Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1919 — Page 18
m
mmm
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Tm TXDTAXAPOLIS NWS. MONDAY. XOTEVTBEll 3.
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SPORTS
FEW SURPRISES SPRUNG IN EASTERN GRID BATTLES
FOOTBALL ~~ F " ATHLETICS —-
DE PAUW AND WABASH PERK UP FOR CLASH NEXT SATURDAY
BOXING
EMM MAP IS PSETlYttELlIMfD
WITH FEW EXCEPTION# GAME# WENT AS PREDICTEDDOPE ON TEAMS.
[By VmH*4 Pm**J
NKW YORK. Norember l.—A no«f« ot th» eextern football nituatlon •how» that whilo batUred a by Maturday’a fame#, ita faeo la not bo-
yoad recognition.
Tbe Pona Utato gave the weekly black eye to the dope man. They tipped tbe boat In which PeniMylvaiila waa drifting along to tbe top of tbe liet, and Bob Folwell'e boye fell
out with an awfn! aplaah.
Otberwtae the gamee went as predicted. Colgate and Dartmouth were so evenly matched that a tie game result proved satisfactory to both
two bidder# in
STARS TO APPEAR IN LINEUPS WHEN WABASH AND DE PAUW BATTLE FOR COLLEGE TITLE SATURDAY
The college football title of Indiana bash came only after tbe closest con- down of the game on the next play.
OE PAUW VICTORY HOPES INCREASE FORSATURDAY
Wabash and DePauw meet at Washington park next Saturday in the last big game in Indianapolis this season. Butler. Hanover and Eariham each dropped from the Indiana college championship running early in the season, and Franklin and Rose Poly were cut from the field this last week whsn Thurber's men fell before the Old Gold and the Engineeers were eliminated by the little Giants. The vlctorfea of DePauw and Wa-
L 0
m
SSMVW Mauled by West sve of the Harvard
position has strengthed the DePauwj
team noticeably.
The Little Giants won from Rose Poly last Friday principally through the steady work of Xabor. It was three minutes before the close of the game and neither team had scored when Saber made a drop kick which
SO TERRIBLE AFTER FRANK-
LIN TRIUMPH.
G REES'CAFTLE. Ind.. November 3.
"Now for the Little Giants”
This is the slogan of DePauw, j
£S?s^srr5K'.*. 4 &r^«sir;sT!n«*-Fr.rn.un. the ball in position for Weber, the gturriv Baptist eleven. And from to-j substitute quarter, to take it over for & untn Saturday afternoon, when \
SSif defeat by Lafay< case's vidtery ovsr Brown«
soors was tbe only BBpRff&raJ /•r Brown and ehml-
natlon of the undefeated Lehigh by Pittsburg gave the principal dopers a With a Halurday with Rochester, the battered Cofgaterii may ease up a Wt and get their first breathing spell in six weeks. Dartmouth must buck against Pennsylva-
nia. ■ .5 > _■ ' ; Coaler SpHage farptiee.
West Virginia paused In ita elation over the Princeton triumph, and pricked up lie ears when Center College, He opponent next gaturday, kicked one of the souths beet In the ribs by winning from Virginia, 4» to 7, Georgia Tech ran away from Davidson, Vanderbilt and Kentucky battled to a scoreless tie. and Auburn beat Georgia, 7 to ♦. The other battles were only of ordinary Interest. The skiff of most of the eastern teams turns against the current next Saturday. Dartmouth meets Penn. Tale takes on Brown, and that Providence team can do funny things. Notrs Dame goes to West Point for the only big Intersections! game of tb* season, the Navy takes on th« |5mleTt n plcklni^of iff with Rochester—and Colgate needs it.
a touchdown.
TWAS MUDDY.
A little story that rivals some of fishing and golf is told by the Butler football team, which returned from Hanover yesterday. "The mud was so thick,” one of the team said, ‘that one time when our center tried to pass the ball, it stuck in the mad and could not be dislodged for several seconds. The entire Butler line dashed on over after the Hanover defensive, only to be called back. By a great effort, the ball was pulled out of the mud and put into play, but the action was so strenuous that it set Rioch, the center, on his back. The play
ended in a fumble.'*
’1
j the Blue and White Is wary of a William Penn triumph. By the time this 1 contest comes around, most of the Butler crips, who now number about ] one-third of the entire squad, will be on their feet again. But win or lose, the Eariham game of course is merely a preparation for the Franklin fray.
