Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 February 1950 — Page 7

. 11, 1950 0

les

Class lass rey

out and Armory.

ud holders ot

were crowned’ :

Novice Class Legion Golden Armory. |

who carried his al hatchet) into d, the 118-pound ir, took the edge

10 is expected to h-feared fighters purnament, won _ tle over Walter .

Hill Community fought a game _ not avoid the f Hood.

dent Wins

Twiss, Purdue . nt and repre. . Logansport Boxe onald Carpenter the favored pera . 160-pound "class, mart battle, jabe ) Carpenter. d, Leeper’s, had utpointing = Jim, n AC, for the title, yrd, Schaeffer's. ike a worn out 8 of .the third Paul Lockett, 'KO victory and title.

wn Twice

gargantuan 260 ett down twice and had him ral other occas | placed blow to: ng middle and ed.

irs until Referee ed and awarded ry in 1:29 of the

h started their at the opening ght a right to t down. But he int of eight and oth landed some . il the fight was

s Upset 7 nate Avenue Y, rite to win the und title, was McDonald, Ace McDonald come and outslugged

with a right to onds of the sec.

\plons will leave’ 26. Fights will d Mar. 1 in the

a of

Results

foned Raymond :

Side will begin at 3:30 p. m.

‘SATURDAY, FEB. 1 $11,900 in Prizes Lures Bowlers

|For Season’s Heaviest Session

1950 _ —

Attractive Awards Await Top Keglers In Singles, Doubles and Team Classes

By GENE Indianapolis will

into action.

The feminine keglers will go into their second session with aggregations getting their flings at

some of the highly rated

prizes and cash awards.

Some of the teams slated for activity that will bear watching

are Hickman o iraway, Indiana” ‘Gear Works, Indiana Fur, Indianapolis Typewriter (defending state champions) and a few others. Milano Inn, last years’ victors ID TE pr al Hetors chance until the following week. At the same time the Sport Bowl again will be host to the doubles and Ki Singles events. The team events at the West

today with the next two rounds scheduled for 6 and 8:30 p. m. Competition in the doubles and singles divisions tomorrow will get going at 3 p.m. with -further- action 7 and 9 p. m, or immediately after the preceding round is over. The male keglers get their belated chances at the various honors tomorrow also. Both team and doubles and singles firing will open their tourney with team events centering around the FoxHunt starting at 6:30 p. m. Doubles and singles action will get into full swing at Pritchett's starting at 1:30 p.m. with each session being alloted two ‘hours. 6 Teams Rate Highly Mechanics Laundry, Yaver Men's Shop, Marott’s Shoes, Kay

undergo its heaviest week-end of bowling this season with both the men’s and women’s city tournaments swinging

rand -181--for

Jewelry (defending city and sta state

South Bend Central Beals

La Porte for Division Title

New Albany Rallies to Keep Record Perfect; Jasper Suffers 6th Loss at Vincennes

By KURT FREUDENTHAL,

South Bend Central's high-flying Bears led the parade of _ stars last night as Indiana's major high school basketball powers turned in the most convincing triumphs of the season. The South Benders shot their way into possession of ‘the Eastern Division crown of. the Northern Conference for the second straight year by drubbing La Porte, 61 to 43. It was the 17th 5st

-for—Coach—BebFrimmer’s boys, their 18th in 18, games and their ninth consecutive in loop competition.

It also marked the seventh time

iy the past 12° years they have

shared or won the blue ribbon. The rest of the big shots did just as well. Madison's Cubs made Greensburg their 16th victim, 58 to 43, the winners taking control of the game in the second period. Anderson and Muncie Central still headed the North Central Conference title chase, with the Indians one step closer to another division crown. Anderson, after trailing Logansport at the end of the first quarter, 14 to 7, took over before the half ended to beat the Berries, 61 to 51. Gene Wilson’s 21 points led the way. Muncie Bearcats led Kokomo! all the way, 57 to 49. In another NCC tussle, Junior Wood's 21| points sparked New Castle to a 57-to-40 win over Lafayette Jeff. The Trojans poured in 16 straight | --points--after Lafayette shot front, 6 to 0. New Albany's Bulldogs Kept, their slate perfect in the Southern] Conference, beating Evansville Reitz, 51 to 46. Here, too, the, favorites were forced to come from behind after Reitz took an _ 8-to-2 lead. on Two other downstate members of the elite, Evansville Central and Tell City, also were victorious, The Pocket et City club edged Bed-

