Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1940 — Page 10
PACE 10 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | SATURDAY, OCT. 16, 1040
, Harmon to Spend Rest of Year Dueling With Scoring Rivals
Frank Reagan of Pennsylvania, convoyed by Gene Davis, sets course downfield. At Tight is Tom Harmon as opponents, still on their pins, frequently see the Michigan flier.
SPORTS By Eddie Ash
THE Hoosier State's football Big Three will be oecupied by heavy action next Saturday... . Top billing within the State will be Wisconsin at Purdue. . . . It will be recalled that the Badgers and Boilermakers fought to a deadlock last fall, 7 to 7. Notre Dame will depart the home grounds on Oct. 26 for the first time this season, playing Illinois at Cham-
paign. . . . They did not clash in 1939. Indiana will go on the road and tackle the Northwestern Wildcats in Dyche Stadium, Evanston. . . . The Hoosiers and Cats were not scheduled a year ago. Butler's Bulldogs will be away from home against Washington University at St. Louis. . . . These rivals will be trying to unscramble last fall's bitter battle that ended a tie, 6 to 6. DePauw will be at home against Evansville. . . . They fought to no-decision in 1939, a scoreless tie. . . . Franklin will be host to Indiana State and Manchester will invade H¥nover. . . . Franklin and Indiana State did not meet last fall and Manchester edged Hanover, 7 to 0.
Earlham and Rese Clash at Terre Haute
EARLHAM and Rose Poly went ‘round and ‘round last fall and the former emerged the winner, 14 to 13. . . ext Saturday the Quakers and Engineers will play a return ShgRpement at Terre Haute, . Ball State is to call on Valparaiso. . . . Score last year, 16 to 17,
: Ball State.
A year ago Central Normal of Danville and St. Joseph's mixed in a free-scoring attraction, St. Joe winning, 20 to 19... . Next Saturday the Teachers and Pumas are booked in a re-match at Danville. . . Wabash will visit the Blue Grass, playing Georgetown College. . . . It was close last fall, Wabash winning, 9 to 7.
” 2 2 ” a
PENNSYLVANIA has won only three of the 34 grid games played with Princeton. , . . The series started in 1876. . .-.. Today's game is the fourth in the modern series that started in 1935. All-time standings of Michigan-Illinois games show that the Wolverines have won 16 of the 25 played. .. . The Illini have taken all other nine, as there have been no ties in this series. which was started in 1898. . . . Today marked the 26th grid battle between the schools. .
Notre Dame Comes Up With Gorgeous Greek
NOTRE DAME has come up with a Greek gridder of no mean proportions. . . . He is George James Rassas, 195-pound senior from Stamford, Conn. .. . Greek George stands 6 feet 3 inches. A star pass receiver as a sophomore, Rassas got little experience playing behind Earl Brewn and Bill Kerr, and ‘last year a cracked cheek bone kept him out of action for most of the season. Other Stamford products and high school teammates of Rassas's on this vear’s Notre Dame squad are Walt O'Meara, John Peasenelli and Tom Callahan.
t 2 5 o s
SOUTH BEND high schools are well represented on this fall's Notre Dame squad and the hometown lads are challenging for regular positions. ... They are Steve Bagarus and Owen Evans, halfbacks; Joe Laiber, guard, and John Kovatch and George Murphy, ends. Seven years ago Al Wistert, a tackle on this year’s Michigan eleven, was down to 97 pounds. . .. The cause, a series of mishaps, including being struck by an automobile, having his tonsils removed and an appendectomy. ... He now weighs 212 pounds.
One Grid Captain to Another
. FRANK LEAHY, Boston College coach, tells an amusing yarn about the Boston at Fulane game in New Orleans on Sept. 28. . He recounts the conversation between his captain, Chet Gladchuk, and Tulane’s co-captain, Tom O’Boyle, when the players met in midfield for the coin-tessing ceremony. “Listen, Mr. O’Boyle,” said Gladchuk, “We've all heard up North how much the Soush hates the dam Yankees. Well, I'm pure Lithuanian and most of the other Boston players are either Polish, Irish or Lithuanian and none of our grandpappies was in the Civil War. Does that set you right?” “Listen, son,” replied O'Boyle, “I got my Southern accent from drinking out of Dixie cups. I'm from Gary. Ind, so let's get to playing football.”
