Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 153, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1922 — Page 6
6
Conference Football Race May End With Teams in Tie for First Place
HUMUS IN HE TEI US YET IRE iDEFESTED lowa Does Not Meet Strongest Contenders Saturday’s Games True to Form. BADGER CARD DIFFICULT Wisconsin and Illinois Winners Over Minnesota and Northwestern Elevens. By Charles R. LYNCH. United Press Staff Carrcspnndent CHICAGO. Xov. 6. —The race for thè "Western Conference football champoinship narrowed down to four today. Chicago, lowa, Michigan and Wis consin were stili undefeated and indications based on thè remaining games to be played were that there would he a tie for fìrst place. lowa, last -years champions, must play, Minnesota, Ohio State and Northwestern. Wisconsin must tackle Michigan, Illinois and Chicago. Michigan must beat Wisconsin and Minnesota and Chicago has yet to play Ohio State, Illinois and Wisconsin. The Ohìo-Chicago and Wisconsin - Mlchigan games probably will determine thè victors. lowa this year does not meet "Wisconsin, Michigan or Chicago, which aie three of thè most powerful teams of thè Conference. tteturdayVj oatlles ran truj to forni. "Wisconsin outplaved Minnesota and wiiL, 14-0. Illimvs triumphed over Noi thwestern. 6 3. SPECTACULAR TIE GAME FOUGHT OUT IN KOKOMO By Times Special KOKOMO, Ind., Nov. 6.—ln thè fastest and hardest fought football ' game played in Kokomo this season : thè Kokomo American Legion team i played a tie game with thè Conger- j ville Flvers Sunday. The score was 6 to 6. CongerviUe defeated thè Ko- ! komo team a week ago by a 7 to 3 score. The CongerviUe team will play j thè Femdales at Indianapolis Sunday. | Nov. 12, and thè Kokomo team will j play Sheridan at Kokomo on that date, j Kokomo male ita score early in thè ! flrst i-“'iod. Cardwell booted a punt | sivty yr.rds and King was onside and ! for on thè ball. It was Kokomo’s bali on thè eleven-yard Une. Buckholtz plunged over for a touchdown. CardweU’s place kick in a try for polnt went wild. In thè second period thè Muncle eleven scored. Kokomo was rushlng thè ball up thè field when Buckholtz fumbled. Cooper, Muncle center, scooped up thè ball and dashed forty yards for a touchdown. Cooney Checkave tried a place kick In a try for point, which was blocked. The second half was a desperately fought battle. Eii Fenters, former Pine Yillage star, went lnto quarter for Kokomo. In thè return of a punt Fenters made a forty-yard rur. through a broken field. Muncle was penalized Ave tlmes for holding in thè final period. Mlckey Mole was forced to pur.t from behind Ma own goal line. Cardwell forward passed and Siane intercepted thè pass and ran fifty yards before being tackle! by Fenters. Time was called with thè ball on thè Kokomo twenty-ftve-yard line. PRINCETON AND HARVARD By United Xrsrt NEW YORK. Nov. 6.—Both Princeton and Harvard carne through Saturday’s games with Swarthmore and Florida respectlvely, with vlctories and without injury to any of thè regalar stare who are to flght thè flrst of thè “Big Three” battles at Princeton next Saturday. Baker and Tlilson were thè only regulars used by Princeton in overwhelming Swarthmore, 22 to 13, at Princeton. Harvard not only started with a team largely made up of seconda, but sound Florida so easy that seventeen substitutions were made in thè Crimson team. SOCCER GAME A TIE The Westvllle, 111., team and Indlanapo is Soccer Club played a 1-to--1 tie Sunday at thè locai field. Both of thè scores carne In thè second half. The locala kept thè ball In thè visltors’ territory through thè opening half, but could not put over a goal. Foreythe of thè locals booted a goal In thè second period. The Westvllle tram rallied and tied thè count. Both tfams played strong defenslve games. MATHEWS GOES UP By Time* Special MILWAUKEE. Nov. 6.—Matthews. outflelder of thè Milwaukee American Associatlon club last season, has been sold to thè Philadelphia Americana in exchange for two payers and a flnancial conslderatlon. Bave Keefe, pltcher, and Frank Catlaway, infielder, come to thè Brewers In thè deaL Grapplers Break Even The Grapplers and thè Tuexado Club played a hard fought game Sunday aftemoon at Woodside Park which ended In a score of oto 0. The Grapplers will practice Tuesday and Fri day cvenlng at thè corner of Southeastem and Wolcott Sts. AU players are urged to attend. For games with thè Grapplers cali Clrele 2268 and ask for Paul. Amo Win Opener By Time Special AMO, Ind., Nov. 6.—ln thè opening game of thè season at Amo thè locai basket-ball flve won from Stileevllle, *2 to 24. The flrst half ended, 10 to 15, In favor of Amo. The locale play Pie In field. Nov. 10 at Plalnfleld and Roachdsle, Nov, 11 at Roachdaie.
