Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 November 1938 — Page 17
Pitt Refuses
© ness department.
a
{ The
To Pay Frosh
Tuition Bills
». Just Part of ‘De-emphasis’
On Football Is Answer of University Officials.
PITTSBURGH, Nov. 16 (U. P.).— De-emphasis of football at the University of Pittsburgh went beyond the dream stage today as Business Manager John Weber refused the . Scholarship demands of freshman players. When presented with bills for $150 for their first half-year tuition, 33 members of the freshman squad re- - plied, “We came to Pittsburgh with the understanding we would receive athletic scholarships.” Weber said that since the sports de-emphasis program announced by Chancellor Dr. John G. Bowman last November, all athletic scholarships had been' banned, and reminded the boys that they had “ signed promissory notes for the $300 ” full tuition fee, and payable to the university. : : Just a Formality!
* 5 The players, forming lone of Coach
ock Sutherland’s most promising . freshman squads in years, said . they had believed the notes were a mere formality and that the ath- . letic department would “take care” of them. . Weber said the university had no idea of “taking care” lof the notes and that tuition bills “are payable . currently.” He did promise some . “extra, jobs to help the boys liquidate the notes. . So far as is known the fresh- .. men are not planning to “strike” or quit school in default of their notes. They practiced yesterday for their . last game of the season against Kiski Prep Saturday. If a satis- . Iactory solution is not found, how“ever, Pittsburgh may lose valuable . grid talent needed to replace three ..members of its “dream backfield,” Seniors Goldberg, Stebbins. and . Chickerneo. -- Weber's stand was the third mani- . Testation of official determination _ for a strict “non-professional” ath."letic policy. 1937 Action Recalled’
The first came last fall after the > Panthers had been acclaimed almost unanimously as national champions. Almost a sure bet to participate in ‘the New Year's Day Rose Bowl game, the team announced it was not interested in the Coast trip. The . action was attributed to the school’s > refusal to grant a demand for “spending money” to players eligible
* for a California trip.
The second demonstration came this fall when 18 sophomore squad members refused- to practice be®ause of “differences” with the Pitt busiThey demanded to know just how long, and hard ~ they were expected to work on their _ various. jobs around the building,
~ and whether they could get wage
_ advances.
Rockets to Be Feted
The Broad Ripple gridmen are to be feted at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Cornelius in Haverstick Park Dec. 3. The invitations were presented by Edward and George Cornelius Jr., freshmen and junior members of the football squad.
Notre Dame Still Goes for Long Ones
¢ <
5 [rd 7 7
SAGGAY
vr
THESING
Dismiss Five At Manhattan
Drop Gridmen for Playing ‘Outside Sunday Games.’
NEW YORK, Nov. 16 (U. P.).— The dismissal of four varsity players and one freshman candidate for playing in “outside Sunday games,” left Manhattan University’s football squad weakened today for its game here Saturday with West Virginia. Coach Herb Kopf was reluctant
to discuss the “firing,” but said the entire squad had been warned regarding the strict Manhattan training regulations, and that the players had been dropped “only after. we received definite information they had disregarded my orders.” None of those dismissed were reglars, but the four varsity ‘men would have played at least a part of Saturday’s game against the Mountaineers and in the Thankksgiving Day game against Villanova. The affected players were: Anthony Gregonis, sophomore halfback; Adam Link, sophomore tackle; Joe Sullivan, junior guard; Harry Greco, third string center, and Freshman Teddy Godleski, promising fullback. The squad suffered another 1dss yesterday when Joseph Mitchell, junior end, announced his resigna-
tion from college.
Amateur Basketball
Results in the Meridian Club WPA
basketball league last night:
Greenwood, 24; Rasedale Milk, 12. ' Brightwood B. C. Ba. Fainburs, 30. Meridian Club, A IL A, 3
The pl game of the evening was the Brightwood Boys Club tilt against Edinburg. Bright- - wood overcame an eight-point lead
. , with Collins making a field goal in
+ the last 20 seconds.