Footba!l Scores
LOCAL HIGH SCHOOLS
Tech. 26; Manual, 0. Broad Ripple, 12; Rushv Ft. Wayne Central, Mi Shor ridge, 0. Washington, outhpor Ft. Wasne North Side. 18: Cathedral, 0. Crispus Attucks, 13; East St. Louis, 6
8
»
mR NE ns
Catawba, 7: Albright, 6. Chadron, 14; Midland, 2 Tulsa, 19; St. Louis U., Transylvania, 0; Union, i (tie). Muskingum, 19; Georgetown, 0. Kent State, 13: Findlay, 0. St. Mary's (Texas). 18: St. Anselm's, 0, North Dakota, 6; South Dakota State, 0. St. Thomas, 18; St. John’s, 13, Penn Military, 20: Blue Ridge, 0. Centre, 28; Louisville, 0. Texas Tech, 21; Brigham Young, 20. Soringfield, 13: Maryville, 0. Kansas Weslevan, 6; Ditawa, 6 (tie). Bemidji, 21; Moorhead,
Park School (age Card Released
At Park
OTHER HIGH SCHOOLS
Ben Davis, Kirklin, 14; Richmond, Bloomington, a6: Lafayette, 19} Renscelaes, 2 4 ette, 5: Washington, 6: Vincennes: 6 (tie), Warsaw, 25; Plymou Crawfordsville, 253 Noplesille 0. Anderson, 18; 1 Alesandria, 3 mo. 32; Valparaiso, Rok Emerson, 13; Evansville mortal, Olle, 19; Silent Hoosiers, 0. Linton, 32: Bicknell, 0. Terre Haute Wiley, 8;
(11). 0. hall (IIL), 7. Brasil, 19; Mars Haute Garfield, 0.
6; Terre Case 33; Indiana State Boys’
i i ace Mann ’ : Sn om Wallace, 26; ast Chicago nonsevelt, 20. : East Chicago Washington; 13: Whiting, 8. Hammond, 40: Hammond Clark, “Runiington, 58 Garrett,
26: Westfield, 6.
2.
Me-
Georgetown |. School ‘they’ re already
ule the toughest any of Coach] Lou Reichel’'s teams have had to | face. The 14- -game card just released includes six contests with Midwest Prep Conference rivals and four games with non-conference prep teams. The schedule:
14: Gary Froebel, 7.
SIX-MAN SCORES
, 41: New Augusta, 6. awsr 16; Beech Grove,
Spee y 44; Terre Haute State, 24.
Lawrence, Rockville, t Bloomington University Point: Jan. t COLLEGES , 19; The Citadel, 0. gan Salem College, 0.
versity School: Jan. 23. St. Jo Elgin Academv: Feb. Jamestown: ‘Feb, 8. at Culver: Feb. Na Sma Feb, 22. at Morgan Park: arch 1, Cincinnati University School. os JMarch 7. at Cincinnati Country Day Schoo School.
Speedway Frolics In Six-Man Fray
Speedway High School defeated New Augusta, 41 to 6, in a six-man
Preshyte Morehead, 27; Heidelberg, 13; Kenyon, in Wisconsin Tech, 13: Mi on, % Lenoir Rhyne, 20: Guilfor Stetson, 19; Iai 1m i : an Betral in: Western nd land, n He), Northwestern (Okla.) State, 0; Centra (0X%la.) State, 0 (tie). ’ : Rollins, 39; Tampa. od Georgetown, 46: Virginia Poly, Wavneshurg, 10; Geneva, Carroll.
Case, 31: 32. ‘ Washburn, 7: Grinne ell. , 7: Illinois College, 2. Parsons 19: Hillsdale, 6. ple. 21: Michigan State, Girardeau Teachers, in]
Cape Teachers, 0 Catholic University, 20; Miami, | 9; Bethel, 8.
