Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1939 — Page 12

mE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES °

= MONDAY, NOV. 13, 108

Scrappy Litt le Towa | Sarid Is Newest Menace in Big Ten |

By Eddie Ash

THERE WAS a big turnover in college football Sat--urday and many experts were plowed under to save ‘em for another day. At any rate it was nice to see so many underdogs lash back on the gridiron just to make it tougher for the prognosticators during the waning weeks of the

season. An expert doesn’t feel right unless he’s confronted with Gridirons of Wrath, mainly because he realizes the public at large expects him to fall apart every week. Your correspondent was having a bad day when the sun went down in this area Saturday but after the South and Far West quit bouncing the ball around he emerged

with a batting average of .742 for the week-end. . . . The

record for 69 games was 49 hits, 17 misses and three ties. . . . The department’s percentage for the season on leading games is .T41. Probably the biggest upset was St. Anselm’s lopsided victory over Catholic TU. ./ The score was 39 to 13. . Catholic had not lost a game in six starts and had beaten good teams such as Detroit, Miami Fla., and Tulsa. The Hoosier State now has just one undefeated and untied eleven and Manchester is it, with only Ball State remaining on its schedule. . . . Butler finished undefeated with one tie against it by Washington U.

Notre Dame Generous, Kinnick Does Rest

NOTRE DAME was removed from undefeated, untied class as Towa, the team of destiny, completed the rout of the Hoosier Big Three and in one, two, three order, Indiana, Purdue and the Irish . by the margin of three points over the Crimson (32-29), by four points over the Boilermakers (4 to 1), and by one point over Notre Dame (7 to 6). ... a total margin of eight points. Monday quarterbacks and all other quarterbacks probably will second guess aplenty on the Notre Dame defeat. . It was a blunder, no doubt, by Quarterback Sitko that paved “the way for the Iowa touchdown. He is supposed to have tried a lateral only yards from his own goal line and lost the pigskin to the Hawks who immediately let Nile Kinnick take charge. . . . He made the touchdown and then booted the extra point. . . . Late in the game Zontini of Notre Dame missed a conversion after souckRiowyy: and it was curtains for the Irish. : yy 8 8 2 2 = ACCORDING TO Ed Burns, Chicago Tribune, who watched the thriller, Coach Layden put in this way: “I've remarked before that the Notre Dame football team is the greatest charitable institution ° anywhere, and it was provel again today. However, we've won a couple by one point, and a few other close ones from time to time, and it’s no disgrace to lose a close one to a fine team like Iowa's.” Sitko intercepted an Iowa pass in his own end zone and ran it out instead of touching the ball to the ground for a touchback, which would have given the Irish the ball 20 yards out and with time for the half about completed. But mistakes happen in all branches of sports and business, too, and that’s that. . . . Notre Dame has two more tilts, both at home, Northwestern this week and Southern California -on Nov. 25.

Nine Rahs for Purdue—And Butler, Too

BULLY FOR Old Purdue and Bully for Butler’s Bulldogs. . . After a troublesome early season the Bailermakers snapped out of it and toppled Northwestern, 3to 0, on Fred Montague’s field goal. The Wildcats were tougher than leather but the Purdue boys had tired of losing close ones and halted several menacing Northwest ern drives. Purdue has two games to go. both away, at Wisconsin this week, at Indiana on Nov. 25. . Purdue’s point record is one for the book, 42 points scored to 40 for opponents, winning two tilts, losing three, tieing one. . . . An Indiana alumnus probably will grumble about this situation and say, “Yeah, they're saving up for us.” 8 8 _»n ® = = PACED BY Tom Harding the Butler Bulldogs turned the tables on Western State at Kalamazoo and won, 12 to 0. . . . Indianapolis is proud of the Bulldogs’ record of seven victories and a tie. . . . Harding scored orfe touchdown, Bob Roberts the other, against Western, who won last year, 13 to 0. Undefeated in Indiana Conference competition, Butler is sure of a share in the title, and maybe an undisputed crown, if Ball State trips Monchester. » » 2 ” ” ”

INDIANA PUT up a stubborn fight in New York and made the Fordham Rams earn a 13-to-0 victory the hard way. . . . Leonard Eshmont was too elusive for thg Hoosiers and his running game paced Fordham's attack which produced touchdowns in the second and third quarters. At one time the hard-fighting Hoosiers reached the Rams’ 4-yard line before losing the leather on downs. . . . A T4-yard touchdown galloped by Eshmont highlighted the game. . . . Indiana has two to go, against Michigan State and Purdue,

