Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 October 1940 — Page 8
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PAGE 8
Capitals an
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
d Red Wings Put On a Brot
MONDAY, OCT. 21, 1940
5 Jumpin’ Joe Carveth (behind the goalie) slaps the Red Wings’ fifth and final goal into the cage. The puck is shown en route,
SPORTS... By Eddie Ash
VICTORY is sweet, nature is grand and Indiana U. football prestige is saved, at least for another week. . . . The Hoosiers were due and came through like champs against a favored Iowa eleven that lost only one Western
Conference tilt last year. Having picked Indiana to upset
the Hawkeyes; this department
feels a party coming on but shall skip it until after the snow flies and the helmets and cleated shoes are put away for another year. The “picking” business runs into deep November and there's no telling what fate has in store for the crystal gazers during the re-
maining week-ends of the grid season. .
. . Calling the turn on 58
college games last week, your's truly managed to come up with 45 winners, 11 losers, and two games were played to no-decision. Batting average for the week was .804, a neat jump in points
over the previous week. . . . Record picked, 236; winners, 1 over all, .785.
75; losers, 48; ties, 13. .
for the season to date: Games
. . Batting average
We had a close shave on Minnesota at Ohio State, but gleefully accept it to offset games in which our: predictions missed fire . The Bucks had the ball on the Gophers’ two-yard line, second down, two minutes to play, but couldn't buck it over.
Hats Off to Creighton for Garrison Finish
AND how about that Marquette at Creighton thriller?
JI
ea
was one for the “book.” . .. Marquette leading, 20 to 7. at the end of three quarters. . . . In the bag. that one . , . . only Creighton refused to surrender and scored 20 points in the last period to seven by
Marquette for a deadlock, 27-27.
We picked Marquette but desire to give the Bluejays a barrel of credit for their last-ditch rally. . .. Garrison finishes like that - make the sport worth while. : IN the Hoosier state DePauw was removed from the undefeated ranks by Ohio Wesleyan’s Battling Bishops and Evansville finally lost one to up-and-coming St. Joe. . . . Notre Dame is the lone undefeated Hoosier team of the 17 playing football. Franklin, Earlham and Central Normal still are victory-starved. «+. When the latter two met early in the season they played a tie.
Layden Introduces Six-Team Football
ELMER LAYDEN, the Irish coach, introduced six-team football against Carnegie Tech. . . . This is a wide departure from six-man football as played by Chicago University. Notre Dame steps into the Western Conference this week. playing Illinois at Champaign. . . . Other Western Conference schools on the . Irish schedule are Iowa and Northwestern. . . . Iowa, on Nov. 16, is the lone home game remaining.
2 2 ”
z ” WABASH made Butler hustle to win the annual rivalry battle and the home-coming crowd at Crawfordsville agreed that the Scarleteers put up a better show than expected. Idle last week, Purdue entertains Wisconsin in its home<comer this Saturday. . . . This game rates top billihg within Hoosierland and for Indianapolis sports goers. . Notre Dame, Indiana and Butler go on the road and out of the State.
Purdue’s Chance To Even Long Series
THE BADGERS, who provided somewhat of an upset last year when they held Purdue to a 7-10-7 tie, provide the immediate problem for Coach Mal Elward in the 25th renewal of a series that has become almost traditional for its upsets. The game offers Purdue a chance to even the all-time series count with the Cardinal-clad eleven, for in the past 24 games the Boilermakers have won nine while losing 10 and -tying five.
” n ”
n
2 # o
SATURDAY morning, returning
Purdue alumni will be enter-
tained by a regulation game between {wo picked freshman football squads and a Big Ten dual cross-country meet with Wisconsin. . . . .Home-coming decorations, with fraternities and sororities compsting
for trophies, will add color to the week-end.
