Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1939 — Page 14
the really best team in the country.
tate High School Cage
‘SPORTS... By Eddie Ash
WES GRIFFIN, the Indianapolis Indians’ new. man-
~ ager, is in town preparing to to attend his first American Stepping up from coach and
bearing up as well as can be expected while acknowledging the congratulations of friends and answering the questions
put to him by fans about next
The big fellow is taking the situation in stride, however, and is anxious to get going in the stove league
at Columbus and Cincinnati, first at the A. A. powwow and then on to the Queen City for the big minor and major league conventions
next week.
Tribe President Leo Miller and Secretary Dale Miller will depart for the Buckeye capitol tomorrow and Griffin on Thursday. . . . The two Millers are on the league schedule committee and they have some problems to iron out prior to the official loop meeting. .-. . It’s St.
Paul's turn to in Indianapolis
open battle the four Western clubs before hitting the road.
Exhibition Schedule of 21
+ INCIDENTALLY, Secretary Miller is: mapping out a 2l-game exhibition schedule for the Redskins and all will be played in the South. . . . The Tribesters will not arrive in Indianaoplis after spring training until a day ahead of the A. A. opening. ' Manager Griffin’ approves the heavy exhibition program and says actual competition gives a better line on the talent than routine
batting and fielding practice.
WHILE Shaughnessy
the ability of the opponents to maste
Afer Kansas City’s fine team and the Minneapolis Millers were eliminated in the 1939 playoff after practically running away from ° the other clubs in the regular race, the Shaughnessy system was
under heavy fire.
The leader of the movement to knock out the playoff is Roy
Hamey, secretary of the New Yo Blues, . . . The is ‘that the something better is suggested.” pro-playoft.
Scoreboard to Flash Hits
ry Stadium’s scoreboard is to receive a new face before the 1940 baseball campaign opens in Indianapolis. . . . It will be painted black but not blacked out... . “It will be easier to read the scores,”
Secretary Miller said.
Also on the Tribe scoreboard will be flashed “H” for hit or “E” for-error on questionable plays. . . . The decision will be flashed from
the press box, like at Cincinnati. . . this arrangement-and will know at the batter gets a safe blow. It also will permit a player to
his cuff before retiring for the night instead of waiting to peruse the box score the next day. . . . It’s uncanny the way the athletes keep abreast of the weekly averages and this new scoreboard arvangement is expected to develop a race of lightning calculators in the
dugout and clubhouse.
THE DIAMOND at Perry Stadium has received a new face and has the appearance of a putting green. 1939 season Jack Price, groundkeeper, lifted the old sod and replaced it with new. . . . The infield now looks like velvet and with no bare spots. . . . Price turned in a big league job on that task.
One thing stadium attaches fi
Manager Griffin late yesterday as he walked into the cold clubhouse. . « + It was the last notice chalked on the players’ bulletin board for
the 1939 season.
“All players report at Traction station at 12:00 noon for trip to e” . . . That was the warrant that sent the Indians to Derbytown to get their ears pinned back by the Colonels in the playoft
Tennegsee Leads Kentucky in Long Series WHEN THE undefeated, untied and unscored-upon Volunteers of Tennessee and the Wildcats of Kentucky collide in the South’s most important football game of the day Thursday at Lexington, Tennessee will be trying for its 19th victory in the rivalry that dates back to
1899. . . . In 33 games played betwe
tallied 18 victories against nine defeats while six tilts ended in ties The ties in 1928, 1929 and 1931 ruined otherwise perfect Tennessee records, eliminating the Vols from the Bowl picture. .
last triumph over the Vols was in
Last year Tennessee waltzed in, 46 to 0. . . .
KENTUCKY 21—Virginia Military (EER ETE NS 21—Vanderbilt
0 eee dd Sree 0 Sree nnan 4 21—=Xavier (Ohio) Sess ectassen 0 T—Alabama ~~. .......c00000. 7 6—Georgia “Tech, secensenss 13 13-—-W. Virginia tsetse nane 6
161 5
EXPECTING an open fight on the floor over the playoff, President George M. Trautman of the A. A. does not believe the post-season plan will be altered. . . . He points out that it would take the vote of six clubs to abolish and questions
shove off for Columbus, O., Association meeting. . . . acting: manager, Griffin is
year’s team.