Action aplenty is expected tonight on the Dearborn gym court with the Capital City Basketball League scheduled to see action with four net tilts. The Drikol-Brehob Market tilt at 8:40 p. m. will probably be the evening’s feature contest. The Drikol quintet is made up of many ~ of last year’s Technical High School performers. Holland, Hook, Kramer, McDonald and Bob Curry are the ~Drikols starting five. For the Brehob quintet, the present City ama- - teur champions, Baker, Smoll, Stull, Banta and Hickman are to start. The night’s schedule:
' ¥ P. M.—Liehr’s Tavern vs. Mt. Jackson Tire & Battery Co. 7:00 P. M. — ena Ice Cream vs.
« Lawrence Denzells. 3 3:40 Pe M. ~Drikel Refrigerators vs. Bre- . ket. hop 30 Bh M.—Schwitzer-Cummins Stokols
ey oo Fashion Cleaners.
Led by Schutt, who tallied 16 , points, the Schwitzer-Cummins « Buddies defeated the East Side : Boys’ Club, 38 to 18, last night in the Manufacturers League at the Dearborn Gym. Kenny Bepley, with 13 points, paced the Fashion Cleaner Aces to - a 32-to-29 victory over the Wilkinson Lumber five. +. Polk’s Milk quintet dropped the 4H. P. Ransburg five in a contest s‘that was decided in the final sec“‘onds. The most bitterly fought ’ contest of the evening was taken
“*< by the Beveridge Paper five, 21 to
20.
Teams desiring to entera tourna- ¢ ment at the First Presbyterian : Church the week of Nov. 21 call RI. i 7124 before 4:30 p. m. Saturday,
>
:. The newly-uniformed Tic-Toc : Club wants to book games with ; strong City and State teams for
_: any night except Mondays, Thurs-
: days and Fridays. |The team is , composed of former high school and * college players. Write or call Bud % Nevins, 197 W. Harrison St., Moores- © ville, Ind.
3: The O. A. Birr Motors basketball : quintet wants to schedule out-of- : town games with teams desiring to : play on a guarantee or percentage : basis. The team includes such stars 3 as Jim Birr, former Indiana Unigi. versity star; Bill Merrill, ex-Butler ® center; John Sutton, former Wai bash forward, and other college % players. Write George Wolling, 833 *N. Meridian St. =
Johnston Food Markets . opened their season with a 43-t0-25 victory over the Tabernacle Flashes. | Botermer, with eight field goals, was ; outstanding for Johnston while * Reed, with 10 points, was high point man for the losers. The Johnston ! team this year consists of Kline,
2 Lynch, Oppel, Miller, Phillips, Baker ! and Botermer. M. Riser is manager.
The team is entered in the Sports-
For games call RI-9551 and ask for Riser,
In the Sportsman’s Store Sunday] School Basketball League games played Monday at the Brookside United Brethren gym, Englewood Christian nosed out Linwood Christian in the last 30 seconds of play, 18 to 15. With the score tied at 15 points Glenn Meiers registered three points in rapid succession to give Englewood the victory. Brookside United Brethren defeated Victory Memorial, 41 to 21, with Bill Saunders tallying 16 points for ‘the losers. Central Christian, paced by Larry Hall, beat First Reformed, 29 to 8.
Manager M. G. Goldsmith wants|y the following men to report at 7
{o’clock. tonight at the E. 10th St.
gym: Pinky Davis, J. Zukerman, A. Zukerman, Rube Reiswerg, Dave Cohen, M. Nahmais, Toddy Waiss and Greenberg. The opening game is to be against the strong Boys’ Club quintet. For games write M. G. Goldsmith, 5357 S. Illinois St. or call LI-1612 before 5 p. m. or DR-2618-W after 5:30 p. m.-
For a game with the Riverside Park Methodist girls team (high school age) call the manager at TA-0592. The game is to be played in their gym tomorrow.
