Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 October 1940 — Page 10

SPORTS... By Eddie Ash

HOOSIER COLLEGE elevens today chalked another heavy week off the grid calendar and on Monday will begin defense |and offense programs for the round of

strenuous battles on Nov. 2.

The annual Notre Dame-Army game is to be played next Satur ay [in New York, Purdue travels to lowa City to meet the Hawkeyes and Indiana invades Columbus to

‘tackle Ohio State.

In last year’s| encounters the Irish beat the Soldiers, 14 to 0;

Iowa edged the Indiana Hoosiers,

oilermakers, 4 to 24 to 0.

0, and the Bucks trounced the

.

In Indianapolis the Butler Bulldogs aré booked in their annual struggle with DeBauw and the Tigers expect to give the Hinkleites

a rousing afterno but DePauw has heen doing a lot of

...It was a 33-

0 walkaway for Butler last year scoring this fall.

Hanover is slated to pair off with Wabash at Crawfordsville

‘on Nov. 2.... A In 1939 Mancheste swamping Defianc luck at Manchester. Ball State and Central Normal

year ago the Scarlet emerged the winner, 7-0. . . . er traveled into Ohio and staged a track meet. by le, 72-3. . . . Next Saturday Deéfiance will try its

did not clash last fall but are

due to match theii mettle at Muncie next week-end. . .. At Evansville . the Earlham Quakers will square off against Evansville College. . . .

A year ago the Q Franklin to En

ROSE POLY will clash at Fra Charleston, Ill, Illinois pedagogues Valparaiso an ‘fall and the rivals ‘gridiron. Joe Dienhart's lone member of ~ that is not schedu

# sn

BEGINNING nation next week

akers won, 13-0.

[eachers, 7-6, last

he Hoosier group

"

tertain Rose Poly

rolled over Franklin, 33-0, in 1939 and the rivals nklin' this time. . .

. Indiana State nudged the fall and will play host to the

this season on Nov. 2. : nexed a thriller, 12-8, over Capital of Ohio last are matched to collide next week on tne former's

St. Joseph College Pumas are idle next week, the

of 17 colleges playing football

ed for official action.

H # 8

the November stretch run, big games over the include Clemson at Tulane, Minnesota at North-

western, Georgia Tech at Duke, Columbia at Cornell, Marquette at

Duquesne, Auburn Kentucky, Kansas Nebraska at Oklah : Louisiana -Sta Arkansas at Texa U.C.L. A, Mississ at Yale. Pittsburgh has next week.

te at Tennessee,

News and Notes of Interest to Bowlers .

SPARES served piping hot by the American Heinie Groh, former major league third sacker of bottle bat fame, has had five 600 series in a row this fall. . . . In a recent.exhibition match he smacked out a 660 total. . » . Heinie does his bowling in Cincinnati. Wally Lundgren, Chicago pin spiller, came back from a tournago and told a friend that he rolled 690 without a games were 195, 195, 300. 17-year-old senior at Morgan Park High School of the nation’s most amazing bowling youngsters. g 210 in Chicago's Classic League as a member of

STRIKES A Bowling Congress press service:

ment a few years 200 game. . , . H Glen Gersch, Chicago, is one ot . . . He is averagin the famous Schlitz ” ”

TOMMY GIBE Paul Tournament Bowling Congress have reached 2961 Herb Engstron bowling had an av the aid of a single 703, 597 and 597. Joe Rossini of with a score of 617 tinuous bowling to ” 8

HERB FREITA Chicago Gold Coa

team. n

1. ...It took him finish the job. o

at Georgia, Princeton at Harvard, Alabama at State at Michigan State, N.Y.U. at Missouri, oma, Navy at Penn, South Carolina at Penn State.

Southern Methodist at Texas,

s A.-M. Baylor at Texas Christian, Stanford at ppi at Vanderbilf, Kansas at Villanova, Brown

| morrow with only one team still un-

_|title contenders in non-sectional en-

we

Caps Mee

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

t Wings in Home Debut Tuesday

%

Redskins Risk A (Clean Slate Against Lions

Invade West as Bears Go East to Meet Giants,

WESTERN DIVISION WwW Lip 4 0 3 3

Chi. Bears ... Green Bay... Detroit . Cleveland ... 2 Chi. Cardinals 1

EASTERN DIVISION

Pittsburgh. *Philadelphia 0

*Tonight's - (Sat.)

THIS WEEK'S GAMES TONIGHT Brooklyn at Philadelphia, : TOMORROW Chicago Bears at New York. :

Pittsburgh vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee,

Cleveland at Chicago Cardinals.

L 0 1 2 4 6

game not included.

