Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1938 — Page 6
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vy Eddie Ash
BIG DAY OF PUNTS AND PASSES
HOOSIER COLLEGIANS LIFT LID
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Indianapolis Times Sports
Asleep in the Deep Joe McCarthy, Yankee pilot, told his boys to relax after clinching the American League pennant. For a
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OLLEGIATE football shoves off today and for several 4 weeks there will be stirring action and gala occasions all over Indiana and elsewhere where the pigskin warriors go on parade. . . . Tony Hinkle's Butler Bulldogs show their teeth for the first time against Ball State out at the Bowl, Purdue's Boilermakers tackle a hardy foe in the University of Detroit at West Lafayette, and DePauw collides with Franklin at Greencastle in an annual tiff. Other Hoosier lidlifters: Manchester at Valparaiso, Michigan Normal at Indiana State, Evansville at Rose Poly, Wabash at Akron, O., and tomorrow at Collegeville St. Joe tackles Jordan Coilege. : There will be no rest for the footballers until midNovember, and on the spectators’ side of the picture, thousands of grid fans will be somewhere every week-end looking in on helmet wearers. x x » =
Next Saturday's Hoosier slate: Purdue at Butler, Indiana at Ohio State, Kansas at Notre Dame, Ball State at Central Normal, Evansville at DePauw, Earlham at Manchester, Franklin at Indiana State, Hanover at Wabash, St. Joe at Toledo, Valparaiso at Capital University. Reports indicate the Ohio State-Indiana Big Ten battle on Oct. 1 will be broadcast by the NBC chain. . . . One for Bo McMillin to emulate. . . . Francis Schmidt. Buck coach, whistles through his teeth to call his boys He had no breath to whistle with after the Hoosiers trounced the Bucks, 10 to 0, last fall Francis and Don Twedell are being trained and coached to form a brother combination at guard for Minnesota. . Don Peden's assistant on the Ohio University staff this fall is Russ Crane. who was the Illini captain in 1928. . . . He led the team at guard and had a high national rating. = » »
OCAL football ticket information: The Bush-Feezle sporting goods store. 136 E. Washington St., has arranged to handle tickets for home games at Purdue, Indiana and Notre Dame, and Purdue's game with Butler here. W. Lawrence Sexton, realtor, 707 Peoples Bank bldg., will have on consighment as in previous years tickets for Notre Dame's home games. . . . Purchasers are requested to call in person. Notre Dame home dates: Kansas, Oct. 1: Illinois. Carnegie Tech, Oct. 22; Minnesota, Nov. 12. Purdue at home, after that tussle with Detroit today: 22: Indiana, Nov. 19. Indiana at home: Kansas State, Oct. 22: Towa, Nov. 12.
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Oct.
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Wisconsin, Oct.
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o » BIG Brown Bear. apparently well tamed for several years, may 4 A develop unexpected ferocity this fall and rip plenty of turf from hallowed gridirons. . Coach Tuss McLaughry, entering his 13th year of teaching Brown University football, is definitely bullish on the Bears’ chances. > McLaughry's son, John, a big lad, provides further bulwarking. . - . Tuss, trying to be modest. says that John is one of the best backers-up he ever has seen and no slouch at blocking and crashing side the tackles . . Brown's chief aim. of course, is to bump off Harvard, who beat the Bears last fall to the large tune of 34 to
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» » 5 T" VIDENTLY Jimmy Crowler. Fordham’s head coach, wants to get it first hand what the governor of North Carolina said to the gor ernor of South Carolina Anyway. Fordham's grid warriors ill meet University of North Carolina Nov. 12 and University of South Carolina Nov. 19. Crowley and Rex Enright, South Carolina coach. were roommates Notre Dame where they learned the fine points under Knute ockne . Jimmy was a snaky-hipped halfback. Rex a fullback.
t
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1938
while, it looked like they went into a coma, thstead.
PIRATES’ LEAD WHITTLED TO TWO
GAMES
Northsiders | Rule Gridiron; Smith Stars
Shortridge Subdues Southport as Six Local Squads | - Win; Manual Stopped.
