Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1938 — Page 15
Huffman Pass Brings Lions
Pro Victory|
But Chances of Remounting Western Division Top Almost Hopeless.
NEW YORK, Nov. 21 (U. P).— The Detroit Lions, 1935 professional football champions, maintained their hopes today of remounting the throne, but the odds against ‘achievement were. tremendous. The Lions must win their final two games, against the Chicago Bears and Philadelphia, to tie tne Green Bay Packers for the Western Division crown; then beat them to enter the East-West Divisions playoff. Either New York or Washington as Eastern champion, would ‘be the Lions’ final obstacle—and a real one. Detroit kept alive its mathemati‘cal chance Sunday with a 7-3 vic tory over the Chicago Cardinals, 'who now have lost nine of 10 starts. The Cards stopped the Lions’ famed ground attack and forced them to the air. A short over-the-line pass “from Vernon Huffman, former Indiana University star, to Moscrip, in the first period, gave the Lions ‘their only touchdown. Moscrip shook off two tacklers, skipped though a broken field 47 yards across the goal. He then kicked the extra point. Intercepts Isbell Pass Green Bay missed a chance to clinch the division title when beat€n 15-3 by the New York Giants, Who increased their Eastern Division lead to a full game over the idle Washington Redskins. Two . stunning plays, one which ended in ® boomerang for the Packers, gave ‘the Giants victory after they had
‘trailed 3-2 in the third period. Tuf-|.
fy Leemans broke off tackle and, ‘with perfect blocking aid, galloped seventy-five yards for one touchdown. A few minutes later, Mel Hein, Giant center, intercepted one of Lecil Isbell’s passes and ran like a halfback 50 yards to score his first touchdown in eight years of pro ball. Statistically, the Packers shoved the Giants all over the lot, making 20 first downs to six. A crowd of 50,000 watched this thriller. Brooklyn's Dodgers were condemned to third place in the East as they bowed, 24-6, to Chicago's revitalized Bears. An 80-yard march climaxed by Buivid’s 20-yard pass across the goal line to Wilson, gave the Bears a lead they never surrendered. A victory over Detroit Thanksgiving would - .clinch a second-place tie for the Bears. * , Eagles Beat Pirates - The Philadelphia Eagles, last year’s cellarites, defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates, 14-7, for their fourth win of the campaign. Whizzer
- White’s brilliant 70-yard touchdown! —
run_put the Pirates into a 7-7 tie in’ the third period, after Dave Smuckler’s touchdown pass to Bill Hewitt had set the Eagles out front in the first. The Pirates fought the Eagles to a standstill until late in
the final period when Riffie’s 54- xX
yard gallop on a delayed line buck, took the ball to Pittsburgh's 11, from where Smuckler heaved a pass to Joe Carter for the winning margin. Stapdings: : WESTERN DIVISION Pct. Green Bay 137 etroit 667 hicago eBars . Cleveland Chicago Cards ....
EASTER
wanwwt — on cocoaH
—
New York Washington Brooklyn Philadelphia Pittsburgh
Next week’s schedule: Nov. 24— New York at Brooklyn; Chicago Bears at Detroit. Nov. 27—Cleveland at Chicago Cardinals; Pittsburen at Washington.
awa ome
Blue Key Banquet }* Speakers Named
Mayor-elect Reginald H. Sullivan will ber one of the guest speakers at the Butler Blue Key football banquet, tomorrow night, at 6 o'clock in the banquet hall of the Scottish Rite Cathedral. Hilton U. Brown, president of the board of directors, will also be a guest speaker. The banquet is sponsored yeariy by the university's senior honorary for men, to honor the football team which has won the Indiana College Conference championship during the last five years. This year the freshman football team, the crosscountry teams and local high school football coaches have been invited | __ tc attend as guests of the organization, , Principal speaker for the fete will be Harold (Red) Grange, former gallopin’ ghost from Illinois, now a radio sports commentator. George {Cully) Thomas, 1912 graduate of Butler and one of the best all-round athletes the university has ever produced, is to serve as toastmaster. : Other speakers will be Pres. James . Putnam, Coaches Paul D. HinEle and Hugh Middlesworth; Emsley W. Johnson and John W. Atherton, ard members, and Dr. Henry M. elston, chairman of the athletic gommittee, who will announce the gthletic awards.
