Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1945 — Page 22
SE
} : . » i : 3 * 4 ¥ : ! i : :
cp
A WE RR
iggest Nadu: in Sports Offered Fans at Annual State Track Meet Saturday
a By BOB STRANAHAN
Times Staff Writer
. The
biggest 30 cents worth in sports.
That's the Indiana state high school track and field championships
to be held Saturday at Tech field.
There won't be 11,000 customers in the stands as there were at the state basketball finals in March and the I. H. 8 A. A. will have to dig into its pocket to stage the show. But those fans who pay their 30 cents certainly wil get their money's , 8. 8
© worth,
For the uninitiated who think] that every time the I. H.' S. A. A.
turns a wheel gold pours into the,
coffers, the 1944 carnival cost the outfit $1556.60 to stage. And that’s shaving everything to the bone, too. : Highest priced official was the referee and starter, who drew $25 He worked all day. | Officials for the state high school basketball tourney finals receive $70 for 96 minutes of actual running. A third official gets $30 to sit. on bench just in case one of the regulars develops a charley horse and can't navigate. That will give you a slight idea between the big basketball show and the track meet.
Plenty of Thrills
Yet there'll be just as many, thrills for the schoolboy athletes
Saturday; just as much drama and
a whale of a lot more action. It's a difference in sports popu-|
larity among the customers, apparently. : Maybe Commissioner L. V. Phillips should get the propaganda _ around that there's a ticket shortage. But even then we doubt if the fans would shovel out $5 or $10 to a speculator. Paid admissions at the 1944 carnival were 2217 at 30 cents a crack as compared with 10927 at $2.20 for the 1944 net finals, One hundred and four schools will be represented in the final: field Saturday in which Anderson's Indians are the ruling favorites. A total of” 373 boys will compete in the individual and relays events. Gates at Tech field open at 9 a. m. and the trials in the dashes| and hurdle events will be conducted | from 10 to 11:30 a. m. Finals start at 1:30 with the 100-yard dash and; if youYe in your seat 10 plcunds late you probably will miss the fi ish. (Harold Morris of on Clark and Wardell Harvey of Boon- | ville already have run the century! in 10 flat) > Trophies to Be Given. It all will last until around 4 p. m.
and then Assistant Manager Fred! Gorman of Tech will pass out the
.team,. individual and relay awards and trophies which set the I. H. S.; |
A, A. back some $547. According to all advance calculations, Anderson should be on the re-| ceiving end of the team award.' Coach Carl Bonge's boys are unbeaten and hoast some of the finest |
performers in the state, including!
Bob DeVinney and Johnny Wilson. | Most of the track experts think! they'll score somewhere between 30 and 38 points. Ft. Wayne Central| won it last year with five boys and! "29 points. That still doesn't come up to the
performance of two Rochester. boys.
LOANS
.L ANON na aTCHES
LINCOLN STATE P PAWNERS
COR. CAPITOL. yo WASH. ST.
for JEWELRY it's Tavel's
* Easy
Fed. Tax Included
2 %
Diamond Set Masonic Rings
Massive Yellow Gold Mountings
Diamond Set Scottish Rite
Plain MASONIC and Scottish,
Buttons Rite Rings
for All Lodges . $i5 wp i. $1.25 a Week!