SAN
By LEO DAUGHERTY Times Staff Writer | Shortridge High School's Blue (Devils today appeared the rulers of the local gridiron picture. | { Romping to a 34 to 0 victory over {Southport last night, the Blue! {Devils looked like the Sagans of {intracity competition. {| Four other prep teams traveled {to victories against
out-of-town | ‘elevens and Crispus Attucks hum- | bled its Alumni. 24 to 6. Tech| toppled Richmond to the tune of] {18 to 0. Washington romped over | {Kirklin on the latter's field, 48 to 0. Cathedral registered its third] [straight victory at the expense of | Noblesville, 26 to 0, and Broad [Ripple edged out Plainfield, € to 0. The lone city team to lose was ‘Manual. The Redskins were scalped {in their own wigwam by Blooming{ton, 14 to 7. | Southport, with some 5000 persons looking on, might have had a more | pleasant evening if Shortridge had |
_ Gets Off Good One Against St
kicker, let fly a 40-yard punt )
| Panthers at Delavan Smith Field yesterday afternoon. After a hard, driving attack in| early in the second quarter of the game against the Bloomington | bowed to Bloomington, 14 to 7, with all scores in the first quarter.
Cubs Advance As Bucs Fall Before Reds
Greenberg Increases Homer Total to 56; Even With Ruth’s Pace.
NEW YORK, Sept. 24 (U. P).— The Pittsburgh Pirates are selling World Series tickets but they haven't received any reservations from the Cubs yet. The Cubs staged two thrilling, up=hill battles and defeated the Phil= lies in both ends of a double-header, 3-2 and 7-5, yesterday while the Cincinnati Reds obligingly knocked off the Pirates, 5-4, in 12 innings. The loss cut the Bucs’ lead to two games. Pittsburgh has nine games te play, six with the Reds and three with the Cubs. The Bruins have nine to go, the Reds nine and the Giants 10. Augie Galan’s eighth-inning homer and brilliant relief pitching by Jack Russell, who allowed two hits In five innings, brought the Bruins the first game while Ripper Collins’ double with the bases loaded fea=tured a ninih-inning, four-run rally that copped the nightcap.
Walters Blasts Bucs
Bucky Walters beat the Pirates singlehandedly to bring the Reds
Times Photo. The Redskins
the first quarter, the fleet back (circled left end for a counter, and then added the point with a place
i Budge Seeks | | Southport took a licking in yard- | Grand Slam
|age gained in the second quarter | |although the Blue Devils failed to {score. But in the third period a! | sustained Shortridge drive ended brilliantly as Smock raced his left end for a marker and Smith's toe added the point.
Don Tackles Mako in Tennis Finals: Marble Advances.
Smith Scores Again
The fourth quarter was a field day for Coach Bob Nipper's Northsiders. Bob Scott intercepted Schienbein’s pass and ran 20 yards to midfield. That Smith boy ran again, skirting his left end for six more points but missed the conversion. i Smith was back again. He inter- | cepted another of Schienbein’s pl passes, ran 58 yards to a touchdown FOREST HILLS, N. Y. Sept. 24 ‘and added the extra point with a (U. p.) —J. Donald Budge will make (placement. After an exchange of |g big for the first grand slam in
BULLETIN FOREST HILLS, N. Y, Sept. 24 (U. P.).—In the most one-sided finals match in the history of the tournament, Alice Marble today won the Women’s National Ten- | mis Singles Championship with a 6-0, 6-3 victory over Nancye Wynne of Australia.
Baseball at a Glance
| punts Smith again began to run {and ended up over the goal line. | Gosh, he was mad, when he missed !
| tennis history in the final round of
the National Singles Championship today, and the man who will at-
Patty Berg Again Battles
Mrs. Page for Golf Title
WILMETTE. Ill. Sept. 24 (U. P.).—Patty Berg's campaign of vengeance simmered down to the final stage yesterday when she fired her way into the finals of the Women's National Amateur golf tournament opposite Defending champion Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page. So todav at 36 holes it's the 20-vear-old Minneapolis college freshman against a 31-year-old housewife, battling for the title for the
® second straight year. | Patty, whose record of nine vicT k tories in her last 12 tournaments Blues a e jcan’t be touched by any active —a— |Peggy Graham, of Hollywood, Cal, {8 and 7, with the hottest round of ST. PAUL, Minn. Sept. 24 (U. P.). the tournament. —Kansas City was a game ahead| Mrs. Page’s first nine of 35 was today in the vital playoff series with {four under par. She apparently is
the St. Paul Saints, which will de- at her peak, playing as well or cide the American Association rep- petter than she did at Memphis,
(golfer, entered the finals by defeating her old nemesis, Marion Miley, of Lexington, Ky. 2-up, while Mrs. Page was crushing
victory. His single in the 12th in= ning scored Harry Craft from second with the winning run and his seven-hit pitching shackled the Pi= rates. Ernie Lombardi and Wally’
Foxx Holds Batting Lead zm mmission tse
| unscheduled. ! In the only two games played in
'Ruffing, Brown Pace Pitch- the American League, Cleveland {took two games from the Tigers, ers; Vaughan Moves Up.
