Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 September 1936 — Page 20
~~ -*™
WORLD SERIES
BUY ’EM
#® ;, Eddie Ash
TICKET POINTERS
IN STRIPS
OF THREE
JORLD SERIES action is to get tomorrow and the Hoosier
the crowd. At least.
’ this corn
in been received tickets. . Orders a Yankees and the Giant: will |
by
Tickets
an application for one seat in ti panied by a certified check ‘or money order—no cash—for
$16.5 “sa Ba stand seats
3 : 1 : ct The series schedule is a
and a reservation in a are 30. that » hil (;ial t
the Yankees nav
nts have yet to achieve th * Game No. 1} Game No. 2—P« Game No. 3—Y Game No. Game No.
N{).
olo Grou in
3—Yankee Sta {—Yankee St b—-Yankee Sta (ame T7—Polo G
(ame NO.
n =
r tickets fc
3, 4 and 5.
be handled
licat he National gem ent— at 18.000 grand s 57.000.
Seating a stand and box seats; standing room. Total Yankee Stadium—2£00 ved;
stand, unreser
rrang
grand 75,000 Unreserv game, and purch be $1.10 and wil Games post inally designated. . .. Tie has been played through York >
ed grand stand seats, at rs must enter be sold in a
poned on ¢
of wiil -
account of games Games time. ” ”n zn Twelve foreign pilots have entered the 400-mile speed glassic at Roosevelt Raceway, New York, on Oct. 12. . . . Five are from France, four from England and three from Italy. . The drivers from across the sea will have no advantage over the Yankees, according to Wilbur Shaw, Indianapolis, who has raced against them on their own tracks. . The Raceway course is new and has 16 turns, making it a wide open event, in Shaw's opinion. . . He will be there along with Wild Bill Cummings and other American leaders
of the roaring road sport. x un
tisburgh line from end field that will 180 pounds per man. med outfit . When the Panther machine starts clicking in a big way the team 1s expected to line up as follows: Paul Shaw and Frank Souchak, the ends; Tony Mat isi and George Delich, at the : tackles: Biff Glassford and Dalle the guards; Don Hensley, Micheleson, at quarter back: Marshall Goldbere and Bob La Rue, half and Frank Patr ick, full back. n 2 Sam Mutoars er, Indianapolis, chief inspector for the Hoosier State Athletic Commission, yesterday was
fo end go about And it’s a seas
at
Tezze, at
at center; Johnny
eleciegd to a vice presidency in the | Association at |
National Wrestling the convention in Houston , . . Sam is a former grappler of the “old school” and alse an ex-fight manger. He handled the affairs of Jack Dillon when the Hoosier Bearcat was light-heavyweight champion. ® forn
” » ENRY BRUDER, of Indianapo bid on € nois 1 team.. He , who starred rs ago, later but cleared
returned to act
is ridder, for berth University weighs 215 with -the landed on 1 up his ion at
er Hi ch g mak g a ard Ili Ten He:
0
a Big nry
ir
Purdue Drills Hard; Decker Improvi ing
Bu Inited Press LAFAYETTE, ridders cont effort 4 vy disrupted by the recent explosion. Lowell the seriously injured improved today.
Cale ndar
AX MERICAN LEAGUE
Ind., Sept. 22. — SOSS101 an team bad shower
Decker, 1
piayers.
y L 43 68 £9 7
NATIONAL L
£4 85 67
Games Today
AMERICAN LEAGUE §t. Rouis at Detroit 2). Philadelphia at New York. icago at Clevel and Boston at Washir
LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE {2).
Results Y esterday ~ NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklvn ++ 300 103 000— 7 1 Boston . 100 000 000— 1 Prankhouse and Phelps: Chaplin, n Ama Mueller Be uis .. 013000 001— 3 9 3 & 020 110 000— 4 10 1 Winford. Heusser. J. Dean and V. Davis, Ocrodowski: Carleton. Warneke and Hartneit.
— New York at Philadelphia:
4 0 Reis
wet grounds. Cincinnati and Pittsburgh not scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE No games scheduled.
