Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1937 — Page 33

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| FRIDAY, SEPT. 17, 1937

‘Waldorf I Has

One Veteran in

Forward Wall

Big Ten Champs, Hard Hit By Graduation, Not Expected to Repeat.

(Second of a series)

By STEVE SNIDER (Copyright, 1837, by United Press) EVANSTON, Ill, Sept. 17.—Northwestern will defend its Big Ten football championship this fall with a yawning hole in the middle of ine line and Lynn Waldorf's amazing luck sagging at both ends. Waldorf admitted today the Wildcats would be “tough, but weak,” if the luck held out and just weaker if his giant Purple line” doesn’t improve with age. “We've got exactly one lineman of Big Ten caliber left on our squad,” Waldorf said. “And it was our luck and our line that gave us the title last fall. “Bob Voigts, a right tackle, is the only lineman good enough to hold his own. If the others don’t come through, well have a bade time of it.” Northwestern's. problems were re-

" versed from last season when Wal:

dorf rently had a veteran line and i backfeld, The line held until his’ green backs polished up. This year’s backs will rank with the pest in the league. Eleven lettermen were graduated from the line, leaving troublesome holes at center, guard and tackle. Centers Leon Fullef and Ray ArtaFasy, guards Carl De Vry and Capt. teve Reid, tackles Vance Burnet, e Witt Gibson, Walter Malloy and Park Wray all are gone. Voigts will start at right tackle and Nick Cutlich at left. Alternates will be a couple of converted reserve guards, Jack O'Leary and Tom Irving, and Frank Young, a sophomore. The ends appeared set with veterans Cleo Diehl and John Kovatch and two lettermen, Tom Eby and Ed Klamm, available. Mike Calvano, Reid's understudy, steps into right guard along with Hal Method, a sophomore. On the left side, Dick

Wells, senior squadman, had the |

edge over Don Guritz.

In the backfield, it's & different

story. The Wildcats lost fullbacks .. Steve Toth and Don Geyer, leaders Vin conference scoring last season, but the open style of play necessitated by 4 weakene line may take the pressure off that position.

Backfield Is O. K.

Fred Vanzo, credited by most with paving the way for Northwestern’s 1936 touchdown against Minnesota, again will handle the blocking quarterback, assisted by Nick Conteas, a bruising sophomore Waldorf hopes may be another Vanzo. Capt. Don Heap and Bob Swisher, two of the shiftiest runners in the conference, will be at left half and a new, smoother, more ‘confident Bernie Jefferson again will be at right half. Jefferson, a slim Negro, is an improvéd passer and runner. Clancy Hinton, another Negro, will alternate. For the open fullback, Waldorf can choose between Jack Ryan, best passer on the squad, and Jack McGurn, bulky youngster who tried his luck at Notre Dame and was lost in the shuffle. Both are sophomores. - With Towa State, Michigan, Purdue, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota and Notre Dame in order, Northwestern is a long shot to-re-

peat with a championship. Every |

team on the list except Ohio State is stranger. Purdue, one of the title threats, replaced weaker Iowa on the schedule.

Small Squad Handicap

At Central Normal-

DANVILLE, Sept. 17.—Handicapped by the smallest squad in the history of the school, Central Normal’s football team was busy today with preparations for its opening game Sept. 25 against Earlham at Richmond. Only 30 men are working out at Tiber field, and Coach Leitzman is pessimistic about the Warriors’ chances for a successful season. Martin, tackle; Roudebush and Andrews, ends; Kelley and Pike, centers, and Blanford, Ewing, Scott and Wallace, backs, appear to be Leitzman’s most likely prospects.

The Silent Hoosier football aspirants began practice this week in preparation for their first game with Crispus Attucks Sept. 25 on fhe School for the Deaf field. Veterans reporting were Martin, Hendrix, Kaim, Arnold, Wilhelm, Holodick, Smiley, Crouch, Lambert, Massey and Gibson. Newcomers showing promise include Miller, Pavicich, Grimes, Mills Shriner, Travis, Henderson, Davis, Noland, Elmore, Gall, Hart, Hocker and Patrick.

Football

Fashion Cleaners, last year’s Senior Football League champions, will, meet tomorrow between 12 and 1 p. m. at Brightwood Playgrounds. The team will hold signal drill and uniform scrimmage at the Deaf School Field, and every player must

be uniformed.

