Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1938 — Page 14
Jock Sutherland is debating er or not to leave Pitt, it is 7 He probably is trying to dis
virtue is its own reward or a Co |: doom...
By Eddie Ash 11 MINUTES OF ACTUAL PLAY
IN 60-MINUTE GRID TUSSLE
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1938
PAGE 14 OUR Marquette University students with stop watches
and a statistical flair recently analyzed a good battle iy LE |
on the Golden Avalanche schedule and came out with some ; :
figures that, if not accurate, are at least interesting. - They discovered, for instance, that in this particular P 0 st S C ason : . Tilts Out, Is|
60-minute game the actual playing time, from the moment ; 9 Mentor’s Word
the ball left the hands of the center until the time the ball carrier was tackled, was 11 minutes 45 seconds. Of this time, 3 minutes and 6 seconds were consumed But Our Leo Finds Team Is Best Turned Out Since Rockne Regime.
|Escobar Given Bad B s | By Local Boxer in Nontitle Tilt. .
TORONTO, Nov. 2 (U. P.).— Escobar, world bantamweight chi pion from Puerto Rico, took | beating of his life from E Hook, Indianapolis veteran, in nontitle 10-round match here night. : Sa More than 5000 persons in N Leaf Gardens watched the 1 pound titleholder give a d ing exhibition = against the ring Hn
in making 128 tackles; 5 minutes 24 seconds used up in actual scrimmage, and 3 minutes 15 seconds employed while the ball was being passed, lateraled, punted, kicked off or place kicked for the point after touchdown. . = = ee. THE greatest thief of football time, according to the compilation, is the unscrambling after plays and getting ready for the next signal. . . . This took up 19 minutes 29 seconds. Team A employed a huddle and took 12 minutes 29 seconds to call 43 plays. ... Team B used no huddle and called 97 plays in 9 minutes 34 seconds. Going into formations and shifting took up 6 minutes 5 seconds. . . . Only a brief time—45 seconds—was lost in moving the ball 15 yards in from the sideline when it neared the border on plays. ” ” = CCORDING to Milwaukee scribes Wisconsin's 6-0 victory over Indiana last Saturday didn’t cause any great excitement among Wisconsin fans who agreed the Badgers were fortunate to escape with the game. : Coach Harry Stuhldreher said he “aged 10 years” in the last five minutes of play as the Hoosiers uncorked a sensational pass attack. . . . Harry named Joe Nicholson, Ed Clasen and Jim Logan's as In-
diana’s best warriors for the day. t 4 ” »
LEO DAUGHERTY Times Staff Writer SOUTH BEND, Nov. 2.—The No- | tre Dame football team will not play |: in the Rose Bowl, the Sugar Bowl, the Peanut Shell or any other of the postseason football extravaganzas. That's the word from Mr. Elmer Layden. And Mr. Layden happens to be the
By
. | wise Midwesterner. : Hook, throwing hooks and upp cuts in an unceasing barrage, - seven of the 10 rounds. won only the first when he stag gered Henry with a straight righ fo the jaw. The fifth and seventh were even and Hook won the. In the eighth, the Hoosier | Sixto with a right uppercut a lowed through with a half stinging rights and lefts to that had him groggy as the ended the round. Escobar was ‘|afoot from the first and ; merely to be waiting his chance
opinion of the faculty & and the professors and the gentle- |3 men who operate Notre Dame. Riding the five-yard lines for another apparent national championship, the Irish have no other aims than to win the ball game which is | coming up the Saturday ahead of |} them. «We finish the season with that Southern California game on Saturday, Dec. 3,” said the thin man who develops husky athletes. There's a rumor around here, in fact, a well-founded rumor, that this
» ” »
jE
As Layden gives Sheridan a few pointers, . . :
Noble Kizer, Purdue athletics director, looks on . « »
» 2 »
A Long COUNT” argument probably wa
s averted when Indiana
was stopped at the Badger 4-yard line on the last play, a pass
from Bringle to Oliver. .
run; the game ended on the preceding play,
But that play should never have been
according to the time-
keeper who ran the electric clock from the press box.
Excited scribes, pounding on tabl on the timing device. .