8-1 and 6-5, despife a pair of homers by Hank Greenberg. | Bobby Feller pitched six-hit ball, NEW YORK, Sept. 24 (U. P.).— fanned 10 and walked only one as | Jimmy Foxx, Boston Red Sox first he turned in his 16th victory of baseman, and Ernie Lombardi, Cin- jthe year in the opener.
|cinnati Reds’ catcher, continued to | Hank Ties the Babe ‘hold their major league batting! A 12-hit attack on three pitch= | leads last week. according to the ers. capped by a four-run fifth averages released today and includ- | inning, brought the Vittmen the ing games of Thursday, Sept. 22. [nightcap called at the end of the Foxx added two points to his seventh because of darkness. average to increase it to .350 for a| Greenberg hammered out No. 53 10-point lead over Buddy Myer, and 56 in the second game to bring Washington. Lombardi slumped six | him up even with the pace set by points to .339 while Arky Vaughan, Babe Ruth in 1927 when he hit his
Pittsburgh, increased his average from .331 to .333 and moved into
record 60. | Ruth hit his 56th homer in game
second place. {No. 145. Yesterday's double bill
Red Ruffing, Yankees, lost a brought the Tigers’ total games to game but held the American 145. Both of Hank's homers were League pitching lead with 21 vic- | hit off Earl Whitehill with the tories and six defeats. Mace Brown, pases empty. Pittsburgh's relief artist, remained | : at the head of the National League |
moundsmen with 15 victories sue ELECT JORDAN HEAD OF ATHLETIC UNION
six defeats. Leaders in other departments fol- re low: Paul R. Jordan of Indianapolis is Giuns— Greenberg. Tigers, 131: Mel Ott.) to serve as president of the Indiana= Hits—Vosmik. Red Sox, 193; McCor-| Kentucky Association of the AmaT Doubles—Cronin, Red Sox, 49; Medwick, | teur Athletic Union for the forth 44 coming year. Vice-presidents elect= ed include Charles McCall, Louis= ville; John Lauck Jr., Indianapolis; Norman Werry, Gary; S. C. New=-
resentative in the Little World enn, last fall when she beat Miss Series with the International gerg for the title, 7 and 6. League winner. | But the galleries followed Patty The Kansas City team Was a ang they hailed her as the coming winner from the start last night, champion. She couldn't clinch the getting hits where they counted, 10, atch until the 18th green, but lake an 8-to-3 deision from the pfiss Miley always has been tough ‘Saints. Marvin Breuer pitched as go. patty. Until this year, Marion
| well as he needed to. keeping the; 5 the 72-hole western St. Paul hits fairly well distributed, (rec times. With Patty sscona |
although he allowed 11. Rain Lowers
The winning Blues defeated a Westchester Scores
former nemesis, Lloyd Brown, a southpaw who had beaten them on] WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Sept. 24. U. P.).—A soggy, pool-dappled
numerous occasions during the regular season. They made 14 hits, all course sent scores rising like frightened waterfowl yesterday as the
but two players getting at least one] ( first brigade of ambitious linksmen
safe blow. Joe Gallagher with a started a quest for the pot of gold
home run and two singles, Walter Judnich with a single, a double and in the $13.500 Westchester 108-hole the
; the extra point Kick. | tempt to foil him is his best friend— | YESTERDAY'S RESULTS | His interception of another gene lo m ie | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF | Southport aerial put the ball on| Mako rose to superb heights yesKansas ...... 000 210 203— & 14 3 the Cardinal's 26 and it was only terday to score a thunderous upSt. Pau ------ 000 001 011— 3 11 2 a matter of plays until Jim Miller | get by defeating John Bromwich GE. and Riddle; Brown, Klaerner and had it over and Fred Maynard's | of Australia, second only to Budge plunge added one more point to the jn world ranking, 6-3, 7-5, 6-4, in a {Ste : {semifinal match. Budge joined him Panthers Take Redskins lin the final round with a 6-3, 6-3, s 1) It was an ail-offensive game as 6-3 triumph over Sidney B. Wood, % 000 000— 2 6 0 the- Bloomington Panthers chewed New York veteran. Dea: Mulcahy and the Manual Redskins at Delavan| In the women's final, Alice {Smith Field. Both squads had | Marble, the statuesque Californian - 010 000 024— 7 13 3 strong attacks, but neither had | from Beverly Hills who held the : te iy Ihe 6 8 4 much defense. title two years ago, was to come to Ri ona nch, nd It was early in the fray when grips with Nancye Wynne, the slug- | Gib East, the downwesters fullback, |ging Australian star. came between a pass and its re-| Miss Marble rallied to defeat ‘ceiver and romped to a touchdown. {Sarah Palfrey Fabyan of Boston, 0 ot 80a : 3 3 Carl Freeman plunged the one 5-7, 7-5, 7-5. yesterday after twice ombardi: Blanton, Swift point. being within one point of losing the '. Thomas led the invaders’ attack match.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
(Playoff Finals Series) L. Pct. Kansas City .. 1 0 1.000 St. Paul an 0 1 000 Winner of four out of seven 3a as meets winner of International Leacue playoff in Little World Series.)
