Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1939 — Page 6
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Football Articles by Galento is Tribe and Blues Resume Series Battle |
° El mer La den Be in y : Seeking to make a clean sweep Indianapolis fans will see their temper because of the shellack- endeavor to set the pace. They neapolis prevail, action will be- ; 7 Y J in | a 1 ae a S of the first-round playoff series hustling Redskins in action ing the Indians handed them. were never ahead in any of the gin in Kansas City. . over the champion Kansas City against the Blues tomorrow The Tribesters took turns at first three tilts and will be ott If Indianapolis and MinneapTh : | Blues, the Indians will go to afternoon at 2:30. The series dishing out the poison to the to grab the lead in the opener olis survive, the Miller City will e tmes on ; on ay ! bat on their home grounds to- calls for four - best - games in Meyermen. Allen Hunt pounded here. It also will be the closer get the ‘opener, and if Louisville ony oy. night loaded with fighting spirit seven. the leather in all games, Jimmy if the Indians win it, but the meets Kansas City, the finals | and confidence. The Hoosiers are anxious to Adair developed into a slugger Blues refuse to see it that way. will start in Kawtown. | a —— . The Redskins startled the clinch matters tonight and get and a sparkplug, Don Lang Allen Hunt is batting .692 in Tribe Secretary Dale Miller baseball world by taking three it over because they know it's belted two homers in one game the series and Lang is next at today reported a heavy advance
‘Puts Golden Boy Nova in straight in Kawtown, and all dangerous to trifle with a pow- and Myron McCormick was po- 545. Adair is clubbing at an ticket sale for tonight's game y games by decisive margins. They erful team like the Blues. be tent on both attack and de- even .500 and og at at the Stadium. The fans here
HPDEN factors of football that the stands never see —player morale, strategy and alertness—will be discussed by Elmer Layden, Notre Dame football coach, Hospital; Wins Second In crisp, authoritative articles which are to appear three Ti : ' itle Chance. times a week beginning Monday in The Indianapolis
{ i | really hit their stride in all de- Tribe fense. Lang and McCormick 467 fear the Blues in spite of the \ | . pitchers ready for the ols partments and there was noth call tonight are Logan, Don ° got seven hits apiece. Lindsay Brown continues to Tribe's grand slam in Kansas | ing the Blues could do about it. : Hunt smashed out nine hits : ' City. | Bob Logan, Red Barrett and French, John Wilson and Elmer in the three games, including hold up his end while subbing last year’s first - round . Times. Lloyd Johnson pitched without Riddle, i will five doubles and Adair got seven for We Injury Nolen Richard- playoff the Indians won two ouf, : By JACK CUDDY relief while the Kansas City : . blows, including a homer and a of three in Kansas City, then Parents of boys with football hopes, the boys United Press Staff Correspondent hurlers took a pounding, par- Manager Bill Meyer of the triple. The teams will remain at lost three in a row at home to themselves lave 0 . : PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 16.—They| ticularly in the second and third Blues indicated his choice will Tribe casualties on the Kan- Perry Stadium until the series go out of the race. S Pp yers, SA were still singing “Tony, Boy: Tony! tilts. be between Tom Reis and Ernie sas City front were Legrant is completed and Minneapolis The 1939 Indians answer that coach®s and former stars \ Boy” at his headquarters in the _ Manager Wes Griffin of the Bonham, both righthanders. Scott and Hunt. Both were Will remain in Louisville until gepqcle with the statement that and the great army of \ Walton Hotel thi S hen Tribe had his staff at fine edge Bad blood cropped out be- struck by pitched balls and the that one is concluded. The they are a “different ball