Miami Oklahoma City College vp Idaho,
PKirksvilte | field. Speedway this fall against one defeat and a tie. Center Grove is next on the schedule, Oct. 23, at Center
18, McPherson, 13, ' Grave,
tin, 24: fdaho Southern, 19;
$
Game Called— Blackout!
MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., Oct. 19. —Less than two minutes after Jack Fallon had run 83 yards for a touchdown that gave Kingston High School a 6-6 tie With Middletown in a night football game
last night, the stadium lighting system failed and the game had to be called. School authorities agreed to let the game stand as a tie and promised the 3500 fans that they would be admitted to Middletown’s next home game at half price.
But Billy Conn Wanted a K. O.
BOSTON, Oct. 19 (U. P.).—Handsome Billy Conn’ scanned the heavyweight horizon today for additional
opponents to serve as stepping stones to a title shot with champion Joe Louis in June. Conn, of the movie profile, autoed out of Beantown at dawn, sorer than a mustang’s saddle burn because he failed to knock out veteran Al McCoy last night at the garden Billy-the-Kid won the unanimous decision over McCoy after 10 rounds of fighting before 15,523 fans at the garden. Those fans contributed to a gate of $21300 and got their! money's worth in ring dramatics, but Conn figures he disappointed them by failing to knock out Mec-
‘Imaintain
By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Service Sports Editor ANN ARBOR, Oct. 19—Tom Harmon, Michigan's remarkable back, will: spend the second half of the season dueling with four of the brightest stars of the game. Frank Reagan and a high-roll-ing Pennsylvania varsity visit Ann Arbor next Saturday. Harmon and his one-man gang, Forest Evashevski, go to Minneapolis to tackle speedster George Franck and the mighty men of Minnesota Nov. 9. Bill De Correvont and the Northwestern Dark Horses invade Michigan Stadium Nov. 16. Harmon & Co. shoot for a three-year sweep over Ohio State and its 215-pound octagonal
threat, Don Scott, in Columbus Nov. 23. Reagan and the sons of Penn, and . Franck and his brother Gophers are not awed hy the presence in the Wolverine lineup of Harmon, leading ground-gainer of the current campaign. While Pennsylvania was edged, 1917, on Franklin Field a year ago, Tailback Reagan outgained Harmon when everything is considered . . . yards from scrimmage, yards gained on passes thrown by the two and punt and kickoff returns. The figures were 356 yards to 294. Minnesota has taken six in a row from Michigan. Five of the engagements have been lopsided. Only in the sophomore year of Harmon and Evashevski did the Wolves make it close, 7-6. On
¥
that occasion, they outgained the Golden Gophers tremendously. But last autumn, with Blocker Evashevski on the sidelines with an injury, Harmon had a bad afternoon, and Minnesota prevailed, 20-7. Franck, the fastest man in football, feinted Harmon out of position and sped by him on a long touchdown run. Pennsylvania will detrain at Ann Arbor with high hopes. Only one sophomore, Bernard Kucznski, is a starter. Outstanding as a {ireshman, he plays plenty of left end. : Clearing the way for the versatile Reagan is Gene Davis, the counterpart of Michigan's Evashevski, and numerous other blockers from ’'way back. ® The fact that Pennsylvania crushed Maryland, 51-0, and Yale,
50-7, may not be an indication that the Quakers are ot lotty national ranking quality. Yale,
hardly a Rhapsody in Blue with them, was without its two most formidable backs, Hovey Seymour and Ray Anderson. But Pennsylvania's blocking has been particularly good. Once a ball-carrier. is free, the entire club springs into blocking action. George Munger's team has better cohesion than it had last autumn. It is’ a determined, alert outfit with (a thorough knowledge of fundamentals. With Princeton, always a tough nut for Pennsylvania, and Michigan out of the way, the Philadelphians will still have a tough road. Navy, on the upsurge, follows Michigan, after which the
Quakers engage Harvard and Army before the finale with Cornell’s juggernaut. Perhaps the opposition Pennsylvanian has met thus far has not been too strong, but the Quakers have capable reservists backing up able athletes, and their spirit and morale is excellent. Regardless of what happens in the future, everyone close to the Pennsylvania picture is positive that the school has its best team since 1936, when the Red and Blue lost only one game. - Michigan realizes it will have its hands full, next Saturday, when it deploys against Pennsyle vania, and Tom Harmon duels with Frank Reagan, a runner, _ passer and kicker worthy of his mettle.
