketball coach, by five Brooklyn college players that they had conspired to throw
(Phog) Allen, Uni-
& game, bore out his charges that “professional -gamblers have approached players in Madison Square garden games.”
“This revelation should ceme as no surprise to any “They have known, these things were going on all one player had been approached by along. Most of them were afraid professional gamblers in a Madison {Square Garden game. Allen said that only yesterday he were denied by New York police had received from a New York authorities and Ned Irish, promoter printed [of games at the Garden.
coach,” he said.
to say anything about it.”
sports authority several sheets listing odds on various col- |
legiate games, inviting the recipi- boys is only another instance of the organized gamblers using college athletics as “With closing ball coaches charged in an exclusive of the race tracks, the bookies are! to collegiate
ent to place bets through given | telephone numbers. The dean of the nation's basket-
interview with a United Press correspondent last fall that at least
{turning
said today that the admission
intelligent
“What happened to the Brooklyn | dangerous activity of a pawn,” Allen said.
increasingly sports.”
The charges
| thing.”
Rolls Along
Es Acai seb ash emai r abu Aa thu Sari es isi wy RAT
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.
3
TUESDAY, JAN. 30, 1945
| TUESDAY
|| WALTER
{ i } | |
4
ris World Shocked As College Basketbal l Scandal Brea ks
Change in ; Rations
~tper-game department all season but until last week, “when the Purple]
U. 8. signal corps photo from NEA Pfc. Clinton Calvert (left) and Cpl. Roy Swisher of the 4th divirations with deer and
sion provide a welcome change from G.I rabbits bagged in snow of Luxembourg woods.
Val Werner, Wilbur Richwine, Carl {Mindach, Lou Fouts, | Jim Hurt Jr,
Petersen’s Classic Attracts
29 Indianapolis Pin Leaders
Indianapolis will be well represented in the 33d annual Petersen “I can't understand what! oes Classic which opened in Chicago Saturday. . Two of the 29 local pinmen scheduled to take a whirl at the $43, 200 | Boktama, {prize list were slated to try their luck this afternoon. {and John Rice were scheduled on the 4:30 p. m. squad in Chicago. Harry Wheeler, Capt. |
Friday afternoon at 4:30 Hershell Stillwell,
{needed 16 games,
Harold Brown
Annexes Lead In Net Points
By UNITED PRESS Lanky Harold Brown, Evansville college's cage captain, took over the Indiana collegiate individual scor ing lead toda¥.
Brown has led the average- pointes
Aces took on two opponents, he had not played in enough games to set the total paint pace, . The 6-foot junior from Mackey, Tnd., flipped in 47 points against Camp Breckenridge, Ky., and George field, Ill, last week, however, to] displace Bob Dille of Valparaiso and | Clarence Disney of Indiana State, who shared the No. 1 spot a week ago. That left Brown with 246 points; | Dille with 221, and Disney, now of | the U. S. army, with 208. The Evansville ace assembled his point total in 13 games, giving him | a 19-point-a-game average, while) Dille, last year's scoring champion, |
Players with 140 points or more:
Brown, Evansville ....... 13. 90 66 246 Dille, Valparaiso .. ....... 18 88 45 221] Lisney, Indiana States .... 14 90 28 208] Boryla. Notre Dame ...... 13 82 43 "207 Lash, Indiana State ..... 18 75 48 198] Faris, Indiana ........... 14° 82 25 185} Janisch, Valparaiso 18 15 35
Armstrong, Indiana State. 18 77 20 Gosewehr, Purdue 14
George Crofts Jones, Evansville ...
John Kiesel,|among local participants. Oscar Behrens,
Roy Springer;
in establishing al [pair of individual records and lead-| On the 7:15 squad Friday night ing his team to a new season high | | —Outfielder Ron Northey of
in ins)
Dee, Notre Dame ,........ 13 74 23 Gardner, DePauw +13 68 29 { Swintord, Indiana Stat e. «18.67 21 Butler 15° 64 29 191] { DePauw 60 31 151 . 65 14 144 { Pees, Earlham .........00 56 28 140
Rolling | Northey, Ex-4-F,
Ed | in five of the Petersen events, he has | Stevenson, John Mencin and Gene hauled in $1310, | Briner will compete in the Petersen | {event
Taken by Army
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 30 (U. P.). the!
