Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 247, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1937 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

FEATURE GAMES ARE SCHEDULED Outstanding Grid Games Are On Schedule For Saturday New York. Oct. 19 -(U.R)—Torrid soetiouul battles in the seven major conferences, nine intersectlonal brawls and three games pairing undefeated and untied teams feature the coming week-end of gridiron hostility. The east, which produced many | of the casualties in last Saturday's unexpected slaughter, again commands national attention. Seven majof intersectional games will lie played on Atlantic seaboard grid- j irons. . i Two games pair perfect record . elevens —Alabama at George Wash-

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I ington, and Western Reserve al I Boston University while two] other elevens with perfect records I meet opponents which have been | tied but unbeaten. Undefeated] , Wisconsin invades Pittsburgh, tied by Fordham, and unbeaten Detroit > plays at Boston College, tied only by Temple. The other eastern intersectionals ' are Duke at Colgate, Texas Christian at Fordham, and Washington I', of St. Louis at Army. Other intersectlonal battles: Navy, unbeaten but tied hy Harvard, at Notre Dame and Manhattan at Kentucky. The south boasts the No. 1 game of the day unbeaten Vanderbilt i against unbeaten Louisiana State, ; I a battle which might have an important bearing on the Rose Bowl question as well as the championship of the southeastern conference. Most of the others in the i rapidly thinning ranks of the tin I beaten *nd untied have stiff op--1 position. California, favored to win the Pacific coast title and represent j the west in the Rose Bowl, faces an up-and-coming Southern Cali- ■ fornia team. Dartmouth meets Harvard, unbeaten but tied hy Navy. Baylor plays Texas A. and I M., another unbeaten but tied , | eleven. Holy Cross faces Western , ' Maryland: Syracuse plays Mary- • land; Yale meets Cornell; Northwestern plays Ohio State; Santa I Clara meets Loyola of Los Ange- , les on Sunday and Colorado U. plays Colorado State. Lafayette and Rutgers, two of the minor unbeaten and tlntied teams, play respectively N. Y. U. and Princeton. < o ♦ ♦ < General Electric Bowling Results 1 GENERAL ELECTRIC Office | Hancher 160 151 181 ( Braun ... 116 137 141 ’ Gage 175 144 124 * Leitz 123 125 133 Totals 734 715 708 Stators ‘ Spade a 137 159 ] Crist 141 172 160 < Braun 124 141 j Haubold 150 131 170 McDougal 133 213 2631 Jackson 178 122 i — Totals 726 775 839 ■ | i Rotor I H. King 170 127 1291] B. Vian 153 154 158 - R. Bretner . . 128 149 218 , H. Cochran 163 184 207 T. Miller 159 192 152 Totals 773 807 864 ( Assembly C. Weber 160 176 130 , L. Ahr 126 179 114 , F. Scheiman 173 165 173 E. Chase 166 188 153 C. Mclntosh 149 202 189 ” I f Totals 774 910 759 — Flange Gallogly 174 191 162 Shackley 141 169 P. Busse 160 156 Schultz 181 160 175 Schafer 191 205 148 Omlor 183 154 Totals 847 895 80S Tool Room Stanley 131 168 146 Gage 141 174 182 Beal 160 174 167 ' Schneider . 125 104 " 145 145 145 Totals7o2 765 785 — Night Men Lindeman 120 155 166 B. Roop 124 111 116 jD. Steele 211 157 160 E. Warren ... | CORT * — Last Time Tonight — “THAT CERTAIN WOMAN” featuring Bette Davis-Henry Fonda ALSO —Colored Feature and Latest Fox News. 10c -25 c * WED. - THURS. “ONE MILE FROM HEAVEN” A fast mo vine picture everyone should see. ADDED — “How to Ski” and Good Comedv. Also—Pathe News. 10c-25c Sunday—“VARSITY SHOW”