Pro Title Hopes Still High on
Six Fronts
Sutherland Brings His Dodgers to Chicago
WESTERN DIVISION T. 0 0 1 0 0 : EASTERN DIVISION L. T. Pet. 0’ 1.00 0 [350 1
550 .000
Chicago Bears. Green B Detroit Chicago Cards. Cleveland
2 Philadelphia .... 0 GAMES TOMORROW
Washington at Philadelphia. - Brooklyn at Chicago Pears. Pittsburgh at Green Ba Chicago Cardinals at Cooveland.
Times Special CHICAGO, Oct. 19.—Championship hopes still blaze brightly on six
fronts as National Football league
teams approach the halfway mark in the 1940 title fight tomorrow with a full schedule of five games. Green Bay, the defending champion, and ‘the Chicago Bears are tied for the lead in the Western Division, where three of tomorrow’s five games will be played, and Detroit, which journeys to Green Bay to meet the Packers, remains a definite possibility for the sectional title, despite its T-to-0 defeat at the hands of the Bears last
| week.
Rams Meet Cards
The Bears will be hosts to the Brooklyn Dodgers tomorrow and at Cleveland the Rams will engage the surprising Chicago Cardinals in the third western division contest. Washington, the only undefeated team in the league, will seek to its half-a-game advantage over the steadily improving Dodgers by whipping the Eagles in Philadelphia and New York, the
| third team with championship pos- | sibilities in the eastern division, will
entertain the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Green Bay-Detroit and
Coy. You can’s blame Billy. He had] McCoy, the New England heavyweight champion, virtually kayoed | in the ninth and 10th rounds. If! the fight had been 15 rounds, Conn! would have won by a kayo. But it! was a 10-rounder. In fighting his fourth heavyweight | opponent, Conn—who already wears the light heavyweight crown—treated Boston to its best heavy fight in years. It drew $21,300 gross and a! net of $19,074. Which isn't bad, at all, for Boston. In the third round, the somew hat | portly McCoy forced Conn about | © the ring. slammed him with short left hooks and had him staggering | when two minutes had elapsed. Billy fought out from under that cloud of tossed leather to set McCoy back on his heels before] the third round ended. Let it be emphasized that Conn | scaled about 1723: pounds, two and | a quarter less than the light heavy | limit of 175. McCoy's weight was | given off. as 181%: pounds. It is quite likely that Conn and McCoy will have a repeat bout in Boston before the new year.
Latfoon Pacing Wichita Field
WICHITA, Kas. Oct. 19 (U, P). —Ky Laffoon, Chicago pro, today, led the field at the end of the first round of the third annual Wichita apen golf teurnament. The ‘contestants were scheduled |
include $1800 cash for pros and $500 in merchandise for amateurs.
the defending champion, and Hor- | ton Smith of Chicago, were tied! with 67's for second place.
| 86
the first four plays.
‘|tain the power for
Bears-Brooklyn games headline the {day's card. Detroit has improved | steadily since opening its season with. a scoreless tie against the Cardinals in the mud and rain at! Buffalo, N. Y. It reached its peak
[last week against the Bears, when he was one of our favorites and parts of it were personal.
its defense braced after a sluggish | seconds at the outset of the] game and the Bears had scored on | Whizzer White and Lloyd Cardwell led forays into |
[the Bears’ territory in each quar- |
Iter, indicating that the Lions’ of- |
? lense is beginning to assert itself. Green Bay, playing its last game of the season at home, will be
{equally as intent on victory with! one eye on the Bears and the other on first place.