Butler university's all- DD Lou Schwitzer, Jerry O'Grady, Philiin the Marmon-Ferrington league] ' Philadelphia Phillies, 25, was sworn|
Bulldogs were only two victories Bisesi, Paul Field, Ralph Richman, at West Side, was. the top soloist of into the army here yesterday. He|
|away from at least a share of the Bill Dugdale and- Bob Kelly are last night's league performers,
Indiana Collegiate basketball con- scheduled to face the maples.
|ference title today. |
Returning to the cage sport after:Miller ‘Ensminger and Bill Blyth With the aid of its a season spent on the sidelines ‘take their turn Sunday, while Bill Springer’s 690 series and 278 game | player is married and the father of gave every indication of becoming because of wartime conditions, the Bilsky and Bob Schaub are on the were best of the season in the loop./a 16-month-old son. John Ott with "219, 246, 200—6§5, Northey led the Phillies in bat-| when he showed 810 for four games and. in| anapolis entrants, Carl Hardin and {for Moose Grille in the Moose league ting last season with a .200 average.| and 1203 for six. ¥'He rolled games,
Well, They're Set
Bulldogs uncorked a surprisingly Monday schedule.
powerful band of “rhinies”
{plastering Manchester last night, ! {John Blue, will try their luck on at the Pennsylvania was runnerup | eighth | | Friday, Feb. 10. ¥ Practically. every member of the ing soloists scoring 650 or better It was Manchester's sixth {local contingent is rated as a top- were members of the South Side Butler was hotcher and is conceded an excel- | Businessmen’s loop, rolling at Sport {lent chance to cop the $5100 first Bowl,
63-44, marked up their straight against no conference! losses.
loss in eight games. ahead at the half, 34 to 16. Butler tangles with Earlham next |
competition against Ball State five {days later. By repeating earlier
sylvania, and at Bush-Callahan,
nights.
Don't Miss the Amateurs
Reserve seat tickets for the Times-Legion Golden Gloves amateur boxing show to be held at the Armory Friday night are on sale downtown at the Sportsman's: Store, 126 N. Penn-
second presentation of the?1945 tourney. Friday's fistic menu is expected to offer approximately 20 bouts over the three-round distance. Prices are $1.80 and $1.20, tax included. General admission tickets, priced at 80 cents (tax included), are nof sold in advance but are available at the Armory box office on fight nights. The Armory ticket booths open at 6:45 p. m: on show
Remaining tourney dates are Friday and Feb. 9th and 16th.
decisions over these two clubs, But-
DePauw's Tigers, unbeaten five state conference starts,
their remaining conference games—.
LaCross, Chaney Paired on Mat
Gil LaCross is back at the Armory Cithideal Travels
tonight where he will clash with Lon Chaney of Vincennes in the, top bout on the Hercules A. wrestling card,
The two junior HCAVywelghts are Beech Grove at Beech Grove Tomorrow. night.
touted as action-producers and their match is expected to be a “give and] affair.© Gil is out of Boston ind has a reputation of being one of the best in dishing out aggressive tactics, Chaney was a favorite here a few jeasons age, but changed to a ough nd tumble style... They meet for iwo falls out of three, Monty LaDue .of Mass,. meets Jackie Nichols of Nova Scotia in the one-fal] -opener at| 5:30, while semi-windup opponents wre Ali Ali, Turkish grappler, and lex Hager of Eugene, Ore, It also is for ‘one fall.
Manchester, |
Get B. F.
syathetic rubber ia our shop.
Rubber for Best Results.