Here is the list of the former state | high school track champions: 1804 Biouming ten 1926—~Kokemao ammond- 1927—Kokome ‘Shortridge 1928—Froebel | tied) 1929—Froebel 1906—Hammond 1930—Froebel 1907—Manual 1931—Froebel 1908—Meonitcelle 193%~Froebel 1909--Manual 1938~Froebel 1910—Linton J384-~Kujumo 1911—Kokomeo -1935-<Kok 1912-Fairmount 1936—Horacs Mann 1913~~Noblesville 1987—Kokome 1914-~Washington 1938~Hammond 1915—-Washington 1939—Horace Mann1916—Shortridge North Side 1917—Manual mn Wayhe) 1918—Rechester ied 1919~Crawfordsville 1940—Fr oebel naal 1941—=Neorth Side 1942—North Side
1920~Ma 1921—Manual 1922—Tech 1943~Burris 1928—Manual (Muacie) 1924—Kokomo 1944—~Central (Fi. Wayne)
1925-—~Kokomo
who won the title for their school in 1918. Charley Ivey now of the Kendallville school was one of them. The rules are different now, how- |" ever, and the feat couldn't be re-| peated. Boys are restricted to three: events and one relay race. If sheer numbers meant anything New Albany would have the thing sacked up. The Bulldogs qualified 16 boys for the finals but they had 11 last year and didn’t score a point. Howe had 11 qualifiers to lead the Indianapolis and Marion county entrants but Shortridge, with nine, was expected to pick up most of the points for schools in this area. And some of the experts figured that would be less than eight, although the Blue Devils are entering the meet unbeaten. Tech had 10, Washington eight, Manual seven, Warren Central three and Broad Ripple, Crispus Attucks, Silent Hoosiers and Pike township one each.
Heath Waiting For 'Fair Offer’
s From Cleveland
{
|
CLEVELAND, May 17 (U. P)— | The recalcitrant Jeff Heath, Cleve-
land Indians hard-hitting “hold- .
iout” outfielder, will report to the: | Tribe “if they make me a fair of - | fer.” it was learned here today. | Heath, who wants to be traded, {has spent the first month of the] current baseball season at his Seat- | ‘tle, Wash., home. The Cleveland Press, in an ex{clusive telephone interview, quoted | Heath as saying “I know I can help, | the Indians or whatever team I play with and I'll give them everything {I've got.” “They (the Cleveland baseball officials) are too proud to admit I { can help the ball club or they would not let me sit out here,” Heath | claimed. He insisted he was in good shape and ready to play.
Derby Candidates Run at Keeneland
= - ‘the team wasn't playing better|
Sore About Ban on Racing *
Frisky Arthur Childers, dirt track og and midget racer, who traded ws I racer for a PT boat beck in 192, is ! just as mad at some government of- 7 {
.|figials as he was at the Jups wh
shot him up four times. < i Well, maybe not quite as mad Dw | almost, he qualified his statement as | he launched into a somewhat heated tirade against “the guys who won't . lift the ban against auto racing.” “Hell,” he said, taking a deed 3 breath before the deluge, “They’ ve | lifted the ban against horse racing, dog racing—cats could even race it there were any cats around that wanted to race. Why the ban against motor racing?” Without waiting for an answer, even if there'd been one. available he went on “We don't use {ires—or at any rate only.the ones we've got stored. The fuel mixture isn't even gasoline. And auto racing doesn't tax inter-state transport facilities. I can’t see it.” . “Isat around three years, looking| Now back at his home in Beech forward to climbing back into a|Grove, the 28-year-old veteran was midget and what'd it get me? I'm discharged after three years with back, I'm out and like a pack ofthe navy and being wounded and other drivers I have nothing to|seeing action at Saipan, Guadaldo but sit around and wait. The canal, Tulagi and the Russell isJaps treated me pretty rough but|lands. Before entering the service I'm as mad—well, almost as mad|he had raced for 10 years at the anyway—at the government as I|Indianapolis Speedrome and other wa: at them.” tracks over the: state and country.