Jock Will Have a Job
Brooklyn's invasion of the Bear istronghold will be noteworthy from {two aspects. It will mark the first {time Dr. John Bain Sutherland has | brought one of his teams to the loop and it will be the first time he {has sent his Dodgers against a team from the Western division, where the balance of power in the National League is believed to be centered. Sutherland will find a mighty Bear machine still striving to atwhich teams] coached by George Halas have become famous. Although victorious in three of their four games, the Bears have not yet reached the de-
|in the weekly amateur show at the |
Joe Sgro’s Courage Isn't Quite
By FREMONT POWER = Courageous little Joe Sgro, who kept on fighting, fighting, fighting when there was nothing in it for him but a sickening bombardment of both rights and lefts, lost the bout—by decision—but he shed not a speck of prestige. i Joe is Indianapolis’ top-ranking : Golden Glover. He's the kind of : .lguy who never lets up, never slack-
3 lens the pace until the time- keeper | : 1 bangs the bell.
But even his heart, big as a battleship and just as tough, was not
. lenough to stop the continual boring !
in of Buddy Jones, a 135-pound
3? puncher from the Leeper A. C.
Jones Keeps Boring In It was a three-round bout, but for action it was as good as any of the other eight presented last night
Buddy Jones . . . more than a novice now.
without themselves
open.
leaving Armory. Seventeen years old and back in school now at Manual, Sgro was making his first appearance here since battling his way to the New York finals last winter as a Golden! Glove alternate following the Indi- | anapolis and Chicago . eliminations. He was anxious to go and led the fight squarely to Jones’ Jaw in the first round. Jones, head down and always moving in, slinging chilling right and left crosses to the head, opened up the second. A stiff right drew blood from | Sgro’s nose and the galleryites| started the chant for the kill. A; climax, they expected. But it never happened.
went to Buddy. | Jones fought last year in the Golden Gloves as a novice and Sgro as | an English Avenue Boys’ Club vet- | eran—and so when they hook up; this year, that'll be one to see. The main bout last night—a five-| round heavyweight clash—went to Vic Hutton, national A. A. U. light | heavyweight champion, by virtue of | his being able to outbox and avoid | the “Joe Louis” punch of Charles | Duncan, Westside A. C. Vic won mostly on a stiff left | which he managed to throw to! Joe wouldn't let it. Duncan’s midsection at will, He led! He kept wading in for more of the fighting in the first period, in| Jones’ dynamite and the round en- which neither did much damage, | ded about even.
able mayhem in the last round as| blows in the second. they threw everything they had| As Charley opened up in the third, |
Rock Still Thought Horsemen Were Better Than *30 Team
By JOE WILLIAMS : Times Special Writer NEW YORK. Oct. 19—We came across a letter the other day in our file. It was written from Rochester, Minn., and dated Dec. 26, 1930. It! was from Knute Rockne and he was in the hospital at the time having his infected leg treated. We don’t know why we kept the letter except it was from Rock and He had just {finished a remarkable season with his 1930 team (the one Jock Suther- | |land calls the greatest college team he ever saw) and we had written} him for some dope on this team as compared with his fabulous four | | horsemen team, | | Here are some of the comments | o | he made: “On Wednesday betore' No Denial? the Southern California game 1 -| told the team I was going to use| TOKYO, Oct. 19 (U. P).— Japan held a 2-1 lead over ~~ Germany today after the second day’s play in their tennis meet.
| Bucky O'Conner at full and just out | of curiosity I asked some of the | | backfield men what they ae] tof it, I had already indicated I! (thought O'Conner would do all right. “Carideo said: ‘That’s a hot one. Say, Bucky can play fullback with anybody in the country and with 5 d S him in there we will win. Brill ecor S et said: ‘You can double that tor me. : There isn’t anything about the job It’s an unusual week-end when he can’t do.’ Schwartz said: ‘There | some new high school cross-country|isn’t a chance for us to lose. Bucky | mark doesn’t show up. | will be a sensation. We'll give ‘em | Yesterday three were set in this the surprise of their lives. neighborhood and credited to John y a of Manual, Adolphus Per- Sure, Carideo Was Cocky “Now this wasn't egotism. I once
kins of Warren Central and Bob Crousore -of the Indiana Boys heard egotism defined as the | School. anesthetic that deadens the pain (How ‘Rock liked |
3 Cross-Country
Mascari stepped over the mile and! of one’s stupidity.’ five-eighths course at Manual in to remember lines like that one)! | 7:55 to lead his teammates to a 19-/ | This is self-confidence and conti-!