FAILURE TO DEFEAT HANOVER j J-'"
ROUSES DISAPPROVAL— | able-bodied man in camp—made the capi uani ic wcvt strip. The coaches did not wish to fcAKLMAM ib iNtAt risk laying out any more of the
varsity. There was no regular man
BUTLER WANTS A VAN
Professional Fsotbsll. Mi. 7, iieraldn, 'YMriy-SSttwa Divisive. Mi Detroit Motiliwks 1|, rhiewro ftlversMsa, #; W. Warns T. O p„ G. ' . ■ ~ •
Citations for Week
Oggva, Osivr, DePauw—For bivrkteg kick that revolted ha tkv victory aver PraakUa mm* kept DvFaaw la fke collegiate ckaasploaskip race. gmltk. Goard, Metre DaaMs—Best lightweight Itaemaa la the state aleec • Frank Mtotevman, ef Indians. For] oggreontvo and effective werk tbreaghewt ladtana game. Borgmaa. Mslfhsrk, Metre Dame— For growad-galalag ability aad bead
week.
Leoaard. Taekle. ladlaaa—Per ■»- anaal pasting ability aader adverse Hrewmstanccs against hot re Dame. Klngsetlver, <|aarterbaek. Franklin —Far brilliant npea field raaafag
against DePaaw.
Blrfc. Tackle, Fardao—For beiag «*a whale aide of the Use** alt ky himself
against the Mleklgaa Aggies.
Harris, Tackle. Rone Foly—Fer ladfvtdaal play that waa largely re-
fer holding Wabash safe tbe greater part ef tbe
•possible tbresgboot Keee.Waba
Ms bar. Fallback, Wabash—Fer groaad-galalag sblllty aad aeorlag the drop-ktek that “broke” tbe Rose defease aad placed bln team alsagslde DePaaw as contenders for tb« Indians college title.
NABOB, FULLBACK. Wabash.
IT’S UP TO OLD PURDUE TO CHANGE COMPLEXION OF WESTERN TITLE *>.. f* ** ^ - - Boiisr Msktrs Find Themselves in Unique Position—Ohio State and Notre Dame Only Contenders for
Western Championship.
Y". .
(By Thomas A. Hsndrirlt*] It's up to Purdue! Aa a result of Saturday's games Notre Dame and Ohio State are the only teams left In the running for the woetern football ohamplonehlp and Purdue find# horaelf In a unique position. Dented of all ebance of winning the championship crown for themselves, the Boiisr Makers exercise the sols power of kingmakers, king breakers, or oven bean spillers. The unexpected elimination of Chicago by Illinois, 10-0, and the defeat of Wleoeneln by Minnesota, ld-7, leave Notre Dame and Ohio State aa the only possible title claimants. Purd«e l« the .one team to have^ a game
<v< f
urdue” will not be any
Ur the rival cont
Ive
to
■d
because
and ere.
that,
ny pasHlv
| itenders t
full of boles either. Overlook-
In IndianapoUe this seeaon beca of leek of orgameed publicity failure to have a game scheduled h the fact remains nevertheless tl after a discouraging getaway, coach Scanlon's men are coming fket. The splendid, aggressive l*-7 victory over the Michigan Aggies Saturday m*d« it plain that Rockne’s winner* and the Buckeyes are likely to akld off the rosy road to the championship when they hit the ever dangerous
Purdue curve. , •
Berg men vs. Harley.
But footbell comparisons, which must be baeed on indirect contact, are drab and lifeless at the beet. For the sake of tbe sport .at well as proventing all-winter debates. It is a shame that Dutch Bergman and Ohio Harley will never be seen in action on opposing collegiate teams. Notre Dame's ll-l victory In the mad ever Indiana at Washington park hardly showed the real strength of Roekne'e team, but JU did show conclusively that Bergman Is one of the beat backs of all time, that in Kirks and Anderson Notre Dame has a pair of super ends, that Smith is the biggest l&S-pound guard ever seen here and that Rockne has developed a forward passing game so nearly perfect that the surprise does not come when It succeeds, but when it falls. And there are not many
surprises.
