Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1936 — Page 19

FoLLowN G FoorsaLL with John W. Thompson

‘ Manual-Shortridge Rivalry, Filled With Exciting Lore, Reaches 40-Year Peak in Game at Delavan Smith Field Friday.

OR all we know, the official for the first Manual-Short-ridge football game might have been William Henry Harrison, or Miles Standish, or even Tecumseh. To those hot stove leagues who glory in the ecastacies of sport tradition the rivalry between these two schools offers large morsels of white meat. 1t all started in 1896 and the two teams areits meet Friday at Delavan Smith field for the 1936 edition of their 40-year series. After an exhaustive (and exhausting) search into ‘sundry sources of football information, including a few old grads who were forced to admit, between nervous heh-hehs, that they weren't exactly sure just when they graduated, we have garnered the following:

3 4 [DURING the chain of encounters, the number of which is said to be 28, Shortridge has scored 343 points and Manual 322. But the Red and White has won 13 games and

the Blues have only won 12. There have been three ties. ” 2 u u

Although the historical data concerning the first halfdozen games played by Manual and Shortridge is fast tak-

ing on the pallor of primeval conjecture, the turn of the 20th century launched the schools into one of the most|;|

spirited grid series of all time. Here are the scores as we have been able to obtain

them:

1806—Manual 14, Shortridge 0. 1897—Manuat 14, Shortridge 0. 1807—Manual 18, Shortridge 10. (Post seasan game.)

1808—Manual 0, Shortridge 0. 1808—Manual 16. Shortridige 0. (Post season game.)

1899—Manual 11, Shortridge 0. 1900—Manual 0, Shortridge 0. 1901—Manual 17, Shortridge 1902—Shortridge 12," Manual - 1903—Shortridge 51, Manual 1904—Shortridge 30, Manual .1905—Shortridge 12, Manual 1906—Manual 22, Shortridge IwI=Euolirites 10, Jyanual

(Games from 1908 to 1919 inclusive cancelled by school board order.) 1920—Manual =i, Shortridge 0. 1921—Manual 50, Shortridge 0. 1922—Manual 26, Shortridge 13. 1923—Manual 13, Shortridge 0. 1924—Manual 59, Shortridge 1925—Manual 14, Shertridge 1926—Shortridge 18, Manual 1927—Shortridge 33, Manual 1928—Shortridge 25, Manual 1929—Shortridge 39, Manual 0. 1930—Shortridge 19, Manual 0. (No games in 1931 and 1932.) 1933—Shortridge 7, Manual 7. 1934—Shortridge 7 Manual 0. 1935 Shoririese gi Manual 6. ”

YESTERDAY we sat by while Manuak S velerin principal, E. H. Kemper McComb thumbed through old issues of the Manual monthly Mirror. He recalled that Manual played Buffer, Wabash, Central Normal and other colleges, along ith some high schools. The reason they played colleges was at the colleges had football fields and the high schools idn’t. And playing in a hilly cow-pasture was frowned upon, even in those days. In the early days of Manual-Shortridge football, when those were the only high schools in town, the games were played at the old baseball park on W. Washington-st, mainly because neither school’s bleachers would hold the crowds. At the famous, or maybe it should be notorious, 1907 game, more than 11,000 saw the action, action both on the field and off.

1 0 0 8. 0. 0 0. 0.

” 2 ”n 3 2 tJ The year before Manual had broken the jinx and won,

22 to 0. But in 1907, Shortridge’s Hawkins made a. lusty dash for the goal line in the closing minutes and the Blue and White came out the victor. During the game someone hoisted red and white streamers in the middle of the Shortridge bleachers. Shortridge rooters tore them to shreds. That made Manual’s section see red, or blue, or something. Anyway, the newspapers of the day claimed it took 72 pa-

trolmen to separate the spectators. » E4

» ” 8:8 FTER the game another ruckus occurred on the White River bridge and somehow or other, the Shortridge colors got tossed into the river. The wires on trolleys carrying Shortridge rooters back from the game were disengaged, and miniature battles sprung up all over town, one of the outstanding ones taking place in the middle of Illinois and Washington-sts. The day ended up with a nightshirt parade, and a hot ‘ chocolate party at Craig's. Some folks claim that Manual and Shortridge met on the gridiron again before 1920, but if they did, it seems that the meetings were extra-curricular. But that’s altogether possible. Anyway both schools tried substituting soccer for football for several years and found it didn’t