. . At any rate, that’s
jarred the second hand loose Paul Jensen's story,
es,
writing in the Milwaukee News-Sentinel.
=» ® T= week’s grid schedule offers all sections of the nation. . . the list. . . . Big game on the Coa fornia-Southern California affair. . .
® 8 8 a galaxy of rivalry matches in
_ Intersectional battles dominate st, of course, is the annual Cali-
The Hoosier Big Three travels
again. . , . Here are the week’s keen rivals and how they fared last
week:
(Tied Purdue. 0-0) (Tied Navv. 0-0) :
WEST
IOWA at MINNESOTA PENN at MICHIG
(Lost to Northw, 6-3) AN :
1938 football team of Mr. Layden's is the best that has grazed on this pasture since the late Knute Rockne last blew his commanding whistle.
Perform Before 230,000 Fans
They have beaten Kansas U. Georgia Tech, Illinois, Carnegie Tech and the Army troops. But on top of that record, Mr. Layden doesn’t have anything to say about his boys riding to the national championship heights which he knew. These kids who study every afternoon until that whistle blows for practice, have played this year befor a collective audience of approx-
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent
third time in his career James’ Emory Foxx, cherubic first baseman, of the Boston Red Sox, has been named the most valuable player in|
Writers’ Association of America.
A. L.; Writers Ra
the American League, it was an-|3 nounced today by the Baseballlg
As a climax to one of the great- |’ 2
Foxx Voted Most Valuable Player in te Bill
Dickey Second
and drove in 139 runs, 106 points; Joe Cronin, Red Sox shortstopmanager, 92 points; Earl Averill, Cleveland, 34 points; Cecil Travis, Washington, 33. points, and Charley Gehringer, Detroit, who wen the 1937 most valuable player award, 27 points. - One of the two youngest veterans in the majors—his only rival being
:| Mel Ottof the: Giants—Foxx at 31
Marvin Halted ‘By Granovich
‘Oklahoma Bully’ Loses Two Of Three Falls at Armory.
Worestling’s * “old meanie,” Tom Marvin, was stopped in two falls out of three in last night's Armory bouts by John Granovich, the 235pound New Yorker.
nail Hook with one kayo punch, the Hoosier never allowed ¢hamp to solve his bobbing, weaving style. : ere Escobar’s crown was not in ger, however, as both were : class limit. Hook weighed Escobar, 121%. Ta
Basketball
The Capitol City basketball 160
is again entering competition: several of the city's leading:
tets. They include the Brehobs
year's city champs, Lawrence.
_ (Beat Illinois. 14-0) {Beat Kansas State. 27-7 .. (Beat Nebraska. 19 -3)
completed his 13th complete season in the American League. He broke in with the Athletics in 1925 at the age of 17, but was farmed out to the Providence club for half a season : | before making good with the A’s | to stay in 1926, : A natural-born ball player, Foxx R | came up as a catcher, but was cohn3 yojte into a first baseman in 1928. : | He also has played at third base on many occasions. Since he became a regular he never has failed to bat in 100 or more runs every season. He weighs 185 and is one of the fastest big men in the majors. The Red Sox bought him in December, jose; for a reported price of $150,-
0. Although the Yankees for the second straight year placed second ‘lin the individual competition, they amassed more votes than any other team. With eight players getting “wotes the Yanks collected a total of 489 points. The other players who placed besides Dickey, Ruffing and DiMaggio, were Joe Gordon, Lou Gehrig, Red Rolfe, Frankie Crosetti and Lefty Gomez. The Red Sox were second with 411 points; Detroit third with 198; St. Louis fourth with 129; Cleveland fifth with 113; Washington
zells, Liehr’'s Tavern, Schwitzels, Cummins Stokols, Mt. Jackson
& Battery, Drikol Refrigera tion, Waverly Oils and Fashion ‘Cleaners.
The excitable Granovich, who several weeks ago -became sO. enraged at Marvin that he attempted to toss the referee from the ring and was thereby disqualified, had, his revenge in straight falls. He flattened the Oklahoma bully by a leg breaker and body press in 17 minutes and returned following the intermission to win the match with 5 body press in nine minutes. Their final bout was a poor fourth act after the thrilling third which the customers—a quarter of whom were women—had come to see. It was the return of “Lord” Lansdowne after a week's absence. He was matched with Buck Lipscomb, 185, of Tulsa, who evidently had not been a party before to Lansdowne’s grappling artistry.