DePauw Chalks Up Third Straight

HOW THAT DePauw has come back. . . . Earlier in the season Evansville and the Tigers played a scoreless deadlock. . . . Then Earlham downed Evansville, 13 to 0. . . . But on Saturday, DePauw swamped Earlham, 48 to 6. . . . It’s funning how things add up! DePauw now has won three straight after lcsing three and tieing one. . . . Wabash is next and last on their card, this. week at Crawfordsville. Undefeated Manchester blanked Franklin, 33 to 0, and Capt. Hank Licberum tallied two touchdowns and boosted his total points for the season to 102. . Liebrum took it easy and seldom carried the ball from scrimmage. .. . He's saving up for Ball State, last on the docket. . Manchester has won 25 out of its last 26 home games, ‘which is some sort of a record. 4 ¥ = 2 ” 2 2

FRANKLIN HOLDS the dubious distinction of going to the post seven times and losing em all. . Points scored, seven; points by Opponents, 174. . . . Cheerio, Grizzlies, only one to go, against Evansville In other games involving Hoosier elevens Saturday Rose Poly thumped ,Hanover, 18 to 6; Lake Forest swamped Wabash, 39 to 0; . Ball State defeated Valparaiso, 16 to 7, and Lawrence Tech, Detroit, downed Indiana State, 20 to 13. Of the. State schools, Butler, Earlham and Central Normal have completed the season.

Minnesota Next Foe Of Hawks

If Anderson's Bi Boys Lose . That One Ohio State Is Virtually In.

By STEVE SNIDER United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Nov. “13.—There’s a new menace in the Big Ten today— Iowa's amazing little band of iron men, who drove mighty Notre Dame from the list of the nation’s undefeated, untied elevens. The question now is: How long can they hold. out using only a handful of players a week?

It may be answered Saturday when Minnesota, definitely on the upgrade as it routed Michigan, 20 to 7, invades Iowa City. One more defeat for the stubborn Hawkeyes will leave Ohio State almost clear sailing to the conference championship. Purdue Meets Wisconsin

Rolling up its fourth victory of the Big Ten season against Chicago, 61 to 0, Ohio State runs into that tough Illinois defense this

| week, while Purdue is playing Wis-

consin in the only other league game. Northwestern, eliminated from championship contention along with Michigan, plays at Notre Dame, Michigan invades Pennsylvania, Indiana plays at Michigan State and Oberlin tackles Chicago on the Midway. Towa must retain the razor sharpness that produced victory over Notre Dame to down Minnesota. Physically, the Hawks apparently are ready for another severe test. Dr. Eddie Anderson employed only 15 men against Purdue and 15 against the Irish but scattered bumps and bruises are about the only marks on the scrappy little squad. Counted out of the race before it started, Iowa upset Indiana, 32 to 29, lost to Michigan, then defeated Wisconsin and Purdue for its best Big Ten season in a decade.

Wildcat Attack Stalled

Climaxing this unexpected record was Saturday’s upset of the Irish, who had won six in a row and were being hailed as the best Notre Dame team since Rockne. A fumble on his own 4-yard line by quarterback Steve Sitko led to the Iowa touchdown and when Lou Zontini failed to match Nile Kinnick’s point after touchdown the Irish fell, 7 to 6. Minnesota completely outplayed Michigan, permitting a touchdown only after piling up a 20-point lead. Northwestern outplayed Purdue, too, but the Boilermakers stalled Northwestern’s heavy attack on six occasions and pulled out their first Conference victory, 3 to 0, on Fred Montague’s fourth-period placement. : Nordine defeated Indiana, 0 An 82-yard run by sophomore Jimmy Smith, who broke clear after failing to spot a receiver for his forward pass, gave Illinois its second in a row, 7 tc 0

Holland Mtnen On Armory Bill

By obtaining opponents for the Schnable brothers, from Holland, Matchmaker Lloyd Carter has completed his wrestling card for tomorrow night at the Armory. Hans Schnable, 231, will tackle Henry Olsen, 229, Duluth, Minn., in the semi-windup, while Fritz Schnable, 235, will go against Angelo Cistoldi, 229, Boston Italian, in the opener. The Schnable brothers, making their initial Armory appearances, are publicized as the “Flying Dutchmen.” Danno O’Mahoney, 228, Ireland, appears locally for the first time in a year, when he battles Juan Humberto, 226, “meanie” performer out of Mexico City, in the feature tussle. The “Irish whip” specialist is a former champ and is listed as the only grappler to gain a verdict over Jim Londos since 1930. Juan is unbeaten here in five encounters and has draw decisions in other