The Wincel A. C. junior team is to meet tomorrow at 7 p. m. at the home of Robert O’Banion. The following players are asked to bring uniforms for the games at 8 o'clock: Stringer, Moore, Saunders, Phillips, | Stewart, Kinslow, Clark, Miller and Taylor. For games in the 18-year-old class write H. E. Wincel, 1518 Kennington.
The Columbus Tigers are ready to schedule games. Bloomington, Terre Haute, Madison, Indianapolis and Connersville teams please notice. For games write Chester T. Smith 840 Brown St., Columbus, Ind.
Tonight's schedule for the opening of the Sportsman’ssStore Independent basketball leagiie: Speedway Rockets vs. Pure Oil Co., at %:30 p. m. Burt’s Shoe Store vs. Johnston’s Market at 8:30 p. m. VanCamp Hardware vs. Medics at 9:30 p. ‘m.
The Em-Roe Boys’ Big Six League is to meet tonight at the store at 8 o'clock to complete league plans and elect officers.
Schedule for the Bush-Feezle Downtown Merchants basketball league playing at the Hoosier A. C. tonight: ~ J. C. Penn vy vs. L. S. Ayres, 7:30 p. m.
3
Ft. Harrison
H P asson vs. William H, Block, 8:30 p. . Texaco Hibben-Hollweg, at 9:30
Pp. m. : . The Wednesday Night league opens at’ the East Tenth Street gym with the following schedule:
Boys’ Club vs. Goldsmith Pipe & Sup- |
ply, 7:30 p. m. Indiana National Bank vs. 30th and Central Avenue Merchants, 8:30 p. m. Royal Ramblers vs. Central Christian, 9:30 p. m. : Officers of the league are E. Kelley, president; Robert Sheehan, vice
5 Store Independent League. tary
president, and E. B. Scott, secreer.
NOTRE DAME SHAKES LOUIS ZONTIN/ LOOSE ON OLD CUTBACK PLAY /NSIDE 7ACKLE FOB 84 YARDS AND FIRST OF y FREE TOUCHDOWNS ACANST MINNESOTA.
VAN EVERY
CENTER AND BIGHT TACKLE | TAKE SAFETY MAN.
e Sitko ’ +
/
C =" 7B ELMER fi
- ——
” ® ®
By ART KRENZ NEA Service Sports Writer
OTRE DAME shook Louis Zontini loose on an eighty-four-yard run after six minutes of play for the first of its three touchdowns against Minnesota at Notre Dame Stadium. It was the old cutback play inside tackle. Steve Sitko, quarterback, and Johnny Thesing, fullback, went ahead of Zontini through the hole ripped in the Minnesota right side. Sitko took out the right backer-up, and Thesing looked after Wilbur Moore, the right secondary. Ed Longhi, center, bumped Horace Bell, Minnesota's left guard. Paul Kell, right tackle checked Win Pederson, the Gophers’ left tackle. They then went downfield as a team to take Harold Van Every, the safety man. : By the time Van Emery finished sparring with Longhi and Kell, there was no chance of his overtaking Zontini.
Boston, Toronto Hockey Aces Tie
Caseys Take Easy Matches
Steve Wins in Two Straight Falls Over Tom Sawyer.
An overflow crowd packed the Armory last night, drawn by the appearence of two wrestlers as Irish as the Lakes 0’ Killdirney—the brothers Casey.
decisions could not have brought them more verbal abuse had the customers all been Orangemen of the North Country. Steve the Crusher was the victor over Tom Sawyer of Los Angeles in straight falls in. the main event. The one time world’s champion stopped the Coast grappler in 20 minutes with a body press. After seven minutes in the second fall Sawyer charged at the County r erry heavy but missed. He sailed through the ropes and was unable to continue, the match going to Steve.