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H. Johnson 181 200 176 Totals 838 791 793 ] Welders J. Gage 159 166 1741 C. Bunnegraff 156 124 151 . T. Keller .. , 152 163 • A. Miller 171 IS2 MS] M. Hoagland 160 168 1741 Totals.79B 803 815 MATCH GAME Schmitt Spangler 174 178 1851 Ross 166 212 177' Green 8 . 167 211 169! Young 175 179 152 Ladd 187 142 153 Totals 869 922 836 Flange Hoagland 162 183 199 Gallogly 201 159 154 Schultz 181 137 139 Mclntosh . 178 156 170 Schafer 125 168 188] 1 Totals 847 803 850! o Along The Sidelines ' * -———-<■ * By United Press Northwestern Evanston. 111.. Oct. 19 —(U.R> — Coach Lynn Waldorf searched the Northwestern squad today for reserves to use in the Ohio State game at Columbus Saturday. John Kovatch. end. will be out of the Buckeye game because of slow recovery from a leg injury. lowa lowa City—lowa freshmen today , held a 12-7 practice game victory | over varsity reserves. lowa’s in- 1 jury list is heavy but fullback. Olson, halfback Dean and end Lannon are expected to play against Michigan. Purdue Lafayette. Ind. — Although Purdue is idle this week Coach Mai El ward ordered a hard scrimmage for today's practice. The Boiler-1 makers are in very good spirits despite the disheartening loss to Northwestern. Indiana Bloomington. Ind. —Jim Sirtosky, Indiana guard, will be out of Saturday's game with Cincinnati be-. cause of a leg injury. Coach Bo Me-1 Millen announced. Chicago Chicago — Fullback Fred Len-| hardt of Chicago will be out of action the rest of the season because of a badly torn ligament in his right knee suffered in the Princeton game. Captain Fitzgerald. end. has a badly bruised side but will be ready for the Ohio State game next week. Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich.—Pass defense and tackling drills were scheduled for Michigan today The Wolver- ! ine linesmen still nursed bruises from the battering they took from j Minnesota Saturday. Notre Dame South Bend. Ind —Jack McCarthy, senior left halfback, was reinstated on Notre Dame's first team today over Lou Zontlni, who replaced him in the Carnegie Tech game. Coach Elmer Layden scheduled a hard scrimmage for preparation for Saturday’s game with Navy. Illinois Champaign. 111. — Jay Wardley, Illinois back recovering from an ! injured knee, was back on the squad today and may be ready to i play against Michigan next week Wardley worked out at the left i halfback post yesterday. Ohio State Columbus, O. — Coach Francis Schmidt of Ohio State, who scout-, ed the Northwestern-Purdue game himself, termed the Wildcats “a lucky team.” He drove the Buckeyes through a hard drill yesterday in the rain in preparing for the clash of the two unbeaten confer-1 ence leaders Saturday. Wisconsin Madison, Wis. — Coach Harry

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1937.

