Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1938 — Page 6
Jim Lotozo, Army tackle, is a former sailor in the U. S. Navy. There have been no indications of it: yet but gridiron sabotage is a possi-
bility.
"MAJOR GRIDIRONS |
‘e
By Eddie
DYNAMITE IN DODGERS’ SETUP
Indianapolis
MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1938
PAGE 6
HOOSIERS RIDE HIGH O
2 COACHES ARE EX-MANAGERS
EC DUROCHER is the first playing manager the Brooklyn baseball team has had since 1909, when Harry Lumley, a great outfielder and hitter, succeeded Patsy Donovan and failed to lift the old Superbas out of seventh place. . . . Wild Bill Dahlen, Wilbert Robinson, Max Carey, Casey Stengel and Burleigh Grimes, who followed Lumley in that order, all were bench pilots. Baseball experts discerned in the Durocher-Dressen-Killifer lineup in the Dodger pilot house a possibly successful and conceivably troubled regime. There was a suspicion that in surrounding Leo with veteran talent boasting major league managerial experience Larry McPhail had created a setup which ' packed all the dynamite of the Grimm-Hartnett-Lazzeri situation, which blew up on July 20.
oma ou sa ® ® B® JE XPERTS saw in the naming of Charley Dressen, former manager of the Reds, and Bill Killefer, erstwhile pilot of the Cubs and the Browns, as Leo’s coaches, MacPhail’s doubt as to Durocher’s ability to lead the club. Leo opens his regime with the knowledge that in his clubhouse he will have two men who would be eager to
take over. Baseball history proves that the truly successful regime in the majors is that which has one strong man at the helm—a manager unhampered by the presence, inno-
cent as it may be, of ready replacements. 2 ® ” # ” ”
OT so long ago Larry MacPhail made up his mind that Billy Herman, second baseman of the Cubs, would be the ideal player= leader for the Dodgers. . . . But after having seen Herman in the closing drive of the pennant race, and in four World Series games with the, Yankees, Larry has given up on Herman. “I no longer am interested in Billy as a player,” McPhail conee has ruined himself as a hitter, and has slowed up in the field.”
Indiana, Boilermakers Tie Opponents as Irish Triumph
Butler Heads for Indiana Conference Title After Beating DePauw; Evansville Wins Another.
By LEO DAUGHERTY
Hoosier college football armies today aimed guns for new week-end maneuvers after Saturday’s battles which saw them ride high, especially the Big Three—old Notre Dame, Purdue's sturdy Boilermakers and the fighting Crimson of Indiana. Butler’s Bulldog licked its chop with the satisfaction of a 12-to-0|: tally sheet against the DePauw Tiger and the bagging—with apparent certainty—of its fifth consecutive Indiana College Conference championship. © SIn the ‘East today there was a
@® cheer for the men of West Lafayette WwW ] after they had returned from the 0 verines Atlantic Seaboard to prepare for Wisconsin with a 6-to-6 tie with the e top-flight Rams of Fordham. OW 1g t The Fighting Hoosiers of Indiana University began Sotisa)tals for . their first home game against Kan- E L sas State and a new bid for their ven mn OSS first triumph of this golden autumn : after surprising he S¥ponts i» hots. = ing the Nebraska Cornhuskers : a 0-to-0 debate on the hot soil of Minnesotans Outplayed by Lincoln. “Minh : Sherhian Has Day Michigan but Win by Sure 'n the grandstands know| °* One-Point Margin. that Notre Dame did a 14-to-6 SE scoreboard business’ against the| ecHICAGO, Oct. 17 (U. P)— Illini and the dopesters are weigh-|Michigan’s resurgence in Big Ten ing the feats of Benny Sheridan on|foothall is very definitely “The
HEN football isn’t worth the price. . . . As Tom Harmon, Gary, Ind., youth with Michigan, finished a run of 10 yards against Minnesota Saturday, he was dropped unconscious by a vicious tackle
by Wilbur Moore of the Gophers. .
. As Harmon went limp he lost
his hold on the ball and it rolled a yard forward and was recovered
by Minnesot4.
Harmon was unable to continue action and the “fumble” inspired the Gophers and they launched a touchdown drive and beat
the battling Wolverines, 7 to 6.
The game isn’t worth the effort and glory if it's necessary to
tear a player apart to get the ball.
. . . Something similar happened
to Red Grange when he opposed the Gophers with the Illini.
