Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 December 1920 — Page 38

"

THE IXHIAXAPOIilS KWS, FBIDAT, DECEMBER .0,1920.

" / . .... - - - . 3r ■ .

=

' — *

■ KETBALL

few

w Changes

Leaders in City Pin

Tourney

—..—ni. -

-

_

ATHLETICS

BOWLING

h pfeftf:.-;-., ■ :.;ii FR«e

_ c

—Jn&ge head of authority to erlL here

two hof»r< court

rf*hoth

rmsruz

that in to

i to he

lris«4 Jodae

SOME SHOWING, SHOALS? SUOAUS, Ind. The stria of the School hare formed team aad will soon be ready for Same* with giria' team* elsewhere- This makes four basketIjtgion team- the boys' hish school team, the sirls* high school

DE PAUW CONFIDENT OF VICTORY OVER EM-ROES

GREENCASTLE, Ind—J>ePauw opens the

sen toofsht against the Em Roe team, of Indianapolis, on the local floor. Coach Buss says the team is making good progress and a tight whiteV ~ xpect<sL *»»▼«**«*

MITCHELL AND KILGORE RECEIVE S. H. S. HONORS

If ' • :

Charlie Mitchell, the fighting guard, and an all-city football man has been elected captain of the Blue and White, eleven that represented the north elders for the lest seaeonu No captain was elected during the last season but different players were appointed acting captains for each game by the coach. Mitch*!! Is also a member of the varsity basketball saoad. and a member of laet years’ track team. Mitchell works under the handicap of having only one arm, but he nas earfted the admiration of the school for his pluck aad fighting spirt. Dave Kilgore, fullback on this years' eleven, has been elected to the tfHj of the Ml team. Kilgore _ ftt an able leader and under leadership Shortridge is expecting

7 ears

captai* his * tea

a fighting team next year.

The athletic board has awarded the following players letters and monograms. which are to be presented to

or Krumbeuer and Cai

Laughlin at forwards. Mendenhall

mnon or

c*at*r. Captain Gipson and Hirt

guards. Gill may also ;

game at center.

get into the

Gets Groggy Watching Kid Glove Pugs Making Demands

CUP FOR UPSTATERS. SOUTH BEXp. Ind- December 10.—Charles C. Gates, of this city, has offered a large silver loving cup to the winner of the northern Indiana basketball tournament, which is annually played in South Bend. The team winning the cup two consecutive years will retain permanent possession of it.

NEW YORK. December 10.—“Talk about being hit a wallop, Fm just about groggy from readfn' a paper. I see where Willie Jackson wants $S0,W« for a chance to win the light-

weight championship.” 1 da £n

Jack McAuliffe. retired »»wi

feared lightweight champion, was unburdening himself on the difference between the old and the new fighters.

“Jackson wants a young gold mine

for a chance at a title that would, bring him a fortune. He wants close; to 91,009 a minute for meeting: Leonard In a fifteen-round bout. | Back ii* November. I8S7, I fought! seventy-four rounds with Jim Carney j in. Revere. Mass., and didn’t get ai the 1 ceBt * E * x, J r *« the same year I {

i Hoppe Wants It AU.

NEW YORK. December 19.—Ef(forts to arrange a billiard match beI tween Willie Hoppe, re-established I champion, and Edouard Horemann [ European title holder, have been held ! up temporarily, it was announced to-

■ Whether the match can be arranged

unde- later depends upon Horemans’s accept-

ance of Hoppe s terms, according to R. P. Benjamin, the latter's manager, who said Hoppe would insist on a winner-fake-ali contract for receipts. It was said the Belgian manager insisted on a sixty-forty contract. Horemans today is en route to Chicago. where he will play a number of

exhibition matches.

MAJORS HANKER FOR RESTORATION OF DRAFT

STAND READY TO DOUBLE PRICE OF -IVORY ON FOOT ,, AT GOTHAM MEETING.

AL ROBERTS.

A distressing ring accident, but of unusual features, occurred at eey City; laet Tuesday nignt

at *auditorjum *f er ®**** { went twenty-eight rounds with Harry I play 3SL'm&£r. 1 * *-**"“«-• »*»..

Kilgore, Lusby. Ray and Dunbar will be given varsity letters. McLeay. Hamlm. Parsons and Marshall will be awarded the football monogram.