Boilermaker campus over the
According to Purdue Ticket Manager C. S. Doan, although there
has been a brisk advance ticket sale, game are available.
plenty of reserved seats for the
Week-End Football Results
STATE COLLEGES Butler, 19; Wabash, 12. Hanover, i: Franklin, 0. Indiana, 10; Iowa, 6. Indiana State Teachers, Grand Rap-
ids, 0. Manchester, 7: Ball State, 6. Notre Dame, 61; Carnegie Tech, 0. Ohio Wesleyan, 26; DePauw, 19. Valporaiso, 20; Central Normal. 0. Swarthmore, 15; Earlham, 6 St. Joseph, 26; Evansville,
2%
OTHER COLLEGES Akron, 7; Wayne, 7 (tie). Alfred, 19; Buffalo, 0. Alma, 14; Adrian, 0. Alabama State Teachers, 26; South Care-
. 26; Rochester, 0. Arnold, 3: Trenton, 2 tre. 7 ian, 9; Newberry, 7. APpatacy Harvard, 6 (tie). ] a Raanera. 0. Beloit, 0; Ripon, ie). Boston College, 60; Idaho, 0. - Boston University, 14; Cincinnati, 0. Bowdoin, 13; Williams, 13 (tie), Brooklvn, 14: St. Lawrence, 12. _ Bradley Tech, 19; Central Michigan hers, 0. Ly 26; Tufts, 6. Bethany, 9: Westminster, 0. California, 9: U. C. L. A, 7. | C. C. N. Y., 0; Clarkson, 0 (tie). Colby, 26: Middlebury, 0. Columbia, 19: Georgia, Connoericat. 15, Mane, 6. nell (Ia.), ; Coe, 7. Coed (Ia.), 18; Whealon, 13. Cornell, 33; Syracuse, 6. Carlton, 13; St. Olaf, 0. Colorado, 33; Colorado State, 14. : Colorado College, 28; Colorado Mines, 21. Dayton, 3 Miami ¢ YU ver, 41: oming,\9. i at 3 Ya 0 (tie). Dubuque. 20; Upper Iowa, 6 Duke. 13; Colgate, 0. Davidson, 27; Sewanee, 20. Florida, 19; Maryland, 0. Fordham, 24; Pittsburgh, 12. Franklin-Marshall, 14; Muhlenberg, 12. Fresno State, 3; College of Pacific, 0. Gustavus Adolphus, 26; MacAlester, 0. Georgia Tech, 19; Vanderbilt, 0. Gonzaga, 20; Portland. 6. Grove City, 4 Allegheny, 0.
Hiram, 2; Thiel, 0. k, 14: Rio Grande, 0. Holbeny ew York
( ss, 13; N Uy Holy Cfo rs, 20; Western (Mich.)
Towa State Teache Se ian pire) Teachers, 15; Slippery k Teachers, 6. Res illikin, 14: Knox, 6. shingion, 0.
V,
ames M ig 24: George Wa ‘LaSalle, 19: Davis-Elkins, Louisiana State. 20; Mercer, 0. Lawrence, 19; Monmouth. 6. Lafayette, 45: Gettysburg, 6. Lake Forest. 13: Augustana. 0
Marquette ,27; Creizhton, 2% (tie). Michigan, 28: Ilineis. 0. Minnesota, 13; Ohio State, 7, iY
Mississippi, 14: Duquesne, 6. Mississippi State, 40; Howard, Missouri, 30; Iowa State, 14. Montana, 6; Montana State, 0. Navy, 19; Drake, 0. Nebraska, 53; Kansas, 2. New Hampshire, 19; Springfield, 4. Niagara, 20: St. Bonaventure, 0, North State, 7. Northeastern, 12; Bates, 3. Northwestern, 2%; Wisconsin, 7. Norwich, 23: Coast Guard Academy, 1 Nevada, i8: Arkansas A. and M., 0, Oberlin, 13: Hamilton, 12, Ohama, 14; North Dakota State, Ohio U., 15: Furman, 6. Oklahoma Aggies, 33; Washington
Louis), 12, 14: State, 0,
Carolina, 13; North Carolina
6.
(St.
