Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 175, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1926 — Page 9
OCT. 28, 1926
HOT TILT FOR H. S. ROOTERS Tech Groomed to Battle Old Rival, Manual, at Irwin Field Friday. Coach Mueller has sent his Green and White gridders through overtime practices in preparation for the game with Manual Friday. The Tech-Manual match at Irwin field, 2:30, is to be the first city series tame of the season. Neither team has made art impressive showing this fall and they seem to be evenly matched. ' The Green and White line was not strong enough to hold the Muncie Bearcats last Saturday, so Coach Mueller worked hard with the linemen this week. He also has paid special attention to his substitutes, whom he is planning to use in case his regulars weaken, as they did in Muncie. Stanley Krueger’s and Fox Thompson’s injuries have healed and they will be ready to play their best in the game Friday. Mueller is depending upon the following back field men to turn in a victory over Manual: Kruger, Caine, Adams, Saleba, Massey, Blake, Conner and Herner. These men will be ready for action on the line: Thompson, Demmary, Saler, Sargent, Trimmoister, Frye, Schlegeel and Hessman. In the six games played between Tech and Manual since 1920 the Green and White has won four, tied one and lost one. The total score stands 94 to 32 in favor of Tech. The results since 1920 follow: 1920 Tech. 24: Manual, 13. 1921 Tech, 0: Manual, 0. 1922 Tech. O: Manual, 12. 1923 Tech, 52: Manual, 0. 1924 Tech, 3; Manual, 0. 1925 Tech, 16: Manual. 0. —4 MANY TACKLING DRILLS Bu United Press l SOUTH BUND, Tnd., Oct. 28. Concentrating on tackling drills In this week’s practices, Coach Knute Rockne expects to exhibit a much better defensive team this week. Tills part of the defense was weak against. Nouthwestern and Rockne immediately started to remedy it for the Georgia Tech fray here Saturday. .
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The Coach Knows!
Bu United Press LAWRENCE, Kan., Oct. 28Coach Hanley has taken his men to Manhattan to practice on the Aggie field hi preparation for the Haskell Indian game with Burknell Saturday. He feared the Indian celebration this week would prove too much detraction for the Braves. Stirrin’ Dope (Continued Front Page 8) over Illinois w ._n they meet Saturday, the boys who dope the grid sport and put their money down on their opinions, have picked Illinois to win. Thev are basing their opinions on the supposition that the eastern club has not played any strong opposition this season and so is overrated. The Pennsy team decisively defeated Chicago, but this contest is not being considered seriously, as the Maroons have shown themselves not nearly so strong as in the past. Illinois’ good showing against Michigan also is being taken into consideration. And, maybe, some of the boys cannot forget the triumph of Illinois and “Red" Grange last season at Philadelphia. Os course, they may be wrong about Saturday’s game. But they are more often right. .* * * A peculiar combination of maladies has been discovered which is attacking the college football teams that have been losing games this fall. For want of a better name we will call it hoohdruckkxyndensaihmsdam pf lokomotive. This word comes from Switzerland. It has thirty-seven tetters and means something or other. As we use ft, in connection with football, each letter and each syllable represents something the matter as diagnosed by the alumni and student coaches. * • * Franklin College surprised De Pauw last season and defeated the Tigers, 14 to 10. Next Saturday the Greencastle club will try to get even. If Hughes’ boys play like they did against Butler they’ll do that very thing. However, they h'ad better not underrate the Baptists. Some of those sophomores don’t like to lose. HARVARD SCRUBS STOUT Bu United Preen CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct. 28Harvard’s scrubs Wednesday took the measure of the varsity in practice, winping 14 to 13, while using Princeton formations. In the scrub line-up were various ineligible stars, including eight who had won their letters in previous years. MORE TOUGH SCRUBS r ‘n I nil rd Press NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 28. The Vale scrubs showed themselves off in practice Wednesday, holding the varsity in a twenty-minute scrimmage with a stone wall defense. Larry Noble and Bill Kline were absent from the varsity line-up. .Both will be out of the Army game.
