Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1938 — Page 26
A Real Finish
A J ho A» Q } e the hest ¥ oh
Indianapolis Times Sports
Out of the Red
The Reds have been eliminated in
the National League race,
but Mec-
Kechnie got ‘em farther north than
PAGE 26
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1938
they had
been since the days "way
back when.
2
Harry Stevenson will do the left half backing for Notre Dame in the clash with Kansas University tomorrow afternoon.
MN p. Eddie Ash
N
RR
YANKEES HAVE MOUND TROUBLE
-
MAY
MURPHY BE
JOE McCarthy's New York Yankees may enter the World . 5
Series with a crippled pitching staff. . . . And pumping t | over the platter, according to the better minds, is ait least 65 per cent of baseball. . . . Lefty Gomez has an tating cold, Spurgeon Chandler's arm is giving him pains and Monte Pearson just recently recovered from a
1 \ ¥) > 5 ) °" ~ 3 ATI . » } heavy cold and sinus trouble,
As a result, Johnny Murphy, the big relief man, may
arting assignment against the National Leaguers. Marse Joe has Red Rufting, Bump Hadley
lowever, and two or three other chuckers good enough to be on the payroll of the parent club of baseball's greatest chain. FP + +. The Cleveland transferred Sunday's double-header with the Tigers o the spacious Municipal Stadium on the lake front. . . Today's Tiger-Cleveland tilt was postponed to permit a
bargain bill on the Sabbath.
Cio
8 = > = x »
[DIMENSIONS at the Cleveland Stadium are: Home plate to left field corner, 320 feet; to center field, 467 feet: to right field corner, 320 feet. . . . Distances much greater as you get away from foul lines. six weeks of the Coast League season. ... Frank O'Doul. ger of the San Francisco Seals, savs that the third DiMaggio will be ready for major league delivery after one
more season.
Viana alia
O'Doul predicts that Lennie Gabrielson of Seattle eventually will replace Lou Gehrig at first base for the Yankees. . . . Gabrielson is New York property, but the Rainiers hope to have him for another year.
» = LEXNTY of that
12 POUS tomorrow
» 8 = LJ
old colorful campus rah, rah life will be seen in . Butler vs. Purdue! . . . It's a chance Ing \ in the grid world. . . . It's been years since a Big Ten eleven showed up here and if the fans jam the Butler Bowl other Big Time games can be arranged. College athletics divectors schedule their teams where the profits are greatest and theyll be watching for the attendance figures here
polis to prove itself
NOTrow Besides, it promises to be an entertaining show. Both teams have a game under their belts and are near-midseason form as a result of long practice and action under fire. . . . Purdue got off a grand start against Detroit University and while Butler had ty e Wit 1 St: it is said the Bulldogs are far better than last Saturdav's s
howing indicated ist wouldn't put the Purdue date out of their minds t on edge Information from the Bulldog front says ladiators have really clicked in practice this week.
- 5
” » »
ill be in Indianapolis on Oct. 7 to battle Shorting to Norman A. Perry Jr, who is president of Culver Alumni Association. the grid warriors from the of Lake Maxinkuckee are going to receive a re. Culver alumni and the Cadet gridders will be heir dinner after the game. . . . For information on game and dinner tickets call Dave Braden in the Circle Tower. . .. The game is to be played at Shortridge’s new field next Friday afternoon
shores
academy on the warm welcome during their trip 1}
200 local
esis at a
= » JONES, Ohio State's 1935 reto his Alma Mater as line coach this fall . . . King on Charley Maag, sophomore snapperback who 3 and weighs 213. maller man center . Big boys are great at it they can’t gather themselves in a hurry for
x = x x
All-America center of
assistant
at
Simonizing Your car washed, $ Missouri State Teachers, 27; Simoniz cleaned. Scuthern Illinois Normal, 0. Simoniz waxed Millsaps, 10; Arkansas Aggies, 0. and chrome polWarrensburg Teachers, 40; Kan- Shed, only
sas Wesleyan, 9. BLUE POINT
Football Scores
DELAWARE & MADISON
J
TS PURDUE HERE AF
Capt. Paul Graham will lead his Indiana Crimson against Ohio State's eleven in the Columbus horseshoe tomorrow.
! »
Victory Over Detroi Boilermakers Favorite
Hoosiers Open Big Ten Campaign Against Ohio State;
Layden’s Irish Tackle
» » .
t Makes
Kansas at South Bend.