Oklahoma, Kansas Otterbein, 13: Bluffton. 6 Pennsylvania, 46: Princeton. 28. Pennsylvania State. 3%: Lehigh. 0. Providence, 13; Canisius, 2. Renssalaer. 26. Drexel. 0. Rhode Island. 9: Massachusetts State, 3. Rutgers, 53; Marietta, 0. San Jose. State. 7; San Francisco, 6. Scranton. 6; Toledo, 0. South Dakota, 26; Morningside, 6, St. Ambrose. 13; Rockhurst, 0. St. Norbert, 26; Carroll, 10. St. Mary’s (Cal.), 18: Loyola Cal.). 7. Southern Methodist. 20: Auburn, 13. Southern California, 13; Oregon, 0. Stanford. 26: Washington State, 14. Tennessee. 27: Alabama, 12. Texas, 21: Arkansas, 0. Texas Aggies, 21° Texas Texas Mines, 9: New Mexico, 3. Tulane, 15; Rice, 6. Utah State, 7; Utah, 0. Ursinus, 25: Delaware, 0. Vermont. 19° Union, 7. Virginia Military. 7; Virginia, 0. Wilberforce, 37; Knoxville, 2. West Texas St.te, 27: Arizona State 6
Christian, 7.
mw . 6, Washington-Jefferson, 7: . : Washington and Lee, 3; Richmond, 0. William and Mary, 41; Hampden-Sydney,
"Wooster, 24; Mt. Union, 0. ° Washington (Seattle), 19; Oregon State, Western Kentucky Teachers, 6; Tennessee Tech, 0. a ot Virginia, 32; West Virginia Wesley-
Western Reserve, 2: Baldwin-Wallace, 0. Wake Forest. 31: Marshall. 19. Wittenberg, 8: Denison, 6. Xavier (New Orleans), 6: Lane, 0.
Xavier (Cincinnati), 15; St. Vincent's, 3.
Yale, 13; Dartmouth, 7.
PROFESSIONAL Nationai League
Chicago Bears. 16: Brooklyn Dodgers, 7. Detroit Lions. 23: Green Bay, 14. ’ New York Giants, 12; Pittsburgh Steelers,
' Washington Redskins, 34; Philadelphia Eagles 17. 1 “leveland Rams, 26; Chicago Cardinals, 2 HIGH SCHOOLS Boonville, 28; ‘Bloomfield, 0.
DETROIT, Oct.
teams in mind. Hardly an hour Herbie Lewis had cautioned his Hoosier Capitals against | possible injury. His theme was this: It's just an exhibition game so beware of high-| sticking and the like. But here was a bunch of am-
two-goal deficit. Sorry to say, Caps lost, 5-3, but only after the Red Wings had ruffled a few of their feathers in turning the trick.
And in Scooted Herchy It was Art Herchenratter, a streamlined brunet fresh out of amateur ranks, who started this third-period uprising. All by himself Herchy went around leit end, then cut in on what would amount to the 10-yard line and propelled the
puck into the cage. Alex Motter and Sandy Ross, both former Caps
| themselves, were the befuddled de-
fense men on this play. On the next change of lines came the next Capital goal. It was credited to Dick Behling, another new pro. who wears a size 44 jersey with Bob Gracie (remember him) and Cecil Dillon lending a stick. But in the next minute the Red Wings were back in command, thanks to the combined efforts of Mud Bruneteau, Ken Kilrea and Syd Howe. Brunetau, a favorite with the 4783 fans on hand, drove the puck by Floyd Perras, who had replaced Jimmy Franks in the Capital cage. Those Brunetaus, Again The Bruneteau family work to do—and did it. Eddy Bruneteau scored the fourth Detroit goal at 9:32. Don Grosso and Sid Abel doing the assisting. It's a dead cinch the scorekeeper and referee didn’t even see the next Capital goal. an eight-second affair from faceoff to cage. Joe Fisher finished it off with galloping Gus Giesebrecht as his accomplice.
only to have Joe Carveth and Jimmy Orlando spoil the strategy and score the fifth Detroit goal. It was Mr. Abel, lately of this neighborhood, who sent the Red Wings into the lead in the first period, while Mr. Howe produced the second. Any ‘Indianapolis fan could have found plenty of familiar faces on either side last night. There was the kid line—Wilder, Douglas and Carveth — playing for the Red] Wings. Other former adopted! Hoosiers in scarlet togs were Abel Ken Kilrea, Alex Motter and Sand Ross.