F°
‘ tJ 2 8
OTBALL players at the Butler-DePauw fracas and in other games in the torrid belt were well tuckered by the heat Saturday. . ..
Pretty tough going out there on the greensward under a hot sun.
The boys deserve a lot of credit.
The Northwestern-Ohio State, Notre Dame-Illinois and WisconsinPittsburgh tilts attracted most of the grid fans in the Chicago district, and Chicago and Iowa conducted their game “all alone.” . . . At any rate, the attendance at this Big Ten affair was less than 4000. The contest was presumably for the cellar title and Saturday’s
Children passed it up. 8 ” ”
2 2 2
ATURDAY'S biggest upset? ... Probably Tennessee's victory over . Alabama in the top flight class. . . . Conductors of “parlays” got rich on that one since the thousands of fans who like to lay a few
bobs on combinations thought the Crimson Tide was a sure fire pick.
. . . In the Hoosier State there was
very little betting on the Evans-
ville-Franklin encounter but it was a grand upset nevertheless. While the University of Illinois and Notre Dame varsities were playing at South Bend Saturday the B teams of the two schools met at Champaign with the Little Shamrocks winning, 33: to 0.
2 2 2
” ® 2
the scale where football greatness is tested. But it would take a glib
tongue and a facile pen to present a word picture of the spectacle witnessed Saturday afternoon at the South Bend stadium. There are just about three things to repeat at this late date about the game itself which brought 45,000 into the arena. One was. that hair-raising, rifle shot pass of Harry Stevenson to Earl Brown for 35 yards and the first Irish tally against the cohorts of the tricky Zuppke. Another was when Phil Pezzoli, Illini quarterback, intercepted an Irish brickbat on his own 10 and toured down the sideline to the N. D. eight, until Steve Sitko caught up with him and levelled him on the green. The third and most glorious act of the great matinee was that which brought curtain bow after curtain bow to Benjamin Mason Sheridan. It was shortly after the opening of the third quarter that Benny, still not a starter in Elmer Lay-
|den’s book, took George Rettinger’s
punt like he'd grab a grip on a week-end trip and started away.
Shakes ‘Em Off
One hip wiggled aside one tackle, the other hip shook off another. He side-stepped everyone else who
McCoy.” When they stampeded Chicago last week, there was a growing suspicion that the Wolverines had
something this year. But, paradoxically, it was in defeat that Michigan proved it has arrived. If there's such a thing as being glorious in defeat, that’s exacily what Michigan was Saturday when it bowed 7-6 to the best thing in the Big Ten—Minnesota. The mighty Gophers, unbeaten in conference competition since 1936, must feel mighty thankful today that their record remains unsullied; that they are leading the conference chase with two victories and no defeats. Power Meets Power Michigan humiliated the Gophers in every way except the final score, which, of course, is what counts. The Wolverines out-played them, out-passed them and even outdid them in their strongest suit—power. In the only other two conference games of the week-end Ohio State, cofavorite with Minnesota, and “dark horse” Northwestern, battled to a scoreless tie in a masterpiece of missed opportunities. Northwestern’s aerial guile was balanced by Ohio’s brawn. Iowa. was supposed to score its first Big Ten triumph since 1935 and did—a 27-14 victory over Chi-
Jack Brown, Indianapolis lad with Purdue, is shown coming around right end for a 10-yard gain during the first period of the
ot
Times-Acme Photo.
game with Fordham at the Polo Grounds, New York. Playing cautious ball neither team scored during the first half. The game ended, 6 to 6,
RIVALRY which began and ended in the first decade of football at the University of Michigan will be revived Saturday when the Wolverines meet Yale at New Haven. . . . The two schools have met twice on the gridiron, in 1881 and 1883, Yale winning both times by scores of 11 to 0 and 46 to 0. Michigan football dates to 1879, but only three games had been played in the two years before the season of 1881, when the Wolverines - went East to engage Harvard, Yale and Princeton. . . . Football at Yale dates to 1872, when the Elis first met Columbia before engaging Columbia, Princeton and Rutgers the following year.
