Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 117, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 September 1929 — Page 15

SEPT. 25, 1929

Lack of Promising Guard Prospects Worries Butler Football Mentor

Wanks Lead Golf Event Eleven Americans Left in Canadian Tourney. !<U r 'nitr4 Prrm* HAMILTON. Ont., Sept. 25Eleven Americans and five Canadians remained today in the second round of the Canadian women’s open golf championship. Miss Ada MacKenzle, regarded as the Dominion’s outstanding contender, went down td defeat before her fellow countrywoman, Mrs. B. P. Pellenz of Winnipeg, in the first round Tuesday, 3 and 1. Miss Glenna Collett, Miss Helen Hicks and Miss Peggy Wattles are ' the leading American survivors. Miss ! Collett beat Miss EfTie Nesbitt, the i home club champion, 6 and 4.

Baseball Calendar Games Today—Results Yesterday

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pet. Kansas City 107 51 .665 St. Paul 09 61 .619 Minneapolis 85 76 .528 I -DIANAPOLIS 75 86 .166 ( olumbns 75 86 .166 I onisville 73 86 .150 Milwaukee 5 97 .4<n Toledo 63 98 .391 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. Phiia.. 100 45 .690 Washgton. 69 77 .473 New York 85 62 .578 Detroit 67 80 .456 Cleveland. 77 68 .531 Chicago. .. 56 89.386 Et. Louis. 75 70 .517 Boston 55 93 .372 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet.' W L. Pet. Chicago.. 96 50 .658 Brooklyn. 67 78 .462 Pittsbgh . 85 61 .532 Phiia 64 80 .444 New Yk . 80 64 .556 Cinein 63 82 .435 St. Louis. 72 71 .504 Boston 54 92 .370 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Minneapolis (two yames). Louisville at St. Paul (two games). Toledo at Milwaukee. Columbus at Kansas City. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Boston. Chicago at Cleveland. St. Louis at Detroit. (Only games scheduled.) NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at New York. Brooklyn at Philfdeinhla (two games). Cincinnati at St. Louis. (Only games scheduled.) Results Yesterday AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 640 000 000-10 9 1 Kansas Cltv 000 010 041— 6 14 5 Rvan Winters and Devine Thomas. Fette and Peters. Aneley. Snyder. (First Game) Toledo ... OH 210 00 °— 5 9 1 Milwaukee 020 011 20x- 6 12 0 Ferguson. Pfeifer and McCurdy; Cobb and Young. , „ (Second Game) Toledo 120 130 1— 8 15 1 Milwaukee 020 301 1— 710 1 (Called end of seventh; darkness) Tate Lindstrom. Dovle. Raab and Devormer; Streleckl and McMenemy.

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If what a I Gbardp. mj I bmKPis lr/wtU IH Li I and hl (MU* celebrating 1 tie inn:. IV Dav V 1 of anew contract with— If c 1| ••HONEYMOON ORI ISE" M Th@ T £ Joe Penner f n TH ■ America'* Premier Comedian ■ I I iNlillC AND—IT’S HERE II /? ■ S/W ■ 1 The pie .‘ore of love and marriage 111 Jf H .11 that’* excited the entire nation: 111 Wfß tu\ “PARIS BOUND" /U Sensational Screen Version ml |\\ mth //A\ NANCY CARROLL // gVWL AWN HARDING * anil HAL SHELLY Mil krf.dcric march EXTRA! mIIr

5 Hoosier Grid Teams to Play at Northwestern By Thru* Special EVANSTON, 111., Sept. 25. Northwestern's Wildcats face plenty of Hoosier opposition this year. Five teams from Indiana environs will travel to Dyche stadium, the home stand of the Purple. Butler college of Indianapolis will come for the opener Oct. 5, followed by Wabash and the Notre Dame B team on Oct. 26. Indiana will play the homecoming game at Evanston, Nov. 16, while the "Fightin’ Irish” in person will appear here in the last game of the season, Nov. 23. It will be the first NorthwesternNotre Dame battle since 1926.