JStuhldreher will not scrimmage the Wisconsin regulars this week ! for Saturday’s invasion of Pitts-1 | burgh. The Badgers are in good I shape with only Al Dorsch. Johnny ; Doyle and Billy Schmitz nursing ! minor injuries. r I Today’s Sport Parade (By Hsnry McLemore) 1 * Atlanta. Ga. Oct. 19 — (UP) — Southern football notes jotted down i lon the back of a road map: setting ' in the field house coach Bill Alexander of Ge .rgia Tech to’d this one: "It was back in our football depression years when we had no scholarships, and the team was pretty awful We were playing Carnegie Tech and they were heating ; the day-lights out of us. We hadn’t made a first down so I sent in a , substitute quarterback named Tom > Peeler as a sort Os desperation measure. In the huddle Peeler called ■ for formation 25. We didn’t have any such formats ,n but the other | players were afraid to question PeeI ler for fear there was such a iplay ' and that they had forgotten it. So i they lined up and just blocked. Peeler got the ba'l and went for I 35 yards, our only decent gain of the day.” .... Alexander ever since has been trying to figure out just what play No. 25 was . . . “If it was god for 35 yeards with that team, it oughta be worth a 100 yards' n.w." he said . . . unbeaten Vanderbilt’s defense is built around four 150-pound backs —Huggins. Hollins. Marshall, and Plunkett . . . Hollins I and Blunkett both kick and pass i left-handed . so to speak . . .prosI perity note: L. S. U. transported 5.000 students and a 208 piece band I to Huston for the game with rice—free of charge. . . northing is too \ god S»r the L. S. U. students . . . | even the mascot Tiger has a 67.000 1 cage. . . . 23000 L. S. U. students live in the stadium which was built ' to serve also ae a giant dormitory. , The University of Georgia thinks ■ it is certain to place at least one ! man on the All-America teams . . . 1 They rate Bill Hartmann, who playied such a magnificent game against Holy Cross, and Quinton Lumpkin, Center, as tops . . . Ole Miss and Duke had equipped its players with low cut shoes this season. . .ncih- | ing but baseball shoes with cleats. I. . . The boys wear short socks with i the Oxfords, giving them the ap- ' pearance of Litt’e Girls all dressed iup for a party . . .customers at South Carolina's home games are amuse dduring the halftime intermission by a group of selected students doing the “big apple”. . . Probably the best back in the entire s.Aith is an unknown young man at Little Davidson college in North Carolina . . .his name is “Teeney’’ an dthere isn’t anything he can’t do with those 165 pounds of his. . . and when the time comes to pick the outstanding play- ■ ! ers of the year it wouldn’t be a bad idea to mentfo n“Tiger” Mayberry, captain and half back of Florida's team. . . given a stronger eleven to w«rk with and Mayberry would be in the head'ines Saturday after Sat ' urday. . . . Respiratory Diseases In State On Decline Indianapolis. Oct. 19—(U.R' —The • peak of respiratory infections . among Indiana residents probably i was reached more than a week ago II and a deadline has been noted > since that time. Dr. Verne K. Harvey. state health director, said today. For the week ending Oct. 9 I there were 37 new influenza cases reported in the state, he pointed out, while only 19 cases were listed last week. "Statistics in this office show that the firt wave of colds and Influenza usually starts with the, ! beginning of schools. Children who have been spending most of their time outdoors during the summer months come into closer contact with each other.”

SEEK CONTROL OF OLYMPICS Colleges Seek Control Ot Olympic Teams; Fight Looms Chicago Oct. 19—I Uf 1 )-The nat; .ial collegiate athletic association came into the open today with its i long struggle for - control of Olym- | pic trams with an amendment proi viding for collegiate direction of i track, wrestling, swimming and crew racing in the Olympic games. Seeking to end dominance of the national amateur athletic union on those i.'tir Olympic committees, the N. C. A. A. submitted to the Amerllean Olympic association and ai mendment providing that three of five members on the crew cornmit--1 tee and five of nine on the other 1 three committees be college repI resenatives. The A. A. U. now libs nine of 13 ! m.- mbers on all four committees. "We’re not trying te run the i Olympic show.” said Maj. John U Griffith, president of the N. C. 1. A. | "But we are seeking to improve the Olympic situation. Almost 99 per ! cent of the American point winners I in track at Berlin were college men. I The winning teams were college students. “The colleges merely are concernied with having the right sort of men being in charge of such teams.” ’ The amendment will com? up be- ‘ fore the meeting — the Olympic asjsociation scheduled in Washington. ’ i November 17. A two-thirds majority of approximate'y 500 eligible votes is necessary for passage. o Rep. John E. Miller Succeeds Robinson Little Rock, Ark. Oct. 19—(UP) j —Rep. J- .'in E. Miller, who admires President Roosevelt but didn’t always support his program in the j house of representatives, was named by the voters today to fill the un- i expired term of the late Joseph P. Rcbinson’in the senate. Miller defeated Gov. Carl E. Bail- ■ ley, who accused Miller of disloyal- i ty to the national administration and t .'d thev oters that he had and would support President Roosevelt "100 percent.” o A representative of Redfern will be at our store tomorrow morning with a complete showing of new coats. —i Lankenau's.

