Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 173, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1933 — Page 12
By Eddie Ash Baseball Has ‘Stove League Holdout’ m m m He Makes Himself Heard Above Football
HPHE days of holdouts in baseball were supposed to be a tiling of the past, but there’s a young- fellow on the west coast doing 1 some off-season blasting regarding the old pay check and he's filing his grievance even before the football season ends. Jot him down as Holdout No. 1 for the 1934 season. His name is Dick Ward and he is a pitcher of promise Ward seems to have an argument. That part of the country is football touchdown crazy at this time, but newspapers out there have given Dick a chance to start a stove league “all his own.” Ward won twenty-five games against only nine losses for Los Angeles the past season and was paid at the low rate of $230 a month. He was new in the league game and “went right along" at brick yard wages. Dick was styled the prize 1933 rookie of Pacific Coast League pitchers and was high over all including veterans, in percentage and third high in earned runs. a an nun Y\T lIEN the 1933 campaign closed in the Coast loop. Ward was paid ▼ ▼ off at the usual rate of $250 per month. The rookie phenom thought he was entitled to at least enough extra money for transportation to his home in Washington state. His demand was refused despite the fact he served with the Los Angeles club, a team with great financial support. Now Ward has notified all and sundry that ‘'L. A." fans won t see him again on their club unless the Angel owners kick through with a whopper increase for the 1934 season to make up for the low returns he rrceived in 1933. Speculating on the subject., coast baseball scribes think the Chicago Cubs will “buy” Ward and then option him back to Los Angeles. The Cubs own controlling interest in the Angels. Regardless of the outcome, young Ward has made himself heard above the shouts of the gridiron throngs and it’s hardly likely he will be an overlooked ball player in the spring. That “25 ajid 9" record looks too good for the magnates to pass up.
NAMES and major feats of high gridiron pickers on games of Nov. 25 were published yesterday, including fourteen high, thirteen higTl and twelve high. A group of “specials” is given mention today, covering selections that were unusually accurate on naming in advance the scores of particular games. Look ’em over: J W Miller. 908 Bir Four building, Indianapolis. Named eleven winners. Picked exact Nebraska-lowa outcome. 7 to 8. Joe Marsh. 3510 North Meridian street. Eleven winners. Named correct Ohio Btate-lUinois score, 7 to 6 John Berk, 2635 North Illinois street Ten winners. Named correct N. Y. U.Carnegie upset, 7 to 0. Charles Rusk. 9 North Bevllle avenue Eleven winners. Picked correct Ohio State and Michigan scores. 7 to 6 and 13 to 0. Walter Hornocker. 3403 West Washington street'.' Ten winners. Named actual Ohio State score. Conrad Barrett, 1158 Eugene street. Nine winners. Picked exact Southern Calilornia result. 19 to 0. Margaret M. Dugpp, 4012 Ruckle street. Nine winners. Named correct Nebraska •core R R Hill. Oreencastle Nine winners Named correct Nebraska score. Joe Joseph P Rolles. 440 Century building, Indianapolis. Nine winners. Nearly cracked Purdue-Indiana game for hole in one, naming it 21 to 3 Actual score, 19 to 3 James B McAvoy, 1826 South Meridian street. Eleven winners. Named correct Ohio State score George L Brown. 559 South Woodrow avenue. Eleven winners. Forecast correct Nebraska score Halford Brlnlev. Zionsvllle, Ind. Eleven wunners. Picked actual Nebraska score. Amos N Gerth. Columbus, Ind Nine winners. Named correct Ohio State score. John E Xletnhenz, Indianapolis Water Company. Ten winners. Named correct Nebraska score. Alf-ed Bunte, R. R 4. Box 622. Indianapolis. Ten winners. Named correct Net ,;a score James O. Jordan. 1635 Central avenue. Ten winners. Picked two correct scores. Michigan. 13 to 0, and Ohio State, 7 to 6. Dick Foutz, 144 West Thirty-third street. Eleven winners Picked correct Nebraska score. Marvin Click, 3962 Boulevard place. Nine winners. Named correct Detroit score. Frank B Dowd, 570 East Fall Creek boulevard. Ten winners. Named correct Michigan score and was close on Princeton. B E. Capehart. Greenrastle. Ind. Eleven winners. Only one point off on Michigan and close on Princeton. A! Lindop. 