Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1937 — Page 9

MONDAY, OCT. 18, 1937

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

EE

PAGE 9

MAJOR UNTIED AND UNBEATEN ELEVENS REDUCED TO 13

He's Just a One-Man Line

Favorites Fall By Wayside in Savage Games

Pitt, Cornell and Nebraska Among Leaders Whose Records Were Marred.

NEW YORK, Oct. 18 (U.

today after savage week-end play

by underdogs. Only 13 of last week’s |

24 perfect records remained unblemished. Five teams were beaten, two falling by ga single point. The other siX were held to ties. Surviving the slaughter were Yale, Holy Cross, Syracuse and Dartmouth in the East; Wisconsin, Northwestern and Detroit in the Midwest; Alabama, Louisiana State and Vanderbilt in the South; California and Santa Clara on the Pacific Coast, and the Southwest's Baylor. Killed off were: Seven in the East, Fordham, Pittsburgh, Navy, Harvard, Cornell, Army and Catholic University; two in the South, Georgia and Georgia Tech; Nebraska in the Middle West, and Texas A. & M. in the Southwest, Yale beat Army 15-7 and Syracuse upset Cornell, 14-6. Holy Cross beat Georgia 7-6, Detroit whitewashed Catholic 30-0, and Dartmouth trampled Brown, 41-0. Northwestern licked Purdue 14-7, the same score by which Alabama defeated Tennessee, L. S. U. downed Mississippi 13-0, Vanderbilt stopped S. M. U, 6-0, and Baylor blanked Centenary 20-0. Wisconsin was 13-6 better than Yowa, and California scored a double shutout, 14-0 over California Aggies and 20-0 over College of the Pacific. remained unscathed triumph over Portland. Fordham and Pitt battled to their third 0-0 deadlock in as many meetings, and the Navy-Harvard game also ended in goose ‘eggs. Texas A. & M. was held 7-7 by T. C. U, and Nebraska's powerful Cornhuskers were held to a scoreTess tie by an unheralded Oklahoma team. Georgia Tech's clean record was Other principal results: East—Columbia 26, Pennsylvania 6; Tulane 7, Colgate 6; Villanova 20, Manhattan 0; Penn State 14, Lehigh 7; Carnegie 9, Notre Dame 7; N. Y. U. 39, St. John’s (Md.) 0; Amherst 41, Rochester 0. Middle West—Indiana 13, Illinois 6: Minnesota 39, Michigan 6; Princeton 16, Chicago 7; Kansas 14, fowa State 6; Michigan State 2, Mis- | souri 0; Kansas State 13, Mar- | quette, 0. South—Auburmm 33, Mississippi State 7; Kentucky 41, Washington

& Lee 6; Florida 21, Sewanee 90;

Santa Clara | with a 27-0 |

smeared 20-19 by Duke. i

@&

| |

Winning Plays of 1 93 /

FF

TULSA 19 OKLAHOMA

THIS LATERAL OFF A FORWARD WAS GOOD FOR A 57-YAED GAIN AND A TOUCHDOWN WHICH PUT THE GOLDEN HURRICANE OUT IN FRONT AFTER TRAILING 7-6 ...

Py=| Unbeaten and untied major football | teams were thinned by nearly half |

-

WHEN TACKLED BY MERRBELL fy RUNNING 10 YARDS, HAYS LATERALS TO BAZE, RE, WHO RUNS 5 YARDS “8 TOUCHDOWN .. bY

RAKES FORWARD PASS FROM BETWEEN BAERS ABMS ON Z5-YARD LINE «

i THOMPSON, HEB, TAKES SNAPBACK FADES BACK TO LEFT AND PASSES 70 HAYS, L.E.

( TAKE To VIE HURT, V.OF JoLSA CoACH)

Gophers Back

As Favorites in Big Ten Loop

Bierman’s Boys Shake Off Slump in Turning Back Michigan.