gree of effectiveness hopd for from | the outstanding personnel in foot- | ball. Against this array, Sutherland will send a squad that makes ‘more use of forward passes than | his old Pitt teams used to and one | ‘that has been improving week by |
to play 18 holes of medal play to- | Week as Ace Parker, veteran triple |p ird. Warren Central won the day, and 36 holes Sunday. Prizes threat back, has recovered from a meet, 21-34.
leg injury suffered in baseball. Washington, shaken up a ‘bit
E. J. Harrison of Little Rock, Ark., physically in its hectic encounter |tinsville course
with the Cardinals last week,| matches its aerial circus against that of the Eagles, * |
36 victory over Tech. John's brother, ! ‘dence in a teammate who though | Mike, finished second, and Eddie somewhat untried had played some | Williams of Tech was third. fine football on occasions. Perkins romped over the 19-mile, «1, the case of Carideo, to maize | route at Howe in 8:52.4 to head the exception, it might have been | Warren Central parade. Chester cockiness, but I like to have our | Perkins and Ivan Roney, both War-, quarterbacks cocky. It's good for | ren harriers, finished second and po team. I would say the out- |
| standing feature of this 1930 team ! was the close-knit bond of iriend-| ship and inspiration that made -it | I : new marks, fepented over me Mar lone hig driving, ambitious torce. |Crousore stepped it in 10:40 to lead EVerY body was pulling for the other
the Indiana Boys School team to a, fellow.” ; 17-46 victory over the Artesians. But the team closest to. Rock’s heart was the Four Horsemen.
Crousore, who already had set 13
eC. 8, Harrisbunss Dec. 13, et Bates-|
grid game yesterday at Speedway's| It was the fourth victory for |
‘calling the 1940-41 basketball sched-
workout for tomorrow’s polo game Ridge.
Curly McQuinn, Samuel Sutphin Jr. Jimm
Warming Up for Tomorrow's Polo Game
Maj. John W. Wofford of the Ft. Harrison team (left) and Conrad (Bruz)
on the Ft. Harrison
field at 2:30 p. m. Ruckelshaus plays with Rolling y James and Al Buck, all Rolling Ridge riders, and Capt. Jack greipe, Bill Aycock and Lieut, D. W. Thackeray all of the Army, alse will see action,
Even with the Carideo team riding the crest, with the critics calling | it national champion, with Rock himself insisting it could beat any professional entry, the famous Posen withheld the supreme accolade.
On this subject he wrote us . . . “However, for real athletes you would have to hand it to our Four Horsemen team. Somehow they seemed to go whenever they had to go.- In their senior year I never saw a game that in their minds there was any doubt as to the result. Stuhldreher always felt they could go and you would ‘hear him | say to the men, ‘Let's go to town before these fellows get an idea they can hold us. “You see, there was never a question in their minds as to their ability to do it, just a question of when they wanted to go to work. It was that kind of a team, and I never had another one like it.”
Lebanon Wins Title Times Special : LEBANON, Ind., Oct. 19—Lebanon High School held the Boone County baseball title today as the result of its 7-1 victory over Pinnel in a playoff game.
Used Radio Bargains Large variety s:9- 95 49 5
BLUE POINT 5x
Ruckelshans engage in a
models All a & Madison
Buddy Jones’ Terrific Shelling in the Ring
Enough to Stop
Hutton used more caution and both concentrated on in-fighting. Vic threw his first good right in the fourth and both worked hard in the finale.