13

places with Louis Thesz and Everett Marshall. 3

FOOTBALL RESULTS

STATE COLLEGES Butler, 13; Western State, (M utler, 12; Western fae: ( ich. DePauw, 48; Earlham, 6. by 0 Fordham, id Indiana, 0. Jowa, 7; Notre Dame, 6. Lake Forest, "30; Wabash, Lawrence Tech, 20; Tndisna Stole. 13. Manchester, 33; Frankl Purdue, 3; NOT a 0 Rose Poly, 18; Hanover, 6.

HIGH. SCHOOLS we aial (h. Wayne), 28; South Side (Ft.

53;

Fresno State, 27; Portland, 13. Franklin-Marshall, 21; Gettysburg,

(tie). Furman, 20; South Darul, 0. Bethan

Geneva, 37: h Georgetown, 20; Maryland, 0 Georgia, 6; Florida, Georgia Tech, 13; mucky. 6. 23: Montana,

Hampden Sra 14; ivoffor

S Harvard, 15: Army, 0. Haverford, 0; Hamilton, 0 Hiram, 26: Clarion. Holy Cross, 14: Temple. 0. Hobart, 20: Buffal Idaho Southern, 13: College of Idaho, 6 Illinois, 7: Wisconsin, 0.

emorial (Evansville), {fies (Evansville), Sulliv 18; Linton

rCoa non, 26; Biekneli, . iley (Terre Haute), 8; ~ (Terre Haute), 0.

Central

Gerstmeyer

nels, Teac Chers . in = OTHER COLLEGES Indlana Vesiey TL : i . 5 eachers 46; Dickinson, 14. Kolo¥d State Teachers,

14;

State, 22; Tennessee J. C., Tech, 46; Convondin (Minn. 3

* Assumption, 26; Bluffton, 12.. Agbura, 10; } yillan Oya % ech a win- Wall lace, ig ee Oa Macalester, 21: Eau Clair

ro! Manhattan, 19; West Virginia, % Bakr aa 3 Wesleyan, i (tie). Marquet je. 5 Iowa State, 2.

Marshall, Tole do, 12. oat, 29; Rl wh v.. 0. McPherso. Hs “ outhwestern (K

bi oo Chlleze. 20; Det rot, 15. LS aukee ine on U., cinna Bowling Green, O.,. 7; Findlay, 7 (tie). “Minnesota, 20. Michi Bradley Tech. 18; Washington and Jef-

Jerson, Viah State, 0 (tie).

: e, : Canisius, 3. U., 18: Louisville Municipal, ¢ Louisiana | Normal, 19: Murr Maine. 12: Bowdoin. 6.

State Teacher

0. Brigham Jofing, 0 Brown Yale, i Capreal, 2%: JOtierbe ig o Case, 5 Ee 6. Centen x Texas Tech, 0 (tie). Central I (Mich) Teachers, 33; Wayne, 6.

r ! i: Ohio, Northern, 0, C: [ 1 Chattanooga, 13; Birmingham Saath, q { Col (

23: Lehigh ‘. ? Heidelhere, 0. sas, 0.

Clarkson, 20; St. Lawrence, 0. Clemson, 20: Wake Forest, 7.

28; College of Pacific, 21; California Aggies,

Colorade College, 19; Whitman, 7. Dolorade Mines, 71; Western (Colo.)

a Ambia. 19; Navy, 13. Connecticut, 20 29; . Rhody Island State, 14. yi 1 Giver ‘stock rates william Jewell, 6. Oregon State. 19: Oregon. 14. ; th, . Pacific. 0: Willamette, 0 ( ha vis s, 19; West Virginia Wes- | Pacific Lutheran, 3; St. Ader. 0. * - enn ary ; Delaware, 0. SH. 18, Cotorads State, &. Primus (10; Pennsyivania. 8 14; Drsinus, u Se): Pittsburg (Kas.) Teachers. 1;

pants 2 North, Caroll lin 3 stat se 1 uesne, 9; rolina State, Princeton. 9: Dartmouth. : Bloomsburg, 3. Pomona, . 20: California Tec 5 Virginia ec. 12.

ew Mexico Normal, 25; Warland 0. orth Carolina. 32: Davidse

orth Texas visihers, 2%: mont, 0 (ti

Bh . 61: cago. 0. 7 Oh van. 13: Centre. 7. =

Austin 0

nen EE 3

al

rd. 203 Fast Carolina eashers. 0. Nat, i

0. 4 or aI din Simmons, 18; West aay Teach-

Tilinois' State Jorma), 13; Northern IMNi-

lik 19: Catitornia South Daohn Carroll, 49; Arkansas A. and M,, 7. Knox. 11: Coe, 6.