TOOK NAVY TO STOP HIM , ‘:V----f jggP;^ % ■ 9 : ~ ' jgfcfc . Wfc***- 1 I V M f| \ w m if V. ' ?*: '■ . , ... / -. V - COACH HUGO BEZDEK
Three years without a defeat untll last FYiday. That is thè unique recc~d of Penn State. Penn State is coached by Hugo Bezdek, who gained football fame ;is a player at thè University of Chicago. Bezdek. who is now director of athletics at Penn State, has also dabbled In professional baseball For several years he managed thè Pittsburgh team of thè National League with mediocre success. The remarkable record made by Penn State was not made iiossible by Eli ELEIIEfiS “ DO WELLS Eli!!! On thè locai lndependent grid Sunday thè Riversldes met thè hardost opposltlon and gained a tie with thè fast Shelbyville eleven. The Belmonts and Ferndales had rather easy tlmes with thè Ft. Harrison team and Arllngton, respectlvely. The Itlverside A. A. plcked a tough customer In thè Legion team from Shelbyville and a great battle was thè result. Both scores carne as thè result of forward passes. . The visi torà countod in thè flrst quarter on a long pass from Ilaynes to Britton. Livingston kleked goal. Just before thè flrst half ended a thirty-yard pass engineered by thè Weaver brofhers gave thè locals a touchdown. D. Weaver went over for thè marker and tied thè count with a place-kick on thè try for point. The teams were evenly'matched. The Ferndales opened up on Arllngton in thè last half and defeated that team. 25 to 0. Nameloe, thè new fullbaok of thè Ferndales, was a star throughout. Ho went over with two of thè touchdowns. and was In thè game up to his neck at all tlmes. Nelson, who was seriously hurt In thè Sheridan contest, got back into t|jo game and scored a touchdown. A forward pass, Sapp to Joe Hopkins, counted another touchdown. The Northam brothers and thè Wllcozens showed up well for Arlington. Out at Washington Park thè Ft. Harrison team took another beating. The Belmonts ran up 40 points on thè eoldlers, aster thè Fort eleven had held them to 0 points In thè flrst half. The final two perioda tumed Into a rout-
INDEPENDENT AND AMATEUR FOOTBALL
The Briffhtwood A. C defeated thè Northweetem lndependent* by a scoro of 15 to 0 Sunday. The game was featured by runa made by Roy Wallace and John McGire, half backs for thè Brighiwood team. Wallace made two touchdowns. Cbel Bowmau. full back for Brightwood. played a faat game. A week afo Hrightwood A. C. defeated thè Riley Tiger by a 12-to-0 score. Manager of teams wishing to schedule games with thè Briehtwood A. C., telephone Brightwood Y. M. C. A. aster 7 p. m. and ask for Harry. PORTLAND. Ind.. Nov. B—The Porti and Our BoJ-s football team eh alien g -any team in thè 150-pouud c!an in thè State for games to be played at Portland. Ind. All manager wishing to answer will please state terms and addreas Communications to Horuer Schanip. manager. Olir Boys football team. Portland. Ind. No teajna not fully uniformed need auswer. Tho Y. M. 8. football team will meet thè Squtheastems next Sunday at Garfield Park. Practice wiil be held Wednesday night. Thnse players not presont at practice will r.ot piay In Sunday’ game. Tho Y. M. S. wiil flnisher tho season in thè city and want games with thè Garflelda. St. Phillips and spades. The Southeastem Seconda defeated thè Hercules in a hard-fought game by a score of 6 ot 0. The Southeasterns will practice Wednesday at 7 o’eloek at Spruee St. and Spana Ave. Culver Has Open Date By Times Special CULVER, Ind., Nov. 6.—Culver Milltary A cadérti y has an open date Saturday Nov. 11. Manager J. F. Grant wants to schedule a game for that date. Manager of teams wanting a game on that day are requested to wlre J. F. Grant, Culver Military Academy, Culver, Ind.