next April and the Indians will
Games
r that strength.
rk Yankee-owned Kansas City playoff will be retained “unless « The Indianapolis club is
and Errors
. Fans won't have to guess under once if a miscue is charged or
compile his batting average on
« + » Since the close of the
orgot to erase jumped out at
en the two institutions, the Vols
. « Kentucky's 1835, a 27-to-0 shellacking. . . , This year’s records: TENNESSEE 13—N. C. State 40—Sewanee ..... *sesrsnneis 28—Chattanooga 21—Alabama
34—The Citadel ............. 0 13—Vanderbilt
186
Mac’s Round-Robin Bowl Could Settle Everything
By HENRY M'LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—If I had enough concrete, and a place to pitch it, IT would build a football stadium with 5,000,000 seats, print myself 5,000,000 tickets at five bucks a throw and introduce the RoundRobin Bowl. During the last week of December and the first week of January, I would hold enough games for the recognized four top teams in the United States to play one another and determine to the satisfaction of all 5,000,000 and myself which was
At the risk of having some chronic naggers write in and complain, I will name the four top teams in the United States. They are, and the order in which they are named means nothing, Cornell, Tennessee, Texas A. & M. and University of Southern California. One is from the East, one from the Southeast, one from the West and one from the Southwest. Between them, they already have Qemmonsieat heir su. periority over claimants { other sections
He Has Seen Three
I doubt if any football season within memory. has produced four such top-flight elevens. I have seen of them—Tennessee, Cornell . 8. C—and heard enough the other to know that it bein the same bracket. But no
amount of ar t ever will set- : a which is the : the four, because there is in ch they can meet and
~argument with a footit from me, there is little to
‘a terrific beating by a fine Ohio tate squad, and show an irresistible c had everything in its neback drive that Tennessee had
0 Shortridge is: Bryan West and
team that had beaten seven powerful foes. Southern California had all Cornell and Tennessee had, plus a little more manpower. The quarterbacking of the Trojans was a bit at fault, but that didn’t matter. Any signal brought a fast, 200-pounder running in from somewhere. As for Texas A. & M., men who see more of a football game than coeds and pom-poms, tell me Coach Homer Norton has corralled some of the wildest young brutes seen outside of a rodeo and polished them up into one of the smoothest units the Southwestern Conference has developed.
Wanted: One Concrete Mixer
On’ second thought, I doubt if 5,000,000 seats would be enough. All of Texas would be there, all of Tennessee, all of Southern California and all the New Englanders who haven't had a really good Ivy League eleven since Pudge Heffel finger was not only Pudging but Heflelangering here in the dear old
If you have a concrete mixer and
time of night. A more concrete idea wouldn't hurt either. ;
Shortridge Five Opens Tomorrow
Coach Kenneth Peterman'’s Short ridge basketball team will pry the lid off its 1939-40 schedule tomorrow night when 'it meets Greenfield at the North Siders’ gym. Game time is 7:30 p. m. The probable starting lineup. for
Dave Strack, forwards; Walt Frei-
hofer, or Larry Yeager, center, and Chuck Benjamin and Dick Gage, guards, Gage is the only letterman. Tomorrow's fray will be the fifth for the Greenfielders, who have won two and dropped two, tripping Maxwell and New Palestine but losing to Anderson and Fortville. The Blue Devils swamped Greenfield last
-| Hinkle, however, hopes to develop
options on these four teams, don't]: hesitate to call me, no matter what| :
‘Due to Be ~ Postponed
Commission Almost Certain To Grant Demand of Henry’s Manager.
By JACK CUDDY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—Postponement of Friday night's Henry Arm-strong-Lou Ambers welterweight title fight was virtually certain to be granted at -today’s boxing commission meeting because of Champion. Armstrong’s bad cold. It was just as certain that the] commission would approve a substitute . main event for Madison Square Garden Friday night, matching Allie Stolz, young Newark lightweight contender, and Petey Scalzo of ‘New York, - outstanding United |, States featherweight challenger. Armstrong’s manager, Eddie Mead, demanded the postponement because Armstrong is so sick “that he cannot leave his bed and probably will not be able to fight again until January.”
Prices to Be Cut
Promoter Mike Jacobs arranged for the substitute 10-round bout late yesterday when it became apparent that Armstrong would not be ready to tackle Ambers in their third tilt Friday night before “an assured sell-out crowd and a gate of $91,000.”