MAJOR LEADERS
be sold in strips of t
lo Grounds, adium,
6—Polo Grounds, Monday,
rounds,
xhibition Co. at the Polo Grounds,
reserved grand 18.000 bleac
sim rain must be played in the park orig- | are
backs, |
Tech |
inued long drill | to build up a|
under way a week from state will be represented and: letters have information on
several calls
er requesting
re being taken in New York by: the Jock Selects |
three. which means that tand must be accom-
he grand s box means an outlay of $19.80. 50 each and box seats $6.60. s follows, always remembering e clinched their pennant, the e mathematical certainty: Wednesday, Sept. 30. , Thursday, Oct. 1. im, Friday, Oct. 2. Saturday, Oct. 3. Sunday, Oct. 4. Oct. 5. Oct. 6.
ds. dit dium,
Tuesday, = r Games 1, 2 a . If a seventh contest is the Giants immediately after will be redeemed
nd 6; The Yankees are necesby the games after the offices of that club at tickets at the Polo Grounds the ball park, New York. 29.000 reserved grand 4000 bleachers, 6000
Lo
ions for
unreserved;
nd land,
18,000 Total
stand and box seats; hers, 10,000 standing room. $3.30 each, will go on sale on morning park immediately. ... ilar way.
played off after the regular schedule will be started at 1:30 o'clock, New
State Colleges Set for Action
Nine Football Battles to Open Conference Saturday.
With Butler again the defending champion, the 1936 football season
of the Indiana College Conference | will open Saturday with a schedule !
of nine games, ference contests. The 1934 and 1935 title winners will open their campaign against Evansville here. The Bulldogs defeated the -downstate team, 12 to 0, on their championship drive last year. Rose Poly will attempt to avenge a 15-to-0 defeat suffered at the hands of Earlham last season when the conference rivdls met at Richmond. Central Normal will play Manchester at North Manchester: land City will invade Franklin and Valparaiso will entertain St. Joseph in other > Inter-state competition is in store for other elevens. Wabash will I11.,
T'S
including five con-
State at Muncie;
entertain Normal (Ill.) College, and |
Miami of Oxford, O., will entertain { De Pauw in other non-conference games. Hanover will not open its season until Oct. 3, when the invade Terre Haute to ‘diana State's Sycamores. Two of the “Big Three" elevens of the state, Indiana and Notre Dame, will be idle, but Purdue is to tackle Ohio University this Saturday at Lafayett
battle In-
McMillin Is Optimistic Over Indiana Football; Has Praise for Tackles
chance
"”
Indiana has a “toss-up” of winning four of its eight “top {games during the 1936 football sea- { son, Coach A. N. (Bo) McMillin told | university alumni here yesterday. He said the Hoosiers would have an even chance to win against | Michigan, Towa and Purdue in Big | Ten conference games and against { Syracuse in an intersectional tilt. McMillin refused to list Centre, opening game rival, among Indiana’s prospective victims, but said | his team “should prevail over Centre {and Chicago and probably lose to
°t. | Chio State.”
The Hoosier coach said Indiana's { particular strength was at tackles {and that he wouldn't trade Capt. { Chris Dal Sasso and other candi- | dates at that post for “any in the country.” He expressed sympathy over the {death of Tom McGannon and Carl Dahlbeck, Purdue University
explosion. Assistant Coaches Paul
{ { | | | } { | { 1
i neral. services for McGannon in | Evansville, were the luncheon. Other members E. C. Hayes, head track coach: C.
| Temerario, Clyde Smith and W. H.
Thom. Zora G. Clevenger, athletic | director, and Dr. William Lowe Bry- | also | Leo W. Shumaker, president | of the Indiana University Club, pre- |
an, president of the university, | Spoke.
sided.
PACKY M’FARLAND ILL
By United Press JOLIET, Ill, Sept. (Packy) McFarland, who retired in | 1918 after earning $200,000 as a top-
"i notch lightweight fighter, was crit-
LEADERS <G AB R ° Appling. White Sox... 133 589 107 Waner, Pirates.... il. Cleveland .....1 , Dodgers . 109 292 34 Ditkel, Yankees .......107 414 87 1 HOME RUNS Cehrig, Yanks... 48, Ott. Giants . .. Trosky, Cleve. ... 4] DiMaggio, Yanks. . Foxx, Red Sox... 39 RUNS BATTED IN Trosky, Cleve. ...153 Medwick, Cards ..137 senrig. Yanks . 138 Bonura, White 8x 132
BATTING
{ically ill today with a streptococcic | infection localized near the heart.
5 | McFarland, state boxing commission | member, is 48.