Ends in 19 Minutes
Lipscomb entered the ring wearing dark trunks and a sneer. Before the bout ended 19 minutes later when Lansdowne applied his “Special” he had doffed the sneer and replaced it with a look of respect and incredulity. In the second bout Ray Eckert, 216, of St. Louis, smothered the claimant to the Canadian crown, John Katan of Alberta, in 16 min-
NEBRASKA at KANSAS .... MICH. STATF at MISSOURI .. WISC. at NORTHWESTERN . .... (Beat Minnesota, . (Beat N. Y. . 32-0) vo W ERN M s .... (Beat Wabash, 27-0) os A WABASH (Lost to Butler, 27-0)
(Lost ta Missouri. 13-10) (Lost to Santa Clara, 7-6) (Beat Indiana. 6-0)
imately 230,000. There were 45,000 to see them thump Kansas. Another 28,000 turned out to see them come back before Georgia Tech. Right here 45,000 turned out to see them outsmart the Zupkemen of Illinois.
est comebacks of the 1938 season Foxx was picked by 19 out of 24 writers—three from each city—for the most valuable player award, an honor he won in 1832 and 1933 when he was with the Philadelphia
More than 30,000 came to see them Athletics. Out of a possible 336 in that struggle with Carnegie points, Foxx received 304. Of the:
Tech. And nobody could make an|five writers who did not put him accurate count of that crowd at|first. two rated him second, one the Yankee Stadium last Saturday third, one fourth and one fifth. so they compromised on 80,000. Because of illness in 1937 Foxx v had one of the poorest seasons of Time Out to nis career and his batting average Distribute Tickets shrunk 53 points to .285, the lowest Mr. Layden has lost only eight
figure he ever hit. . : " pounds during this grind which has Sy A Sopen “ly ig that off the ordi-| rent sinus trouble a lies : gained his former glory by leading “hr Tayden was taking himself) oe “American League in batting tickets to b given out for the Min- with an a o 30m oie} nesota game, upcoming on Nov. 12. bases with 398; and in runs ba Every player gets so many in with 174. He finished second in «How many, Jack?” he asked, as|Dome runs with 50, second in runs the boys came in, “and how many scored with 139 and third in hits for you, Bob?”
with 197. : Say, the toughest thing in the Bill Dickey, New York Yankees world is to “cover” or try to get the
catcher and deadly hitter, placed least slant on this Notre Dame pre- second with 196 points. He received liminary with Elmer so busy.
three first place votes, 11 seconds We were fortunate in getting into and scattering votes for the other the office of this man who directs
(Lost to Chicago, 34-14) . DE (Beat Cen. Normal. 44-0) (Tost to Maeomb T.. 18-0) (Lost to Manch.. 44-0).. (Lost to Transy, 13-7) ... (Beat Franklin, 19-13)...
(Lost to Rose Poly. 14-6) (Lost to Hanover, 19-13) (Beat Evansville, 7-6) game) . 1-6) game)
above teams will be night at 8 o'clock at the Hassler Co. Other teams Wis to enter leagues at the Dearborn gym call Harold Engelhardt or Stehlin at CH-7550.
The Bush-Feezle Industrial bi ketball league will meet at the sf tonight at 8 o'clock. All teams iis, terested in entering a Thursday if. dustrial league should have a Tepe resentative present. Lr The Bush-Feezle wednesday basketball league, playing at the. 10th ‘St. gym - will - meet: tony night at the store at-8 o'clock. teams entering this league come prepared to pay their fi fees as this is the final meeting fore league play starts.
Schedule for Em-Roe Big Six i ketball league for girls, Friday 8 the Hoosier Athletic Club: ~ a Hoosier A.C. vs. Mid ‘Nite Chul, 7:30. p. m. : Nees Unemployment Compensation Seven Up, 8:30 p.m.