Politicai Advertisement ELOKft.HUTCHISON FOR ASBESSOB WAYNE TOWN Siiti’ K E PI" BUCA N TICKET VOTINO MACHINE NO. 50-A I ask thè support of all who belleve In efficieney, economy and good government, regardless of party affiliatlons; nnd extend greeting to all k>vers of our American republic. hoßg for good wageg and prosperlty t^J|i.
a weak schedule. Of tho thlrty games played during thè undefeated era most of them have been against elevens like Pittsburgh. Cornell, Harvard, Navy, Dartmouth, Nebraska, Georgia Tech and Pennsylvania. Of thè thirty games played silice t'ne start of thè vlctory etrlng, twen-ty-flve were victorles. Penn State was tied twice by Pittsburgh, once by. Harvard, once by Syracuse and once by Lehigh. The long string of vlctories was broken Iti Washington. D. C., yesterday when thè Navy downed thè Staters, 14 to 0.
H. S. Football Saturday Male (Louisville). 13: Techntcal (Indianapolis). 7. ITincctoa. 14: Flcknell, 0 Elwood. 38: Noblesvill®, 0. On rf, 34 : Perù. 0. Richmond, 24: Bluftton. 0. Wj.uo (ToUdo), 1*1; Lane TecbnlcaJ (Chh-ago). O. Jasonviilc. 31: BloomflelU, 0. Warsnw, 27: Central (Ft Wayne). O. Provisi* (Chicago), £4: Fitchburg (Mass.), 9. Garflcld (Terre Haute), 28; Reltx (Evans ville), 14. (Dayton), 27: Dii vai (Jacksonville, Eia). 0. W baab, t:: Jefferson (Lstayette), 0. Howe, 13: Coidwaler, 6. Klrkhn, 4 : Montlccllo. 0. Central (Ft. Wayne), 35: Central (Toledo), 34. Two Ticket Each NEW HAVEN, Nov. 6. —To meet thè demand for tickefs for tho Yale Harvard game, graduaf.es will Vie allowed only two, instead of three, tlckets. No tickets will bo offored for public sale. Nlnety thousand appllcatlons have been recelved and only 76,000 cari be accommodated.
Strauss Says FELICI TAT lONS To our distinguished townsman —Frederic M. Ayres—his partners —and to thè honored institution —L. S. Ayres & Co. jfERE is a very riose rolationship—a sort of commin gl ing of past procedure that Aiake our congratulations upon this, vour Golden Anniversnry, Romething far deeper than perfunctory expressions. Many, manv years ago, when but a small Strauss store occupied pari of tiie present. Ayres site, you not Hi ed us, ivitli tho utmost eonsideration, to “vacate”—but turned over to us thè fine, spacious quarters you then occupied (our present, location), and enabled two businesses to expand where two were cramped before. Business is but Ilio lengthened sliadow of one man —in thè Ayres store you ohserve Mr. Ayres, and in Mr. Ayres you ohserve thè store. Always there is tìuit flavor of courtesy and civility—always that, graeiousness and refinement —always that spirit of “I serve.” The principles on which thè Ayres store rest are imperishable—and we can visualize no finer future for L. Strauss & Company than that it fili thè edifices you vacate for more imposing and vaster structures In thè years to come—to continue to walk In thè footsteps of honor of which you are such a worthy exemplar. AGAIN OU R FELICITATIONS. f Presldent. L. Strauss and Co.
