Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 146, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1925 — Page 9

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SilililillliHHilJlllllillllllllUllltllllliiUlllllllltttUllllllllilllillUlUllUUUlliU TIRRIN’ the DOPE By VEDDER 6ARD

rjnHE country seems over-run ll* I I with formidable football L * I teams this fall. We can not remember when there was so mucli strength shown in all sections by the various grid elevens. The East is bristling with power and the Middle West is not far behind, if It is behind at all. Pennsylvania, appears to bo the class of the East with Michigan possibly the best in this section of the football universe. But these two can not rest back on any laurels. There are any number of teams ready to kick over the dope bucket on the 'slightest opportunity. Stars of former seasons are being pressed hard to keep their places in the front rank. Two new luminaries flashed in the Big Ten when Kutsch of lowa and Benny Friedman of Michigan did their stuff. The Hawkeye star is only a sophomore, but is leading the Western Conference in scoring. Friedman is second in points scored. Ohio (State 'believes it has another Chick Harley in Marelt, but as yet the soph has not done anything startling. Al Kruzq of Pennsylvania is a terrific plunger and looks like one of the greatest backs in the East. . Eddie Tryon, the veteran Colgate F player, is leading his section in points scored. * * • o : ACROSS THE BOARD TODAY : o The last day at Latonla was not productive of any Rood resul’fs ns far as the bankroll was concerned. The Runt made more of a runt out of the B. R. Kinc Nadi was withdrawn and there was no action on the narlay with Cornelian. Vietoire was out of the dough. Patricia .1 was third at Laurel. The roll today has shrunk to $1(57.00. As Latonia closed on Saturday we’ll hop over to Laurel until Churchill Downs Rets under way Thursday at Loulsvlir.e. Today we will take some chances in an effort to get back some of the coin lost at latonia. Twenty-five dollars Roes on BAR LIGHT in the first. ‘ This one probably will he the favorite, but favorites win occasionally. PAAVO in the fourth is as fast as his namesake. Nurmi, and will Reta $25 across the board play. We will hook up COBRA in the second with CALIGULA In the sixth and CIJIiIK in the seventh in a $lO win, place and show play. Twenty-five also goes on CLIQUE to win. * * *

ET begins to look as though the Ferndales, local pro •football team, is going to have one of the best clubs that ever represented this city. The addition of Carmen, former Purdue player, and Drayer, who performed at Illinois, has taken care of the two tackle positions. Sunday against the Louisville Breclcs the line played fine ball. Carmen is especially powerful and is the kind that breaks through to block punts. He came mighty close on Sunday against a mighty fine punter, Wiggs. The backfield showed power and speed with Duttenhaver, formerly of Butler, and Zlvich, late of I. U., adding much zip to the attack. The team worked in smoother fashion after another week’s drill under Coach Erehart, but still was not quite ready to take full advantage of its potential power. If the same players are retained the team will improve steadily into an aggregation hard to stop. * * * r— >sLL of the larger Indiana A schools have been defeated this fall on the gridiron. They have not all been beaten by State teams, but have been forced to take the short end of the score, nevertheless. Notre Dame, almost always the pride of Hoosierdom, got a real lacing Saturday by the Army. Purdue, Indiana, Butler, Wabash, De Pauw, Franklin — all have lost, although the season is only three, or at the most, four Saturdays old. * * * *-T-| LETTER from L. B. S. I /VI says not to forget Technical High School when picking the strong prep football teams of the State. L. B. S. predicts a .State championship for the local team. We only hope this Is true, hut more can he said about It after that Muncie game on next Friday afternoon. It will be a severe test for the Green and White. Muncie was surprised on Saturday by a fighting Marion team which succumbed only after a real struggle, V to 0. The game was played on a muddy field and seemed to be the old case of an over-confident team meeting one which was keyed up to the battle. Indianapolis fans will have a chance to see two high school teams this week which are rated among the best in Indiana. Emerson of Gary and Manual play at irwin Field on Wednesday and Muncie is at Tech field on Friday. * * * Mrs. Malaprop said today she saw where the Army had to be called out to heat Notre Dame and that such "goings on" was illegible. according to her deception of the matter. The old lady was horrified to read where someone shot off-tackle and when she came to the point where “an aerial barrage was loosed" she jumped to her feet in Indignation and exclaimed, "It. an outrage to teach young men such benignant habits.” * * • m|F you didn’t happen to noI tice it, may we call to your i attention the fact that none of the Big Three teams ih the East won last Saturday. Can you remember when that happened before? Holy Cross defeated Harvard, 7 to fi; Pennsylvania downed Yale. 16 to 13. and Navy and Princeton tied at 10-all. * * * We know at lest three teams which looked on that Army, score over Notre Dame with something like awe. They are Yale, Columbia and Navy. All of them play the Cadets later In the season.