2 2 2 s 2 f J ATURDAY’'S game is the first of a home-and-home series which
will bring Yale to Ann Arbor in 1939 for its second game west of the Alleghanies.
wasn't blocked out and ran like &|cag0 which still is seeking. its first deer on the first day of the hunting Big Ten victory since 1936. Iowa season for 66 yards to score. was paced by Ray Murphy who Benny made it much more than|p,.qe two touchdowns. The Big $3.30 worth for a plump Irishman me, standings: who, under protest, took his seat on Ww. the 10-yard line, and, mind ya, On | Minnesota ........ the Illinois side of the field. Wisconsin cccoeces He could see a green-clad boy |Ilinois .......... romping but for the moment could [Ohio State .......
= Times-Acme Telephoto. ? Notre Dame beat the Illini on their first visit to the Irish home ; a 5-yard gain around left end in the second quarter. A 35-yard pass grounds. Harold Gottsacker, Notre Dame fullback, is shown making | and a 68-yard run gave the Irish their touchdowns.
Results of Saturday’s Games WILELRY yiNuEs
. Pts. Opp. . 6
ODO Dy DuHHHOOOO OM
not positively identify him. Neriuwesterss «sss - Soon he sew whe wi was, i Yisniean seveosese 3 . STATE COLLEGES | Minnesota; 1 ry an, Nllsips ° St floud, 7; Pemidil Teachers, 0. IN FRANKLIN RACE “Why, it’s Benjamin eridan topasiesenu: Ball State, 20; Manchester, 14. :, 10; ville, 0. OO La A inion himself’ no less” he exclaimed | pail «0 s3| Butler, 15% DePauw. 0." Monn Union, 1; Otterbein, 6. | Sinta Clars, 3; ‘Atisona 0 * | FRANKLIN, Oct. 17 (U. P)—~ : : ; rlham, 0; Wabash, . gu 3 , 6. Ss ton, 19 rris H , 14. Meeting the Elis will be no novelty for members of the Michigan Emons Bien ang ana - Sapping CiCAEs. io rrvenis 21 %2| Evansville, 26; Franklin, 6. Murray, 41, Birmingham. Southern, 14. aay ‘Keystone, 32; Suselchann, 14.| Jimmie Wilburn of Los Angeles won coaching staff, Fritz Crisler, Earl Martineau and Campbell Dickson, |gin't he the sneaklin’ lad? Ah, an’|109 yards, while Butl de goog| Indiana. 0; Neb : : North Carolina state, 19; Wake Forest, 7.| Shippensburg, 13; Shephard, 3. the 15-mile feature automobile race who come to Michigan from Princeton and annual engagements with |. he sweet?” I Iyer manag FE ns ey, Northwestern Oklahoma, 18; Northeast-| Suppery Rock, 7; Westminster, 8. “|qaf the closing bill of the season ab x Yale, ne And it's a sweet football player : St .Joseph's, 2; Louisville, 0. ern Oklahoma, 8. ers, 18; Whea-| Southern California, 19; Washington | the Fair Grounds’ here yesterday. Members of the Michigan squad, too, will feel at home in the |inat this Sheridan lad is. It takes| Lhe front office was pleased when| Luther, 20; Valparaiso, 7. 5 > State, 0 en Tilinois Normal, 6; Arkansas| Ed Rice of Crawfordsville was sece Yale camp with three Michigan men members of the Yale coaching : + |it counted about 6000 patrons. Tom OTHER COLLEGES. 18; 6. PP pend Weld 1 5 ir of Indianapolis; staff. . . . They are Ivan Williamson, captain of the 1932 Wolverine | tacls ground both his ankles to ; 12 otto), anf 3s, Oregon, 16. i Les Adair o polis,
Swarthmore, 14; American, 6.
: . Harding and Bob Connor were floor him. He's never ready to quit Akron, 6; West State Teachers, 0. when he thinks another yard is still [other Butler standouts and Scott probabil la y
for DePauw. Alfred, 7; Buffalo, 0. Tennessee, 13; . Alabama, 0. to be had. Amherst, 41; Rochester, 6. 6. Tennessee Poly, 7; Western (Ky.) Teach-
— Perhaps in the roar of the crowd While Bo McMillin’s travelers| Appalachian, 41; High Point, 2. ers, 6. : ; and the excitement, on the fleld few couldn't get a scoreboard nibble, | ARES Cech ENE 108 A : Refs om am pn vo. (Qf noticed the real tribute that was|they broke the jinx which the| Arkansas, 42; Texas, 6. 4 ToXAt Chuissian, 34] Telas Ac and M., 6 ! hed BEd fo Suiesiven: a a ar Wa rn uh oo : Trinity, 6 Abilene. “Christian, 0. ; / on the nod - Baylor, 14; Centenary Tulane, 26; Rice, Cheered by Mates aylor, 14; y
0. : : c . their two previous conflicts. Boston’ University, 25, Upsala, 0. os We Union, 31 Veymoena, 9. (ile) As he and his mates passed the
7 ’ : loit, 6. Vanderbilt, 13; Mississippi, 7. . Bowdoin, 14; Williams, 0. J Ea Villanova, 35; C Hoosier Defense Holds Bowling Green, 7; Wittenberg, 0. Fall nS 0 inia,
- entre, 6. Virginia, 14; , 6. Notre Dame bench on their trot Bradley, 26; Carlet Virginia Militarsy hy Bie, 6.