3959 Ruckle street. Eleven winners. Only few points oft on Harvard's big upset of Yale A L. Orrell. Quincy. Ind. Eleven winners. Named correct Ohio State score, one point off on Michigan and close on Minnesota. Calvelage Betty. 2239 North Pennsylvania street. Picked upset of Auburn bv Florida, 13 to 6 Correct score, 14 to 7. Bob Stevens, 104(1 North Pennsylvania street Eleven winners. Picked correct Michigan score, 13 to 0. and correct Georgia score. 7 to 6. Alan Huckleberry. Greenrastle. Ind. Eleven winners Picked correct Princeton Victory, 26*to 6, and only one point off on Harvard-Yale, 20 to 6. Correct score, 19 to 6. John McAvoy. 1826 South Meridian street. Ten winners. Picked correct Ohio State score and correct Detroit score Close on Armv-Navy. William M Britton. 46 South Belle Vieu place. Ten winners. Close on Purdue at 19 to 6 and close on Michigan 14 to 0. Maurice Crider. Shelbyville. Ind. Ten winners. Named correct Ohio State score. n n a nan thanksgiving day grid games
Times Staff .j c = It! s | .-! jJ §J e it' J J Selections 1 j|| jj 1 ||l 231 Jsl all U 1 !l j3l II gS Nebraska 7 1 7 1 7' 6 7 7 | 0 0 | 6| 6 > 51 Oregon State 3 0 6 3 6 0 7 10 J 6; 10 5 Brown 6 0 0 0 0 6 7 710 1 0 4 Colgate 10 7 7 6 3 13 _1 3 0| 6 7| 7 | Kentucky 0 0 0 6 7 7 0 0 7 0 3, Tennessee 12 114 20 13 7 14 14 6 14 13 il3 Carnegie 0 6 0 7 0 0 0 7 6 0 3 Pittsburgh 16 14 14 il3 13 1 14 i 10 21 i Pennsylvania 7 0 7 6 6 6 0 i2 12 7 6 Cornell 13 6 0 7 7i 12 7 0 0 14 I 7 | St. Mary’s 119 14 |l3 13 19 19 7 1 6 r 14j12 |l4 j Oregon U 0 7 0 7 6 7 0 0 6_ 4 J Oklahoma 13 12 6 13 7 6 0 12 10 3 8 Oklahoma AM 16 0 7 0 0 9 7 7 6 CM 4 North Carolina 14 12 13 13 0 14 7 0 10 14 10 Virginia 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 7 3 0 2 U. cTITa .. . 13 7 7 0 0 12 0 0 12 3 5 Wash State j 7 14 0 14 13 ! 6 1 7 14 14 14 'lO West Virginia 6 6 10 7 0 6 13 12 21 14 10 W. and J 7 0 0 0 14 10 6 0 6 0 4 Vanderbilt 7 6 6 7 0 7 0 0 6 3 4 Alabama * —! 10 12 13 13 7 12 14 6 < 12 11 Kansas .19 32 20 H 13 21 7 18 14 14 'l7 j Missouri 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0, 0 TeX as ~6 0 13 0 7 13 ; _ 6 7 10 | 3 | 7 j Texas A. M 13 6 0 7 i 6 0 0 7 0.5 Cincinnati 10 7 3 13 0 0 0 12 20 3 8 Miami iO.) 7 6 0 i 7 13 * 0 6 0 5 i C-i AMES of Saturday. Dec. 2. will bring to a close the pursuit of PerI feet Picker Pete and Perfect Picker Patricia by the fan football experts among Times readers. The selection coupon is carried in this column today and twelve contests are listed for grid followers of the city and state to forecast results. During the several weeks of competition, many fans have come mighty close to making a clean sweep of winners and countless fans have succeeded in predicting the exact scores of important games. The Times’ invitation to the football public to test its skill at forecasting results met with popular and heavy response, and there are many I Told You So's now who can back up their boasts with evidence. Everybody is headin' for the last round-up this week in the football pick 'em league. No selection blank was published for Turkey day games, but perhaps the fans will find a few 'headaches” in the group of twelve on Saturday. Clip the coupon below and mark your guess on scores in the brackets. Sign name and address and mail or bring to Football Score Editor. The Times. Indianapolis. Saturday noon is the deadline for selections to be received at Tire Times. Dig in! Versus Versus Army... ( ) N Dame ( ) Auburn. ( ) S. Caro.. ( ) Yale ... ( ) Princ'ton ( ) Rutgers ( ) Villa No. ( ) S. Calif. ( 1 Georgia ( ) Boston.. ( ) Holy C. ( ) Florida.. ( ) Maryl'nd ( ) Tulane.. ( ) Lou. U.. ( ) Ga. Tech ( ) Duke ... ( ) Tex. Chr. ( ) S. M. U. ( ) Baylor . ( ) Rice ( ) G. Wash. ( ) Kansas.. ( ), Name I Address *
Kautsky A. C. Five Will Meet Chicago Team Here
Kautsky A C. hardwood quintet will face what is reputed to be one of the fastest cage fives in the country Sunday when the Duffy Florals of Chicago meet the Kautskys on the armory floor. Last year the locals nased out a 22 to 19 victory in the final minutes of tlieir game with the Duffy five. This winter the Windy City team has added strength in Harry (Red) Skurnick. formerly with the Cleveland P. senblums. the New York pro leaguers, and later with the Chcago Bruins.