The Southport Red Birds desires a game with a state team Sunday. Call Ken Osborne at Drexel 4996.

Members of the West Side YugoSlavs football team are requested to report in uniform for practice Sunday at 10 a. m. at 10th St. and Warman Ave. Edwin Howard, team eaptain, will be in charge.

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" NORT HWESTERN FEARS WEAKNESS IN LINE

~

pr

of Noble Kizer, their opening game against Butler

Mal Whips Purdue Into Shape

Mal Elward, Purdue's acting head foothall coach during the illness is drilling the Boilermaker squad in preparation for

Sept. 25.

competition.

count and a two-out-of-three-game decision over the Bemis Bag squad. The scores: ROCKWOOD 193— 656 210— 518 220— 599 180— 540 189— 544

I. Jarboe D. Jarboe J. Rockwood R. Fishbeck H. Rosemeyer

* ns itt aan. Totals 991 985-2857

BEMIS BAG Seholt .............. 201 179 Schwomeyer 165 Shoemaker 153 Whetstine 190 Bentley 188

210— 590 189— 538 154— 463 200— 576 225— 594

Totals 875 978—2761 In other matches, Champagne Vealvet, with 2821, gained a triple victory and Guarantee Tire & Rubber, Heidenreich Florists and Russet Cafeteria won the deciding games. Paul Striebeck’s 637 was high in the Print Craft League at the same drives, pacing Advance Electrotype to a clean sweep over Rapid Rollers. The scores: ADVANCE ELECTROTYPE

P. Strigbcnk 179 196— 687 E. Klein 178 158— 471 W. Rudie 3 172 114— 479 E. Schoch 143 192— 524 B. Schoch 203 199— 619

Cela enawaenne 918 893 RAPID ROLLERS

166 223— 574 171 138— 474 G. Williams 130 166— 436 0’Gorman 228 170— 540 Moxley 189 163-— 500

Totals . 919—2780

E. Tenetke

800 584 860—2544 Following B. Schoch on the individual list were Fehr with 611 and Bohne with 600. Cornelius Printing also won three straight games while Palmer Ink and Hendren Printing . scored double triumphs. Hodges spilled 596 pins and Nichols toppled 580 to lead other leagues in action at Pritchetts'— the Diamond Chain and American United Life.

Smith High as Universal Bowlers Lead in Scoring

Universal League bowlers today held the spotlight in local league Gib Smith was best in the matches at Pritchett’s Alleys with 661, rolling games of 234, 212 and 215. Second honors in the loop went to Ivory (Bo) Jarboe, who used a middle game of 266 to boost his total to 656. He led the Rockwood

Manufacturing team to a 2857 ¢

Parts Manufacturing, Engineering Department and Regular Assembly made clean sweeps and Sales Department gained a pair of victories in the Diamond Chain loop. All matches in the American United Life circuit resulted in triple victories with Twenty Payment Life, Joint Life and O. L. C. O. the winners.

Al Dorsey showed the way in the Intermediate League at the Uptown Alleys by hitting for 630. Uptown Tavern, Wiles & Wilson and Johnson Coal registered two-out-of-three triumphs.

‘McKinney Rolls 585

A 622 by Kemp featured the session of the Related Foods League at the Pennsylvania alleys. Tacoma Drugs Noa. 1, Fox Film and Stokely No. 1-were three-time winners while Fairmount Glass and Stokely No. 2 scored double triumphs. Ed McKinney turned in a 585 for first place in the Fletcher Trust circuit at the Pennsylvania establishment. Thirtieth Street Branch, South Side, Irvington .and Main

Office registered shutout victories,

At the same drives, Atkinson came thnough with a 578 to top the P. R. Mallory League. and Gang Switches series and Jack Switches, and Charges captured the odd game. The best score in the Elks circuit at the Hotel Antlers was a 617 by Fresh .

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All Is ‘Rosy’ At Rose Poly, Mentor Says

Veteran Backfield, Freshman Candidates, Strong Line Cited by Brown.