Indlana’e defensive showing was fully 80 per cent, better than against Minnesota two weeks ago and the Crimson linemen were particularly game and stubborn inside their tenyard line. Stiohm had succeeded admirably in plugging the hole on the left side of the line that was so disastrous In the Gopher game. In Loonard he has developed a punter of unusual ability. Kicking under the most disadvantageous conditions
with a wot, soggy ball.
Gold on Its one-yard line, eliminated the heavy Franklin team from the Indiana oolleglate championship race. As a result Wabash and DePauw adherents will argue all week, and the toams wilt fight It out for the state Collegiate title Saturday at Washington park In the last big game tb be Pl*y«d In Indianapolis this year. There wee no *cor* in the ButlerHanover game. Honors were about even, the defensive of both teams to the,r offense. The Colgate-Dartmouth 7-to-7 tie game left the eastern championship Mill in the air, Dartmouth saving Itself from defeat in the final quarter by scoring a touchdown after blockVng a Colgate punt. West Virginia tied double hitches, nooses, slip and bowk note In the Tiger’s tall, overwhelming Princeton £5 to 0. Pennsylvanla dropped out of the running when Penn State put over a lO-to-O victory. Tale. Harvard, Syracuse and Pittsburg came through with easy victories.
Metre Dame Victory Mote*. The first querter wae the fastest ovsr played here Th- paly time taken out waa
WM uahered out on tha
field for atpp. 1
Rvery player dried hia handa on the pretty, wh ta, clean and apotiem *mta of the officials Result, eeld autta were not pretty.
white, clean and * pot less fer more thin two
downs - ■
Hmlth, the featherwelaht guard. spent all last year tn a vain attempt to make a Bare- i man out of hlmaelf. Rockne spotted his
la 3
The Carmel Kelts defeated the Debonair Club, of Indianapolis. £1 to ». The Debonsira were earupletely outclassed. Games are wanted with fast local and state teams Address Dr. Clay pool. Carmel, Ind. The Shelbyville Ootntnerlials, one of the fastest football teams tn the state, will play the fast Brownaburg club next Bunday at, Brownsburg. The flhelbyvUte team has been favored by the dopeeters as the winner of the proposed scrap. Tbe gheibyvtlle eleven is made up of former college stars and men who have made good records on several state Independent football squads. Ellis, of Indiana, and Roe Smith, of Pennsylvania, are officials for the team. Several open dates are now standing on the Shelbyvtlle team's schedule, and they would like to hook up with several state and local teams. For games call Harry McClain, at McClain'a grocery, ShelhyviUe, Ind. With their last two Sunday games canceled on account of the weather, the Belmonts will go Into this week’s practices to produce teamwork that la necessary to a winner. The weather has been against football so far this season, and It has been hard for the road teams to get started, but thle has not placed tbe least of down hearted ness in the minds of the coaches of the west side organisation. The team will go to Andereon to repeat the victory of 1517. Very important practice will take place at Indlanaola park on Wednesday and Friday nights of this week. All players that have played this season and any former players as well aa those wishing tryouts are requested to call Belmont 8*27 after 6 o’clock and ask for Don. H00SIER BIG GAME HUNTING PARTY HEARS CALL OF THE WILD
•he whiatle is biourn at Washington j park in Indianapolis, -heralding the .
beginning of the DePauw-Wabash
game, it will continue not only the j
hut the oredominxte thought ! will happen. The upsets Saturday * slogan but the preaomu* j showed that teams are not always as in tbe minds of the Tigers. • strong as they seem. The Illinois vieFor the 7-0* victory of coach Buss ; tory over Chicago surprised Purdue over Franklin was merely a step to- ; as Illinois was not able to beat Purward the game with the Scarlet De- due by as large a score. Purdue held Pauw celebrated the victory, for it j the Suckers to a 14-to-7 score wherewas well earned, but the joy of that j ^ Illinois beat the Maroons. 10 to 0.
triumph will not compare with the celebration that is planned tn event ot a DePauw victory next Saturday.