jmarksmen retained their unbeaten status, trimming Petersburg, 47 to a

LAWSON

the

champions), “Delaware Bowl and! Russet Cafeteria are just a few teams which rate as serious contenders for the crown, Awards totaling $11,900.50 are in the “kitty” for those who manage to come up with creditable performances. The biggest “take” will be in the team division where a total of $4975 will lie in wait for the lucky ones. rtrude Rhodes was the star of the bowling front last night as she whacked 641 pins in the Sponsors Classic at Pritchett'’s, Gert rang up games of 104, 266 loop-leading Milano

Inn. Tops among the men was Don Mitchell of Delaware Bowl in the Illinois - Washington circuit who

{tional a a game champion,

fs =n =

Girl Chianipion To Bowl Here

Ladewig, women's ha-

and her Grand Rapids (Mich.) Fanatorium teammates, will bowl

alleys. The match is slated for 8 o'clock. © ! bowling’s March of Dimes cam to a smashing

close, the visiting girls will roll} the Milando Inn girls Sunday, afternoon at 1:30. This match also will be rolled on the Penn-| sylvania_ alleys. 1 Miss Ladewig. who captains as her team. recently averaged 201 for the match game tourney to defeat 47 other women, including Indianapolis’ Patty Striebeck, for.

age of 910 which is considerably under the 945 mark carried by the Milano girls.

ins Ice C : scored a 675 on scores of 240; 192 Sarnan K Koll, prastie doy on, 8 nro n and 243. Ee Chr en atruetio Ca reeley, Greeley ros Texaco .. Ben Mitchell HeLa, niheRn 3iQon ood d, ack's avern i os | ck Risin. Rite niture . .+ §70 Guy ey. American St > i Jam Bright Varnes ¥y Wuench, Bulld Electric 619 Pall Bie: 5 ad" s : 5 or. Jal 5D age Paul Bas "Mac Laundry ‘Naval Ord. Plant :. 1 | Bob -Susemiche! ware ow ree Cro 8, Brass 1 .. BY Fonnie Snyder. Union Title ........, orn day. Night ed a i Bob Haagsm U ed LE: hu LA “Sige ree als mon, | Russells Ba 5. Red Theis sing. Mi Heh Tae to Arte nr pen, Mixed Red Mayn: os 6 A ed Corley "Bir Alinge AE re B Ey Canaan 4 Henry amp he: thy ¢ Merchants . g rile 5 gn das 8 Russ Media Iain. Industrial Engineering’ Cleienn es SEA Iga pi B ee eins John y Fe Bows Truck Beal Fast. 608! ala oe i : Sq 8q. a. Bowling Lanes 608 mer: ni orD y {ma ter Market . ol Ti Sti welt olf Foxworthy “ord c agner r Rybolt, 8 bi ne Construction Stuart, Mechanics Laundry ...... onnie Sn avai Oring Sea Past an ons 600 Kuhn, Naval Ore rdnance Plant ...... Clare y, Ilaria’ Lee Lanes Frans {Charles Welch: ai Avene

United Press Sports Writer

iford, 40 to 38, and Tell City's| Ane

33, for their 16th triumph.