Shower of Shells
In the semiwindup the younger Timothy Casey finished off Joe Corbett of Seattle with an airplane spin and body press in 11 minutes. The spectators showered the ring with peanut shells, crumpled programs, catcalls and bops at what, to them, looked like a gift decision. The two preliminariesfwere as exciting as a package of exploding|
By United Press The Boston Bruins and Toronto Maple Leafs were tied for second place in National Hockey standing today. | The two New York clubs, Americans and Rangers, were dead-
Labor Rivals Seeking Bid
Both won dull matches and the!
gave a ragged exhibition.
Oct. 6, 6, 1919, Ir
locked for third. With the leading Chicago Blackhawks | idle, the Bruins and Leafs battled to a 1-1 overtime tie last night, the first standoff of the two-weeks-old season. It was the Bruins’ first appearance on home ice, and without the services of holdout Eddie Shore they Cooney Weiland put Boston in frent with bh first period goal, but Murph Chamberlain tallied the equalizer for Toronto in the second. The Rangers, making their New York debut, blanked the Detroit Red Wings, 2-0. It was the second straight victory for the Rangers and the fourth straight setback for the Wings. Cecil Dillon and Neil Colville put over New York’s two goals in the second period. The standings:
Ww. L. he is% Pts chicago viva eens 4 0 0 8 Boston |........... 2 1 1 5 Torontg .......... 2 2 1 5 N. Y. Rangers ... 2 0 0 4 Americans ....... 2 1 0 4 Detroit! .....coceae 0 4 0 0 Montreal ......... 0 4 0 0
Harrier Meet at Purdue on Friday
LAFAYETTE, Nov. 16 (U. P.). — The Big Ten cross-country championship will be held Friday at 3 p. m. over Purdue University’s rugged four-mile course. instead of Saturday morning as originally scheduled, it was anounced today. Big Ten coaches voted to move up the race in order to give the runners an extra day of rest before competing in the National Intercollegiate meet on Monday. ~ Six teams have entered this year’s meet which was revived after a fiveyear lapse. Indiana, winner of the title for five straight years before the event was. discontirfied in 1933, again will be favored. Other schools entered are Wisconsin, Ohio State, Minnesota, Illinois and Purdue.
® Sports Quiz Q—How many world’s boxing titles has Tony Canzoneri held? A—Three — Featherweight, lightweight, junior welterweight. He won the lightweight title twice.
Q—What was the longest baseball game ever played in the American League? A—A game lasting 24 innings, between Philadelphia and Boston at the old Huntington Avenue grounds in Boston, Sept. 1, 1916. Philadelphia won by a score of 4 to 1. Jack Coombs pitched the entire game for Philadelphia and Joe Harris for Boston.
Q—Did Bob Shawkey, pitcher for the New York Yankees some years back, ever strike out 16 batters in a nine-inning game? A—No; his best effort in this respect was 15 strikeouts on Sept. 27, 1919, against the Philadelphia Athletics. Q—When Howard Ehmke, Philadelphia Athletics’ pitcher, struck out 13 Chicago batters in the opening game of the 1929 World Series, were all of the strikeouts consecutive? A—No. The World Series record for consecutive strikeouts is six, by Horace O. Eller, Cincinnati Reds,
y
firecrackers and as ljvely. Buck Weaver, the Terre Haute matman who is as popular. with the fans here as any current wrestler, relied on his drop kick to defeat Kiman Kudo, the tricky Japanese. Kudo is 170-pounds of bronzed lightning. He, like the shifty “Lord” Lansdowne, combines tumbling with the mat art and adds a few jujutsu tactics. His knowledge of balance was used effectively in tossing the heavier Weaver in one of the fastest bouts seen here this season. Come to Blows The opener began as a “waltz me around again, Willie” and ended in a near riot with a platoon of National Guardsmen and a handful of policemen quelling the disturbance. The decision was a draw. Jim Coffield and Ray Eckert for-
| got they were wrestlers and in the
final five minutes battled with bare fists. At one stage of the fray they both fell from the ring, continuing their war among the ringside customers. Neither the final bell, their seconds, . nor Referee Bob Barry were effective to stop them as their arms flayed like buggy whips.