When you recap be sure you get the best materials. We use only Grade "A"
FACTORY METHODS USED
Our trained recappers use the B. F. Goodrich thd in putting thick, new tread on
Monday and then winds up league thal goes with it.
ler would clinch a share of the title. roy Springer. Marmon-Herringion .. 690 in !John Ott, .-. 865 Norb Day, face | witbur Schuck, South
a pair of lightly regarded rivals in| rave, Koma, Srp
{had 175, 278, 237-690
Gomer Allred, George Seeger, counting five,
The final Indi- |
[for individual Honors .
| —650. Both were
Hardin is the top money winner American Transport. » s ” » » J 600 BOWLERS (MEN) {Mary Taylor, R.C. A. Gladys Lane, Blue Ribbon ... 5 Elau Holliday. Coca-Cola . South Side Business Men's 632 Lucille. Hornady, Blue Ribbon Side B.
Moose Lodge
Inter-Plant
Betty Dobyn, Uptown Monday
John Mullinix, Fraternal | Roberta Harlan. Herman Schmitt Ins. .
The remain-
50 | OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (WOMEN) Betty Deppen, Ravenswood Merchants 434)
He ‘is the first big league ball
the Ac- player to be drafted since the war 96 bowlers to roll last night were which totaled * 3396 |department’s recent directive for re- | lable to crash the upper 10 bracket. handicap. examination of 4-F athletes.
The |
To Start Again
Norb Day had 211, 216, 225—| NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (U. P).—|¢ {place prize and the diamond medal 652 and Wilbur Schuck, 246, 191, 213, The Swedish air lines advised Danin “action with|iel J. Ferris, secretary of the Na-| tional A. A. U., today that the de-|
parture of Haakon Lidman,
Gunder Hagg and
Swedish
+ 308 | stars, from Stockholm had been .. s01/delayed again because of inocula501 tions.
They now are scheduled to leave {Feb. 1 ‘and are expected to arrive,
400 | in this country for their indoor
rome his 1577 for eight games on
| the first to go over the 1600 mark
| | |
track!
Plays All-Stars
Paul Birch will be in the lineup of the Ft. Wayne Zollner Pistons when they meet the local Indianapolis All-Stars at Butler fieldhouse fomorrow night’ Birch is a former Duquesne university star and later played with the World Champion New York Celtics. In other games tomorrow, Cur-tiss-Wright girls play Pepsi-Cola girls at 7:15 and Butler university meets Camp Atterbury at 8:15. The pres clash at 9:15.
‘Heiden Holds Chicago Pace
CHICAGO, Jan. 30 (U. P.).—Al Heiden's 1577 still . remained the top mark in the $43,200 Petersen individual bowling classic - today after 11 of the 54 squads had compret ed. firing. Heiden, -a Detroit war worker,
the eighth squad. Only thre of the
Jerome Van Becelaere, Detroit,
Peis : Gives
| Badgers Dose Of Home Form
% vr. BY UNITED. PRESS x Purdue university ‘was marked
today as a danger spot for all vis iting Big Nine basketball teams, . | Purdue has played four Western conference games at home and has won---every one, —inctuding--4ast-night's 45-34 yictory over Wiscon=
sin, which placed the Boilermakers
and Badgers in a tie for fourth place at .500. Purdue has split even in eight games, Wisconsin has done the same in four, - Except for that mild shuffling, the standings remain the same with Iowa and Ohio State tied for first place with four victories and one
three victories and a single loss, Win at Home, Lose on Road
traveling games. to - Ohio State, Iowa, Minnesota and Indiana, Indiana and Iowa, however, have games left at Lafayette, which por= tends disaster, The Hoosiers play there, Feb, 7 and Iowa, Feb. 12. Meanwhile, the conference race doesn't pick up again until Friday when Wisconsin plays Michigan in the second of its three road games this week and Purdue meets northe western at the Chicago stadium.