Frisky Childers
Lippy Leo Believes ‘Daily Win’
Sessions Responsible for Success
By JACK CUDDY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 17.—With 11 straight victories to the Dodgers’ credit, Manager Leo Durocher was mighty happy as he climbed into the -gladdest Tags worn by any manager in the majer leagues—olive green sports shirt, mouse gray slacks and toast-brown sports jacket. Laughing Leo was surrounded, crowded and enmeshed by sports writers who wanted to know, “How come?” As Durocher ran the gamut of} his garment, he said this and he| are pitchers as Vic Lombardi, Roy said that. “Most of his conversation | Pfund, Tom Seats and Hal Gregg. naturally ‘had to do with Brooklyn's {He said, “These questionable piteh-3-1 victory yesterday over Pitts-|ers-have buckled down at every preburgh But, while combing his|game meeting—learning everything sparse brown hair, he admiited that they could—and remembering it the Dodgers’ recent winning streak (when they faced was due partially to the club meet- | batters. ings before each game. | Bear Down on Field He said, “these club meetings are! “They set the pace in attentivethe most serious I've ever seen. ness in our club meetings—meetings Everyone — particularly the new that were mighty serious because pitchers—bring their brains to bear none of the experts figures us to do during these meetings. As a Ye. | utich. Our boys went into those sult, they go out onto the field meetings knowing that on paper we well educated. And they've been| {were figured as a second-division living up to that education.” ‘club. Instead of being discouraged This caused a reporter to re- by such rating, they bore down more mark: The “daily win” in the club-/ {and more at the meetings—and on house is helping the Dodgers | the field—trying to prove the exachieve a daily win on the field. | perts wrong.” Durocher put down his" hair | Ouytfielder Dixie Walker, last brush before the mirror and said, |year’s champion batsman of the ‘you've- got something there.” | majors, agreed with Durocher. He Applied in Jest said, “we have been getting unDurocher knew that “daily win” | expectedly effective pitching; but we was applied jestingly to every club- | alsd have been getting unexpectedly house meeting throughout ‘the ma- | tight fielding, and winning power at jor and minor leagues. Those meet- | gat—shough hitting power to score ings, shortly before each game, were from, three to eight runs a game. held to take the opposing team | It's hard to beat a club having that apart—to study its batting weak-| | combination of pitching, defense nesses and other playing pecu- | 3nd punch. liarities—and to change signals if necessary. The brain work in: Brothers Brought | those meetings was supposed to beat | the opposition before it took the | ‘To New York Club {field. Hence it was a “daily win” | | before the first pitch. |The New York Giants had the]
Durocher said, “I'd be a liar If 1 povest. brother combination in the
than I expected. It's playing like I|
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
Returned. Vet, Midget Pilot, *
" | chester, N. .Y.,
the different’
Cards" Ace. Is Suspended
-- BOSTON, . May . 17 (U., P.).—Another round in the salary battle be-
{tween Pitcher Morton Cooper: and
the St. Louis Cardinal management was in the offing today following C8bper’s suspension by Manager Billy Southworth. Southworth suspended Cooper yesterday alter the big righthander left the Cardinals without notice, presumably to go to St. Louis for another salary conference with Club' President Sam Breadon. . Breadon, however, wags in Rotransacting business with the team’s farm club there. Advised of Cooper's suspension, he said, “the matter is entirely in Southworth’s hands.” “The last I saw of Cooper was in the hotel Tuesday night,” Southworth said. - “Frankly, I don't know what is wrong. . You'd think, though, the way we are situated for pitchers that he would have said something to me about going— given me a little warning. We're really in bad shape for pitchers now with Max Lanier going home
Dockins having arm trouble.” May Ask for Trade—
probably would attempt to persuade Breadon to sell or trade him to another major league club. The big fellow told some of his teammates that he was worried over sickness at home. He had been Southworth’s selection to pitch the opener of yesterday's double head< er with 'the Braves in which the Cards lost both games. ? The salary dispute developed after Cooper and his brother, Catcher Walker Cooper, signed contracts calling for $12,500 each. When Shortstop Marty Marion later signed for £13500 the Coopers demanded a raise to $15,000, threatening to quit baseball if the money was ‘hot forthcoming. After conferring with Breadon several times, the Coopers went to Leslie O'Connor, secretary -of the commissioner's office. He in turn referred the matter to the office of the economic stabilization director to determine whether the Coopers were eligible for raises.