work so well. ” ” » ” ” o HERE are numerous tales surrounding the Manual-Short-

"ridge games, one of the best being that concerning one Leathers, a Shortridge star in 1905. It seems that Mr. Leathers’ professor, on the day before the game disqualified him for whispering in class. But the entire Shortridge squad struck, said they wouldn't play the next day and the professor ate his words, probably didn’t go to see the game. But the boys did, and won, 12 to 6. Those were the days of Allerdice, Coffin, Clark, Coval, Kittel and Krull, days when a football game was usually more than that, no matter what the score. This is the day of Robinson, Etherington, Pappas, Adams, Rash and Crockett, days when a football game is rarely more than that. And rightly SO.

Stanford Players Charge Referee ‘Tutored’ Rivals

Cardinal Gridders Blame Official for Defeat by Cougers; Investigation Is Under Way.

By United Press’ * STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal, Oct. 6.—Stanford University football players announced today they will refuse to play in another game of the 1936 season to which Bobby Morris of Seattle is assigned as referee. Morris officiated in the Stanford-Washington State game at Pullman,

‘| lenged him for the goat honors.

Wash, last Saturday. Washington State Sefeateq the Gardinale, 14-13,

and the Stanford team protested . They charged unofficially that Mortis during the game “tutored” Washington State's quarterback, Ed Goddard, 1935 players’ choice for allAmerica.

They maintained that Jake Brig-

ham, substitute fullback, carried the - ball over for a touchdown, but that ~ Morris ruled “no touuchdown”:before he could see the position of Biignam's prone body under a

manager, took official cognizance of the players’ protest and decided {ou to ask a full investigation of the situation. » It was expected that Coach Til} Thornhill and players will file a report of the affair with Herb Dana, commissioner of Pacific Terence officials.

Indianapolis Times

orts

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1936

PAGE 19

Scout Speeds by Plane After Sam Barry scouted Illinois for Southern California last Saturday, he hopped a plane for the Coast to supply pointers to the Trojans. The teams

meet this week.

~

Joe Inclined to Place Lou in Goat Role

Williams ‘Pans’ Gehrig for Lapse on Base; Thinks Ruffing Good.

BY JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Weiler NEW YORK, Oct. 6—This is about the fifth game of the World Series—yesterday’s game. It is the second inning. Biz Hips Gehrig hits a single te right feld. The usually dependable Mel Ott messes it up. He seems t¢ be looking for handles on the ball. Meantime Big

At the time the score is 3 to 0 in favor of the : Giants against thie Yankees. The Giants have got t¢ Red Ruffing iri the first inning for five solid hits and three runs. Thére is a mild sort of astonishment that the . skilled Ott should gum up a ground Eg hit ball. There is + just as much asJoe Williams tonishment that Big Hips can show so much specd and enterprise in going from first to third on the error. . . . “Say that big guy can run, can't he?” ... The next hitter is Bill Dickey, the Yankees" catcher. He hasn’t been doing so well in the series. Up to now he is batting precisely .133 for four games. That scarcely makes him a killer of pitchers. Today he is facing young Hal Schumacher, the high-cheek-boned sinker ball pitcher of the Giants. Young Hal started the second game of the Series and didn’t last through the third inning.

did something,” a spectator remarked. Dickey didn't do much, but he did hit a ball that was destined to be extremely influential in the result of the game. Especially from the point of view of the Yankees. He hit a ball down the first base line which young Hal went over to field. It was a slow roller. You will remember that Gehrig was on third base. - When Dickey hit the ball Gehrig started for the plate. Half way to the plate he hesitated. Big Hips broke his stride, just for a second, then started again. It was a good start but in the wrong direction. He might as well have started for Des Moines.

Pause Is Fatal

This momentary pause gave young Hal time enough to pick up the ball, Dickey, and Terry turted and threw to the plate. Gehrig was out. Everybody seems to agree he would have been safe if he had kept in high gear from the crack of the bat—which was not a very loud crack at that. Possibly this is what confused him. Anyway it was foolish on his part to slow up once he had started. He should either have held the bag or gone into the plate full steam ahead.