LEADING ELEVENS OF 1924 OUT OF UNDEFEATED CLASS EARLY

HOOSIER ELEVENS DAMAGED Three Trimmed by Out-of-State Opponents—Butler Displays Class. State college football teeams'fared very badly against out-of-State opposition last Saturday, Notre Dame, Indiana University and Wabash falling by decisive counts. The size of the score piled up by the Army against the "Irish" was the biggest surprise. Although many believed the Cadets would win, none imagined such a overwhelming victory. Indiana came to life against Syracuse and gave the eastern club a real battle although the Orange decisively outplayed the Crimson. Minnesota was too powerful ror Wabash, which put up a game fight against a heavy outfit, Butler showed tho class of which it is capable against Franklin and ran up 23 points while holding the Baptists scoreless. Fans are looking forward with anticipation to the Wabash struggle next Saturday at Irwin Field. Purdue had no trouble in piling up a big or,lint against Rose Poly In a preparatory game for the Boilermakers' first Big Ten contest next Saturday against Wisconsin at Madison. De Pauw downed State Normal, Louisville beat Hanover, Earlham put it over Cedarville and Indiana Central had the better of the argument with Manchester College at the University Heights grid. The Wabash-Butler game is the big feature of next Saturday's State contests. Notre Dame has another tough one at Minnesota, Miami is at the Indiana “II” stadium, Evansville is at Rose 'Poly, State Normal at Franklin and Hanover at Earlham.

National Pro Grid

; SUNDAY GAMES Frankfort! Yellowjackeita. 14; Now York Giants. 0. Akron. 30 Canton, 3. Green Bay. 20: Rock Island, 0. Detroit, 6: Dayton, 0. Buffalo. 1!) Co'umbia. 6. Ohicaßo Card'nala. °l): Kansas City. 7. Chicago Bears, 7: Cleveland. 0. Pottsville, '34; Proviaence, 0.

WOLVERINES CONTINUE TO SHOW GREAT PUNCH Michigan Assumes Leading Role in Big Ten—Kutsch and Friedman Crowd Grange in Brilliance. By Edward C. Derr United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Oct. 19.—Red Grange is being crowded for individual honors in the Big Ten football conference. This fact was established in Saturday’s game in the Middle AVest.

Grange has lost little, if any, of his brilliance. His brilliant eightyyard run to a touchdown on the first play of Saturday’s game between Illinois and lowa showed that he is still fast and a serious threat, once he gets in the open field. But Grange is surrounded by a mediocre team that gives him few opportunities to show his brilliance and the fact remains that Red was overshadowed by lowa's "Flying Dutchman,” Nick Kutsch, w’ho

