Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1933 — Page 29
NOV. 10, 1933
Prof. Makes Grid Picks Chooses Michigan. Purdue in Midwestern Tilts Saturday. BV HENRY M'LEMORE I mt*<i Pre Staff C orrrtpond^nt NEW YORK. Nov. 10.—A sad duty is a sad duty, but it is my business to report to the cattle-farmers of the nation, and the people who manufacture footballs. souvenir watch fobs, shoe-uppers, memorial editions of Shakespeare and overnight Dags that the bottom is about to drop out of the fancy leather market. The situation in leather is reaching a distressing stage because local men are throwing away their wallets. They haven't had any money to keep m their wallets since i929 Since then they have depended on cards to have something in their purses, mostly cards showing the names and addresses of speakeasies. Today they are as useless as an aspirin to a man marching to the guillotine. When Utah and those other states knocked out prohibition, the cards directing folks to a drink had no worth. This depresses the leather market by 2.012. But to get on another subject the Herr Professor is sitting right here at my elbow, waiting to give off his football winners for tomorrow. The Herr Professor insists, for the first time in his life, that: U S. C. will bea> Stanford Northwestern will hade Illinois. P urine will take No - re Dame Georgia will march through Yale. Georgia Ter h will take Florida. Michigan will wallop lowa. Wrcon.Mn will handle West Virginia Michigan S*a’c will boa’ Carnegie Tech. Chicago will out-gallop Indiana Denver looks too good for Hawaii. California will kick Washington. Washington State will bake Idaho. Oregon will shade Oregon State. St Mary's will slaughter College of Pacific. Texas Christian will beat North Dakota. Na\v will sink Columbia Army will blow Harvard to bits Ohio State will kick Pennsylvania. Alabama will bam V P I Auburn will take Oglethorpe. Kentucky is too good for V. M. I. Duke will kick Maryland Tennessee is better than Mississippi. Tulane looks too strong for Mississippi State, Vanderbilt will handle Sewanee I ovoia will whoppo San Francisco. Southern Methodist will beat Texas Aggies. Pittsburgh will trim Duquesne. Princeton will whip Dartmouth. Brown looks a bit too good for Syracuse Penn State will operate on John Hopkins Brigham Young will beat Colorado College. Colgate will bea* Ohio Northern. State College Tilts TONIGHT R'Hf Polv vs. Indiana State at Terre Houte. SATURDAY AFTERNOON Notre Oame vs. Purdue at South Bend. Indiana \s < hirago at Chiraffo. Butler vs. Washington at St. Eouift. Wabash vs. Hanover at Hanover. H* Paijw vs. | vansille at Fansville. Franklin vs. Ball State at Mancie. Valparaiso vs. Detroit City college. City H. S. Football This Afternoon Tech vs. Washington at Tech field. Shnrtridgr vs. Broad Ripple at Shortridge field. Tonight Cathedral vs. Clinton at Perry stadium. Tomorrow Afternoon Manual vs. Bloomington at Bloomington. BUCKEYES FACE PENN By I vitid PrrsH COLUMBUS. 0.. Nov. 10.—The I Ohio State football team, composed ' of thirty-seven players, was en route ! today to Philadelphia to play Pennsylvania tomorrow. Full back Wet- i ?el and Pipoly and Gilman, ends, were recovering from injuries and probably will be in ihe opening j lineup. I
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New Hyphenate Works! Henry Moreno, ‘Evansville-Mexican,’ Uncorks Hot Tamale Punch Against Paul Lee.
BY EDDIE ASH Times Sports Editor Fistic fans of Indianapolis received their first look at an Evansvillelast night at Tomlinson hall, and much to their surprise the home town pride, Paul Lee. was sent back on his heels when he traded punches with the invader, one Henry Moreno. An "Evansulle-Mexican" is a anew hyphenate in the boxing business. but whoever thought of the Hoosier-Tamale combination is entitled to a lot of credit. It worked.