Jasper's defending state champs; erbert

ns LEAGUE LEADERS (MEN) Bridge port Bras! Jenkin oud 5 ‘Market

gh Jenkin, Br Bridgeport Brass .

ull HE Ho Samarss

No. 2

dropped their sixth game of the campaign, losing at Vincennes, 67 to 53. The Alices overcame a five-point first-period deficit, but controlled the final eight minutes after a nip-and-tuck battle. Hits 100% on Free Throws Jack Runyan of Lawrenceburg and Ray Pavichevich of East Chicago Roosevelt probably turned in

—shotin “come-and-get-it” {nersville finally winning, 25 to py Marta Roberts,

the most outstanding feats of the {night." Runyan hit 17 of 17 free

throws and added four fielders as {Lawrenceburg swamped Seymour, ‘80 to 50. | Pavichevich, one of Northern Indiana's most prolific scorers, dropped 30 points as Roosevelt's {Rough Riders turned back Val-{ 4% | paraiso, 70 to 50.

| Connersville and Shelbyville per

boys stood in the middle of the Bot 8

floor looking at each Sher in in fashion,

The winners led 6 to 2, 11 to 10, and 19 to 15. Peru, which captured its second {Central Indiana Conference crown last week, dropped a 45-to-44 decision to CIC rival Roches- . But Alexandria

_still has to! break into the win column. Ther

Berra tt Aan

ale ‘Mires! Md ns ard of Health

a vers. 4

Eva i

ou! erne Biers, arriett Hendricks. B Ra ona : Bowes

's Frances 5k | pls. Typewriter .. 5 Vera Stiles "Gear I Works |

Al drey iter, - Indiana’ 0 y Brier Anderson's Spring

Dareih Y Hansen. DeWolf News Margaret Curd, Lone Funeral Home Coca: s

. Junker, butter. Davids px

Lagles - eat 5 3 Baxter's Grill Mxd. § assar Culld

£: ine. -Cola_ W 2e meron, Coca on a Bohisen. Sioe-Cola Women asia M18

eat Market 8 Pally Riteney. aT 1 Equipment _MecKeele Loans

er: tates Loan a Vassar Guild 300 Rau pment. 519 sally en 50 Dorothy Crawford, Friday Night xd. 2 ase, Elizabeth Pfielschifter, Catherine Puricha, Real Silk Mxd. OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS Retha Carver, Railways fi A ’ Bent, Betty ette Soare. S Mu

2 Hi ro ar Mixed Fire ins Mxd. 480

{Tigers dropped. their 19th game in a row last night—a 46-to-36 verdict to Elwood.

#3auette are, 85, of Health Mxd. 466

Merz Engineering. . I » Latina VA Women Mery! Burton, Ayrshire Collieries ‘Mxd, 430

nionet Baiph 1 High School, College Basketball Scores

oned Jerry Modecisioned Bob

decisioned Kea 1 by TKO over ound.

Y, knocked out’ ond round. }

nv

JOUVENIRS OVELTIES

AN'S 5 ivoars

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boats $12.95 | NTS ps 4

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Van Buren 32. ;Bshaug 28. incen 53. Wabash 53, n 49. Wadesville EN a eoure 18. allace 3a Greene “Fownship Parke)

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Kentland | 43, 1, Lewisville 3.

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Lacrosse

~ [Tech to Meet [Tigers in Classic:

‘tory gave the Silent Hoosiers a.

the Yaver Men's Shop men’s team siar's “well

here tonight at the Peunavivaniolss points. Jim Snedefer of the

the title. Her team has an aver-|..

27 dislodge Ben Davis as the Speed-

Davis ¢

“Boner Law Office

Bf Association, Phi Alpha Delta

445/dicted here today by forecasters

A A er

_ THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES

The Mudiark .

Big Green Defends go City Record (Continued From Page 6) then went on to defeat Morton

Memorial of Knightstown, 48-42, on the victors’ floor. The vic-|

9-9 mark for the season.