ILL. NOR. CEN. NOR. at ST. JO ee ea UNO LOUISVILLE at EVANSVILLE.. (Lost to Ind. St. HANOVER at BALL ST. (No EAST
_.ST. MARY'S at FORDHAM... .... (Lost to Pitt. PROWN at YALE .... (Lost to Dartmouth, VIRGINIA at Copia vies
(No game) .. .... ...cee. 24-13) - (Beat Tufts, 48-0) (Beat W. & M.. 34-0) ... (Beat DePauw, 34-13) . ... (Lost to Wisconsin. 6-0). IN: (Beat Wash. Coll.. 6-0) .. (Lost to Georgetown, 13-0) T (Lost to V. P. I, 7-0h ... N. (Lost to Rutgers. 13-0) ... (Beat Ursinus, 39-0) .... LAFAYETTE (Beat Akron, 27-13) ..... CARNEGIE at PITT (Lost to Harvard, 26-7) .. PRINCETON at (Lost to Holy Cross, 21-7) . COLGATE at SYRACUSE F. & M. at ARMY . NOTRE DAME at NAVY ....... AUBURN at VILLANOVA ....BUCKNELL at G'T'WN
SOUTH TULANE at ALABAMA
(Beat Colgate. Canisius,
(Tied 'S. Carolina, 6-8) (Beat Temple, 13-0)
28-6) 33-0)
(Beat Miss. State, 27-0).. (Beat Kentucky. (No Game) ...-.......... GEORGIA at FLORIDA ....(Lost to Bost. Coll., (Lost to Alabama. 26-6).. KENTUCKY at GA. TECH... . (Lost to Vanderbilt, {Lost to Tulane, 27-0) . .. MISS. STATE at L. S. U. ... .(Lost to Tennessee, Ss . 7-0)..V. P, 1. at N. CAROLINA (Lost to Duke, 14 _. DUQUESNE at S. CAROLINA. ....{Tied Villanova, CHATT. at TENNESSEE eo Best 1... 8. U.. 4 SEWANEE at VANDERBILT... .. (Beat Ga. Tech.
SOUTHWEST
RICE at ARKANSAS .. ..... (Lost to Tex. A&M, KAS. STATE at OKLAHOMA. ....... (Beat Tulsa. TEX. A. & M. atS. M. U....... .. (Beat Texas, BAYLOR at TEXAS (Lost to S. u T, C. U..at TULSA (Lost to
"(Lost to B (Lost to Tenn. Poly,
(Beat Auburn, 14-00 .... (Lost to Kansas, 27-7) ... (Beat Arkansas, 13-7) ... (Lost to T. C. U.. 39-7) .. (Beat Baylor, 39-7)
7-8)
Okla., 28-6) points. © Only one committeeman
Issue Blue Devil
FAR WEST
CALIF. at S. CALL /......... WASH. at STANFORD .C. L. A. at WASH. ST....... IDAHO at OREGON .
(Beat Oregon State, 13-7) (No game) (Beat Stanford, 6-0) saad (Beat Montana, 19-6) ...
......(Beat Oregon, 31-7) Lost to U. C. L. A.. 6-0) ....(Beat Gonzaga, 15-13) (Lost to S. Calif., 31-7)
—
—And in This Corner
PHIPPS GIVEN 10-GOAL POLO RATING
NEW YORK, Nov. 2 (U.P.).—The U. S. - Michael G. Phipps among the 10-goal players, four limit handicaps for the first time in 13 years.
Smith. Stewart Iglehart and Tommy polo player can achieve.
Polo Association today ranked giving the United States Phipps joins Cecil Hitchcock in the highest bracket a
AMERICAN IN MEXICAN GOLF FINALS
MEXICO CITY,
Nov. 2 (U.P. .—Blaine McNutt, city champion of
El Paso, Tex., and Percy J. Clifford, British resident of Mexico City, meet ‘today in tHe 36-hole final of the Mexican Open golf championship. McNutt won his way into the playoff round with a 3 and 2 victory over a fellow Texan, Bobby Riegel of Beaumont, while Clifford overwhelmed
Carlos Belmont of Mexico, 12 and 11.
Amateur Football
'6. B. Casey and Jardina were out-|
The Ajax Beer Co. is sponsoring a football team in the Capitol City Teague. The team is- composed of Brightwood Merchant players, champions of the Senior League last year. The Beers will meet the strong Holy Cross Ramblers in a league tilt Sunday. Practice is to be held tomorrow at 7:30 p. m. at Brightwood playgrounds.