Times Special CHICAGO, Oct. 26.—The National Football League, well on the way to one of its most successful seasons, opens the second half of its 55-game championship schedule to-

McCalley of Cathedral tries an center background.

Jeffers Wins

beaten and new records for attendance and offense virtually assured. Two games are on the day's schedule in which division leaders take to the road to engage ranking

counters. - Washington, undefeated and a game and a half out in front in the eastern division, comes west to play the Lions in Detroit and

end run with Hanna (52), Rufner (46) and Seipel (55) of Tech closing in, Ramsey (42) of Tech is in

Tech High Keeps Road Clear to City Gridiron Ti

Vig

Single Touchdown Gives Them Cathedral's Scalp

5 an unusual schedule, idle this week, idle again

the Bears, in first place by a game in the Western Division, go to New York to face a crippled, but steadily improving Giant eleven. Other games send the Cleveland Rams to Chicago to meet the Cardinals, whom they dumped into the Western Division cellar. with a 26-to-14 defeat, in Cleveland last Sunday, and pit Pittsburgh against Green Bay in Milwaukee. The Brooklyn Dodgers oppose Davey O'Bri¢n and associated Eagles in Philadelphia tonight. This is the) last night game on the 1940 schedule.

Redskins on Warpath

# u 2

A Close One

Jethro Jeffers. Leeper A.C. heavyweight, took a close five-round decision over Charles Duncan, West Side A. C. 186-pounder, in the feature bout of last night's weekly amateur boxing card at the National Guard Armory. Jeffers weighed in at 184 pounds. The Leeper mauler got the nod on a split decision after the two judges had over-ruled Referee Roy Rodgers, who scored the fight in Duncan's favor. It was a bitter battle all the

Technical High's gridders had another scalp dangling from their belts today in their quest of the city title. They subdued a fighting Cathedral eleven yesterday, 6-0, with a sustained 75-yard drive in a thrill-packed game at the East Side field. Tech defeated Manual . last week. : The score against Cathedral came soon after the second half kick-off Turkey Talk as Willard Reed, huge Tech fullback, pluwged over from the Irish To avoid any political contro- one. Bold Hennigar’s drop-kick for versy over which is the right the extra point was wide of the upThanksgiving, the Speedway Golf Club will hold its annual dinner and handicap tournament next Saturday.

rights. Taking the Cathedral kick-off in Pop Myers will furnish the milk-fed turkeys, which will

3ONS, the old prize fighter, is president of the St. Association that will entertain the 1941 tourney, March 13 to April 28. . . . Res teams at this early date, says Tommy. 1 of Chicago at the end of five weeks of league erage of 203. . .. He accomplished this feat without } 600 series. . . . His league totals were:

rican vations

597, 557,

Los Angeles won a marathon match of 30 games

7 hours and 50 minutes of con-

N 1

o ” 2

\G rolled 278, 243 and 279 for an even 800 in the League the other night... . Last spring Freitag

and Joe Sinke took the A. B. C. doubles championship with 1346 pins.

A few weeks

totaled 3497, including a 1263 game. , this fall in league competition.

posted an 802 earl

go Freitag and the Chicago Pabst Blue Ribbons

. . Bert Barkow of Milwaukee

each other for four scrappy periods |

last night and the |[game ended in a ie, 7-7. The first period |was featured by| a punting exchange, with Kentucky | __ getting the best of it. In the second, Kentucky dro touchdown, with the ball over, bu

| |

a 30-yard pass Mullins, who breezed into’ the |end zone with Georgia tacklers floundering about him. Jones converted for Kentucky. 2 Georgia appeared to be “moving into scoring position twice as the] first half came into closing mo-| ments, but each time fumbles upset the Bulldog plans.

in the fourth, on the wings of Frankie Sinkwich’s| crushing drives] through the Kentucky line. Sink-| wich set up the tally with a 12-

yard jaunt through the Wildcat 21:215. He was followed across the|

To the Colors

Times Special a DETROIT, Mich, Oct. 26.— Raymond (Butch) Morse of the Detroit Lions, has enlisted in «the United States Army Air Corps. The veteran end now is in training in California. Morse, who had been with the Lions six segasons, is the second” Detroit player to enlist in the air force. Dave Smukler, former Temple fullback, “ joined -up shortly after the Lions purchased him from Philadelphia. Morse played undergraduate football at the University of Oregon.