13: LaCrosse Foren:

Mississippi, 21s Missioanpi (Hattiesburg) Mississf i Stat 15: L 2 Labi ate, e, 5 opjsizna State, 12.

Dakota State, 16: Montant State

Si. Bene-

St. Anselm, 39; Catholic U.. 13. at Cloud Teachers, 19: Minot Teach-

St. Joseoh’s (Pa.). 13; L St. Norbert, 13: Carroll, Shanon Valley, 2 San 13 State, 6. San Francisco,

iego Hata, San Diego

Bonarenture, 0. Shippenshurah, 20; Millersville, 19. Sipnery Rock, 40; Edinboro, 0. ] akota State, 34; Morningside, 13. i hern California, 33; Stanford, 0. ou hwestern (Tenn ; Howard, 6. i i 26; City College of New Superior. 7; Duluth, 7 (tie). Springhil, 9 Millsaps, 5 Susquehanna, 13; Juniata. 0. Swarthmore. 10: Johns “jtopkins, 0. [ennessee, 34; The Citadel, 0. fexas A. & M., 6; So iade. Mothodist, 2 . exas Shristian, 16; Tulsa, s Min 14; Arizona, 6. rhiel, 14; Allegheny o ary’s (Texas), 0.

, 9: Knoxville, : ¥ ). 46; Rekhuster, 0 i Ky) a 14 Transylvania, 7.

Haw 19. 25: A: £ 7.

y s i . SYashinston (St. Louis), 7; Oklahoma A.

"Waskin fi (Seatt] 13: Cali . Washington St; WH oD: aliternia; § -Wesl A Williams, 0. es Western Illinois Teachers, 14; Carthage, H SIE tern (Ky.), State, 26; Eastern (Ky.) Weste ern Reserve, 38; Kent State, 0. tminster, a5 Grove City, 0.

ewater, 3 Oshk 0. A Epon’ ate, Wilherforce, 9; Kentucky State T. C.. oo William and Mary, 19; Randolph a Sittenhery. 13: Marietta, Worcester, 7; Rensselaer, ¥ (tie). Xavier (0.). 12; Dayton, 7.

PROFESSIONAL National League Chicago Bears. 23: Detro it 1 Green B

1%: Chicagn C rdinals hy 0 Washington, 42; Brooklyn, 0.

American League

Cincinnati, 28; St. 3%, 14. Dayton, 19; Kenosha, 7.

: lotion

Here's Purdue’s three winning points in the making.

western, 3-0, at Dyche Stadium. The ball, seen in the air, was held by Jack Brown. .

James Blumenstock of Fordham rips off 10 yards against Indiana’s team.

* Ram Rams I. U. Line for 10 Yards

Times-Acme Photo. The gain was one in

the Rams’ attack that led to a 13-0 victory over the Hoosiers at New York.

How to Watch Hockey

City Seeking A.B.C. in 42

Conkle Is Elected President Of Local Bowlers.

A definite campaign was launched today by the Indianapolis Bowling Association to bring the American Bowling Congress back to this city in 1942. ‘In a meeting yesterday afternoon at the Hotel Severin, the association

elected Roscoe Conkle president and Oscar Behrens secretary-treasurer. Ted Siener and Percy Henry were re-elected first and third vice presidents, respectively, while Dick Nordholt and Henry Zitzloff were chosen second and fourth vice presidents. Lawrence Rudbeck, Jack Meyers, Ralph Arbaugh and Richard Lennox were named to the executive committee. Les. Koelling and Norman Hamilton, the retiring president and secretary-treasurer, respectively, were voted life memberships in the organization. Neil King, A. B. C. first vice president, outlined plans for bringing the national event to Indianapolis in 1942. The association agreed to retain for another year the present handicap system for the annual city tournament which is to be held at the Fox-Hunt Alleys starting the first week-end in February. A committee was appointed to study suggested handicap changes for succeeding city tourneys. The association's: new officers are to assume their duties Jan. 1.

Amateurs

BASKETBALL Royal Crown Colas won their third straight victory of the season yesterday, defeating Citizens’ Gas, 44-27, at Dearborn Gym.