They also have signed up Steve Red' Barak, another ex-star with the Bruins, and Charles (Feed) Murphy, a graduate of Loyola, who played center with the Bruins. Johnny Ivers, the guard who last year held Johnny Wooden scoreless from the floor, and allowed him only a single point on a free throw, also is back with the Duffy quintet. The U. S. Tires a~d F anner Buchan.tn t°ams will piny ii a cuitain raiser at 2p. m The Kautskys and Duffy Florals will tangle at 3.
Indianapolis Times Sports
I. U. Denies Coach Deal Hcosier State School Will Not Hire Duke Grid Instructor. By United Preee BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 29. Reports that Wallace Wade, coach at Duke university, would be appointed head football mentor at Indiana university, met with vigorous denials today. It has been rumored about the campus that he would succeed E. C. i Billy i Hayes. Professor W. J. Moenkhaus, chairman of the Indiana university athletic board, said he had heard nothing of such reports. He indicated that no changes are planned. Dean C. j. Sembower, a member of the board, said that no meetings have been called to discuss the athletics department personnel. Despite Indiana's record of one victory, two ties and five defeats this fall, the student body and alumni have stood behind Hayes. The athletics department as a whole, and athletics director Z. G. Clevenger in particular, have been criticized freely by Crimson football fans, however. Hayes has no contract to coach football. He is head track coach and took the football job three years ago when Pat Page was ousted. Hayes did not particularly w r ant the football responsibility, but he yielded to popular demand at the university. Before the 1933 football season opened, it appeared that Indiana would have one of its best teams in many years.
Kipke Thanks Lucky Charm | By Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind„ Nov. 29.—The secret is out. Harry Kipke. popular | young coach at Michigan university ' gave some five hundred persons who i attended the annual Kiwanis Club football banquet to the 1933 Purdue | teams last night the low down of how the Wolverines win championships. He attributed it to superstition. Kipke was principal speaker at the dinner to the Boilermakers. It was during this dinner that twenty graduating seniors and major letter men elected Carl (Tony) Heldt, of Evansville, captain for the 1934 team and named Freddy Hecker, great running, blocking and tackling backfield star, as the most valuable player on the Purdue team this i season. Many tributes were paid to Noble Kizer, athletic director and football I coach, and to his coaching staff. As far as Kipke is concerned, J while the favorite saying is that Michigan punts, passes and prays, he linked his teams success to a rabbit foot given "Simmy” Simrall by a friend in 1929 and handed down through the teams to date as the ranking fortune charm. Once, he said, the entire student body scoured the campus for the missing good luck omen before an important game. Lon Mann, for ten years trainer of Purdue teams, was voted an honorary major letter for his untiring services. Captain Dutch Fehring presented Kizer with the senior players’ gift, a traveling bag, and the 1934 schedule was announced as follows: Oct. 6—Rice at Purdue. Oct. >13 —At Notre Dame. Cct. 20—Wisconsin iHome-comingl. Oct. 27—At Carnegie Tech. Nov. 3—At Chicago. Nov. 10 —At lowa. Nov. 17—At Fordham. Nov. 24—Indiana at Purdue. Hoosiers Name Jones Captain By United Press BLOOMINGTON. Ind„ Nov. 29. Robert Jones, Wabash, senior guard and full back, has been elected honorary captain of the 1933 Indiana university football team by his teammates. The team had no captain during its regular season. Jones, who has been on the Crimson squad three years, this season was rated as one of the most consistent punters in the Western conference. He also is Big Ten heavyweight wTestling champion. Devore to Lead Irish Gridders By United Press SOUTH BEND, Ind.. Nov. 29. Hughey De Vore, Newark, N. J., right end. has been named captain of the Notre Dame football team for its final game against Army at New York Saturday. De Vore captained the Irish against Indiana when they scored one of their two victories of the year. 12-2. The Irish were to hold their final practice today before leaving tomorrow at noon for New York. CARDS ELECT SWEANY Bob Sweany, quarter back, will captain the Southport high school football team next fall. He was named by Southport gridmen this week. Monogram sweaters were awarded to: Captain Goins. Oliphant, Jordan and Roberts, guards: Sweany, quarter back: Anderson and Vondersaar. tackles: Winchell and Gimbel. full backs; Langley. La Pack and Hohlt, half backs: Schaeffer, Stull and Temperly, ends, and Swickhard, center. TIGER SQUAD IS CUT Bft Times Special GREENCASTLE. Ind.. Nov. 29 Tubby Moffett, De Pauw university's basketball mentor, today said he has cut the Tiger cage squad to fifteen men. De Pauw- will open the hard-, wood season next gTv.osday night against Ball State o* Muncie.
INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1933
Battle for World Golf Crown
t*' ''' l **#•'*< JUt /. §4
Johnny Goodman
THE world golf championship will be derided at Miami, Fla., Dec. 2 and 3, when Denny Shute. Philadelphia pro, winner of the British open title, and Johnny Goodman, Omaha amateur, winner of the United States open will play seventy-two holes for possession of the Colonel Henry L. Doherty gold trophy. They will donate proceeds to the Red Cross.
Wolf Puffs —Too Weak! Andy Rascher Trips Up Tom Marvin in Feature Go on Mat Card at Armory.
BY CARLOS LANE The big bad wolf puffed and puffed, but he couldn't blow Andy Rascher’s house to the floor. Indeed, the Cedar Lake lad with the Adonic features and the hefty socks appeal, slapped the wolf’s shoulders twice on the canvas in the Hercules A. C. wrestling exhibit at the Armory last night to avenge a previous encounter, and to maintain a brilliant record in the local mat ring. In the feature event of the card, Mr. Rascher faced Tom (The Bad Wolf) Marvin, one of Oklahoma’s irascible exponents of the ungentlemanly art of annihilation popularly embraced under the general term of wrestling.
Two months ago Mr. Marvin indelicately upset Mr. Rascher so firmly that the' latter's biceps caressed the njng floor to the disappointment of several thousand fans. Marvin Takes Fall Thus as the pair glared at each other before the starting bell last night there was determination on Mr. Rascher’s face, and some gloating mixed up with Mr. Marvin's expression. A generous apportioning of strangleholds and toe locks finally gave Mr. Marvin an opportunity to encircle Mr. Rascher’s classically molded jaw with a chin lock in nineteen minutes, and the party looked like it would finish quickly. That was a mistake on the ringside customers’ part. Mr. Rascher came back. And he came back with such venom that in twelve mniutes he had pinned Mr. Marvin to the mat with a flying tackle so definitelly that the fans who sojourned to the corridors for a cigaret conjectured that the bad wolf would soon surrender the glory of the first meeting between the two. Language Sizzles How right they were! The grapplers came back into the ring with even more murderous tactics than they had displayed in the first two falls, and added to the more conventional practices several epithets which in most masculine gatherings are a direct invitation to unceremonious mayhem. Mr. Rascher barged heavily into Mr. Marvin and scooted him through the ropes, as the Oklahoma bad man protested to referee Heze Clark: "He called me a nasty name." It was tough on the customers who couldn’t read lips and those who purchased seats too far back from the ropes to hear the conversation inside the lines. But to the privileged few. of the throing of two thousand or more, who snuggled close to the canvas the rest of the affair was a linguistic treat. Shikat Is Victor However, not for long. In five minutes Mr. Rascher zoomed through the smoke-filled ether and crashed into Mr. Marvin. The bad wolf grunted, and it was only a trifling matter for Mr. Rascher to clank his shoulders back on the canvas for the winning fall. Last night’s show put anew performer to Indianapolis fans in the ring. He was Dick Shikat, who toppled Cowboy Jack Russell in twelve minutes with a crotch and slam. In the opening bout. A1 Baffert, French Canadian, took two falls out of three from Babe Caddock, New York grappler.
Basketball Scores
COLLEGE Indiana State. 19; Oakland City 28. Frankhn College. 35; Anderson high school. 23. HIGH SCHOOLS Oreencastle. 23: Danville, 21 (triple overtime i. Horace Mann, Garv. 27: Wallace. Gan’. 20. Kmghtstown. 23: Morton Memorial. 14. LON'DOS TOSSES BOESCH By Unittd Pri es NEW YORK, Nov. 29 —Jim Londos, Greece, threw Paul Boesch, Brooklyn, in a feature mat bout here last night. Jim McMillen, Illinois, threw Sun Jennings, Oklahoma. and Jack Humberto. Mexico, decisioned Dick Raines. Texas. PAIR TIE IX SHOOT L. C. Miller and Charles Unger tied for first place in the singles shoot at the Crooked Creek Gun tlub yesterday. Each cracked 48 out 50 targets.
