Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 November 1918 — Page 6
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TRIBUNE
mc TETMILV 0PEI3 GRID SEASON
Purdue-Chicago and Itiinois-Iowa Big Contests In West—Dope *0n Other Games.
With four* western conference teams going into action" against each other, .Northewestern scheduled to meet the strong: eleven from the United States auxiliary naval resfirve school, and four big eastern teams clashing with each other, an idea cf the strongest teams iu the cast and went can Be 4rawn aft«r today'a struggle,
Interest in the wett. will' center arounti the games between Chicago and Purdue at Lafayette and Illinois a.nd Iowa at low*. City, while Chicago fans will turn their attention to what should be one of the hardest played grumes of the day at Evanston, where the Purple will give battle to the sall» or*.
Of the two conference games on the schedule the clash between Illinois and lOwa will be most important.- Chicago «.nd Purdue have not shown enougti footba.H this season to be rated as championship con tenders. The coaches ijave done as v/ell au could be expected with their material, which id about the poororr which has ever turned out for football at. either institution.
Iowa, which luus played well all seaSon, tsh »u!d havu the edge on the Or an e and F,l eleven. The Hawitey«s played good, football in their first ?arn«, of the season on Sept. 28^ and bince that time have shown such marked improvement ats to be considered one of the strongest in the conference. Coach Jones hap developed an aggregation which relies upon team play for its, desired results and has paid litte attention t,o* development of Individuals,
Wot llfttai of OM.
Illinois Is not a* strong as Iowa In all departments. .Coach Zuppk£ lias not the veterans to fortn a nucleus as he had in former years, and the team will not be taught the advanced footbfUl of other elevens. The material "is too green for intricate formations and for the moKt. part Simple formations Will tc employed.
The ?«me will a long way toward Hfetcrniintng Iowa's chances to. be a atrohg contender for the conference honore now hold by Ohio State.
The clash at Lafayette between Chicago and Purdue will bring together two evenly matched mediocre elevens. Both have been defeated this season and their showing was not good enough to warrant their belnsr considered championship caliber. The Ma-i-Oo«s will he a makeshift aggregation, the remnants of an average football Squad. If Chicago wins the gam« it will be due to Stasg's coaching ability and not so much to the playing of the Wan
WiecoTTcIn. sftfir its '7-0 defeat by Camp Grant last Saturday, will meet Beloit at Madison. The Badgers have
Minnesota Plays Carleton.
^Minnesota, which has been Improving with-the playiner of every game. Will meet Carleton-St. Olaf's collego 8. A. T. C. at SL Paul. Carleton will be remembered as the team which defeated Chicago, 7 to 0, two years ago. The game-will afford Coach Williams the opportunity to test some of hia men further and to perfect team play for the Iowa game next Saturday.
Indiana will go into action against «-amp Zachary Taylor at Indianapolis. Cartip Taylor will clash with Camp rant in Chicago next Saturday, and is composed of former college players Who are displaying excellent team work. The Hoosiers will have to play mighty good football to escape decisive defeat.
Camp Grant will meet the Fort Benjamin Harrison team at Rockford. This contest will be for the trenefit of the tioldlers at Camp Grant, and no civilian upectaiors will be admitted, by ruling of the health officers. Camp Grant is one of the strongest service elevens In the west.
"'-D$PAUW. AWAITS WHISTtE. GREENCASTLE, Ind., Nov. 2.—All Is net here for the first home game of the season for DePauw scheduled against
Franklin. Coach Buss sent his ni^n through a long signal practice followed ly a snappy scrimmage. The Tiger mentor pronounced his team retidy for the Baptists and expressed a belief that DePauw had it on Franklin In
•I",
J.ar£e cripple list nTw on
the Old Gold list. In the fighting spirit of the DePauw squad li« s the hope for today, he declared. Smith, O'Neil, Burton ar.d Curtis were used in the back field last, night. The clasg scrap was postponed becatiso o£ the recent vaccination of the men.