Bowsher to Captain : Sycamores in 1939
Eimes Special = TERRE HAUTE, Nov. 21.—The Indiana State Teachers College footRll team has elected Wayne Bower of Terre Haute, a chunky 160pound guard whose speed fits in well with Coach Wally Marks’ style of line play, as captain of the 1939 squad.
.In the same balloting the Syca-]
mores chose Woody Wey of Terre Haute, a 155-pound sophomore half- ¢ back whose 27 points were the high * ptal on on the squad during the last season, the “most valuable player”
14—Gooraia T. 142 ARKANSAS 27—0Okla. A. & M..7 14—Tex. Christn.21 6—Bav lor 9 42—Texa 6 8—Santa Clara. 21 7—Texas A.&M. 13 0—Rice
. ‘20 119
6—S. Method. . 14—Mississippi 122 ARMY 32—Wichita 3-V. P. I ...... 18-—Columbia .. 20
Harvard Boston U.
Prank-Marsh 12 34--Chattanooga 13 19-—Princeton ... 7 229 88 AUBURN 14-Birm. Southn.0 0-—Tulane 0
ionnesste seers 201-Miss St. .... &G
1 Viitanova .e 28—-Louis. St. 23-—Georgia
BAYLOR 3 ISDuthwestern , Okla. A. & M..
BOSTON COLLEGE
63—-Canisius ....12 I Northeastern .0 9—-D 6
a OSTON U. 19-80 * Lawrence 1d
BROWN 20—Harvard ....13 20—Lafavette ....0 13—Dartmouth.. 34 3) mhode Island 2 48—Tu fs - 14—val 12—Holy Cross ..
167
20 14
BUTLER 12—Ball State ... 6 6—Purdue vevegl 0—Geo. ‘Wash. .26 12—DeP 10 35—Ohio UWesley 0 27—Wabash 10 wen, i Las 21—Wash. St. L. 27 a —— 113 CALIFORNIA
. Pacific..|0 $= Aggies. .0 L. A....7
Washington 2 13—Oregon State [7 T7—S. California eg 6—Stanford ...
206
| CAR. TECH
49—Davis-Elkins .| 32 ittenbers a
T—AKr 20—Pittebursh . 21—Duquesne ....
156 CENTENARY
CENTRE 13-Miss. College. . 6—Chattanooga J —Shattancozs 6—Villanova .. esbyterian Wash, U. .. Wash.-Lee, 26—0hio Wes 1€ Louisville" . 155 CENT.
NORMAL
0—S8t. Joseph’s .21 0—Meorehead T. 57 233 CHICAGO
4—DePauw 13—_Harvard 0—Coll. Pac.
the year. Bowsher and Wey are
_ 0 filtiots
«esl Notre Dame..19| —
6 ee ria 14
09 | 7
COLGATE
12" Sracuse 127 CORNELL
15—Colgate
14—Dartmouth ...7
DARTMOUTH 46—Bate 0 51—St. sy FIT 0 22—Princeton ....0
Franklin Ev ansville ....
DETROIT 8—Purdus ...... 7—-Kalamazos T. 27—Catholic U. . Boston Col.
=e : —— [ot a ii
J a
18—V. P. 1. $7—=-Davidson
has
DUQUESNE 34—Waynesbrg... 6—Texas Tech... 0—Pittsburgh .. 3—W, Va. We 14—D —ar ; 0—Carneg. Tech 21 7—Miami, Fla...21
81 108
EARLHAM Manchester 8
2—Fr 14—Rose Poly 12:8 0—DePau
au . 0—Bali State we 0—Swarthmore. .