jfibfìfr <7 a c* \ts a '
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PURDUESTfIGES RESI COMEBRGK Boilermakers Brace and Give Wabash Terrific Battle — Notre Dame Plays to Form. CASTNER SHINING STAR Rose Puts Up Stubborn Defensó Against Butler —Griggs Fails to Kick. The dopo ran fairly true over thè week-end as far as Indiana football was concerned, although Butler was expected to run up more of a score against Rose Poly and some fans thought Wabash would be a lugger wlnner over Purdue. Purdue was thè team to givo thè best account of itself In tho Saturday battles. The Boilermakers, staglng a come-back aster their dlsastrous beating at thè hands of lowa, fought every minute of thè timo against Wabash and lost by thp narrowest margin of one point, 7 to 6. A blocked punt in thè last quarter proved thè undoing of Phelan's team. Duffin, substitute quarter for Wabash, kicked thè hall over for thè point needed to win aster Knee had plunged through thè line for a touchdown. Penalty Hurts Scarlet A peculiar penalty carne up at thè start of thè second half. Wabash was not on tho field when timo was eajled and received a penalty of twenty-flve yards. Purdue started a march at ! this timo that carrled thè ball over, with Wellman making thè final ! piange. Butler used second string men ! against Rose and got a surprise at thè way thè Engineers fought. There were no scores in thè second half. 'I he final count was 19 to 0. Griggs tried numernus place klcks, but could not got thè ball over. He missed fìve dlfferent attempts at dlstances ranging from twenty-flve to fifty-flve yards. Long runs were made by Northam | and Huagate. The Rose defense was much bettor in thè final half and Butler was held for down on several occasians. Forsythe and Miller stood out : for Poly. Castner Day at N. D. In thè Notre Dame homecomlng game with Indiana. Paul Castner played wonderful football. The versatile 1 risii star thrilled thè huge crowd with bis marvelous work. He score<l | all three touchdowns, kicked for point aster each, and booted two field ì gfiiils sor si total of 27 points. Indiana : was seldom dangerous on thè attack 1 and made only three flrst downs. j The flrst half ended 7too In favor ì of Notre Dame, but Castner was feol Ing Just rlght In thè last half nf thè pamfì and ran wild. Hb wm ably na sistoli by Don Miller. Notre Dame i started a second string backfleld nnd i ended up with numerous subs in tho game. Tt was Castner s day. i 7 ),, pauw showed great strength ! against Kenyon and from indications Butler bas a task on it hands next j Saturday when thè Mothodists are met on Irvvln field. Tho De Pauw ati tnck swept everything in its patii and ! Kenyon failed to make one flrst down : through thè line. Earlham went over lnto Ohio to 1 play Musklngum College and was de jfeated, 12 to 0. Hanover swamped I Oakland City College 66 to 0.
Play ing thè Field
With Eddie Ash THE week-end produced its cluster of upsets as per usuai. Some dopesters are stili battlng .000 and thè grid season is in its last stages. Where is that man who said Nebraska could beat Harvard on Monday, Yale on Tuesday and Princeton on Wednesday? IT finaljy A crowd at an lndependent football game In thè East beat up on thè referee. The old grid sport is taklng a Arai hold on thè public. Rose was not easily plucked. The Rutlerltes had a hang-over from thè Wabash game., When Wabash gets witlhin scoring distane® Mr. Knee takes thè ball and over it goes. That man certainiy must have gunpowder In his shoes. Pennsy was going so well until Alabama arrived in Quakertown. That WAS an upset. TENNIS Champ Tllden lost a pari of a finger, but amputatlng his title will not be so easy. They’ll have to handicap Bill more than that to lower bis rank. COMING events: De Pauw and Butler, Notre Dame and Butler, De Pauw and Wabash. All for thè entertainment of Indianapolis fans. THE Boilermaker is becoming stronger. Be careful, Crimson! IT takes a fast movie camera to catch that man Castner of Notre Dame In action. Frank Merrlwell of fiction fame never was better. IF there are any more threats than three, Castner has ’em. AR M Y scout will become tongue tied this week teiling West Point conche of Castner’ prowess. THE De Pauw Tiger may do some unexpected scratching on Irwln Field Saturday. The Tiger has been fed carefully and is twltching for a lunge. A SURETHING gambler got thè fìrst half score of tho Lafayette-W. and J. game Saturday and went out and hooked a bet at even money. Lafayette waa leadlng 13 to 0 and ho thought he had a sucker. W. and J. made him sick. LOOK what's loomlng next Saturday —Wabash tackles that gigantic Presi dentini outflt, Washington and Jefferson. That's big league football. Eagles Beat Delta The Engle As. basket-ball team defeated thè Delras by a score of 21 to 13. Ktinkle starred for thè Eagiea. | The Eagles play at Ft. Harrison Tue- , day night. Any one wishlng to ac- ! company thè team be at Sprlng and North Sts. at 6:30 p. m. For games cali Main 6274.
The Best Governor Indiana Ever Had
VOTERS! JUDGE HIM BY HIS RECORD He brought thè State out of debt thè first time in 82 years. At thè end of his administration he left a balancè in thè state treasury of $3,700,000 Pulì thè Demoeratlc Lever and Vote Tuesday for SAMUEL E RALSTON For United States Senator and thè Straight Democratic Ticket Demoeratlc County Commlttee, RUSSELL J. RYAN, Chairman.