Denny Shute
Young Murphy Bumps Pins for Three Scores of 235
BY LEFTY LEE The Fox Jail House team, composed of youngsters of high school age, continues to hold the spotlight in the St. Philip No. 1 League. The ! boys, headed by Johnny Murphy, j took three more games last night to cling to their top rung position. Larger totals may be secured by the bowlers of the city, but no bowler is likely to duplicate the latest feat of johnny Murphy, who rolled 705 last night with three games of 235 each. In the tenth frame of the first game Murphy spared and then struck to reach this figure, struck out in the second game for the same count and then drew a 8-10 split in the final frame of the last game to reach perfection plus. John Kiesel, a team mate, opened with a double, spared the pin that tapped him in the third frame and then struck out to roll the high single game of 279. Tommy Vollmer is another member of this loop who always shines, his latest set being a 657 that led Seven Up to a triple win over Coca Cola. Harold Barrett had 606 that also helped. Art Krick, the outstanding star of the Rotary League, also connected lor a real consistent set, his sheet showing games of 203, 202 and 202. a total of 607. The Our.gan team won the odd game from Foehner during this play. The Brass. Van Ausdail. Baker. Thompson and Coppack teams also won two from Miller. Busch. Zeller, Johnson and Boone Quintets, as Meyer and Clark took three from Gulling and Hatfield. The members of the Hiller Office Supply League were shooting for poultry prizes during their series at the Central alleys and Rohvans copped the turkey with a grand total of 655. A1 Millington won the duck with a score of 642, while G. Wilson showed his preference for chicken with a count of 637. Another case of a bowler retiring from the game and the nreturning to the lineup and pounding out one of those big 700 totals is Al Striebeck, one of the veteran stars of the old Silver team. Rolling his second series of the season, Striebeck gave the members of the Pritchett Recreation League something to think about when he crashed the maples for a 727 with games of 215. 256 and 256. Horn also was in form during this play, rolling b 74 with games of 236, 202 ana 236. Lieber had 620. Stiles 605. and Weimer 604. The Bowes Seal Fast ladies team of the Rose Tie Ladies Social League, that rolls on the Hotel Aantler alleys, crashed the maples for games of 875, 933 and 905. a total of 2,713. to take three games from Beard's Brake Service. Johns, Dawson and McDaniel were the girls toget the pms during this set. their sneet showing totals of 591. 570 and 560, Marott Shoe Shop and Tourney and Shea scoring 528 and 508 to lead them to a triple win over the Fox Jail Birds, who had Harian counting 513. Mausner Beer duplicated their feat of taking two out of three from the Jack C. Carr team when Court counted 527 against a 516 by Meeker Pouiks Milk a'so won two games from Happy Wonder Bakers. Brewer and Rice were the only girls to go over the 500 mark during the Tuesday Night Ladies League play at the Pritchett alleys, their scovs being 534 and 513. A flock of 400 totals appeared, however. Davev scoring 456; Wyeth, 448: Rohr. 474: Rudbeck. 423: McAniy, 432; Monta. 427; Alien. 493: Iliff. 470: Widolff, 456; Dunlop, 423: Fuller. 417, and Ronk. 493. Two to one was the verdict during the Hoosier A. C. play. Watts Press, Block Optical. Barrett Fuel and Bowes Seal Fast defeating Indianapolis Office Supply. Coca Cola Potter Coal and Centennial Press. Fred Schmitt was the only player to reach the 600 mark, scoring 603. Welsh had the high single game of 225. Mendenhall had a 580 total with the high game of 222 to lead the Water Company oovs during their set at the Pritchett alleys Shively was next with 556. as E. Smith showed on 544. The Central States Envelope team of the Commercial League was in rare form during last night's series at the Parkway alleys rolling a total of 2.947 with games of 924. 1.012 and 1.011 Rorkwood Manufacturing was the victim of this set and lost all three despite a score of 1.002 In their second try. Crescent Paper also won three games from Pure Oil. as Kingan and Citizens Gas took two from Abels Fink Auto and the Indianapolis News. Totals over the 600 mark were: McAllen. 636; Sylvester, 604 Wrav. 618: Lewis. 626. Brunot, 630; Hendricks, 614, and McAniy. 627. Company F worn two games from Company c as Company A cleaned up on Cnmnany E during the Christian Men
PAGE 12
Duane Purvis Named on All- America Squad Purdue Sensation Is Placed at Full Back Position Along With Cream of Nation’s Football Talent: Big Ten Lands Five Star Warriors.