[the Coliseum. The three Capital lines—as of Jast night—were Liscombe - McDonald - Herchenratter, Jennings-Brown-McAtee and Hud- { son-Gracie-Dillon. Bush and Whitelaw teamed in one defense combination, with Behling and Jones working the other. The latter, incidentally, has as many followers at Olympia as he had last year at | the Coliseum. But neither team has jelled completely, and several transfers are iikley to be made by the time the clubs go to Indianapolis next Tues- | day night for the final game of their - Detroit city series. Before that, they will tangle here Thursday night and again Sunday night and sandwich in trips to Windsor, Canada and Toledo. 1 The summary:
Indianapolis (3) Detroit (3) Fra
| Wh {Bush,......... L | Herchenratter.. Center .... ...K. Kilrea | Liscombe .... Right Wing..M. Brunsteau | McDonald Left Wing owe I’ Indianapolis Spares—Behling. Jones, Dil{lon, Gracie, McAtee, Fisher. Brown, Keat{ing, Thomson, Giesebrecht, Jennings, Perras. Detroit Spares—Motter, Abel, Ross, Grosso, Wares, Carveth, Douglas, Wilder, Smith. E. Bruneteau, Perras. Officials—McVeigh and Fauria.
—Score by Periods—
nk itelaw....
Petroit
, 0 3-5 Indianapolis
0 3-5 First Period Scoring — 1. Detroit; Abel (Howe. Motter) 4:43: 2. Detroit; Howe (K. Kilrea), 18:55. Penalties — Orlando, Behling. : ; Second Period — No scoring. Penalty — Motter. Third Period Herchenratter. 42 . In ing (Gracie, Dillon). 6:55: 5. Detroi Bruneteau (K Kilrea. Howe). Detroit. E. Bruneteau (Grosso. Abel), 9:32; 7. Judianapolis. Fisher (Giesebrecht), 9:40; 8. Detroit. Carveth (Orlando), 19:42, Penalty—Bush,
ring—3,
] Indianapolis,
Sco 4°28:
t. 7:52;
M
4
earlier,
Detroit k Ruffled Up ’ Bit. Though Not Enough to Lose
Herchenratter, Behling and Fisher Score for Our Boys—Chief Lewis Juggles Lineups
By J.-E. O'BRIEN Times Staff Writer
21.—The organist at Olympia blasted out “Playmates” between the second and third periods, apparently with the brotherly Indianapolis and Detroit hockey
Col. Bradley
Has a New One
NEW YORK, Oct. 21 (U. P), -
[Out of the gloom and the heart-!
y break of his bitterest bitious voungsters who refused to 40 paward Riley
year rose old
) Bradley today with a 1 any figure-eights in the face of a qptie reminder that his last river Mason-Dixon line, but you would
{ \ ' ! these nash t been crossed and a warning
erly,
3, Ice Exhibition .
I+] Be Harmon Vs. Reagan
NEW YORK, Oct. 21 (U.P.).— Two of football’s brightest stars—
Tom Harmon and Francis Xavier Reagan—collide this week when the undefeated teams of Michigan and Pennsylvania, meet in the nation’s top game. No other section of the United States can match this classic of the Midwest, although there will be some pretty good games played all the way around the circuit. The] East's best bet will be undefeated | Cornell against Ohio State at Ithaca, N. Y., where the Scarlet Scourge, twice beaten, but still a power, will try to get revenge for last vear's licking. : : | A chance to play in the Rose Bowl| will be the stake at Palo Alto, Cal,,! where Stanford meets Southern California. Stanford is undefeated | rand so is Southern California, al-, ‘though the Trojans have been tied | twice. No one game stands out below the
{certainly get your money's worth (at any of these: Baylor-Texas, A.
that his green anc white hoops may & M., Georgia Tech-Auburn, or
roll on to that fifth Kentucky Derby | North Carolina-Tulane.
triumph yet. The banner of Idle Hour is on the march again and Bimelech — well, Bimelech had.best be forgotten. This time the bright silk is
3 Army Outclasses
still had
Five forwards took the ice for from his field in the stretch to win Indianapolis in the last minute, by a length and a quarter.
| Detroit Lions have one formation i which begins with nine men on the ? line, before the shift.
Detroit Likes Jones
| Lewis has split up some of the! well-known combinations used at
Indianapolis, Behi-| § ¢.|and chrome pol-
hitched to the rising star of an un-| heralded young colt named Bryan| Station, and maybe this time the 80-year-old Colonel's number is due to turn up.
