Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 144, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1925 — Page 23

FRIDAY, OCT. 16,1925

LOTS OF ACTION IN B I GT E N Three Western Conference Games and Two Intersectional Battles Saturday. liy Edward C. Derr United Press Staff Corresvondcnt CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—Interest of i.iiddlewestern football fans Saturday will be centered in three Big Ten ames of almost equal importance, i hree intersectional games and one trictly eastern engagement which will have a bearing on later intersectional struggles. Illinois, with a line that has been

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Knute Rockne’s Squad

IN EAST TO PLAY ARMY Ends—Captain Crowe, Voedißch, Walsh, White, Wallace. Benda. Tackles—Quinn. Boland, McMullen. McManmon. Doran, Polish. Guards—Morrelli, J. Smith. E. Crowe, Mayre. Eggert, R. Smith, Whalen. Centers—Maxwell. Murrin, Boeringer. Quarter Backs—Scharer, Edwards, Riley, McNally, Half Backs —Flannigan. O’Boyle, Roach. Coughlin. Heardou. Dahman, Cody. Prelli. Full Backs —Wynne, Enright, Hanousek.

showing improvement and is now believed capable of opening some big holes for Red Grange, goes to lowa City to engage the tough Hawkeyes. If lowa can do as well as Nebraska did in stopping Grange, the Illini will be out of the Big Ten race. Feature at Madison Michigan travels to Madison, Wis., to meet Coach George Little’s Badger squad. The Wolverines showed a powerful attack las£ week in defeating Indiana, 63 to 0, but should find the going rougher against Wisconsin, which has been picked by

! many as a likely title contender. Coach Stagg’s Chicago Maroons go to battle against the greatly improved Northwestern team in the annual football “city series.” It will be a contest between the straight line attack of the Maroons and the open formations of the Wild Cats. Two Big Ten teams take on eastern elevens, Ohio State meeting Columbia at Columbus and Indiana engaging Syracuse at Blpomington. At New Haven The Yale-Pennsylvania game at New Haven will be watched with more* than passing interest because both Chicago and Illinois are to meet Pennsylvania later in the season and fans are anxious to know the strength of this year's Pennsylvania team. The remaining members of the Big Ten engage in so-called practice, Minnesota taking on Wabash College at Minneapolis and Purdue doing battle against Rose Poly at Lafayette.

CLASS TELLS (Continued From Page 22)

by rain, and it was finished under extremes of circumstance. Old Barney Johnson went out to win his third victory ‘of the series, and he was in trouble fro mthe very start. His fast ball worked wdll in the semi-darkness until the ball got wet, and then he lost control. The Pirates started after him then and did plenty. It must have been a sentimental pulse in the heart of Buck Harris that prompted him to leave his old veteran in the box when the peanut butchers in the stands knew he was through. It must have been the same sentiment in Harris that made him leave Stan Coveleskie in the box in the sixth game when even his own players knew Coveleskie had nothing. The wise minds of baseball today charged Harris with the loss of the World's series because he would not relieve Coveleskie and Johnson in time to take a chance on a relfef pitcher. The worst handicap the Senators had to carry was the feeble playing of Roger Peckinpaugh, their shortstop. Errors by Feck Peck, who was voted the most valuable player In the American League for 1925, blundered eight times and most of his errors were vital. Hi3 two errors in Thursday’s game helped the Pirates to win. His home run was only a temporary penance. The Pirate outfield outshone the veteran Washington outfield, the Pirate infield outsteadled and outstarred the Senators’ infield and the Pirate pitching staff out-lasted the Senator staff —and Washington had most of the breaks. There was the weather break against Johnson in the final game—but the Pittsburgh pitchers had to use a hall just as wet and just as tricky. The series . broke all records for receipts. The seven games played

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.THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Saturday College Grid