Lee trotted along in confident style at the outset of the milling and Moreno took on the actions of 1 just another Mexican jumping bean. In the fourth round, however, during a flourishing mix-up, Moreno | snapped over a short right hook, it j clipped Lee on the jaw and Paul I started for Wabash street, and not under his own power. He was : groggy. Dropped by Left The ropes kept Lee upright and he charged bark for more of the same thing, which was waiting for him, and another Mareno righthand again shook Paul's frame. In the seventh canto the EvansvilleMexican" proved he could mix chili with both hands and this time a long swinging southpaw hook collided with Lee's chin and the local bantam collided with the floor. Lee regained his feet pronto, but it went as a knockdown nevertheless. The decision over the ten-round route was awarded to Mareno. but Lee shared some of the night's honors. Paul rushed and hanged away with both hands and scored with some solid punches himself. Asa matter of fact, it was a redhot fight and the customers were [ well repaid. Lee lived up to his reputation of producing action and the guess is that his advisers underestimated Moreno ability to •sock.” Father Time Inspects Loft Nate Goldberg, a local middleweight out of thp amateur ranks, annexed a six-rouna verdict over K. O. McClellan in the semi-windup. It was Goldberg's first pro bout, and he showed fairly well, although rather timid. His opponent was described as Father Time by the crowd and the veteran was no match for the youngster. McClellan was on the floor inspecting the rafters when the closing beil sounded. He had made other inspections of the loft, twice before in the sixth and in the third and fifth. The old-timer was short on bellows, and it was a .struggle for him to last the distance. RESULTS OF OTHER BOUTS Paul Waggoner swamped Young Leach with rallies and punches in six rounds. It was a hard scrap and Leach left the ring showing many marks of the battle. Leach was down for “no count" in the sixth. The loser made a game effort, but Waggoner had his number in this one. They are featherweights. Rav Drake knocked out Jimmy Goodman in the third round of a slugging bee. It. was a case of somebody “getting it" and Goodman happened to be the victim. The boys swung from their hips and it was a slambang melee. Pat Lopez and Bernard Canganv opened the show and it was a quick win for the I former. The Filippino flattened Cangany in the second round and there was no doubt about it. Bernard was out cold. The show was promoted by Dale Miller and the program was well received. Attendance fell below expectations. however. Minnesota Rests fly United Preen MINNESOTA. Nov. 10.—With no regular game scheduled for tomorrow Coach Ernie Bierman planned to send his entire squad into the practice game against the freshmen, in preparation for the important clash with Michigan next week. FRANKLIN CAPTAIN NAMED /?/ T fitted Prrn* FRANKLIN. Ind.. Nov. 10.—Selection of Max Martin. Martinsville, 111., a full back, as captain of the Franklin college football team for 1933 was announced today by Coach Roy Tillotson. Martin is a junior and will start tomorrow's game j against Ball State.
Aids De Pauw
& HSI ft * 1 *■ '■ y • I I . i
F.arl i Red) Pierce T'VE PAUW university football team, undefeated, untied and unscored upon in five games this season, takes to the road for its first away-from-home game at Evansville college tomorrow. The tilt will be home-coming attraction for the downstate college. One of the reasons the Tigers have been able to outscore all opponents this fall has been Earl (Red> Pierce, Kenosha ( Wis.) boy who has been holding down the role of full back. Besides being good for yardage, Pierce has shown ability as a place kicker, adding numerous points after touchdowns during the season. Early Season Basketball Two former members of last season's Indiana university basketball team will be pitted aaainst each other tomorrow night at Pennsv gym when the U. S. Tires, last season's city independent champions, meet the Rush County Collegians. Red Heavenridge is in the Tire lineup this season and Glen Hodson. I. U. captain last season. Is performing with the Collegians. The Collegians have won three games this season by top-heavy scores. A curtain-raiser will be staged tomorrow night between the U. S. Tire girls and the B. & B. girls. A novelty tumbling act will be given by Jimmy Mozingo's Tumblers following the basketball games. The Hilgemeler Packers, playing under the name of the management of the Charles Dom. desires games with fast city and state fives. For games write or call Charles Dom. 5136 Brookvllle road. Irvington 0937. The Packers have their own gym and will play a return game. Butler Juniors basketball organization will have two teams in the field this season, one in the 14-16-year-old class and the other in the 16-19 class. For games with either team call Washington 1495-J. after 5:30 p. m.. and ask for Harold Gemmer. SPLENDID RECORD^ In four years of coaching at Colgate university, Andy Kerr’s football | teams have scored thirty-six victories, compared with three defeats.