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Joy Jamboree and Mardi Gras Ball Fourth Annual Junior Chamber of Commerce Frolic, Featuring Arentrout’s Blue Hooslers (A Russo-Florito Chicago Unit) And the Parisian Red Heads for Dancing. BABETTE, Chicago Feature . Dancer. CLAUDIE PECK, Dancing Violinist. MARTHA TRIPPEER, Sing- • Ing Pianist. Tomlinson Hall Saturday Night, Oct. 30 Admission 50c
AMUSEMENTS MUTUAL —j Burlesque Theater Formerly Broadway MINNIE (BUD) HARRISONI and Her HOLLYWOOD SCANDALS I A Rooking, Swaying Chorus On the Illuminated Runway
Ona B. Talbot Fine Arts Enterprises NEXT MON. EVE., Murat A civic Job —buy a ticket for Symphony concert*. Great Wagner w/)rks sung by Melchior. CINCINNATI Symphony Orchestra I Frits Reiner Conductor | rrices. $3. *2.50. $2, *1.50, sl. Plus I Tax. SEATS NOW SELLING. Ona B. Talbot, 016 Hume-Mansur. | WMnicl KINCAID’S RADIOETTS With Mary Traub Busch and Jessica Me Whir ter EDDIE I PISANO ft CAgR I LANDECR I DORA EARLY * !SD I AARON ft KELLY Cos. | KATE ft WILEY “Pirate Treasure” LYRIC DANCE PALACE . Emil Seidel and His Orchestra AFTERNOON AND EVENING
poo||>all Captains Pennsylvania Bu NEA Service iHILADKLPHIA, Oct. 28.—De--13 spite' the graduatioVi af several stars of the 1925V oot ball team, Penn rooters are enjoying a highly successful season this year.
The timber at hand may not be up to that a v a i 1 a b 1 e a yearl 'ago, but the 1925 outlook was a rather unusual one. George Thayer is captain of the Quakers this fall. Thayer is a veteran and plays end. He was one of the mainstays on the offensive last year by virtue of his uncanny; ability to snag passes. Thayer is likewise strong on the de-
THAYER
fensive and it’s a real job trying to gain around his flank. Asa tackier he rates with the best 6n Eastern fields. Charlie Rogers has been going great for Penn, hut he is now reported 'on the crippled list. The Quakers come West to play Illinois at Champaign Saturday in one of the feature battles of this week. Penn already has trimmed Chicago and is rated among the outstanding 1926 teams of the East. 4 RUSH FOR TICKETS Bu United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 28—More than 10,000 tickets for the ArmyN'otre Dame game, Nov. 13, were sold here Wednesday, the opening day of sale. Advance sale of seats for the Columbia and Cornell game Saturd^ - also promises a full attendance of 55,000. AMUSEMENTS The Whole Town Wilt Rove Over , This Bhotv The LOCKFORDS Famous French Dancers and PAUL TISEN’S ORCHESTRA ED. & TOM HICKEY JOBNNY H VMAN SARGENT & LEWIS GIXTARO SYLVIA LOYAL A CO. FOUR CAMERONS |*at lie News—Topi on—Fables Next Week Royal Peacock Orchestra
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MOT I or* PI CT URE S BELLE BENNET in “THE LILY” The Story of a Girl Kept From Love—lt’s Marvelous —RAY MARSH Teasing the Xylophone FLOYD THOMPSON’S SINGING TROUBADOURS
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
I. A. C. CARD Galaxy of Willing Amateurs in Bouts Friday. Fans who like amateur boxing will get their fill of the sport Friday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club gym in the city invitational amateur ring show—the first of a series of glove entertainments to be staged at that club. Some of the most likely of the local have entered. Officials will handle the show have been announced as follows: Referees—Billy Shine, Frankie Jones. Blaine Patton. Judges—George Geckler. John Mellett, Ed Clemons, Paul Hawkins. Don Hawkins and George Diver. Physician—J N. Collins Inspector—Robert Poehner. Scorer—Efi Zimmer. Timers—Paul R. Jordan. A. R. Coffin Announcer—Harry Geisel. The show will begin at 8 o’clock, the early start being occasioned by the large number of bouts. The public is invited. Admission is $1 plus tax. Bouts follow:. FLYWEIGHT—Jay Eeigenhaum. Solly Epstein A. C.. vs. Wilbur Evan*, unattached. _ _ , BANTAMWEIGHT —Jimmv Durkin. Solly Epstein A. C . vs. Vincent Anthony, unattached. Abe Cohen. Solly Epstein A. C.. vs. K. L. Meyers, unattached. FEATHERWEIGHT—AIton Miley. unattached. vs. I)iek Donaldson. FalrbanksMorse. Rodney Prane. unattached, vs. Lester Howe. Fairbanks-Morse. Abe Cohn. South Side Turners, vs. Eddie Robbins. Solly Epstein A. C. _ LIGHTWEIGHT—John Runkle. South Side Turners vs. Harry T. Neff, unattached. Ike Coyle. South Side Turners, vs. Eari Washburn, unattached. WELTERWEIGHT Elmer Howard. MOTION PICTURES