In either event, Big Hips would have scored a run, and as matters worked out the rin would have won the ball game and the Series would be over. Twinkletoes Selkirk followed with a home run. Even a professional second guesser is reluctant to criticise a player of Gehrig's established ability. But facts are facts; Gehrig should have scored and didn’t. Thus he becomes a goat, with two interesting looking horns and a fine resonant bleat. At the time Gehrig's lapse didn’t seem very important. It seemed less important as the game went on. In fact, there came a time in the sixth inning when Mr. Travis Jackson, the Giants’ thirdbaser, chal-

Wild Toss by Jackson

Going into this innings the Giants vwere leading, 4-2; two were down when Selkirk singled to center. Jake Powell was the next hitter. He slapped a ball fo Mr. Jackson, a tricky sort of thing that demanded the quickest sort of attention. Mr. Jackson realized this. He picked the ball 1p and made a desperate throw to first. It was a wild throw that went past Bill Terry, hit the stands and bounded back into the field. Selkirk came all the way home and Powell went to third. A moment later Signor Tony Lazzeri scored him with a single to right. Thus Mr. Jackson—another usually dependable player—was mainly responsible for the score being tied. Now it was anybody's ball game. You could forge: about Gehrig and you could forget about Jackson. What was going to happen in the innings to come? In this same sixth i g Ruffing was benched for a pi hitter, and despite the fact he had settled own and was pitchig fine baseball. Where the Giants had got five hits off him in the first inning, they had made but two in the next five. Essicles which he had pitched himself out of a hole in the same mentioned sixth by fanning two men with two on.

Error by (‘resetti

In this inning the Giants’ had scored their fourtli run and they hag scored it on an error by Frank Crosetti. The ialian had tried to make a running pickup of a bounding ball and missed. It was a reasonably excusabie hobble. “Why are they out?” the stands ssked. It seemed a pertinent question, when Roy John:on, the pinch hitter, struck out. Rufling is a good hitter. He couldn't have cone any worse,

Hips goes all the way to third base.’

“Well, it’s about time this Dickey | T

toss to Terry to erase| Genri

| 2:12; fifth game, 2:45.

taking Ruffing |

SCRIBE BECOMES CRITICAL

OF YANKEE!

When Joy Reigned in Clubhouse

Pitcher Hal Schumacher (left), who pitched the and Outfielder Joe Moore, who came in with the .winning run in the tenth, offer mutual congratulations in the dressing room, after the Giants’ 5-4 win over the Yankees

Giants to victory yesterday,

—Acme Photo.

in the fifth World Series game at Yankee Stadium. Schumacher struck out 10 rivals during the exciting struggle and in one inning fanned both Di Maggio and Gehrig with the bases loaded. :

\

Composite 5-Game Box Score WORLD SERIES STATISTICS NEW YORK GIANTS

R

necuso, Whitehead,” 2b Jackson, 3b Hubbell, Schumacher, Smith, p Coffman, Gabler, p Gumbert, Fitzsimmons, vis {Danning iKoenig §Leslie

Totals

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inning of

veo 5 168, 18 41

*Batted for Coffman in four inning of second game; of third game; ran for Leslie in eighth inning > fourth game. atted for Gabler in eighth inning of second gam

0

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ran for Leslie in ninth

iBatted for Jackson in ninth inning of third game; batted for Whitehead in ninth

inning of fourth §Batte eighth inning of fourth gam

game.

d for Fiaacinmons in ninth inning of third game; batted for Hubbell in

NEW YORK YANKEES

Dickey, ¢ Selkirk, rf Powell, Lazzeri, 2b |[Ruffing, Pp

cOocooronUIRwkNRad

Totals

3 tted for Hadley in eighth inning of third game. i 3 be Yi th inning of third game;

Ran for Ruisug in eig inning ot fifth gi

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batted for Ruffing in sixth

n for Dickey in tenth inning of fifth game. PITCHING RECORDS

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COMPOSITE SCORE BY INNINGS

New York (N) ececsssscccnissces teens New York (A) 2

Game standing—New York (A), 8; fices—Ripple (2), 8 Bartell 2), Mancuso, Whitehead to Terry; Leiber to Jackson to

36; New Y to Laszeri to Gehrig. Left on bates ew Porman snd 'Magerkurth (National League).