N. D. Hall Eleven Beats Legion

Utl Times Special KOKOMO, Ind., Oct. 10.—The flashy Notre Dame Hall grid squad came to Kokomo Sunday, rode roughshod over the local American Legipn footballers and then rode back to South Bend little the worse after a sixty-minute struggle with the big team here that had a week before sent the strong Dayton (Ohio) Koors to defeat. The score was 14 to 6. The forward pass and masked plays of the visitors were not solved by the locals, and that spelled defeat. THREE - CUSHION MEET Six Matches Scheduled This Week in Billiard Touimey. Six matches are on the program this week in the State three-cushion billiard tourney at Cooler’s parlors. One match is carded each night with one matinee affair on Thursday. The schedule: Tonight—Klein vs. Jones. Tuesday—Bosson vs. O’Connor. Wednesday—Henderson vs. Shrats. Thursday—Afternoon, Kepner vs. O’Connor; night, Ramsey vs. Rubens. Friday—Curtis vs. Sharts. PLAYER IN ACCIDENT Bit Times Sueeial HOUSTON. Texas, Oct. 19.—Marvin Goodwin, former manager of the Houston Texas League team, who was sold to tho Cincinnati Reds, suffered two broken legs in an airplane crash at Ellington field. He is a first lieutenant in the air service reserve, and he fell 200 feet when his plane went into a tail spin. State Pro Football GAMES OF SUNDAY Indianapolis Ferndales. 12; Louisville Breck s. 0. Dayton (Ohio) Koors. 13: Jonesboro Flyers. 0. Swayzee, 7; Gas City Tigers. 0. Elkhart Lesion, 25: Goshen. 0. El wood Lesion, 26: Wabash, 0. Notre Dame Hall. 14: Kokomo Legion. 6. New Albany Calumets. 6; Jeffersonville Elks. 0. SEYMOUR NINE WINS Bit Times Special SEYMOUR, Ind., Oct. 19.—Jewell’s A. B. C.s of Indianapolis were defeated here Sunday by the Seymour Reds, 9 to 5, with Hod Eller doing the pitching for the locals. Huckleberry of Seymour and Treadwell of the visitors poled home runs. The Reds will close the season here next Sunday with the A. B. C.s as opponents.

Football Pictorial

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Saturday Grid Results

STATE Army. 27: Notre Dame, 0. .Minnesota, 32: Wabash. 6. ' Syracuse. 14; Indiana. 0. Puraue 44: Rose Poly. 0. ut r 23; Frank in. 0. De Pauw. 26 Indiana State Normal. 0. j oiu-villc. 21; Hanover. 0. Ear:liam. 13: Cidarvilte. O. Indiana Centra! 12: Manchester. 0. OTHER GAMES Alabama. 27: Sewanre. 0. Albrisht. 58: Gallaudet. 0. A linn ny. 20: m. tionaventure. 6. Amherst. 19; Hamilton. 0. Arkansas. 9: Rice. 13. Bn''dwin Wallace. : Heidelberg. 0. Buhany, 13: Westminster. 0. Boston College, 51 : Boston Univ.. 7. Bowdoin, 14 Wesleyan. 8. Brown 48- Bates, 0. Bueknell. 0: Haskell IncUains, 0. Buffalo. 0: Rochester, 0. California, ti: St. Mary's. 0. Calif. Inst, of Tech . 21: Pomona. 14. Carson Newman. 10: Milligan. 6.

scored all of his team's 12 points to defeat the Iliini, 12 to 10. Kutsch is playing his first year of Conference football and probably will give further demonstrations of power with ripening experience. Another star that threatens to push Grange out of the limelight is Benny Friedman, Michigan’s great back, who took the heart out of Wisconsin in tho first ten minutes of play Saturday. Benny hurled a long forward pass that brought the Wolverines their first touchdown, then received the next kick-off and ran for the goal. From that moment the Badgers were a beaten team. Fielding Yost, Michigan veteran coach, showed he has lost none of his cunning. The team that beat Indiana, 63 to 0, and Wisconsin, 21 to 0, is going a long way toward the title. The Wolverines should have little trouble In beating Illinois this week. Chicago’s Maroons stayed In the running despite the fact that they have not yet crossed a Big Ten goal line this season. Bob Curly booted two field goals for a 6 to 0 victory over Northwestern. The Maroons showed no variety of attack and will have to do better if they hope to beat Penn or win another conference title. Indiana showed some improvement by bolding Syracuse to a 14 to 0 score. The Hooslers had been expected to suffer a more crushing defeat. Ohio State gave a good exhibition in defeating the powerful Columbia team, 9 to 0. Minnesota rolled over Wabash, 32 to 6, and Purdue beat Rose Poly, 44 to 0. These two teams have yet to meet a conference opponent.

