Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1938 — Page 15
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“Royalty” enters the ring in his maroaon-colored cloak. .
Log Cabin Inn Team’s 2986 Tops Local Bowling Meets
The Log Cabin Inn quintet took the team honors in last night's -bowling meets as they toppled the maples for a 2986 and shut out the - American United Life five. The Log Cabins started things off with a 1010, slid to a 955 and then closed with a potent 1021. Dwight Hiner -and Eddie Stark each rolled a 236, Hiner in the opener and Stark for the middle game. Their 1010 first game easily downed the Lifes who rolled a 971. In the middle roll Hiner, Lone, Buses and Champ slipped as each posted a 189 or less while Stark’s 236 kept them just one pin ahead of the Life’s 954. =~ Hiner and Lone jumped back into the 200s, Stark hit that score even as Buses and Champ climbed to the “190s for the last game. With their
Bussey Decides
1021 they swamped their opponents who rolled their poorest game—a 933. The score:
Champ ..eeesoscecese Stark c.ccoccecccccss
UNITED LIFE
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! Koelling 64 POWer ....cco0000000e 204 : 971 With two consistent games of 225 and 223 to which he added a stronger 236, R. Thomas of the Pritchett Recreation loop paced individual keglers with a 684. Rolling with the Seven Up quintet Thomas led them to an easy threegame victory over Hot Point Appliances. On the distaff side Rita Johns of the George Desautels squad in the Marott Shoe Store Ladies
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Johns opened with a heavy 208,
To Stay at L. S Uo re ee a
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- BATON ROUGE, La, Oct. 19 -(U. P.).—Young Bussey, former Louisiana State University star halfback, changed his signals today and decided to plunge through his studies instead of kicking them around. _ Bussey, who was dropped from the football team because he violated training rules, said earlier he would quit and return to his Houston, Tex., home. His cecond decision came after conferences with school and state officials. . “I want to see just what campus Jife at L. S. U. is really like,” the 20-year-old junior said. “It’s some‘thing I haven't been able to do since I've been here playing football.” . His dismissal from the team was primarily for smoking, but he had disagreed with the coaching staff before on the question of a “players’ union.”
Basketball
Any independent or manufacturing basketball quintet desiring to enter elague competition is requested to see H. G. Engelhardt or
t° Bob Stehlin at the Dearborn Ath-
JJetic Club or Ross Smith at the ‘Smith-Hassler Sporting Goods Co. A meeting is to be held tonight at 8 o'clock of all managers of teams wanting to enter league play. Practice hours at the Dearborn gym may be had by calling CH-7550.
The Galloping Ghosts defeated the first Presbyterian team, 28 to 24, at the Presbyterian gym Monday ‘night. The Ghosts desire games with strong independent teams in the 16 to 19-year-old class. Call “CH-1323-W.
"An independent hardwood league ‘to play on Friday nights at the 10th St. Gym is being organized bv Bush-Feezle. Teams desiring to enter are requested to contact Carl
®* , Callahan. A meeting is to be held
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Thursday at 136 E. Washington Ss. and the league will open play Nov. 11. i
" The Englewood Church basketball team will meet Sunday at 9:30 a. m. at the church. The following players are asked to call CH. 2326-J before Saturday: J. Meier, G. Meier, J. Burks, J. Brooks, H. Kaufman, H. Ostermeyer, G. Kelso, B. Smith, R. Smith, Joe Childers, O. Dobbs and
Bill Mellow.