“21
EVANSVILLE Fos Poly .....8
19—Valparaiso . 8—Hanover .... 0
“93
FLORIDA Stetson
eorgia 21—Marylan d JT 0—Georgia Tech 0
a 122
FORDHAM
47—Upsala Si— Warn sbura 6—FPu fs
26—Ore 13—Pittsburkh or Ei 3ary's ves
0—N. Care. «....0 _13—South Carol. .
161
FRANKLIN
nover 9 13—Manchester . 12—Geo’ton Col.
134 GEORGETOWN U.
51—Hampden-S. . 33—Roanoke
14—Maryland .
185
G. WASHINGTON
ado A —Davis-BIkins . }—Mississiopi ..25 ' 0—Clemson ....2 —Kansas 0—Buckwell ....
GEORGIA 20—The Citadel .12 7 . Caro .
6—Tulane .. 14—Auburn
8] 161
The South Side Turners athletic committee gets down to business preparing for the annual city and county glove tournament. Members are, seated, left to right:
Records of College. Elevens
GEORGIA TECH 18—Merc No "Dante. 19 0-—Duke 6 T—Aubur 6 T—\ Janderbit “ 19—Kentucky ...18 Bucky esssl 0—PFlorida
HANOVER
Te a thd dL wowWwaom
0—Evansville ...
84
N © |
HARVARD 13—Brown
157 HOLY CROSS 28—Providence .. 6—R. I. State.. 19—Manhattan . ar. Tech ..
2 6—Notre Dame. 14 0—North’'w’'rn .1 0—Michigan
_34—Chic 110
INDIANA
0-—Ohio State . 2~Illinois 12 0—Nebrask
20—Valparaiso ..34 . T—Evansville .. 6 7—East. Hiinots 19 __ Eastern Ky...36
“69 171 IOWA UY. C. L. A... 13—~Wisconsin .. 27—Chicago
0—Nebraska 46
IOWA STATE 14—Denver
rake 2110 13—Kansas St. .. 0—Oklahoma, ..
125 KANSAS
e B 58—Washburn ... 0—Oklahoma ..1¥ 7—Iowa State.. 27—Kansas S. . T—Nebraska .. 7—Geo., Wash.
125
KANSAS STATE
0—Northwegstern.21 21—Missouri ....13 8—Maraquette ...0 3) d seis B
0—O 41—Washburn 101
KENTUCKY 46—Maryville ....
120
150
LAFAYETTE 8—Pennsylvania 34 wn 20
LOU. STATE 3—M;ssissinni .
3] A Tovola (8S) ... 7—Vanderbilt .. 7—Tennessee .. 32—Miss. State .. Auburn . ...2 32—Southw. La.. 0 160 MANCHESTER 14—Valpo
21—Buffalo
i i—8t Joseph's.
4 108
SETAE F
_18—Ohio State .. 0 131
_10—Temple .....0 133
“97
213
117
119
156 | —
Yes] 4
108"
7 1
5
03
MARQUETTE 0—Wisconsin ...27 7—S0. Methodiat.0 S~Rangas St. ..6 C. U. +3]
Ist State .. 14—Mich. State. "20 12—Arizona 20
33
MARYLAND 6—Richmond ...19 0—Penn. State. .33
Oi 14—1 Vir
“o1
MICHIGAN 14—Mich. State..0 45—Chicago 7 6—Minnesota .. Yale 13
Illino: 0 HE Sivanis 13 0—Northwestern 0
MICH. STATE 34-Wayne
0—Michig 8-111. Weslevan: 0
MINNESOTA 15— Washington . 2
..6 3-Northwestern 6 28—Iow 0 Nore Dame 19 21—Wisconsin ... 0
MISSISSIPP1 20—La. State .... 27—La. Tosh , 14—Miss, oes T—Vanderbilt - 47—Centenary . 25—G. Wash, .... 14—8t. Louis .... 33—Sewanee 20—Arkansas ....