NOW SHOWING STELLA DALLAS ’ . ’WITH A GREAT CAST Ronald Colman, Belle Bennett, Alice Joyce, Jean Heraholt, Lois Moran, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. STELLA DALLAS Time Schedulet 10:00, 12:03 . 3:30. 4:50, 7:20 and 0:30 CHARLIE DAVIS and His Gang “BOLSHEVIKI” DAVIS Time Schedule: 2:10, 4:30. 7:00 and 0:10
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Fairbanks-Morse. vs. Ray Johnson, unattached. Paul V. Lucas, unattached. v. Harry Goldstein,, Solly Epstein A C. MIDDLEWEIGHT —Otis TysoH. South Side Turners, vs. Alvin Huward. FairbanksMorse. LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT—Ken Roberts. South Side Turners, vs. Max Farabee, unattached. JASPER HAS OPEN DATE Bu Times Soecial _ JASPER, Ind., Oct. 28.—The Jasper College Academy eleven has an open date on its schedule and desires a game away from home Nov. 27. The Academy team is a high school eleven, the same that lost'to Cathedral. 9 to 0. in Indianapolis Oct. 16. Address communications to F. Norberf, O. S. B. Athletic director, Jasper College Academy. PRAISE YANKEE POIjO Bu United Press BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 28.—Members of the Argentine polo team, arriving here from a series of matches in the United States, said the brand of play encountered in New York was “the best we ever have seen.’’ “The ponies used in the United States are excellent and their riders of the highest rank.” said Manuel Anrada.
The Colored Trails ofAntamn are flaming with beauty! The whole countryside is a glorious riot of color —scarlets and golds and browns. Don’t miss it! If you have a car, it’s time to be up and away! Autumn skies are a deep blue. Autumn winds are rich with fragrance. A softened sunlight floods the earth and the air is like mellow wine. If you are searching autymn beauty any road will do, for every highway hol.ds a taunting lure for the motorist. Now is the time to roam your own Middle West and discover all the interest that it holds for you. This list of pleasure places is very brief—but you can make out your own! 1— Indian Trail State Park, Missouri, containing thousands of acres of rugged landscape. Once a favorite hunting ground for the Indians. Stocked with deer and wild turkey. Fine fishing near the park boundaries. On State Highway No. „ 19, Jwelve miles north of Salem. 2 Cataract of the Turkey River near Eldorado, lowa, a region * of great natural beauty. State Highway No. 11. 3 The grand canyon at Grassy Butte, the outstanding scenic spot of the Bad Lands of North Dakota. State Highway No. 26. 4 Hanson Military Reservation, Michigan, a 16,000-acre state park, located on the beautiful Lake Margarthe. State Highway No. 14. 5 Turkey Run State Park, Indiana, containing some of the . largest and finest trees in the Middle West. Sugar Creek runs for a mile through the park. This stream with its tributaries has cut deep canyons through limestone which form one of the park s features. Three miles north of, , ’ Marshall, State Highway No. 10. ' ; 6 Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, a summer resort country of beau tiful woodlands and rocky bluffs. State, Highways No. 17 and No. 78. 7 Site of Creve Coeur (Broken Heart) Illinois where La Salle built the first white mail’s fort in the Mississippi Valley. Beautiful roads wind, along the Illinois River through this district. Near Peoria, State Highways No. 9 and No. 29 8— Rapid City, South Dakota, the “Gateway to the Hills,” on Rapid River. State Highways No. 30 and No. 40. 