FOOTBALL STRATEGY ■" 1 Selection of Style of Play ■■ By Harry Stnhldreher, Notre Dame All-America Quarter Back, 1924. a football team, It Is absolutely necessary that he have a clear head at all times. Coach Knute Rockne of Notre Dame, under whom I gained my knowledge of the game, Is a strong advocate of the theory that the quarter back, to do his best work, must at all times be as near mentally and physically efficient as possible. For that reason he favors using the quarter back as little as possible on offense in the actual carrying of the ball.’ As I understand It, Harvard for years has leaned to that point of view. Football is a strenuous game. The man carrying the ball Is subjected to the strongest fire of the opposition. Play hard and clean is the motto of most football coaches. Hard pipy means getting the man with the ball and doing it In a convincing style. The mere exertion expended in attempting to advance the ball takes its toll out of the player. Add to this a dozen or more hard tackles and you have subjected said player to considerable punishment. Carrying the ball naturally tires the player physically. The physical effort expended makes the player tired mentally. No quarterback can do his best work when tired mentally. It tends to confuse his selection of plays and often results In slips that would not have otherwise happened. However, don’t get the impression that I do not favor the quarter back playing his part in carrying the ball. My thought is that his attempts should only be plays with a punch. With the opposition working on the theory that the quarter back will not be used in carrying the ball, it is possible for him to pull a surprise play at a critical spot by doing that very thing. Usually he can get away with it. in the game the quarterback, who has nursed his physical condition, can often take advantage of it by carrying the ball in preference to his tired back field. In other words, the quarter backshould direct the play rather than execute It. His efforts in carrying the ball should be In the nature of a surprise, thereby Increasing the chances of going over.