Manual Gridmen Join Cage Squad Monday
The Manual gridmen who are to join the basketball squad will not report until Monday and until then
Coach Oral Bridgford is not selecting a first term, he said today. ° Defensive measures, penalty shooting and new plays were stressed yesterday as the Redskins prepped for their opener with Ben Davis Dec. 2. Elmer Parks was knocked unconscious ‘and Fritz Mueller received a slight eye injury when they collided with Edward Dersch in scrimrhage. Football players who are to begin practice Monday are Norman Williams, Pearly Hickey, William Fair, Robert Timmons, Allen Smith, James Chapman, Raymond Koch and Leonard Robinson.
Gronauer to Get Lennox Golf Cup
The Indianapolis District ' Golf Association is to honor its 1938 champion, Fred Gronauer, at a
luncheon tomorrow noon at the Columbia Club when the Edwin L. Lennox Trophy is to be presented. The trophy, given the association by Mr. Lennox, for many years president of the group, will be presented to Mr. Gronauer to keep until next year when it will be at stake in the 1939 Indianapolis District tournament.
Better Than Luckman
NEW YORK, Nov. 16 (NEA).— Paul Sullivan, Erasmus High School |. Coach who developed Sid Luckman of Columbia, says Max Rubenfeld, his present star, is a better passer at a corresponding age. ,
Men's and Women's
CLOTHING
ON EASY CREDIT
Askin & Marine Co.
127 W. WASHINGTON $1.
To Rose Bowl, Joe Opines
While He’s at It, He Decides Alf Is Going to Peru ~ For More Seasoning (Remember ’36).
By JOE WILLIAMS ~ Times Special Writer EW YORK, Nov. 16—We wouldn't know for surg, but we have a hunch what the C. I. O. and the A. F. of L. are fighting for is a bid to the Rose Bowl game. ” ” ” 2 ” ”
It’s our notion President Roosevelt sent Alf Landon fo Peru on option for further seasoning—the last time up he Proved he couldn’t cover much ground. 2 2 2 ” ® »
When Fred Apostoli and Young Corbett the Third meet Friday night they will be fighting for the middleweight championship of Madison Square Garden as far as the customers are concerned and they ag. seem to be very concerned. They have indicated a most enthusiastic apathy for the thing. The boxing commissioners have designated it as a world’s championship but the commissioners’ idea of the world seems to be that it begins and ends in the vicinity of the Garden. Maybe they never studied geography. And it’s plain enough they never studied the traditions of the prize ring, which for generations have insisted that championships are won and lost in the ring.
No gp # 5 =
Everybody will applaud the move on the part of America and England to come to the rescue of the Jéws in Nazi Germany . . . but who's going to come to the rescue of the decent Germans who want no part of Hitler hoodlumism but can do nothing about it?
8s 8 # & =
view of what is going on in the Third Reich we are beginning to feel Al®apone and his mobsters were, in comparison, among the
first citizens of this country. 2 2 2 ” td o
We were talking with an Old Blue yesterday and he was pretty distressed about the Yale situation, He said it was the worst “late season” Yale team he had ever seen, that it lacked physical condition, had no fight and was almost totally without finish in the execution of assignments. “You expect these things in the first or second game of the season but not in the seventh,” he grumbled, adding that Princeton was so much the better team, especially in polish and performance, -that it wasn’t a contest. He wondered mournfully what the trouble was. -We mentioned the fact that there isn’t a Larry Kelley or Clint Frank in the Yale lineup this season and walked swiftly away.