Faster Each Time
Bryan Station is a youngster who runs faster each time he runs farther. He is no Bimelech, true. But then neither were many of the others. Rather he is more a Broker's Tip or Burgoo King or Behave Yourself—a youngster who comes out of nowhere in the sunset of the year. Until a few days ago he was an unknown; today he’s on that long, long road to Churchill Downs. Last Tuesday the Colonel sent Bryan Station out for a race in Maryland. It wasn't much of a race and Bryan Station wasn’t much of la horse. In six starts he had been| second once and third once but he! hadn’t managed to win.
Equals Bim’s Time
Briefly, the young horse liked the extra distance. Off smartly, he! | whooped to the lead at the half and [stretched his stride in the straight[away to come breezing home four [full lengths in front. Saturday he | went again,’ this time in a stake— |this time the distance was even
far as 2-year-olds ever are asked to
|travel. He went to the top at the three-quarter pole and ran away
. The victory -was worth little more than $5000 and boosted the horse's total earnings to a mere $7200 for the season. But the time of the race was 1:45 1-5, equal to that of Bimelech for the same distance and proving that if coming events really cast their shadows before, the newest of the Bradley “B's” worth watching.
Mixing It Up
DETROIT, Oct. 21 (NEA).—The
* Thom Foe
This pretty man is Jules La Rance, well-known as “Speedy” and as a wrestler. He’s from Montreal, recognized as the light heavyweight champion and the local angle is that he’s going to meet Billy Thom eof Indiana University at the Armory tomorrow
Simoniz cleaned, imoniz waxed
night. ished, only . 3
{ longer, a mile and 1-16, which is as
is a colt well}
| Barthel TAILOR
Ridge Poloists
Ft. Harrison's polo team outrode, outhit and outplayed the Rolling Ridge team yesterday afternoon to win, 9-5, on the Ft. Harrison field. Outstanding player of the game was Capt. Jack Reipe, who has been playing an excellent defensive game all season. Yesterday he stepped out in some offensive plays and smashed several goals for the Army. At the end of three chukkers the Army led, 7-1. The fireworks came in the final chukker when Rolling Ridge cut loose for three goals. The season’s last game will be next Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock,
Rutherford Wins At Franklin
Limes Special : | FRANKLIN, Ind, Oct. 21—Slim| Rutherford of Whiting, Ind, es-| caped a crackup in the 23d lap and went ahead to win the 25-lap feature of the dirt track auto racing
®
| program here yesterday. Leon Hubble, Dugger driver who is in his first year of competition, was forced out with a: blown tire when his car locked wheels with Rutherford’s mount two laps from the finish. Frank Popp of Detroit was second and Mike Salay of South Bend was third. Rutherford, Popp and George Metzler of Indianapolis won 10-lap eliminations.
Greenkeepers Meet Here Sunday
About 300 members of the National Greenkeeping Superinteny dents’ Association are expected here for an annual meeting opening Sunday and continuing through Tuesday. The Indiana Greenkeepers’ Association, of which Carl Bretzlaff of Meridian Hills is president, will be the host organization. Headquarters will be set up in the Claypool Hotel.
Mike Jacobs’ Ring Octopus Stretches
NEW YORK, Oct. 21 (U. P.).— Mike Jacobs’ promotional activities will extend to Chicago, Detroit and Boston this winter. Jacobs will stage a series of boxing bouts at the Detroit Olympia Stadium and the Chicago Stadium in co-operation with the Jim Norris interests. At the Boston Garden, he “will team with Promoter Rip Valenti.
64 Wins at Hillcrest
John David, state amateur champion, and three companions, A. C. Crum, E. L. Copeland and A. Thompson, produced a best ball of 64 to win the all-amateur ABC tourney yesterday at Hillcrest.
‘
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Michigan, Northwestern and
Minnesota Pace
lowa’s Stock Falls—Hoosiers Vs. Wildcats May Be the Crucial Loop Game Saturday
By STEVE SNIDER
United Press Staff Correspondent
CHICAGO, Oct. 21.—The
»
and already outcome of the is inextricably bound up in th Minnesota and Northwestern. These three are undefeated, growing more powerful as the weeks go by and somewhere! along the line they'll have to| meet each other. On these week-ends, the Conference championship will be settled.