United Press All-America Team
EDGAR MANSKE Left End Northwestern FRED CRAWFORD Left, Tackle Duke AARON ROSENBERG ... Left Guard Southern California CHARI.ES BERNARD Center Michigan FRANCIS SCHAMMEL Right Guard lowa FRANCIS WISTERT Right Tackle Michigan PAUL GEISLER Right End Centenary IRVINE WARBCRTON Quarter Southern California NORMAN FRANKLIN Left Half Oregon State JACK BUCKLER Right Half Army DUANE PURVIS Full Back Purdue BY HENRY M’LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK. Nov. 29.—The balance of football power has swung from the Pacific coast gridirons to the corn-stubble pastures of the middle west. The 1933 all-America football eleven, presented today by the United Press, contains five players from the Big Ten conference as against three from the far west, one form the south and one from the southwest.
The 1933 all-America, judged by any standard, be it speed, strength, brains or resourcefulness, is worthy to stand along with any of the mythical elevens of the past. From end to end, from quarter back to full back, it packs the requisites of a great team. Its players have been tested in the heat of topnotch competition. No stronger proof of the class of the first team could be found than a glance at the alternate squad. When such performers as Feathers. Petoskey and Oen are forced to yield top positions, the men who beat them out have to be great. Duane Purvis of Purdue, named as full back on the United Press first all-America team, has no weakness. Big, fast and tough, he can give and take it with any player in the country. He is a fine passer, pass receiver, tackier, blocker and kicker. Purvis proved his courage in the lowa game, when, badly hurt, he stayed in the battle and played like a demon. He averaged better than five yards gain every time he carried the ball this year. CARDS PLAY TONIGHT Southport high school cagers will meet the Warren Central high school Owls in the Southport gym tonight. The Cards will play Decatur Central on the home floor Saturday night.
Builders set at the Illinois alleys. Jess Hall closed with a 224 to total 602 and to lead this play. Ramsey was next with 555 as Bryson showed on 548. Clean sweeps ruled the Packers League play on the Illinois drives, Meier Packing and Armour & Cos. defeating Hilgemeier Packing and Indiana Provision. Rail rolled games of 193.214 and 212 to lead this session. The Beard Brake Service ladies' team will roll the Armour & Co.'s men's team > in a special match game on the Illinois , alleys Thursday afternoon at 4. Friday night an eight-team league, sponsored by the Switzer-Cummings ComEany, will open its season's play on the lelaware alleys. Ahearn stole the show during the Mallory & Cos. contests at the Illinois, when he pounded the pins for games of 237, 223 and 223. a total of 683. With this kind of help the Elkonodes had an easy time taking the entire series from | the Ford Valve team. I A special match game will be held at the I Illinois alleys at 4 p. m. Thursday between the Raab Bros., team of the Auto League and a picked squad of women bowlers. The men s team will consist of Jacob Freje, Riley, Montgomery. Rohrman and Turney. A big crowd is expected to attend. The match will be the first of a series between the teams. The men's team won the series last season. Tigers Balk at Rose Bowl Tilt By United Press PRINCETON. N. J.. Nov. 29.—The Princeton Tigers, one of three unbeaten and untied major football teams, will not consider meeting Stanford in the Pasadena Rose bowl game because of a policy against post-season games. Princeton was eliminated as a possible contestant last night by the Princeton athletic association's board of control, which said it would not deviate from its policy.