Urgel Wintermute, who stands 6 feet. 8 inches, will perform with the Detroit Eagles against the local Kautskys in the National Pro. Basketball League opener at. Butler Fieldhouse tomorrow night at 8:15. -
Pair of Kautskys' Foes
Title Fight |
Connie . Berry, former North Carolina University star, and allSouthern Conference center, also will be in the Eagles’ lineup. Berry also plays pro football and saw some action this season with the Detroit Lions.
Ticket prices will be halved for the Scalzo-Stolz brawl and the gate is not expected to exceed . $30,000. Scalzo and Stolz were originally slated to clash at the Garden on Dec. 22, and the forward shift came on such short notice that Stolz had to go through with a bout last night at Newark where he stopped Lee Halper of New York in the sixth round. It was young Allie’s 33d victory in 35 fights. : Meanwhile, Manager Mead -explained to the commission that Armstrong had been bothered with a cold since his last bout in Denver on Oct. 30, against Bobby Pacho. He said he took Armstrong to Hot Springs, Ark., to break up the cold, but it rained there during their two-week stay.
Delay Annoys Ambers
Still hopeful that strenuous training might relieve Henry’s condition, they came to New York, buf the champion was in such bad shape
Big League Clubs to Meet In Cincinnati Next Week
NEW YORK, Nov. 28 (U. B)—
Major league baseball clubs come out of hibernation for the annual winter meetings at Cincinnati, Dec. 4-6.
Every club has weak spots to for-
tify and from the last-place Philadelphia Phillies in the National League to the champion New York Yankees in the American League, is willing to trade, buy or sell.
The particular problem in the
American League right now is how to time world champions appear strong enough at this point to breeze on to four more championships. Their most important problem is pitching.
“stop the Yankees.” The four-
Charley Ruffing, mainstay of the staff, will be 36- when next season begins and how long he can last is a vital question. Whether Lefty Gomez, who showed only flashes of brillance last year, will come back to winning form is another. Steve Sundra, Marius Russo, Atley Donald and Spud Chandler will be expected to take up the slack. The National League, whose comparison to the junior circuit ends when the World Series begins, needs a general overhauling. Last year’s pennant-winner, the Cincinnati Reds, lack hitting power and the runner-up St. Louis Cardinals need pitching.
Sunday night, he was forced to bed under a physician’s care. Ambers, the lightweight king, and his manager, Al Weill, were ultrapeeved over the delay because little Lou had interrupted his honeymoon to begin training. Lou, who had recaptured the lightweight crown from Henry in August—after losing it to Henry the year before—was confident of annexing Armstrong’s welterweight tiara also in this, their rubber meeting. '.
Blue Rejects Football Bid
Hinkle Turns Attention to Basketball at Butler.
Refusing an invitation for Butler University to play a post-season charity football game, Sunday, against an all-star group of Kentucky college seniors in Louisville, Coach Paul D. (Tony) Hinkle, has turned his attention to basketball for the seaccn’s opener, Dec. 9, in the Fieldhouse against Ball State. Hinkle received the invitation yesterday to meet a squad of seniors chosen from the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. He declined the offer because his undefeated gridders had not practiced since Nov. 1t when they finished their season against Western State at Kalamazoo, Mich. Instead, he held his first scrimmage yesterday for his netters and gave particular attention to five returning lettermen. His first team showed lack of height but displayed early-season speed and excellent ball handling. At center was Bill Hamilton, Louisville, Ky. junior. Byron Gunn, senior, from Centerville, and Bob Dietz, Indianapolis junior and high scorer last year, were at the forwards, while Lyle Neat, Ft. Wayne, junior, and Capt. Jerome Steiner, Berne, worked at the guard positions. Only two © nine returning letterman are above the six-foot mark. They are Hamilton, 6 feet 2 inches, and Charles Atkinson, 6 feet 1 inch.
a fast-moving squad to withstand the 'tough 22-game schedule that will pit the Indiana Collegiate Conference champs against five Big Ten foes and five intersectional teams as well as seven league rivals. -
Vols Place 2 on
Winning with the outstanding- individual stars, which explains why two-flay-ers each from Tennessee, and Georgia Tech appear on the All-Southeastern Conference team gomounced today by the United ess.