Orville Northcutt led the Hoo--with

visitors captured scoring honors with 20 points, including nine field

goals. Deat School (48) ni SX fg 1t of f Northeutt.f eo 1 dek "a Gormat.g 1 1 liGerholdtf 8 i 4 Wooten.e ~~ 3 1 1 MeDaniel ¥ 4 Moers.g 2 3 5 Harte 1 3 2 Bush,g 4 2 1 Hyatt.g 0 § Louden.g 00 } Moore 3 001 Hagemeyer.? : 3 | Bthridge.x 11 Suroweicg 0 0 % Lavalle.g 01 | . 81215 Totals © 181019

Halftime score—Dea! School 30, Morton

Memorial 15. throws Silased~Deat, School Ra

Plugs Triumph. 42-25

Ray Stewart's 26 points helped

{way five won 42 to 25 on its own {floor last night. The Plugs overcame a 6 to 2 lead at the outset and led, 11 to 6, 2¢ to 16 and 35 to 19 at the

with the story—

shoulders and buttocks trembling

“He'll do,” an officer sald. Wheeler's hands were two fig leaves in front of him; he looked up, the gameness of his outthrust| underlip betrayed by eyes that were on the verge of tears again, and said apologetically, “I #'y, if aw am done ter tyste, sir, waon't yer just give a chap ‘is hinexpressibles?" “Eh? What's that?" “Maw bags, sir.” For although he might endure the cold on the rest of him, he was of course unmanned without his trousers. But by Coggeshall’'s order all his clothes had peen taken out and burned. He was thrown a bundle from the housekeeper's| charity bin. In this he found aly boy's black trousers’ (patched) and stockings (heavily darned) which pretty well fitted him, a cambric shirt somewhat too large, a pair of shoes, battered but still serviceable and approximately the right size, a short jacket only slightly too long at the wrists, and an old cap. There was also

|quarter. stops. It was Speedway’s 17th triumph in 20 games and

i the losers’ 10th defeat in 18

Hl camer

Speedway (42) Ben Davis (25) " pf! fg ft pf | wiechers, { 3 2 Kinkead.! 103 Kuykendall.f 0 0 2! Andrews.{ 2 33 Stewa! - 810 2 Ellaby.c 005 Boles.g 1 3 1i8wicks 41:3 tlson.g 2 1 1 Backers 301 Wingert.g 0 1 1fAllenf 132 4 nts, } 0.4 : Rohersan e 6 a8 1 rnold,c 201 Hendersons 0 0 0 Totals 12 18 9 Totals 10 5 24 Halftime score—8peqdway 24, Ben Davis

16 Fee rows missed—Speedway 9. Ben

George C. Christ, former chief probation officer of the Marion County Criminal Court, a graduate of Butler University and the Indiana University School of Law, has opened law offices at 1206 in the 108 E. Washington Bldg. He is a member of the Indiana State Bar

legal fraternity and the Greek

Orthodox Church, He will be associated with Max M. Plesser.

RADIO SUNO0R GOOD

for short wave radio reception for this week-end and

at the National Bureau of Stand-

a novel garment that delighted him. It was made of wool and had long arms and legs, and he had intended to put this on last as a sort of coverall, but the soldiers stopped him and made him put it on first. It felt pleasantly snug and warm, but it irritated his skin and he was not at all satisfied with the arrangement, But he did not dare to argue, and besides, be could not wait to put on the othier garments too. He was thrilled with all these new clothes, the finest he had ever had in his life, and when fte stood up in them before one of the long {mirrors he thought with a giggle that they made him look a proper toff. But after a moment he won-

dered what had become of his

own, particularly his coat. He would have liked to keep his coat. The new jacket wasn't so warm

|as it, he perceived now, and he

wouldn't be abl so much into the pockets: that was important in his business. And he began to examine the jacket more critically now, feeling

“| soméhow: that he had given his

coat for it; and in the midst of his good fortune he had a dim

sense of loss. .

» . shall returned, harassed

meantime. “That's better!” the colonel said,

but as safe as a base hospital.

sion, with about the same damlage to the nerves of both parties; that it adjourned promptly at 1:00,

sudden, bitter defeat for the

Scotland Yard.

lentleas Busher Ash.

ards.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN RUBBED DRY with a barracks towel after his bath, Wheeler PY knew all right, he would never stood sniveling in a eircle of soldiers—up for inspection; his thin

with the cold, while they turned,

been in on the whole thing? But it was recalled what Mr. Naseby {had said about it being the serv-