City 1
NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game)
Chicago . 000 020 010— 3 200
| Philadelphia
Higbe, Russell and 0 Atwood.
NATIONAL LEAGUE WwW. L -. 33 33 “32 61 64 64 70 4
9%
S Pittsburgh (Second Game)
Chicago Cincinnati New York Boston St. Louis Brooklyn Philadelphia
cress Chicat® .......-...- Philadelphia _... Carleton, Russell, Hartnett, O'Dea; wood.
Mize and
(Twelve Innings) i Cincinnati Yankees,
Pittsburgh
Walters and L Brown and Todd
M01— 5 1 a triple, and Harry Davis with a | pair of singles and a double led the
Cardinals, . riples—Heath, Cleveland, 18; Gutteridge. Cardinals, 15 each. ome Runs—Greenberg, Tigers, 54; Ott, Giants, 33. Runs Batted in—Foxx, Red Sox, 163; . Medwick, Cardinals. 17. o lin, Ft. Wayne, and A. W. Hardin, § til, 2. | Hack, Cubs. 17. ; |New Albany. ; The ten leading batters in each! Bruce Fogle and J. E. Aspinall, : league follow: both of Indianapolis. were elected Kansas City attack. Bob Boken hit AMERICAN and treasurer, respec=
LEAGUE
AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww 5 1 39 61 I) 2 6 8a 93
Only games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE {First Gams) Cleveland 00) 011 213— 8 14 © Detroit 006 800 010— 1 6 2 Feller and Hemsley: Gill, Fisenstat, Rozalski and York, Tebbetts. (Second Game: Seven Innings; Darkness) Cleveland 100 041 6— 6 12 © Detroit 0600 103 1— 5 35 @
Whitehill, Humphries and Pytlak; Benton, Wade, Harris and Tebbetts.
Cleveland Detroit Washington Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia .. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION {Finals Plavoff) Kansas City at St. Paul: game.
50 51
night Only games scheduled
Qutboard Races Draw Fast Field
Times Special MONTICELLO. Sept. 24 —Outboard motor boat races are to be held on Shafer Lake near here tomorrow at 2 p. m. Fifty beats are expected to compete in the events which are sanctioned bv the Hoo-
sier State Outboard Association. 2 Speeds from 45 to 60 miles an hour
37 are expected in the six events.
Indianapolis racers include Tony § Venezia, Art Werner and Arrell
NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati at Pittsburgh. St. Louis at Chicago. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. New York at Boston (2). AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland at Detroit. Washington at Philadelphia. Boston at New York. Chicago at St. Louis (2).
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS (Yesterday's games included) Batting AB . 538 453 406 466 n 455 Home Runs
joers
H 18% 155
3 138
In the same period and enabled Tennis has offered few more East to register a second time. A ironical situations than that of line smash by him made the Budge and Mako meeting for the! score 14. " title today. These two are closer! An aerial from Williams to Bur- than Damon and Pythias and have tis tallied the only Manual marker been for years. They have roomed | in the first frame. It was scoreless together, traveled together and] . the rest of the way, but the Purple Played together since the time they and White held the edge. were juniors.