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
Ball State Haitian Teachers Would Welcome Proposed Indiana Conference. At least one Indiana college would favor organization of a Hoosier collegiate athletic league, formation of which is rumored planned by Butler. DePauw and Wabash. Despite denials by Butler and DePauw of originating a scheme that would entail Butler's withdrawal from the Missouri Valley Conference to join the proposed loop, the rumor persists that the Indiana conference soon wilL be organized. Any invitation to join it would be welcomed by Ball State Teachers college at Muncie, authorities there said today. “We play practically all of the Indiana colleges anyway, and would welcome the opportunity of becoming a member of any such conference,” an official Cardinal spokesman said. “I believe such a conference would do much to stimulate interest in athletics in Hoosier colleges,” the unnamed Ball State speaker declared. “Already there are traditional rivalries among sorfie of the institutions which would enhance the success of the Hoosier conference.’* Ball State is one of five secondary colleges in the state that do not use freshmen in varsity competition. The rumor of the conference stipulated that the league would be restricted to six schools.
Whitney Loses on Local Card Substituted at the last minute, ftenry Peak, Negro, defeated Bob Whitney, Butler university amateur, in a feature attraction on an amateur boxing card last night at Eagles temple. In the other main go Albert Slaughter defeated Tommy Smith. Wilmer Hardesty survived a knockdown in his bout, and came back to win the decision from Wilbur Boyce. Julius Glanzman, a newcomer to the shows sponsored weekly by the Indiana-Kentucky A. A. U., lost to Gordon Walker. Other decisions were: Frank Wells kayoed Ross Vincent in the second; George Daniels beat Lucien Armour; Emmett Longstaff knocked out Paul Dickey in the first, Carrol Scolf kaoyed Lowell Parish in the first, and Jimmy Myers defeated Nat Ludlow. PEDESTRIAN STRUCK BY CAR; HURT SERIOUSLY f Possible Skull Fracture Sustained by Joseph McNorton, from internal injuries, and possibly a fractured skull, Joseph McNorton, 55, of 833 Bradshaw street, was taken to city hospital this morning, after being struck by an automobile driven by Harold C. Francis, 5801 Madison avenue. The accident occurred in the 200 block North Senate avenue, while Mr. Francis was driving north and Mr. McNorton attempted to cross the street. FORT CHAPLAIN WILL BE LODGE SPEAKER Major Oliver to Be on Program at Prather Masonic Temple. Principal speaker at the annual past masters’ night dinner and home-coming of Calvin W. Prather lodge, No. 717, F. & A. M., in Prather Masonic temple, next Friday night, will be Major A. C. Oliver Jr„ Ft. Benjamin Harrison chaplain. Joseph W. Kaercher will direct Master Mason degree work at 4:30, preceding the dinner at 6:30. DE PAUW SQUAD LEAVES Neal Works Old Gold on Pass Attack in Last Drill. By Timet Special GREENCASTLE, Ind., Nov. 10. — Three teams of De Pauw university's football hopes left today for Evansville, where they will play Evansville college tomorrow' afternoon. Coach Neal sent his charges through dummy scrimmage yesterday, emphasizing the Old Gold's forward pass attack. Hoosicrs to Run Today Cross-country teams representing Tech and Washington high schools were to clash this afternoon between halves of the Tech-Washington football game. We Specialize in mo-1933 Steaks and Chops IJ D A SUNDAY DINNERS CHARLEY’S RESTAURANT 144 East Ohio Street CAPS f/K New patterns, the 9 9 kind you won't see elsewhere. LEVINSON ££. Gentlemen's Fine Clothes j MADE TO ORDER j KAHN Second Floor Rahn Rifts. Rates I 20 MONTHS to pay I WOLF SUSSMAN, Inc. 239 W. WASH. ST. ”",£*■ I Opposite Statehouae
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