. Synopais: Little Wheeler, = Sadler Tavink Tound BIN way confidence anyhow, hadn't he info Windsor Castle to startle Queen Victoria and Disraell at dinner, Is now the center of controversy and dissension. Scotland Yard and the Guards are both seeking his custody. He has

~ been bath th wering guardsmen. N on ants’ duty to rally round Her given a : by three mr * haji in a pinch, and it was al-

| loved

although Mr, Nase-

“There he.go 3,” they would

this was not the business of Par-

him round and round, peering into his ears, probing his scalp, lift each foot to show the bottom; he was mortified. -

isay as he went waddling down a |corridor—“mum. He'll carry that story to the grave with him, {Naseby will. Aye, and that's not

Wheeler sat fascinated by the measured brushing of the beard

guard of Wooten and Dicey in a

HE WAS given a dish of gruel for his breakfast, and was just scraping the bottom when Coggetrailed by his dutiful staff and also. by the McHatten, whom the colonel had béen having at in the

surveying the transformed prisoner, and he walked around him on a tour of inspection, breathing freely now, for the boy who had reeked of the primal fall of man now smelt like nothing human

The inquisition resumed. All that need be said of it is that it went very like the other ses-

reconvened at 2:30, and ended two and a half hours later—in a

Grenadier Guards. The Govery Selence Service nor had signed a paper forcing WASHINGTON, Feb. 11—Good them to yield up the prisoner to 1 conditions And so, at 5:00 o'clock, Wheeler through next Tuesday are pre-| passed into the hands of the re-

The inspector probed-into him for hours that evening while

Wheeler ‘slept that night under

yp | cell-like chamber of the. Round Tower. The next morning he led Ash aver. the route from 8t George's Gate to the coalhole that was no longer open, and went ‘with his captor that day to London—his first train ride—to be lodged privately, as befitted an enemy of the Throne, in a tight little upper room of the Clerkenwell House of Detention, there to lan h an unconscionable time till the inquiry should be over. No, there would: be no going: bask up that coalhole, and he feared just then that there would

else either, ~He climbed up on his bunk to) the iron-grilled window, hoping |

well he could see Poplar, but he couldn't; nor Limehouse, nor Stepney, not even the river, London lay under the familiar haze of all her chimneypots, old and dirty, in the waning afternoon. » . » THE TIMES’ correspondent at Windsor, having heard of the Queen’s burglar next morning, notified Printing House Square, for which Scotland Yard confirmed as much of the story as at the moment it could; but the next day, with the guard at the castle mysteriously doubled, with

hostile mood, with all kinds of rumors coming down from Windsor and the public already showing signs of uneasiness about it all, the Yard cautiously held its tongue. This alone was enough to arouse what a newspaper calls its instinct. And the reinforcement of the guard was a fact that seemed to speak for itself.

reports of other newspapers, the Times’ reports were conservative, The public mind, schooled to some reverence of the Sovereign's person and to a nice regard for the rules of place, could not readfly comprehend a gutter boy violating the Queen's privacy for any but the most monstrous reasons: It could not possibly imagine the truth on its own hook, and in the absence of calming explanations It naturally imagined everything else,

Ji ‘ed something dreadful. . o

Mr. Naseby,

vented he hadn' be assumed that

household did, and Sergeant Footman,

be no going much ef anywhere privy comment over the castle | walls and piped it to London,

that over the roofs of Clerken-|

«| Tory depreciators, the Grenadier

the Grenadiers in a bafflingly

But by comparison with the

Who will believe the reassuring| public verbiage of a lady's solicitors when her cook is whispering a better story out the back door? But Her Majesty's servants were only going loyally on the black hints of the Master of her Household, who was the genius of the whole particular movement, and: he, perhaps was only the tool | of what a psychologist nowadays| would call a “defense mechan-| ism.” The aggressive Bir Gilpin| arvery was comforted by the view that his vassals had prevents

AND THE SERVANTS read volumes in the dark attitude of who accepted Sir Gilpin’s view as gospel and throve on it, though what had been pre-