INDIANA TEAMS Franklin at Butler. Notre Dame vb. Army at Yankee Stadium. N. Y. Syracuse at Indiana U. Rose Poly at Purdue. Wabash at Minnesota. State Normal at De Pauw. Cedarville at Earl ham. Louisville at Hanover. Valparaiso at Kalamazoo. Manchester College at Indiana Central. OTHER GAMES (Homo Teams Listed First) Akron vs. Case. Alabama Poly vs. Texas. Arizona vs. Utah. Baylor vs. Trinity. Boston College vs. Boston University. Bowdoin vs. Wesleyan. Bradley vs. Chicago Y. Brown vs. Bates. Bucknell vs. Haskell. California vs. St. Mary’s. California Tech vs. Pomona. Canigiua vs. Quantleo. Centenary vs. Rollins. Chattanooga vs. Mercer. Chicago vs. Northwestern. Cornell vs. Rutgers. Dartmouth vs. Maine. Davis-Elkius vs. Duquesne. Dayton vs. John Carroll. Delaware vs. Swarthmore. Detroit vs. Georgetown. Fordham vs. Manhattan. Georgia vs. Furman. Georgia Tech vs. Florida. Harvard vs. Holy Cross. Idaho vs. Washingotn State. lowa vs. Illinois. g James Milltkin vs. 111. Wesleyan. Kansas vs. Kansas Agri.

to a gate of $1,182,854 on an attendance of 282,830. The previous mark for the gate was $1,093,104, set last year, with an attendance of 283,665. However, neither 1925 or 1924 scored the largest attendance record, the Giants and Yankees having played to 301,430 persons when they battled it out in 1923. Choosing of an outstanding hero of the series is an arduous task. For those statistically inclined a composite box score of the seven games will show Mabc Carey, the veteran center fielder of the Pirates, was the batting leader with eleven hits and a grand average of .458. Joe Harris, another veteran, led the Washington troops at the plate with a .440 average, also nailing eleven hits. Carey Fuse on Bases Carey also led in the number of stolen bases with three and Joe Harris attained another honor when his batting mark of twenty-two total bases stood way above his nearest competitor. Joe Harris tied Goslin for the home run honors with three each. Moore, with sei’en counters, led in the total number of runs scored and he also walked th£ most times, having been handed five passes. The final batting average of the Pirates was .265, and the Senators lagged by three points at .262. • Fielding honors also were won by the champions, with an average of .975, as compared with .966 for the Senators. Vic Aldridge, with two victories and no defeats, is the pitching leader. Kremer and Johnson are credited with two victories and one defeat each. The veteran Walter holds the strikeout mark for the series with fifteen fanned batters to his credit. ROZELLE SCORES K. O. Harry Rozelle, Indianapolis, 138 pounds, knocked out Jimmy Mains, 142, Newcastle, in the first round at Brandywine Park, near Greenfield, Thursday night. Mains went down twice before taking the final count. Rozelle’s aggressivness made short work of the scrap. He is under the management of L. C. Witt and desires matches on Tomlinson Hail cards. For bouts address 2508 Brookside Ave., or phono Webster 2865-W. WILLS WORKS OUT Bit United Press NEW YORJC, Oct. 16.—Harry Wills, the negro heavyweight, has begun working but for his twelveround bout with Floyd Johnson at Newark Oct. 26.

Kentucky vs. Wash-Lee. Lafayette vs. Colgate. Lehigh vs. W. Va. Wesleyan. Lombard vs. Viator. Maryland vs. Virginia Poly. Miami vs. Transylvania. Michigan Agri. vs. Centre. Missouri vs. Rolla Mines. Monmouth vs. Augustana. Montana vs. Gonzaga. Morningside vs. Creightpn. Muhlenberg vs. Lebanon Valley. Nebraska vs. Washington. Nevada vs. Pacific. New Hampshire vs. R. I. State. N. Y. Univ. vs. C. C. N. Y. N. Dakota vs. S. Dakota. Oberlin vs. Mt Union. Occidental vs. Redlands. Ohio State Vs. Columbia. Ohio Wesleyan vs. Ohio North'n, Oklahoma vs. Drake. Oregon vs. Pacific Univ. Otterbein va. Cincinnati. Penn State vs. Marietta. Pittsburgh vs. Gettysburg. Rice vs. Arkansas. St. Louis Univ. vs. Drury. St. Xavier vs. Wittenberg. Sewanee vs. Alabama. Springfield vs. Vermont. Toledo vs. Ohio University. Trinity vs. Union. Tufts vs. Norwich. Tulaue vs. Mississippi Agri. U. S. Navy Acad. vs. Princeton. Univ. Cal. So. Br. vs. Whittier. Univ. So. Cal. vs. Stanford. Vanderbilt vs. Tennessee. Wash.-Jeff. vs. Carnegie. Washington State vs. Idaho. Western Reserve vs. Wooster. W Va. Univ. vg,. Grove City. Wisconsin vs. Michigan. Yale vs. Pennsylvania.