PLAN NIGHT FOOTBALL
Times Special
4 HUNTINGTON, Ind, Sept. 22.— | vogton High School is to play | night football at Kriegbaum field | | this
is season. An effort is being le to install equipment for the ’ with Peru
the
Bleacher seats
Oak- | conference games. | invade Charleston; |
to meet Eastern Illinois Teach- |
Michigan Normal will play Ball | Indiana State will |
Hilltoppers |
play- | ers burned fatally in a shower room |
| Harrell | {and Ralph Graham, attending fu- |
unable to attend |
of | the coaching stdff introduced were |
5 Allison to Meet
22 — Patrick |
Indianapolis Times Sports
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER :
29
od y
1936
PAGE 19
Pennants Follow Joe Manager Joe McCarthy of the pennant-winning Yankees has won flags in both major loops and two
in the American Association with Louisville.
He won
in the National with the Cubs.
PROMINENT COACH SIZES UP BIG GAME
Gaumy Neal Grooms Seventh Team at De Pauw
Gophers Over | Phelan’s Team
Sutherland Also Predicts Colgate to Knock Off Duke Saturday.
BY JOCK SUTHERLAND Pittsburgh's Head Coach PITTSBURGH, Sept. 22.—There are a half dozen stadiums. in the | country in which I'd rather be a spectator on Sept. 26 than a coach | In my own. On widely scattered { fronts the 1936 football season | opens with a real bang. i Minnesota, unbeaten in three | campaigns and pre-season favorite for. the national. championship, | tackles as high | a hurdle; as it | will run jzacross all season in engaging Washington in Seattle. The Huskies are expected to fight it out with California for | the Pacific) Coast Conference title, but wise folks will not pick any club to top the | Gophers this | season. f Who wouldn't | like to be. watching at | Durham when Colgate deploys against Duke? Can Ace Parker, a | remarkable back, offset the inexperience of a number of the Blue | Devils against the magic of the Red Raiders’ attack? I ‘doubt that he can. | Rice meets Louisiana State at {| Baton Rouge in another feature. | Rice fell down last year, while { Louisiana State performed up to expectations. The Owls appear { headed for a comeback, however, and have a good chance in this one,
Tulane didn't use to fear Misbut that was before Ray started to click for Ole | Miss. This loping back is likely | to mean the difference ‘between | victory and defeat for Lowell (Red) { Dawson, who launches his first season as head coach of the Green | Wave. | Southern California and Oregon | State, schools which are rebuilding, | get together in the Los Angeles | Coliseum. Watch the Trojans this | trip. .I do not expect Oregon State | to break into: the victory column | in its first start. Major Lawrence (Biff) Jones is expected to pull Oklahoma right in | behind Nebraska in the Big Six scramble, but the Sooners had best { be careful in their first one with | Tulsa. My choice is the club from Norman, however. Alabama is out to wipe out that tie with Howard of last year, and should succeed, although the Crimisn't what it has been { in the past. Navy's improved machine will find William and Mary competitive, but not too dangerous. Kansas | State bumped into a tartar in Fort | | Hays Teachers last year, but should | | avenge the defeat. | | The Purdue tragedy, which sii
Sutherland
| sissippi, Hapes
| son Tide
“When in doubt, punt.” quarter backs, and incidentally, foothall.
(Turn to Page 20)
Coming around the bend on an off-tackle slant is the quartet of De Pauw backs selected to do most of the foraging into enemy territory in the
| | i | eight games this season. The 1936 model is some-
what lighter than that of last year, but the greatest Neal-coached team was the small but cagey squad of 1933 which finished the season, undefeated, untied and unscored on. That was the year after the roster had been depleted by the graduation of Don
| Brownlee, Washington A. C. will { appear in the four-round semi-final
i
{ bout. He was slated for a rematch
For d on Ring Bill with Harry Fishel of Bargersville,
but the latter is unable to appear. Lightweights again will hold the
| Mickey Davis, unattached welter- | weight, and Russell Stewart of | spot on Roy Wallace's weekly fight | card at the Illinois-st arena Thurs- | the three-round supporting scraps.
Greencastle are to mix in one of day night, with Marshall Allison of |
| Shelbyville opposing Floyd Ford of | | the Boyce A. C. Both fighters lost elimination battles held recently to decide the | city amateur lightweight champion. | | Milton aoe Ba of the | tional Negro Baseball League, Will series, gained the titular stage by [Diy an exhibition game at Municidefeating Allison. Ford was defeat- | Pl Park here tomorrow afternoon.
