Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1948 — Page 9
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Pastoe oy Harness Races Set Today
7 Futurity Events
SMITH i The mile track at the.Indiana State Fair promises 10. be a
busy. lacs toga.
The biggest single day of light harness racing at the fair will be run off today with eight events making up the program. Prizes will total more than $17,000. i Heavy torreatial rains Sunday night and yesterday turned the
track into a sea of mud and forced postponement of the day's racing card. L. Orville Miller, director of speed at the Fair, ‘announced at noon today that the track was fast drying out and that by post time it: would be in good condition. The racing schedule calls for the four-stake events to be run off first. These include the $8000 and $10,000 Horseman Futurity races originally scheduled yesterday, the 14 Class Trot, “Big Five Stake” (Governor's trophy) and the $34,000 Horseman Stake. The four overnight races, Which includes two from yesterday will be run in two' dashes each with the original $1500 purses divided into $750 for each dash. Fox Stake Tomorrow Topping the race card tomorrow will be the rich Fox Stake, 2-year-old pace with an estimated purse of - $31,000. Recent winners on the Roaring Grand that probably will be favored inh tomorrow's race are W. H. Crane’s Good Time, E. C. Moriarty’s Favonian Chief and N. D. Hale from the barn of Frank Ervin. Others steed a
Fair ‘Old Home Week’ for Breeder Leo McNamara
Grand Circuit harness racing
like old home week for Leo C. McNamara, who guides the fortunes of a giant breeding establishment known as Two Gaits Farm at
Carmel; Ind.
During the five-day stand at the fair, Mr. McNamara’s tem-
porary home is a box seat in the point he can keep an eye on his Hoosier bred sulky pullers. ik ® = =» LOCATED JUST 10 miles from the fair grounds, Two Gaits Farm has produced many of the top standard-bred horses of all time. To illustrate the virility of this top-notch breeding farm, the lst of stake and futurity eligibles for State Fair races this year showed 418 trotters and pacers nominated to 12 feature events. Of these 86, or 20.8 per cent, were bred at McNamara's Carmel plant. Seventy-six were pacers and 10 trotters. - When the eligibility book was published, 73 two-year-old pacers were listed for the $31000 Fox Stake. Twenty-six of these were bred to. Two Gaits and at least six, and’ probably more, are capablé.of taking tep money in the rich Jace ba Te ee T™WO GAITS Farm has‘ five pacing sires standing in stud and only two good trotting sires. This fact has marked the farm as more of a breeding ground for the ‘ sidewheelers' than the trotters. McNamara boasts of only three starters among the 2-year-old trotters entered in the $34,000 Horseman Stake. But the McNamara name, either as owner or breeder, will be carried to the starting gate in all but four of the early closing: events scheduled at the fair.
La a AT PRESENT, the pacing sires on the grounds at Two Gaits are Hal Dale, Chief Abbedale, Victorfous Hal, True Chief and Brown Prince. Trotting sires include
LEGAL NOTICES
BPECIAL SHAREHOLDERS' MEETING THE MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK otice ‘1 hereby. gwen” hat ven tha rsuant o call of its irecton, ® iT
ial meeting of the shareholders oe erchants Nation of will be held at its banking Rouse os 1
apolis, State o ndiana, esda) Oct. 5 19 at o'clock A " Se tral Standard Time, for the ~ of considering and determining b: er an agreement to con: bank and The Fountain Square State Bank, located in Sudianapolis, State of Tndiana, under ‘the provisions of the laws of po United a ual he ratified purpose of yoting Yoon any “other maiters incidental
solidation of th two ban Copy of 8 the. aforesaid agree ment, Xi rity of the
of Indianapolis Jad Appioved by the Board of Direc Pountain Square State Ba arovidin oe for the consolidation, is on file at the bank and be inspected ung Pisin hours,
September 4, 1948.