Tuesday Ring Results
AT NEW YORK—Billy Hogan. 143 Piermont. N Y., outpointed Petey Gulotta. 141, Brooklyn, (6'; Lew Feldman, 129. Brooklyn, idrewi Frankie (Kid) Covelli, 129. South Brooklyn. (6). AT LOS ANGELES—Baby Arizmendi, 129. Mexico City, decisioned Eddie Shea, 129. Chicago: Harold Anderson, 180 knocked out Ed Prante, 200. (1). AT ALEXANDRIA. Va.—Pete Sarron. defeated Varias Milling. San Francisco, ten rounds, decision. They are featherweights. AT HOUSTON. Tex— Maxie Rosenbloom. light heavyweight champion, and Clyde Chastain, Dallas, drew in ten rounds. It was a whirlwind scrap which saw both contestants on the floor. Rosenbloom for no count and Chastain for seven seconds Frankie Huehes, Indiana welterweight, decisiveiv outpointed Don La Rue. Montreal, six rounds. GRIZZLIES WIN OPENER By United Press FRANKLIN, Ind.. Nov. 29.—The Franklin college Grizzlies won a charity-practice basketball game from Anderson high school here last night, 35 to 23. Irvine, Franklin forward, scored twelve points. Anderson is ineligible for high school competition until Jan. 1. ‘Y’ 4-MILE RACE SET Final preparations were being made today for the Y. M. C. A. Turkey-day race, starting at 9 tomorrow morning, ‘over a four-mile course on city streets. The race will finish at the Y. M. C. A. Official starter will be Heze Clark. Officials are Paul Jordan, Herman Philips and Earl Montgomery. Jimmy Clark and Keith Pegg will Judge the finish.
Utah’s Hero YEAR by year the Rocky mountain gridiron clan is being heard of more in national circles. One reason is that the mountaineers are getting more players like Aldo Richins. Utah full back, named on his all-section team.
Few Notable Grid Tilts on Thanksgiving Day Program Although Thanksgiving, once heralded almost as widely for its gridiron as for its turkey festivities, has lost a major portion of its football significance in recent years, still it can not be overlooked in the annual pigskin campaign. Its importance as a grid holiday slumped about the time the eastern colleges, which innovated the sport, had to admit that the game had moved westward and taken root in the big schools in what then was known as the American hinterland. For some reason few of the western schools took readily to Thanksgiving games, perhaps because of the rising popularity of long schedules which virtually confined the contests to week-ends.
The majority of games listed on tomorrow's program, it is true, are west of the eastern standard time belt, but only a pair of the entire lot have any bearing on the national grid picture. Most of them are merely traditional rivalries, important only locally. Cornell, Penn Meet In this light perhaps the most outstanding tilt is the annual meeting of Cornell and Penn, on Franklin field, in Philadelphia. The records of both denote anything but high caliber football, but Cornell’s past performances are a shade better this fall than those of the Red and Blue. Carnegie and Pitt are another pair of old rivals holding to the Thanksgiving tradition in a game that probably will decide nothing more vital to football than the championship of the Keystone state. Perhaps the bitterest battle in the east will be the Brown-Colgate scrap at Providence. W. & J. will meet West Virginia on the West Virginians’ home lot. Nebraska Plays Coast Team In the south there will be Kentucky and Tennessee, at Lexington, and an important tussle between Vanderbilt and Alabama at Nashville. In the midwest the NebraskaOregon State game will headline a bill which includes the OklahomaOklahoma Aggie struggle, and a minor game between Kansas and
Independent and Amateur Basketball Gossip
Sixteen teams are matched in the first round of the early season tournament which will get under way at the Dearborn hotel gym tomorrow. O'Hara Sans will meet the McCrory Five and Ten netters in the opening tilt at 2 p. m.; McClain Grocery and Belmont A C will play at 2:o0; Mallorys and Wayson Fivers are booked at 3:40; and the Fletcher Trust al }d D £ oley Hotshot fives will play at 430 Doll Flyers and Phillips '66 meet at 7 m r.-, Armou L and Bridgeport Cards at 0 in' Cri J7 ls T on . Cubs and Riverside A. C. at 8.40: and Indianapolis Flashes and Commencai Towels at 9:30. viiwJ'p&W Camals . will P lav the Noblesi- llp P xhl P Friday night in Noblesi“js- Camels want games with Plainfield, Kokomo. Bridgeport, and Crawfordsstreet. Wnte Phil 15 Eas? Michigan Indianapolis Water Company five will practice Friday night at Rhodius 5™ For games phone John carl nf L ltlC ° n 9110 ' or wrlte Mm in care or the company. tefm^t^L^Ho 5 , dow , r i ed thp Franklin team ast night. 