Two stiff weeks of hard practice
at Center and Lundy Welborn, quarter. played through th^ entire sea of
face the Butler squad in preparation mud with a seriously-wprained ankle, for the next game, which will be I ^ r *ham time captain Mullane . , ... r, T,. „ . will be back at center, both Welborn played with Eariham at Richmond on an d Ike Wood will be healed and ia November 15. The Butler players condition for the quarterback posiwere not up to their usual fighting ! i*. 00 * *nd Portteus and Brown, tackle*.
spirit at Hanover and the college and coaches are frankly disappointed with the team. Those who saw the Hanover game, in which Butler was held 0-O. say that if the style displayed against Rose a week ago had been in evidence, a victory would have been a signal one for Butler. For the first time in several seasons Butler resumes play with Eariham and as the Quakers held Wabash to a much lower score than Butler did.
Mercer,.end. L. Woods, Bastian and several other backs are expected out. For the first time in years Butler, failed to wallop Hanover Saturday. The DePauw. Wabash and Rose defeats are partly excusable, in the conclusion of the campus, but a Hanover defeat—never! Bitter censure await* the team for this humiliation, especially when It is felt by the students • that the eleven was capable of a little more spixx. Campus apathy is passing at Butler and the students are
demanding a victory.
Shows Fighting Spirit. The thing most noteworthy in the Old Gold day game was the fact that Buss has demonstrated that the Tigers can play straight football as a b!y aa they play the aerial gxme Although playing on the muddiest field, perhaps, ever seen here, the old Gold machine showed a fighting spirit and determination that made it more tnan j a match for the heavier tranklin. Again and again the ] to force their way through the Meth- j odist line and every time they were held as if by the old stone wall of the . time of Dan Lynch and Bill Tway and Northway. . „ . . 1 DePauw's goal was registered in | the first quarter when Franklin attempted to punt and the kick was blocked and the ball taken by De1’auw on Franklin’s twenty-five-yard line. The remainder of the K ap1 ^ sa }** both teams see-saw back ana lortn. gaining little.
r
LLIAPD
■\
G'XKIL. QUARTERBACK, DePauw.
guard this xmc. whl ith the strength of
d of a halfback
.. awy? Sijrara retd* hi* punts average better than forty yard*, which undouotediy kept Nttce Dam* from a touchdown or
tw®.
At times the Indiana tackling was high and grew steadily worse in this rMp*#t aa the game progreseed. Her offense just wasn't. Williams acoomnlished th* little that wa# done in this department. Twice he broke through Notre Dame’s left tackle fer substantial gains, and that was
about all.
Flake Teackgewa.
After passing up four legitimate chances to score in the first half. I trice due to splendid resistance of the Crimson Inside her own fiveyard Une, Notre Dame got a touchdown on the rankest kind ot a fluke, when Qipp fumbled the ball on fourth dpano. and Blackford fell on it be-
hind tha Indiana line.
The second touchdown was well
deserved. Notre Dame got the ball bx blocking Mathy's kick In midfield. Hard plunging by Blackford and atpp, sided by a sensational run by Bergman, pot the ball on I. U.'s fiveyard line. Glpp went over on an end run. Notre Dame's other three
were due to a twenty-three
bjmI tried him out at position he plays wi lineman and the speed
Williams' Kyis of offensive play shooed great improvement over that of the Mtnne sola game. He no longer cuts hack when hr earrleo the hall, but drives steadily farThe Indiana hand was the one bright spot on a dreary day. Despite the rain it stepped out on a peppy pee-rade before the game end tooted the gloom out of the weath-
er all through the afternoon.
Practically the entire. Notre Dame atudent body was down for the game. The parade was led by Harry Scott, the standard was carried by Wop Iierra, while th# cheering was led by Frank FHulmmons. A1 Slaggert.
and BUI Dempsey. After the wn they probably didn’t even
l raining.