ERS MEETING OP|t UARE STATE BANK,
Notice a yen that, pursuant po call of its 5 Pou mesting the i Founta! 5 Staté Ban ® "wil be banking house at Virginia Avenue, in the City of i Biase Ine diana, Wednesday, Oct. 6,°1 2 clock P.M. Central Standard for the e of sonsidering and a termining an ment to consolidate The said bank and The Merchants Jelena) Bank of 1Indianapolis, Jocated . in Indians Yolis, Stave under the provisions of the pied States, shall be ratiand confitmed; and for th
SPECIAL THE FOUNTAIN
agreement, executed by a majority o the directors of The Merchants Nationa Bank of Indianapolis and approved by the Board of Directors of The Fountain Square State Bank, providing for the consolidation, is on file at the bank and y inspec ng business hours. AL PF. SCHNEIDER
esident. Septeriber 4, 1048. & Re
On Card With Rich Horseman Stake
Olivette Flying Song.
thimore good teams and more po-
-|stand the shock.
to Be Run
ever scheduled
Program Today
‘The Horseman Futurity, $- year-old Face; oN estimated $8000. Thé Horse Futuri 3-year-old Trot, esti estimated $1 000. 14 Class Trot, “Big Five Stake” (Governor's Trophy), estimated $1500. The Horseman Stake, 2-year-old Trot, estimated $34,000. 20 Class Pace (Overnight) (2 dashes, $750 each).
24 Class Pace (Overnight) |
(2 dashes, $750 each). 20 Class Trot (Overnight)! a Dashes, $750 each). Class Pace (Overnight) a E $750 each).
Program Tomorrow
The Fox Stake, 2-year-old Pace, estimated $81,000." 12 Class Trot (Overnight), estimated $1500. 20 Class Pace “The Hoosier Stake,” estimated 24 Class Trot
$3000. (Overnight), estimated $1500. :
Hanover, Golden Nite, Revenue Attorney, My Majesty, Stormyway, Poplar Ann, Castanet and
at the Indiana State Fair is just
grandstand from which vantage
Scotland’s Comet and Colby Hanover. The Farm annually breeds its stallions ta over 300 mares including more than 100 owned iby McNamara. Ir addition to his farm chores, McNamara is vice president, from, Indianapolis, of the Grand Circuit. His son Ed, an ex-Marine, has taken over many of the details connected with the opera-
mara’s 10 children, nine boys and one girl, have all had a hand in|
another.
tion of the breeding farm. McNa- ne predecessor, Ri 0
AIR BORNE—Tackle Ed Ecker of the Chicago Bears gives
Allen Lawler six feet sevan inches more altitude and the five foot 10-inch halfback throws forward passes out of
the clouds.
Valpey Opens Grid Season at Harvard
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Sept, 7 (UP)—Head Coach Art Valpey {greeted his first Harvard football squ=d today as he began the task of restoring the Crimson’s tarnished Ivy League glory. Valpey's first job was to replace the complicated methods of ard C. Hary with the flashy “Michigan system” he learned as a player
the business at one time or and assistant coach under canny Fritz Crisler of the Wolverines.
Billy Sidwell, 6-2, 6-1, Parker Downs Sidwell In the opening singles matches Saturday Parker downed Sidwell, 6-4, , 6-4, while ' Schroeder licked Quist, 6-3, 4-6, 6-0, 2 In
Colin Long and Sidwell, 8-8, 9-7 and 7-5. Thus djd thefU. 8. superiority] show, The Yanks lost only two sets in the five matches, and Schroeder well made up for the one he gave up by white-washing Quist at love the next two sets. For Uncle Sam, it was the third straight Davis Cup victory over Australia, the second of three in 5-0 sweeps. The U, 8. has won the cup a total of 15 times, on six occasions by shutout scores. :
County Football Begins Friday
High school football makes its 1948 debut in Indianapolis and Marion County Friday with all but two city games being played under the lights. The city games will be between Washington and Cathedral'on the Continentals field, "and Sacred Heart will play Crispus Attucks on ‘the latter's gridiron: All of the county schools will see action under the Mazdas with a change in Speedway’s schedule]. taking them to the Pike township field where they play Brownsb All of Bpeedway’s home sc! will be played on the Pike grid with the exception of the Sept. 17 game. They will play Danville
Like Football
down to size. It looks like this: EAST—Army, Penn State or Pennsylvania. MIDWEST AND NATIONAL| —Notre Dame. BIG NINE—Michigan, Purdue! or Minnesota. SOUTHERN — North Carolina has the best of pre-season arguments. SOUTHEAST Georgia Tech's most popular. SOUTHWE!