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Canisius. 3: Quantleo Marines. 0. Colby. 31: Lowell Textile. 0. Carroll. 74: Northwestern. 0. Catholic University. 9; Villa Nova. 0. Chicago. 8; Northwestern. 0. Coißate. 7: Lafayette. 7. Coe. 8: Lawrence. 0. Cornell. 41: Rutgers. 8. Uhattanooßa. 12: Mercer. 7. Cornell Coileße. 27; Ripon. 0, Creighton. 20; Moniingside. b . Cos oi ado Arrics, 16: Denver. Univ., 0. Dartmouth. 58; Maine. 0. , . I Dartmouth Freshmen. 14: Dean Acad., 0. Dayton. 17; John Carroll. 0. Denison. 20: Ashland. 0. Dickinson. 7; Franklin-Marshall, 0. Ferdham. 55: Manhattan. 0. Ft. Benning. 27: Ft. Oglethorpe. 8. Geneva, 21; Adrian. 0. Georgetown. 24: Detroit. 0. Georgia Tech. 23; Florida. 7. George Wash.. 7: Mt. St. Mary's. 3. Georgia 21; Furman. 0. Ho y Cross, 7: Harvard. 6. lowa. 12: Illinois. 10. Johns Hopkins. 7; Richmond. 0. Kalamazoo College. 10; Be.oit College. 3. Kansas Aggies, 14: Kansas University. 7. Kenyon. 27: Muskingum. 0. Lake Forest. 32; ll.inois College. 7. Lehigh. 3: West Virginia Wesleyan. 0. Montana University 14: Gonzaga. 14. Ma s Aggies, 13: Conn. Aggies. 0. _ Michigan State College. 15: Centro, 13. Middlebury. 61 : St. Michaels. 0. Mississippi 7; Union University, 8. Michigan. 21: Wisconsin. 0. Missouri. 32; Holla Miners, 0. Monmouth. 7; Augustina. 7. Montana State. 30: Mt. St. Charles, 0. Mtllikin, 6: Illinois Wesleyan 6. Muhlenberg. 14: Lebanon Valley. O. Miami, 16; Transylvania, 0. Navy, 10: Princeton. 10. Nebraska. 8: U. of Washington, 6. New York University. 41; C. C. ol New York. 0 Now Hampshire University, 26; Rhode Island State 0. North Dakota University. 3: South Dakota University. 0. North Dakota Aggies, 3; South Dakota State, 3. Norwieh. 13 Tufts O. Oberlln. 0: Mt. Union, 0. Ohio Slate. 9; Columbia. 0. Ohio University. 7: Toledo. 0. Ohio Wesleyan, 24; Ohio Northern. 0. Oklahoma, 7; Drake, 0. Oklahoma Aggies 0: Washington U., 0. Oregon. 13: Pacific, 0. Penn State 13: Marietta, 0. Pennsylvania U.. 16: Yale, 13. Pennsylvania Military College, 19: St. Joseph's College. 0. Pittsburgh. 13: Gettysburg. 0. Providence, 14 St John’s. 8. Loyola (Chicago). 14: St. Ambrose. O. Sprmghiil. 24. Auburn, 0. Southern. 14; Jonesboro A. and M.. 6. St. Louis U.. 25: Drury. 7. Springfield. 6: Vermont. 0. State Teachers’ College. 53 1 New Mexico Normal. 0. Susquehanna. 14: Drexel, 0. Swarthmore. 2: Delaware. 0. Standford, 13: University of Southern California, 9. Tu’ane. 2&; Miss. A. and M.. 3. Union. 36; Trinity, 5. University of Idaho. 7: Washington State, tl. University of Virginia, 18 Virginia Military Academy, 10. Virginia Toly. 3; Maryland. 0. Ursinus 19: Juaniata. 6. University of Nevada, 14: College of Pacific, ft. Vanderbilt. 34: Tennessee, 7. Wa.sntngton and Jefferson. 0: Carnegie 0. Washington and I/ee. 25: Kentucky. 0. Waynesburg. 6; Thiel. 0. West Virginia. 54: Grove City. 3. Williams. 0: St. Stephens, 0. Wisconsin Mining School. 14; St. John’s military. 8 Wittenberg, 7: Xavier. 7 Wyoming. 43. Colorado School of Minos. 0. HIGH SHCOOL Boys’ Preparatory, 2; State School for Deaf, 0. Anderson. 14: Newcastle. 8. Portland. 34: Bluffton. 0. Wilkinson. 7: Richmond. 8. Rensselaer. 0: Montioello. 0. Kentland. 6: West Lafayette. 0. Central (Evansville), 19; Catholic. C (first, game). Central (Evansville). 68; Jeffersonville. 6 (second game). Reitz (Evansville). 15: Princeton. 12. Muncie. 7: Marion. 0. Linton, 13: Sneridan, 0. Emerson (Gar}’). 13. Wabash, 0. Elkhart. 30: Howe M. A. 0. Columbia City. 7: Decatur. 8. Greenwood. 48: Madison. 0. Boonvllle. 72; Oakland City, 0. South Bend. 32: Goshen. O. Kokomo. 24: Hartford City, ft. Gerstmeyer, 7: Wile.v. 8. Jasonvilie. 30: Brazil, 0. Bteknell, 19: Sullivan. 0. Paris. 12 Westfield. 13. Oblong. 13: Casey. O Mishawaka. 53: Plymouth. 0.

