Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1937 — Page 14
By Eddie Ash
ONLY 12 MEN IN WORLD SERIES
GIANTS DID IT
Indianapolis Times Sports
He Goes On and On Bob Nestell has been beaten by the veteran Maxie Rosenbloom, who apparently now fights under the auspices
UNDER
M'GRAW
OE M'CARTHY'S New York Yankees, while mauling
@
the Giants, used only 12
players in the first three
games of the World Series, but it wasn’t a record. . . . Rack in 1905 when the Giants defeated the Athletics, four
games to one, the winners used only 12 men in the five
tilts. « « « Mathewson pitched
the Giants, McGinnity one, and in the second game Strang batted for McGinnity and Ames finished on the New York mound. « « « The Giants’ batting order, except for the pitcher, remained intact throughout the Series.
three complete games for
| | | |
|
Perhaps old-time fans will recall John McGraw’s
lives of the “all-shutout” series. . . . It was: Bresnahan,
+ Browne, rf.; Donlin, cf.; Daen. ss. Devlin, 3b.;
UTLER UNIVERSITY'S Washington-Jefferson of
national football giant in the early Twenties and won Rose Bowl by going undefeated through a strenuous schedule in 1921... .. W. and J. was matched with the University of California and the Bears . . The Generals upset the dope, how-
the trip to the
pregame favorites. . and the baitle ended in a A. E. the Cincinnatx
ever, with Reds,
Ducky Pond’s first Blue's success is attributed to
when the team is within scoring distance.
=» on
the
WORD for professional
Leaguers are drawing large crowds and there is marked interest
in the results of the games between not touched by the salaried warriors
= » »
Wi in this week's Liberty magazine, Steven Owen, coach of the New York football Giants, illustrates the point by giving an instance in last year's post-season game between the Green Bay . » Victory meant no more money for
Packers and the Chicago Bears either team, Owen says,
88-inch gash on his leg in the first quarter, the game when things began to look black to the Chicago eleven.
OACH OWEN adds: legiate contest frequently looks blocking and the like. That,
Gilbert,
home-coming foe Saturday,
(Greasy) Neale, a former big league outfielder coached the W. and J. in its Rose Bowl days and he's still doing a good job as assistant at
5. vy Many Hoosiers attend the games in Chicago and the paid sport is growing in the cities where it is well-organized and well-financed. . . are prone to fake a struggle except when there's plenty of money involved has been debunked by facts the last several years.
but Bronko Nagurski,
“To an ordinary
however,
McGann, 1b.; Mertes, If.;
2h.
" n »
Washington, Pa.,, was a
were heavy scoreless tie. eleven
Yale. Neale'’s
« + » Much of the strategy, especially
u footballers. . .
. The National
the paid teams even in territory
. The theory that pro players
» » »
who had suffered an pleaded to be put back into
{
un gridiron follower, the col- | to have more fire to its tackling, |
is just a delusion. The pros are |
past masters of the sport—post-graduate students, is it were, When the major pros make a tackle, the ball carrier generally stays tackled. And
leek, »
when they
= =
the man stays blocked.”
{
N recent history of Minnesota football in each season there has been
a sudden turn along the middle,
| in which the Gophers, in one
stride, improved their game a matter of two or three touchdowns. . . .
And history repeated itseif in this respect this year. . Obituaries of Minnesota as a gridiron power were more than a
trifle premature.
Andy (Can't) Stopper plays in the backfield for Villanova and he’s Smith,
a nova's coach. .
triple-threat. . . . Little Clipper . Big Clipper Smith,
at Duquesne. . . . New York University has its full squad on hand for
practice only three times a week.
classes on Thursday afeernoon | and no practice is held on on Friday.