Lots of Power In Bear Attack
NEW YORK, Nov. 28 (U. P.).— The Chicago Bears were the most potent attacking team in the history of the National Professional Football League today. Closing their regular schedule. with a 48-7 rout of the Chicago Cards last week, the Bears ran their season’s total to 3988 yards gained and 298 points scored. They
surpassed their own 1934 point record total of 286 points and exceeded the ground-gaining mark of 3703 yards made in 1936 by DeDoct and their own 1934 total of Washington held second ‘place in both scoring and ground-gain-ing with 235 points scored and 3288 yards gained.
All-Southeastern
ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 28 (U. P.) — teams us come up
Tulane
A concensus of coaches and sports
writers opinions, personal observations and information gleaned from statistics of the various games allotted six places to the three coleaders. :
Auburn, Alabama, Vanderbilt,
Louisiana State and Kentucky landed one man mythical eleven that lacks: little in the way of power, speed and versa tility both on: offense and defense. Here they are:
each to reund out a
Eends—Ken Kavanaugh of Louis-
iana State and Rob Isof of Georgia Tech. Tackles—Harry MecCollum of Tulane and: John Eibner of |sh Kentucky. Guards—Bob Suffridge of Tennessee and Milton Howell of Auburn,
Center—Carey Cox of Alabama. Quarterback — George Cafego of Tennessee. Halfbacks— Bob Kellogg of Tulane and Doc Plunkett of Vanderbilt. Fullback— Howard Ector of Georgia Tech.
|
and & glimpse of the Trojans victory over a Notre Dame
year, 45 te 27. The reserve teams Will.play a curtain raiser at. 8:30.
: i
for 1940. He succeeds’ SI
|Allerdice to Pilot
’ al O’Mahoney Heavies Meet in Main Go on Tonight's Mat Show.
‘Rival heavyweight mat stars, Danno O'Mahoney, 229, Ireland, and
| Everett Marshall, 224, La Junta,
Colo., clash tonight at the Armory in what is listed as an important “big time” engagement for both performers. The rugged Marshall gave advance word two months ago that he was launching a drive to regain the heavyweight title, and he invited all comers to try to block his path. He has been successful to date, but O'Mahoney is the most formidable opponent yet to accept the “invitation.” Danno, laso a former champ,
‘|is the only matman to hold a ver-
dict over Jim Londes since 1930. Marshall is a powerful performer and extra fast in the ring, while
holds, chief of which is the “Irish whip.” - The encounter is for two falls out of three. ; Semi-windup action 1s between Ray Steele, 218, Glendale, Cal., and Warren Bockwinkle, 219, St. Louis. Len Macaluso, 220, Boston, meets Hans Schnable, 234, Holland, and Tom Marvin, 217, Oklahoma, faces George Trogas, 218, St. Louis, in other matches.
Table Tennis—
Decatur Cenfral High School's table tennis team will entertain Beech Grove in a return match next Monday. In a match last night Decatur Central won, 10 to 7.
vd
the Paddle Club:
Feliman:Curme, 10; Jacobs’ Outdoor
Western Electric, 10; Mallory Bulldogs, 8. Dr. Pepper, 18; Standard Oil, 0.
Results in the Indianapolis League at Jimmy. McClure’s Club: Don Lee Stokers, 10; Power & Light, 8. Binger A. A., 18; Red Rock Cola, 0. Seven Up, 10; Branch 35, 8.
Sportsman’s Store, 10; Tiny Town Restaurant, 8 ;
Shortridge Eleven
Bill Allerdice, junior fullback, has been named to captain next year’s School football
| Shortridge High team. Allerdice broke into the lineup ‘|this fall afer an injury forced Joe _|Shedron, starting fullback, to the
| sidelines, and scored 15
points during the campaign. wir i a
Langhurst Named
Ohio State Captain]
: COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 28 (U. P).|
urst, Willard, O., Ohio
ee f the Buckeyes
Eh
‘|. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov: 28 (U. |P)~Yale's is football team will
have one
It'sMarshall vs.