KLEIN AND WHITNEY MAY SELL SERVICES
HIA, Oct. 19 (U. P.) PHILADELP > : . P). —Outfielder Chuck Klein and third baseman Pinky Whitney of the Philadelphia National League club have received permission to sell their services to the highest bidder next season, President Gerald Nugent announced today. Both are 10-year men in the major leagues and may not be sent to the minors without their consent. The announcement necessarily mean that the pair will not be with the Phillies next season, Nugent said, but the action was seen as a start toward the strengthening of the club under the guidance of James Thompson (Doc) Prothro, newly appointed manager. :
eee epmieeeemes PO IT WITH MIRRORS Harvard gridders yse large mirrors in practice to aid them in learning new plays, and in correctults in ; So
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slipped 17 pins to a 191 and came back halfway for a 198. She also paced her team. to a clean sweep. Walt Trennepohl of the Downey Dunkers in the Pennsylvania League could easily have passed Thomas had he opened with a better game than his 180. In the middle game he hit for a 246 and finished with a 230. The honor games continue to be fairly numerous but also low. Thomas and Trennepohl were the only Kkeglers to hit above 650 in a list of 35 honor count bowlers— counting Miss Johns’ 597 as an honor roll. Only six 700s have been posted this season and we have yet to see the first perfect game. Perhaps the low scores can be attributed to the two new lanes in operation—Fox Hunt . Recreation and Sturm alleys. That can hardly be the answer since many of the crack teams continue to operate at Pritchetts -where they should know every board. As long as the counts remain low, 600 will be the minimum score to achieve The Times’ daily honor roll. But when the keglers begin to click that figure will be moved up. Last night's honor game rollers were:
R. Thomas, Pritchett Walt Trennepohl, Pennsylvania Larry Fox, H. A. C. Walt Holtman, City Karrman, City .. George Lehman. City .... Ed Sargent, St. Philip Eddie Stark, City [ou Fouts, C Bob Hartman, Pritchett Dwight Hiner City ... .........cc0040 Frank White, Allied Printing 6 Eddy Pearson Fountain Square Hohman, Pennsylvania 0. Grottie, Pritchett Jack Hunt, H. A. C. C. l.awlis, Continental C. Brehob, Pritchett Ralph Richardson. Indiana Thad Tedrowe, City Gene
B'anford. Pennsylvania Hank Thoman, I. A. C. E. Johnson, Community ........c0000+ Hill, Rotary ... Wilbur Roesner. P. Pitts, Community Tutteson, Commercial B. Galebreath, Pritchett Showalter, Rotary L. Radkovic, Pritchett .... J. Flays, Pritchett .. Campbell, Harvester Les Martin, City ........ George Pieper, Pritchett 60! Rita Jenn Maroft - ................. 597
Local keglers will be glad to learn that although Jess Pritchett’s condition is still serious he is on the way to recovery at St. Vincent's hospital. Since mid-September he has been ill and a few weeks ago was taken to the hospital. He is permitted to see friends now and we join with all other local bowlers in hoping to see him back on the alleys shortly. .
Howe Harriers Bow To Warren Central
Howe High School's freshman cross-country squad was still after its first victory today after being shaded by the Warren Central varsity yesterday, 30 to 27. The meet was the third athletic event for the new school and the first to be held on the Howe campus. The thinlies are to face Warren Central in a return engagement at Warren Central Nov. 4.
APPROPRIATE, ANYWAY
Teammates of Corne Aarts, Northwestern sophomore tackle, cail him “Woodenshoes” because of iis Dutch ancestry.
17ii1X COMFORTABLE FITTING
GUARANTEED EGRET
ET ETT |
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580| falls to Lansdowne’s one
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~ Stands resplendent in his fur-trimmed coat-of-mail jerkin.
Hinkle Doubles Result As Varsity Scrimmages
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Buck Weaver Wins Match
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Briton Is Vanquished Headliner at Armory.
Buck Weaver, the Flying Hoosier
8 from Terre Haute, had a triumph
over Lord Lansdowne of Barrington,
7021 2986 | England, tucked away today but the
“titled” Briton won a moral victory. Weaver at. 180-pounds won two in last night's feature bout on the Armory wrestling card. He scored the first in 28 minutes with three drop kicks and a body press but lost the second in eight minutes as the Lord stopped him with a “Lansdowne special” off the ropes. Eight minutes after the start of the third fall Lansdowne again applied his “special.” Everyone — including Lansdowne and the spectators—thought it was all over, but Referee Bob Barry had different ideas. Before the Britisher could overcome his amazement, Weaver. had reversed the hold and flattened Lansdowne with a spread eagle. An argument with Referee Barry failed to change the decision—do they ever?—and Lansdowne crossed the ring to congratulate Weaver.