2 2 = ® £2 =»
Czechoslovakia has lost 4,700,000 men since the Pact of Munich « » « They couldn’t have dore worse if they had played Pittsburgh. s 2 = ; 2 8 8 NE of our scouts in the beak busting business tells us Joe Louis will bat out John Henry Lewis in three rounds. He says Lewis is practically blind in his left eye, “has to tilt his head to see when he talks.” We don’t know how true this is but we feel it is a matter that should be looked into. Louis is tough enough for any guy with two eyes. It shouldn't be hard to determine whether a fighter is half blind. Ernie Schaaf was permitted to go into the ring against Primo Carnera * with an active brain concussion which led to his death some hours later; but this was a condition that didn’t reveal itself in a routine physical examination. A Princeton fullback, Bill Lynch, toppled over dead last September after an admittedly competent physical examination had indicated he was in perfect condition. There was something organically wrong with him that didn’t show in the standard tests. But if Lewis’ left glimmer is gone or half gone any shoemaker ought to be able to detect the fact—and if this proved to be so he shouldn't be allowed in the ring with the hardest hitter the gums. has known since Dempsey’s time. 2 nn : an ® We have a suspicion that the Atlanta artist who painted Confederate soldiers in blue uniforms will be playing for the Brooklyn Dodgers next season. : ” 2 ” ” % 8
A man named Humason out in Pasadena says he just spotted an un‘named star 487,500,000,000,000,000 miles away from the earth . . . We suggest he call it the national deficit, y #8 { 2 nn Bn
MONG the undefeated, untied teams of football this year are West Tennessee Teachers, Hillsdale, Lake Forest, Western Washington and Wahpeton Science. They must be good, but do you think you
Pittsburgh, Carnegie Tech, Purdue, Cornell and Santa Clara, all beaten once? The truth is, generally speaking, perfect records in football don’t mean much. A good team with a stronger schedule is always in danger of “being ‘knocked off—and just because it happens {o be turned back once is no reason that it should be discredited. There's a lot of luck in modern football and not infrequently it breaks against the big team. Which is all right with us. The game. would be pretty drab if it ran as “ true to form as a sun dial or a + Mississippi election. ” ” » ” » ”
Col. Batista, the strong man of Cuba, is in town and we don’t know whether he’s overrated or not—we never saw him try to crash through a subway jam in Times Square. ; 8 #8 : ® 8. 8
We are glad to see Gypsy Rose Lee has quit the drama and returned to the strip tease. ... Somehow it gives us greater faith in the established order of things, makes us feel that new foreign ideologies
can’t flourish here. ” 4 s 2 2 ”
PORTS have done a great deal to make small towns nationally prominent. There is Goshen with the Hambletonian, Poughkeepsie with the Intercollegiate Regatta, New London with the YaleHarvard race. Not many people would ever have heard of Carson, Nev., if it hadn't been for the Corbett-Fitzsimmons fight, or Shelby, Mont., if Dempsey hadn't fought Gibbons there. Football put Green Bay, Wis., in the headlines. From the early days of professional football this little town of some 30,000 people has been a vibrant, vital factor in the game, competing on better than even terms with New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, etc. In the last 10 seasons Green Bay has won the championship four times and has a 50-50 chance to do it again this year. The answer is the citizens adopted the game early, supported it wholeheartedly as a civic force and it is as firmly established there as it ever will be
in any metropolis.
New Rule Speeds Up Penalty Shot
NEW YORK, Nov. 16 (NEA).— The penalty shot in hockey is more dramatic than ever before because of the rule change which benefits the shooter. ‘Formerly the man making the
Here’s That Spiral Argument Again
NEW YORK, Nov. 16 (NEA).— The - argument about when the
Hudson Sinkinson, Mowdoin ’02, says that when he played for the Maine college they were kicking spirals. He asserts that the spiral kick was not a novelty in 1905, when
would rate them above teams like California, Dartmouth, Holy Cross, .