Louisville 103 000 000— 4 14 2 I St. Paul 003 010 Olx— 5 12 0 j Deberry. Wilkinson and Thompson; Van ! Atta. Zumbro and Fenr^r. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York .......... 003 020 000— 510 X Boston . . 000 102 000— 3 9 1 Zachary and Bengough, Dickey; Bayne, Simmons and A. Gaston, Asby. Chicago 000 012 001— 412 2 Cleveland 101 031 lOx— 713 2 Lyons and Berg; Hudlln, Ferrell and L. Sewell. j St. Louis 000 030 001— C 7 0 i Detroit 2300110 llx— 9 13 0 Crowder and Manion; Herring and Hayworth. . . . Philadelphia and Washington, not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) Boston 010 003 000— 4 10 0 New York 001 100 201— 5 5 2 Seibold and Spohrer; Hubbell nnd Hogan. (Second Game) Boston 109 Oil 200— 5 ® J New York 010 200 12x— 6 9* Cantwell and Spohrer; Mays, Genewich and Hogan. Brooklyn 000 100 140- l4 0 Philadelphia 001 110 05x — 815 1 Clark. Morrison and Piclnich; Smytne, Dailey. Collins, Elliott, Sweetland and Lerian. Davis. Cincinnati 000 010 000— ' * ' St Louis 000 300 OOx— 3 5 0 Lucas and Gooch; Hallahan and Wilson. Chicago and Pittsburgh: not scheduled. HARVARD SEEKS COACH By United Preen CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. Sept. 25. Harvard university will be looking j for anew coach shortly. The resignation of Ed Brown, for ! three years in charge of Crimson j oarsmen, has been accepted by Athletic Director Bingham. Brown resigned after Harvard was decisively beaten by Yale last spring.

MOTION PICTURES

Bulldog Back Field Has Speed to Burn, but Line Is Problem. MANY SHIFTS ARE MADE Sophomore Stars Bring Hope to Coach Clark. BY DICK MILLER If there is a problem in the 1929 I Butler grid machine, it is in the j forward wall. It didn't help the situation any | when Neil (Cowboy) Hyde, who coached the Bulldog linemen the past two years, decided to remain away from football this fall. One look at the Butler outfit and you realize the back field squad has . speed to burn. In tnese days, how- | over, the up-to-the-minute elevens ; have guards just as fast as the | back field men. ‘‘What I need is guards,” said Potsy Clark, head coach. Glunt Is Missed When Warren Glunt, former Tech boy, failed to enter school this fall, the entire guard department took the skids. Glancing over the candidates for the berth, one would think that a good combination could be gainecj from the list. Frank Heddon. a veteran, is of the stocky variety, the husky type for muddy fields. Bill McCarthy of Crawfordsville looks good, but hasn't been feeling well this fall, and his w'ork has not been of varsity caliber. .Potsy has moved Willard Worth, another ex-Tech boy, into the Glunt opening. Worth is a speedy 180-pound player and may solve the problem. Lewis Rufli, James Strahl of Greenfield, Carlyle Bauermeister, another Tech boy, Joe Bebout of Decatur, Gerald Hershberger of Logansport and John Woodell of Noblesville are promising. Schoff Appears Fixture George Naftzger, Marion, and Jack Walsh, former Cathedral star, are battling for a tackle berth, with Walsh holding the edge. Robert Schoff, the 180-pounder from Ft. Wayne, pratically is a fixture on the other side. Another tackle, Harold *Templeton, may be shifted out to help a perplexing wing problem. Francis Royse, defensive demon, accurate ball handler and excellent pass catcher, was moved from his regular berth at half back to end. So well does Clark feel about this shift that he even contemplates moving the mighty John Cavosie to the other wing post. Two excellent prospects, Wilho Maki, Ironwood, Mich., and Tom Davies, have not reported and are counted out. Fair Is Promising Quite a lot is expected of Robert Fair of Greenfield. Bob Manley, exCathedral star, also is a good end. Robert Brock shows promise and Howard Crosby is a letter man. George Nulf of Ft. Wayne, a letter man and reserve quarter back, is suffering from a leg injury, and Cleon Reynolds, Terre Haute, handicapped by his size, looms the best

MOTION PICTURES

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

7 ~tim,sffe~Bketches F% es fmm f|H(a StarsAy GEORGE EARNSHAW PAT MALONE

George earnshaw, star right-hander of the Philadelphia Athletics, plays much the same role in the American

League as does Malone in the National He cost Conni' Mack $85,000 ir real money am is worth ever; cent of it. . . Has ter rifr speed H; is the nearest ap p r oach tc Walter Johnson that has broken in tr. the America;

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Earn ihaw

League in the last ten years. . . Also boasts a good curve and r fair change of pace. . . . Was tl’ first major league pitcher to win twenty games this year. . . . Du; to the many right-handed batters in the Cubs’ lineup, may be selected as Mack’s starting pitcher ... Is inclined to be a triflle wild, which at times tends tc lessen his effectiveness. . . When he is getting them over the plate and is ahead of the batter, there is no tougher pitcher in the majors to beat. . . . When right, his speed is blinding. . . Like Grove. Mack’s great southpaw, Earnshaw received his baseball training under Jack Dunn at Baltimore.