49 to 22. The Packers shp n meet the K°*omo Eagles at the Old Butler gym. For games write nr phone Charles Dorn. Irvington 0937 5136 fea o t°ed Vl th e . The , HilgSrCuVde--2Q , and Indianapolis Deacons last night. 2.® Th ,S Cubs meet the East Tenth Street Pirates Sunday. Games a-e wanted with fast teams in the 19-vear-old phi!, f0 T Tuesday Thursday and Sunday S?"L e Ji vln £'l r L 3429 Flashes B and South Side Buddies notice. McCrory Five and Tens and the Kresge SSnf d ,ys' n! "> “*• > K .hFLSn|r t r:rr,.srs h p”, 7, t <, s and H?™’ s Phone Kenneth Lemon, Hemave k nut H9 ' ° r ® him at 2446 Cal 'eee Car ,P ent ers and Joiners local union five in Bloomington would likp to book fas. teams in Indiana. Ohio or Kentucky For games write Frank Douthitt general delivery, Bloomington. ’ * enerai The Dooley Hotshots, with a iineim inc a nd?. ! h ®n P Smith, Clevton, Beetle B R °?ers. Ewing. Curiee. Teegarden and Sharpe, want gamps Write V Criee. 1103 East Michigan street Cu ’* Coach Costello has issued a call for al' S* eI John S HV^ r v tPd *k MT 11 * out I°r the frppMkf *j an \. e basketball teem First n‘pp C ’ be b i e,a Sur -day af’ernoon from 9 te\ Ri ver side Olympic Club gym S" 1 * to * P. m. For games call Drexel 1331-W and ask for Ed. „ T^ e . Indianapolis Sportsmens' Club will mee. the Oak Hill Flashes and the Kre-gp TPns T Th ' Jr sday night at the Edgewood gym I S C. was defeated bv the French Lick team at French Lick Sunday. For games, phone or write Drex r ei Ce 2656 H -J U ’ 1537 Street ' Arsenal Bulldogs wan* games with fast basketball teams in the 15-17-year-o;d class. Phone Harrison 0591 and ask for Roy. or write Roy Stephens, 1624 North Pennsylvania street. MATES HONOR MANSKE EVANSTON. 111.. Nov. 29.—Edward (Eggs) Manske of Nekoosa, Wis., end, has been named by his teammates most valuable player on the Northwestern football team the past season. He has played regular end for three years.
3 Overtimes in Net Fray By Tin • e Syeciil GREENCASTLE. Ind. Nov. 29.—The local high school basketball team, runners-up in the state title finals at Indianapolis last March was given a hard ride her? last night by •the Danville high quintet. The contest went three extra periods, Greencastle winning, 23 to 21. Hutchinson and Cox starred for th° victors and Montgomery was best for Danville. Score at end of regulation time was 17 to 17. The count was 19 to 19 after one overtime session and 21 to 21 at the conclusion of the second extra period. Danville failed to score in the third extra round and the Tiger Cubs netted two points.
1 N D| A N A STATE WINS By United Preen TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Nov. 29. Indiana State Teachers’ college opened its basketball season with a 39 to 28 victory over Oakland City college here last night. Miklozek and Spence led the scoring for Indiana State. The Oaks were forced to play the last three minutes with only four men after Hollen, guard, went out on fouls.
Missouri, in which Kansas probably will conserve its strength for a second game with George Washington in Washington, D. C., Saturday. The Texas-Texas A. & M. contest will be the only game of note in the southwest region, while on the Pacific coast, the Oregon-St. Mary’s game will draw greatest interest, although the Gonzaga-Idaho tiff in Spokane should be something of a battle. Among the secondary schools meeting in this sector, Miami and Cincinnati, clashing at Cincinnati, promise the most fireworks. Tomorrow’s games, and the few listed for Saturday, will close the regular grid season throughout the country.
Low Round Trip Coach Fares DECEMBER 2-3, 9*lo $5.50 PITTSBURGH, PA. Leave Indianapolis 6.45 P. M., or 11.00 P. M., Saturdays. Returning leave Pittsburgh 11.20 P. M., Sundays. $3*75 Columbus, O. $2.25 Dayton, O. $1.65 Richmond, Ind. Leave Indianapolis 6.45 P. M., Saturdays, or 6.20 A. M. f Sundays. Returning leave Sunday Night. $2.50 Louisville, Kjr. Lv. Indianapolis 8.20 A. M., Sundays Returning leave Louisville 8.00 P. M., Sundays. DECEMBER 2-1 $4.50 ST. LOUIS, MO. Leave Indianapolis 10.58 P. M., Saturday; 2.35 A. M. or 8.26 A. M., Sunday. Returning leave St. Louis 8.00 P. M., 11.30 P. M., Sunday, or 12.03 A. M., Monday. WEEK-END EXCURSION (Friday to Monday Trips) ss<so Chicago, 111. $3.60 Louisville, Kjr. International Live Stock Exposition Chicago, 111. • Dec. 2*9 Greatly reduced round trip Rail and Pullman fare* every weekend, between all stations. City Ticket Office 116 Monument Place Phone Riley 9331 Pennsylvania Railroad
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