By LEO DAUGHERTY
“Big
soil.
Ten opener-— Scarlet and Gray of Ohio State at The cheering here will be at Butler Bowl where Purdue's Boilermak- | ers, fresh from that not-entirely ex{pected victory over Detroit, will | face the growls of the Butler Bulldogs. It will be the first than 30 years that a Purdue team [has visited the Hoosier capital and the occasion calls for festivities. The 130-piece Boilermaker band {1s coming and it will not only vie a the Blue and White cornetists | 1
i i
et al, but will parade downtown tomorrow morning. Butler's athletic officials expect the enthusiasm to hit a new high and send enough patrons to the | Fairview playlot to jam it to its | capacity of 32,000. Such a crowd might mean more “big time" football for the city in future campaigns.
The Boilermakers stick out as the
Bulldogs are really more vicious ito-§ bark at Ball State last Saturday.
Butler at Top Strength
state teams They also want avenge last year's 33-to-T7 blemish. Tom Harding, feared by all Butler's rivals, is ready to romp again, so the eyes of 11 Purdue players ‘will be on him always and he'll find many a hurdle to go over. | Frank Welton, ace senior halfback who has been shelved by in- { jury, may be able to get out there.
{Chuck McDowell, promising sopho-|
{more quarterback, stands a good {chance of seeing action. But in all { probability, Hinkle's starting lineup {will be identical with that of last Saturday. Mal Elward will have all his power too. He can call out Ted
Hennis, Louis Brock, Jack Brown Buckeyes have Frank Zadworney to |
to in the backfield, with lots of re- | serves to call on including Schackelton, Anthony Juska, et al. Cocaptains Paul Humphrey and (Joe Mihal will be among the powers jon the lines. The weights will be {about even, the forward walls av[eraging about 195 pounds and the | ball luggers about 180. The game is at 2 p. m, Bo McMillin;
[from Indianapolis, and Tony Ippoli- |
who previously
doubted his team’s ability to win
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Cod | time in more
favorite, but maybe Tony Hinkle's|
| than they cared to be in their 12-|
Butler will be at top strength for] the renewal of a rivalry that dates one of his stalwarts and one of the not hurt as badly as someone told | back to 1887-—the oldest between best in the conference, and Al Sabol, | the newspapers when they took a | to have been assigned to the tackles. |20-to-0 :
time" football returns to Indianapolis tomorrow on a day which | | will see 16 Hoosier college teams in 10 combats, seven of them on Indians
Ohio will be the scene of the three other battles, one of them a Big 30 McMillin's Crimson of Indiana University against the |
the Columbus horseshoe.
| HOOSIER GRID MENU | Butler vs. Purdue at Butler Bowl.
| Indiana vs. Ohio State at Colum- | bus.
Kansas U. Notre Dame at South Bend. | Evansville vs. | castle, Earlham vs, Manchester at North | Manchester.
| Ball State vs. Central
VS.
DePauw at Green-
Normal at
| Danville. Hanover vs. Wabash at Crawfordsville. { Franklin vs. Indiana State at | Terre Haute. | Valparaiso vs. Capital U, at Co-
| lumbus, O.
St. Joseph's vs, University of To-
{ledo at Toledo.
— {more than two, now is optimistic
tover his squad's chances to topple Ohio State's Buckeyes at Columbus {for the second year in a row. The warriors from Bloomington took last year's dispute, 10 to 0. The old Centre juggernaut has decided on Frank Petrick and John Janzaruk as his ends. Bob Haak,
| Jimmy Logan, from Indianapolis,
land Bill Smith are to be starting|
| guards, with Russ Sloss at the pivot post. Eddie Herbert has the nod for quarter and Capt. Paul Graham |for full. Two halfback jobs are open and three boys are ready to take (them. They are Cobb Lewis, Vincent Oliver and Joe Nicholson. McMillin terms as “green” the team which will meet Francis Schmidt's veteran combination, led by Mike Kabealo, who will carry the torch in the backfield. “But it might be an Indiana Satjurday,” the Bo hoped. | Mostly home-grown Ohioans, the
~
Furnishing power in Mal Elward's backfield tomorrow against
Butler will be Jack Brown, Purdue junior from Indianapolis,
TER 30-YEAR ABSENCE
Bob Connor, who graduated from Cathedral High School, may see action in the Butler backfield against the Boilermakers.