club J 3 allon - Hole S morning When | ro; the series and comes up to tween the teams in the third former had to leave the third Colonels came home from Min- and with a new spirit!” fans that pack the na- \ Tony Galento headed for Orange, the fourth battle without worry fracas at Kansas City and po- game on account of a bruised neapolis holding an edge of two It's hardly likely that the tion's stadiums will en- y N. J, to begin prolonged training! in that department. lice had to go out on the field arm. Hunt was popped in the to one. Blues will reverse the Redskins bats . or NR behind his tavern bar for another. In the event the Indians win to prevent a free-for-all and eve during the Thursday night The playoff finals will start this time, but baseball still is Joy this unique feature A crack at the world heavyweight again tonight, the series will restore order. brawl and was sporting a shiner immediately after first-round baseball and you never can tell. written bv a man who | h hi tJ . | end and they will stand by until The heat wave, coupled with yesterday. supremacy has been established. Both teams are keyed to a k y } 3 championship next June. | Louisville and Minneapolis con- the heat of battle put the play- With their backs to the wall If Indianapolis and Louisville high pitch and there will be no nows the game from a ! There was revelry at the Walton| clude their playoff. Should ers in a swinging mood, and the Blues probably will he a reach the finals, play will start holds barred while the battle every angle. ; 3 \ Ness lse bi JohyS Yicwry BSE hight Kansas City win tonight, the naturally the Blues were in ugly different ball club tonight and here. If Kansas City and Min- rages, : \ A X TR in Municipa adium, but all was| As fullback of the {\\ * 3 quiet on the Hahnemann Hospital | immortal Four Horse- \ front where young Lou Nova, the!
N . ® NE 'guy Tony ed, had his face men, Layden experienced Fa Stitched together again. ne Riggs, Hunt One to Go the joys of a player A shot." at. ugtliem's Sarid 0) * mes or - chosen All - American. ITTY lerown by upsetting all the laws of Pl F | F Y k After. graduation he ho |nakue. a Oracle. of rane ay na S Gi or an S coached first at Colum. a men by registering a technical | st | PAGE 6 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1939 ren : bia College in his native ‘tarnished “Golden Boy” from the Close Match Predicted for! McCarthy Has Begun to Ask
{knockout over the now slightly lowa d later at Du- | Golden Gate in the 14th round. y owa and later at Du Just Before Refe ree Cal led Halt About Cincy Reds.
quesne University in Coach Elmer Layden A Bloody Brawl Tennis Crown. eran of 12 years in the commercial; FOREST HILLS, N. Y. Sept. | NEW YORK, Sept. 16 (U, P.).
| : : i uy | Pittsburgh. He was hired as athletic director and -| Galento, 29, a battle-scarred vet- | head football coach of his alma mater in December, ring, again became the world's No.! 1§ (U. P.) —Helen Jacobs of a : One to go and the Yanks are home.
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~ : : ta Neds ’ 1 challenger and won the right to! 1935, and since that time his Notre Dame teams have We onge ola i Ss day] Berkeley, Cal, defeated Kay If the Yanks win today or the Red
won 35 games, lost nine and tied three. night's Louis-Pastor title tilt at De. |! Stammers of England, 7-5, 6-0, (Sox lose, the Bronx Bombers will troit by triumphing with ease over| © Sain the final round of the | - be champions of the American
v | mational tennis’ women's singles 24-year-old Nova in one of the] championship today. 8 League for the fourth consecutive where. — season—a feat never before accom=
