Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1940 — Page 20

THURSDAY, SEPT. 19,

Vie, of the Fighting Hutton Family, Is Ready

To Even a Score Here Tomorrow Night

By FREMONT POWER

In much the same way doctor’s son often studies medicine, | Vic Hutton, a strapping big fel-| low of 21, put on boxing gloves] when he was still in his teens. And it was by no accident or queer turn of fate. “I just sort of fell into it,” is the way Vic puts it.

“I come from a fighting family.” |

| |

In that fighting Hutton family.

which resides on a 35-acre truck] farm at Farmersburg, Ind.. near Terre Haute, there are four fighting brothers. Del, the oldest, twice rep- | resented Indianapolis at the Golden | Gloves tourney at Chicago and when Vic was 18, brother Del decided 1t was about time to put the gloves on him. Brother Charlie fought 135-pound class and pride of the family. & Greek soldier,

in

that a |

the jan unfortunate end he was the career when he broke a hand on Handsome as [Milton Bess, Indianapolis’ Charlie came to Gloves pride.

1940

-

Vic Huiton . . . he decided a shave wouldn't hurt.

Golden

in his ring

And Young Brother Bill fights in the 160-pound division. That's the Hutton family lineup —all except the father, who used to promote amateur bouts in Anderson, Ind. Of the four, Vic seems ready to go the farthest. The evidence of that prediction will be presented tomorrow night at the Armory, when he takes on Charles Duncan, West Bide A. C. heavyweight, in the main | ™ bout of the weekly amateur pro-|; gram. * Since winning the national A. A.| | U. light-heavy title last year In Boston, Mass., Vic has been getting around the country pretty much and in the last three weeks has |seriously been thinking of turning | professional. Pittsburgh promoters are interested in him and some of Billy Conn’s handlers think the Hoosier {lad has the stuff. go

“I'd like the money in it,” Vic

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admitted as he lounged in a downtown restaurant and fondled =a glass of orange juice. And with a {shy Irish grin added: “I think I {could handle most of the fellows [I'd run up against.”

| | Matchmaker Fred DeBorde to- | day added another three-round | bout to Friday night's boxing | program—Al McReynolds, Ft. Har- | rison, vs. Harvey Malek, Anderson, Ind. Both are middleweights. |

But there are drawbacks to professional pugilism. Hutton knows that and for that reason he’s not fully decided on what to do. But if he could get in the “right” stable, | he thinks he'd shed the simon- -pure| cloak. Clean-cut and stocky, Vic is the| kind of a guy who's always ready | {for a fight. A nasty blow in a first| * {round doesn’t discourage him. He Manager Bill McKechnie gets a

He suffered his only cut in a re-|

{an outstanding local heavy. Jethro| {slashed Vic's left eye with a good | {hook in the first round—and it seemed to be what Hutton was, needing. He came back fast and | | pounded through to a decision. | In a previous bout with Duncan. | he lost by decision, but this time | Hutton thinks it'll be different. Since thinking of turning pro, | Vie has been doing a lot of hard | work developing his short range at- | | tacks and his left hook. He needs | headaches but the present combi-| |a lot more work—and knows it—but | nation ot Ripple, Mike McCormick | | he is the sort that improves rapidly. and Goodman apparently is the best | One thing he’s overcome already | trio the Reds have had in two years. | 1s the matter of a beard. A long-| The Reds took the lead on July| | time admirer of Jack Dempsey, Vic|7 and in a big July drive won 14 used to like to come in the ring | out of 17 games. They were never with about eight days’ growth of| headed after that. Darkest hour | whiskers. Might scare the oppo-| for the Reds was after Willard ! nents, he thought. Hershberger's suicide at Boston Aug. But he’s decided now he gets 3. The second-string catcher's death | along just as well with a shave— cast a pall of gloom over the Reds | besides looking a litttle better. for days afterwards, but McKechnie Now about the young brother, finally brought his boys around and Bill. He'll be on tomorrow's card in they kept their equilibrium right 'a middleweight battle with Owen dOWn to the day the pennant was Gilbert, unattached. clinched. Some time, Father Hutton would Oddly enough, Johnny Vander like to have all his four boys on one Meer, the ‘double no-hit mno-run| program. {hero of 1938 who went into decline | That should be a lulu. {last season and only recently came | back from Indianapolis, Plishen Ja! 3 nnant-clinching game. He beat) Rain Slows Havana fet Phillies, 4-3, in 13 innings, with | | 3 - la final inning of relief help from | Diamond Play | Joe Beggs. | The Cardinals’ 14-7 victory over |