Lefty Crore,
junior league’s service bureau. Grove, who won 14 games and
lost four despite his. “dead” arm, had the edge over every club except Cleveland, with which he broke even in two games. Lefty had his greatest success againts Detroit, beating the Tigers in four out of five games. Harder, whose season’s record was 17 victories and 10 defeats, had the
edge over four clubs and broke even with three others. He tied the champion Yanks with two won and two lost, and the White Sox and Athletics with one and one.
both the Browns and Senators and plastered four defeats on the Red Sox while dropping two decisions to them.
‘Y’ Swim Team to Meet Ft. Wayne
Sixteen young swimmers, representing the Indianapolis Y. M. C. A, will meet the junior swimming team from the Ft. Wayne .Y. M. C. A. at 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon in the first of the season’s dual meets. The contest will be staged in the local Y. M. C. A. pool and will be open to the public without admission charge. John Schattner, who is coaching] - the team, under the supervision of Homer Fulton, has indicated that he will use Edward Morgan, Charles Hancock, Robert Rairdon and Milburn and Wilbur Groseclose in the meet. George and Alex Stoyanovich, Bud Morical, Herschel Curtiss, 20bert Miller, Robert Corn and William Stump are expected to see acti, together with Clifford Matthews, Frank Hurst, Paul Bearer and William Dwyer,
Show Well in Averages
NEW YORK, Nov. 16 (U. P.).—Robert Moses Grove, ancient south<
paw, of the Boston Red Sox, and Melvin Leroy Harder, Cleveland Amers icans, right-hander, shared the distinction of being the only two Amers ican League pitchers who did not lose a series last season, according a compilation today of pitchers’ records by Henry Edwards, head of th
- Harder won three out of four from!
Pro Swingers In Close Pla
PINEHURST, N.C. N. C.,, Nov. 16 (U, P.).—Clayton Heafner of Greens boro, N. C., shared honors today
mour at the halfway mark in the 36-hole Mid-South professional best: ball golf tournament. Heafner, teamed with Johnny Bulla of Chicago, shot an individus score .of 68, Armour’s 67. The Heafner-Bulla team finishe the 18-hole first’round in a tie wit
Armour and Bobby Cruickshank at 33-33—66. Tied for third with team scores of 67 were Henry Picard of Hershey,
Jim Turnesa of Elmsford, N. Y., ani Jack Patroni, Shawnee, Pa. Eight pairs were tied at 68. They were Jimmy Thompson-Horton Smith; Ed Oliver-Frank Walsh; Felix Serafin-Terl Johnson; Dick Metz-Gene Sarazen; Al HuskeFrank Stuhler; Stephen Warga-Jim Milward; Eddie Bush-Denny Champagne Turnesa.
Mars Horses Rest CHICAGO, Nov. 16 (NEA).—Mrs, Ethel V. Mars, owner of Milky Way Farms, will rest her horses through the winter season, under! advic from Trainer Roy Waldron,
with such veterans as Tommy Are.
one stroke behind
Pa.,, and Jack Grout of Chicago;
‘and Tony Manero- -M Ke
TERMS AS A WEE
LOW AS DELAWAR
GOODYEAR T TIRE BLUE POINT 2=ima
YOU WIN BY THREE HOLES. AND, BY THE
AND IM GOING TO SPEND IT
LOOK _THATS THE Ff | STILL DON'T
BOURBON I'M GO- [{ KNOW IF ITS i GOOD BOURBON. 4 AND | WONT TILL
spiral punt started goes merrily on. .
Amateur Football
shot was forced to stop before reaching the deadline from which the attempt is made. This often caused him to take his mind off the shot itself, and consequently a large percentage of tries were misses. This season the rule has been revised to allow a player to go ‘over the line, if he desires, immediately after making his shot. This gives Him a better follow through and ‘makes for greater accuracy.
The De Molay gridmen defeated the West Indianapolis Boys Club, 19 to 0, Sunday, and will play at Greenfield - next Sunday at 2:30 p. m. All players are to meet at 1017 Broadway at 12:15 p. m. A meeting is to be held tonight at 7 o'clock.