Drinking at Big 10 Games |
, ing won three games and Business
. Ask Michigan.
| Notre Dame, 21, Notre Dame "28, is the head man
is Villa- | . Some of the regulars have heavy |
On Wane, Survey Shows |
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staf® Correspondent Copyright, 1937, by United Press) CHICAGO. Oct. 19 —Drinking at Midwestern football games is on the wane and members of the Big Ten
Conference no longer consider it a major problem, a survey showed today In last week's Big Ten games only three cases of drunkenness were reported, two Dearborn, Mich. fire- | men, attending the Minnesota- | Michigan game at Ann Arbor, | stayed in jail overnight and were | fined $11.75 each. Students tossed a | drunk at the Princeton-Chicago game into the Botany Pond to] sober up. Persons under the influence of liquor are barred from all Big Ten | stadiums, and ushers and special | police have the authority to eject | any persons exhibiting a bottle of |
liquor. In most stadiums appeals |
are sent over the loud-speaker svs- |.
tem for spectators to refrain from | drinking. The Wisconsin-Towa game at! Madison was described as the soberest home-coming in Madison in| vears. Sports Baitor Henry MecOor- |
McCarthy Regains | Berth With Iris
SOUTH BEND, Oct. 19.-—Jack | McCarthy, senior left halfback, was | reinstated Notre Dame's first | team today over Lou Zontini, who replaced him in the Carnegie Tech game. Coach Elmer Layvden scheduled a |
hard scrimmage in preparation for | Saturday's game with Navy Here.
Jim Sirtosky on Sidelines at I. U.
BLOOMINGTON, Oct. 19.—Jim Sirtosky, Indiana University guard, will be out of Saturday's game at Cincinnati because of a leg injury, Coach Bo McMillin anounced today. The Hoosiers are taking it easy this week while looking forward to the tussle with Nebraska at Lincoln on Oct. 30.
|Z G | Frank Hockema,
on
| |
Hard Scrimmage
On at Purdue LAFAYETTE, Oct. 19.—Although Purdue is idle this week Coach Mal Elward ordered a hard scrimmage for today’s practice. The Boilermakers are in very good spirits despite the disheartening loss to Northwestern. A Big Ten battle with Towa here on Oct. 30 is the next hurdle for Purdue
AUTO LOANS |
and Refinancing 20 Months to Pay
WOLF SUSSMAN, Inc. 238 W., WASH, ST.
| ported drinking at Ohio State games
| little drinking at our two home | games this fall,”
| objectionable he iz removed by the
|at Towa games and we intend to
| Director
| at the Coliseum of the State Fair
mick's explanation of this was: | “Wisconsin is winning this year and |
| the people really want to see the
game. They haven't the urge, com-
| mon in other vears, to get paralvzed
as an antidote to the Badgers’ disappointing play.” Oscar Thomas, assistant to Athletic Director L. W. St. John, re- |
i
on the decline. “There has been he said. Drinking is strictly forbidden at Illinois, where any spectator arrested automatically is fined $17.50 or more. Chief Lewis W. Fohey of the Ann | Arbor police reported only four or | five court cases at Michigan games this year, while at one time during prohibition there were sometimes 25 0 40. ® Athletic Director Frank McCor- | mick said Minnesota refuses admis(to “any one showing a tipsy inclination.” Athletic Director K. L. | Wilson of Northwestern said, “We | no longer consider drinking a major | problem at Northwestern.” Any one seen drinking at a Chicago game is handed a printed card asking him to leave. If he becomes
usher, assisted by city police, if necess. Our plea for less drinking at Indiana's ‘games has met with a fine response,” reported Athletic Director Clevenger at Indiana. Prof. assistant to the president at Purdue, reported drinkmg “very much reduced.” “There 1s a minimum of drinking
eliminate it entirely, said Athletic E. G. Schroeder of Iowa. Notre Dame makes every effort to | keep spectators from drinking at South Bend games, mailing out with each ticket a printed plea not to arink.
Roop-Aronson Due Wins Derby
The team of Hazel Roop and Wes
Aronson today had chalked up another victory following the conclusion last night of the roller derby
Grounds. Tied for second honors were the combinations of Jack Cummings and Grace Freid and Vizena-Nygra.
As the competition entered the|’
concluding hours the Roop-Aron-son and Freid-Cummings team had been tied for top honors. Tiny McDowell and her partner,
Jack Lyon, finished fourth.
PAGE 14
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1937
of the Smithsonian Institution.
GIB SMITH SETS MARK IN BOWLING LOOP
T opples Pins | For 688 Score, High for Year
Rolls for Stahlhut in South! Side Merchants League; Lawrenz Second.