eton, o. back up the field after his dash, the| A battering Hoosier defense halted| Brigham Young, i; Utah, 7 (tle). Wore 0 ads Colle
team; Gerald Ford, a graduate in 1935, and Bill Renner, captain of . Syracuse, 19; Cornell, 17. v
Michigan's 1935 team. ” ” ” » ” t 4 OOTBALL coaching veterans Pop Warner and Gil Dobie, with a combined total of 82 years of teaching the fall game, renew their rivalry of recent vintage Friday night when Boston College and Tem-
ple play at the Temple Stadium in the third annual fray between the teams. . ... Pop, the older of the two, has seen his Temple Owls win
: 3 : entire Irish squad arose as one to California, 20; U .C. L. A., 7 And in This Corner eniirs Irish sound sree 8 Nebraska when it was in scoring| Salfornis, 20; UC. I. ona ; : position six times. : Westerns Reserve, 4b: Baldwin: Watlace, 0 ! re, . ’ » s y YU. U. S. AMATEUR WRESTLERS DEFEAT GERMANS rocks on the Notre Dame bands-| At the Polo Grounds in New York,| Central, 6; Warkio, 6 (te), 00h 0, Elwood, 32 to i bony TelRastes Teachers, 25; Mutiteess rman t 5-2 h terday. D ,|despite the season and trombones Eshmont, Jimmy Crowley’s snake-| C , 13; ich, 0. ; ; hittier, 14; "0. Rivsiions defeated 8 Comipy loon Fant th ren go Janie! sprouted out with that lilting mel- | hipped holy for oh honors Charison 10; Gliy College of New York,| Cathedral's Irish piled up 32 Wichita, 12; Pittsburxh Teachers, 0. . . 5 s y oy ’ ‘186. points and held the Elwood grid- Williamette, 6; Santa Barbara State, 3.
14 to 0 in 1936 and tie Boston College, 0 to 0, last year. Brooklyn, laer Poly, , 0. ; aliforni a We ad Cathedral Tops Washington U. (St. Louis), 59; 0 we J C WH , 8 And then, begorrah, the sham- Cortare Tan Hiinoss, Cotene, 6. ; i ' m|it was Louis B ion, 21; , 0. itewater, 6; , 0 STUTTGART, Germany, Oct. 17 (U. P.).—United States amateur{men’s hats seemed to blosso s Brock against Leonard| Clarion, 21; Thiel, 0. © = Whitewater, 6; Stevens Point, 0 featherweight; Walter Jacobs, Ithaca, N. Y., welterweight; John Harrell, |0dY that puts the jig in Irish hoofs, Their runs deadlocked a game 13; Cornell (Ia), 12. Wofford, 0: Erskine, 6 (tie). the “Kerry Dance. which brought Fordham to a reali- Sr Caaampshite, 8. ders scoreless in the Saturday night| Ymor'eh Ji Sage 0 (tie).
Oklahoma A. & M., light heavyweight, and Clint Gustafson, University of Minnesota, heavyweight, were victorious.
CANZONERI STARTING COMEBACK TRAIL
SCRANTON, Pa. Oct. 17 (U. P.).—Tony Canzoneri, former world lightweight champion, starts the long trail back to a title fight tonight when he meets Eddie Zivic of Pittsburgh at the Scranton Town Hall. Canzoneri hopes to defeat Zivic and then move to New York and build up for a championship match with Henry Armstrong.
FISHERMAN’S TROPHY RACE AGAIN POSTPONED
GLOUCESTER, Mass, Oct. 17 (U. P.).—The third race in the series for the 1938 International Fishermen’s championship was postponed
today for the fourth straight time. L. Thebaud, required repairs.