GOULLET AND KOCKLER WIN SIX-DAY BIKE RACE CHICAGO, Nov. 6. —Goullet and Kockler won thè slx-day bike race here by adding points in thè final hour of sprinting Saturday night. The winning palr proved easily thè class of thè meet scoring 633 points in all. Coburn and Lands were second place winners with a score of 490 points. Thomas and Hanly of San Francisco finished third with 470 points. More than 9,000 fans jammed into thè Coliseum to see thè final night of racing and an exciting evening of sprinta rewarded them. Goullet and Kockler were forced to sprint conin thè final hour and always responded nobly. Goullet won nine of thè twenty-three sprinta in thè final hour. Kockler turned in points on seven sprints. SIKI SEEKS MOVIE FAME By United Actcs PARIS, Nov. 6.—Battling Siki has determined to reach for artistic honors. He has signed to play thè leading roles in two motion plctures, to be produced in France. Whether thè locale will be a jungle or a zoo has not been ascertained.
Saturday’s College Grid Scores
State Butler. 19: Rose Poly. 0. De Pauw. 34: Kenyon, 7. Notre Dame, 27: Indiana, 0. Wabash, 7: Purdue. 6. Muskingum, 12: Earlham. 0. Hanover. 06: Oakland City. 0. Conference Illinois, 6: Northwestern, 3. Wisconsin. 14: Minnesota. 0. Other Game* Alabama. 9: Penn.. 7 Auburn. 7: Georgia, 3. Army, 62: Bonaventure 0. Akron, 21: Ohio Northern, 6. Boston. 15; Villa Nova. 3. Bucknell, 33; Muhlenberg. 6. Bates, 0; Massachusetts Aggles, 0. Colorano. 7; Colorado Agirle. 0. Clarkson. 7; Norwich University, 0. Carletoa, 39: McAlllater. 12. Cornell. 50: Columbia. O Carnegie Tech. 7 : Aliogheny, 0. Centre, 27; Kentucky. 3. Coe, 21 ; Alblon. 7. Colgate. 3.V Lehigh, 6. Colby, 7: Lowell Textlle. 0.Dayton, 20: Ignattua. 13. Detroit. 6; Lombari. 0. Drake. 14. Amea. 7. Delawarc. 7; Steven. 0. Denison. 10; Wooster. 0. Dartmouth, 10: Boston, 7. Denver. 0: Wyoming 0. Franklin and Marshall, 42: Penn Millitary, 0 Georgia Tech, 21 : Cletneon, 7. Gettysburg. 23: Dickmon. 0. Harvard, 24; Florida, 0. Haverford. 48: Gnilford. 0. Hobart. 7; Union. 7. Holy Cross. IO: Georgetown. 0. John Hopkins, 3.V. West Maryland. 0. Kansas Aggies, 14: Missouri. 10. Kaiisas IT., 19: Oklahoma 3. Michigan, 03; Michigan Aggies. 0. Maine. 7: Bowdoin, <> Marietta. 0: Grovc City, 0 Mt Union. 32; Case. 0 Middlebury. 6. Tufi (' New York. 18; Trlnlty. 0 North Carolina State. 15 Davison, 0. North Carolina. 19 Tulaiie. 12. Ntrth Dakota, 7 North Dakota Aggies, 0. Otterbein. 20; Heidelberg. 0. Oberili). IS: Wtttenberg. 0. Princeton. 22: Swathmore. 13 Pittsburgh. 02: Genera College, o. Stanford 17: Nevad. 7. St Xavier. 13; Ohio University. 7. Pi. Lawrence. 0: Hamilton. 3. 8t Louis, 14: Rolla Mirice. 7. Syracuse. 9: Nebraska. 0 Brwar.ee, 7: South Carolina. 0. „ St Ignatitis. 13; Dayton. 20. Springfield. 17; Fordham, 0. T-xae. 29; Rice. 9. Tulsa. 13; Arkansas, 0. Union. 7: Hobart, 7. Virginia Military Instltute. 02; Catholic T'niversity. 0.
{POLITICAI- ADVERTISEMENT)
******•+*. SAMUEL M. RALSTON Por U. S. Senator
Four Contests Left on W. and J. Card; Wabash Next Foe of Presidents
By United A’et cs WASHINGTON. Pa„ Nov. 6.—Coach Greasy Neale’s victorious Washington and Jefferson football team, which, on Saturday, b ya game struggle defeated Lafayette, 14 to 13, at thè Polo Grounds, New York, has four more games to play and a fair chance to pass through thè season without being defeated. Washington and Jefferson now has played eighteen games without losing, thè record extending back into thè lattor games of thè 1920 season. To dose this year with a record of not being defeated in twenry-two games Washington and Jefferson must tie or defeat Wabash College of Crawfordsville, Ind., here next Saturday. Wabash defeated Purdue on Saturday and has been downed only once this year. Purdue scored thè only touchdown which has crossed thè Wabash goal so far in 1922. Butler College of Indianapolis, which defeated Illinois a few weekes ago, recently conquered Wabash with three field goals, 9 to 7. Wash-Jeff must meet Pittsburgh, Detroit and West Virginia also.