(Fourth of a of a Series)

By PHILLIPS J. PECK United Press Staff Correspondent TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Sept. 17 (U.P.).—The “elephant of Rose Polytechnic is trumpeting in high glee these days as he contemplates the outlook of the Poly football squad for 1937. There are a number of reasons which explain this fact and also the general optimism expressed by Coach Phil Brown as he starts his 10th season as head football coach of the Engineers. Four of them are: 1. The Engineers have a backfield composed of four veterans of last year’s team. 2. The Poly line is well-filled with experienced gridders and promises to be strong offensively. 3. The Engineers play their freshman candidates and a wealth of good material is promised from the yearling ranks. 4, Four good tacklers are available, a crying need with last year's eleven. “We hage a pretty good looking ball club,* Brown said. “Right now we appear stronger than we were after our second game last season.

1 The backfield shapes up well and

our line should be stronger, at least offensively, than it was last year. Freshman replacements gave us exactly what we needed, most important of which was some tacklers.” Only notable losses by the Poly eleven were Ed Wodicka, captain and right end of last year’s team, and Franklin Stewart, alternate quarterback and passer. Veterans in Backfield For his backfield Brown has the veterans Max Stanfield, captain and fullback; Robert Colwell, 200-pound halfback; Robert McKee, quarterback, and Bob Brittenback, halfback. Augmenting this combination are George Harper, a freshman, from whom Brown expects great things as a quarterback; Bob Ladson, junior . halfback; George Smith, junior halfback who is rated as a fine ball-carrier;. Bill Rustamier, former Wiley (Terre Haute) High School backfield ace; Bill Ingle, another freshman back; Bill Stewart of Riverside, Ill,

ski, Clinton, a sophomore fullback, and Don Reel, freshman halfback and a former Golden-Gloves boxer. Lettermen available for line positions include .Ed Eckerman and James Lohr, -ends; Buzz Montgomery and Norman. Elder, tackles; Charles Fuller, John Wilson and Nick Smilanic, guards, and Max Mitchell, center, : Replacements Plentiful - Replacements for the’ lihe Poets tions are plentiful. The freshman

class has provided Willis Bobbitt,

Elmer Menefee and Ray (Shanty) Hogan as tackles. Brown expects a great deal from this trio, especially Hogan, who stands 6 feet 4 inches and weighs 235.

Other promising candidates in-

clude Dick Wodicka, brother of last year’s captain and a candidate for end; Jack Quinn, Logan Davis and John Combs, candidates for the center position; Ernest Palisin and Claude Zinngrahe, ends. The Poly line will be offensively strong, averaging about 180° pounds and will be backed up by strong reserves. The backfield will be fast and experienced, well qualified to carry out Brown’s program of deception and speed. Only the test of actual competition will determine the apparently strong capabilities of the 1937 Engineers. Poly opens the season Sept. 25 at Evansville.

Hayes. Business Men won three games and McGaw Insurance, Heidenreich Florist and Don Lee Stoker turned in a pair of victories. In the St. Catharine’s loop.at the Fountain Square Alleys, Lee set the pace with 562. Wizard ‘Machine, Weber Milk, Schuster. Coal and Fountain Square Furniture gained a two-out-of-three-game edge.

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brother of last| year’s quarterback; John Kowain- |.

No Kiddin’ Goat Game Expected

Te Enliven Things at Stadium Tonight.

OU'VE heard, no doubt, of someone getting a ball player's goat? Well anyone getting the goat of the players in tonight's game at Softball Stadium will really have their hands full.

There will be more goats ambling about the diamond than on the side of a Swiss mountain and to make the players task of reaching the bases more difficult the “billies” will be attached to them at the end of a five-foot rope. If you go and see a flock of players gathered around one of the bases while their “handicaps” are busily engaged making a repast of gloves, bases, masks or what have you, don't get the notion that there is a convention around said base. For in this “goat game,” there is no limit to the number of men occupying a base at the same time. The Indiana Avenue Markets, a Negro aggregation, and Rockwood

A. C. teams will be the boys at-||

tempting to argue the goats along.

Preceding the goat contest, Eli Lilly |

Co. and Crown Products are to meet in a game that is to decide the championship of the Manufacturer's League.

BUTLER PLAYER’S LEG

BROKEN IN PRACTICE |

New worries were piled on Coach Tony Hinkle and Butler followers yesterday when Hilton Atherton, junior end, received a broken leg

during a scrimmage between the ||

Varsity and freshmen.