They’re Haskell Chiefs

HERE are two Indians whose prowess on the athletic w’arpath is keeping up the old tradition of Thorpe and Guyon. Above are William (Lone Star) Dietz, left, and Captain Louis Weller of Haskell Institute at Lawrence, Kan.

understudy for Captain Hosier, who : is a sure starter at quarter. Just like Hosier, Jim Puett of Logansport seems outstanding in the center position. He is an accurate passer, has 207 pounds to back him up and is a cool, steady worker. George Fredenberger, another center, is a letter man, while Walter Johnson is a third ball passer. Leaving Cavosie at his half back post, it is a good bet that Coach Clark will use Hinchman at full back and Kenneth Booz of Carthage, 111., the new Bulldog sensation, at half back, in the vacancy made by Royse’s shift. Booz is a clever passer and a capable runner, blocker and kicker. It often is wondered why Alonzo Watford, the Negro boy from Lafayette, is not shifted to a wing. Watford was a great end in his high school days. He has been an excellent ball toter for Butler for two years and it seems wasted power to keep him out of action as a reserve full back. When Cavosie goes out, another

AMUSEMENTS

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MUTUAL BI KLESWUE J HEATER ; “BOHEMIANS" with Mildred Steele And a snappy chorus on the Rose-Tinted Runway

MOTION PICTURES

■TrcrgTiTrtTi LAST 3 DAYS! “ON WITH THE SNOW” With Betty Compson—Joe E. Brown and all-star cast I All-Talking! 1

T>AT MALONE, serving his sec- -*■ end year under the big tent, is perhaps the most impressive member of the Chicago pitching

orps He is a good -•ix feet and ■ veighs in the ) ei g h borhood 'f 200 pounds. \s would be expected uch a phyique makes .or a fast ball that fa irly hums To make his ;tuff all the more deceptive, Malone

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Malone

has a sizzling curve that is in eeping with his swift. . . . Failre to take baseball seriously spt Malone in the minors at east three years after he dem--nstrated he had enough stuff •o win in the majors. . . . John McGraw had him in 1922. paying $5,000 to Knoxville of the Appalachian league for his services. . . . Two years on option aused McGraw to decide Malone just wouldn’t be a big leaguer. . .. Ee was too much of a playboy. .. . Later two great seasons in the minors caused Chicago to decide he was ready to take his baseball, seriously . ... He has.

Dietz, a star at Carlisle twenty years ago, is coaching the Haskell team. He formerly coached at Purdue and other prominent colleges. Haskell invades Indianapolis Oct. 19 to battle Potsy Clark’s Butler Bulldogs.

new sophomore, Bob Jarrett of St. Louis, will step in. Bob isn't quite the all-round class that Booz is, but rates a varsity place. Yeasel, a bit small, takes Booz’s place, and Ed Allen of Westfield may slip in ahead of Reynolds for Hosier's place when the captain is out of action. If at any time the score looks safe, Butler coaches still have Sibbett of Fillmore, Gordon Pugh of Baltimore, Md., and William White, former Tech star, to shift in for experience. Butler, as you know, has a nice stadium. The Bulldogs have a stiff schedule this year, with a luring trip to New York. They also have a very good freshman team of sixty boys working out each night under Bob Nipper and “Fuzz” Hungate. BREAKS Th¥mbTwlNS Oklahoma Boxer Defeats Philadelphian, Fighting With Injury. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 25. George Courtney, Oklahoma light heavyweight contender, defeated Billy Jones, local Negro, at the sesqui stadium Tuesday night, winning the decision in ten rounds after being deprived of all chance for a knockout by breaking a thumb in the fourth.

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lowa Ready With Plea Hawks to Ask Reinstatement in December. By United Preen lOWA CITY, la., Sept. 25.—Readmission into the Big Ten Conference will be asked by the University of lowa at the next meeting of the conference faculty committee, probably Dec. 6, the university athletic board of control has announced. Major John L. Griffith, high commissioner of the conference, has ; promised that no basketball schedules will be made up until after the meeting. lowa was dropped from the Big Ten, due to alleged "underwriting” of athletes.

