Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1946 — Page 27

he first session the tilt, 68 to 46, Central in the

s Card

way vs, Franklin

uthport vs. Pike '

Mat anged

njor heavyweight lined up for the ling and boxing | for the ‘benefit ralysis fund next the. Armory. yill appear in a with the bout n of Indianapolis elle of Toronto slo of Akron, O, of Boston. Stic part of the ity show is an between two Ine weights, Sparky fike McKessick, n annual affair ytchmaker Lioyd rcules A.C. T¢ 2000 for the chare Tickets are on

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AG Sat pour Ise

‘when the Hornets threatened late

. game,

| FRIDAY, JAN. 18 198

Individual Sogring Record. Falls, Tight Co Mark | Play i in County

By LARRY STILLERMAN of the 27th anpuwhl Marion county. basketball

* Upper Wricket. téarhs

“meet will have to present some adroi . the brand of

Butler fiel

and-tuck. tilts will the court o'clock for new when Speed-

and aggressive Southport Pike township in the “bye”

Sharpshooting Kenny Bridges, Cardinal forward, notched 12 fleld goals and five free tosses for 29

points and a new county individual}

scoring record in leading his team

‘to a 68-to-46 triumph over Beech . ‘Grove in the first game. . i Betters

Cooper's Mark He bettered by one point the mark set by Don Cooper of Ben

Davis in a game against Brownsburg last year. pr In other tilts, Ben Davis, defend-|

ing champs, slid by Lawrence Central, 34 to' 24, and Warren Central got revenge for an earlier season set-back by ekeing out a 38 to 36 victory over Decatur Central. Henry Tonges, rangy Southport center, pushed in eight quick points as Coach Bert Haviland's team jumped into a 21-13 first quarter and 36-19 halftime leads. Only

in the third period did Tonges and Bridges re-enter the tilt, Bridges tallied his record smashing basket with 3:15 minutes remaining in the

Southport had a shooting, average from the field of .333 for the game, hitting 35 of 75 attempts. Summary: J Southport (08) Beech Grove (48) PG

2 3 3

PP 1] Wise f. . ive rgritt, 1 3|long.f.... 4/V'd’'rsaar.c 5{Wood,f.... 1{Clayton.g. 5 Dennis,g. . 1Randg ... 2/Kendellc . 2

HRNWNOAOO RN cOoNaAPwOoOOW CL LT

Junkins 5

we] Fr Totals. . 2% 18 26] Totals ...16 14 17 Score at Half—Southport 35; Beech Grove, 18, Referee—Jack O'Neal. Umpire—Walter Floy

i a

Mixup on Fouls With Ben Davis leading; 17 to 10, at halftime, official scorers waved Charles Thompson, Lawrence Central guard, from the game with five personal fouls. Coach Fred Keeslinig voiced opposition, as unal scoring had Thompson credi with three miscyes and Forward Harvey Craig with two. Official records had no personals against Craig. With consent of both teams, official ruling shifted one personal from Thompson to Craig as the third quarter began. However, diminutive Evan Fine, Ben Davis miniature reproduction of brother Marion Fine, Butler's mighty mite, sparked the Giants throughout the last half as the Giants employed stalling: tactics to proteet their edge. Summary: Ben Davis (34) Lawrence Central 124) FG FT PP 2{Carter.t.. lio'Boyle.t.. aad.

4/Harper.f . O{Young.c...

2 3

Switzer f. Edwards, f Ste'm’ler.f Kearns,c. . Smooth,c. Scott,g ... Yeftich.g. Hurst.g... Pineg....

NOONOWWL=D NOVO

0 2 0 2 0 1 1 5

DONDE CODCOW=RNOO

Totals .11 12 14 Totals .. 10 1s Score at Half-—Ben Davis, 17; Lawrence | Central, 10. Referee— Walter Moyd. Umpire - Prank Baird.

ofteréd. Jo 4500 spectators last night at the A new scoring records’ a misup in score-keeping and two nip-

Net Meet

t hardwood tactics tonight to match

addicts Teturning tonight at xn

Shooting Star

Kenny Bridges . . . sets scoring mark.

Warriors Triumph The score changed hands 12 times in the third encounter of the evening with Ray Smith and Jim Curry combining scoring efforts to give Warren Central the well-deserved victory. Smith, star Warrior guard, tallied nine of his 17 markers in the heated final quarter with deft onehanders from outside the foul circle to counteract Hawks scoring threacs| by Pete Armstrong and Jack Shank- | lin, The warriors trailed at the half, | 15 to 17, and at the third: session. 28 to 29. Summary: i Decatur Central (38) Warren Central (38)

PG FT PF 2 Winning, f.

3 3 ne

Armstr'g,f rner.f.. Lollar tf... Palmer,c.. Reilich,g-¢ Seerley.g. Shanklin.g

Totals .

Score at Half — Decatur Central, 17; | Warren Central, 15. Referee — Frank Baird. Umpire — Jack! { { O'Neal, !

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wos of |DPERS $(29

HIGHER “TAKE HOME” THAN WARTIME. AVERAGE

... but the world’s largest electrical plant has no workers

HALF-FINISHED heaters®

The UERMWA (CIO) has taken General Electrie workers out on strike. . Washing machines, refrigerators, heaters, a hundred things were on their way to you. But the strike stopped that. It was expected to hire twice as many workers as before the war. But the strike stopped that. Six new government plants were bought. Seven other new plants were being built. And land bought for three more. Increased production was planned in every existing

-works city.

We are sorry they decided a strike was the answer. The strike will pinch the publie-with shortages. And take a million dollars a day out of the pockets o of General Electric workers.

- G.E."s PAY OFFER Many of our workers, from what they tell us and write

us, do not know that we offered the union an increase of

* Pictures taken between shifts before the strike represent the cone dition of our factories today.

HALF-FINISHED roasters*

10¢ an hour for all those making less than $1.00 an hour, and 10% increase for those who make more.** With the offered increase and the overtime that will be necessary to meet consumer demand this year, the averagé employee would have had more “take home” pay than during the war.

THE STRIKE IS PUZZLING

Since 1935, average hourly earnings for men climbed over 51%. Over half of this was in the last five years. There has been no real labor trouble at G. E. in 24 years, We believe in- collective bargaining. G. E. was one of the first large industrial companies to enter voluntarily into a company-wide contract with a national union. A million-dollars-a-day pay loss will strike every G-E community. And the real tragedy is that employees can gain nothing that they could not have guid while still at work. **Those making $2,000 to $3,000 in salary would receive 109, increases, and those receiving between $3,000 and $5,000 annually would receive increases of $300.

ELECTRIC