HE 1938 season when the Fighting Irish won eight |most bloody brawls ever staged any-| | ; games and bowed only to Southern California was The crowd and the gate were dis- | C mel gr & : i Ne plished in the junior circuit. Notre Dame's most successful since the death of the ae antes. Nhe | among that select group of players | : : Sah 1X 8-zame dead pnd a late Knute Rockne in 1931. In recognition of this estimated that the gross gate was | Who Lave WR ite Al) mngiend au | X Yanks can get isa tie. To do that i ion's ; | approximately $59,600 and that the , ; ’" hs ; the Yanks would have to lose 18 accomplishment the nation's fans elected Layden head [cash customers numbered about Bobby Riggs of Chicago took on Joe | B straight and the Red Sox win 18 coach of the 1939 College All-Star team, which was de- 18,000. But the battle itself sur- Sunt Ving a te Faure termi ‘ ; in a row. Fine chance, huh? ' Now Vark (Gants. nrabesss : i passed expectations. | oud natch: of Ye al) With the pennant clinching only feated by the New York Giants, professional champions, Those who went to the huge tennis singles championship. | ra : X 2 matic oF NARHY Sm ae hl at Chicago last month. stadium where Dempsey and Tun- Victor Bt Wimbledon in Sune: but 3 ; a ; | McCarthy gave some thought today y p “ "will By ney first tangled in 1926 saw ancient needing the American e lo es- : o to the World Series. He ex cts The Layden [feature “In The Huddle” will appear 70 = oo dissipated Galento tablish his claim to No. 1 ranking & : ; : : the Reds to win the National im exclusively in this area in The Times, and will be car- |a 3-1 underdog in the betting batter among the amateurs of the world, LF flag and face the vouthful lean-livi N into| Riggs figures to have a strenuous : i : i : € the Yanks in the “ YOY ; ' & . 3 riday youthful, clean-living ova into Riggs ! A stre | 8 ; opening game at Yankee Stadium ried every Monday, Wednesday and Friday throughout such a helpless hulk that Referee time with the slugging midshipman 3 ; Oct. yg ’ Shan, the season. George Blake halted the fight at from Annapolis. & 2:44 minutes of the 14th. Slow to find his game this ; : That Walters Sinker And this wasn't soon enough for season, Hunt right now is playing 3 "4 \ McCarthy has begun to ask queshundreds of fans who had been the best tennis of his life. EE : : tions about the Reds, particularly chouting from the fifth round on,| Riggs and Hunt have met twice, RS 3 SN about Bucky Walters. He had been . “stop that fight; stop that fight!” this year. The first time, at South- | ; Bois NE ® £33 unreliably informed that Walters | Left Hooks Connect ampton, Riggs won after a hard | RR x 3 S threw a high hard one. The fact B k ddie Ash : fight. Later, in a Davis Cup tryout : 3 " a is Walters is strictly a sinker-ball They were shouting because Ga- at Annapolis, Hunt licked the little! : 3 Bi pitcher—and sinker-ball pitchers lento gashed Lou's right brow in the Chicagoan in four sets. Theirs | & 3 i HE : fe. have been known to bother the third round with his smashing left should be an interesting match to, } g a EE CEN ONS" Yanks more than somewhat. hooks—gashed his left brow and watch, : | RS : : The Yanks came out of their Q NG G Y ) : CHIEFS mouth in the fourth—floored him | The other semifinal match in the : : RE three-game losing slump yesterday STRONG GROUP OF GRID S four times and caused him to slip to, men’s division pits John Bromwich, | 3 by bumping the Tigers, 10-3, while N & INI the canvas two more times. Hand-'the Australian Davis Cup star, | Steve Sundra copped his 10th BIG TEN SCHOOLS FORTUNATE some Lou was a blood-smeared, against Welby Van Horn, Califor-| Re x straight victory. Joe Gordon had punching bag. And after Tony suf- nia's latest kid sensation. = Pr 3 11 assists to tie the major league fered cuts under his lower lip and| Van Horn, who is making his first | i : : record jor > Second baseman. NE n st coachi ineups in the country under his chin, the encounter real appearance in the nationals (he : eveland helped the Yanks’ cause NE of the strongest coa hing | PX : *’ lreached the ultimate in gore. | was knocked off by Don Budge in| |by blasting out two three-run rallies with each head coach having served in college football | Nova was a worse mess when|20 minutes