Football
Howard Stars as Tech
Whips Morton, 18-0 The Goodwill Golden Bears are to
: tmes Speciat {open their season tomorrow at Gar- | RICHMOND, Sept. 24. —Technical | field Park. All players are to see! |gridders of Indianapolis today had |Zappia for further information. heir fi { The Holy Cross football squad will Yaglr first North Central Conference practice tomorrow at 2 p. m. at Wil- | victory salted away after they had lard Park. Players are to bring all {scored an 18 to 0 triumph over equipment for scrimmage and check‘Morton here yesterday. up. Any team wanting a practice | Charley Howard led the Big game call Frank Barnes, Li. 4321. Green's attack by passing to Warren | Huffman late in the first quarter had made five first downs in a Tov for six points. In the final period Caskey shot off tackle for 14 yards he set up a second touchdown on a! 2nd first blood. On the next to the, pass to Berling at the 3-yard line. last play in the first half the Irish On the next play he scored on a intercepted a pass on the midfield spinner. | stripe and ran it to Noblesville’s 35. A minute later he added another Ferguson passed to Zaesel for the
by intercepting a Richmond pass Score and Potter made it seven with | X
and shaking off four tacklers in a 2 heave to O'Brien. Another pass, | 45-yard touchdown dash. Two place Caskey to Neihaus, was good for 45 kick conversions were blocked ang Yards and a touchdown in the third
: Reinking.
Other entries are Paul
33 Wehrle. Muncie; Dutch Hurst. Jim
~ Covington Is Marion:
and Charles Keisling, Bernie Weaver. Ravmond Young. Charles Kinsel, Leo Schnitz,
125 Ralph Mevers and Don Flowers of Ft. Wayne.
AT FT. HARRISON
A polo game is to be played tomorrow at Ft. Harrison, starting at 2:30 p. m. Among those playing are Samuel B. Sutphin, Thomas Ruckelshaus, Conrad Ruckelshaus, Alfred Buck. Russell Fortune Jr.. Maj). Alphonso Timoteo Sapia-Bosch, Maj. Emest A. Williams and Jimmy James.
MRS. FREEMAN DAVIS WINS GOLF TOURNEY
Mrs. Freeman Davis won the twoday medal play women's tournament at Highland yesterday with a card
of 168, 14 strokes lower than Mary
Gorham's 182, secopd-place winner. Mrs. Ben Olsen had 192 and Mrs. C. A. Jaqua, 197. Mrs. Ted Wurster, and Mrs. M. C. Bartlett, 204-38—16€, tied for first honors in the net division. Mrs. Sid Fenstermaker's 214-46—168 was third and Mrs. Joe Brower was fourth. 205-34—171. JARR FIGHTS TO DRAW FT. WAYNE. Sent. 24 (U. P)— Frankie Jarr. 122, Indiana bantamweight champion. and Herbie Gilmore, 125, Cincinnati. fought to a 10-round drawn in their match here iast night.
198-32—1686,
Other entries have been received from Ohio. Illinois and Michigan,
¥ Bowling Notes Tenpin scores are beginning to climb as local keglers limber up for the long winter drive. High honor game in last night's play went to Harry Wheeler of the Marott Shoes who combined games
lof 203, a scorching 269 and 192 for a 664 total.
Robert Hughes of the Car Department quintet of the New York Central League followed Wheeler with a 651 and Don Johnson of the Barbasols toppled the pins for a 648. At 647 stood Gib Smith of the Reilly Tar & Chemical, one pin ahead of Bill Boersig of the Bankers | League.
George Godwin posted a 640, Justin Forsyth and Earl Goodhue both registered a 633, and Wesman of Conkle Funeral Home scored a 630. Other honor game scorers included Pug Leffert, 629; Tonv Burrello, 623; Ed. Schuster, 621; Gene Rutli, 61%,
Besesi and Joe Danna, 616; Michae-| lis, 608; Joe Freihage, Harry Woe-
rhage Jr. and Hendrikson, 608; Dawson, 607; Chas. Sellers, 605; Paul
Ray. 604; E. Botzon, 602; Emil Voelz, | and.
Leiber and H. Pattison, 601; Gray, 600.
Cray of Rowes Jewelers had a 643,
the other was wide of the uprights.