Indiana Harriers

Drub Champions

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Oct. 26 (U. P).—The Indiana University

[cross country’ team yesterday won | ight, 21 to Georgia's lone score came early a 20 to 35 match from Michigan tO an early

State, defending national champions, in a dual meet here. Wayne Tolliver, ace Hoosier dis-

tance runner, finished first in

secondary. Then Krankie passed to|line in order by Kane, Hedges and

One of the most; potent offenses| way, as Jeffers landed several hard in league history will be brought rights to the head and midriff in face to face with one of the league’s| each canto, but the West Side ace leading defenses in -the Washing-|kept boring in to force the fighting. ton-Detroit encounter. The Red-| In the four-round semi-final, skins, led by the incomparable Rusty Patterson, recently ‘crowned Sammy Baugh, are setting the pace city parks champion in the fiyin nearly every department of weight class, was upset by Clifford offensive endeavor. They have ‘av- Goodwin, Rhodius Community Ceneraged 37 points per game in com- ter, by a shade. a > piling five consecutive victories., In three-round bouts Elmo Latta, Detroit has surrendered only 45 Leeper A. C. pounded out a decision

points in six games, including a over Sammy Allen, English Ave.

New York, not at all sure it will gagements of the evening; Charlie not be able to use Tuffy Leemans, Teckenbrock, English. Avenue Boys’ its star Bear bditer, who suffered a| Club, decisioned LeRoy Simmons, back injury against Pittsburgh last; Hill Community Center; James week, draws the Chicago eleven at| Stone, Leeper A.C. defeated Eugene a time when it is at the peak of Simmons, Hill Community Center; |its power. | Roy Carnes, Lauter Boys Club, de- + cisioned Earl Etheridge, English .Rookies Make Debut | Ave. Boys’ Club; Arnold Deer, South The Bears were a superb football Side Community Center, took a free team last Sunday against the best swinging slugfest trom Clinton Dodger squad yet to represent | Brooks, Leeper A. C.; Eugene Miller, Brooklyn and they are so eager to English Ave. Boys’ Club, won on a avenge the stunning 16-to-13 defeat, third-round technical Knockout hung on them in the Polo Grounds, from Earl Alderson, Northeast Comlast year that there is not likely to| munity Center; and Sam Haslett, be any let up in their attack tomor-| English Ave. Boys’ Club, gave Bobbie row. | Roberts, Fort Harrison infantryman, The game will mark the New a boxing lesson all the way to win York professional debut of such|/by a wide margin. noted Bear rookies as George Mc-| It was announced that Buddy Afee of Duke, described by Coach Jones, Leeper A. C. slugger, will Steve Owen of the Giants, ‘as “the meet James Sheron, Hilll Com- | fastest man I've ever seen in a foot- munity Center 135-pounder, in the |ball suit;” Ken Kavanaugh, All-|feature scrap of next week's card.

| American end from Louisiana Alleged Zivic “Gift”

State; and Bulldog Turner, famous Will Be Probed

Hardin-Simmons center. St. Louis U. Upsets ; PHILADELHPAIA, Oct. 26 (U. P.). —Chairman Leon L. Rains of- the

Favored Drake, 21-0

DES MOINES, Iowa, Oct. 26 (U.| Pennsylvania Athletic Commission |P.).—St. Louis University upset al Said today that he would inves- | favored Drake eleven here last | tigate reports that Fritzie Vivic | 0. The Billikens got off | promised 25. per cent of his earnlead and smothered the | ings to Eddie Mead, Henry Arm- | Bulldogs’ highly rated aerial attack. Strong's manager before the newSt. Louis scored in the first quar- ly-crowned welterweight champion \ter after: blocking a kick on the|may fight here. | Drake 18-yard line, Aussiker scooped| Rains’ statement up -the ball and ran with 1t to the motor Phil Glassman

came as Proannounced,

scoreless tie against the Cardinals.| Boys Club, in one of the best en-|'

‘the third quarter, Tech returned to its own 40. Then Reed, in two plays, made two first downs, the latter putting the pigskin on the Irish 28. follow 18 holes of links play. the tournament starts at 12:30 p. m. and the fee for everything is $1.

Doc Parshall (Quits Big Line

URBANA, O, Oct. 26 (NEA).— Dr. Hugh M. Parshall, who has headed the list of winning harness race drivers for 13 of the last 14 years, will quit the big time" next season. Doc Parshall will put 15 horses up at the Indianapolis sale in November and dispose of most of his equipment. The Urbana - veterinarian plans to race a small stable through Ohio in 1941. Carl Recor, second man in the Parshall Stable for several years, will set up for himself. Silver Recor is to conduct a private stable this winter at Pinehurst, N. C., obtaining horses and training them for owners who want to see their own trotters in action next summer in night meets on Long Island. Parshall was dethroned as topdriver the past season by Harry Fitzpatrick, who took 53 events. Fitz copped 51 races in 1939, but still was second to Parshall. The leading trotting stable of 1940 was that of Homer D. Biery, which captured 62 races.’ Little Pat, the Biery ace, ba 12.

gged

ridge Direct and Jackie Grattan.