in a first round match | : = Ib : hie Sign and ninth to lick the on , SAP n M3 | Referee Blake lifted Galento’s hand, last year) is the talk of the tour-| : = : OX, 7-1. Bob Johnson’s homer S, W S » : : ; onal) GVErasc of more than 18 yenls, ¥ ill be seeking the {than Tony was that night last June|nament. Not since Ellsworth Vines] With two mates on base in the first Western Conference gridiron title this fall. when Champion Louis knocked him was around knocking the cover off | ning enabled Lis Silizletics 3 nose , . S ar S : out in the fourth round. It was all! the ball has anybody given such an] X, 3=2. The Browns Although four of the coaches are graduate of Big Tony's battle from the opening gong. | exhibition of controlled power as| heat, the Senators, 9-5, aided by six Ten schools and three others are graduates of Notre |He forced the fighting throughout Welby did in polishing oft Wayne | ashington errors, Dame, closely allied with Western Conferen¢e schools in [2nd landed the most damaging Sabin yesterday. He isn't favored Reds in Split 4 . blows, winning every round except! over the experienced Australian, but : ; Times-Acme Photo. | TH ei : : the development of football schedules through the years, [the 10th on the United Press score he is certain to give him a whale of Tony Galento gave Lou Nova a terrific licking in their scheduled 15-round bout at Philgdelviia Just oh he Cincinnati Beds Go a Jou “OY "Oa e , , TT ; | sheet. a fight. | night, winning the decision on a technical knockout when Referee Blake stopped the fight after Galento ha {DLE : e ew or the backgrounds of the 10 coaches represent training in | Blake said: “I stopped the fight] The woman finalists will be de- floored Nova several times. Nova is shown on one knee just before the fight was halted in the 14th. |Glants, taking the opener, 10-6, but almost every coaching system and every section of the country where | because I was afraid that those cuts cided today with Alice Marble de- —— — - a —————————————— at td ed Sa tet terest ———— 10SINE the nightcap, called at the
different styles of play prevail. on Nova's ri y i i i : i iva | . | | : s right eye might blind him | fending champion, engaging Vir-| ® | . Iveac i vt Veteran of the Conference coaches is Bob Zuppke. in his 27th sermanently.” Blake was brought ginia Wolfenden. and Helen Jacobs W dd ( 4 { ] / d B P ness, 4-3. The split pared the Reds year at Illinois. . . . A graduate of Wisconsin in 1905 and a high i" : : nlx : al ains - PD ea | ue re \ al S National League lead to 3's games
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Watch for the first one Monday.
(end of the seventh because of dark{here from Los Angeles because four times winner of the title, play- i
Se < i i Ww . ti . . {as the runner- is school coach until 1913. Zuppke at Illinois either won or tied for the 'Nova's manager, Ray Carlen, had ing Kav Stammers, English south- ie oD St Louis Cardinale
Biz Ten title on an average of one vear in three until 1934. 5 yaw, | . B 11 no J an hr an Continued on Page pan On Billows at 18 Holes Over Brazil imi esi wn:
ERNIE BIERMAN returned to his alma mater, Minnesota. in 1932 ees the winning run. Hank Lieber hit his fifth homer
\ after successful years at Mississippi A. & M. and Tulane to Times Special ; / establish one of the most imposing records in the history of Confer- Baseball at a Glance GLENVIEW, Ill, Sept. 16 (U. P.).|losing seven of them—and never re- big Ind. Sept. 16.—Short Fd many i we Ohiesan 3 Z1L, + Sept. yam - h he adelphia