By STEVE SNIDER

United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Oct. 18 (U., P.).—The rumble of Minnesota's Golden Horde spread over the Big Ten with a vengeance today after two weeks of bitter disappointment which apparently had spelled an end to the record football cycle of the mighty

Gophers. Fired by a do-or-die spirit seldom needed at Minnesota, the Gophers

KEEN 2 nn @ 32,

Johns Hopkins Plan Lauded

Experiment Abolishing Receipts Held Courageous.

By DANIEL Times Special Writer NEW HAVEN, Conn, Oct. 18— Johns Hopkins University, down in Baltimore, houses not only a spien- | did medical school but a noble experiment in football. Hopkins has abolished gridiron receipts. It ae-

South Carolina 12, Davidson 5; | North Carolina 28 Wake ¥orest 0; | North Carolina State 13, V. P. I. V; Citadel 8, Furman 0; Maryland 3, Virginia 0. | Southwest—Arkansas 21, Texas | Tulsa 0, Rice 90. Rocky Mountains—Utah 7, Greeley tate 6; Colorado College 7, Denver Wyoming 7, Colorado State 0; olorade VU. 14, Brigham Young | Idaho 0, Utah State 9; Montana State 235 Idaho (Southern | Branch) %. Pacifie Coast—Washington v, Washington State 7; Southern California 34, Oregon 0; U. C. L. A. Y, Oregon State Butte 13, San | Francisco 7. |

10

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Notre Dame Net List Announced

NOTRE DAME, md. Oct. 17—A| ame schedule for Notre Dame's | -38 basketball team was an-| ! nounced here today by Director of | Athletics Elmer F. DLayden. The Irish, defending national | champions, again will meet the | cream of the nation’s hardwood | teams. The schedule calls for games | with such leaders as Wisconsin, | Northwestern, Illinois, Minnesota, | Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Pittsburgh, | Butler, Marquette, Colgate and N. | Y. UO, Coach George Keogan has his squad back, practically intact, from last year. Only two monogram men, | Poth reserves, John DeMots, ‘c¢cen= | ter, and Red Allen, guard, were | graduated. His starting combination of Capt. Ray Meyer and John Moir, for=- | wards: Paul Nowak, center; XEail| Brown Jr. and Tommy Wukovits, guards, was not affected by graduation. Almost his entire second team is back, also. The schedule: De

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Columbia College at Notre Dame, B State Teachers at Notre Dame. Western State (Kalamazoo) at Notre hn at Notre Dame | ern at Notre Dame

} AX hs N'¢ ¥ at Evanston | | sota at Minneapolis. ve at Philadelphia Aa hos RA { | |

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11 Det1'ol

GRID TEAM SCORES A4TH STRAIGHT WIN,

BALTIMORE, Oct. 18 (U. P).— Negro athletes of Morgan College here posted a 19-0 victory over Lin | coln College today—their 44th in | a row—and claimed a new record | for college football. The team has been tied, but not defeated, in six seasons of football.

BABES BIGGEST THRILL NEW YORK, Oct. 17—Babe Ruth «avs his biggest thrill in baseball | was striking out Ty Cobb, Sam Crawford and Bobby Veach With | the bases full while pitching for the

cepts no guarantees for going abroad and it pays none to its guest-com-petitors. Anybody wishing to see the Johns Hopkins eleven in action has only to write a note to the athletic associa- | tion, By return mail will come a card admitting not only the holder, but his family, his friends and his mother-in-law, This arrangement tends to develop an onlooker-democ-racy, and a return to what are pronounced “first principles.” It is a widely circulated fiction that back in the days when grandma was proud of her horsehair sofa and her whatnot, grandpa’s hair oil smeared all over the antimacassar, and every dude carried his | own gold toothpick, college football was conducted on a simon-pure basis. But it is disclosed by so eminent | an authority as Dr. Edward S. El-| liott, director of athletics at Colum-= bia, that even in the pleistocene age of the gridiron, the boys tangled with receipts and weren't quite so amateurish as we imagine. He says that digging into some old records the other day he came across a story of the first Harvard-Columbia game, at Cambridge, in the late "70s. “The players passed around a hat after the game, and collected something like $170, which they used for a Saturday night festival,” Dr. El=liott chuckled. Hopkins’ experiment of giving the game back not only to the boys but | to the nonpaying public is either a development with tremendous possi=| bilities, or just an unimportant solu- | tion of a strictly local problem. | The Baltimore institution has de- | cided to have nothing to do with athletic scholarships and all the involvements they inevitably bring on. Giving no scholarships, it is conceivable that it will get no football players. Having no gridiron | exponents of even second grade abilities it is not likely to produce football for which the general public would shell out. This situation left Hopkins between two horns of a dilemma. It

|

and turn bo intramural games. it could keep football and give its | games away. It seems to me that the solution arrived at is a cour-

ageous one, worthy of the safe in- | a,

stinets Hopkins in its scholastic growth.