I. A. C. MEETS ELKS.

A record crowd is expected at the Independent Athlcti Club gym i

‘'ST- y w" 1 ,1 M ,hS'"u« '

NEW YORK, December 19.—Restoration of the draft, an economical means of getting young blood Into the major league veins, will be advocated here tomorrow when the delegations of the majors and minors

get together.

The session is slated as a conference on a new national agreement to succeed the one that was discarded some time ago, but it will also act as the coronation of Judge K. M. Landis, the new dictator of baseball. Garry Herrmann, who once held tbe job that has been enlarged for Landis, and who also penned the old national agreement is here with his copy of the agreement that is said to put the minors on a fifty-fifty footing with the big time fellows.

will Double Price.

A little matter of 169 per cent. Increase in the price of '*iv©r* on the foot” is thought to be the prise bait that the majors will dangle before the little fellows. The draft price of the old defunct national agreement was $2^90. The majors, it Is heard, are now ready to increase the

rate a head to $9,000.

The American Association and the International League may bmik at the

GIANTS OFFER FORTUNE FOR ONE RED PLAYER NEW YORK. December 10.—An unusual baseball proposition was made here today by President Stonehara and John McGraw, of the New York Giants, to Garry Herrmann, president of the Cincinnati Reds. They offered to give the Cincinnati club 9150.000 in cash and a catcher for the right to choose a player from the Red lineup. They refused to name the Red player “they were after and also the name of the catcher they would give. Critics here are of the opinion the Giants want either Heinie Groh or Eddie Roush. Herrmann declined to act until the arrival of Manager Pat Moran

of the Reds. ,

HENDRICKS TO ACT AS SCOUT FOR REDS IN A.A.

CINCINNATI DIRECTORS ADOPT NEW SYSTEM IN SEARCH FOR PLAYERS.

j NEIAi YORK, December 10.—Garry j Herrmann, president of the Cincinnati

Club,

th

want the draft restored to chop off ..wHHpi: . |

a lot of fine player or manager in every important

vV* ! 1 Aanvn** fjf’v »•**r\rv»»# wr* cnVrfvK ivtfikAsa «

the list of the. leaders a lot oi talent with top prices that is making the league races a setup for Balti-

more et ml.

has engaged Jack Hendricks, of

Indianapolis Association Club, to act as scout for the Reds in the American Association. The men are here to attend the various baseball meetings that are scheduled for Satur-

day and the coming week.

The Cincinnati Club has given up the system of employing expensive scouts to travel around through the minors to look for players. This system has worked well in some cases, but the directors of the club believe that much better re suits can be.obtained by appointing a competent

DENTS AFTER PAINLESS VICTORY OVER CRIMSON

league to report on such playel took as if they would have a Ml to make good on the big line.

Pint Appointment.

Manager Hendricks is here, and ht is the first man to be appointed under this new plan. Jack is one of the

7““- _ . i most efficient managers in the minor BIXXIMINGTON, Ind., December 10. j leagues, and a very keen Judge of, Bent upon extracting a painless vie- ' players. His recommendations will be

. E

but Epstein

Z p Mt^

M *nd Johnny An-

match between Al Roberts and Mickey Shannon, light heavyweight*. In the fourth round Robert* wa*

down and took a count of when the bell *av#d hllh from g a knockout. Robert* recuperand waited into Shannon, with

the result that Shannon wa* knocked to the floor unconscious in the sixth

He died later In a hospital, being due to internal hemorShannon, whose rifht name wa* Raymond McMillan. ■' was a star football pi ■if

let* at Davt* and Elkin* College, i West Virginia. Robert* wa* arrested on the charge of manslaughter, but it Is thought he will be discharged. Roberts was outweighed

twelve pounds.

ii arMooresvf lie

team, which ha* won seven out j

of eight game* *o far thi* season. ; Babb and Klein, formerly of the Lrnlloes, play guard and forward, assisted by Curtl*. Lay and Taylor and | form a formidably team, which t* gradually tightening its claim on the independent championship of the

state. . , The Elk*’ fine record, however,

makes the I. A- C. warriors more eager. Buschell, Bartholomew, Gass, O'Connor, Schmidt. Carter. Trench

W Streeter, form the

Three-Cash los Title Final*.