The Goodwill Golden Bears are to play the Midway A. C. at Brookside Park Sunday. 1 players are requested to see Zappia before then. Borman and Foust please notice.
The Fall Creek/Red Devils, playing in the h-Hassler Junior League, are asked to call Jimmy Coleman at Drexel 7011 or see Walter Loman at the Smith-Hassler store concerning the game Sunday af Garfield Park,
roi 2 the State — Legal Rates
LOANS
The CHICACO Store
it is claimed that Amos Alonzo
Stagg started” it, and certainly not in 1906, when Fielding Yost maintains he introduced it to college football.
SAVE (3~
on Fine
GUNS
$300. 1, $700
® SINGLE BARREL ® DOUBLE BARREL ® PUMP GUNS ® WELL-KNOWN MAKES
SACKS BROS.
306-308-310 Indiana Ave.
on on Everything!
Diamonds, Watches, Autos, Cameras, Clothing, Shotguns, Ete.
WAY, HERE'S THAT NOW FOR A PINT BOURBON FORA |\ WITH ME TO THE DOLLAR | BORROW- JN of GoOD DOLLAR.YOU'Lt | | LIQUOR STORE ED FROM YOU. BOURBON, HAVE TO DIG | |AND YOU'LL SEE. DOWN IN YOUR
OH,NO | WON'T! JUST DROP AROUNI
YOU CANT GET A PINT OF GOOD
OWN POCKET, T00, A
Ze
| 1
PLEASE YOUR PALATE AND YOUR PURSE —AT YOUR FAVORITE BAR OR PACKAGE STORE, ASK FOR
| IN FACT, ITS BETTER || STRAIGHT WHISKEY ATHAN GOOD. ITS GREAT EVERY DROP ANDI:
THE BUY-WORD FOR BETTER BOURBON /
0
BRAND KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY ' 90 PROOF CROSSWORD PUZZLE HORIZONTAL Answer fo Previous Puzzle 12Heisa 1 The last royal [GITIL member of ¢ ruler of AR ~—— family. Germany. | N M A 15 Scoria. 12 Sword handle. [RIO JHBIAISIKINI 20 Deprives of 13 Brother’s L |A[TIHEEF IE 21 Accuiiesces. daughter. IIL AILIC] VIRGINIA 23 Dye. 14 Ratite birds. RR[E AN GILDE 24 He was —= 16 One time. SIOIOINEEP IA 1 ruler of 17 Mohammedan |S/AMERHIUIN Pl Germany, prince. . 1INIATIE R[O RIS] 25 Each. 18 Timber tree. SION AllIN 27 Uncle. 19 Hearkened. E RIAN E |AIR] 28 Female deepy 21 Amphitheater 29 Measure, center. : 34 Forward, 22 Aftermaths 45 Headman of VERTICAL 35 Bone. ~ for pasturage. an Indian 1 Cows. 37 Heroic. 26 Regular. village. 2 Genus of auks. 38 To rectify 30 Like. 47 Clenched 3 Passage Kava. 31 Resembling an hand, : : 41 Heap. animal. .51 Respiratory 4 Being. 42 Holm oak. 32 To question. sound. 5 Laughing. 45 Chum. : 33 Egg dish. 52 Oat 6 Measure of 46 Branch of the) 35 Upon. at grass, weight. Tai race. 36 Most 53 Cetacean. 7 Frosting. 47 Evergreen honorable. 54 He lives in 8 Conducted. - free. 39 Stone. _ 9 Turkish title. 48 Wayside hotel) 43 Queer. 55 His home is 10 To canter. 49 Note in scale, | 44 Corrupt. ~~, Holland. 11 Principal 50 Beret. Poe 3 | 4-15 [6.17 {6 9 [io [nu 12 13 q 15