The American challenger, Gertrude
INJURED MISSOURI PLAYER OUT FOR SEASON
COLUMBIA, Mo, Oct. 17 (U. P.).—Jack Whalen of Maplewood, Mo., one of the most consistent ground gainers in the University of Missouri backfield, suffered a broken collar bone in Saturday’s game with Iowa
If there hadn't been any football game at all the Irish and Illinois alumni probably would have been satisfied. The pre-game, the be-tween-halves pageantry was an eyeful and an earful. Illinois presented its 180-piece marching band and hearts quickened as the nigh-symphonic contingent formed the word I-R-I-S-H, rejiggered into the form of two footballs and played end sang “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.” (But they hoped that at the conclusion of the game they wouldn't be). The Notre Dame musicians returned the compliment by bringing into the visitors’ section the refrain of the Illinois anthem, “Chehee,
zation that it is far from unbeatable and Purdue to the anticipation that it has something. No telling where those Evansville Purple Aces are going. Think of it! The team that hadn’t scored since 1936 until the Oct. 8 warfare came back again and showed enough aces to take the pot from Pranklin’s Grizzlies, 26 to 6. St. Joseph's Cardinals won their first game of the year by the skimp margin of a two-point safety over the University of Louisville. Wabash’s Little Giants sprouted a bit to hold Earlham to a scoreless deadlock.
winning pace at the expense of Indiana State, 12 to 6. Ball State had
Mines, 60; New Mexico Nor-
A iat Normal, 13; Mayville, 0. E ] th Franklin-Marshal, 20; Muhl .|the same period for the second
Hanover's Panthers kept up their|Heprv., & 28; Grand Rapids, 16
tilt at Southport’s Roosevelt Stadium. ; Paul Moxley starred for the vic-
goal line in the second period and a 55-yard run for another in the third quarter. : Jack Meihaus scored the first touchdown on a pass from Sal Calderon, climaxing a series of running plays that worked the ball to the 15-yard land. Tim McMahon crashed through the Elwood line in
marker. : Don Potter plunged through from the 3-yard line in the fourth period for the game’s final score. Cathedral kept Elwood from advancing
tors, with a 75-yard dash to the|p
avy. 7. Xavier, 52; Traslyvania, 6. HIGH SCHOOLS
Cathedral, 32: Elwood, 0. Silent Hoosiers, 6; Kentucky School for
eaf, 0. Oakland City, 39; Petersburg, 28 (sixman
Connersville, 6; McGuffey (Oxford, 0.), Rensselaer, 14; Hammond Catholic, 6. Froebel (Gary), 34; Southside (Ft.
Wayne), 0. entral (Ft. yarns). 29; Auburn, 13. North Side (Ft. Wayne), 46; Garrett, 0.
SUNDAY COLLEGE SCORES
8. Mary’s, 82, Portland, 7. St. Benedict, 25; St. Norbert, 6. Niagara, 6; St. Bonaventure, 0. St. Joe, Pa., 13; Canisius, 0.
CRANES
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State, and is out of the lineup for the season, Coach Don Faurot said | Cheha.” = a little trouble but out-counted the| Hope 22; Adrian, Jor Sitlu, 6.) [beyond ihe Irich 40-yard Line, Hs fds? 5 | "Mr. Zuppke pulled out of his gray| Spartans of Manchester, 20 to 14. | Jisho; Hip SIRES IE 1g; paiapor o,| "O00 ACE ORC IT oR. | Whalen, a 190-pound halfback, scored one of the Missouri touch-|felt crusher all the tricks he had| Valaparaiso went on a long trip| Illinois State Normal, 19; Western Illi-| The Silent Hoosiers won from the downs Saturday and was the hardest to stop of all the Tiger backs. {saved this year in an effort to stem Decorah, Towa, and came out on | sua srs Chicago, 14. = Kentucky School for the Deaf, 6 14-YEAR-OLD BOY WINS MOTH BOAT TROPHY hs Ue 257s iia in ake Ji 16 suo $A syskel Liber Col] HM EEAL CARAS 1 to 0, a game played here Satur ELIZABETH CITY, N. Y., Oct. 17 (U. P.).—Billy Cox, 14-year-old speak, for he sent into the fray a s, 5 E Tennessee Teachers, 0. |oavi jn 'ateer a 60-yard march, Norfolk, Va. skipper, was world champion moth boat sailor today. He |McDonald, an O’Neill and a Castelo x, 0; Millikin y !