BAER HEADING EAST FOR BOUT PARLEY

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 18 (U. P).

—Max Baer, former world heavy- | weight boxing title holder, and Ancil Hoffman, his manager, were en route to New York by plane today. It was reported they would con- | fer with British boxing oters | concerning a series of fights for | Max and his brother, Buddy, in | Great Britain.

TONY LA2ZER! DENIES | MAJOR LEAGUE OFFER

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 18 (U. P). —Tony Lazzeri, released recently by

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Weekly Bowling Roundup

R. E. Hughes and 0. E. Berry Tied for Lead in New York Central League.

Plans for the annual series of

1020 scratch sweepstakes for local

pinmen have been announced by Paul E. Crosier, Indianapolis Bowling Alley Proprietors’ Association president. The first of these events will be held at the Illinois drives Nov. 6 and

7. Sweepstakes at the Hotel Antlers at the Fountain Square plant Jan. ® 8 9 15 and 16 will follow. i The remainder of the Ssweep- | stakes program will be released following the annual meeting of the Indianapolis City Bowling Association next month. Dates and the site for the city tournament will be selected at this session. More than 100 teams are expected to participate in each of the sweepstakes with approximately $200 going to the high team in each tourney. Additional cash prizes will be awarded other winners. Announcement also was made of a sweepstakes to be held at the St. Philip Alleys Dec. 31, Jan. 1 and 2.

Season’ ayerages reported for cal leagues follow: NEW YORK CENTRAL LEAGUE (Indiana Alleys) . Ave,

191 R. Trefz “ 181, 0. Hildeb't . 184 L. Logue 183 B. A. Mclain 182 A

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The Highland Golf and Country Club is organizing a bowling league to compete each Sunday morning at 11 o'clock at the Uptown Alleys. he loop will start action next Sunay.

| 39 to 8, and climbed back to their | familiar station as favorites for the

% | before losing the ball on a fourth

Kilian and Vopel

} Montreal's

2 | Germany were enthroned as mons ; |archs of six-day bike riders.

' LAST RITES TODAY

i | for Cylde Hatter, pitcher for the

rolled over a stout Michigan squad,

Conference championship. Northwestern clung to its share of the lead with a shaky victory over Purdue, 14 to 7, but the cham= pion Wildcats must face Ohio State this week while Minnesota, jubilant over its comeback, will have a week of rest to smooth over the last of the sluggishness which had it in a rut,

This fearsome fellow, from left

the reasons why the Penn is mightier than lots of things.

to right, is Dominic Polilli, one of Little

Dominic, who makes the scales grunt at 235 pounds, is a University

of Pennsylvania tackle.

He comes, F. O. B,, from Ardmore, Pa,

Michigan Meets Iowa

Michigan meets Iowa at Iowa City in the only other Conference game. Indiana, victor against 1llinois, 13 to 6, will journey to Cincinnati and | Wisconsin opens the suicide half of its schedule at Pittsburgh. Navy’s invasion of Notre Dame will be the premier attraction in the

" 2 n

Middle West despite *Notre Dame's scoreless tie with Illinois and the 9-to-7 licking at Carnegie Tech last week, Minnesota found itself in the second period against Michigan. 8ix points behind in the battle for the Little Brown Jug, the Gophers rallied under little Andy Uram, who later broke his wrist, and punched over two touchdowns in each of the final three quarters. Northwestern pushed over the winning touchdown against Purdue in the fourth period on a scrambled play involving a pass interception, fifty-yard run, a fumble and recovery. Fred Vanzo, giant defensive quarterback, did everything but vecover the fumble he executed after being tackled on the 12-yard line. It bounced across the goal and Nick Cutlich, sophomore tackle, fell on it for the final score.