Announcement of the Illinois victory over Chicago made a great hit with both tha Indian* and Notre Dame cheering sections. Notre Dame because it removed a western championship rival and Indiana on general
principles.
How does Bergman do tt? This question was asked hundreds of times throughout the game Again end again the little fellow would apparently be buried under an avalane he of Crimson Jerseys only to sneak, wiggle. Jump, crawl, scamper, squirm or fly out of the mass of antt-BemianlUes, and Joyously proceed goalward for some more yard* And It would have been Juat the same had tbe opposing team been Colgate. Dart mouth or Ohio State. He is Jea nateherly an
elusive gentleman.
Captain Bahan’a big brother waa right on hand and left with n very high opinion of
tbe Bahan family.
Trafton got in the game at eerier when Maddtgan went over to guard’s position, hut was hurt and had to leave a few minutes later. He looked good the short time be was
in- x -c.'' . ‘' * >
When Indiana had the ball on Notre Dame's four-yard line In the last quarter the fighting Irish yell of triumph wa# changed to a pleading, soulful. "Hold 'em. Notre Dame, hold 'em.’’ That chant must have been sweet music to the ears of tbe Indiana rooters who had voiced the identical sentiment so many times themselves before. Joe Brandy, who relieved Captain Bahan at quarter, called signals In a clear, incisive tone that could be heard all over th* field. Brandy wore a turban of bandages but it didn’t effect the enappirwws of hts play. Dud Pierson <i*d aa awful time, nobody knew Just why. talking the officials Into MUng him Into the gnme He celebrated that event a minute tater by getting off a regular fifty-yard Leonardeaque punt Speaking of punts, Leonard got one off in the first quarter that sailed fifty yards and submarined for another twenty before tt was brought to harbor and anchored by
Notre Dame.
Coughlin, tbe biggest man on the field, played a wide tackle that reaembied end Play. He made some brilliant tackle*, but on two occasions Williams slipped through the gap between Cougiln and bis guard for
long gatna.
Mathys played hts usual steady, heady wne, and hi* clean handling of punts on the wettest field in Indianapolis history was
remarkable.
totbiui * nd r>U00 '* Notr * freshman
A Hoosier big- game hunting party, in charge of Captain John Graves, of Carmel, will leave for the northern wilds Tuesday for an annual hunt. Three Indianapolis men will be in the party, which will be composed of the following men: Captain John Graves. Fred Johnson, Virgil Harvey, Austin Sheets. Harry and Charles Powell, of Carmel; James Brendle, of Zlonsvllle; James Staley, of Lebanon: Dr. Fred Wilson, of Sheridan, and his brother from Memphis. Tenn.. and Luke Duffey, W. J. Gimmel and Dr, Clark E. Day. of Indianapolis. The party will go to a small station called Witch Lake. Mieh., and then drive nine miles into the country to Big Fence river, where a camp will be established. This is In the nortl^rn peninsular of Michigan. Several of the men in the party have been making the trip each fall for a number of years and they are well acquainted with the big woods.
* "
yard *drop kick at a difficult angle
by Glop.
Riselr scored Indiana's three points of a placement kick from the four-teen-yard line in the last quarter after the Notre Dame line had held for Otroo downs on its four-yard
iin*.
A blockod punt on her own fifteenyard line that DePaaw converted into a touchdown on the following play and tbo spectacular stand of the Old
rn-iTr 1 ” >ortl,n *. but thn#e that w-er# not allowed to come, came anyway and now Mine of them are In tbe city without tickets peiee. funds for food or carfare
* u °- ic -
•* < l ,, * r t«'rtiack for Indiana and showed
that he wa* * fast, aggressive,
pisjsg, - ^
fighting
FOOTBALL SCORES
GAMES STAGED BY RECREATION DEPARTMENT AT CITY _ PARK FIELD.