Washington Smothers | Kirklin, 48 to 0
Times Special | KIRKLIN, Sept. 24 —A vear ago the Washington Continentals swamped the local eleven, 40 to O.! Yesterday it was even more decisive. | The Indianapolis squad won, 48 to 0. { Capt. Bob McCalip romped to a touchdown in the first period after Jack Peyton blocked a Kirklin kick |and repeated two quarters later with ja 40-yard dash. | Boris Dimancheff made one on a | 40-yard aerial play begun by George {Smallman and again carried the |ball over in the fourth period. A {Kirklin fumble on the two-y~rd line | was scooped up by Billy Howard for {six points and Charles Coats |smashed the goal line for another. Peyton garnered the final touchdown by snatching the ball after Ralph Canter blocked a kick. An- | other two points were added when a Rirklin ball carrier was tackled for {a safety. Four runhing plays ati tempting the extra point were successful.
{
Cathedral Takes Third ‘Straight, 26 to 0
Times Special
edral today had earned its third
straight victory by crushing Nobles- |
ville here last night, 26 to 0. The Irish controlled the game completely and scored in every quarter but the first. After they
NOBLESVILLE, Sept. 24 —Cath-
period. Fitzgerald place kicked for the point. Six more points were tallied in
the final period when the Irish
blocked a kick on the 21-yard line.! A line buck mage it first down on, the 11. for five. Noonan then crashed the line for six points. |
Broad Ripple Rockets Down Plainfield
Times Special PLAINFIELD, Sept. 24 —Broad Ripple of Indianapolis was back in the win column today after their 6
night. Bill Wetmore chalked up the game’s only score in the second period on a short line plunge after a series of plays had taken the Rockets down the field.. Twice the Plainfield eleven was stopped within the five-yard line by stellar tackling on the part of Bill Taylor.
Crispus Tigers
Down Alumni The Crispus Attucks Alumni | could brag about their Varsity to-| day. Yesterday the old grads were de-
Noblesville was penalized t
to 0 victory over Plainfield nere last ‘
championship, golf tournament. Only three
year's a home run for the Saints. > The Blues noted with satisfaction that their cousins from Newark won the International League semifinal playoffs last night. Newark is a New York Yankee farm club and so is Kansas City. Both Manager Bill Meyer of the cent with 72s each, two above par, Blues and Manager Babe Ganzel of | were Andy Lapola of Florham Saints announced that they had|p,.x N J. and Tony Tiso of East several pitchers ready to go in the | ~ ester. N. ¥ pros an da Tony Kossecond game of the series which will | . i nf Bride » be played tonight, ivy of Bridgeport, Conn., an amastarts
The second contingent FOOTBALL RESULTS
play today in the five-day event. LOCAL HIGH SCHOOLS
Washington, 18; Kirklin, FOOTBALL TODAY
Bloomington, 14; Manual, Tech, INDIANA COLLEGES
18; Richmond. 0. Crispus Attucks, 24; Alumni, 6. Broad Ripple, 6; Plainfield, 0. . . Cathedral, 26; Noblesville, 0. Butler vs. Ball State. at Indianapolis. Shortridge, 34; Southport, 9. Purdue vs. Detroit, at W. Lafayette. — tami in DePauw vs. Franklin, at Greencastle. Valparaiso vs. Manchester, at Valparaiso. Inciana State vs. Michigan Normal, at Terre Haute.
club-swingers aptheir first 18 medal holes over the Fenway Club's recently flooded and hurricane swept course. Those who led this first contin-
»~ a“
OTHER HIGH
Sheridan, 19; Connersville, 2. Marion, ©; Wiley (tie), Kokomo, 1 Newcastle,
SCHOOLS
Westfield, 6. 5: Columbus, 0.
33 Akron vs. (Terre
St. Joe vs. morrow).
Wabash, at Akron. Jordan, at Collegeville (io-
MIDDLE WEST vs, U, of Washington,
Haute), © 9; Peru. 6. 26; Rushville, 0. Wabash, 35; Elwood, 0. Crawfordsville, 6; Brazil, 0. Emerson (Gary), 13; Hagamond, 0. Roosevelt (East Chicag 14; Froebel
ary). 12. Whiting, 31: Hammond Tech. 0. Elkhart, 30: Brown (Chicago), Suilivan, 19; Bicknell, 12. Vincennes, 19: Lawrenceville (111), 0.
North Side (Fort Wayne), 24: Misha- | aka, 6. { Riley (South Bend), 18: La Porte, O. |
; anderen, ((Terve | Dartmouth vs. Bates, at Han . Holv Cross vs. Providence, at Worcester. (East Chicagn)., 26: Olin. Menhiatien vs. St. Bonaventure, at New ork.