Gib Smith today topped local bowlers by rolling a season's high score for the South Side Merchants League at the Central Alleys. Smith hit for games of 219, 200 and 269 to total 688, bettering by four pins the loop mark set by E. W. Fulle Sept. 20. Herb Lawrenz staged a 289 finish for a 674 count and second honors in this circuit. Herb Guntz came through with 648 and Bob Hartman had 617. Stahihut Jewelers, with 2880, and Robbins Market turned in triple vietories, and Kamm's Beer won the odd game. The Stahlhut scores
| follow:
111 554 180 618 183 313 19% NY G. Smith .... wes 219 200 269 GSR ERR “915 967 968—2880 Wilbur Sage led the Omar Baking League, also in action at the Central drives, with 493. Stock, City No. 1, Rolls and Bread annexed two games. Fran Schmitt showed the way in the St. Joan of Are circuit at the Uptown Alleys, blasting the maples for 660, another new record, Ralston’s Pure Oil Station and Fitzger-
185 2 ver 160 160 12
2
21%
170
W. Stahthut . H. Gunts .....
| ald Coal made clean sweeps and St, | Joan of Arc, Tom O'Hern and Lana- | gan Furniture captured two-out- | of-three decisions.
The Uptown Ladies League was
| paced by E. Goode's 461.
Wilbur Richwine again provided the feature of the Fraternal loop session at the Illinois drives, rolling a 643 score which included a 256 { middle game. Other leaders in this | circuit were Hetzler with 633, Virgil | Kehl 622, Wilder | Heckman 603.
Ulsas Fires a 565
In team matches, Gibson Com- | pany and Beveridge were three-time | | winners while Gaseteria, Seven Up, | C. V. Beer, Cassidy Oilers, Real Silk | | triumphed twice. Al Ulsas fired a 565 to top the
| standing in the U. A. W. of A. cir- | cuit, also competing at the Illinois
plant.
Frank Liebtag’s 633 showed the | | way in the Indiana Bell Telephone | League
at the Indiana Alleys, Mason getting 619. General Plant, with 2820, Revenue Accounting, General Commercial and Account- |
Office No. 1, Western Electric, Maintenance No. 1 took the odd game. | Plant scores follow: BACBEAE ov\uosuunenen 23% Prout Ledwith
The General
238 633 168 152 188 383 Linehinger 210 188. 533 Mason 2s 188 R19 Totals w..uvaveiin “310 913 831-2820 Walter Kemper turned in a 637 in the Kiwanis circuit, also at the | Indiana establishment. Fred Schneider came with 645 to top the Evangelical loop at Pritchett’s Alleys, Bob Bollinger hitting for 632, John Bentley 620, Ed Menges 609 and Henry Noitke 606. The Dodgers, with a 1013 finish, Cubs, Yanks, Pirates, Senators, Indians and White Sox .all were double winners. Another 645, by Wood, set the pace in the Reformed Church League. Immanuel No. 1, Pleasant Run No. 1 and Second Reformed No. 1 gained triple victories, while First Reformed No. 2 and First Reformed No. 1 scored two-out-of-three verdicts.
Mose Collins Gets 623
Mose Collins rolled a 623, the best count in the Transportation loop this season and Collier's 255 middle game boosted his total to 607. Canadian Pacific was a triple winner and Southern Pacific, Louisville & Nashville, Indianapolis Union Railway, Chesapeake & Ohio and Burlington Route finished ahead twice. Jess Pritchett closed his series with 255 to account for a 620 score in the Optimist circuit. The Mounties, Stiffs, Molars and Tickers all annexed two games. Jesse Smythe was high in State Highway League with 608 to complete the action at the Pritchett drives, The Senators, Yanks and Giants registered double triumphs. John Sheehan's 629 showed the way in the Holy Cross League at the Fountain Square Alleys. Curran Insurance, Oriental Tavern and Fox's Jail House won by two-out-of-three margins. Les Brandt toppled 605 pins for first honors in the Indianapolis Church circuit, also competing at the Fountain Square plant. The Indianapolis Automotive League at the Hotel Antlers Alleys was led by Martlage, who fired a 605. Capital Ice, Wreckers and George Barbecue were triple wine ners and Gulling Auto Electric captured the odd game. Glenn Campbell fired a 599 to head the Lions Club loop and Dugan’s 549 was best in the Cathedral
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Marty Glickman,
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By DANIEL
Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 19.—All aboard for the Rose Bowl! | Bowl, the Cotton Bowl, | Bowl, the Boll Weevil!