Geisel and Summers (American League), Game times—First Legend: Battin — Games, bat. runs,

in, bases on patied com Nete games, innings pitched, strikeouts wild pitches, hit batsmen, won,

four or five innings he is ‘as ond a pitcher as there is in baseball. Old Blubber quickly proved the Yankee manager had made no mistake. He turned the Giants back in blocks of three in the seventh, eighth and ninth. Even if Ruffing had been pitching hitless ball he couldn’t have done any better, so the behching of Ruffing had no bearing on the. result up to this point. Jo Jo Moore started the tenth inning with a two-base hit to left field which hit in front of Powell and bounced into the stands. Dick Bartell sacrificed him to third. The Giants were playing for one run. That's all they needed. It was now up to Terry. He fouled two off, took two more and took a third. Umpire Pfirman called this last pitch a ball. It was a curve and seemed to slice off a large part of the plate for what should have been a strike to make the second out. Old Blubber raved. So did Dickey back of the plate, and Gehrig coming in from first. Most of the experts’ in the press box agreed that Pfirman had given Terry a courtesy decision, possibly because he has a bad knee and is about to retire. This decision had an important bearing on the result. With twa out Moore-could not have scored on an outfield fly, which he did a few seconds later when Terry lifted to Joe Di Maggio in center. That was the ball game—5 to 4, Giants.

PINS “TINY” ROEBUCK By United Press

1

3 New York (N). 2. Stolen base—Powell. Sacri-

0

0 2

4 - 0

2

5 1-18 0 2 0—30

0 12

Double Plas.

Bartell; Mancuso to Whitehead; Bartel Whitehead to Terry (3); Schumacher to Terry to Mancuso; Crosetii ho, Gehrig: eet

ame, 2:40; second game,

at alls, struck out, batting average putouts assists,

York (A), 32. Umpires—

2:40; third game, 2:01; fourth game, home runs, runs

errors. Pe bases on bal

hits, doubles, triples,

5 runs, earned runs,

South Grove Club to Elect Officers

Election of : officers for 1937 is scheduled at the annual banquet and business meeting of the South Grove Golf Club tomorrow night at 6:45 o'clock. Present officers are Norm Thompson, president; Tom Hanson, vice president, and Harold Smith, secre-tary-treasurer. Information regarding the banquet may be obtained by calling Riley 8992.

Japanese Net Fans Cheer Tilden, Vines

TOKIO, Oct. 6.—Big Bill Tilden and Ellsworth Vines, American professional tennis players, reecived a rousing welcome from Japanese net fans yesterday when they arrived here ‘on their Oriental exhibition tour. After being “rescued” from admirers by police, the two stars pro-

DAY BEATS FASNAUGH

ooococooooo~oooMid

Heavy Rivals Clash Tonight

The return of George (Cry Baby) Zaharias, 240, top-ranking mat performer from Pueblo, Colo. to face

the speedy Orville Brown, 222, Wichita, Kas., is to serve as the headlining tug on the Hercules A. C. grappling card tonight at the Armory. The two nationally-known huskies are expected to attract a large crowd to the N. Pennsylvaniast arena. For Zaharias, the Greek matman, it will be a case of attempting to

make it two in a row over Brown.

,| For Orville, it will be an opportunity to avenge a disputed verdict which he dropped to his rival four weeks ago. The popular Wichita “Indian deathlock” hold star tossed Chris Zaharias, younger brother of George, last week. Aggressiveness

| is expected to feature the perform-

ance of both matmen. Rowdy Rudy Laditzi, 236, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.,, will face Big Boy Davis, 239, Columbus, O., in the semi-windup and Jerry Burns, 235, a newcomer from Texas, is to meet Dick Lever, 236, Nashville, Tenn., in the 8:30 p. m. opener.

Canzoneri at End of Great

Is Boxing Obituary, Says Critic.