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Zaharias Agrees To Tackle Brown

The “pet hate” of most local and state wrestling fans will appear at the Armory next Tuesday night to practice his tricky mat maneuvers. He.is George (Cry Baby) Zaharias, 241, Greek husky from Pueblo, Colo. Zaharias has accepted the challenge of Orville Brown, 228; Wichita, Kas., and the two rivals will square off in the feature tussle. Although Brown will spot his foe some

13 pounds, he figures his speed and

well-known “Indian: deathlock” hold will prove a stumbling block for the “Cry Baby.” . George “got even”

with a large crowd at the Armory last Tuesday by beating Dorve (Iron Man) Roche. Irish Dan O’Connor, 222, Boston, also will be on the program. ’

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Legals

SHERIFF'S SALE

H. NATHAN SWAIM, —Attorney for Plaintiff—

By virtue of a certified , copy, ot a Geored to me directed from he

of diana, in cause No. A-91061 wherein Leo F. Welch, Harold R. Victor and Norbert J. Fox, Trustees, pursuant to Trust indenture of Celtic Saving and Loan Association, No. 3, under date of April 30, 1936, Plaintiff, and Rolla J. Dempsey, Rose Gordon, n, Defendants, requiring me to make the sum of Twenty-Two undred We Seen Dollars, and Forty-Nine Cents ($ as provided for in said decree, with in terest and costs, I will gXpose at publis sale to the highest bidder, o BATURDAY, THE 2ND ay OF OCTOBER, 193 between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o'clock P. M. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Marion County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term -

real estate in Marion County, Indiana:

Lot numbered twenty-three (23) in william ¥. Wiley’s Subdivision of the South and East Tart of out lot 156 in the City of Indiana! olis, as per plat ther2of, recorded in Plat Book 2, page 17 in the office of- lhe Recorder of Marion County, Indian If such rents and Pais will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree with interests and costs, the

sale the fee sim so much thereo discharge said decree,

of said real estate, or

appraisement laws.

OTTO RAY, Sheriff 2 Marion County. Sept. 10, 17, 24, 1937 :

SHERIFF'S SALE

HARRY M. STITLE JR. © —Attorney for Plaintiff—

to Te directed from Superior Court of Marion ily InYala in cause ‘No. A-9292¢ wherein Leo Pon ach, Harold R. Victor and Norbert J. Trustees, pursuant to Joust indenture > Geitio Saving and Loan Association No. , under gare of April 3 > and Lee M. Harper, Defendant, requiri ne to_make the sum of Eight Hundre & Worty-Four Dollars iE venty-Fout Cents ($844.74), as ‘provided for in said decree with interest and costs, at public sale to

SATURDAY, THE 2ND DAY OF OCT

BER, between the hours of 10 ¢o’clock A. M. and ‘clock P. M. of said day, at the door the Oourt House of Marion ney. Sales the rents and profits for a erin, not exceeding seven ears, = of fo oning real estate in ain No. 4 and 5 in Wilmington Park, an addition: to the 7oWE 6 of Lawrence, :

Cas per recorded in Plat Book pe a “1s, 5 in the Recorder's office of gis County Indi If such dan a profits will not sell: for a sufficient sum to satisfy said Qecres, with terest A304 rn 0 bis at same time Place wills” sale the fee and e 80 much thereof as may discharge said decree. made without Telia from valuation or appraisement law

Sheriff of M Tho SAY a. Sept. 10, 17, 24, 1937. Tigh Som,

3he purchase of

and Invitati Cor Mat Halo delivered to a oe he s shat ot submitted upon standa ard an

e is reserved Chairman os a ny of ion of bids"

BLL

not exceeding seven years, of the following

ads ay 4

puts

ever ready B= you and assist in

Superior Court of Rn Es tne :

37.49),

a i same time and place, expose to public

made without relief from valuation or :

By virtue of a certified oor. ot of a decree d of the

30, 1936, Plaintiff, -

I will exthe highest bidder,

ation Sotngy:! :

of "said ged eatare: or be aufhieient to Said sale will be

NOTICE TO BIDDERS r= Notice is hereby given that sealed bids for the following maby the Chairman sion of $

i ile SW / §

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