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ence football with his seven Gopher teams and four titles —Marvin (Bud) Ward of Spokane, covered. Biilows’ expert work on| : D8 Bierman ranks second to Zuppke in Big Ten service but in vears | | Wash. shot another masterful back the greens almost was overlooked in ridge Hig'n School of Indianapolis |Phillies. The Phils won the first, of coaching service he ranks third behind Ohio State's Francis nine’ today and went 4 up on Ray the constant querying about what today had posted its first football |9-6, and the Cubs the second, 6-1. Schmidt, who joined the Buckeyes in 1933 after graduating from NATIONAL LEAGUE 1 (Second Game: 3 Innings: Darkness) | Billows or Poughkeepsie, N. Y.. half | Was the matter with Schumacher. | itary of the season at the ex. |. Brooklyn strengthened its hold on Nebraska in 1913 and coaching thereafter with exceptional success at 3 G8. New Yoru ever HU U2E Jou df 8 3 EL IOWS } a le match for Schumacher went out in 42 on > of ‘ fourth place by defeating Pittsburgh, Kendall, Tulsa, Arkansas and Texas Christian. nen il 2. Schumacher. Melton and Hayworth: 1. | ov through their 3 or Wi : his first round—six over par. He Pense of Brazil, and the Blue and|4-2, in 10 innings. Lavagetto’s doua . . | Moore, H. Johnson and Hershberger, Lom- the U. S. Amateur golf champion- couldn't putt and he couldn't ap- (White gridders accomplished this! ble and Walker's single drove in the Shaugnessy a Gopher Graduate J io Inning | ese two former Walker Cup | Proach. feat while the thermometer yester- 'WO Winning runs in the 10th. JR ETusiNG to the Big Ten in 1933, too. was Clark Shaughnessy. a 3 Rrookiyn ... Te A il Sue 49 players put on an exhibition of eee De Sonis Hourh day hovered around the 100-degree o a Minnesota graduate of 1917 who had coached at Tulane and mn Pittsburgh 100 €O1 000 8— 2 3% 2 putting yesterday that by noon left : - : en a1: i mark 3 . : bua oo « RSCAN & I REEL Hollingsworth, Hutchins A Hartje: Lan Auth, heey , : |cluded defending Champion Willie . d 8 ng Fi Berafie Thicelns Sod CORCh Jot he Succeed | Gigi ws i G.B Butcher. Sewell and Berres. Musiler. Re Gouby Wiiieh 5 he Semi-final | rumen, Melvin (Chick) Harbert| Despite the boiling temperatures, veryt Ing ca y . A. Stage. : : va x Bh (11 Innings) ‘four would play for ) . | c i . | SAYA : A. N. (Bo) McMillan, famed as an all-American quarterback with [eR Pali " 18 | Roston 000 000 000 000 M0— A 11 #0 Ward, 26, an ex-caddy who lost | Of Battle Orsek.. Mich, pid Rinses both teams were in good condition Fo C C: T the Centre College "Praying Colonels” in 1919, came to Indiana in |Chicaze Yor: Sirurner. Lanning rma Le M1 ola tie and possibly a victory in the | Britbh Amateur Champion Char- and the contest was played with r Lu. Ul ourney 1934 after successes at Centenary, Geneva and Kansas State. | Re ron re 331 man, McGee, Shoun. Warneke and Padgett. U. S. Open when his ball struck a oy Bigy ictories Showed hi wisopusingly few ‘meouts. The Lynn Waldorf, a graduate of Syracuse in 1925 and later line coach | DATINSIOR -coxnes + dell AMERICAN LEAGUE [spectator just six holes from home, | is ad ve DES Eg He 10% | Shortridge margin of victory was Arrangements have been coms at Kansas and head coach at Oklahoma City. Oklahoma A. & M. and | St. Lens Cond 58 | Chicaro 00 100 000 2 s 1/had 16 one-putt greens in 35 holes ugh is at m play. | to 6. pleted for the Columbia Club's anKansas State, made his debut at Northwestern in 1935 and the fol- | | Philadelphia 300 000 00x— 3 3 2|a5 he defeated Art Doering of Chi-|fsaind Eddie Wim of Bd SE It was a case yesterday afternoon nual golf championship, which will lowing year Harry Stuhldreher, immortalized as one of Notre Dame's | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Pravorr | Dietrich C. Brown and Tresh: Nelson | ago after the grandest match of Bok up mn ¢ oles, Tous 8 r : of Shortridge taking a lead, and pe staged Tuesday at the Broade “Four Horsemen” and a 1925 graduate, went to Wisconsin after a bril- | wtananolis Y x 17006! s¢ - 01 123 020— 9 13 o the tournament, 2 and 1. > ink of Bir hE hag oe nS Brazil ey being aie shle Wo moor Country Club. liant record as coach at Villanova. Ry lan ; 3 000 | Washinet 08 101—3 3 ¢ uth sharpshooter reeled off| > ° Hi catchi up. On the first play of the| At a joint meeting of the handiatans oy ' |p Remnedr: Mills and Harshany: Krakaus: | The you i Wo par of North es Joung Hp} 22 qecane period Maynard, Shortridge | cap Ota rol towne * S, s. { ng , ’ | WARD. a Notre D ; . . Minneapolis .. eae 2 383 pricton and Evans |Shore Country Club's long course | ISO - arlo, SHE a Otel halipack guliopes for 18 Jards for| committee yesterday, handicaps for MAL EL , 8 Notre Dame graduate in 1918 and former head Se———— | Batond ........... 