WEEKLY BATTLES TONIGHT Schaefer Brothers and Glick and Dugan in Features— Five Scraps. If fistic tons dq not pet their fill of action at Tomlinson Hall tonight it won’t he because Matchmaker Goldstein of the Capital City A, C. has not tried to please. He has brought in high-class talent, two Chicago boys and four from Louisville. Four Indianapolis knuckledusters, Kidney Glick, Reamer Roberts, doe Scully and Johnny Murphy will perform. Two Ten-Rounders Chicago lads slated to appear are Frankie Schaefer, in a ten-round scrap with Sidney Glick, and Her bie Schaefer, in a ten-rouryd en counter with Jackie Dugan, Louir ville. The Schaefer brothers are "in the money” as pugilists and have na tional "reps." Meeting Frank!' Schaefer will be the old acid test foi Glick. who asked to be sent against a topnoteher. Babe Ruth, Louisville, will be ti newcomer to local fans, hut he utv doubtedly knows how to fight ns indicated by his knockout victory over Brett Waggoner, Petersburg coa! miner, in a bout at Evansville recently. Ruth will clash with Reamer Roberts, a local willing mixer, in a six-rounder. Other Six-Rounders Joe Scully, former Chicago boxer, who has been* camping here for some time, will clash with Billy Cecil, Louisville, over the six-round distance, and Johnny Murphy, Indianapolis, will swap punches with Young Tucker, Louisville, in six rounds. All boxers on tonight's card were to weigh in late this afternoon at the Arcade gym. First bout tonight will be started at 8:30.

GrioQwz QUESTIONS V F-o-i *-•-' mc-t —i lb- 6-M ! the ball put Into play for the kickoff? 2. When is the kickoff the proper proreu.r> u> n . ,u> h.i to uni> : 3. When i a plajer euneiilerrd offside? ANSWERS 1. On a kickoff tho ball is put in nlay from the forty-yard line of the side having the kickoff. The ball in put in play by meins of a place kick. 2. The ball is put in play from a kickoff to open play in the first and third periods, after a goal from field and after a tr.v-for-noint following the making of a touchdown. 3. A player is considered offside when the ball has last been touched by one of his own side behind him. INDEPENDENT FOOTBALL The Acme A. C.s and the Belmont Tigers battled to a 0 to 0 tie Sunday at Rhodius Park. The conteet Sunday makes two conse-utive tie games the Domes have played. The previous Sunday they played the Christamore A. C. a 6 to 8 tie. The Acmes will hold a meeting tonight at tho library. The Tuezedo Maroons won their fifth straight game by defeating the Central Bulldogs Sundav 20 to 6. It was the first time the Maroons had been scored on. Richmond, SV. Whitt and F. White made the winners' touchdowns. Next Sunday the Maroons will play the R. J. C.s at Jamison Park. 1:30 n. m. EHMKE FANS 18 Bit United Press HACKENSACK, N. J.. Oct. 19. Howard Ehmke, Boston Red Sox star, pitching for the Hackensack team, let the Englewood Madonnas down with one hit, fanned eighteen batters and won his game, 3 to 0. Ehmke fanned Frank Frisch, New York Giant captain, in the ninth with two on bases.