MISS. STATE
12—Duaquesne ... Tulane .... 7T—Louisiana Ss. 32 5
112
0—Centenary . 3—Southwest.
MISSOURI1 4—Colorado
13—Princeton sen d8 0—Pennsylvania 0 0—Notre Dame 15 14—Columbia v9
FT;
NEBRASKA T—Minnesota
NO. CAROLINA
14—Wake Forest..6 21—No Car: State.0 14—Tulan 17
34—Davidson. 0—Duke 7—V y.! 0—Fordham
NO. CAR. STATE
19—Davidson 0—No. Carolina. 0—Alabama BB Yake Forest. gq 7—Fur 7 0—Virgimia TI. . 0—Manhattan .. 0—Detroit 7 0—Duke
o a
NORTHWESTERN 21—Kansas State..0
13—Wisconsin 9 « h—Michigan : 7—Notre Dame.
NOTRE DAME 52—Kansas
14—Ga. Tech .... I Sinols tevaves 6
.10—Iowa State .
138
“39
138
213
“84
g| 100
“86
ol
161
0 127
ome STamE 6—India 0 7—8o0. fornia. 14 0—Northwestern 0 42—Chicago ; 32—N
0—Pu 33-7 0
—Tu 26—Kansas State ( 21—Missouri
PENNSYLVANIA 34—Lafayette .. 1Yale ‘0—Princeton . 14 Golumbia
Nav 13—Michigan Yer 7—Penn, State ..%
PENN STATE
33—Maryland .... 0—Bucknell ... 9—Lehigh
ne 5 ..26 7
PITTSBURGH 19—West Virginia .0 28—Temple 6 27—Duquesne .. 26—Wisconsin 4--3
34--8 M. U. . 24—Fordham
7—Pennsylvania 0—Pittsburgh
26—Penn. State.. 0
- PRINCETON
33— Williams vv. 0 Dartmouth . nn .
21—Rice 131 } ® TEX. CHRISTIAN
13—Centenary 2l—Arkansas ...
23%
10=Clemson
Neu, chairman; George Bates, Fred Hoffmark. Standing: William Geckler, Oscar Buehler, Paul Koebeler and Benney Bencdict. Claude Miller, Art Paetz, Frank for. winners will be announced later.
TEMPLE
TENNESSEE
26—Sewanee
Sits 00R2 .
.45—Ch —| 1l4—Vanderbilt . 183
TEXAS
18-RKsnsas State
irre 2 frome) Afkansas
6—So 3—Bay 6-T. C. U.
EL
TEXAS A. & M.
52—Texas A. & M..0 -20—Tulsa
15—Arkansas casas? “Sous, Meth. 10
TULANE
0 12—Ohio ate . 13—Ind. 6
RICE 6—Oklahoma ...
ST. MARY'S T—California ... 0—G -
7—Santa Clara ..
SANTA CLARA 22—sStanford vw. 0 7—Texas A. & M. 9 2T7—Arizona 21—Arkansas .... 7—Michigan 8S. .. 7—San. Fran. U. 0—St, Mary's ..
RN
S80. CALIFORNIA T—Alchama
6—Washington '. 5 juin
SO. aoa
§3—Erskin Ravine (Cin.).0
eorgia 19—Wake Forest. 20 25—Davidson 12—Clemson .. [se 6—Villanova ... 7—Duquesne . +8 27—Furman .....6 0—Fordham ....13 86
SO. METHODIST
3 Delton Tea..." 29—Arizo 1 T—Fittsburen ve T—Tex 10—Tex. | . M. 2 19—Arkansas 1 21—Baylor 6
3
STANFORD 0—=Santa Clara. .22
0—-U. C. L A....6 7—Washington .10 0—Oregon 8. 0—California ...
a
13—Manchester . 19—capital U....
t. 19—Evansville .