100 008 833— 313 1_and went two up at the end 5 ar » A tone Sowa, Although Allerdice’s 31) members were set and they will coach at Grinnell and John Carroll, succeeded Noble Kizer as YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Huglin and Hemsley. Ovrmniier. Wil' (of the first round. Biliows’ road’ to ithe: Anal also) tit eS blocked, Stauber picked up| pe announced at a buffet supper to Purdue coach after spending 12 years as an assistant on the Boil- AMERICAN ASSOCIATIGN PLAYOFF Son. Lefebvre and Desanutels. "| He grew wild with his long irons | di or Ee op Toe 1e loose ball to cross the line for he held Monday night at the club, ermaker staff. No games selheduled. ...... 10 010 001— 3 8 #/in the afternoon, but once Doer-| "as diilicull. Te beat I CCl) the conversion. .. | The buffet supper, free to all meme In his second year as head coach at Michigan, H. O. (Fritz) NATIONAL LEAGUE New : D3 030 2Ax—10 13 1 ino had squared the match on the | °f West Orange, N. J, 4 and 3,| Before the quarter ended, Brazil | hers is being held: 10 Inake are Crisler is a familiar figure in the Conference, having served eight (First Game) | Parsons: Sendra and Dickey "0 TeOPEUS. oth green, Ward buckled down and | defeated Henry Kowal of Indian-|gained 15 yards on a triple lateral rangements for a “Calcutta” sweepyears under Stagg after graduating from Chicago in 1922. and tWO | philadelphia . 106 020 000— 9 12 ® ——— 'added two more one-putt greens | 2Polis, 4 and 2. eliminated Former pass, going down to the Shortridge iares to be staged in connection years at Minnesota. . . . Crisler came to Michigan from Princeton after Chicaze &vi vein Yat GAMES TODAY [to go two up on the 34th They | LiliorCoVeglate Rosmpion Join Ps one-yard line. Schultz bucked the |yiih the tournament six seasons in the East. Dean, J. Russell, Lillard, Olsen and Hart: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAVOFF {halv i . vir q Burke of Rye, N. Y, 2 and 1, and ball across, But the conversion | re rev eed sama ea Rue, Lilyrd, Vise aia Kansas City at Indianapolis. night game, halved the Tn ours giving Bud | crushed C. Ross Somerville, Lon- failed, making the score at the half,| .. , "no. x wx = : (Second Same vA Minneapolis at Louisville, night zame. | Billows, 25. a printing salesman 900. Ont. 6 and 5. Somerville, who Shortridge, 7; Brazil, 6, and this Links Stars Stage RESHMAN in the Conference is Eddie Anderson. Iowa's new | Phatieinnia >vavnes BIG RUG B00 1 3 } News NATIONAL LEAGUE who was runner-up to Johnny VoD the championship in 1932, was was the closest Brazil came to closcoach. . . . A Notre Dame graduate of 1022, Anderson served at Kerksieck and Warren: Page, Passean pot 1 OTE 3% Ce imatl, Goodman in the 1637 U. S. Amateur °P® of the reigning favorites. |ing the gap. : oo wh Best Ball Contest Columbia College, De Paul, and came to the Big Ten after an im- |*"® Mancuse. Breskiyh at Pittsburgh. at Portland, Ore. entered’ the finals | Tr ———————————— After a Brazil drive in the third | pressive record at Holy Cross. (First Game) Ysdelpitia at Chieaze. again by whipping Don Schumach- » quarter fell short on the Short-|,. Sutcint While Big Ten schools have taken their eoaches with training |New Vork . -+.. 900 A24 Go0-. 8 9 9 it aMMERICAN LEAGUE let Dallas, Tex., 6 and 5 Day S Rest Is ridge 21-yard linc, Bob Nippers ANDERSON, Ind i t= of the country, they also have ibuted jr STRcinual i | Ditrait at New York. I~ we trod yh |charges launched a counter attack, | SON, Ind., Sept. 16.—Horin many Peru C country, rs ave contributed their | yJohrman, Solve, Gorman and Danning Cleveland Mlomston. | The Texas State champion folded | ‘: -. the feature { which was Williams’ | ton Smith, Oak Park, Ill, and Ss i i Me . xs N n - : | y JAS S| 1 , : y 3 former coaches and graduates to positions of dominance in American [SARGSY Tee Som Bp MT SYCMe aL el {completely on the first nine holes— (ziven Champion 54-yard pity to the Red Devils'| Henry Kowal, Indianapolis, state | . . : [amateur champion, were to play ie wn seven-yard line. Shedron smashed | ]