St. Catherine,” leaders in the Parochial Schools League sponsored by the Sportsman’s Store, scored | their seventh straight victory yesterday by defeating Cathedral, 13 to
Cage Schedule
The Shortridge High School basketball schedule was released today by Russel S. Julius, director of athletics. The Kokomo game, originally scheduled for Feb. 18, is to be played on the 17th and the Blue Devils will have an open date Dec.
|
29. The card: Nov. 23 at Greenfield. Dee. 8, Noblesville here. Greencastle here.
here. here . Ms» e here. na 18-14. City Tournament (at Tech). an. 20, Cathedral here. at Columbus, at Rushville. ‘ 3 at Crawrordsville. here.
ob. Anderson ‘here. For basketball squad, lessened by the final season’s cut, began intensive drills today, working in various under-the-basket plays. The team
now includes Fred Krampe, Bill
Notes
standing for thie winners. St. Philip defeated Little Flower, 21 to 12, with O'Connor furnishing the scoring power for the winners, crossing the goal line three times. Jordan scored twice for the losers. St. Joan of Arg took undisputed possession of second place by handing the Lady of Lourdes squad a 32-to-6 defeat. The Holy TrinityHaughville Irish tilt was postponed. Holy Cross defeated St. Patrick to move into a tie ‘with Lady of Lourdes for sixth place.
The DeMolay team will play the West Side Merchants Sunday at 2 p. m. at Grande Park. All players are to report at 1027 Broadway not later than 12:30 p. m. Sunday for equipment. George Iker and Meredith please notice. A practice will be held at Brookside Park Friday night. A meeting is to be held at 1027 Broadway tonight at 7 o’clock.
The DeMolays beat the Brightwood Cleaners, 12 to 6, last Sunday. Two touchdown passes in the first quarter provided the winning margin.
The Fashion Cleaners are to practice tonight at Burdsal Parkway and Riverside Drive at 7:30 o'clock. Those who are unable to report are requested to call LI-8629.
Mossey Is Elected As Butler Frosh Captain
Harold Mossey of Ottawa, Ill. today was the honorary captain of the Butler freshman football squad following his election yesterday afternoon by the team. Mossey plays
Hardy, Frank Levinson, Dick Gage, Gene Miller, Byron West, Robert | Sielken and Ralph Helser. John Allerdice, Robert Raber and | walter Williams of the football | ad, are to join the hardwood wing the final game with
{2
both center and tackle. The Bulldogs Rhinies completed their sixth consecutive undefeated season recently and for this accomhment are to be entertained by Pop Heddon, Nov. 17, in re
|all things athletic at this institu- ‘| tion.
“Why, yes,” he was saying, “our boys get along on the trains all right. But before we get into a game, say like the Army last week, and then back over East this week for the Navy, we like to get into a bed for one solid night. The boys need it. “I don't have anything to say about this season,” Mr. Layden smiled. “All T know is that when the
'kids get out of school, we practice
and then we play football on Saturday. I mean, I hope, we play football on Saturday.” The old Four Horseman was getting a little tired of talking because he was talking of everything but football anyhow. “Say,” he admonished, “if you do not get out of here we're going to miss practice.” Far be it from a Daugherty to make the Irish miss practice.
Touch of Sadness As Kizer Calls
Just about that time I got the high sign to sit still. There was out there in the front office a Mr. Noble Kizer who used to guard while Mr. Layden and the other three of the Four Horsemen were riding to victory. There was something sad about Mr. Kizer’s appearance. You know, he’s nominally the boss man at Purdue. Fate beat him out of that. He just doesn't seem to know whether he belongs to N. D. or to Purdue, or both. And Notre Dame and Purdue oppose each other next year. There's man against man and you want both to win. There’s no worry with this man Layden. If there is, it’s about the mortgage on the new home more than it is about the current football team. : Two student managers keep the layman away from the practice field, but right in the midst of things up pops a young man with his right arm in a sling. He ventures right out there where no one but players fear to tread. It’s Elmer Layden Jr. Old Man Layden says that the kid broke his arm falling down a bannister, but there are conflicting reports. At any rate, the dope around the campus is that Elmer Jr. has been scrimmaging with that arm in a sling. Elmer, you really have something there.