odist if it weren't defending] champ; Texas, probably;’ Texas] Christian, maybe. l
or Oregon. More Good Teams Actually, the only point of
agreement contained in the stack of football mail that pours in daily is that this is a season of
tentially great ones than we've seen in many a season. The leading mythical champions of 1947, Notre Dame and Michigan, suffered considerable losses which will trim their sails but the general impression is that they were classy enough to with-
Frank Tripucka is replacing Johnny Lujack at quarterback for
huge tackles is being primed to step in the places vacated by, George Connor and Ziggy Czarob-| ski. : Michigan's - nifty .offensive team led by Bob Chappuis, Chal-
are coming from reserves and the veteran defensive elven. . Army Is Btarless Reports indicate Minnesota's rock-ribbed lne vould swing a
agres- Rose Bowl for Bernie Bierman's| = _
outfit and that Purdue will be a power in Coach 8tu Holcomb’s second year at the helm. In the East, Army is starless again but good enough for its schedule. Penn is a trifle weaker than '47 and Penn State could pick up all the marbles by knocking off Penn on Nov. 6. Few graduation losses and excellent sophomores put Georgia Tech in the southeast’s favored spot with no special standout challenger in a league that's noted for ' surprises. Charlie Justice still is the magic name! at North Carolina, although he! was around last season when | William and Mary won the title. | Doak Walker and all his back-|' field mates are back at Southern
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the Irish and an assortment of;
mers Elliott and Jack Weisenberger is gone but replacements
Notre Dame Again Looks
Standout
NEW YORK, Sept. 8 (UP)'-Summer studies of the 1948, tol‘legiate football‘picture indicated today that,Notre Dame is the only undisputed standout in the nation: Every major section apparently is too close for comfortable 5 forecasts until the hard knocks of actual competion shake ’em PAINT & LINOLEUM CO.
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== LARGEST SELECTION of Linoleum in Indiana
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Methodist although the line has suffered. Since champs have re{peated only twice in Southwest .{Conference history, the eyes. of Texas are on the Texas Long-
{horns, who hope Paul Campbell's
passing will come close to that of
the graduate Bobby Layne.
Lynn Waldorf’s: second year
at California is supposed 3 be his bell-ringer but Oregon has
ST—Southern Meth-{I0t of backers. So does South: ;
{ern California and even U. C. {L. A. despite heavy losses.
But Notre Dame is the only, PACIFIC COAST — California | °0® nobody wants to argue about
—Just yet.
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ood to have on, hand.
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STATE PAIR!
repeat performance! because sensationally successtul rem
from Gulf’s fly-control program last year Pleased Fair officials a by Pleasing you
TRAK with 6% DDT
on surfaces, against insects that crawl
REMEMBER LAST YEAR? Something wis missing from the Indiana State Fair; For the first time in jts history—mno hordes of flies to *“‘eat he visitors, exhibitors and nearby residents!
HOW YOU CHEERED! A far cry from the old torrent of complaints, you deluged newspapers, radio stations, the Fair Board and us at Gulf with such * comments as “no flies this year. Many thanks.” , . . “it was a wonderful idea” . . . “lived here 25 years, flies have been terrible; this year there are none”... ‘has been notping short of a miracle” « “thanks for your wonderful work” . . « “hope you do it again.”
WE'VE DONE IT AGAIN by applying Trak to 750,000 square feet of surface in the Coliseum, pe livestock snd swine barns, rest rooms, trash piles
ing places with Gulfspray Conce al Pre Aerosol Sprayer*. ~ enjoy it as never before. Spend your time more profitably. Pump salesmen for information without distraction. And eat your food
without misgivings. Here's to fun—and death to flies! § seeing és believing. you won't soon forget how wasily you can kill *cRAWLERS” with TRAK, kill *sLYERS* with GULFSPRAY AEROSOL BOMBS
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