Fans Provide
Fund for Langford
NEW YORK, May 17 (U. P)— Generous boxing fans of the nation have provided. “green pastures” for that fist-blinded old warhorse, Sam Langford. A postal card from David H.| Knott, chairman of the Sam Langford fund committee, gave the final
total of $1089233 had been collected from about 2000 contributors throughout, the country. It said:
NEW YORK, May 17 ¢U. P.).—|
“The committee bought him an! annuity. This assures that he will tbe fed and housed the rest of his life.”
{majors today when they brought |
NEW YORK, May 17 (U. P).—|ngured it might if it went all out.|in First Baseman Al Gardella tron: HOPPE’ 8s Lead Now
How Kentucky Derby candidates; ran yesterday: | At Churchill Downs (Reerielond} | meeting)—Best Effort won | $5000 Phoenix at six furlongs; Pot-
Darby Dieppe won the six-fur-rons Keeneland seventh in 1:14 on {muddy track. Bob Mann wis seclond by a half, Fire Ahead third by| | eighth, Coolite fifth by 13, and | Darby Duluth sixth by 16 lengths. |
Pact Approv ed WILMINGTON, Del, May 17 (U | P.).—The Delaware racing commis|sion has approved the gentlemen's agreement between the Delaware steeplechase and race association
{Delaware park on June 16th te help| in the perpetuation of the Preak-| {ness at Pimlico, Delagrare park's {traditional dates are from May 28th {to July 4th, both inclusive.
‘Major Leaders
% By UNITED PRESS AMERICAN LEAGUE G AB
Cuc.inello, Chicago 60 Stephens, St Louis‘ 17 7 61 Case, Washington 89 ’ N 4 70
N ATIONAL TLEAGU E i J
HOME RUNS T Lombardi Glants 7 Workman Browns §
Giants intraub Braves
Stephens,
“Eastern Star”
NTT I)
J. TN LETT £3
RL NS BATTS D IN Jombardi, Glan 23 Derry Weintraub. Giants 21 Elliott | Ott, Giant s 21
LE IR § Post 3 In the
hii
int
SLC
ALAN LADD's got a pig he race—and all his dough is
riding on it—if he wins, he gets
a gal with stars in het eyes— if he loses, it will be just too +bad—a one.way ride with a dame named Death. See all this in Paramount's exciting picture . . -. , "SALTY O'ROURKE”
S|
—— i Ld
ANDICAP!
HH
{and Maryland jockey club to close! ®*
¢ Brooklyn
. Yankees .. 18 Pirates 18
ow what manager expects ‘his-team | their Jersey City farm club to team |
go all out—during the first month with substitute outfielder, Danny | |
ey ee season. Particularly when| Gardella.
you can't depend—and a squad that|long ball hitter.
| number one substitute for the reginitial sacker, Phil
you shuffle and reshuffle it.” Lippy Leo said he had got sur-| {ular prising help from such question-; | traub.
Baseball Calendar
AMERICAN Won Te ‘ Won s 12
(Second Game) Pet. St. Louis 000 100 OO— 1 632 Boston 832, Jurisich, 600 Masi. 563
| Toledo | Louisvine a | INDIANAPOLIS .... | Milwaukee . [ah
Creel and Rice;
A35 Cincinnati . 000 500 101 2 Kansas City . AZ Philadelphia 100 201 02x— 6 | Minneapolis 389, Heusser, Fox and Lakeman; Paul aa nn 267 and Mancuso,
Chicago Pet. |New York . jChicage .s . $67 Wyse, Comellas, Stewart and Williams; New York 650 Voiselle and Lombardi. | Detroit S11 | St. Louis 500 Pittsburch Washington A35 Brooklyn Philadelphia . AN Gerheauser { Boston “ebeuss ene ? A403 Owen, | Cleveland ‘ ‘ 316
i
AMERICAN LEAGUE Wo
000 110 10x— 3 8 and Salkeld;
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE All games postponed, vain-—wel grounds. w a—
New York GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
INDIANAPOLIS at Kansas City (might).