HAVANA, Sept. 19 (U. P.).—Oc- the Dodgers made it possible for the | casional showers slowed up play in Reds to nail down the flag yester-| the amateur baseball series nere day. * yesterday as Nicaragua defeated patted in by Johnny Mize. Hawaii, 8-6, in the first game of a| Bullet Bob Feller put the Indians double-header and Venezuela won |into the American League lead by) over Puerto Rico, 3-1, in six innings. pitching a five-hit game to beat] American and Cuban teams Washington, 2-1, with only two days | played a 2-2, 11-inning tie Tuesday. rest. After the Indians had won

|the opener, 3-1, with Ken Chase] 2 BEAUTIFUL ] forcing in all the Cleveland runs on| ENLARGEMENTS } walks, Manager Vitt decided to use| With each 6 to 16 exposure WM his trump. Feller, in the nightcap. NE To) eno. 25 | Feller fanned seven and sey Ji) x total to 251, a new record for him.| n= Sen een mote 2e | The Tigers beat the Athletics, 14-| . 0, and then had them beat, 6-4, going into the ninth inning of the | nightcap when hell broke loose. The - | Athletics scored nine runs and] knocked the Tigers out of the lead | | with a 13-6 defeat. Hank Green-| perg hit three homers, raising his | total to 38. | The Yanks and White Sox divided | a pair, with New York coming from | pehind to win the -eight-inning| nightcap, 9-8, after dropping the

And Some Said

(Continued from Page 18) outfield has given Bill McKechnie |

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 2in a Row—the Reds Whoop I+ Up Bulldogs End

© | record of never losing to an Indiana | Ra ¢ | College Conference team.

“ |end, must do extra work, according

= | backs.

Ba

ride on the shoulders of his

just comes back harder. | jubilant Cincinnati Reds as they celebrate their pennant victory in the Philadelphia dressing room. The Redlegs’ 4-3 victory over the ‘cent bout here with Jethro Jeffers, phils yesterday assured them the flag.

Cincinnati

Couldn't Repeat in 1940

| first game, 6-3. The Browns bumped School football in Indianapolis and

| the Red Sox, 11-2. In the other National League | games the Cubs handed the Giants] | their 10th straight loss, 6-4, and the | Bees won from the Pirates, 4-1,

lat 2:15 p. m. at the North Side

A rg (FIL TF

SCOREBOARD

By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Service Sports Editor

RICHARD BARTELL was re- |

ported to be a broken-down rheumatic when the Chicago Cubs traded him to the Detroit club last winter for Billy Rogell. But it is now obvious that Dick Bartell was suffering from nothing that Dennis Carroll couldn't cure. It was the best swap the Tigers

ever made. Bartell has sparked the Tigers to the threshold of the American League throne room. Rogell has been released.

Though the Cubs were desper- |

ately in need of a shortstop, Bartell is authority for the statement that the management didn’t even bother to check up on his physical condition before shipping him. “And 1 was sound ss a dollar,” he laughs, “and happy to be sent to a high class club like Detroit . given a fresh slant on things at 32 . . . after a dozen years in the National League. “With no other club would I have Denny Carroll to put and keep me in the game.”