Minnesota Minneapolis. Illinois vs. Ohio U., at Champaign. Xavier vs, South Carolina, at Cincinn
ati. Weshington U. vs. Vanderbilt, at St. 0. uis. Michigan State vs. Wayne, at East Lan-
Ss
sing. Kansas vs. Texas, at Lawrence, EAST A A Pittsburgh vs. W. Virginia. at Pittsburgh. Paris Gerstmever over. Haute), 0. Washington 3 (0.), Wavne), 0. Memorial
32; South (Fort apolis.
(Evansville),
Side 52:
on, 0 Central (Evansville), 21: Henderson (Kv), 0 !
Reif (Evansville), 39: Washington. 0.
Navy vs. William & Mary. at Ann Army vs. Wichita. at West Point. Prince- | Rutgers vs. Marietta, at New Brunswick
1CX. Maine vs, Rhode Island. at Orono. | payee vs, Richmond, at College ark. Lehigh vs. Brown vs.
Pa. Military, at Bethlehem. Conn. State, at Providence. SOUTH Virginia vs. Va. M. I.. at Charlottsville. Kentucky vs. Maryville, at Lexington. Georgia vs. Citadel, at Athens. Centre vs. Mississippi College, at Danville, Ky. Tulane vs. Sewanee, at New Orleans. Oglethorpe vs. Presbyterian, at Atlanta. North Carolina vs. Wake Forest, at Chapel Hill.
COLLEGES V. C. L. A, 2 Yowa, 3. Drake,’ 47; Monmouth, 9. Mankato Teachers, 7: River Falls, 8. Glenville, 28: New River State, 0. Ouachita, 14: Oklahoma Baptists, 8. Eastern Kentucky Teachers, 19; George-
own, 0. Washington-Lee, 7; Hampden-Sydney, §. Dayton, 38; Wittenberg, 0. Heidelberg, 32; Ashland, 12. Ohio Northern, 12; Findlay, 9. East Texas State, 19; Louisiana Normal, |
t
SOUTHWEST Texas Christian vs. Centenary, at Ft.
Worth. Texas A. & M. Texas A. & I, at Denton,
~ i“
Duquesne, 34: Waynesburg, Geneva, 26; Lock Haven, 12. St. Vincent, 26; Davis-Elkins, 6. Grinnell, 20; Cornel! (Ia.), 0. Auburn, 11; Birmingham-Southern, 0. Temple, 6; Albright, 0. John Carroll, 19; Detroit Tech, 0. Mount Union, 7: Hiram, 0. Newberry, 7; Emory-Henry, 0. Bradley Tech, 6; St. Louis, 0. Washburn 34; Baker, 0. Rockhurst, 78; Wentworth, 0. Kemper Military School, 7; Graceland, 6. Morningside, 14; Hastings, 6. Ni State, 20; Moorhead
Superior Teachers, 6. ; Denver, 7
vs. College Station. Southern Methodist Dallas. Baylor vs. Southwestern, at Waco.
VS. at
ville. PACIFIC COAST California vs. St. Mary's, at Berkeley.
Washington State vs. Oregon, at Pullman.
Angeles. i v Oregon State vs. Idaho, at Corvallis. Towa State, 11 Ne ~"HATTANOOGA WINS Loyola (New Orleans), 13; ‘Springhill. CHATTANOOGA WINS Tennessee Wesleyan, 13: Milligan, 7. Ab kansas Tech, 14: Murray Aggies, 14 ie). St. Ambrose, 6: Coe, 0. Haskell Indians, 3; McPherson, 0. Oklahoma City, 26: Austin,
(U. P.).—Chattanooga, Tenn., advanced to the semifinals of the National Amateur Baseball tourna-
feated, 24 to 6. Twelve points were made by Sleet in the opening period | when he tallied on a 20-yard run and later intercepted an Alumni |pass for a touchdown. | Dunn passed to Tinning in the] |third quarter for the only Alumni |score. Williams and Donohue added successive six points in the second and third periods. \
nent yesterday by defeating Des Moines, Iowa, 6 to 3.
