The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 August 1939 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER, GREEKCASTLE, INDIANA,
T! ESDAY. AFGTST 22, 1939.
League Standing
Coca Cola I'utnamville BaJnbrldge K-rogcf HUHScllviLle Zinc' Mill University Northern Inf). P Morton IjOne Stai Fillmore Colored Giants
W 6 5 4 4 :i 3 3 2 3 3 2 0
i
PORT
Soft Ball Schedule
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Tuesday, August 22 7:00 p. m. Zinc Mill vs Coca Cola 8:00 p. m. Kroger vs Putnamville 9:00 p. m. University vs Lsme 8tac Wednesday, August 23 7 00 p. m. University vs N. Ind. P. 8:00 p. m. Russellville vs Fillmore 9 00 p. m. Putnamville vs Zinc Mill | Thursday, August 24 7:00 Lone Star vs Morton 8:00 p. m. Coca Cola vs Bainbridge 9:00 p. m. Bainbridge vs N. Ind. P.
! witt^
I 316 north K '
Of
Crawfonj ! J
FOR Kpy
ALL-STAR GAME HERE AUGUST 29
—For Sale-
apart metn,
Roasonabi, v Address Bos !
Sell ;
i sheet
PEACHES for canning this week ! In ^anap $1.00 bu. The "Y" Cafe, 11 miles east 1 Com PRES of Greencastle, U. S. 40. Phone ~ Stilesville 830. 21-(Jp
STUM' I’LAYINt; TiimtK <;\ui:s AT CITY PARK
I.I UMW HITS IIOMKIt TO MAKE ONLY EXTRA BASE BLOW FOR BAINBRIDGE
I .ONE STAR’S EKE VICTORY
Robe Ann Park was the seene of three softball games last evening, this being the start of a three game eueh evening event as the soft ball association would like to end their season before the end of August. In the first game the Coca Cola’s easily won from Fillmore in a 14-0 game. The Lone Star's took a very close second game from Bainbridge 6-5 and in the third game the Uni-, versity beat Morton 4-2. I-one Star Game The Lone Star cement men managed to maintain a lead gotten in the thiid Inning to win a close second game from Bainbridge. The score was 0-5. Making the only extra base hit for the Bainbridge ton was Lewman with n home run. This was tho second run
R H
0 6 8 2 5 7 Ousler
of the game and came early in the last half of the fourth inning.
Score by innings:
Lone Star 002 004 Bainbridge 0 0 1 110 Batteries Pitts and Hill
and Dickson.
University vs Morion The University team took the second game from Mortoh, 4-2. In the first inning, Komjencke, first man up at bat hit a single and came heme on a double hit by Hutcheson. The only other extra base hit in the game for the University team was a double by C. Williams in the third inning. For Morton, O'Hair and Costa hit
doubles.
Score by innings: RH Morton 0 0 0 0 1 0 1—2 7 DePauw 0 2 1 0 10 x -4 8 Batteries K. Clodfelter and Fowler; Porteous ‘and H. Williams.
Putnam County All-Star Team BALLOT NO. 1
This first ballot, to be valid, must bo in the Bor.ner office by Thursday r,'- n. August 24. Each blank must be filled in and any blank that h i I ecu erased, stamped over fir otherwise defaced will be void.
V ‘cis may elect any senior on a Putnam County high school team senioi this past season' providing the player was in the high school name l i.n that line. The last two blanks have no school name and here ti e v may name any two seniors regardless of the high school, pro-vi-li . the j layer was a ■ enior fin u Putnam County high school squad.
PLAYERS
BAINBRIDGE
belli; union
CLOVERDALE
FILLMORE
IREENCASTLi:
RI El KVII.LE
RUSSELLVILLE
ROACHDALE
COACH
Any Putnam County Coach last season eligible to he elected.
or the coming season is
The roach receiving the most votes will be the coach of the Putnam County All-Stars and the coach receiving the second greatest number of votes will be his assistant in the game at the Greencastle High School Gymnasium on 'i uesday evening, August 29.
COUNTY RESIDENTS MAY VOTE IN FAVORITE SENIOR MEMBERS FROM SQUAD
FOR SALE: Feeding cattle of all kinds. Weeds Yards, Crawfordsville 4-tf
U 'AN7Kj| pprienced faj
K°0il ri-
E Campbrt |
'VAN’Tg'jJ
'
i Some day “
Address Boj i
THREL BALLOTS TO APPEAR IN BANNER
All Star County Team To M et Downey’s All-Stars In Hardwood Tilt At Local High School Gymnasium On Tuesday Evening, August 29.