Gophers af. Indiana
Ohio State and Iowa return to action Saturday against Wisconsin and Michigan, respectively, while Minnesota is at Indiana the same night. Wisconsin never was up to Pure due’s fast pace last night. Purdue's lightning speed was never faster when Forward Billy
of 182, 203, 212, 213, 202 and 191, then faltered within sight of the | {lead and slipped to 160 and 150. The leaders:
a Helden, pout Fasanans ves 33 Hoffman for high-scoring honors. oe umesic enosha 18. cevvnnes 3 Stanley Stefancic, Cleveland ........ 141 Purdue Us) rom Wiscansin_ (30), PP Don Fairchild, Dayton, O. . . 153 htt 5 3 1iPatterson{ 4 2 2 | Einar ‘Wick, Minneapolis v | Gosew . 1 2 : 8! Fon Otto Haubrich, Kenosha, Wis. ...... 1523 | Andersn.f. 3 { at hows, 6 0° 3 Al KIDee, CHICHEO <<. svaresrevres 1521 | Hoffman 6 1 1/Bachmanc 0 0 2 Emil Kashmerick, Detroit ........... 1521 | Haagg... 4 1 Hohnson.g 3 3.3 Charles Earl, Lansing, Mich. ...... 1515 |Hingag... 0 0 38u Bvan.g 3 3 Al Kopitski, Detroft ..........c.ooeee. 1513 Dykhizn,g' 1 1 0iDah 8, 8 $ 3 Van Becelaere, Detroit ........ueevae 1513 | Lewis.t 0 0 08Smit ———————————————— Elliott,¢ o 0 OiGoering.t. ‘ ] : : i 4 unke,c. Hollingerg 0 0 0 Three Sports | BL STATE COLLEGE, Pa., Jan. 30.— | . Grim, f.. .. 9 9 9 | Baseball, track ‘and lacrosse are Totals 19 1 1 Totals ..15 4 1 |
1 1 |
retained on the 1945 spring calen-
Gosewehr, Center Paul Hoffman jand Forward Red Anderson streaked | through the Badgers defense to take | an 8-4 lead in the opening minutes and never relinquished it. Gosewehr, playing his last game | before reporting to the army next
| week, racked up 13 points to tie with
Score at Half—Purdue 24, Wisconsin 31,
defeat, and ‘Illinois “in third with |
Defending champion Ohio State, | Northwestern, Minnesota and Wis= | consin all have fallen at Lafayette, | where the Hoosier fans spur the | Boilermakers to heights. © But al= | though the Boilermakers are kings | at home, they're not so hot, on the | road, where they have lost all four |
§ Indianapolis,
Schultheis,
Franklin and Wabash. Closing vie- | Lou Koehler, Evangelical ... «++ 635 patty Bruner, Real Silk Mixed | Referee—Glenn Adams (DePauw), Ume George®™zix, St. Philip No. 1 vie 634 {track tour the next day, | dar at Penn State, Will Haarlow (Chicago). tories by the Tigers and Bulldogs Dale Logan, Fraternal .. TH Cath, Neidigh, Marmon-Her gion 431 = i : {Harry S8chornstein, Courthouse 631 " 126 E. Washington. It is the [ Would leave them in a percentage gin adders St. Philip No. 1 ooo... 630 ree tie for the championship. | Porrest Jottes, Courthouse ........... 821 { Gene Deardorf, Little Flower ........ 2 Tonight's conference game sends, qi, Smith, South Side B. ® Wabash (won 4-lost 10) to Indiana Lou Meyer, St. Philip No. 1 ... Lux, Auto Transportation .. State (13-5), a Reinbold, Fraternal 621 Howard Caulfield, Capital Paper Taare 621 “ . Major Hume, Marmon-Herrington .... 621 Ex- Gridder Killed {Hank Mueller, Capital Paper ........ 62! | Miller Kellar, Marmon-Herrington ... 618 CHAMPAIGN, Ill, Jan. 30 (U.P.).!Jim Baker, Moose: 615 ~Unive _ Jim Waldon, Evangeiical svae University of Tlinois officials re George Crofts, Fraternal ............ 815 % vealed today that Jim Srednicki, Rev. Clement Bosler, St. Joan of Are 614 Il oy Ongiey oodard, Fraternal ......... 