CANCEL ON NOTRE^DAME. LINCOLN^. »so\. 2.—Ths NebrankaDame footuall game, originally scheduled for Uet. 17 and put over to j»Ov. 2, was again postponed last evening when the citv commissioner of Lincoln refused to lift the influenza Quarantine. The state quarantine wit! P.® Saturdaj, but tiie cjty authorlties will keep th© lid'* clamped for another week. Prof. Scott, acting director of athletics* at IWBrtiks, wired to Mead Coach Rockne, offering- Notre Dame a game in Lincoln on Thanksgiving da
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Voter:--
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THtRE-
Max Carey, captain of the Pirates, not only la the National leaguer who haa stolen the greatest number of bases —he is the one player left in the senior Organization at the close of last season who wbs
contended the Grant game should have Casey Stengel, nbw in t'he navy, and been a tip, and are bent on drubbing Bill Fischer, who caught this year for
the Smaller Badger state institution. Wisconsin is expected to show marked improvement, whi-h will give a more definite line on its strength.
able to make homo runs iu
successive innings. When the 1#1S'season opened there were three men who. In conbecutive innings, had sent the ball on four-furlong rides, Pittsburgh posress'npr all three. The others were
Binghamton. No National leaguer thif year was able to make two home runs in a game, so there were no additions to the "I Made Two Homers in Two Successive Tnninsrs" society.
Carey made successive horfie runs in the first and second innings of the game of Aug. 19, 1913, at the polo
HEZE (LARK NAMED PHYSICAL SECRETARY
Fonner Rose Poly Coach Joins "Y" Athletic Corps for .'Service In France.
INDIANAPOLIS, Nov.- "2.—"H,ez" Clark, for several years police reporter on the Times staff, was today appointed a physical secretary of the Y. M. C. A. and will report to M. H. Bickham, secretary, at the Great Lakea naval training station Monday. Clark's appointment was received from Allan B. Crow, of the war personnel board of the western district. "Hez" Clark is known- In all college football and athletic circles in the middle west. For four years ho was a leader in Shortridge high school football, basketball and track athletics, later attending Indiana university, where he was a football star and was unanimously chosen by critics as ail "all-western halfback." He was also on the track and basketball squads.
He was athletic director of the Marion club one year, and for four years was athletic director and coach of the football, basketball, track and baseball teams at Pose Polytechnic institute at Terre Haute.
For the last ei:c years he has coached the Indiana Dental college basketball team and has officiated-
"TVc find the accounts of Trustee Greiner corfeet and his records neatly kept. All funds have been deposited in the public depository and prop erfy accounted for, and we believe it is his chief ambition to administer the affairs of his township to the best interests of the tax payers."
I ^Sfanding on zri'y record as Township Trustee of Pierson -'Township, I solicit the support of all honest and fair-minded citizens against the miserable attacks of men who do not have the CQuragc to sign their names to the charges they .make.
If ejected a member of the Board of Commissioners I pledge myself to show ao: favoritism in the performance of my offipal duties.
Howard -P. Greitter
Democratic Candidate^ for Member Board of County Commissioners. '4,j —Paid Advertisement.
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VP To MmutiT]
Three Players in National League Are Joint Holders of Odd Hitting Record
CASEY' STENGEL. MAX CARET.
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lege football games.
many col
JIM JOHNSON DIES OF "FLIT."
BOST!i., Mass.. Nov. S.~-**fiattllng Jim" Johnson, negro heavyweight, died at the city hospital today of pneumonia, which developed f*-om influenza. In Paris in 1913 he boxed an eight ro%nd draw with Jack Johnson. Johnson was to have fought Sam Lanatord here last night.
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"In "reply to tlie unsigned attacks circulated .against me," I quote from the report of I. D. Weist and William A. Ma^ch, Field Examiners for the State Board of Accounts, in relation tamy record in the only ofifice I have ever held, namely that of Trustee of Pierson Township, Indiana:
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BiLL JFISCHICR.
grounds off the 'pitching of Arthv Fromme, former Red. Stengel, .wt
ur
who
started 'the season playing alongsidcof Carey# and who joined Uncle Yarn's sea fighters on the Pirates' first eastern trip, hit for the circuit in the first and second Innings of the contest of May 1 1913, with the Braves, Otto Hess, who taw military service in the Philippines when this country and Spain were having their scrap twenty years ago, being the Boston box man off whom the flouts were harvested. '*,
Fischer duplicated the Stengel-Carey performance at Philadelphia on May 16 1017, in th# third and fourth inning? against Joe Oeschger. The St. Mary's graduate was lifted by Pat Morgan "ter Fischer's second, four-bagger
CHICAGO,Nov/' 2.—Maj. Branch Ttickey, president of tfye St. Louis Cary dinals, is to be the next president of the National league, according to well defined rumors current in baseball cir-
.are said to have pledged support to e Weeghman, of the Chicago
Ilialey
are
(Thai-les
Cubs. Harry N. York Giants.