Vand'-rbilt. 14: Tennessee, 0. Virginia Poly. 21: Maryland, 0. Virginia, 22; Washington and Lee. 6. Vermont. 33; New Hampshire State, 0. Western Reserve, 18; Hiram. 0. W. and J., ! 14: Lafayette, 13. Williams, 27: Renssalaer. 7. West Virginia Wesleyan, 28: Duquesne, 0. Mt. St. Mary s, 18: Washington, 14. West Virginia, 34: Cincinnati, 0. Yale, 20; Brown, 0. JONESBORO LOSES By Tlmes Special JONESBORO, Ind., Nov. 6.—ln a game wltnessed by 2,500 football fans thè Jonesboro team lost to thè Cincinnati Celts by a score of 7 to 3 Sunday. It was thè fìrst game lost by Jonesboro this year. The Jonesboro team seven times rushed thè ball to thè Celts’ ten-yard line, but lost Uon downf "Chunk” Hejvle scored a drop kick for Jonesboro from thè thirty-five-yard line in thè third period. A Jonesboro man fumbled a punt late In thè fourth penod and thè Celts' end recovered thè ball on thè elght-yard line. A criss-cross worked well and thè Celts scored a touchdown on thè next play. It was thè largest crowd that ever wltnessed a game in Jonesboro. REFEREE IS BEATEN By Time* Special MANCHESTER, N. H„ Nov. 6. Fred Hoey, a referee in a game between Haverhill and Manchester independent teams, was severely beaten afv.er thè game by a crowd of spectators who did not like a decision that was rondered during thè contest. In spile of police protection Hoey was struck several times. At thè start of tlie fourth quarter Hoey permltted a touchdown. claiming thè ball was over thè goal line. Some of thè spectators dlsagreed.
NET KING EOSES mTOEFINGEI! Injury Damages Tilden’s Rac-quet-Wielding Hand—Can Continue in Game. INFECTED FROM SCRATCH Big Bill May Be Able to Change Grip and Retain Tennis Laurels. By United News PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 6. —William T. Tilrlen, tennis Champion, will losa thè upper portion of his middle finger on his right hand from thè distai joint, Dr. W. B. Swartley, attending physician, announced today. ‘‘The terminal phalanax has become gangrenous. The upper portion of thè finger is very loose now and may drop off any day,” thè physician stated. Tilden’s finger was scratched in a recent tennis match when he collided with a wlre backstop whlle chasing a line drive. He pald little attentlon to thè injury untll thè finger became infected. Losing thè upper end of thè middle finger of his right hand from thè distai joint. may not put an end to thè tennis star's career, according to his doctors. Tilden can now get a little motion in thè lower end of thè infected finger and with timo may be able to revolutionize his grip on thè racquet so as to retain his championshlp hold. Seven incisions have been made en Tilden s finger and at thè time Of thè operations thè pressure was so great as to cut off thè blood supply. GENE SARAZEN QUITS PITTSBURGH GOLF CLUB By Times Special PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 6. Eugene Sarazen. professional at thè Highland Country Club, has termlnated his contract with that club, it was announcei Sunday. The committee announced that Sarazen wantel a fiat contract of $5.000, thè prosit on thè sale of supplies and permission to absent himself without notice to play in meets. It is understood that thè open golf Champion will accept an offer from thè Westchester-Biltmore Club of Rye, N. Y. The Pittsburgh club felt that thè young Champion would not be able to serve thè club more than a few weeks next season if all his toumey plana were carried out. H. S. Basket-Ball Greencastle. 28; Eminenee. 21. Shade’and. 25; Eminence, 21. Shadeland Seconda. 57; Oakland Seconda. 4. „ „ Oaklandon Girla, 4: ShadMand Gira, -. Cumberland. 32: Lawrence. 13. TNiiford. 37: Orleans. 15. West Badfn. 25: I.oocootee. 23.
Will Make thè Best U. S. Senator Indiana Ever Will Have
ìsOV. tì, 1922