It was a fine exhibition of boxing and the crowd roared its approval. Earl Paul, very possibly the most popular amateur in the city, was up
Tech, Ripple,
| Washington
Frolic on Grid
But Ft. Wayne Has a Big Time, Too
to-his usuai aggressive ways last night and pounded - through to a three-round decision over Raymond | Glenn, unattached. Paul is a Rhodius 'C. C. buster. Referee Dick. Patton had to take a hand in the Elmo Latta-Clifford | Goodwin bout to keep it from go- | ing on into the night. Goodwin continued swinging after the final bell and Latta didn’t much | care for it. He swung right back | and finally had to be cornered by the
too | announcer and a couple of seconds lights,
while Patton corraled Goodwin.
forget after the decision was an- | nounced and shook hands.
Other results:
{|A. C. Lee, Hill C. C., an unpo ular | decision from Billy Batre, Leeper three rounds. Jack Durham, unattached, knocked Dave Taylor, Peru, Ind. in 1 50 seconds of the first. rnold Deer, South Side Turners, cisioned Charles Spurling, hree rounds. | Clinton Brooks, Leeper A. C.. for Bobbie Roberts of A cisioned Sam Haslett, Boys’ Club, three rounds. Tony Vogt. Evansville, Ind.. James Stone, Leeper A.C.
out minute
deunattached,
A
substituting | arrison, deEnglish Avenue |
decisioned ! three rounds. The last bout was arranged when Milton Bess, Bess A. C., failed to! | show for his scheduled four- -rounder | with Jesse Johnson, Leeper A, C.!
DeBorde said would be for an in-| definite period. .
Something fo Keon
The Hubbies Quiet”
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Oct. (U. P.).—Three women, all of Kansas City, were playing the 15th hole—130 yards, par 3—at Milburn Country - Club in a Woman's Golf Association Jounament yesterday. Mrs. H. H. Silverbrook smacked the ball with a No. 7 iron: made a hole-in-one. Somewhat shaken, Mrs. E. F, Devilbliss hit her ball with a No. 9 iron. Trembling violently, Mrs. J. C. Fry hit her drive. It hit the pin, bounced back and landed four inches from the cup. She tapped it in for a deuce. .
19
Extra Points
Help Catholic
MIAMI, Fla. Oct. 19 (U. P.) —Led | by Pete Sachon, Catholic University | defeated the University of Miami, 20!
{to 18, last night before 24,000 specta- |
tors, winning on a margin of points after touchdown. Sachon was on the throwing end | of two touchdown passes in the opening period and counted six. points himself when he drop-kicked |
field goals in the‘ third and: fourth |
| periods. Miami failed to convert in each (case after pushing over scores in the first, third and fourth periods. Bill Steiner scored two of Miami's! ¢ [three touchdowns, going over from {the one after a 57-yard march in the {opening period and skirting end for 14 yards in the third quarter. A pass from Sachon to Brendan |Stynes in the opening minutes of
play was good to Charlie Moutenot, | BS"
accounted for the visitors’ second touchdown and climaxed an 83- -yard march.
Afterward Bogart tallied Miami's third touchdown with five minutes | remaining in the game.
Villmer to Return
To Mat Tuesday
Ray Villmer will try for victory No. 10 here in a special semi- -windup |
on the Armory wrestling card next! Tuesday night. The young and rugged 222- -pound |
St. Louis star, who has won nine |
consecutive bouts here, will face Len! Macaluso, 227, of Buffalo. Macaluso gave Ray a close call here several | weeks ago and has asked for an- | other chance to upset the St. Louis! matman.