Cathedral Rhinies Win; Reserves Draw
The Cathedral frosh won their battle from the Shortridge rhinies, 13 to 7, yesterday at the Blue Devil
|
Park the reserve teams of the two schools battled to a scoreless tie. Jack Weaver and Emmett Behr scored for the Irish rhinies and Jim Bilger converted with a drop kick hile Castler urnisk th
failed to place him. Hank Greenberg, Detroit Tigers’ to come within two of tying Babe Ruth’s record, was third with 162 points. He failed to get any first places but only one writer neglected to vote for him. Behind those three leaders came Red Ruffing, Yankee, who led the
American League pitchers with 21
first baseman who hit 58 home runs:
Jimmy Foxx
points; Buck Newsom, of the seventh-place St. Louis Browns, who was the only American League pitcher, besides Auffing, to win 20 or more games, 111 points; Jeo Di-
victories and seven defeats, 146
To Go In
~ By HENRY SUPER United Press Staff Correspondent __ NEW YORK, Nov. 2—Eastern football goes intersectional this week with nine teams from this district taking on elevens from the Midwest, South and Pacific Coast.
field. At the same time at Riverside |:
The two giants of the division, pittsburgh and Dartmouth, encounter opposition from their own sector. Pittsburgh, far and away
negie Tech. Dartmouth meets Dickinson in a breather before facing Cornell and Stanford.
The top intersectional game pairs St. Mary's and Fordham, which lost its first game of the year to Pittsburgh last week. That one shapes up as an even-money proposition. Pennsylvania travels West and plays Michigan while other intersectional games scheduled to be
Seek to Bolster Butler Defense
The search for a more effective defense has begun at the Butler gridiron camp. : Coach Tony Hinkle had his varsity squad view Western State plays yesterday as presented by a freshmen eleven in preparation for Saturday’s last home tilt against the Kalamazoo, Mich, team. Because the Bulldogs lost to the Hilltoppers last year, Hinkle is placing more than usual stress on this week’s practice. Yesterday's drill was divided by the Butler mentor, with one squad looking over the Hilltoppers’ plays and formations and another engaging in a passing drill and an offensive rehearsal. Another Butler gridder joined the injured ranks yesterday when John
the class of the East, tackles Car- :
Maggio, Yankees, who batted .324
Nine Eastern Elevens
tersectional
played on eastern gridirons are: Boston College-Indiana; Boston U.Tampa; Columbia-Virginia; Har-vard-Chicago; Manhattan-Nort h Carolina State; Navy-Notre Dame and Villanova-Auburn, Otherwise, things will be quiet in the East as many teams take it easy in ‘preparation for the late Novemper run down the stretch.
Pitt Stands Out
Holy Cross, one of the East's best teams despite a one-point defeat by Carnegie, plays Temple; N.Y. U. faces Lehigh; Rutgers meets Princeton and doesn’t seem to have much chance of winning its first game from that school since the 1869 triumph which was the first college
meets Colgate; Army plays F. and M.; Villanova, unbeaten but tied, tackles Auburn; Yale plays Brown and Georgetown, unbeaten, meets Bucknell on Friday. i Looking over the results to date, Pittsburgh stands out as the class of the division if not the entire country. Week after week, the Panthers have taken on tough opposition and buried it beneath a barrage of touchdowns. All that remains between Pittsburgh and a perfect season are Carnegie, Penn State, Nebraska and Duke.
Dartmouth meanwhile rolls along quietly toward one of its best seasons in history. Its defeat of Yale last week marked the first time that Dartmouth had defeated all teams in the “Big Three” in one season. After Dickinson, Dartmouth plays Cornell and Stanford and if it goes undefeated will have a right to rank up with Pittsburgh. . Fordham, despite its loss to Pittsburgh, is still one of tlie East's best teams and should be better next year. Harvard, with its victory over
Noel, reserve center and sophomore from Bloomfield, suffered a wrenched knee during a scrimmage against the freshmen. : Approximately 175 high schools of central Indiana have been invited to witness Saturday’s game as -the guests of the university athletic de-
Princeton, shapes up as the best in the Big Three. ) Army and Navy look ordinary
along with most of the other East-|{{
ern elevens.