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» » x v » Wn ° ° . an: p Jimmy Thomson, Shawnee, Pa., and £5 NORTHVILLE, Mich. Sept. 16 across for the score, and Maynard . ’ , Pa, VERY time the Reds win they come just that much closer tn M 1, E pl D UY E PD { J, (U. P.).—Champion Joe Louis was skirted right end for the extra Johnny Vaughn, Anderson, in an E clinching Cincinnati's first pennant in 20 years. . . . The National | C émore WX, ans zz X, er in > ordered. to rest Ipion to permit com- | point. | exhibition 18-hole best ball match league flag has resolved itself into a race against time. with the {plete cure ofa slight cold he con-| In the last perind long gains by | ab the Anderson Country Club this
: : : : 3 ° * : . ett’ ‘ing | afternoon. Cardinals fighting two enemies instead of one—the Reds and the F d ‘O EE WwW { d S t |tracted earlier this week. ‘Maynard set up Trockett's scoring? schedule, ln S an u in a r 0 e Uys em Sparring sessions have been plunge from the three-yard line.
Furthermore, the Reds figure to march on steadily now that they | scheduled for tomorrow and Mon-
» are within the familiar and friendly confines of Croslev Field. where day, however, preparatory to Louis’ | 1 they have won two-thirds of all their games. By HENRY M'LEMORE |Cordell Hull have to use cipher to!I predicted (between the lines). AAT, Jrep bout with Bob Indians at Bat— s The Reds have 20 games to play, the Cardinals 18. . . . They meet United Press Staff Correspondent get across their stuff. | Galento is a misunderstood genius. Pastor in Detroit Sept. 20. Before ! in one more series, a four-gamer at the Queen City. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 16.—Well,| Throughout my message my Just as Columbus was never appre- ringtime, Louis intends to lose four
you folks must be ich today, riding h1'S DADeT” 0 to spenk—T weed ciated: just us Lora Byron wus C1" She"Sos unas he weishes ve | easors svar
Re \ : | M emphis Outfielder | Football Scores around in Rolls-Royces, planning Galento. This is, to outwit the cen- | passed by, and just as Henry Mec-|terday: AB H 2b 3h HR RBI I | 43 1500
k | opps | HIGH SCHOOLS your winters in Palm Beach, order-|sors who now study all my copy for|Lemore (hear! hear!) is derided] BRIGHTON, Mich. Sept. 16 (U. r Bought by Phillies Shortridge. 20: Brazil, 6 ing new rugs for your shooting hidden meanings, I reversed the two|occasionally, Galento’s qualities P.).—Bob Pastor, EL with ini ———————. cat) lodge, and matriculating the twins | fohters. were held up to scorn. The box- tensive training for his fight with |
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A Southport at Tech (canceled because f | Noblesville, 13. Warren Central, 0. at Groton. N i 1d 1 - |" Re te, 3 : : aturally, I made no mention of (ing world was reluctant to rec t. 20, planned light Ji gr Dy | North! So. FE Warner 38: Wabash, 12. | If you are not filthy rich it's ta After all, if you explain your ognize his talents. But from the uly oor the a gy ; _ unced the purchase of Outfield | Ries (South Bans) jown fault, because I certainly code, you haven't any code. Of moment I first laid eyes on him, in will move to Detroit Tuesday to rest announe md loi tipped you off on a short cut to | course, most of you understood this, | the process of having his third chin until the bout er Huber | parker (Chicago). 6: Michigan City. 0. wealth. Only three days ago, in a but there will be a few moronic, lifted, I maintained stoutly that .