613 ini football end in 1943, was killed Bottin, Evangelical ............... 611 . in action Dec. 26 in Belgium. | Waiter Nash, Moose ..... . 610 | Jim Talbert, Ravenswood Merchants. . 609 - | Walter Pennington, Optimists........ 609 | Dick Cox, Moose . Bud Faulting, South ‘Bide B. M.. ntertain | Bernie Mills, Capital Paper CeNCas €, Jest Montague, South Side B. M.. ward Mitchell, Inter-Plant . w : | Hor aa Erner, Times Composing | Ralph Haverkamp, Evangelical ...... 5) to e anon Herman Bohne, Praternal ........,. “ ’ | Bill Blyth, Moose. .. . | Fred opeler, Reformed ‘Church. o ® ‘ : . : [Rep, Kline, Praterne roo In basketball games tonight involving Indianapolis high school teams. ar Mungt: oo hiernal Cassie c. Shortridge is to entertain Greencastle at the Blue Devil gym and, Lia Rishi. -Praternai AREER Cathedral journeys to Lebanon. ly COX, IRLeTr-PIAY os isiveessisss » In another mid-week game, Indianapolis Sacred Heart is to play|Carl Hohlt, Evangelical ............. OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (MEN) A i Claude Neeley, Pt. Square Classic..... 590 Some of Indiana's top “Big Ten” of high school basketball go into [Carl Hague, Allison Executives ...... 593 « : 8's » [action tonight against dangerous) connie gustan, Holy Cross ie i 2a3 . | : 3 . i | Roscoe awyer, Tr ghtwoo erchants SCHEDULE CHANGES | Opposition. Stiffest assignment goes Forrest Sample, Service Club .. is ; . : to Jeffersonville’s Red Devils who Day ve Klinger, North Side B. M. is . . bari : ren edlin, Transpertation x Tech's court game with the | Play host to Louisville Male in an Tony Collier, West Side Church .. Southpert Carflinals scheduled to interstate headliner, | Larry Payne, West Side Church ...... 573 a 3 x k | Dick Nolan, Mitchel-Scott .......e0us 572 be played at Southport Saturday aspers Wildcats, their 13-game Bud Heizer, Allison Gagers .-. 570 - night has been transferred to the Winning streak snapped by Evans-|j Sondey. J D. Adams Co 36a East side gym, Tech high school |ville Bosse last Saturday, invade|K. Gardner, Lions . ......... 560 | Evansvi 3 o Bill Myers, Allison Bearing tan . 560 authorities announced. Tech also |Evansville to face an off-and OV 6. Russman, Allison Bearing «........ 560 plays Muncie Central here Friday. Central quintet which holds a de-|Sgt. Al Adonaitus, Stout Field ........ 551 vision over Jeffers ; Arthur. Burns, Real Silk Mixed ...... 547 The Shortridge-Manual game, Bedford's ete cnville, t Tony Ledwith, Indiana Bell Telephone 535 . originally bovked Friday af | FSVOCS StGneciliers mee Sey-1¥, hia ole TS Shortridge, has been shifted to ey dope S Jeneal 8 49.08 iri Sophie Krapes, Coca-Cola 4 519 the Butler fieldhouse to meet a ph se ° r the Owls in .mid- Betty Walsh, Stewart-Warner ........ 518 heavy demand for tickets December. That was one. of the Mary Brisnik, Coca-Cola .. 516 Te 3 dd e lon: ” " Juanita Cox, Blue Ribbon Ice Cream. 518 few lopsided defeats on Seymour's Marie Scheich, Blue Ribbon ... 0! record, however, and the South! " | Central conference five holds upset | decisions over New Albany and| xarner Defeats Hood z : 3 f Greencastle, a South Bend Riley plays at Roches- | In Close Fight or tonight, while Linton takes on a! CHICAGO, Jan, 30.