BY HENRY SUPER United Press Staff Correspondent

career of Tony Canzoneri, one of the" grandest fighting men the ring eve: has known, was at an end today. Last night in Madison Square Garden, the little bull-shouldered Italian, who started fighting in New Orleans 12 years ago, was battered to a pulp by Jimmy McLarnin, the baby faced assassin from Vancouver, in a ten-round battle that marked the passing of a man who has ruled three boxing divisions. Tony’s ring obituary has been written before—as recent as a month ago when he lost the lightweight title to young Lou Ambers. But always he has come back to confound his critics. Four Cuts on Face Last night it was different—only Tony didn’t realize it. He sat on a stool in his dressing room, blood pouring from four gaping cuts on his face, and insisted he was not through. But a rapier like left which, a few minutes before, had gut like a freshly-honed razpr, was more convincing than Tony’s words That punch, delivered by the former welterweight champion who was as fresh when he left the ring as ‘when he entered, ended Canzoneri’s hopes of more fistic glory. It landed in the first round and opened a wound over Tony's right eye. And it found home continuously until, by the end of the fifth round, Canzoneri was bleeding from four places on his bruised face. Down in Second : Tony, a gamestér to the end, stood up under the battering. He had been dropped for the count of two in the ‘second round. His punches continuously kept MecLarnin on guard. But 12 years of fighting began to take their toll and Canzoneri was helpless. By his victory, McLarnin qualified to challenge Barney Ross for’ the Welterweight title which Barney won from Jimmy. . The crowd of 11,423 was sickened by the sight of Canzoneri. Many winced when McLarnin hammered home his left. They yelled for Referee Cavanagh to halt the bout. But Canzoneri never had been knocked out before and Cavanagh realized it would be an inglorious way to end such a career. He let the fight continue and Canzoneri wound up his career by going the route.

FISHER GETS VERDICT By United Press : ‘NEWARK, N. J, Oct. 6—Tony Fisher, Newark, decisioned Tys Menges, Paterson, in their eight-

round bout here last night.

World Series Chatter

BY LESLIE AVERY ‘United Press Staff Correspondent

NEW YORK, Oct. 6.—The Yankees were so used to victory that they were more surprised than anything else when the Giants knocked them off their top perch in the fifth game of the Series. The worst about de-

feat however, was packing their trunks for another excursion across the Harlem River to the Polo Grounds. :

The prize for spar sparkling catches of the Series so far goes to Jimmy Ripple, center fielder of the Giants. Two days straight now he has run far in to make shoestring catches with double or triple somersaults. He had to dive for Rolfe’s lob over second » | yesterday, and as he rose to his feet after the acrobatics he held the ball high to show the “umps” that he had caught it.

At the big “conference between Manager Terry, Catcher Mancuso and Pitcher Schumacher as Lou Gehrig came to bat with the bags loaded in the third, the Giant moundsman was told “you get this big lug out or we’ll bounce you out.” He did, all right, on strikes, then made Bill Dickey fly out to pull out of the jam.

Nobody yet seems to be sure whether Schumacher struck out 10 or 11 Yankees. He had 10 up to the ninth, but there was plenty of debate on the last play of the game. Two were out, Seeds was on first, and Lazzeri was batting. There were two strikes on him when Seeds attempted to steal second. The umpire behind the plate never called the ball as Mancuso pegged Seeds out at Second, but from the press box it sure looked like a strike and

CHICAGO, Oct. 6—Davey Day, | yesterday.

Ohicago lighiweight, scored a tech-

$5.50 were available for $4.40, ps

Midget Auto Races Colisehm—State Fair Givuds

‘served seat were reported for the week-end games.

Travis Jackson, Giants’ third baseman, is No. 1 candidate for ‘series goat. Not only is he hitting at a .167 clip, but his three fielding bobbies leave him an average of .769 in that department, the lowest of any player on either team.

Iowa Fans Hail Strikeout King

Times Special VAN METER, Ia. Oct. 6.—More than 5000 persons thronged this small farming community yesterday to pay tribute to Bob Feller, the Iowa farm boy who set a new American League strikeout record in his first weeks of major league baseball. The 17-year-old hurler, who came back home to continue his high school work, which he dropped when he joined the Cleveland Indians last spring, took the mound for four innings against a local team and struck out the first 11 men to face him. One man drew a base on balls and another popped out to the third baseman. Feller missed the “welcome home” greeting of Gov. Clyde L. Herring because the World Series was being’ broadcast while the executive spoke.

TROJANS COME EAST TO BATTLE ILLINOIS

By United Press LOS ANGELES, Oct. 6—The University of Southern California football squad, composed of 38 players, leaves tonight for Champaign, Ill, where the Trojans meet University of Illinois Saturday. The team will stop off at El Paso and Dallas, Tex., Wednesday and Thursday for workouts en route and will arrive in Champaign in time to go through limbering up sessions Friday afternoon.