Northwestern no longer is a laughing matter to the pre-season favorites. The Wildcats, the Conference standings with two
|
victories, meet rebounding Indiana W
in what may be cast as the crucial | game of the day's Conference schedule. Once more intersectional combat | takes the play away from the Big| Ten squabble. Inside the league] Minnesota meets Iowa and Wisconsin plays Purdue but look at these naturals outside: : : Michigan and its Tom Harmon vs. Pennsylvania and Francis Reagan, leading scorer of the East] with 61 points. : Ohio State’s Conference champions, now fallen but striving desperately to harness the power they know is there, vs. Cornell, top team of the nation. Notre Dame, too, steps into the Conference picture at Illinois in a home-coming game Bob Zuppke would rather win than any on his murderous schedule. Odds against Zup’s stopping Notre Dame are twice as great as they were against Michigan last season. Week-end results more firmly established Minnesota, Michigan and Northwestern, but removed Iowa from the list of favorites. Minnesota, which appears to get the toughest assignments (Washington, Nebraska, Ohio State after its first defeat), will sound out
topping Iowa
Coaches Meef |Here Thursday
The Indiana High School Coaches® Association will hoid its annual fall meeting here Thursday. Main business of the meeting will be a discussion of a plan to ap~ point a representative from each county in the State. The county representative would organize the coaches in their vicinity and the business of the main body could
be managed by these smaller county organizations. ‘The principal address will he by A. F. Rupp, basketball coach af the University of Kentucky, who will speak on the subject, “Why a Coach.” Officers: of the: organization are Robert Hinshaw of Rushville, prese ident; Robert Vandivier of Franke lin, vice-president; Carl Adams of Delphi, sergeant-at-arms; Russell |S. Julius of Indianapolis, secretary« | treasurer,
(ity Gridders Led By Beech Grove
Having put a blemish on North Side Chevrolet's record, Beech
the Big 10
end still is a month away 1940 Big Ten football race e rising fortunes of Michigan,
¥ ar BIG 10 NEXT SATURDAY Notre Dame at Illinois. Indiana at Northwestern. Jowa at Minnesota. Penn at Michigan, Ohio State at Cornell. Wisconsin at Purdue.
BIG TEN STANDINGS Pct. 1.000
-
Northwestern Minnesota Michigan Indiana
Q aus
1.000 1.000 500 333 N00 000 .000
I= DIS
UNiD = ld LSE T
dumping Ohio State, 13 to 7, Min=nesota probably will be the favorite but Iowa potentially has a stronger attack than Ohio, which outgained Minnesota. ‘ Harmon stole the show in his
1 ?
first duel with Reagan and should again. Against Illinois, Michigan illustrated again to what an advanced (degree it has mastered downfield blocking to gain the most from Harmon and any other Michigan back clever enough to reach open field. They ran over Illinois, 28 to 0, and couldn't have enjoyed sweeter revenge if the score had been twice that. Wisconsin, stung by Bill DeCorrevont’s passing and running and their own costly fumbles which dropped them 27 to 7, has about an even chance against Purdue. If, however, Purdue’s cripples have recovered their health, - Boilermaker speed will decide it. Notre Dame’s 61-to-0 victory over bewildered Carnegie Tech may be misleading. There's no question that Elmer Layden has one of his best teams since becoming head coach at Notre Dame. Carnegie Tech, however, showed absolutely no liking for blocking or hard tackl-
Jowa’s reaction to defeat, After
Groove had first place all to itself today in the City Recreation Department’s senior football league. An 86-yard gallop by Frank Wele ton, former Butler gridder, gave the {Grove its 6-0 margin over the Chev=vies. It was the victors’ third straight triumph. In other games Shawnee A. C. and East Side Merchants went to a 6-6 no-decision; State Reformatory piled up a 27-6 victory over Sacks Auto Parts-and Red Men’s and Holy Trinity fought to a scoreless deadlock. In the junior league Boys’ Town chalked up its fourth straight tri=umph, a 6-0 affair over South Side
Merchants. Spades won No. 4, too, downing Southeastern Avenue Mer-<
chants, 13-0. The Rams wers rammed by Plaza Club, 26-0, and East Side Merchants conquered Ravenswood, 6-0.
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