1 {play the other half with Mike. Don [Saturday and they're expected to
Scott, the blocker, is slated for quar- |
(ter, Forest Fordham looks like the [starter in the tailback spot Since Johnny Raab, one of Ohio's spark-
| present Pete Vaughan with a vic- | tory over Hanover at Crawfordsville. It will be the first time out for
lers, will be unable to take the field. | the Ohio River boys this year. Three
Howard Wedebrook, the long- Indianapolis lads, Bill Isley,
Jim
(range booter, will be pulled back | . from his end position when a punt | Davis and Dave Hine, are to be in is ordered. the lineup.
Irish Open With Kansas
Optimism pervades the Franklin
The nation again will cast at least den and the Grizzlies have hopes of
one eve in the direction Bend as Elmer Layden's open another campaign | Kansas Jayhawkers, who | benefit of a previous week's 19-18 edge over Texas. The first game will be a test of State Teachers a week ago.
Irish pry | Something at Terre Haute.
{whether or not the old Four Horse- |
of South teaching the Indiana State Teachers
{ Ball State, elated over its showwith the ing at Butler last week, goes to Dan- \ have the ville to help Central Normal open folks, the day's upset. Indiana wins its home season, after taking a 6-|after a collision that will be heard
The Earlham Quakers, still un- |
By HARRY FERGUSON United Press Sports Editor NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—Peering into a crystal ball purchased at a [rummage sale and choosing tomorrow’s winners on college football field: Ohio
State-Indiana—Here yar,
to-0 whitewashing from the Illinois all the way to the Easter Islands.
{Maybe the best game of the day. Notre Dame-Kansas—South Bend
man’s green gallopers can shine like tried, go to North Manchester to watches the Irish get off to the 1938
|the ancient Golden Dome, the face Manchester, which {venterpiece of the Irish campus. | Steve Sitko, a reserve last year, is | Valparaiso last week. | to be entrusted with the Blue and | | Gold's quarterbacking. land Harry Stevenson Jr, lettermen |it& | last year, but not regulars, wil. do!
{the Valparaiso Uhlans, 14 to 13, at
The Uhlans will be over near the Lou Zontini Ohio State Stadium meeting Cap- | Northwestern, but watch out for a
Joe Dienhart’s St. Joseph eleven
nosed out! season with a victory.
California-Washington State— California, 13; Washington State, 0. Northwestern-Kansas
sleeper.
Rice-Oklahoma—R o u g h and
| the halfbacking and Mario Tonelli, | 80€S to Toledo to meet the university | tough all the way, with Rice winwith the same experience, is to be of the same name in the Ohio town.
at full. | xs | Earl Brown and John (Shipwreck) | Michigan, 28 to 13.
| They lost last Sunday to Jordon of
(ning, maybe by a field goal.
points in favor of Washington.
State—
Washington-Idaho—About 10]
Ferguson Consults Crystal Ball—Picks Indiana to Win
Y ale-Columbia — Boola-Boola, Boola-Boola, Boola-Boola, Boola« Boola! Penn-Lafayette—Penn gets off on the right foot. Missouri-Colorado—Whizzer White has gone, so a firm vote for Missouri. Alabama - Howard—The Crimson Tide goes to flood stage and wins as it pleases. Cornell-Colgate—Cornell easily in a game that will unveil one of the great teams of the East. Harvard-Brown — Harvard, but likely to be closer than anybody seems to think. Michigan-Michigan State—Up in {the air goes a nickel and it comes down heads, so—Michigan State by a whisker. Minnesota-Nebraska — Nebraska did it, 14 to 9, last year but time marches on; Minnesota by two touchdowns.
| Kelly, up from the reserves, are to! —————
{be at the terminals. Ed Beinor, all-| America a year age, and Paul Kel, | | who saw some action last vear, are| probable tackles. The guards are to! [be Capt. Jim McGoldrick and Auggie
| Bossu, new to the varsity wars. Ed| Come in Longhi is to do the ball snapping. If you go, you will be part of al and See crowd which the front office expects You# | to reach 45,000. Clothes
Down at Greencastle, Gaumy | Neal's Tigers expcet to keep Evans- | | ville's no-win record intact for the | visitors. The Tigers clawagl Frank- | lin, 13 to 0 in the first start last! week, while Evansville was engij neered into its ninth consecutive de- | | feat, 8 to 0, by the Rose Poly Engi- | neers. 4 2 | The Little Giants of Wabash were
Made
| - ———
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