held to a scoreless tie by Fordham { for the third consecutive year. Nebraska, conqueror of Minnesota,
the Candy
| nival with Oklahoma. Cornell,
bottled up in a wild goose-egg car- |
flashy back, was a big factor in the startling upset scored by Syracuse over Red Yeam from Cornell,
The Sugar |
Pittsburgh |
| Panthers have played four in New York, a contest with Syra-!
|
| proud after its victories against Col- |
| gate and Princeton and determined
| to give Yale its come-uppance, top- |
pled by Harvard and Navy {gan belted around by | Minnesota, Northwestern | winner over Purdue | All aboard for the Rose Bowl! {Notre Dame upset by looking Carnegie Tech. Tennessee, touted as the real thing of the year in the South, whipped by Alabama. Southern Methodist beaten by Vandy, Duke scared by Georgia Tech. Penn kicked around by Columbia, Manhattan messed up by Villanova, Army tossed by Yale for the first time since 1929, Colgate nosed out by Tulane, Oregon mangled by Southern Cal, Washington tied by Washington State, U. C. L. A. deadlocked with Oregon State. All aboard for the football bughouse! There's a seat for every expert, a place for every gridiron nut. Pily the poor birds who have to pick them for the newspapers every
| League, both rolling at the Antlers. Phil Bisesi turned in a 567 for the best count in the Court House League at the Pennsylvania drives. HOLC and Highways gained triple victories and Treasurers, Union Title, Lawyers and Recreation Department annexed two games. A 533 by Eckel was high in the Kroger Grocery circuit and L. Eppen's 463 led the Stewart Radio Girls League, also rolling at the Pennsylvania Alleys.
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Syracuse in a pointless fracas,
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100,000 BOOSTERS in Indiana, llinois, Missouri, Kentucky!
Michi- | a resurgent
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Football Results s Fail to Make Sense, But It’s an Old Story to the Expert
week. You take the records of the previous Saturday, throw in
two should make four, night discover that they actually add up to six and seven-eighths. It was 200 to 1 against another scoreless draw between and Pitt. But they pulled it.
preceded the Ram Jock Sutherland's ofvet Ph account for a
cuse series, fense
having and has
PRINCETON LOSES | STAR RIGHT GUARD
PRINCETON, N , Oct. 19 (U Fritz risler of the Princeton University football team began today to develop a right guard to replace Al Lane, who received a wrist fracture in Satur day's game with Chicago at Chicago. The fracture was disclosed yesterday by Dr. Harry R. McFee, team physician, Lane is the second Tiger right guard lost to Princeton because of injuries. Con Balentine has a leg injury. He may be able to scrimmage this week. Lane is believed lost for the season.
Football The Morris Street Merchants will
practice tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock at Rhodius Park.
The Broad Ripple A, C. team will practice tomorrow at 7:45 p. m, Players unable to attend are asked to call Russ West.
The South Side Craftsmen main- |
tained their undefeated record Sunday by winning from the Irvington Dinosaurs, 14-0. The Craftsmen are leading the DeMolay League.
an Olympic gridiron and breasting
your | dope of the week, feel that two and | and Saturday |
Fordham | The | games |
is shown above on the tape on the cinder
sprinter, the
touchdown here. It must be the air. All aboard for football's comic academy! Only the other day Lou Little said that the attack had run | away from the defense. He approved of this unbalanced situation. Other coaches praised Lou's thesis. And what happened? Our colleges broke out in a veri | table rash of scoreless ties. Played | no fewer than 14 of them. Seventyseven other varsity elevens failed to | score, making a total of 105 com- —— | binations which left the field minus | a point for their pains. The solution of this problem-— very strange in the face of football's undoubted development into a high | scoring game—may be found in tough schedules, poor early season condition, the expansion of scouting, and those odd defensive formations about which Little told you. Up at Yale, for example, the five-man line of the Elis befuddled Army so badly it never did get down on both feet mentally.
NEW YORK, Oct. 19 (U. P.).— Joe DiMaggio, outfield star of the world champion New York Yankees, was en route to his home in California today. After a few days of rest following the final series game, DiMaggio headed a group of all-
stars which played the Bushwick semipro team on Sunday. Joe's | team lost, 5-to-6, but Joe pocketed | a reported $1700 for his efforts.