-« -ere g.MTiiVift Bi j I

“Rfhen I see one of these braves; Bob Cannefax came from behinY in ; plan. They are*about half the worif*; winning Combination. Pitted against i ow u dub and he hopes to close one JJ-IV. al ?, n F*ide Madison Square j his match with Johnny Layton, of St. i of the minors, and their attitude Is'the freshman aggregation in the first j of two before the meeting is over, i-araen in a limousine and have a sec- j Louis, last night, and put the series - causing the magnates.of the big time , scrimmage of the year, the varsity! ' • re ^. r r. a T nd f “*?**9r ennounce his | in a triple tie by defeating Layton i circuit most concern. was barriy able to nose out the fresh-J arrival, I think of the old days when] 75 to 53. A win by Layton would Raising bell players has become a! men, 33 to I*. The varsity was un-j sum** Teams » »te. we nan to hide away from sheriffs 1 have given the St. Louis shark the very profitable pastime since the able to penetrate the freshman de- NEW YORK, December 10.—The and sneak out under cover of dark-j championship. draft ceased to allow the majors \l fense with any degree of regularity. . Kth ness to an old barn. When I seel Today Layton will play Clarence 1 fall harvest at bargain rates, and it! while the ‘’fresh’’ made several ef. •»**“ annual national junior Indoor these high financiers of the glove* Jackson, of Kafisas City, who is tied | may take a lot of talk about necessi- fectual bombardments on the basket, tennis championship tournament will I 'wtScliS*: . k f, re *dng robe, with Layton and Cannefax for the ties in the interest of baseball to get! A stilt signal practice last night be begun here on December 87. it was ? rt . Layton will also meet Canne- the minors to assume the draft rules olosAl Coach Levies preparations for announced today. Vincent Richards.

. , ■ | again. the Lwmtal tilt. Dean, center: Dobbin* l present champion, will defend his

ly.-- .°. ar L a *y* . w . 1> *! 1 * Prise fight- Augie'Kieckhefer, of Chicago, lost Some magnates In the International and Thomas, guards; Marxson and [title for the last time, *inbe he will er could be arrestedwjust for being his third straight game when Jack-! League, which by the way is divided I Schuler or Dehority, at forward, prob-fbe too old to compete for junior hon-

Ison defeated him. 75 to 79. ^ — ' -»■ - • •

found in a town.*'

League, which by the way is divided — — F ,vr«- , ue ivu v.i U on the annual issue of Dave FuIts, ’ ably will be in the game for Indiana. I ors next year. ■■■ min nil ii

f bampion hom*a Boat. rRISAL December 10.-

draw. eight

Boat.

10.—Georg* wo* given sloii over

down

>wn ^SgatlTTn gas floored In

?$fel

according 1 y"5fh’ ’’

Griffith

eayy over slx-

Boetoa Tar Baby Wfws. BUTLER MEETS TWO BIG TEN FIVES

l

o Union ’’Physical ngton "winter gar-

'‘rfWi-S-ssh from vi ech and the “ too confidei s game the

>r mr

i»** The

formerly i Ludy, Taylor

tm mM ‘ t»aiuJ | i | i™j* I® . The probable lineup follows: gilts i L A. O*

“ Bartholomew

Oa«« Buschell ... Schmidt ,. O'Connor

Night Football Provea Success in Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA. December 10.— The football season may be officially closed, but Philadelphian* are not through with the game. While the big college and amateur followers of the pigskin have soaked their tog* i*i moth balls, four score or more of Quaker boy**have Juat opened a sea-

son of "indoor football.

Ten thousand enthusiastic support-

r* of th* Kri< port weekly. Tayed in th* or noon. i

at-’

diron are s The gs evening

easing the

■BsoBnd City Troop, Ponnsyl•tate police, who Cor years have

part in Independetlc*. were the originew indoor sport. ManaMaguirc, formerly end

Jarg*

«nt state athle nators of th*

IMbh P

ill

nati

gir Joseph f. stagt

on the Villanova eleven, has arranged

a schedule that may extend throughout the winter. Ij*w Littte, former

Penn star. i» the coach.

Th* big new drill hall of the cavalry armory here, at one time planned to hold the biggest horse show* in these J* being used by the troopers

Mr workouts s * lib rival troo

for dalik workouts and weekly con-

tests wl

state.

The huge vaul far higher than th assssM te'h.r b -rmit sul rd pi J

rens in

10E BRANDY MAY GOACH. . SOUTH BEND, Ind., December 16.— Joseph Brandy, quarterback and field general of the Notre Dame football team for the last two years, has been called to St. Paul, Minn., to discus* a proposition whereby he would become coach of St- Thomas College. This Institution sent Caatner and Coughlin to Notye Dame.