Down •the Alleys

The bowling of Mrs. Bunch of the Shell Gas team featured the opening nights Dlav o: the Ladles Social League at the Elk Club alleys. After a start of 146 this girl hit for scores of 23 1 and 212 to total 595. McDaniel, a team mate, also roiled well, getting 575 to h *lP the Shell team win three from Hatfield Paint. The Mueller-Nash and Block optical also won three from the Burdsall Paint and W. of s as the Erbricks Products took two from the Koomstohk Candy. Other 500 totals during this session were McKinnon. 51a. Johns. 553 .and Kritsch. 501. The first match game of the seaason will be rolled at the Pritchett Recreation Sunday afternoon at 2:3(1 when the local Burdsal Paint women s team tackles the Coca-Cola girls of Terre Haute. Two-time wins featured the Speedway League games at the Indiana alle\s. the Thompsons. Stanley Jevv j el L v - t 1 gus and Grande boys defeating the Rosier Prest-O-Light, Allison and Speedwav Lumber. Welling led over the tnreegame route with a consistent series or 632 secured on games of 207. 213 Schutte had 603. Kellv of the Stanley team was playing “Hy-Lo. starting with a count of 124 and closing with 255. The Marmon Eight boys pulled the feature in the Commercial league at the Illinois drives when they finished with a score of 1,013 for the high single game score of the season in this loop. They won from the Ballard Ice Cream. The Holcomb and Hoke. Hayes Body and A. C. W. of A. also won two from the E. and G. Foundry, Citizens Gas and Link Belt as the Martin-Parry and George J. Mayer took the entire series from The Indianapolis Times and Crescent Paner. The individual list was led by D. Martin who turned in a tbtal of 612. Johnson had 60. and Hanna 602. The City Office and City Agent teams made a clean sweep of their series with the Shippers and Traveling Agents, as the Traffic Managers and General Agents lost two to the Union Station and Transportation in the Transportation League games at the Pritchett alleys. Shaw turned in another dandy series for the Broadway Specials, getting 654 with games of 214, 218 and 222. His team-mates failed to help to any extent, however, and the Jack Specials copped the odd game. The Indianapolis Music Shoo Eastern and Hoosier Furniture also won two from the Mills Pie, Central Buick and Ben Hur, while the Independents lost three to the Cremo Cigars. The eighteen-team Rotary League series at the Indiana alleys showed the Kelly, Henry, Taylor and Van Ausdall boys taking three from the Edie, Smith, Laird and Lieber. while the Diddel. Dyer, Longworth and Off outfits lost two to the Morrison, Demaree, Holy Cross and Lennox.

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Early Big Series Chatter Stresses Merits of Rival Pitching Staffs Righthanders Have Edge in Title Play of Past, But Then There's Grove and Walberg.

By NEA Service CHICAGO. Sept. 25.—Comparison of right and left-handed pitching is probably the basis of more discussion than any other department of play relative to the impending world series clash between the Athletics and the Cubs. The work of the Athletics’ staff, comprised 'mainly of Grove, Walberg, Earnshaw, Quinn and Rommel, has been featured by the remarkable hurling of the first three, two of whom rank among the game’s greatest southpaws. Earnshaw is a righthander. With the Cubs it is different, for Bush, Malone, Root, Carlson and Blake, all right-handers, have borne the brunt

•WITH LEFTY LEE

Berry easily led this loop with a total of 626, on games of 235, 170 and 221. The Reds outclassed the Cubs in the Optimist loop, winning the entire series. All other games were decided over the two-out-of-three route, the Braves and Pirates defeating the Yanks and Cards. The Ktrschner-Lovlck, Viking and Schmitt Insurance boys won three from the Capitol City, A. D. T. and Marotts as the Black Hawks took two from the Maccabees In the Delaware League games at the Recreation alleys. Two out of three was the rule in the P. and E. Railway loop, the Locomotive and Car bovs taking the Transportation and Office over this route. The two-out-of-three rule also wa-s applied in the Duesenberg loop, the Signal Box Busies and Tail Pipes winning from the Shocks. Lubricators and Radiators. Regan of the Tail Pipes had the best game during these contests with a count of 186 in his first try. COACH SIGNS FOR 5 YEARS EASTON. Pa., Sept. 25. —Bill Coughlin, who has been turning out winning baseball teams for Lafayette as well as developing numerous professional players, has signed a contract to coach here for five more years.

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PAGE 15

of the pitching task during the season. Connie Mack doubtless knows that the record books tend to show southpaw pitching in world series contests overshadowed by the performances of the right-handers. That’s discounting the efforts of some of the old-timers, notably Plank, Leonard and Babe Ruth. The books show that Plank lost more games than he won. And Babe Ruth in compiling his great ser -qi pitching record did so at the expense of other southpaws, Jim Vaughn and Lefty iS'ler of the Cubs. Even Herb Pennock’s two victories for the Yanks in 1926 were not enough to keep the Cardinals from wanning the championship, back of splendid right-handed pitching by Haines and Alexander. Chief Bender, Indian star with the Athletics years ago, won three times from Rube Marquard, regarded as one of the best southpaws of all time. After Slim Sallee. Ferdie Schupp and Rube Benton of the New York Giants had stood National league batters on their heads during the season of 1917, the Chicago White Sox right-handers, Eddie Cicotte and Red Faber, bested them in the series of that year. Getting back to the approaching classic. Grove and Walberg are remarkable pitchers. They have stood up well throughout the .season and deserve the honor of starting against the Cubs. It’s the same with the right-handed Bruin hurlers, Root, Malone, Bush, Blake and Carlson. Whether or not right-handed pitching can chalk up another victory over that of the southpaw's will be determined within short order. If you haven’t seen it anywhere else the full name of the latest ring sensation is Max Adolf Siegfried Schmeling.