9 Point of Rocks, scene of several frontier Indian fights, two and one-half miles west of Pierceville, Kansas. New Santa Fe Trail. 10— -Scenic State Park, Minnesota, 1632 acres of virgin pine forest surrounding Sandwick and Coon Lakes. North of Big Fork on State Highway No. 61. i With Red Crown-Ethyl Gasoline in the tank, you can enjoy all the glory of autumn without a care. You’ll have no trouble up hill or down —over bad roads or good. You’ll hear no knocking from the engine, for Red Crown-Ethyl uses the carbon and “Knocks Out That Knock!” Off to the country tomorrow for an autumn holiday Red Crown-Ethyl in the tank the engine purring smoothly — and a brilliant road ahead! ; * \ Buy Red Crown-Ethyl at Any Standard Oil Service Station or at any Authorized Filling Station or Garage / Standard Oil Company Indianapolis, Ind. 4442 (Indiana)
IN BIG TEN
AT NORTHWESTERN EVANSTON. 111. Northwestern, for the first lime this year, has resorted to secret practices. Some forty members of the Purple team will depart Friday morning: for Bloomington. where they meet Indiana. Saturday. AT INDIANA BLOOMINGTON. Ind—Coach Pat Page at Indiana iq concentrating on methods of improving the fighting spirit of his team. Page believes his team s showing against Northwestern Saturday will depend largely on the mental attitude of his men. AT CHICAGO CHICAGO—Maroon hopes for a win against Ohio State Saturday have been brightened by what appears to lie a much better Chicago team than has gone out on the field on previous Saturdays of this season. Stagg has the team scrimmaging hard. ' AT ILLINOIS CHAMPAIGN. 111.—The Illinois football squad this afternoon retired to the Champaign Country Club to rest until the coming of Pennsylvania Saturday. Hopes for a victory over the easterners are strong. AT WISCONSIN MADISON. Wis. —Several new fagga appear in the BadgeF line, and ns a result the team looks to have a greatly strengthened defense that the Gophers will have to overcome if they expert to., win Saturday. I.lovd Larson, veteran guard, is almost certain to be out for the season a* a result of an injured leg. AT MINNESOTA MINNEAPOLIS —Another setback for Minnesota was experienced Wednesday
night when Duke Johnson. 212-pound tackle, received word of the death of hi* brother. Duke will be out until the middle of next week. Doc Spears is stressing defensive work in practices. AT OHIO STATE COLUMBUS. Ohio. —The Ohio State squad leaves tonight lor Chicago to battle the Maroons Saturday. Several ol the -players were injured elightl.v in Wednesdays scrimmage, but all of them are expected to be in good condition by game time Saturday. AT lOWA lOWA CITY. lowa.—Coach Burton Ingwerson continues to stress his aerial attack in this weeks practices. Ingwerseu has four regulars laid up with injuries. AT RIM E LAFAYETTE. Ind.—A hard scritemage Between the regular squads tonight virtually will wind up this week’s Purdue practices. So lar the week has seen only light practices. AT MICHIGAN ANN ARBOR. Mich.—Thirty-four Michigan players, three coaches and two trainers. left here this afternoon for Baltimore where they meet the Navy Saturday while Yots doesn’t expect a walkaway resembling that of last year, he does expect to win by a good score. FINED AND SUSPENDED Bu United Press PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 28.—For “stalling” in a fight with Sergeant Baker at Scranton Oct. 25, Sailor Freedman, Philadelphia boxer, was placed under sixty days suspension and fined SSO by the State boxing commission.
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DIFFERENCE IN PITCHING National League pitchers use twice as many curve balls as do the Amer lean Leaguers, according to First Baseman Wally Pipp. '
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