NEGRO NINES CLASH
Times Special
RICHMOND, Ind. Sept. 22. —The
is one of the important items in the Tigers’ daily routine. of the men expected to put new “kick”
Wheaton and other stars. heavy, but bogged down with the strain of maintaining the pace of its predecessor. firm believer in cycles—that trend of winning years and losing years. ness to its repertoire, he anticipates a banner year. Or perhaps it will be 1937. With Villapiano carrying the leather in the background, the blockers paving the way in the above photo are, left to right, Kendall, Rulison and Downey. v 5
It’s an old but safe axiom for puzzled the longest ground-gaining Being both an offensive and a defensive measure, punting
play in
A trio into the. attack this year are
In 1934 the team was Coach Neal is a
If this year’s team adds clever-’
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—Advertisement,
| Pittsburgh Crawfords and the Cin- | | cinnati Tigers, members of the Na-|
KOLOIDAL IRON
and Cod Liver Oil Extract Tablets Renew Energy and Pep. Will build up that run down system, Buy Them at
HAAG’S
ied by Johnny Krukemeier. . The two losérs are to meet in a | { consolation affair this week and are | {scheduled for four rounds, Bill|
LOANS
ON ANYTHING
FOR YOUR HEALTH’'S SAKE SEE A DENTIST
If you have decayed teeth you Sither swallow or absorb decayed matter or pus contin This followed by serious trouble. Give us a call for examination
will surely be
ted Here 23 Years
. .
DI
shown above, left to right. and Charles Sandberg. De Pauw last year.
They are Howard Longshore, Alex Shiak
won five, tied two and lost one
After opening on foreign soil agajnst the Miami Indians,
the Greencastle collegians will begin a campaign in the Hoosier con-
ference.
Tech Polishes Pass Plays for Broncos
Tech will be at a disadvantage when it battles Jeff of Lafayette in a North Central Conference game | Friday at the East Side gridiron. | The Broricos already have played | two grid encounters while it will be | Tech's first encounter of the sea- |
son. Logansport, 12 to 0, and downed Frankfort by an identical score the previous week.
An intensive drill on pass offense and defense as well as general] fundamentals featured the workout | for the Big Green squad yesterday. | Coach Robert Ball, who has made | an intensive search for a punter, has selected Tommy Wilson, quarter back, for that assignment.
Last week Jeff disposed of |
|
|
i
| |
They're winding up a century of “Old Asbury” dpwn in Greencastle this winter, and although the “battle of the century end” against Butler isn't slated until the fall of 1937, Coach Raymond (Gaumy) Neal plans to usher out the ninety-ninth year with a suce cessful De Pauw football season. The Tiger mentor is shown above as he. went into a huddle with the outstanding mems=bers of his 42-man squad. De Pauw opens the current cam=paign Saturday at Oxford, O., against Miami University. Starting his seventh year as head coach, Neal has only five regulars from last year, but his system is _ one of regimentation,’ and there are always sufficient replacements from the second and third teams, Shown in the picture, left to right, are: (Front row) Joe Kopta, Bill Sweet, Jack Oswald, Bob Cope= land, Kermit Arnold, Roy Noble, Eldon Johnson, Charles Kendall, Bob Dewar, Howard Longshore, Bill McClurg, Joe Johnson, Coach Neal; (Standing) Alex Shiach, Charles Sandberg, Joe Pekich, Gus Villapiano, Tony Pekich, Bob — Jones, Joe Barr, Vernon Rulison, Harold Downey, Lloyd Reid, Don Grummon, Jean Stoops, Tom
. Murnane, James Gregory.
AMATEUR PROGRAMS SLATED AT TURNERS
Bill Armstrong and Ray Hahn, who are handling fighters at the South Side Turners gym, are plane ning the opening of the indoor boxing season, with a series of regular shows. ° The first workout of the year is scheduled tomorrow night at 7:30 with amateur scrappers and beginners eligible to attend for instruce tions. The gymnasium is located at 306 Prospect-st.
Additional Sports on Page 20
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Tuesday—Wednesday—Thursday
Just Present the Program—2 Hours Free and 10c for Each Additonal Hour
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