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Tonight’s Fight Card

AT TOMLINSON HALL. 8:30 OOIHI.E WINDUP : Sidney Glick. Indianapolis, vs. Frankie Srhurfrr, Chicago; ten rounds at 136 pounds. | Jackie Dugas. Louisville, vs. Herbie ! Schaefer. Chicago; ten rounds at 128 | pounds. PRELIMINARIES Babe Ruth. Louisville, vs. Reamer Roberts. Indianapolis; six rounds ut 118 pounds. ! Joe Scully. Indianapolis, vs. Billy Cecil, i Louisville; six room's at 134 pounds. Johnny Murphy. Indianapolis, vs. You,nr Tucker. Louisville; six rounds at 126 pounds. PERU NEXT Ferndales Show Real Stuff Against Louisville. The strong Peru C. & O. team will come to Washington Park next Sunday to battle the local Ferndalc team. Sunday a different-looking Ferndale eleven trounced the Louisville (Ky.) I Breck team, 12-0. Wiggs, a fine punter with the visors. held the score down by kicking le ball down the field forty and fifty irds out of dangerous territory. After battling to a 0-to-0 tie In the Irst half the locals came back full of )ght and scored a touchdown in the bird and another in the fourth quarer. After a steady march. Zivich vent over for the first score. The oal was missed. Duttenhaver scored the final touchiown. REDS BUY CHRISTENSEN St. Paul Outfielder Goes to Cincinnati in Deal. Hit tsfiilrd Press CINCINNATI. Oct. 19.—The Cincinnati National league club today announced the purchase of the release of Walter Christensen, outfielder, from the St. Paul club of the American Association. Al Niehaus, first haseman, another player yet to he named, and an unannounced cash sum will go to St. Paul for Christensen, who this year led the American Association in base stealing. Y. P. C. NET PRACTICE The Y. P. C. basketball team will practice tonight at St. Anthony’s Hall. All players who desire to make the team are requested to be present. The following men are asked to attend: Ktehlen, Huesing. Roberts, Flora, Lentz, Worrels, Orimsley, Royce, Conley and Harrison. For games with the Y. P. C.s uall Belmont 3778-W. LAI TER BASKETBALL The Lauter A. C. will have a basketball team in the field this season. The following basketball players are requested to attend the meeting tonight at 8 j o’clock at the Lauter Club: J. Meyers, M. Mclntire. G. Ferel, C. Mclntire, J. Watson, F. Thompson, L. Cherry, B. Cherry. F. Ferel, F. Sweeney and Higgs. For games write A. B. Caldwell, 1314 W. Court St. or call Belmont 3641. All baseball players turn in their uniforms tonight.

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Notre Dame, Yale, Drake and Others Go Down—Army and Pennsy Powerful in East. By Henry L. Farrell Unltsd Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. 19.—Pennsylvania, Army, Michigan, Missouri, Dartmouth, Alabama and Georgia Tech rank as the leading football teams of the country with one-half of the 1925 season behind. They remained undefeated by escaping the hectic week-end that brought about the defeat of the 1925 champion teams, Yale and Notre Dame, and another downfall for Red Grange’s Illinois team.

In handing Yale the first defeat in two seasons, Pennsylvania was particularly impressive, and Penna also showed one of the real star backs of the season in Al Kruze, X plunging full back of the old school. Cadets Are Powerful The West Point cadets looked like the strongest team in the East in beating Notre Dame 27 to 0. the larg est score that ever has been made against a Rockne-coached team. Dartmouth remains undefeated, w*th a fine-looking squad, hut the eleven will not be tested until Saturday, when it meets Harvard. Although Ohio S ate has engaged in a tie game, Charlie Crowley, whose Columbia eleven was defeated ly the Ohio team, came hack with the word that the Columbus team is a power'ul one. and that it could do well against any team in the East. Valley Leader Dropped Among the leaders who crashed Saturday was Drake, Missouri valley Conference leader, which fell he-

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fore Oklahoma, and Southern California, which was dropped by Stanford. California,_ Southern California and Stanford have each lost a game, but California and Stanford were beaten by the Olympic Club of San Francisco, a team consisting of former ollege stars. Eddie Tryon, the veteran Colgate star, and Nick Kutsch, the lowa hack, are leading their sections in point scoring. Kutsch leads the western conference with 49 points, from 6 touchdowns, 3 field goals and 4 points after touchdown. Friedman, Michigan, is second, with 35 points, and Ostcrhaan. Michigan, is third with 30 points. v SPOKELESS EBAY AT FORT The Ft. Benjamin Harrison eleven and Laughner Southpaws of Indianapolis fought through a scoreless game at the Army grid Sunday. Both teams played good football and forward passing featured.

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