Demonstrates Ability
The “Royal” wrestler again demonstrated his colorful showmanship and adept grappling. As is his custom he wore the maroon cloak and series of jerkins to hand to his valet and sported a left-eye monocle. But the customers who have seen him in action failed to join the jeers of the newcomers. They knew what to expect. Lansdowne combines the best artifices of wrestling, tumbling and acrobatics to bewilder his opponents and entertain the spectators. He's unbelieyably fast for a 180-pounder and his whirlwind actions are as dazzling as his costumes. Only once—when Weaver floored him with drop Kkicks—did the Hoosier have the upper hand. In the opener the crowd again was with the loser. John Grandovich, 235, of Poland, was disqualified by Referee Eddie Slaughter after the Polish heavyweight tossed him from the ring. Referee Slaughter awarded the bout to Tom Marvin, 220, of Oklahoma, but Grandovich received a roaring ovation from the fans. Tom Sawyer, 215, of California, won the semiwindup from Ralph
3 Garibaldi of New York at 211 with 85: a series of body slams and a flying
‘head lock and body press in 27
Football
Fashion Cleaners are to practice
S00 tonight and Friday night at 7:30
o'clock at Riverside Drive and Burdsall Parkway. All players are asked
606 to attend or call LI. 9629.
The DeMolay football team will play the Irvington Merchants Sunday at 2 p. m. at Ellenberger Park.
a |All players are asked to report at
the Chapter House Sunday p. m. for equipment.
The Stokols will play at Greenfield Sunday at 2:30 p. m. instead of the Fashion Cleaners as was originally scheduled. The Stokols will practice Friday at 7:30 p. m. at the Brightwood playground and Saturday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock at Brookside Park. Al Newman, Greeley, Bohne, Dietz and other tryouts are requested to be at these sessions
The Spades A. C. will practice tonight, tomorrow and Friday nights at 7 o'clock at. Spades Park. Carrol Wells, Harry Carson, Darrel Thomas, John Campbell and Clair Howe are asked to notice. Players are to report or call CH. 6257.
at 12:30
BLAME IT ON CLEATS George Veenker, Iowa State athletic director, claims broken cleats
are responsible for most injuries in football.
Tony: Hinkle’s daily coaching assignment ‘at Butler University is now confined to the killing of two birds with one stone. All the while he is whipping his varsity gridmen into shape for their nonconference battle with Ohio Wesleyan Saturday at Delaware, O., he is giving the necessary experience to the freshman squad which will open its season Friday afternoon at Wabash College. Saturday’s invasion of the Ohio team will mark Butler’s second appearance against the Bishops. In 1924 the same elevens met with the Buckeye Conference representative winning 21 to 0. Ohio Wesleyan, however, has found the victory road full of stumbling blocks thus far this season. They have dropped their first four games to Western Reserve, Marshall, University of Toledo and the University of Ohio.
On to the Title As the result of their victories
over Ball State and DePauw, the|
Butler gridmen seem headed for their fifth consecutive Indiana College Conference football title. Their remaining conference battle will be against Wabash College Oct. 29. Twice this season, Hinkle has taken his boys out into nonconference territory and on both occasions he has met defeat. Fcx this reason, the Bulldogs will undergo intensive workouts this week. The varsity scrimmaged against the freshman yesterday to rehearse all plays. The broken field running on the part of Frank Welton, Bill Kreag and Capt. Charles Broderick was featured. But Hinkle did not stop at this. Following the extended rehearsal drill, the gridders polished up their tackling technique which has been slovenly in the past. Freshman ball carriers provided the opposition for the tacklers. The varsity men got the tackles and the rhinie squad members received the bruises. :
Scoreless Bishops Hope To Win Against Butler
Times Special DELAWARE, O, Oct. 19.—Four successive scoreless defeats have not dampened the spirits of Ohio Wesleyan’s gridders who will make their fifth attempt to win a game when they take on Bufler’s Bulldogs here Saturday. If the Battling. Bishops haye learned enough football from four of the toughest smaller teams in the Midwest—Western Reserve, Marshall, Toledo and Ohio—they may put on their best exhibtiion of the season against the Bulldogs. Four Shutouts Western Reserve won, 33 to 0; Marshall followed with a 62 to 0 victory; Toledo rolled up a 26 to 0 count, and Ohio scored a 28 to 0 victory. Coach George Gauthier has finally found a backfield that clicked in the Ohio game and he - plans to send this quartet against Butler.