Kno , 0 won the $2500 Antonia Trophy, emblematic of world supremacy in the [but without success.
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State Conference
The Indiana College Conference football standing:
Conference
> 8 ®
00 COCO CO BIH pm pus = Ro © 13 12
; Loyola, 6. Lowe! 'extile, 13; Northeastern 13 (tie). Maine, 13; Connecticut State, 0. Manhattan, 3 Providence, 7. Mansfield, 14; Bloomsburg, 0. Mars Hill, 6; Western Carolinas, 9. Marshall, 66; Oklahoma City, 0. Maryland, 14; Western Mary! Miami, O,, 3 d 0. Wate, 56, West Virginia, 0, ate, 26; Wes! rginia, ichigan Normal, 20; Wayne, 7. : bury, 10; ufts, 0. Milwaukee, .12; Oshkosh, 6.
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Sohott took 73 strokes for the 18|to meet tonight at 2440 W. Ohio St.|sheathed more deceptive thrusts|> PUCKeye on every road trip. holes. at 8 o'clock. Games are to be played| than previously. p OUTFITTERS TO Cummings had a 37 for the first at the Hawthorne gym. Those un-| Bill Kreag, who had been rele- MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN FAIRBANKS
“ pine holes in the afternoon and |able to attend the meeting should gated to the second team, substi- : : i" fi wh fr welry & Loan Co
took an eight-hole advantage. see Bill Britton at Em-Roe’s. tuted and scored both Butler touch-
Lafayettte, 27; Washington Jetterson, 0.|late in the first quarter for the ixth annual International Moth Regatta concluded here yesterday. Russ : frp ni ly sixth a Sub Scores Touchdown Lebanon Valley, 5 Hartwick, . threatened by pounding to the third. Harry Andrews, defending world moth champion from Atlantic Ralph Ehnj, substitute quarter- ven i : || bmn AT YOUR DEALER'S City, failed to place, but he sailed home first in the Winston Smith Me- back, was one of the a in the|manover . 3 frasepad.a pass fo gud Re ire) i down on a plunge after a Notre Eos Boly i. Be - "IKE CUMMINGS IS B k ball Dame kick had been blocked on its|Depauw +... B i Y 0 N asket : OUNTRY CLUB KING It will be the Irish vs. the Scotch C A meeting is to be held tomorrow |when the Carnegie Tech Skibos in-|Foman Tke Cummings today was the os qc tore to f day. Cent. men's golf champion at Indianap-| 000s store fo form a West Side) Topo piper pyngogs feel more|mnd- State FIRESTON E feating Walter Schott, 9 Independent league. Teams inter- TO : 2 : : : dad tue yr jar match yester- ested are to see Bill Britton at the ware, O., next Saturday for an en-| Robert Louis Stevenson, 205- Radios—Bicy cles—B rakes Relined g Bishops after putting DeP ; day. o wicker held a fout=hinle gad en De ee ins UW in| versity machine, claims two super- : p i eys that he finds, and also carries shooting a 68, two under par, while ing a West Side church league are petter against the Tigers and un- ney: : ; ; : Friendly Credit—Quick Action AS BJ
ake Forest 1d ay arts] game’s only marker, Kentucky t Lawrence, 19; Monmou Post, Atlantic City, was second and Ed Channing, Elizabeth City, was Hoosier 10-yard line but Mills inmorial Trophy race. - Illinois attack and scored its touch-|Butler . one-yard line. : : . night at the Em-Roe Sporting|vade South Bend next shopping : EASY BUDGET TERMS olis Country Club, a title he cap- Factory basketball league and an gure ghout their invasion of Dela-| SUPERSTITIOUS STEVENSON Sore. gagement with the Ohio Wesleyan pound tackle on the Indiana Uni- : AS : at the end of the morning round by | Church teams interested in enter-| Butler, from all reports, looked stitions. He Reps, all molly pen- L E 0 = AUTO RAD 10S LOW $ .50 \uto Supply and Service Stores
Schott had a 41. The match ended downs. He made them on on the 28th hole where Cummings| Girl basketball players interested | plunges. Yue shot a par four. He also won the|in trying out with strong teams are| The losers had the edge in the ? ” nament Z : 6 0 to call J A T, i alr, compl IK : ‘of 20 Li ’
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