Additional Sports Page 20

on

Fistic Career Ee 5

|Tony’s Loss to McLarnin

NEW YORK, Oct. 6—The fistio| I

SERIES GAME NO. 5 |

(Ten Innings)

al cosunan anh wo! COCO D-NE r

| noormpomemnoll ol comiummonni

Di Maggio. cf Gehrig, 1b Dickey,

~leccoececcsonn wiorceororen

hE. Bl oownnonnewnd S| onminmaw=0 Oh ROI ADD ra en La deh LRN SO TSI RA

ol ooemnscoccal

Totals

Johnson batted for Ruffing Seeds ran for Dickey in tent th Siatts

—- 55° on

ixtn,

T -

37

!

GIANTS Moore, If Bartell, ss Terry, 1b Leiber, cf Ott, rf -

Mancuso, ¢ Whitehead, hb

Whitehead, Selkirk, Lazzeri. Two- bats Yankees, 9. Struck out—By Ruffi- ne nings; off Malone, 1 in 4 innings. Wild Terry: Mancuso to Whitehead; OC: nget 0 Time, 2:4 By United Press Polo Grounds: Gehrig, 1b Lazzeri, 2b Jackson, 3b mers (American), second base; Plirman.

—Moore 2, Bartell, Mancuso Di Ni ggio. Home run—=Selkirk. Sacrifice hits—M ancl Msdlone, 1: Sc Bumachel 29. balls—Off Ruffing. 1: Malon itch—Schumacher’ Losing pitcher «-M one. Double Qays—Schumag er to Terry to Lazzeri to Gehri Umpires— 5 {N.). plate; Geisel (A) Phos. ge ¥ NEW YORK, Oct. 6.—Pro® able batting order for the sixth :ame YANKEES Crosetti, ss Rolfe, 3b Dickey, ¢ Selkirk, rt Gomez, p Fitzsimmon:, p Umpires — Geisel (American), Tiatey base: Atisnal), third base Time of rame: 1:30 mn Eastern Standard ass; Indie

Ya hies batted in—Bartell. Terry, so, Bartell. Left on base janis § | ; macher, 6. Hits—Off Ruffing to Mancuso: Bartell to Whitehead kurth iN second; Summers (A.) LINEUPS TODAY | of. the World Series today a the Di Maggio, cf Powell, If Magerkurth (National). first Sume anepols time

SERIES FIGURES

THE STANDING

Yankees .

"RESULTS OF GAMES First game—Giants, 6: Yankee Wine Ring aA Hubbell; losing hoi. Ruf-

18: Gia 4, Gomes; losing ee

/2; Gianis, le

econd game—Yankees, Winning pitcher, Schumacher. Third game—Yankees, Winning pitcher, Hadley; losing nitcher, Fitzsimmons. Fourth game—Yankees, 5: Gia 8 Winning pitcher, Pearson; losing hen

Hubbell. Fifth game—Giants, &: Yankees, 4 (ten innings). winning 2 pitcher, Schumacher;

losing pitcher, M FIFTH GAME Paid attendance Gross receipts Commissioner's share Contending clubs’ share Leagues’ share : TOTAL SERIES FIGURES Paid attendance Gfoss receipts Commissioner’s -share Players’ share Contending clubs’ share Leagues’ share RA Note: Players share only in receipts tor : first four games.

Oilers Lead Barons in Southern Series

By United Press .BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Oct. 6.-The Birmingham Barons, winners of the

| playoff title of the Southern Asso-

ciation, and the Texas League Tulsa Oilers were en route to Tulsa foday for the third game of the Dixie Championship Series. The Oilers took a 2-0 game Jead in the series last night when they defeated Birmingham 6-4 in 1% ine nings. Max Thomas was given credit for the win. Clyde Shoun, ace Birmingham southpaw who entered the game at the end of the tenth inning, was the losing piicher, Tulsa got 16 hits from the offerings of Roy Joiner, Jones, Shoun and Overman. The Barons got 17 off Kimball, Pickrel and Thomas, The series will be resumed in Tulsa, Wednesday night.

Harriett Randall ‘Wins Links Event

Carding an 84 over the Specdway course yesterday, Harriett Randall, Hillcrest, won the final tournament of the year staged by the Indiane apolis Women’s Golf Association. Dorothy Ellis, Meridian Hill: was second with a score of 90; Mary Gorham, Highland, third with 92; Mrs. C. ‘A. Jaqua, Highland, fourth with 94, and Mrs. 1. G. ‘.ahn, Broadmoor, fifth with 95. Prize winners in the net division were Yopped by Mrs. Dale ientz, Pleasant Run, who had 96-11—85, and Mrs. H. H. Mastin, with 107-22—85.

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