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DIMAGGIO GOING HOME
LA SALLE SUB LEAPS FROM THE BENCH TO TACKLE BALL-TOTER
HILADELPHIA, Oct. 19.— La Salle College of this city and Catholic University of Washington, D. C., were waging a terrific battle on a local gridiron when the excitement got the better of a La Salle substitute. In the heat of the fray, the lad leaped from the bench, rushed out on the field, and tackled Frank Cairo of C. U. dead in his tracks. .
Colleges Push Olympic Fight
P
And Boguemen Set for Tilt
Old Rivals Clash Tomorrow At Butler Bowl; Series Even So Far.
When Shortridge and Washing- | ton meet in their annual city series
tussle tomorrow afternoon at Butler Bowl, it will be more than a battle for supremacy between the city’s only remaining undefeated teams. It will also be the rubber game in the history of the Short-ridge-Washington rivalry. Since they first met in 1929, each team has won four times. Last year CHICAGO, Oct. 13 (U the Continentals eked out a hard- [National Collegiate Athletic Assofought 12-7 victory. |eiation came into the open today Coach Bob Nipper’s Blue Devils, | With its long struggle for control of in winning their first four games| Olympic teams with an amendmen. {his season, displayed one outstand- [Providing for collegiate direction of ing weakness—an inability to cope track, wrestling, swimming and with an effective passing attack |CVeWw racing in the Olympic games. and the Continentals hope to | Seeking to end dominance of the capitalize on this with the accurate | National Amateur Athletic Union tosses of Bob McCalip, veteran full- [01 those four Olympic committees, back. Two of the city’s trickiest |the N. C. A. A. submitted to the broken field runners will be pitted | American Olympic Association an against each other in Whitten amendment providing that three of Lingeman, Blue Devil flash who
the five members on the crew com- ... | mittee and five of nine on the other Rg po three committees be college repre last week, and Marion Carter,
sentatives. y The A. A. U, now has nine of 13 Washington redhead who leads eity | embers on all four committees. players in scoring. Shortridge has won from South-
“We're not trying to run ths Glympic show,” said Maj. John L, port, Stivers of Dayton, O., Nobles- I ville, and Jeff this year, while
Griffith, president of the N. C. A. A,, Washington holds victories over
“but we are seeking to improve the ; Olympic situation. Almost 99 per Kirklin, Shelbyville, Cathedral and cent of the American point winners Southport. lin track at Berlin were college men, The Broad Ripple Rockets stayed |The winning crew was a college crew indoors yesterday to review last end most members of the wresFriday's game and brush up on of- |tling and swimming teams were colfensive plays. Vance Wilkinson, [lege students. junior guard, will be unable to compete in tomorrow's game with
“The colleges merely are cone cerned with having the right sort of | Manual because of a foot injection.
{men being in charge of such teams.” The amendment will cime up be=Butler Runners Are Favorites in Match
fore the meeting of the Olympic As sociation scheduled in Washington, A triangular cross-country track
Nov. 17. A two-thirds majority of [approximately 500 eligibie votes is necessary for passage. meet will be staged at Butler University tomorrow afternoon with the | { local school playing host to Indiana | | Central and Wabash College. The | run will stretch out over a 3'2-mile course, The Butler harriers, who are heavy favorites, have engaged in two meets this year, annexing the first from Wayne University, on the Fairview campus, and then losing to Michigan State Teachers College | last week on the latter school’s | | sandy course.
Races Delayed Again At Narragansett
PROVIDENCE, R. 1, Oct. 19 (U. P.) —For the second successive day, Narragansett Race Track today canceled the day's card ‘on account of martial law.” Secretary Pat Horgan announced that he was receiving entries for tomorrow despite the patroling of a mile radius about the track by nearly 300 militiamen under martial law declared by Governor Quinn Saturday night.
MISS MILEY UNDER KNIFE LEXINGTON, Ky. Oct. 19 (U, P). — The condition of Marion Miley, one of the nation’s leading women golfers, was reported “good” here today following an appendix operation,
) —--The
BOBBY PACHO WINNER
NEW YORK, Oct, 9.—Bobby Pacho, 148, Los Angeles, LL Frankie Cavanna, 145, New York, in eight rounds here last night. Paulie Walker, 153, Trenton, kayoed Dave Bongy, 152':, Yonkers (2); Ken Overlin, 162%, Decatur, Ill, kayoed Roy Williams, 169, Chicago (4); Joe St. Peter, 178, New York, outpointed George March, 175';, New York (4),
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