FOR SALE: 7-room modern house. Good location. Bargain. Sayers, phone 96-R. 19-3L
FOR SALE: residence properties, H ,' *
j ranging in price from $10,000 down
Several rental properties that will i , . 1
. , , H!ac| t Bar show good returns for the investor Sayers, phone 96-R. 19-3t '
Ambrrs- Armstrong To I ijrlit Tonight
ARMSTRONG, AS A FIGHTER IS SUPERIOR. BUT HANDS ARE PROBLEM
John Cobh Runs Measured Mile In 369.53
BONNEVILLE, SALT FLATS, Utah. Aug. 22 (UP)—John Cobb sent his 2,600-horsepowcr racing enr over the measured mile here today at 369.53 miles an hour more than six miles a minute and faster than man ever traveled on land before. The British fur broker was clocke l at unprecedented speed on his first run through the measured course. He must make a return run and the average will determine whether he has
set a new world record.
FOOTBALL PLAYERS , (lay : a,ul ah,,u,lJ ^ back in the linePR UTILE l)\II ■y' ur> in two or three da y s -
CHICAGO, Aug. 22—i UP)—The College All-stars today will resume twice-a-day practice sessions. With little more than a week to go before their game with the New York Giants, professional football champions. the varsity eleven lacks the co-oniination and drive expected of them.
TENNIS TOURNEY NEARS FINALS
USE DAILY BANNER ADVER TISING FIRST And Get the for Your Advertising Dollar.
The seeond squad yesterday heat the All-star varsity 7-0, with the varsity failing to reach scoring position at any time. A 22-yard pass, Everett Kiseher, Iowa State halfback, to Harry Jacunski, Fordham end, netted the touchdown, Kiseher adding the extra point. Lynn Howland. Wisconsin, was
Greencastle will soon have its tennis champions as the tournament is nearing the final stages. In matches yesterday Bob Longfellow met Lowell Hamilton to complete a match started last week. In the previously i played set Uingfellow won by the ! score of 12-10. In yesterday's set he was awarded the honor of going on to meet ''Bomber" Coffman to determine who will play Bob Agncw in the ( finals, when he defeated Hamilton
| 6-1.
In the women’s singles, L. Brendle defeated R. Woliung 4-6, 9-0. 6-1. and E. Crump defeated L. Kestner 2-6,
1 6-3, 6-3.
sent in at left guard and Ed Bock,
Iowa State, {ook over right guard for ' K Crump will now meet G. the first time on the varsity squad. ^ lo determine who will go on
Earl Brown, Notre Dame end, re-
to meet L. Brendle in the finals.
possible fracture of the loft
ceived hand.
To offset Brown's injury, however, Horace Bell, Minnesota guard who Most twisted his ankle last Saturday, was recovered enough to work out yester-
Reverse Decision On Protest (iame
REAL CATCH
RECORD SUNFISH—Harpooned by Captain Walter Saunders, second from left, this 864-pound sunfish is believed largest of its kind ever caught in waters near Atlantic City, N. J. Flesh of ocean variety is tough and leathery. P. J. Haelde, left, and Harry Rodebaugh, right, aided in the catch.
The managers of the soft hall clubs met last night and reversed the previous decision handed down by the Protest Board when they gave th- protested Russellvilie-Kroger game to Russellville. Kroger’s had a man pitching for them that was not signed up or contracted. Kroger’s won the game but it was protested by Russellville. When the Protest Board met they gave the game to Russellville. Last night the managers of the various clubs met and decided to award the game to Kroger’s thus nutting Kroger’s up one place in league standing and bringing Russellville down to the place originally held by Kroger’s.
By Henry McLemore NEW YORK, Aug. 22.—(UP) — The outcome of the Lou Amh rsHenry An i.strong fight tonight is a subject that doctors, not sportwriters. shoul discuss. It is a topic that lends itself more to the austerity of a clinic than to the hubhuii of the city room, to the aroma of formaldehyde than to the ripe smell of printers’ ink. For this reason: If both men were in top physical condition, there could Is 1 no doudt as to the outcome of the fight. As a fighter, in the true and strict sense Armstrong is superior in every v ry. He hits harder, he hits faster and he keeps rolling at a clip few men of the prize ring have approached and perhaps none has exceeded. But there is the chance that hustling Henry is not in what the Bulgarians so aptly call “ze peenk.’’ This, needing a physician’s measured advice before predicting an outcome, I had made arrangements with my family physician, a prominent quack, to visit Armstrong’s camp and look the champion over. However. he the doctor, not Armstrong - was so busy trying to beat some 300.000 other doctors into print with a book of medical experiences, that he didn’t iiave time to go. Therefore. I. who have difficulty distinguishing between a bottle of aspirin and a compound fracture of tho skull am forced to list the merits and demerits of these 135-pounder who fight tonight at Yankee Stad-
ium.