Stasand Leads Wabash

ORAWFORDSVILLE. Ind., December 10.—George W. Stasand. of Harvey. HL, end on the Wabash College team for the last two years.

tball tea a elected at the b

puce on Winter Stove League Embers ild is of

uth I

“.u&i

' WABASH.

Yl

i lio e e Dam* tr Kasper i* | to pick an o its .

'

captain of the 1921 elev'-

last night at the Phi Delta house by Student Manager M. Green. Stasand 1* a sophomore in college and has two more years to play on the team. He was selected both last year and this as all-state end on The News eleven. Stasand Is one of the best ends the state has seen in years. He is also a basketball player and a member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity.

Stasand’s election to the meets with the hearty

the student body and seventeen men who received their footbi|.ll letters f

this week participated in tl

tion.

II til V^.

e captaincy

approval of

the elec-

NEW YORK, December 10.—Reports that Frank Frisch would be displaced as third baseman on the New York Giants next season were dented today * by Manager John J. McGraw, who has - returned from Cuba to attend a conon major league officials here w. McGraw said he considered one of the best third basemen . business. Joe Rapp, a recruit baseman obtained from St. 1 aul, led out at second base, Mc-

*t LITTLE ROCK, in —The United Stat

ut this w __

Ark., December 10. ites circuit court of

ppeals at Cincinnati has been asked j a motion filed by Charles Jacobson ttorney for the Little Rock baseball ‘ * to dismiss the appeal of Presi-

Martln. of the Southern Asso»n, In the case of Casey Smith B|H Seaton, pitchers, on the it Little Rock has no fur-

e two players, Mr. i announced today.

lGO, December 10.—Superinof Schools Peter Jorgenson. H la., has been signed to i Chicago White Sox next •a,a stated at the White Sox »rs today. Jorgenson was r of the Iowa State Teachers’ club several years, it was said.

men’s clothes

Christmas Wool Sox

NEW YORK, w.'

/

Special— .05

I#

_________

4!$,* m|| ii'fcuMmiNiR-

(ffisji ki MM

6 PAIRS $6 A wonderful Christinas gift for a man. Real wool sox, imported from England, in fine heather colors—brown, blue and green. Get them Saturday—they will sell quickly at this price. Regularly Priced, $1.75 Saturday, $1.05 (6 Pairs $6)

! ' ' |

I

■ -

iiiti

now

lie^iold

pre-war prices? Emphatically NO!

Not until wheat is

bushel

Not until daily papers sell for 1c • ^ • Not until 35c buys a big dinner Not until railroad fares are 2c a mile Not until bread sells at 5c a loaf Not until coal is $3.00 a ton Not until gasoline is 10c a gallon

To IndianapolisMen: You are confronted with a bewildering lot of advertising on men's clothing. DISCRIMINATE! Usually when clothes are quoted at extremely low prices they are of inferior quality. The value of a suit of clothes or 'overcoat depends upon the amount of service you get out of it. The prices at which we are offering our fine tailoring represent, in our judgment, the best values in America. Clothes of our quality can not be sold for any less money than we are selling them. KAHN TAILORING CO.

Ready-to-Wear SUITS and OVERCOATS

882 suits now In our stock at this one attractive price. Assortment includes all wool blue serges, gray worsteds, pencil stripes, blue cheviots, fancy Scotch mixtures, etc. Every garment made by own tailors.

our

Other Ready-to-Wear Suits and Overcoats now $26.75 to $$8.75

Made-to-Measare SUITINGS and OVERCOATINGS *

We are now showing 57 different patterns in suitings and overcoatings at this special price, any one of which can be made to your own dimensions in a fashion that pleases you. Woolens include gray herringbones, brown Scotch mixtures, bice serges, novelties, pencil stripes, checks, etc. Other Made-to-Measure Suitings and Overcoatings now $37.50 to $68.50

Not until these things come to pass can you buy clothes at pre-war prices!

KAHN TAIL

=''A. -

Kahn Dealers

are

Offering

G CO.

A ?

Low Prices

Wathington and Meridian

-SI?#

■" 1

SBiHKHUliSRIBSHHIHMH*MMMH**HHI*BH*S*MSMMSSM*MSSSM*BS

1SS

v r , ^ :«>.

—— ■

jfMifflMMZliW

Wil