ELINED
partment. Dads of Butler students | also will be honored at th
EPAIRED
ry
sixth with 43; Philadelphia seventh with 18, and Chicago last with 15.
Trot Conference To Be Held Here
By United Press The first national conference of trotting horsemen in this country will be held here Nov. 11, 12 and 13, it was announced today. Invitations have been sent to a
football game ever played; Syracuse.
py E. Roland Harriman. of New York, “father” of -the meeting. Harriman hopes the conference of owners, trainers, race officials and other interested parties, will open a concerted drive to diagnose the sport and provide “whatever stimulant or sedative is needed.”
Such problems as scoring or starting of horses, classification tables, rules and other technical problems will be studied and recommendations for changes will be drawn under the name of the newlycreated “National Gathering of Friends of Trotting.” An open forum is expected to launch the conference, followed by appointment of a committee io study specific problems and reforms. Sessions will be held at the Claypool Hotel.
Firing Opens on Basketball Front
Several basketball lid lifters were played on the state high school front last night. The Indiana High School Athletic Association permits action to start on Nov. 1, but the larger schools will delay their openers until later in the month. : : The week-end coming up probably will send at least 50 teams on the floor and the firing will pick up as the weeks go by. Last night’s scores:
Shoals 33; Needmore, 23. Jamestown, 28; Roachdale, 2%. Russellville, 42; Bellmore, 26. Montpelier, 22; Hartford City, 31. Markleville, 26: Sulphur Springs, 17. Dalevill 25: Cowan, 283. leigh, 49: Glenwood, 39 (frst game). Raleigh, 27; Gings, 19 (second game).
® ® ; Casting Club Session The Indianapolis Casting Club will hold its first weekly cast of the winter season tomorrow evening at 7:30 o'clock in he gym of the Tabernacle 34th ‘St. and Central Ave.
LOAN
20 Months to Fay PA
representative group of horsemen
utes with a body press. Silent Rattan, the 179-pound Indianapolis mat artist, threw Gordon Arquette, 180, of Spokane, from the ring with an Irish whip in the opener. Arquette failed to return within the required 20 seconds and was counted out. Everett Marshall of La Junta,
day’s card, Matchmaker Lloyd Carter announced. His opponent is to be named later.
18 Manual Players
from an original squad of 50 basketball candidates at Manual High
cut yesterday by Coach Oral Bridg-
ford. Marshall Snoddy, Royce Stevens, Fritz Mueller, Kniptash and Elward Derch received equipment.
for varsity positions and, accordsquad will be maintained until the close of the football season, when
many gridders will return to the hardwood. .
Howe Thinlies Face
-
Howe's cross-country team is to
field Friday. survived a team tryout yesterday are Floyd Bicknell, Robert Hook, John Milam, Robert Winters, Richard. Dobbs, Edward Andres, Jack Jones, Jack Whited, Allan Crapo, Robert Hinkle, Richard Sharp, Arthur Graham, Rohert Broshears, Donald Clapp and Jack Wade.
Presbyterian Church, |.
AUTO AND DIAMOND
Pay 8 visit to the sun — at its winter Florida and along the Gulf Coast! You South a lot longer on the money you save Greyhound 8u
by .Coach! Go one gfoute, return another——at no extra cost.
Traction Terminal Station, Plone ~=CT
Cor. Market & Ill. Sts oss Roads
SSMAN, INC
YHOU
Colo., is to appear on next Tues-| i
Survive Court Cut |
|
Only 18 boys today remgéned} i
The boys remaining are all out Hi
ing to Coach Bridgford, the present i
Warren Central Team
race Warren Central at the latter's it Howe harriers who fi
Pay Less And Stay Longer In
Real Silk vs. R: C. A, 9:30 p.
| Distilled, Aged and Bottled at the Distillery’ -
In Constant Use for 102 Years GROMMES &
H
School following the second season’s
Glenn Smith, [i sii | |i
ww
A"
homé in can stay
GREYHOUND TERMINAL
Riley 8601 d of Bus “Travel :
ND