Scores in the Meridian League at|nigh
35 League
Encounters
And Burris, With Four, To Clash Friday. By UNITED PRESS
. Indiana's winter mania, basketball, will swing inte action in every
~Imajor high school conference in the | state this week as the eight top-| flight leagues present a total of 35 conference games, 24 of them on;
Friday night. In addition to these’ contests, heated as usual, there will be several interconference battles between usually potent teams. Included in the latter are the meetings to-
North Central League and Ft. Wayne Central of the Northeastern
ference; and Richmond of the North
| Central and Rushville of the South
Central
eastern division of the Northern Indiana High School Conference and Lebanon, non-conference; and Washington of the Southern Conference and Huntingburg, nonconference. .
North Central in Full Swing
- Perhaps the top conference game of ‘the week involves two “of the major Hoosier winning streaks. Tipton, which boasts a string of five, longest in the state, will entertain Muncie Burris, which has four consecutive victories, Friday. ‘The tough North Central League has five conference matches on the docket, five of them Friday. Anderson will meet Marion tomorrow and then ‘meet the high-flying New Castle Trojans Friday. Other Friday games are Muncie Central at Frankfort; Richmond at Lafayette Jefferson; and Logansport’s Berries ‘at Marion. The conference will end the week Saturday when Kokomo will play at Muncie Central. ° ; Shelbyville will meet Franklin's defending champion Grizzlie Cubs: tomorrow to open the South Central
week, and Greencastle will .travel to Greensburg. Friday Franklin will play at. Columbus, Connersville at Greencastle, Indianapolis Washington will open its season at Rushville and Shelbyville will meet a tough Seymour quintet.
Action in the Southeast
In the Southeastern Conference North Vernon will meet Madison tonight while tomorrow Aurora will go to Lawrenceburg and Scottsburg to Brownstown. On Friday's schedule are Vevay-Aurora, Lawrence-burg-Batesville, North: VernonScottsburg and Paoli-Orleans. The powerful Northern Indiana Conference divisions, both eastern
|and western, will swing into compe-
tition for ‘the first time, with Val-
ing to Gary Horace Mann tomorrow. Friday three western division games will be played—Whiting-Gary Emerson, East Chicago WashingtonGary Froebel and Hammond TechBas" Chicago Roosevelt. The eastern division will open Friday with Mishawaka at Nappanee,
Vincennes to Play Pair
The Southern Conference opened last week when Vincennes tripped Bicknell, but three other teams will doff their hats this week, all Friday or Saturday night. Bicknell will meet Evansville Bosse and Linton will tangle with Vincennes Friday while Vincennes will travel to Evansville Reitz Saturday. Columbia City and Bluffton will open the week’s hes in the
O'Mahoney touts an assortment of Mortheastern League tomorrow while
Friday Bluffton will play Hartford City’s luckless squad; Garrett will meet Columbia City and Kendallville will open Ft. Wayne South’s schedule. In addition:to the Muncie BurrisTipton clash, the Central - League has two other conference matches, one tomorrow when Wabash meets Alexandria and another Friday when Plymouth and Rochester play.
Logan Is N amed ‘Most Valuable’
, BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Nov. 28 (U. P.).—James Logan of Indianapolis, first string guard on the Indiana University football team, last t was voted “most valuable player” by his teammates at the annual football banquet. Letters were awarded to 28 men and 40 freshmen - were given numeral sweaters, Those rectiving major awards: Alfred A. Bragalone, Campbell, 0.; Harry Tom Brooks, Dayton, O.; Michael R. Bucchianeri, Monongahela, Pa.; Michael Dumke, Ray M. Dumke, St. Joseph, Mich.; James E. Ellenwood, Ft. Wayne; Walter
. | Dwight Gahm, Louisville, Ky.; Ar-
chie Harris, Ocean City, N. J.; Edward C. Herbert, +" Russell botham, - Anderson; Janzaruk, La ‘Porte; Walter 8. Jurkiewicz, Hamtramack, = Mich.; James C. Logan, Indianapolis; Clee 8S. Maddox, Kokomo; James P. McGuire, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Michael Naddeo, ‘Monongahela, Pa.; Edward A. Rucinski, Fast Chicago;
Nothing to It BALTIMORE, Nov. 28 (NEA) —Pat Dengis, marathon champion, runs 100 miles each week in practice.