Boyer, center, and Blasingame, guard, led the Colas’ scoring with 14 and 13 points, respectively. Tonight the Colas will open their Bush-Feezle Monday Night League schedule playing Schwitzer-Cum-mins at 9:30 at Pennsy Gym. All players report at gym by 8:30. ” tJ ” Liehr’s Tavern upset Omar Bakery, 4T to 38, overtime, in the Warmup tourney at Pennsy Gym. It was Omars’ first defeat in the “two and out” event. Inland Box eliminated Texaco Saturday, 29 to 27, and came back to eliminate Fitzgerald Coal yesterday, 40 to 20. A drawing will be held tomorrow ¢.| night at Bush-Feezle’s, 8 o'clock.

Container, Liehr’s Tavern and Stewart-Warner-are requested to attend or have representatives present. Tourney semi-finals will be played at 2:30 and 3:30, and the finals at 8 p. m. next Sunday. ” 2 t J

Geo. J. Mayer defeated L. Strauss, 28 to 19, at Pennsy Gym yesterday. In other games St. Roch’s downed Little Flower, 35 to 19; Drikold Re-

Managers of Omar Bakery, Inland

{rigeration defeated Yellow Jackets,

(Third of a Series)

By CARL SHATTO Times Special Writer Any riddle, when explained, becomes amazingly simple, and the answers to the questions of how a hockey team can get a goal and still not score or score without getting a goal are even more simple than that. ’ The answers are wrapped up in red paper covers of a little book which is labeled “Official Rule Book of Hockey.” Almost anyone knows that a baseball player sometimes can get an extra base hit on what appears to be afvery ordinary single by pausing at first base and permitting nature to take its course. The possibility materializes into reality when a fielder throws his glove at the ball.

A Steal From Baseball

The explanation of how a team can score without depositing ‘the puck in the net is equally simple,

and the solutions are so similar as| - to prompt the suspicion that hockey |

stole a page from the book of laws governing the national pastime. The little red book, which should serve as a guide for all officials, says that in the event any player throws his stick at the puck while standing in his team's defensive zone, the attacking team shall be credited with a goal. This ban includes the goalie. In the event a stick is thrown in any zone other than the defensive zone, the offender should be handed a- major penalty of five minutes,

Throwing, Kicking Barred

The explanations of at least two of the ways in which a player can propel the puck past a goalie and into the cage and still not score are equally simple. One has to do with batting or throwing the puck with the hand, the other with kicking it with a skate, Legally, the puck can be propelled into the net only with a stick. A goal scored by batting, throwing or kicking the puck should ‘be disallowed. Another way in which a ‘player can slam the puck past a goal-ten-der dnd not score is more difficult to discern, and this goes for the officials as well as the fans.

Rule Book Has Word for It

* It involves a rectangle painted on the ice. Its boundaries are ‘lines

extending one foot to either side of |

the front of the cage and right angle lines extending out five feet to another line which is parallel with the cage. It is known as the crease,

CRANE’S

AMIXTURE NA ILRI:

rE

Mild—smooth — fragrant —cool—no tongue-burn;. here's what Your pipe will like best! Try it an

and when any enemy player fis standing in this rectangle the goalie

.|safely can close his eyes and doze

through a bombardment.

The rule book has ‘a word for it, and the word is: “If the player of the attacking side mot in possession of the puck stands at or near the goal of the defending side, in what is known as the cxease area, and a goal is scored, then {the goal shall be disallowed and tHe referee. shall order a face-off at a point five feet beyond the line marking the defense zone of the defending side.

Purdue’ s Three Points in the Making

Times-Acme Telephoto.

Fred Montague of the Boilermakers (left) makes the kick that beat North-

Tech and Blue Clash in Bowl

Rockets at West Lafayette This Evening.

With a successful season behind them, the ambitious footballers of Tech and Shortridge were to clash

this afternoon at Butler Bowl in a game expected to determine the city high school football championship. Originally scheduled for Friday, this tilt was postponed when it appeared that a heavy rain would cut into the gate. A crowd of at least 10,000 is expected to witness this tilt which promises to be one of the liveliest played here this fall. Meanwhile, the Broad Ripple Rockets, who still are trumpeting claims to the title, are to play at West Lafayette at 7:30 tonight. This game also was rained out Friday. Since the Rockets defeated Manual, the only city team on their schedule, they feel that they should have a piece of the championship. The Broad Ripple claims would be strengthened if the Tech-Shortridge affair should end in a tie. A clearcut victory for either one of those two, however, would weaken Broad Ripple’s. position, since both Tech and Shortridge played sterner’ city schedules. The Blue Devil cohorts are depending on Kennéth Smock, their star ball carrier, while the hopes of the Big Green regiment rest in part on the shoulders of left halfback Charles Howard. Both made the Times all-city team.