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Now the doublet comes off.
Two of the boys were converted into halfbacks after they had started as fullbacks. They are Les Michael, junior, and Johnny Zimmerman, sophomore. At quarterback is the veteran Jack Patterson, while at fullback is Pat Brooks, the passing and punting star who last Saturday outshone little Johnny Montgomery, Ohio University’s great passer whose touchdown toss defeated Illinois earlier in the season, 6 to 0.
Coach Gauthier plans few changes in the forward wall. Jimmy Reiser and Bert Kessel will be at the wings; Ray Rebol and Ed Cady at the tackles; Harold Eppler and Bill Jones at the guards, and Vic Malinovsky at full. :
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We Made It Good You Made It Famous
Pleased also with the line’s work,
Times And that monocle is next!
Some Catch
Fish by the Thousands Taken at Brazil To Save Lives.
Ba Oct. 19 (U. P)—
Game Warden Sam Morris
and several Brazil sportsmen are living in a fisherman's paradise these days—catching fish by the thousands. It was all in the interests of conservation, however, that they removed 36,000 young catfish from a pond that was rapidly drying up under the hot fall sun. Morris reported that the water had evaporated until the pond was only about 15 feet in diameter and the fish were packed together “almost like a can of sardines.”
Union Made and Distributed
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or Clash
With
Rockets
fdcCalip Returns to Lead Continentals Against Shortridge; "Higginbotham Back on Tech’s First String.
The Manual football squad was to hold a light drill today in preparation for their clash with Broad Ripple Friday after they swamped the scrubs yesterday, 33 to 0. Before the regulation game Coach Harry Painter held a signal session. Allen Smith, Tommy Mascari, Hobart Blythe and George PopchefI were absent from the reserve team. The contest was. featured by the passing of Norman Williams, varsity halfback. Dewey Donovan and Leonard Robinson, backfield men, scored on tosses from Williams in the final period. Charles Fletcher, fullback, scored on a line smash in the second quarted. Williams made a touchdown in the third on a long run and Bob Stringer swept the right end for six points in the first quarter. = Williams kicked one extra point and threw passes to James Chapman and Robinson to complete two conversions. Outstanding for the losers were Quarterback Melville Davis, Jake Cohan, halfback; James Bogard, fullback, and Ciarence Peiper and Richard Kattau on the line. Blues Rest Tomorrow The Shortridge gridders are to hold another hard scrimmage today for their game with the Washington Continentals Friday. Tomorrow the Blues will be idle as the Washington and Shortridge B Syunas clash at the Northsiders’ eld. _ Yesterday Coach Robert Nipper
‘|held a punting drill with Fred May-
nard, Nelson Johnson, Bob Raber, Kenny Smock and John Allerdice doing the kicking. Both offensive and defensive tactics were stressed as Coach Nipper interchanged the
varsity and reserve squads - free quently. Capt. Bob McCalip returned to the Washington lineup yesterday and led the varsity in some oute
standing offensive practice. Another returning grid star was John Higginbotham of the Tech first string. He is to see action in the Big Green's contest with Cathedral but the squad lost two more varsity players during yesterday's scrimmage. Jim Wechsler received a facial injury and lost several teeth in the practice session and Waren Huffman reinjured an ele w. Almost free of injuries the Park squad held their second drill yesterday as Coach Lou Reichel stressed defensive and blocking tactics. The Park eleven is undefeated in three games and is to meet Shelbyville Friday night. Coach A. E. Pitcher of the South port Cardinals is to start his juniors in the Ben Davis game, it was learned today. He has divided the varsity squad into two sections and has been scrimmaging the seniors against the third year men.
WON EITHER WAY
When California played U. C. L. A. Robert Gordon Sproul, who is president of both universities, “1pheld the spirit of the occasion by sittin gon each bench for half the game. .
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