OUTFITTERS TO MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN
wvingstons THE MODERN CREDIT STORE
129 W, Wash, os0onse ss
Indiana Theater LJ
Bethany, 12; Kearney Teachers, 7. Southwestern, 45: Union, 0. orth Dakota, 37; South Dakota State, 0. { Chattanooga, Denison, 31; Defiance, 0. Arkansas State, 43; Cumberland, 0. wisiana Tech, 19; Millsaps, 7. Lake Forest, 2%: a 8. Hope, 20: Ferris, 0. Central (Mich.) State Teachers, 44; Lawrence Tech, 0. PROFESSIONALS Pittsburgh, 17: Brooklyn, 3. Chicago Bears, 51; Negro All-Stars, 0. Ph 4
2%:
Tennessee Poly, 8.
fi
richest |
proached par, of the 80 who played |
Rose Poly. vs. Evansville, at Terre Haute. |
at |
Arkansas vs. Okla. A. & M., at Fayette- |S
Southern California vs. Alabama, at Los :
BATTLE CREEK, Mich., Sept. 24 |=
secretary AR. RBL Pct. | tively.
153 110 .308| ers in each
LEAGUE
Ruffing. N. Grove. Bos. Chandler, Bos. Ostermueller, YE nnn Pearson, N. Y.
NATIONAL
SAnanpaantd
Foxx. Boston ......... 163 .350 | i ; i - Myer. Washington ‘320| Fred DeBord is registration chair ill, Cleveland J. Edward Clemens, handiChapman. Boston ‘334 cap chairman: R. C. Willis, timing Travis. Washington : Took aele .... OO 332 Jordan, representative to American DiMaggio, New York .. : 330 'mpic Committee; Marion Bos= | Radcliff, ' Chicago 4 Oymp ; i a _ Pct. | man, and R. O. Papanguth, records Lombardi, Cin. ........ .339 | chairman. All are from IndianVaughn, Pitt. ...ev.eee . | rie = 331 | apolis. McCormick, Cin. . .326 | Medwick, St. L........ § 325 | GIatiS, BOS. ..cranvvsn 330] 312 Hack, Chi aa | 1: Moore. N. ¥. «ccvunnees ¢ 2311 Moore. N am iil TROTS MILE IN 1:56 pitc . : Times Special league follow: AMERICAN LEXINGTON, Ky. Sept. 24.— -178 | champion, toured the mile oval of 37 the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breed‘208 lers’ Association here yesterday in Pct. | set here last fall. He was driven by ‘14 |Sep Palin, Indianapolis harness '690 race veteran. 650
Cleveland .332 commission chairman; Paul R. Vosmik, Boston | NATIONAL 328 | tain, membership committee chair= Mize, St. L i IL. Waner. Pitt. GREYHOUND AGAIN vs .311 The five leading Pet. | Greyhound, 66-year-old trotting {1:56, equaling the world record he .632
Brown, Pil. ..covevves. Klinger, Pitt. e, Chi. is Warneke, St. I. ....... Davis. St. L .....>vas :
———— | MIDGET RACES POSTPONED Qualifying trials which open today
BASKETBALL LEAGUES ion the national pidesl, BIOS 2808 T0 HOLD MEETING at Detroit have forced the postpon-
iment of the meet scheduled to begin The Bush-Feezle Factory Basket- Many of the
“aout
|tonight at the State Fairgrounds. local drivers have left it was announced by
000A
{games on Tuesday night at the Is ELINED Women’s Le ill y iday ights. | |League will play Friday nights cE Bush-Feezle store. | L E 0 A girls’ basketball meeting is to gSTERN AUTO which is to play at the Hoosier Athning Nov. 1. There also is to be a; 301 East Washington A = ters! Brand New Firestone Heaters .. 1 Friendly Credit—Quick Action | Tirestone i res
{ball League will play its league | fOr Detroit, | | officials. | Hoosier Athletic Club. A meeting is to be held Wednesday at 7:45 . | a { The Independent Baskethall EPAIRED Men's | Those interested in either league EFITTED {should see Carl Callahan at the) TAILORING CO. 235 MASS. AVE. BASKETBALL MEETING ‘Save at be held at Em-Roe’s Monday at 8 Ww p. m. to complete the City League Stores > 2 .. letic Club on Friday nights begin-| _ 505 North Illinois state league. Teams desiring to en- | ter see Everett Babb at Em-Roe’s. OPEN EVENINGS Radios—Bicycles—Brakes Relined Make Firestone your heater headquar- g gags *6>° w | | Auto Supply and Service Stores Del. at Mich. S. A. Clendinen, Mgr.
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