“40 WASH.
27—
7—1] 6—1In 0—1 Northwestern i 13 .-1
iT 5
VALPARAISO
0—Ball State ..
0 Olteur boxing tournament is to be 8lheld at the South Side Turner Hall,
3|the Indianapolis sports calendar
{tached and unattached amateur
34 at South Side Turner Hall.
‘64 | competition will be held in all
§ltheir titles and other participants
..13 22 | first time.
Prizes -
Fistic Dates Are Dec. 2,9
Competition to Be Held in All Weight Divisions.
The annual city and county ama-
306 Prospect St., on Dec. 2 and 9, it was announced today by, Frank Neu, chairman of the Turner athletics committee. The event has been a fixture on
for years and is open to all at-
boxers residing in Marion County. Unattached glove tossers are invited to use the training quarters
The tournament is sanctioned by the Indiana-Kentucky A. A. U. and
weight divisions, in both the open and novice classes. Last year’s champions are expected to defend
N et Pickup
4 Gunes on This Week In Strong Prep Conference.
By United Press HE North Central High School Conference swings into its annual basketball fight this week with four games which may point out an early season state favorite. Wednesday night the Kokomo Cats meet Jefferson at Lafayette and Marion's Giants tackle the Anderson Indians on the Judian reservation. Anderson Logansport Friday for its a ‘league battle and the Muncie Bearcats, one of Indiana’s strongest quintets last season, take on the New Castle Trojans. All except Muncie and Anderson have played a warmup comparative scores indicating the “Big Ten” will have evenly matched teams this year. New Castle was the only one to drop its opening scrap. Indianapolis games this week: Wednesday: Cathedral at Tech, Broad Ripple at Wasihngton, Shortridge at Greenfield, Sacred Heart at Clayton. Friday: Cathedral at Lebanon.
Notre Dame Runner Wins
Indiana’s Harriers Capture Team Honors.
EAST LANSING, Mich., Nov. 21 (U.P.) —Gregory Rice of Notre Dame won the National Collegiate cross-country running championship today. His time for the four-
(mile Michigan State College course
was 20 minutes, 12.9 seconds. It was the first cross-country meet sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic. Association. Rice’s time, therefore, became a National Collegiate record. He broke the Central Collegiate meet record and the course record of 20 minutes, 15.7 seconds made by James T. Smith of Indiana in 1937, Indiana won the team championship. - Notre Dame was “second, Drake third, Michigan State fourth, Alfred fifth and Purdue sixth. Members of the Indiana team were Melvin Trutt, Edward Hedges, Harry Robins, Vernon Broertjes and Roger Poorman. Rice led more than 100 runners from 18 universityies and colleges across the finish line. William Fielder of Drake was second and James Whittaker of Ohio State was third. The next nine runners finished in the following order: Melvin Trutt, Indiana; William Smith, Penn State; Richard Frey, Michigan State; William Southworth, Butler; Edgar Hedges, Indiana; Fred Padget, Drake; Steve Szumachowski, Notre Dame; Ford Hess, Western State
a year ago are reported in training to go after the honors.
. The English Avenue Boys’ Club today had retained their lead in
4|the City Independent League by de0| feating the hard- -fighting Holy Cross Crusaders, 6 to 0, at Ellenberger
S| Park yesterday.
7—Wisconsin ...14 17 5
With a minute and a half to play in the second quarter, Harold Kauffman, Boys’ Club right tackle,
3 crashed through to block a Cru-
sader puntfand Bill Bauer, snagged
1 5|it and plunged for a short gain to
place the ball within scoring distance for the Boys’ Club for the Two line plunges failed and an intercepted pass shattered the touchdown drive. Campbell Scores | In the third quarter the English Avenue gridmen staged several effensive drives featured by the running and plunging of Chuck Car-
42| penter, Otes Dobbs and Dave Camp-
0—DePauw
0—Vanderbilt ..20 5—Drake 13
27—Butler 88—McKendree ..