Illinois Linksman Wins Spa Tourney

FRENCH LICK, Ind, Nov. 13 (U.P.).—Jim Frisina of Taylorville, Ill., sank a 30-foot putt for a birdie three on the second hole of a playoff with Russell Martin of Chicago to win the first annual French Lick Springsichampion’s golf tournament. Frisina and Martin tied at 146 at the end of 36 holes of medal play. Both netted fours on the 37th hole and Frisina won by one stroke on the 33th. John Karbens of Chicago won the runners-up flight with a

total of 155.

7 Elevens Undefeated;

Dixie Has 4

Tulane, Vols, Texas Aggies And North Carolina Still Ride High.

By HARRY FERGUSON ; United Press Sports Editor NEW YORK, Nov. 13.—Have the band play Dixie, because the South, with four of the nation’s seven un defeated major teams, dominates college football today as the 1939 season goes into the homé stretch, Tennessee, “Tulane, Texas A. and M., and North Carolina offer records unmarred by defeat and there can be no doubt that they are four of the strongest teams in the country. The other members of the “lucky seven” are Cornell, pride of the East; Oklahoma, a real threat in the Midwest, and Southern California, which almost has the Rose Bowl sewed up in a bag. Their ranking, based on informa=tion from impartial persons in all sections, should be about as follows: .- Tennessee, 2. Texas Aggies, 3. Southern California, 4. Oklahoma, 5, Fuiane, 6. North Carolina, 7..Cor= nell,

Irish and Dartmouth Out

Two teams—Notre Dame and Dartmouth—fell out of the race of the unbeaten last week-end. The law of averages caught up with a Notre Dame team that has been winning games by razor-thin margins, and the Irish fell before Iowa, 7 to 6. Dartmouth caught an inspired Princeton team and was defeated, 9 to 7. Two good little fellows, whose schedules hardly justify including them with the major undefeated teams, "went marching along. Georgetown defeated Maryland, 20 to 0, to keep’ its season record clean of defeat and Duquesne, also un= beaten, won from North Carolina State, 7 to 0. Trojans Idle This Week There is a stern test ahead for every one of the major unbeaten teams except Southern California, which has an off day this Saturday, Cornell must play a Dartmouth team that will be smarting from the defeat by Princeton; Oklahoma takes on Missouri, a slick outfit thas proved it could run as well as pass; Tennessee tackles Vanderbilt; Tue lane plays Columbia, North Carolina encounters Duke and the Texas Aggies play Rice. It is a month too soon to be talking about a national champion, but the cards seems to be stacked in favor of Texas A. and M. It has the easiest remaining schedule of any of the first three—Tennessee,. Texas A. and M., and Southern California. The Aggies need to get by only Rice and Texas. Tennessee must defeat Vanderbilt, Kentucky and Auburn., Southern California has the steepest path of all—Notre Dame, Washington and U. C. L. A.

Making It Unanimous

CHICAGO, Nov. 13.—Tom ‘Connolly, chief of the American League umpiring staff, declares that for sheer pitching ability Rube Waddell of the Athletics never had an equal.

BARTHEL

TAILOR Suits ALTERATIONs9 39 SPECIALIST |

Years Same Location . West Ohio Street

TRADITIONALLY AMERICAN

Writing in their Journdl the Pilgrim fathers tell us that landed the Mayflower at Plymouth Rock

because they could not their provisions being exhausted

favorable port, “especially our bees.”

take the time to seek a more

Beer has been part of the American way of life from the earliest Colonial days until the present. For three quarters of a century Wiedemann’ fine Beer has been the favorite beverage of tens of thousands of American homes. The formula that gave its distinctive flavor to Wiedemann's Beer seventy years ago is followed with undeviating fidelity today . : . the “taste you remember with pleasure.” Ask for Wiedemann’s by name,

BREWED BY THE GEO. WIEDEMANN BREWING CO., INC. NEWPORT, KY.

| | [ [i |

|

te & SPECIAL BREW BOHEMIAN

li EDEM AY

INCORBONATED

Athy

of ceil. BRER Mul

THE CAPITOL CITY SUPPLY co.