Hempstead, of the New
Percy Haughton or his successor, of the Boston Braves. Charles H. Kbbets, of Brooklyn, and J". C. Jones, who will represent the St. Louis Cardinals at the next National 4$aguo meeting.
ON EASTERN GRIDIRONS.
NEW YORK, Nov. 2.—For the first time this season, college football teams will figure to a considerable extent in the gridiron play of the week-end. While the schedule of games is meapre, lowing men will
This irewa threw a bomb into the Levinsky camp. The battler has been working in the submarine yards and doing "hie bit" between decks for Uncle Sam,
That did not suffice. He is a big husky young fellow, 27 years or age, arid well fixed financially. Fussing with submarines without any professional mechanical skill did not satisfy the Bridgeport draft board. They studied his record and decided that tile battler must, fight for Uncle Sam.
Your Sick Liver
Do not neglect a sick liver—It means your life is in danger. Are you nervous, irritable, with a* tendency to get drowsy, stupid and dull after eating? Do you tire easily, and belch sour matter into the throat, are you pale and sallow, you have a sick liver aaU #aa be
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TERBE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
SPORTS
PlIHIUSiefPUVS AND MEN FOR.CHIGAGO
Boilermakers Face Maroons Today With But Two of Last Year's Players In Suit.
liAtAYETTB, Tnd., Nor. 2.—Purdue's final workout last evening for the Chicago game this afternoon was a comparatively light drill in formations and signals. The Boilermakers ran through some new plays that Coach Scanion I has devised for use against the Maroons and showed complete mastery of them.
The lineup has practically been decided upon, although the coach ha^ not officially announced it. The changes' rrjade since last Saturday, when Pur-' due was defeated by DePauw, include the substitution of Hargraves for Newmeister at guard and Paly for Roth in the back field. Hargrave is a big, heady lineman and adds considerable strength to the forward wall. Daly is a faster man than Roth as halfback. and his return to the team greatly 'increases its scoring possibilities.
The1 ltfieup probably will be a» fol-1 lows: Left end, Quaiat left tackle, Bart-' lett left guard, Hargraves center Mitchell right guard, Phillips right tackle, Birk right end. Bcndixen: quarterback, Murphy halfbacks. Waters and Daly fullback, Marklev. Stanwood will be used ys substitute center, and there will be no dearth of other substitute material. This lineup shows what effect war has had upon football, at Purdue.
v
i Only Two Vets.
Only two men rn the team ar« resrular Purdue players, qualified by old conferences rules to play this season They are Bartiett and Markley. Daly was a freshman last year and probabl»y would have made the varsity this year. All the rest of the fine freshmen material of last season which was expected to form the nucleus for a successful eleven has gone to war.
Spectators at the game will include the 2,500 men in khaki at Purdue, half of them belonging to the student armv tralning detachment. The football team is made up of men drawa from both sections. I
Notre Dame .Plays Wabash
CRAWFOP.DSVILLW Tnd.. Nor. Notre Dame will play the,Little Giants here this afternoon on Ingals field at 2:30 o'clock. Final arrari?,rements were made for this feame^at the eleventh hour. This proinlse?) to'bo one of the best games in the state today, as Wabash defeated -Fort -Harrison last Saturday, putting the Scarlet eleven on a high standing. Secret practice was held yesterday afternoon and the Little Giants will be shifted considerably during today's contest. Towniifnd hopes to take advantage of heavy line
ha\mg been touched for three in two in the contest and direct'ng .formainnings, P.ill Hinchman, once of Cin- tions toward lin^-smashing plays. cinnati, made the other.
Rickey Next President of the National
ILLINI PLANS FIGHT.
I'RBAXA, 111., Nov. 2.— Cheered by khaki-clad rooters the Illinois football squad departed for Iowa City last night to meet the heavier and more experienced Hawkeyes this afternoon. The Illini have little confidence, but count. on a fighting chance.
The lineup probably will be identical with that used ags .st the Municipal pier, except that Ralph Fletcher may start at Walcjuist's piaee in the back field. The veteran Hanschman and Deitch will alternate at one guard position. The squad, in charge, of Lieutenant Veitch. athletic officer for the students' training corps, consisted of:
Football Captain Bert Tngwerssen Olander and Johnson, tackles Buchhelt, Lovejoy, Schupp and Golder,
lea here today. According to reports ends Depler and Olitz, centers: Mohr.! He was in the first draft and went t« Rickey already is assured of five votea, Hanschman, Leitch and Morgan Cami» Devens as a private. He has and five are enough to elect. Those who guards Bob Fletcher and Roberts, made a study of fabrics aud is a specquarter backs Kirkpatrick, Ralph ialist in uniforms.