242 94 WASH. (Seattle)
0—Minnesota ... Idah
6—Ore. St. .... T7—California .
10—Stanford ...
—U. 8. C. __0—Washington..
WISCONSIN Marquet os: Ww ww]
1—Iowa . Pittsburg .. 2
6
4 0—Minnesota
1 YALE
Princeton - Harvard ...
—Oolumbla .e = en 21
—Qamerie T 19—Ar 15—Navy 0 19—Minnesota ...0 9—Northwestern
49
Ernie
BARTHEL, The Tailor
MEN’S SUITS, $25 UP SUITS—O’COATS
ALTERATION SPECIALIST
bell. : In one of these slashing attacks the ball was toted to the 11-yard line where Dave Campbell plunged through left guard to score the
¢ only 6 points of the contest. A fake
kick formation failed to score the extra point. " In another league contest at
3 Christian Park the Beech Grove o| Merchants defeated the Shawnee
A. C, 12 to 0, in a bitterly contest ed game. This victory brings Beech Grove into second place in the
20 | league. (St. Louis)
Teachers, and Thomas Quinn, Michigan State Normal.
- ous’ Club Retains Lead | In City Independent Loop
On Thanksgiving Day the Merchants are to play the Holy Cross Crusaders at Christian Park at 2 p. m. This game was originally scheduled early in the season but was postponed. A league meeting is to be held
Wednesday at 8 p. m. The championship . trophies will he on display all this week at the Sportsman’s Store, 126 N. Pennsylvania St.
Red Raiders
Trounce West Siders
The Red Raiders today had defeated the West Side Boys’ Club, 18 to 0, by scoring in the first and third periods of the game yesterday at Pendelton. Bomar, right halfback for the Raiders, rifled a 12-yard forward pass to Walthen, left end, who raced 60 yards for the first touchdown soon after the opening of the game. In the third quarter Stone, left halfback, circled the visitors’ left end and, with Reynolds and Bomar blocking, streaked 60 yards for the second tally. Reynolds went over on a quarter back sneak from thie onevard line to climax a steady 58-yard march for. the third touchdown. None .of the extra point attempts
was good.
HOURS
and 15 minutes
Over a New Route
DAILY—T7:15 A.
Fastest Time!
to CINCINNATI
Shortest Highway Mileage
« EXPRESS BUSES °
Leave Traction Bus Terminal, Illinois & Market Sts.
M.—3:30 P. M.
Local Busses to Cincinnati—Via Aurora and Lawrenceburg at 7:15, 10:00 A. M.; 1:30, 5:45 P. M.
ALL DETOURS REMOVED Over Thanksgiving—The “Every Week-End”
Low Round Trip Excursion Tickets Will Be on Sale Wednesday.
MADISON-
CINCINNATI
AURORA. .$2.50 LAWRENCEBURG, $2.75 OSGOOD. . $2.25 GREENSBURG ... $1.50
at the English Avenue Boys’ Club |
McLemore in
Saw More Footba Football Than in Six Previous Games, Henry Confesses.
By HENRY McLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent
HOUSTON, Tex, Nov. 21.—In six minutes, or in just about the same length of time it takes to
Texas Christian University varsity showed me more football last Saturday afternoon than I had seen in
six entire earlier games. Before I settled down in the press box to watch T. C. U. against Rice I had seen Columbia, Yale, Colgate, Oregon, Fordha Pennsylvania, Navy, Alabama, ! lane, Vanderbilt and Tennessee in action. Columbia had shown me a fine passer in Luckman, Fordham a sizzling attack centering around Eshmont, Alabama a staunch defense, and Tennessee a strong, balanced club without any real weakness. As a matter of fact, when I left Nash-
nessee I had seen the best team in the country, one capable of licking any club. But T. C. U. against Rice changed what passes for my mind and changed it in six minutes—six minutes which saw Horned Frogs make three touchdown marches of sixtythree yards, sixty-eight yards and fifty-two yards, respectively.