INDIANA GAMES. Notre Dame. 16; Indiana. 3. Butler, 0; Hanover. 0. Purdue, 13, Michigan Aggies, 7. DePauw, 7; Franklin. 0. fit. Louis, t: Valparaiso, 0. CONFERENCE. Illinois. iO: Chicago. *. Michigan. 16; Northwestern. IX Minnesota, 1*: Wisconsin. 7. WEST. Iowa state. 3; Nebraska. 0 Detroit University, 23; Kalamaxoo, 6. Marquette. 3». Great Lake*. 0. Drake, 6: Grinnli, «. Washington. 76: Roll© School of Mines. 6. Kansas. 16; Kansas Aggie*. 3. Iowa. 26; South Dakota. IS. Missouri. 6: Oklahoma. 6. Colorado College. 7; Colorado School of Mines. X Colorado Aggies. 33; University of Denver. X ver, 3. * Utah. 66; Montana State. 0. Oregon. 21; Washington. 14. California. 21; Oregon Aggie#, li. Creighton. 6; Haskell Indians. 6. KAKT Cincinnati. 6; Wittenburg. 0. Miami, 14; Denison, 0Akron, 22: Mt. Union. 0. Oberthn. 4*: Western Reserve. 6. Heidelburg. 15; Baldwin Wallace. #. Case, ». Hiram, X Marietta- 31; Bethany. 6. Ohio Wesleyan, 6; Ohio University. 0. Toledo University, 12; Defiance College. 6. 1 Tiffon High. 14. Kenton High 0 Pittsburg, 14; Lehigh, 6. Colgate. 7; Dartmouth. 7. Harvard. 28; Sprtngflekl. 0. Syracuse, 13: Brown, 0. Lafayette. 21; Cornell, 2. Penn State, »; Penn University, 0. Yale, Si: Maryland State. 0. West Virginia, 25; Princeton. 0. Wesleyan, 16; Williams, 8. Princeton Freshmen. 22; Yale Freshmen. 3. i Navy. 38; West Virginia Wesleyan. S. Army, 24: Tufts. 13. Bucknell, 27; St. Bona venture. 6 Carnegie. 0. Allegheny, 8. Columbia, 0: Union, #. Penn Freshmen. 9: Virginia Freshmen. X Swarthmore, 13; U rain us. 12. Gettysburg, 7; Dickinson. 0. Johns Hopkins. 2»; Lebanon Valley. 6. Haverford, 16; Franklin aad Marshall. 7. Middleburg, 3; Norwich. 8. Penn Military College. 26; Albright, 0. Vermont, 6; Hamilton, 6. Georgetown. 46; Delaware, 7. Holy Cross. 28; Rhode Island State. X SOUTH. Georgetown, 4$; Delaware CeUege, 7. Kentucky. •; Vlnderbitt. 8. Alabama University, 48; University of th* South. 0. Tennessee University. 8; North Carolina University, 0. Alabama Poly, 7; Georgia. 8.
Ross Breaks Record*. HONOLULU, November 3.—Norman Ross broke an American and a world's swimming record (open water) here Saturday In the annual fall swimming meet. He swam 888 yards in 11 minutes 13 2-5 seconds, breakinjr the American record by 14 2-5 seconds. He then continued swimming to 1,000 yards, which he did in 12 minutes 44 3-5 seconds, breaking the world’s record by 7 2-5 seconds.
The city recreation department was again congratulated for the systematic and orderly manner In which the three amateur football games were conducted at the city parks yesterday. At Brooltside park, the Brookside team simply overwhelmed the Spades to the tune of 51 to 0. The Spades tried gamely to stop the extremely fast Brookside back field. The Ferndale team defeated the Independents 12 to 0, due largely to the fact that only eight of the Independent players were on hand for the game. What the Independent team lacked in numbers it certainly made up in nerve aqd its forward passes several times placed the bail close to the Ferndale goal line. Twice the Independents held the Ferndaies from the five-yard line and won for tatirrs^* hearty a PP Iau »e of the specv0 T t h tf 0 M s| ta r7rf i d TH ea ^ d the Tartars c ’ arfie, d. The outcome of , wa . s very muoh ^ doubt untill the last ten minutes of play. scor^smXfi °- f } he ^' r « quarter the sto °d •to 0 in favor of the Militarys, with the Tartars holding the ball in the Militars' territorv During the last ten minutes the Tarta£vs /nPbf i Weakened and the Mili1 Th» ° ver S wo touchdowns. foHows: ta0d D<r ° f the teani8 i8 as
Ferndale W ® n Military# 2 Brookside ........... ' * } Independents » Spades i Tartars ^
I-ost. 8 8 I 1
1
0 2
atlvf managers of all teams in above league are asked to be
Pet. 1 008 1.090 .608 .500 .000
000
the
pres
ent tonight at 7:30 at the Cl tv Hail to attend the league meeting^ Hal1
Trans-Desert R«<. r . .*
BISBEE, Ariz., November 3.—Nineteen cars, all that remained of the forty that left El Paso Sunday morn ing in the El Paso-Phcenix t^ans desert automobile race, left Bisbee the overnight control station, on the home stretch early today. R. B Arm Mfons. Ft worthf Tex., the leader To
far, was the first to get away.