AMAZING SAFETY demonstrationl SEE HOW NEW INVENTIOnF"' E FAKES TERRORS OUT OF I blowouts I >e» tires on speeding cars ripped to AflH II I pieces by railroad spikes—blown wide ■' l open by dynamite caps. See these cars I keep on going without swerving a i single inch! See them hold the road, "T* SBP| V Aflr slowing down to a safe, sure, straight- j line stop with the tire still inflated—on V ’- X M • the amazing new Goodyear Life Guard a*» ’*• * *1 I Tube that makes the worst blowout as ill \ * ' \ IP harmless as a slow leak! Don’t miss it— \ I you won’t believe your eyes! J I ‘L" ■ I GOODYEAR LIFEGUARD* TUBES YOU CAN'T BUY BETTER PROTECTION TO SAVE YOUR LIFE! — PLACE i » R le Decatur, Indiana •i Just East of Country Club on State Road 527 I ♦ 10:00 a.m. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 20,1931 Goodyear Service, Inc| Glen Oswalt, Mgr. Corner Third & Madison Sts.

Drinking At Football Games ; Is Reported On The Decline

tf'opyright 1937 by UP.) , t'hicago. Oct. 19. - ;U.P) Drinking at mid-western football games is on the wane and members of i the Big Ten conference no longer consider it a major problem, a survey by the United Press showed today. | Tnere still is some drinking at games in this sector but it is on a considerably mpre moderate scale (han In any year since repeal. In last week’s Big Ten games only three cases of drunkenness werel reported. Two Dearborn. Mich., firemen, attending the MinnesotaMichigan game at Ann Arbor, stayed in jail overnight and were fined $11.75 each. Students tossed a drunk at the Princeton-Chicago game into the botany pond to sober up. Persons under the influence of’ liquor are barred from all Big Ten stadiums, and ushers and special police have the authority to eject any persons exhibiting a bottle of liquor. In most stadiums appeals are sent over the loud-speaker system for spectators to refrain from drinking. The Big Ten has waged a relentless campaign the past three years to stop drinking at games. Even bartenders, cognizant of the efforts of the Big Ten to discourage drinking in stadiums, are sympathetic toward the campaign. One • bartender at an exclusive Chicago North Side club advised two patrons on their way to the North-western-Purdue game Saturday not to take a bottle of liquor to the game. Another bartender suggested pouring the liquor into a root beer hottie, and the two fans took along straws with which to sip the liquor. Two Princeton supp<yters attending the Princeton-Chicago game agreed not to drink until , their team scored a touchdown. When that happened late in the third period, they couldn’t get the cap off the bottle so they put it away until they returned home. The Wisconsin-lowa game at 1 Madison was described as the sob- ; erest homecoming in Madison’‘ln years. Sports editor Henry McCormick’s explanation of this was: I "Wisconsin is winning this year and the people really want to see the game. They haven’t the urge, common in other years, to get I paralyzed as an antidote to the ! Badgers’ disappointing play." Oscar Thomas, assistant to ath- • letic director L. W. St. John, reported drinking at Ohio State

games on the decline. “There has been lltlle drinking at our two 1 home games this full,” he said. i Drjnking is stricliy forbidden at Illinois, where any spectator ar- 1 rested automatically is fined $17.50 or more. Chief U'wls W. Foley of the Ann I Arbor police reported that there] have been only four or five court cases at Michigan games this year, i while at one time during prohibition there were sometimes 25 to] 40. | Athletic director Frank McCor- 1 mick said Minnesota refuses admission to "any one showing a tipsy inclination.” Athletic director K. L. Wilson of Northwestern 1 said, “we no longer consider drink-1 ing a major problem at Northwestj ‘■ rn " | Any one seen drinking at a Chi-1 cago game is handed a printed card asking him to leave. If he becomes objectionable he is re-

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