I am forced to give you Armstrong, whose name isn’t that at all. Actually it is Jackson. But if it were McIntyre or Van Buren or Smith or Cohen he still would be one of the 10 greatest fighters this country ever has known. The last time Armstrong—or Jackson fought Ambers, most of you thought the bout was close. But take it from Referee Arthur Donovan, who was nearer Armstrong that night than you or I or anyone but Ambers, Henry won 12 of 15 rounds Only pride kept him from winning all 15. In an early round Ambers hit him in the mouth with an uppercut and opened a gash of frightful proportions. Blood poured from it like oil from a gusher But the spectators never saw a drop. Round after round Armstrong swallowed it, fighting off nausea. Round after round he nevei took a backward step, but shuffled alwayr in, punchin'. Tonight his hands are tho problem A few months ago they gave way under the ceaseless pounding and in his fight with Roderick in England he could only hit with his wrists. He says they are well again, nut brown and hard, knuckles level, ready t( withstand the thousands of punche he throws in a fight.
Putnam county hardwood fans will have an opportunity to see the AlStar basketball team, recently polled into fame, i-, action, when they meet a team selected by the sports fans erf Putnam County. The game is scheduled for action next Tuesday, August 29, at 8:00 o'clock in the Greencastle High School gymnasium. The All-Star team consists of the following players: Crowe, Franklin: Field, Mooresville; Krampe, Shortlidge; Frazier, Greencastle; Goodwin, Bloomington; Mitchell, Crispus At tucks; Payton, Spencer; Taylor, Greencastle; Williams, Southport; and Bundy, Salem. For the benefit of having a game that will be really interesting thers will be three ballots run in tho Daily Banner. The first ballot appears today and there will be one on each consecutive day until Thursday when balot No. 3 will be run. These ballots will be good for a day and a half after they appear in the paper. With many outstanding senior players on the various township and Greencastle high school teams there will be picked a team that will give the Downey All-Stars a real hard-
wood tilt.
Fans who vote are urged to read the ballot carefully so that their ballot will not be destroyed. The senior players In the various high schools are here listed so that fans may recall the playing ability of each and vote for their favorite player in each high school. At the bottom of the ballot in the two blank spaces you may vote for any player that was a senior on a Putnam County high school basketball team this past season. This will give fans an opportunity to vote in more than one player from their community.
FOR SALE: Full blooded English setter. 16 months old. Should make a real bird dog with additional training. Priced for quick sale. Glenn Stamm. Phoen 438-M. 21-31.
WANTED' elderly coup;: Garner, Roach
FOR SALE: Five hundred Hereford heifers and steers, direct from Nebraska ranches, Wards Stock Yards, Crawfordsville, Ind. 18-41
FOR SALE: Plenty of homegrown watermelons and muskmelons, also few peaches. Lem Skelton, 2 miles
Wanted good refere»> j at Banner. 1
-M
Boarding Kei day, week, orj
south of Pleasant Gardens.
16-6p.
RUMMAGE SALE Wednesday, August 23, at 8:30 o’clock at courthouse. Section Four of Christian Church. 21-2t
FOR SALE: Concord
Buckheit Orchards.
grapes. 21-tf.
FOR SALE: 75 Barred Rocks, 10 weeks old, 16c lb. Anna Finegan, Fenwick Reed Place. 21-2p.
FOR SALE: miles south of Shield.
71 acre farm, 1 1-2 Putnamville. Ed L. 21-3p
FOR SALE: Kitchen cabinet table, two bins, two drawers, zinc top, in splendid condition, very reasonable, j 403 Hanna street. Phone 741. 21-2t
FOR SALE: One 32 volt light plant batteries and radio. Roy McCammack, 2 miles northeast Belle Union. 18-22-24-3p
ATTENTICK;| day. Open I a.J urday close a: (I her Shop.
NOTK E OF fl Notice is seil undersigned ’ S 1 the Judge o! 1 Putnam Com Administrator if
NVut late oiiH
ceased. Suiil estate jfl|H ven:. + + I saran K fl-y No. 8132. + + A c ust 21 a
nily
Homer C.
Putnam Clrrr I Attorney KivSl
REAL CONVENIENCE: White Boss Kerosene Range with table top at $75.50. Reeves Electric, North Side Square. Phone 139-M. 22-lt
Li-GoVikj Gigai AiSlaii
The players last year high school are:
and their
’BLIND DATES’’ MUSTERED 3<M> STRONG FOR PARTY
WILMINGTON, Del. (UP)—A local record of some sort was set when 350 male ’blind dates" attended a dance at the same time at the Hotel duPont. The occasion was the convention of Alpha Iota, a business school sorority, only 75 or so of whose members knew local boys. So Phi Theta Pi, a Goldey College fraternity, came to the rescue with a date-bureau recruiting service to furnish the needed escorts for the out-of-town girls.