Rice Just Helpless
They required but eleven plays in the first drive, seven in the second, and seven in the third. A good, game. Rice team was helpless in the face of the T. C. U. attack, which moved through the air and across the ground with equal facility. The most impressive of the three drives was the second one when, as if to prove that Davey O’Brien’s passing arm was not the entire offense, the Christians went the full distance the hard way, through the line. Not a single pass was loosed in this assault, the backs tucking the ball under their arms and sweeping through holes torn open for them by the big and mobile line. These three touchdown forays followed an opening one that netted a score when the game scarcely was
the ball the Christians moved 56 yards down the field in eight plays, three of them being passes by the sharpshooting O’Brien. T. C. -U. lacked nothing when it was on the march. Blocking was savage and sure, there was speed to spare, both in the line and backfield, and the men handled themselves with cool assurance. There was no hurry, no fuss, no kicking of pants or slapping of backs. They were workmen, doing a job well. This poise is the answer to the team’s success, according to Coach Dutch Meyer.
Perspiration, Not Inspiration
“We discourage inspirational football,” Meyer told me, “and stress poise and the efficient carrying out of assignments. We used to try and key the boys up, but that didn’t work. It once cost us a conference Shamplonsain, in fact. That was the year S. M, U. beat us with what I think was an inferior team. We hopped the boys up for that game and put them under pressure even before they got on the field. As a result, they lost their balance, played with their hearts instead of their heads, so to speak, and were beaten. It was the fault of the coaching staff and we learned our lesson.”
INS MINUT
open your account — install
way in just a few minutes.
boil two three-minute eggs, they
ville a week ago I felt that in Ten-
‘Thoma, g Dame, Carnegie Tech and others, i:
under way. The first time they got|
T. C. U. Dazzles Rice and
Six Minutes;
Texas Plans 2 Bowl Til
Elliott Roosevelt Reveals, Bid to Rival Pasadena ;
Grid Prestige.
FT. WORTH Tex., Nov. 21 (U. —Texas today announced a huge= scale bid for first place in the ane nual football “Bowl” competition,
This bid headed by Elliott Roose= velt, F't, Worth radio executive and son of President Roosevelt, and J. Curtis Sanford, capitalist-prom of the Dallas Cotton Bowl, was € vealed to the United Press by Roose= velt and confirmed by Sanford toe day and involves a series of Even that includes two—count them—t bowI football games within a peri of three days between four out= standing American elevens and other features that would drive Cecil B. De Mille or Billy Rose into fits of jealousy. The program, of course, hinges | on the result of the final game of une defeated Texas Christian Univers sity’s schedule. If the great Horned Frog team emerges from a hard sea= son still undefeated, which appears likely, machinery will be put into motion immediately to carry through. Invitations will be sei/to President Roosevelt, Governors of i all Southern states and to the four outstanding football elevens. Two of the teams will be T. C. uv, and Texas Tech. The other two will be selected -from Tennessee, Oklas= Duke, Pittsburgh, Notre
T. S. U. now ranks second to Notre Dame in the national ratings. Texas Tech, also undefeated, has whizzed like a meteor acrosc {the football
|horizon during the last few years = § and will be the selection to play the
first of the two games—on Saturday preceding New Year's Day—while T. C. U, will be invited to play on Monday following. Both games will be played in the Dallas Cotton Bowl,
ble event to seat between 60,000 and 70,000 fans. y
———————————————————— SUNDAY FOOTBALL RESULTS 2 University of San Francisco, 8; Gone it zaga U.,
St. Benedict, 7: Rockhurst, 0. Scranton, 25; Mt. St. Mary, 3. Louisiana College, 13; (Tex.), 7.
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