Independent Football

The Tuxedo Maroona wfll practice Sunday morning at 9:30. All players woh expect to play must report. The Maroons will play the Central Bulldogs at Spades Park at 3:30. Sunday. The manager of the Belmont Tigers is asked to call Belmont 4200-ff and ask for Bill in regard to the game with the Acme A. A.s Sunday. The Brightwood football team will play in Bloomington Sunday. Brigtwood has a few open dates and would like to hear from Jasonville and Elwood, Address Joe Zimmerman in care of Bcmis Bag Company, Tho Fcrndale Triangles defeated the MaDleton A. C.. 36 to 0. A game is wanted by tho winners for Sunday. Call Belmont 2111. The Madison A. C. football team is reorganizing and anyone weighing between 130 and 170 pounds desiring a tryout is asked to report at Garfield Park gridiron next Sunday at 8 a. m. M’INTIRE IN FINE FORM IA 1 ads Field at All-Day Shoot at Indianapolis Gun Club. J. D. Mclntlre led the field at the all-day trap shoot of the Indianapolis Gun Club Thursday with a score of 211 out of a total of 225 targets. MeIntire won the singles event with 147 out of 150, anew mark for the year. Wiggam won the handicap, with 24 out of 25 at nineteen yards and also took the doubles with 44 out of 25 pair. THREE-CUSHION MEET Neal Jones defeated Harry Rubens Thursday night in the Staite threecushion billiard tourney at Cooler’s billiard parlor, by a score of 50 to 37. Safety play dragged out the match to ninety-four innings. Klein and Bosson meet tonight.

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QwfcQwz QUESTIONS 1. How far back of the line of scrimmage must the player be who throws a forward pass? 2. To what extent can the players in possession of the ball use their hands? 3. What Is the penalty If a player Is thrown to the ground after he lias signaled for and made a fair catch? ANSWERS 1. A player making a forward pass, whether handed or thrown, must do so from a point at least five yards back of the line of scrimmage. 2. The player carrying the ball may use. his hands and arms to ward oil au opponent. but no other players. 3. The maker of a fair catch is not to be thrown to the ground. Usually his idea is to escape being tackled when he so signals. If a player so offends, his team loses fifteen yards. KAPLAN MATCHED Bu United Press MONTREAL, Oct. 16. “Kid’ Kaplan, world's featherweight champion, is matched for ten rounds here Nov. 4, with Leo Roy, Canadian champion. SEEKS FRANCHISE Charleroi, Pa., will make an effort to get a franchise in the Middle Atlantic League, which it Is hoped will be an eight-club circuit next spring. The league got a late start the past season, first on a five-club and thep on a six-club basis, and did very well considering everything

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Important Ring Match for Atherton

Happy Atherton, local flyweight, with his manager, Nate Farb, wore in Detroit today, where Atherton meets Emil Poluso in a ten-round bout tonight. The boys will box at 114 pounds. The winner has been promised a

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FOOTBALL! NOTRE DAME vs. ARMY ON THE GRIi-GEAPH TOMLINS&H HALL 1:30 P. M m SAT. OCT. 17 ADMISSION 50c

match in Detroit with Frankie Go naro, former flyweight champion* Poluso halls from Salt Lake City) but ho Is now in the stable of Led P. Flynn of New York. Nate Farb only recently became the manager of Atherton, and he is trying to push the local lad toward the top in the flyweight ranks. Other boxers managed by Farb are Merle Aalte, Tommy Irwin, Louie Epstein and Frankie Smith.

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