Teledo at St. Paul. Columbus at Minneapolis. Louisville at Milwaukee.
| Pittsburgh Cincinnati Philadelphia
GAMES YESTERDAY AMERICAN ABSOCIATION Open date
AMERICAN I LEAGUE New York at Chicago. Philadelphia at Detroit (2). Boston at St. Louis, _ Washington at Cleveland (2, night). NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game—14 Innings) St. Louis 000 881 021 000 00 4 12 |} Boston 000 100 003 000 01 5 3 Byerly, Donnelly and O'Dea; Tobin, C. Barrett and Masi.
NATIONAL L LEAGUE St. Louis at Beston. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn Cincinnati at Philadelphia. Chicago at New York,
- Mom and Pop and the Car...
Wein- |
8 1] 400 000 00x— 4 4 | Logan and | 4283
RB. Barret |
000 000 000— 6 8 3 101 003 10x— 6 14 2
51 Points in Match
‘SEATTLE, May 17 (U. P)—
the | you have young pitchers upon whom | Like his older brother,”Al is a) Willie Hoppe, challenger for the
Manager Mel Ott world's three-cushion billiard title, O-Luck was last in a field of four. yoy don't know much about until{said that Al would be used as the
ji Champion Welker Cochran by 51 points today as the pair moved on to San Francisco after finishing the Seattle section of their cross-country series. Hoppe won the final match here 60-52, while Cochran took the after{noon game 60-40. The scores for 80 games tallied for Hoppe and "4232 for | Cochran. .
! Illinois Designates
enol Bs Game
CHAMPAIGN, Ill, May 11.—The {Tllinois-Michigan football game Oct.
TT 100.008 000— 1 5 127 has ben designated as Illinois’ 1 | homecoming for the Gress an {Douglas R. Mills, director of ath-
1945 season,
{letics, announced today. Qther special days which have | been approved by university officials are Oct. 8, Indiana vs. Illinois, “¥" Men's day, Illmois, Dad's day.
By Southworth]
to North Carolina for induction] and with Ted Wilks and George]
Most of the speculation here cen- | tered around the fact that Cooper |
report on the fund. It said that al
and Nov. 10, Iowa val
teams are from the same city. At the start, the genéral expectation was that the Browns and Cardinals would be capable of repeating, but unless both do an abrupt aboutface there isn't much chance of either winning out. However, being taken seriously by the three New York teams, with the Giants and Dodgers running one-two in the National and the Yankees in second place in the American. And the Chicago. teams are co-operating nicely too, with the whizzing White Sox leading the American and the Cubs in 4hird in the National, But the Cards are in the second division with 10 wins and 12 losses and the Browns are in fourth with an even .500 record of nine and nine. Produces Surprises The first month produced plenty of surprises but nothing ranked above the crack-up of the Cardinals. Admittedly they were playing under handicaps with Pitcher Morton Cooper peeved over his 1945 salary, his brother Walker Cooper leaving to go to the navy, Shortstops Marty Marion and Al Schoendienst going out with injuries, Max Lanier leaving for induction, and Pitchers Ted Wilks and George Dockins suffering arm trouble.