Scheduled
Tipton, With Five Victories, |
morrow of Muncie Central of the|
| Conference; Columbus of the South Central and Martinsville, non-con-
Friday night the non-conference | .| scraps feature Martinsville at Bed- ‘| ford; South Bend Central of the
League’s conference schedule for thei
paraiso’s once-defeated five travel-|
Higgin 1; Harold| ; J. Hursh, Middletown, O.; John D.}|
Hawks Post
They finished with six victories, one defeat and a tie. They were the only team in this sector to lose only one game. Ohio State, undisputed champion of the Big Ten, lost to Cornell and Michigan while Notre Dame, long considered the power in Midwest football, fell before Jowa and Southern California. The manner in which the under manned Iowa “squad accomplished its amazing feats was the one bright spot of the year. Led by Nile Kinnick, the strongest allAmerica candidate the Big Ten has had in five years, Iowa came from behind in the fourth period to defeat Indiana, Wisconsin, Purdue, and. Minnesota.. It was a fourthperiod touchdown that tied Northwestern last week, 7 to 7.
Notre Dame Rated No. 2 Thus Iowa, which finished second in the Big Ten, corners all the post season “titles” for the player of the year (Kinnick), the -coach of the
+
‘year (Dr. Eddie Anderson) and the|;
comeback of the year. This same group of boys, with few exceptions, defeated only Chicago in the Big Ten last season. ; Notre Dame was the No. 2 team. It was one of t squads almost impossible to figure from week to week. The Irish squeezed out early victories over Purdue, Georgia Tech and Southern Methodist by . the margin ofs placekicks but, at no time appeared extended. They whipped Army and Navy, Northwestern Carnegie Tech, rolling up huge yardage totals but scoring little.
was not a -great football team. Against Southern’ (California last week it was for the first time this year but greatness wasn't enough. Heavy graduation losses make: the Irish a definite question mark next
season. : 7, Whatever happens to Ohio State teams when they're ° sailing out ahead of tough opponents happened twice this season. The Bucks had comfortable leads against both Cornell and Michigan,” then blew
tan
"RADIO REPAIRING | Expert Radio Repairing |
., . DELAWARE
and | season Dec. 9 against Kirklin,
In defeat at Iowa, Notre Dame]
Times Photo.
Visiting Perry Stadium for the first time since he was named the Indians’ 1940 manager, Wes Griffin suid he was all set for the hot stove league season and hoped to come up with plenty of newsy player items ‘for the fans before spring training time rolls around. “We've got. a lot of rebuilding ahead and are not overlooking any leads,” Griffin added.
Best Grid
Record in Central West
By STEVE SNIDER : United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—Iowa’s wonder team, which expected to more than two important football games this fall, ended a dizzy campaign with the finest won and lost record in the Central West. "Not even Ohio State’s Big Ten champions nor Notre Dame can match the percentage of the heroic iron men who started the golden - anniversary season of Iowa football with a new coach, new system, and prospects as dull as in their doormat days of a year ago. :
win not
sky high and all the power of their . fine backfield—Don Scott, Jimmy Strausbaugh, Frank Zadworney and Jim Langhurst—proved futile thereafter. 7 : Tommy Harmon of Michigan lived up to. his advance billing despite Wolverine defeats by Illinois ~ and ‘Minnesota. It was his running and passing that helped bowl over . Ohio State. Disappointments of the year were Northwestern and Wisconsin. Northwestern, with material hailed as the Big Ten'’s best, lost three games and spent the entire season trying to .. shake loose Bill de Correvont who showed plenty of promise and not much else. Wisconsin, second in '* the conference last year, failed to win. a single Big Ten game. ; : Ohio State, Iowa, Purdue, North : ‘western and Michigan finished in: the first division. Illinois headed -: the seeond division with Indiana; - Minnesota, Wisconsin and Chicago
Breiner Elected Captain at Park Alder Breiner, leading scorer on - last: season’s Park School basketball team, will captain the prepsters this season. ‘He was elected yesterday as
the 31-man squad went through its first practice. Park will open its
Named, Nassau Pilot
PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 28 (U. ° P.) —Howard J. Stanley, Cranford, N.*J., will captain the 1940 Prince- " ton football team, it was announced today. Stanley, a right end, suc- ;* ceeded Robert F. Tierney, Pearl -- River, N. Y. . ; ;
"Score Rifle Victory “A five-man team of the Indian-
apolis Rifle Clyb scored a 907-868 victory over a Pennsy Rifle Club
team last night at the Pennsy range.