Fletcher, Walquist, Kirkpatrick and Sabo. half backs Kopp and Lanum, full l^acks.
FRANKLIN ALL SET.
FRANKLIN, Ind., Nov. 2.—Coach John M. Thurber. .with his squad of eighteen gridironcru, left here this morninf? for Greencastle, where they will meet the DePauw Tigers on McKeen field. Signal drill, with a short scrimmage, was held behind closed doors Friday afternoon, after which the Gold and 'Blue mentor announced that the 1918 e.eveu is the best grid machine that he has sent against the Greencastle lads In years. The foimake the trip to
when compared with the firpt Saturday Greencastle: Capt. Campbell, Ross, of November, during: a normal season. Browning," Smart, Jones, Strohl, Cline, the-showing is the best of the autumn KinRsoliver, Justus, Hatton, Pike Harto date. Inter-college contests out- rison, Coon, Farmer, Haya, Studdard
number the games to be ^lajed with or between elevens.
Two of th«j best games of the day Will brin* together Pennsylvania and La.ayeite at Franklin field, Philadelphia, and Dartmouth and Syracuse at Springfield, Mass. All four teams have played one or more preliminary contests and while not as formidable hs in pact years, appear to be somewhat evenly matched. Other games include Williams and Weslc-yan at Williamstown Amherst, and Columbia at New York Frank\n and Marshall wj. L'rsinua at Lancaster, Pa. Navy vs. St. Helena, N, T. S., at Annapolis, and Pennsylvania State vs. Wissahicken Barracka at State College, Pa.
FIGH1!
NKW YORK, Nov. ?.—Battling Levinsky finally is to fight for Uncle Sam. Advices yesterday fr6m' Bridgeport, Conti., says that the local draft board has advanced the battier from class 4 to class A 1, and that he must Immediately report for duty.
and
Naugle. At a meeting of the
cantonment or naval station Franklin College football men Friday Harold Campboii,,of Sullivan, Ind., was xieadn'.he rnedicine^
CANOE CHAMP DIES AT FRONT. I
YORK, Nov. 2.—Another famout
atnlete to lose his life in action on the
SO DIFFERENT FROM WILLARD.
KEW ORLEANS, Nov. 2.—Peter Herman, bantamweight champion of the world, today wired Jianm Coffroth in New York that he would De willing to meet Young Sandow,' Pal Moore or any other bantamweight boxer for the war fund. Herman is willing to make three fights in New York Qr one in New York, another in Cincinnati and one in Milwaukee. Herman ia in the navy, but has permission to box for war fund any time.
FOOTZALL TODAY
INDIANAPOLIS.
Indiana va. Camp Taylor. 1 BIG TEN. Chicago vs. Purdue at Lafayette.
Illinois-vs. Iowa at Des Moines. INDIANA. vNotre Dame vs. Wabash at Crawfordsvine.
Franklin vs. DePauw at Greencastle WEST. Northwestern
V3.
Chicago Nsval Re
serves at Chicago. Wisconsin vs. Beloit at Madison. Fort Harrison vs. Camp Grant a Rockford.
EAST.
Nat*y"Ts. St. Helena at Annapolis. Williams vs. Wealeyan at Williamstown. •«.
Pennsylvania vs. Lafayette at Phila delphia. Dartmouth vs. Syracuse at Spring Held.
Franklin and Marshall V8. Ursinus a Lancaster. Penn State vs. "Wlssahicken Barracks at
t3U.Cn
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Gocd Gracious, Francis, What a Dangerous Job!
BOSTON, Nov. 2.—^rancis Ouimet, western amateur golf champion and formerly the nited States Golf association open and amateur golf chaifipion, has receivedr his commission as a first lieutenant in the quartermaster's corps of the United States army.
MAY TAKE OVER BRAVES.
BOSTON. Nov. 2.—Former Mavor .Tames M. Curley is after control of the Boston Braves. He is understood to have the backing of a syndicate of local bankers. There doesn't appear to be anv question of price. Curley already has had one conference with Manager Stallings of the Braves, but is not inclined to be talkative as to the result of it.
Rub Musterole on Forehead and Temples
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