Six players have entered the state 18.2 balkline tournament that will open at the Harry Cooler billiard rooms this week. The entry list Includes four ‘ ocal P lay ,? r8 ’ Cooler. Teague and Parsons. The two out-of-town entrants are Lincoln, of , Columbus, and Brown, of Terre Haute. The games will be at 300 ^irh 0nt pi',T-lfl & , ' B «.r tr ?h m o .‘tl?; ^Brown/of^Terre Haute, will meet Parsons, of Indlanapolis. in to* first contest Wednesday Wednesday night Br T °™ cues with Teague. Lincoln, or to lumbUH. will take on Parsons Thursday afternoon, and play Curtis in the evening contest. Tbe schedule calls for two games a day players. It is expected that the P la > for the title wdll be decided in four weeks. Keiser and Srfrder, both handicap i players, will open the f °urth vveek of Plav in the city amateur three-CUShlon bUliard tournament tonight at the Board of Trade rooms. Lelserhas played three games and has * clean record, with three victories. Last a?eTx f ? for the week: Monday Night—Keiser v*Tuesday Afternoon--Shane vs Hea<Iviie«dav Night—Michell vs. Cooper. Wednesday Afternoon-Frye v»_ Houseman Wednesday Night-Ferguson vs. CMet. Thursday Night-TaSlor vs. Andersr.n. Friday Night—Oeisel va Sutton REJUVENATED PURDUE HOPES FOR UPSfcT OF DOPE LAFAYETTE, Ind., November 3.— Purdue's victory over the Michigan Aggies showed the, Boiler Makers greatly improved in offensive strength and it also revealed the powerful defense which Purdue has built j un during the last few weeks. Atthoutrh the Aggies in the third period worked the Bill down to the very shadow of the Purdue goal posts, three times, the Purdue line field like a atone wall and prevented the visitors from scoring. The only score which the Aggies were able to make came in the third period, however. It was after Purdue had held them for downs on the two-yard line. Cap- ! tain Hufflne dropped back for a punt.! the kick was blocked and Boss fell j on the ball for the Aggies' only I touchdown. Purdue’s two scores were j made in the first and second periods, one being the result of a run by Macklin and a dive through the line by Meeker and the other following a blocked punt in w'hich Mitchell, zecured the ball for Purdue close ; to the Aggies' goal line. This wnll be another strenuous j week for the Purdue squad as the I Boiler Makers play Ohio State at Columbus next Saturday. Coach Scanlon realizes that when. Purdue meets the Buckeyes it w-ill be a case of the | strongest team in the conference I meeting one that is not in the cteam- I pionship running. However there is a bare possibility that the unexpected 1
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Right after the first shave, a t'ade begins to grow dull. Each succeeding shave usually becomes more uncomfortable, until at last you throw the blade away. With the AutoStrop Razor you can get a shave as smooth and clean as that first shave with a new
blade — every day of the week! Built right into the frame ia a simple, efficient stropping device which resharpens the blade in a few seconds—without taking the razor apart or removing the blada.
Five hundred satisfying shaves are guaranteed from every dozen blades. Begin tomorrow to get the comfort of a fresh, keen*, edge for every shave. Ask your dealer today about the AutoStrop Razor free trial plan. Autostrop Safety Razor go. NSW YORK TORONTO LONDON PARIS
/4uto£trop Razor -snarpms itse
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