98 Best for Guests

Lawrence Releases /6-Man Grid Card

PAGE 19 Gun Club Meets

The West End Rod and Gun Club

will meet toight at Flanner House,

| Times Special LAWRENCE, Ind. Sept. 19. — Vi High School today an- | nounced a six-game schedule for its | | six-man football team. | | The card: Tomorrow, New Au-| gusta; Sept. 7, at Center Grove; Oct. 4, at Speedway City: Oct. 11, | Greenwood; Oct. 18, Beech Grove, jand Oct. 23 at Decatur Central. | Lawrence's home games—against |

Butler's Bulldogs completed heavy | New Augusta, Greenwood and Beech | preparations today for their foot-| Grove—will be played at the Indian |

Heavy Drill for St. Joe Tilt

Dienhart to Bring Entire Squad Here

ball opener Saturday afternoon Lake Golf Course, with the games| |against St. Joseph College in the) {called at 3 p. m.

Tonight I's The Night

Tt09 9 P.M

OPEN-HOUSE

ROSES FOR THE LADIES

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FURNITURE co. 932 S. Meridian St.

|at Rensselaer, Ind., Coach Joe Dien- | hart announced that he would bring {his entire 32-man squad to crack Coach Tony Hinkle's blue ribbon |

Butler Bowl.

Meanwhile, in the Pumas’ camp REWOVEN

| As it appears now, two seniors, [Ralph (Red) Swager and Henry | Abts, will spark the Bulldog ball | carriers, while Harold Mossey, 200{pound guard last year, will block | from the quarterback position. Harold Feichter or Richard] | Freuchtenich, two Ft. Wayne boys, | will take over the starting respon- { sibilities of the remaining backfield

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{berth. Abts will do the punting | while Swager will do most of the

| passing. | The line, lettermen from end to

| to Hinkle because of the “pony”| The forward wall will in{clude Stanley Crawford and Bob! | Roberts, ends; Capt. Joe Dezelan fand John Rabold, tackles; Bob | Purkhiser, center.

H. S. Grid War Ready to Begin

TOMORROW'S

Brazil at Shortridge. | Tech at Southport (might). | Cathedral at Noblesville (night). Broad Ripple at Plainfield (night). Washington at Rushville (night). Manual a4 Lafavetite Jefferson (might). Crispus Attucks vs. Plainfield Boys School | at Washington. Ben Davis at Warren Central.

% Although sporadic sniping has been going on for a couple of | weeks, the heavy barrage of high

CARD

| Marion County will open tomorrow {afternoon and evening. The neighborhood teams are involved in eight contests, chief of | which probably will be the BrazilShortridge engagement beginning

field and Tech's nocturnal invasion of Southport. Blue Devils Favored The strong, well-balanced Shortridge team already appears to have attained a mid-season keenness. and naturally rates as the favorite. | The game will afford the first opportunity to see what Coach Bob | Nipper has in his ground-gaining | department to succeed last season's Kenny Smock. Tomorrow evening will be the first of five big nights planned for Southport’s Cardinals. After their fengagement with Tech, they will meet in order Shortridge, Cathedral, Manual and Washington. Coach Walter Floyd's boys dropped their opener last Friday night to Ander|son, 6-0. Cathedral's task will be to return | to the victory column after dropping a 13-7 decision to Muncie Central in the Butler shell last Friday night. Noblesville, the Irish foe, will be out for its second triumph, having knocked over Warren Central, 20-0, in the opener. | Rockets Plainfield-Bound Poach Ed Diederich takesg his | Broad Ripple Rockets to Plainfield {for a night unveiling, while Washington steps into South Central competition with an after-dark engagement at Rushville. Coach Harry Painter, who has (had his Redskins under drill for {more than a week, will dress them in bright new suits and send them against Jefferson under the lights at Lafayette. Crispus Attucks will {entertain the Plainfield Boys School, using Washington's West Side field for the party. The other contest matches a pair of county rivals, Ben Davis and Warren Central. Ben Davis opened ! with a 12-0 victory over Sheridan, | while Warren Central, as it has | been noted, yielded to Noblesville. Coach Lou Reichel's Park eleven

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Siegel Joins Navy DETROIT, Sept. 19 (NEA) —Don | Siegel, former Michigan tackle and

(erstwhile heavyweight fighter, has signed for a Naval Reserve cruise.

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