In the headliner, Coach Billy
Thom, a former light heavyweight |
champ and a consistent winner in Indianapolis, goes to the mat with| Speedy La Rance of Montreal, who is generally recognized as present | light heavy champion. ® The Ca- | nadian will be making his first local appearance. He is touted as skilled and aggressive. J
She A
She made a hole-in-one. |
Tech High School's gridders were ‘back on the glory trail today; {Broad Ripple's victory string re‘mained unbroken, and Southport Iwas getting rather sick of its weekly Indianapolis visitors. Beyond that, it was a day for Ft. Wayne to cele|brate: Tech, off to a slow start, finally mustered its power to score a 26-0 {victory over Manual in a city series igame.- Washington had a big eve‘ning under Roosevelt Stadium's defeating Southport, 47-0, {while Broad Ripple took a 12-7 ver=
Blood still streaming down his] { Latta, 115-pound Leeper A. C. lad, dict from Rushville. face, Sgro’s courage was not enough | won by decision and Goodwin, Rho- | to stop Jones’ shelling and the bout dius C. C., decided to forgive and Shortridge,
Ft. Wayne Central shut out 14-0, and Ft. Wayne North Side handed Cathedral the |same treatment, chalking up an 18-0 victory. Crispus Attucks defeated East -St. Louis, 13-7. Ben Davis, only other county team in ‘action, defeated Westfield, 26-16.
‘Manual Breaks Fast
For a while it looked like Manual thad Tech back. on its heels after {Charles ‘Sanders in two plays had {gained 45 yards, made two first ldowns and put the pull just 15 - yards from the goal. But that was the end of the Redskin assault, and |Tech stayed in command the rest of the way. In the second quarter Roy Frost,
land continued to use his left while| Bess drew an automatic A. A. U, Substitute Tech fullback, broke out Both fighters worked consider weathering about three strong head suspension which Matchmaker Fred 00 lis own right tackle and went
{67 yards to a touchdown, with Houston Meyer carrying the ball ‘over for the point. On the followling kickoff, Tech went goalward again, a lateral pass play from Frost to Meyer being good for the tally. Willard Reed set up the third Big Green touchdown by returning a [al kick to the Manual 20, ‘with Jack Hanna going over from the 10. Shortly after the next kickoff Tech gained a first down on the Redskin 20, and Meyer {passed to Jim Myers, reserve end, for the fourth and final six- point er. Meyer's place-kick was over and between the bars. In the matter of Tech collected seven two credited to Mr. | Manual.
first downs, to the lone Sanders of
Cole Is the Star
Charles Cole was the outstanding performer at Roosevelt Stadium, scoring four of the Continental ‘touchdowns. His - first touchdown ‘came in the final minutes of the (first quarter on a 55-yard return {of a punt. He added two more | touchdowns in the second period, one on a 40-yard sprint and the other from the two-yard line. His final score came in the last period when he galloped 75 yards down the side-lines after receiving a lateral [fom Dick Gingery. | Millspaugh, Schaedel and Stonee | house also registered six pointers. Dick Gingery contributed twa conversions and Millspaugh, Col bert, and Bunting one each. The Continentals made 10 first downs and the Cardinals 4. The Broad Ripple-Rushville game turned out to be a first-half battle, ‘with both teams using the punt as chief weapon after intermission, Bill Steck scored the Rockets’ first touchdown in the first period on 3 Continued from Page 10)
Amateurs
BASKETBALL Tomorrow afternoon's schedule a$ Pennsy Gym:
1—Eastern Coal vs.
M 2—Mount Jackson Snareh Steel
Juniors vs. Sterling
Corner Cafe.
3—Drikold vs. 4—R. vs. Wiedemann Beer.
C. €ola The Sportman’s Store Sunday School League will meet at 7:30 {p. m. Tuesday at the store, 126 N. Pennsylvania St. Teams desiring to enter are asked to attend or call McDaniel, MA. 4413.
Managers of the following church teams are asked to contact Everett Babb, 209 Ww. Washington St., LI. 3446—Zion Lutheran First Evan gelical M. I. A, Woodruff Place, Broadway M. E., Lynhurst, Morris Street M. E., Blaine Avenue, Bel= {mont U. B., Olive Branch, Roberts {Park M. E, West Park Christian, Westview Baptist, Englewood and {Central Christian.
PLAY GOLF
SPEEDWAY GOLF COURSE
Pay as You Play
Green Fees, 75¢ Week Days; $1 Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays
Mondays and Thursdays Batsain 2 —2 play for the price of o
Telephone BE Imont 3570 for Playing Reservations
Oldest Loan Brokers in the State
146 EAST WAS
LOANS
The CHICAG
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Diamonds, Yiamonds, Watches,
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