i . - | Parker (Chilage), 6; Michi . 0. the Southern Association. The pur | Rushville, 11: Columbus. gl Ry.
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r : column which is now being given |j t. ili t d kicked-in-|there was a man. P. S. If it wasn't ss . losed. 11: : ( gnorant, terate, an C I as i Ry batted 316, Brosrson, ii. Eiweed. 6. serious consideration by the Pulitz- | the-head-by-a. Rorse-atoar - early-|a hippopotamus. Add Superstitions
Muncie, 24; New Castle, er committee, I advised every one age readers who took me literally. But why am I wasting my time| CHICAGO, Sept. 18 (NEA).—Tot! \
i Ss, S 22 bases and | - : . b 1 in aut tues, Sale ases and | non dlaomAcid. 0. of you to bet, and heavily, on Tony, Even as I write this some of my| writing a story about a fight be- Presnell, Brooklyn knuckleballer, |
Whitine. 31: Sullivan, 3. Galento to beat Lou Nova. (readers are breaking away from | tween these two men? Heaven knows, refers to receive the ball from the | po Roosevelt (East Chicago). 12: Hammond | I don’t remember my exact word- their keepers, shaking off their I must have made all the money in Prue infielder at the start of each | P AID ry) Silace (Gary). 44: Rabart, . [Would stop Nova in 14 rounds, after goose quill pens to fire letters at|Galento victory I walked into Phila- | GREEN. VERS { Emerson (Gary), 26; Memorial (E i i i M ’ He Week Days Twelve members of a Japanese Emerse + 2; ‘0 (Bvans- in earlier rounds, and cutting him |the sun: inquiring why my office) the mint. Money dripped off my ELINED en’s . $1.00 Saturdays. Sundays Jlolidays track and field team. whose Euro- La Porie, 18: Pere. 0. very badly. pays me for such tripe; how much | person (editor's note: person is Mc-| EPAIRED And i ER ny will compete as special guests of | Rellins, 23: Erskine. In war time like this, a man would week. Martin J. Person: address: dead | EFITTED Clothes Two play for the orice of one the New York Athletic Club at the " riiana Tech. 32: Arkansas A. "a he foolish to express an opinion in But we'll pass lightly over that letter office. Washington, single. 26.1 L r 0 ¥ TAILORING CO. Telephone Belmont 3570 for
ech, 0. a Japanese I n Meet Joliet cM) Catholic, 12; Froebel ing, but I believe I said Galento straightjackets, and grasping their {the world on this fight. Sure of a inning. | Pay as You Play NEW YORK, Sept. 16 (U. P.).—| Huntington. 34: Pivmouth. 13 knocking him down several times me, calling me everything under delphia looking like a fugitive from | ‘ | pean tour was cut short hy war.| Clinten, 3%; Py. Of course, all of this was in code. the Nova organization gives me a, Lemore's secretary; full name: Women’s | | Monday and Thursday N. Y. A. C. meet on Travers Island’ PROFESSIONAL, plain English. Even President feeble-minded minority, and tell| white, eligible, wearing purple 235 MASS. AVE. | Playing Reservations
today. Chicago Bears, 30; Cleveland. 21. Roosevelt and Secretary of State you of the fight. It was exactly as| trunks).
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