Even so; it was beyond belief that they would win only two games out of eight to date in their first road trip against the supposedly weaker |( eastern teams. They hit rock-bot-tom yesterday, losing two to the
|
to 1. The first defeat was caused by a school-boyish muff by Elvin (Buster): Adams in the ninth with two out. Boston scored twice to tie the score aiid won the game for Relief Pitcher Charley Barrett on a double by Phil Masi and a single by Dick Culler in the..14th. Logan Wins Debut Lefty Bob Logan, 35-year-old veteran back from Indianapolis, won his first start in the nightcap, taking it easy after Carden Gillen~ water gave him a lead witha threerun homer in the first,
On the positive side, the biggest upset by far has been the showing of the Giants and Dodgers, since neither first @ivision timber. Yet the Dodgers, playing as if they were in the world series already. won their 11th straight game yesterday for the longest consecutive streak under. the regime of {Manager Leo Durocher. They beat (the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates for {the third straight time, 3 to 1, be- | hind Hal Gregg's almost perfect control pitching. Gregg, in notching his fifth victory against one defeat, struck out five, walked only one. The Giants’ version of murdérers’ row, Manager Mel Ott, Phil Weintraub and Ernie Lombardi hit sixth inning homers to give Pitch{er Bill Voiselle support for his seventh victory without a defeat, a 6-to-0 shutout over the visiting Cubs in a night game. The homers kept Ott and Weintraub tied for the league lead with seven each. Voiselle, in winning his third game since last Saturday, yielded six hits. Dick (Kewpie) Barrett provided the Phils with good pitching in a 6-to-2 seven-hit victory over Cine cinnati at Philadelphia. Ed Heusser lost his first game after three triumphs. For the third straight day, American league games rained out.
all were
Yesterday's star—Carden Gillenwater, whose three-run homer started the Braves off to a 4-to-1 second-game victory over the Cards after Boston wen the opener in 14 innings, 5 to 4
SVT
der in Sinn
save Fuel in Wy
HEI: NOW !
i Lie WE 5 f ISN ATT
TL SALES CO.
36 W. (0th St. ® [1.4438
- manner ® repay conveniently
120 E. Market St. Phone MA ret 0
y people to: one debt that
© borrow in @ pleasant, business-like:
out of earnings
© build up bank credit for the fulvre
if borrowing will accomplish something worth while, and help you improve your - financial situation, come in and see us about ° low-cpst Personal bank loan,
THE UNION TRUST COMPANY
a, 15 et tr hC
Johnson's warning isl
‘he would like to round out 20 years
Braves, 5 to 4, in 14 innings and, 4.
even had. been considered
Burial Vault Business New
Waner Venture
PITTSBURGH, May 17 (U. P.).— Paul (Big Poison) Waner, who heckled major league pitchers for 19 seasons; was. building concrete burial vaults today—just two weeks after his unconditional release by the New York Yankees. Waner said he entered partnership with Dr. Jack, Munyon in the vault-building business a week ago and was supposed to be “a sort of a promotion man.” However, because of the labor shortage, he has been helping in the shop. “I wanted to learn the business from the ground up anyway,” he sald. “And I'm getting a lot of the ground on me.” Although he is in the vault building business permanently, he said
in the majors, “maybe just as a pinch hitter, so I could get a few more hits to add to my total of! 3152.”
Hoosier Fighter
To Face Cochrane
JACKSONVILLE, Fla, May 17 (U. P.).—Promoter Jack Laken has signed Welterweight Champion Freddie (Red) Cochrane and Pete Lello of Gary, Ind.,.for a 10-round non-title match here June I. Laken said that he had completed arrangements with both Cochrane and Lello. Cochrane has just been discharged from the navy after three and a half years and Laken said it would be his first match since his navy release. ~ Lello holds draws with Bobby Ruffin and: Sammy Angott and a seven-round knockout over Lew Jenkins.
Clowns, Red Sox Are Rained Out
Rained out for their first appearance in Victory field, the Indianapolis Clowns will open Sat-
at 8:30.
Sox will bring one of the strongest
years.
Luck of the Irish
MEXICO C It's the luck o
urday night against the Memphis Red Sox in a night game starting
Led by Larry Brown, the Red
teams that they have had in recent
, May 17 (U. P.) — the Irish. Prauk Leahy, Notre Dame football coach on leave with the navy, won $25,000 recently for holding the winning ticket on Gay Dalton in the Mexico
Sis Tn Ay a THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1045 New York, Brooklyr yn, Chicago C lubs Set Pace in 1st Month By CARL LUNDQUIST, United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 17~The second month of major league play begins today after a surprising start marked by (1) failure of the St. Louis teams to’ bid for a repeat one-city world series as expected and (2) the threat of New York or Chicago teams to do it if the Missourians can’t.