Chicago Fights Gamely

Both Indiana and Wisconsin also came through in the fourth period. The Hoosiers, celebrating home-coms ing, drove sixty-five yards late in |the game and scored their second | touchdown when fullback Corby | Davis plunged over from four yards out. Illinois then drove as far as the 6-yard line with a chance for a tie

down pass in the end zone. Howie Weiss gave Wisconsin a home-coms= ing victory by ending a fifty-vard Badger march with a touchdown plunge from Iowa's 8-yard line. Princeton's reserve power wore down Chicago in the late stages afi- | er the Maroons had led near the end of the third period, 7 to 3. The final score was Princeton, 16; Chicago, 7. The standings: { Pet. TP | Northwestern 2 1.000 | Minnesota 1.000 | Wisconsin 1.000 | Ohio State . i Indiana

or

} ¢ 5 6 0 | 3 Of 3 12] 6 13 0 27 6 13 * 2% 6

Michigan 46 | i

Win Bike Race

MONTREAL, Oct. Scoring a ciean-cut

18 (U. P)~— triumph in| 15th international six‘day bicycle race Saturday night, | Gustav Kilian and Heinz Vopel of

The final standing:

Teams | Kilian-Vopel ...... 38 | Ignat=Diot ..... “w 24 | Peden-Peden

9 | Walthour-Crossley 39 | Rodman-Gadou .....

Audv-Reboli Raine ! Debaets-Baggio .. | Thomas-Bedard ..

FOR CLYDE HATTER

YOSEMITE, Ky, Oct. 18 (U, P.). —Funeral services will be held today | Toledo baseball team of the Amer ican Association and former meme ber of the Detroit Tigers and Milwaukee Brewers’ staff, He was 29, Mr, Hatter was stricken with an attack of heart disease while motoring near his home here.

At the first sign of a COLD

gio

COLD TABLETS

SERRE Se RRS RRR

A Household Remedy for 40 Years

A COOL KITCHEN

With Westinghouse Electric Range

Terms to Suit

VONNEGUTS

the New York Yankees of the American League, denied today that he had received any offer to manage a big league team next year. “I don’t know anything about it--what can I say,” he said.

ARVIN HOT WATER HEATERS sQ.%

Ure Out any Pay an

BLUE POINT , Delaware

Boston Red Sox.

October Clearance | OIL BURNING STOVES & HEATERS, Ys OFF

il Burner Co. Milligan 0 if bo,

1553 N. Meridian St. h

John, Mary! Don’t Worry! All the Clothes You Want WITHOUT CASH!

AT _MOSKIN'S 131 Put MOSK Street

CLOTHING FOR ALL ON FRIENDLY CREDIT THE JULIAN GOLDMAN

UNION STORE

118 N. Penepsylvania St.

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the trolleys and forget

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“Y’look pale today, Mrs. Gorsuch. Better ride

INDIANAPOLIS RAILWAYS

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those traffic worries.”

Gen. Sherman Outdone

Erie Tipton Marched Through Georgia Tech and It Was Painful, Mac Reports.

” ” 2

By HENRY M'LEMORE

United Press Staff

TLANTA, Ga, Oct. 18.—Prophecy

Correspondent : The next census taken in this city

will reveal a startlingly low number of children with the first and

middle names of Eric or Tipton, I

wouldn't be surprised if they were

even outnumbered by children named Grant, Tecumseh, or Sherman,

even, and as you know these are names Atla @

sparingly. The names Eric and Tipton lost caste on Saturday afternoon when a broad-backed, whalebone fibered gentleman by that name, wearing the Maxfield Parrish biue of Duke University, almost single-handed accomplished the downfall of a hitherto undefeated, untied, and unscored-on Georgia Tech football team. Sherman's mischief has been dimmed by the passing of the years, but Tipton's is only two days old. And, besides, his feats probably cost Atlanta more money than did the General on his celebrated excursion to the seashore,