't & notion and he 2401 MARTINDALE

if anybody knew the-truth, the Master of the as for the who was! | thought to be in the Master’ 's|

all he'll carry.” For in th. curi.osity over. hat. they thought he! knew about the Wheeler incident, it occurred to them thet he probably kne™ a good deal else besides. “His father was in his place before him, and his grandfather before that; there's a bushel of royal secrets that man could tell if he was minded, but they'll bury them all with him. He could write a book, I tell you. A regular walking archives, that's what he is; and there he goes—mum."” As national interest in the case grew, it followed that interest grew-- somewhat more than proportionately in the town of Wind- | | sor, which siphoned all the latest

which distributed it to the rest of Britain. Yet on the national scale, no one version of the story at first gained any measurable headway over the others, for although most of the servants leaned towards the Boy in the Iron Mask myth, as the canard of the Devil's Tower came to be called by its

Guards kept hinting privately at some kind of criminal plot, about the nature of which they were fascinatingly vague. Impartial thinkers in the public houses pointed out that the Household "Troops would be as likely to know the truth as anyone, and a lot likelier too, while on the whole women and radicals preferred the other story.

BENJAMIN DISRAELlI was mildly astonished at all this ado, but, whether from some ironic humor, he refrained from returning frank answers to persons who inquired of him exactly what had happened. To Randolph | Churchill he sald reflectively: |

“The English are really a romantic people; sometimes I forget that, and then something like this comes along to remind me of it. I do believe they regard Her Majesty rather like the heroine of a novel.” Disraeli is on record as having made some quizzical remarks about the English at this period of his career, but for that he must be forgiven, because at the time), he was understandably annoyed with them. For years he had tried to do something to alleviate slum conditions, to awaken the land to

lament, but of plumbers — a policy of sewage. He had spoken of “Two Englands,” the rich and the poor, pleaded as reasonably

John L Compton ~~ Services Monday

—— s

(To Be Continued)

Copyright, 1980, Josodors, 1 Bonney

ermission

Uncle of Former Lt. Gov. Dawson

Services for John L. Compton, 6419 Carrollton Ave. who died yesterday In Methodist Hospital, will be at 10:30 a. m. Monday in

He was 73. Mr. Compton, uncle of former Lieutenant Governor Charles M, Dawson, was a guard at Diamond Chain Co., Inc, the last 10 years, He retired as an interurban mos torman in 1939, after making the Indianapolis-Feru fun 30 years, He was a member of the Broad Ripple Methodist Church, the Broad Ripple Lodge No. 643, F, &

Ripple I0OF Lodge No, 548, and a past patron of the Broad Ripple Order of Eastern Star No, 315.

ices. Burial will be in Crown Hill, In addition to Mr. Dawson, he

survived by his wife, Mrs Ive Compton; four nieces, the Misses Florence E. and Gladys I. Dawson, and Mrs. Phyllis Gulley and Mrs. Thelma Kline, all of Indian apolis, and two other nephews, Harry Compton of Los “Angeles, iy > y Tod) olis.

————————— ove or N, Feb. 11 (UP)—The British gland, liner Queen Elizabeth has been

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wg CEH g o E Hubimi - Manager rman fran ms

SIXTEENTH STREET OFFICE ; : Ralph E. Dodson, Manager

: a SOUTH SIDE OFFICE vn © 1125 S. Meridian Street : . Emil L Kuhn, Manager ROOSEVELT AVENUE OFFICE 1533 Roosevelt Avenue . W. Ellison Gatewood, Manager *

EAST TENTH OFFICE

Donald E. Williams, Manager

ARLINGTON AVENUE OFFICE - 6000 E: Tenth Street Ted M. Campbell, Mana IRVINGTON OFFICE

Ralph C. Wright, Manager EAST SIDE OFFICE

* Charles F. Bechiold, Manager

"EAST WASHINGTON OFFICE 500 E. Washington Street Roy A. Wilson, Manager

WEST STREET OFFICE 474 W. Washington Sireet - Sole Yoranevidy Munagar

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“+1 “2600 W. Michigan Street. - ny lee

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W. Sixteenth Street

22 E. Tenth Street

E. Washington Street

E. Washington Street