—By scoring! 2 Surpington quintet - which has {wo knockdowns oy the second as g per in recent weeks after round, Bob Garner,’ Louisville . : i h Grade “p” [a woeful eatly season. | heavyweight boxer, decisioned Hu- + r bert Hood, Chicago, in a 10-round ) | } . > Good C Local ¥ Heavy Loses 1 0 20s, Opiase. in WASHINGTON, Jan,. 30.—Al-| It was a split decision due to | though Colion Chaney, Indianapolis Hood's comeback in the late rounds. : heavyweight, outslugged Dixie Garner weighed 180 pounds and y | Walker, local boxer, in a 10-round Hood 195: *>00 i% a wa wy 00 oul | bout here. last night, the Washing- tte : | ton big fellow was awarded the de- FIGHT RESULTS ; : {cision because of superior infight-! ngw YORK.—Archie Moore. 166%. Los 1 p : 1 ing. 16 Was. a ol was a close match, |Angeles, knocked out Bobby Jacobs, 169Ya, | ai a Es | Philadeiphia (9). | , | BALTIMORE Joe Carter, 166%. Rome, | Basketball Scores |» outpointed Louis (Kid) Cocon, 163, | » {Now Haven, Conn. (10), { STATE COLLEGES | NEWARK, N. J.-—Julie Bort, 138, Brook-| 3 : * Purdue 45, Wisconsin 34 {lyn, stopped Joe Griffo, 133%, Newark, | | Butler 63, Manchester 44 N. J. 4), i wai | OTHER COLLEGES PHILADELPHIA —Genes Burton, 139%, : ! > , {Georgia Tech 47, Tulane 38, : New York, stopped Sante Bucca, 1386, : ; : | Kentucky 73, Georg'a 37. Philadelphia (5); Wesley Mouzon, 134'%, | ’ : ” | Louisville 67, Georgetown (Ky) 27 * | Philadelphiy, decisioned Eddie Sloan, Fi Y Marshall 98, West Virginia Tech 36, [14312 New York (8); Vince Jones, 144, 0 SERVICE TEAMS | Philadelphia, decisioned Bob Winters, 148, | : Tin : ol Bunker Hill 68, Camp Atterbury 45. {New York (8), . : : / | Camp LeJeune 40, North Carolina Presi HOLYOKE, Mass. —Danny Bartfleld, 149, ’ flight 37. New York, 'decistoned Joe Amico, 141, : « ! ; Camp Eilis 43, Chanute Fibld 34, | Philadephia (10). i rin i i) SAVE—BUY BONDS ® 2201 N. Capitol © 2037 E. Wash, *45 5. West New York and New Jersey At A 0.5 MAIS. 5 Hundreds to Choose From. oo y . : 1 oak hem over” = ane. To “Va. Ave. and South st. . E 30th and Martindale . 121 w. Wesh, * Beech Grove a J cleaned, sterilized; ean : hardly - bs told trom aew. Up riend AN AOW AR...
SERVICE
1 Local Attorne
War | Vetel of G. 0.
Rites were to | noon at the Peo; for Walter B. (
| attorney who die
Veterans’ hospital Mr, Gary, wh veteran: of world tained a law offic
- gt. for a number -&-member-of-the
association and t Republican club, He is survived b 8 daughter, Mr Nashville, Tenn, William, George all of Detroit, M ters, Mrs. Annabe Lorine Powers, bo
JOHN M. LEY
Rites will be Thursday in St. church, North Michael Ley, wi at City hospital in a fire Jan. 27 8. Randolph st. North Vernon, Mr, Ley who w here since 1932 clothing store a before his retiren Ago. He was a Cross Catholic cl He is survived kb Mrs, Girtha Hi Mo.; Mrs. Laura Cal, and Mrs. E dianapolis; thre Henry and Herm: dianapolis; - two and sist Balti Elizabeth
and three
Mrs,
| Ella Marquett, bo
MRS. MARGARE
Rites far Mrs. |
i who died Sunday
We Merrill st, w p. m. tomorrow
i her brother, Car ! 1033 S. Senate av i In Foral Park.
Mrs. Branan, 1
lived here 21 y i member of Ma ; chapel.
She 1s survived
Mrs. Eunice Fletc i and
another bre F. Schoonover, in
f cum
§ SOAP and [ Fo PROM
CON FUNERAI
1934 W. M BE-|