“ LJ ”

HE score was 20 to 19 and this Eric Tipton, who came here from the burley and cut plug country, rated as less skillful than his teammate, Honey Boy Hackney, was involved in scoring all the winning points, He was in this wild game-—-which had enough action for 10 Burt L. Standish plots—for the full 60 minutes and all he did was everything. When he wasn't passing he was kicking, and when he was doing neither of these he was running or blocking or packing up the line. It was Tipton who, in the dying minutes of the game, brought off the final touchdown without benefit of clergy, interference, or anything else, He simply took the ball under his arm, set his sights on the promised land, and issued a defy to all Tech tacklers to stop him. They accept- | ed the challenge but Eric the Red, as| he is known to his intimates, went | around some, over some, and| through some, and didn't stop until | he was over the last stripe. Coach Bill Alexander, who eight pounds during the game,| (which was within two pounds of | the weight lost by Wallace Wade of

lost |

nta parents use mighty

Duke during the afternoon) Tipton this compliment: “He was far and away the best back on the field. He beat us singlehanded.”

paid

n » » HEN the time comes for pick-

ing All-America teams the

sages in the press rookeries might |.

do a lot worse than give the Tipton man a place, There was another fellow on the field who could carry his weight on any of the all teams, too. His name is Bill Jordan, and he plays an end for Tech, Plays it, to my way of thinking better than Don Hutson ever played the same position for Alabama. And Hutson was nearly perfect. Jordan stands two or three inches better than six feet, packs 190 or so pounds, and is fast and smart. A basketball player in the off season, he is the key man in all of Tech's razzle-dazzle forwards and laterals, and he is a sweet thing to watch. Tech does the fancy stuff better than any team I have ever seen, and that goes for Colgate's Chenango magicians, and Ohio State's cleated Thurstons. And Jordan is the baby who

makes it go. He is the middle man READY TO

on the legerdemain, PUT ON SUITS

TOPCOATS—OVERCOATS Rr’ 232 WEEKS Je

LEON TAILORING Co.

235 MASS. AVE.

A WORD TO

DePauw Stays Out in Front In State Loop

Conference Championship May Be Decided When Tigers Clash With Butler.

BY PHILLIPS J. PECK United Press Staff Correspondent DePauw University maintained its position at the top of the Indiana Conference today after a momentary scare from Ball State's Cardinals in home-coming day exercises at Greencastle yesterday. A two-touchdown splurge in the final quarter enabled Coach Raymond R. (Gaumy) Neal's Tigers to retain their league lead when Ball State seemed at least destined to hold out for a scoreless tie. Shiach passed to Edwards for the initial touchdown that broke up the game and a moment later Downey galloped 65 yards behind perfect ine terference to score the second touch down and insure DePauw its fourth victory in as many starts. The win enabled DePauw to hold its two-game advantage over Butler University, defending Conference champions. With Butler scheduled to play a nonconference game against Washington and Jefferson this week-end and DePauw expected to defeat Evansville, the standings probably will remain unchanged une til the two elevens meet at Greencastle two weeks hence. Butler's powerful running attack went wild in the second and third quarters last Saturday as the Bulle dogs romped to a 51-to-0 win against Evansville. It was Butler's second victory in defense of the Conference championship. Hanover, only other team unde= feated in. Conference competition, was idle, but resumes play against Ball State at Hanover this week= end. Other games include: Eastern Kentucky Teachers at Central Nor= mal, Rose Poly at Wabash, Earle ham at Franklin, Valparaiso at Indina State, Bluffton at Manchester, Oakland City at McKendree, Ill, and St. Joseph's at Louisville. Franklin added its second Con=ference win Saturday with a onetouchdown victory over Indiana State. St. Joseph's maintained the pace by edging Rose Poly at Terre Haute, 13 to 1. Earlham and Wabash played a 6-6 tie. It was the second tie game for Earlham and left the Quakers still without a victory or defeat in Conference competition. Manchester toppled Valparaiso im a home-coming engagement at North Manchester, 7 to 5. Central Normal chose Oakland

City for its first win of the season.

B A TAILOR L

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