J. Monroe Johnson, the office of defense transportation boss, says |: the world series will be. “out of the question” unless bots compeling
Card Champs
For Game at New Stadium
‘A two-game program, featuring the girls’ state champions, will open the new municipal softball stadi Sunday night accordifig to an en nouncement, today by Manager H 'G. Englehardt. Work on the new plait, located on park property at 1700 8. West st, still is in progress, but the lighted diamond will be ready fo use as scheduled unless addition rain causes unexpected delay. The Bob Inn girls of Ft. Wayn who won the state title last season, will face the Curtiss-Wright girls! in the opening contest at 7:30 o'clock with the Kingan Knigh opposing Fuzzy's All Stars from Greenwood at 8:45. League play is also scheduled get under way at the stadium Mone day night and continue through Friday nights each week. Carl C. Callahan has organized the five loops who will play on the West st. diamond, and two which will use city parks. Short Two Teams The City league will play in the stadium on Monday nights; the Factory league on Tuesdays; the Industrial on Wednesdays; the Manufacturers on Thursdays and the Commercial on Fridays. Callahan reports the Commercial is shor two teams and asks any aggregation desiring to affiliate contacs him. . Callahan's Sunday afternoon loop and ' Twilight circuit om Wednesdays will play on city park diamonds.
One team is needed to complete the Friday night Speedway league, ‘playing at Speedway stadium. Ine terested teams should get in touch with Floyd Hassler, MA-6200,
Three games are on tonight's Thursday Night Men's league ak! Speedway. Moose Country Home plays. Omar Bakery at 7;, Quality’ Tool and Die clashes with Meeker | Music at 8 and Allison Gears play} Link Belt at 94 Orie game is scheduled in the Smith-Hassler Twilight loop, Inse ley~Mfg. and Naval Armory clashe ing on the latter’s”diamond.
Chicago Tracks Name Publicity Man
CHICAGO, May 17.— Howard} Barry, former Chicago newspaper’ man, has been appointed publicity | director of the Arlington Park and Washington Park Jockey clubs, This was announced by Benjamin F. Lindheimer, executive director of both organizations.
Race Dates Set i BOSTON, May 17 (U. P.).—~The state racing commission announced today that the Eastern Racing Ase sociation, Inc., operators of Suffolie Downs at East Boston, have been granted a license to conduct 54 days of horse racing from June. 11 te. Aug. 11, inclusive. Last year the association conducted 60 days of
City sweepstakes.
racing.
IATL
Please return your empty cases and bottles to your dealer.
LEISURELY AGED THE OLD STERLING WAY
Master brewers—for your pleasure—bring their utmost skill to the production of Sterling . . . from costly beer grains, and grains alone. Its zesty zip is the thrill of a
ciate true-beer flayor. Try Sterling today!
LISTEN INI LATEST NEWS Daily Except Sunday 5:45 P. M.—WIRE
- ALL-GRAIN
lifetime for all who appre-
STERLING -
28danrsnagsdeuncte
SYeRERiad
OLE
A
Discha
The c busy rec seas ret given fu signed u before r zations. Since tremend “point” troops f
» civilian
clerks n the nece “We soldiers way hor quickly Modiseti er decla Qualif In essen to conta ment off come in sonnel | Camp A
CRA IN
CHUN The Am new 6th Burma, revealed
The « form th
. lined mi
ated in + The n by air
cessful
Prospe fair we Richard .departm fairgrou An 1 Rep. Fe brought retary © that im ernment fairgrou that it béfore lease.” The I¢ rung fo;