PUTNAMVILLE ALL-STARS BOW 4-1 TO BEDWELL TIRE
The Putnamville All-stars met the Bedwell Tire softball team on Sunday morning at the state penal farm
Max Whitaker, Bainbridge Matthew Michael, Bainbridge. Bob Michael, Bainbridge. Milton Scobee, Bainbridge. Claude Wilson, Bainbridge. Albert Soloman, Bainbridge. Lowell Stringer, Belle Union. Charles Hodge, Belle Union. Paul A. Hurst, Belle Union. Donald Keller, Belle Union. Beryl Cook. Cloverdale. Fay Dean Farmer, Cloverdale. Emerson Walker, Cloverdale. Bill Pottorff, Cloverdale. Frederick Gromer, Cloverdale. James Miller, Fillmore. Malcolm Wade, Fillmore. Vemie Zciner, Fillmore. Ben Hanlon, Greencastle. Floyd Goodman, Greencastle. Raymond York, Greencastle. Harold Coffman, Greencastle. Malcolm York, Greencastle Forest Mace Aker, Reelsville. Floyd Bond, Reelsville. Charles McAllister, Reelsville. Junior Thomas, Roachdale. Willard Eggers, Roachdae. Junior Young, Roachdale. Homer Rice. Roachdale. Herman, Sutherlin, Russellville. Dale Bullerdick, Russellville. Rmbert Gardner, Russellville. Putnamville is only a three year high school and therefore they have no senior players eligible to be voted into the All-Star team. Senior players from Putnamville are sent to Greencastle for their last year of high school.
FOR SALE: Ripe peaches. Roy Watson. Manhattan Road. Phone Rural 14F3. 22-lt
FOR SALE: Peaches at the Anderson Orchard, 1 mile East, 1-2 mile North of Poland bridge. Bring containers. 22-3p.
FOR SALE: Bonona apples, alsa Wolf River apples. Canning tomatoes 50c bu. Ogg Orchard 22-2p.
FOR SALE: 60 acre farm in Marion township on Putnam and Hendrix county line road. Immediate possession. See or write, Mrs. Myrtle Kennedy, Cloverdale, Indiana. 22-3p.
F'OR SALE: 1938 one stake rack. Hess Gara.ge.
half ton 22-2p.
FOR SALE: One 850 Watt Delco light plant, with Universal 15 plate, extra heavy duty batteries; 355 Amperes hours. All in A-l condition. H. R. Robinson, Fhllmore, R. 1. 22-2t.
For SALE: Gulbransen piano. A-l condition. $25. Maurice Hedge, State Farm. Phone Putnamville. 22-lp.
—Real Estate—
FOR SALE: A 225 acre farm; 142 acres tillable. Five room house. A profitable farm in a fine community. Good tenant. Owner wishes to sell the farm and his fifty per cent interest in all live-stock and grain. A bargain price with good terms to the right man. J. T. Christie, Real Es-
tate.
21-3t.
—For Rent—
FOR RENT: Houses and ments. Sayers, phone 96-R.
apart-19-3t.
F'OR RENT: One bedroom furnished apartment, newly decorated. Towers Apartments. Call 291 or 380.
16-6t.
FOR RENT
Voters are urged to get their bal-
lots In to the Banner offiee at onee , , —
“ L ^ ,ml ia,n ' ho their favorite player get* a lierth ^ a P :irtment ’ newl y decorated. baseball grounds and they were de- » * * -
One bedroom unfum-
feated in a nine inning game 4 to 1. Jones and Fisher were the batteries for the Putnamville ton and Wilman and Wetnight for the Brazil
team.
The Bedwells and Putnamville will play a return engagement some time next week.
on the I’litiiani County All-Star team. Tabulation will be marie dally
in the pu|ier.
U3E Daily BANNER ADVERTISING FIRST — Everybody Reads, Reads a Newspaper Day.
who Everr
Towers Apartments, Call 291 or 380.
16-6t.
FOR RENT: One upper ajid one lower apartment. Near college and city s< hool. Newly decorated. Large lawn, large shady porch, hent and jvater lurnished. Shown by appointment. Fhone 599-J. 11-tf
Agriculture. Officials oil position esi^l mu o in fair, to run* nights. Septi Participutiy pp ning J*!''] program o; " J all sections 4 Scouts, C* 1 ?! Youth Orr* 12 ! other groups*! drift under ej mined free"! day. , J Headlining day will dedication olT ucutional ■ J shortly aft 01 y Groui - L be staged at ■ 1 evening Boy Seoul)* ister in don’t noon all , field at \ track for several b»n* r ic, the < along the »*. Ajrricultuni’ north to the ■ that form Center. A H grant will t 1
Lieut la,,,I
hibitor of hibitor of '
Likewise,
in th*
girls
means to d'^
cin/ support i
tion in futuir ’
Thousands *
mom. 1 ,,
the S':!to L :S?
you are a he8^|
nliouhl I- Kl tivit i' - • pi surh a )' ai Lieut.-I j oi
Indiana Stated
diatcly.