Indiana Central Wins 4th Straight

Indiana Central country runners scored there fourth straight victory of the season today

Jack Hanna, left half, brought the leader up to the 22, ‘and then he made the third consecutive first down on the seven. On the combined efforts of Reed and Hanna, | Tech reached the -one-yard line. Reed plunged over on the next play.

Irish Turn Tide

In the opening period, Tech re-| ceived the kick-off and appeared to be headed for a score, but after earning a first down on the Irish 20, |Cathedral recovered a Greenclad | fumble on its qwn 30, and threatened the Ball-coached boys with a goalward drive of their own. Sparked by Ott Hurrle, 1939 all-city back, Joe Harmon's charges proceeded to drive all the way to the Tech six on four straight first downs, but Reed intercepted a Hurrle aerial thrust as the quarter ended.

The second period was featured by a punting duel, with Cathedral having the edge, but the half ended scoreless as Tom Fox's passes missed their mark for Cathedral.

After the Tech six-pointer in the third quarter, the Irish brought the ball to mid-field, where Hurrle punted out of bounds on the Tech 2. Then Tech kicked out to its own 35, {and Tom Fox, midget Irish ball|carrier, and Hurrle combined to {make a first down on the 22. On third down Jay Seipel, Tech quarter-

back, intercepted a pass from the

{arm of Dick McCalley and lateraled

to Reed, who ran 85 yards for a

| score, i Play Is Called Back

; | However the play was called back Other consistent winners for on the ruling that the lateral from | the Butler, .Pa., string were Stone-:Seipel to Reed had been thrown for- |

ward, and Tech was penalized to.its one-yard line for the offenise. Reed kicked out of danger for Tech, and the period ended with Cathedral consistently losing ground.

In the final quarter Cathedral {had possession of the ball several [times but the gun sounded just as

{Tech gained a first down on the {Irish 5 after an interception by

25. He took a pass on the 12 from

wheri they turned back the Earl- ganna .

Skipworth for 13 yards and a first|

down on the Kentucky one, from!State won the next five places with |

which point -Sinkwich rammed] across the score. Leo Costa, a reconstructed center who specializes in Kicking the after-

I piece, converted to tie the score.

'Ebbetts Field Has Two Grid Sellouts

i Z'imes Special iy : BROOKLYN, N. ¥., Oct. 26.—Eb- | : pets Field, home ¢f the Brooklyn | Dodgers, -has been sold out for the i National Football | League games| . against the New York Giants on { Nov. 3 and the Washington Red- : skins on Nov. 10; Dan Topping, president of the; Dodgers, announced today. | This is the first time in the his-| _ tory of the club that Ebbets Field) "has been sold out in advance.

Footbal

the next play and converting. A 15-yard penalty in the second |

Jreertjes, all of Indiana. Michigan

| three-yard line, carrying it over on that Zivic had agreed to meet th¢

winner of next Monday's bout between Mike Kaplan and Milt Aron.

ham team, 26 to 29, in the 4% -mile! contest.

|hard tackling of Dave Ramsey, Tech

Throughout the game the fine and

| Managan finished in order.

| Results

Monroe, Scott, Page, Mills and

Special Will Carry N.D.-Iowa Fans

A Dame-Iowa football game Nov. 16 at South Bend will be sponsored by the Notre Dame Alumni Club of Indianapolis, ‘Harry Scott, arrangements committee chairman, announced today. . Tickets for the train will be available at"the New York Central ticket office in the Guaranty Building, the Bush-Feezle sporting) goods store and the Sexton agency at 136 FE. Market St. The tickets at $9.50 include railroad fare, bus transpor-| tation to and from the stadium and | lunch. ‘

a

COLLE(

SES esne, 10; Manhattan, 6. Battin Wallace, 13; Akron, 7. George Washington, 19; West Vitginia, 0. MacAlester, 26; Augsburg, 0. ; Tarkio, 0. -Sptingfleld (Mo.) Teachers, 20; Southwestérn (Kas.),

. 28, New River, 0. Sortom, 1a; Northwestern College, 7.

Baker n 20; Western

jam Jewell, 18

‘thers,

Rip. 3. Southern Bran ormal School, Teachers, 7;

gia T (tie). t;| Elton, 17. D

ch), 26. Al- ¢ ,. 1; Geor, (Fla) U., y i. 35 Otfervein, 0 Translyvania, 13; ferbein, 0. Gustayus-Adolnhus, or Hamline, 0, Concordia (Moorehead) Minn., Moorehead Teachers, 1, Hastings, 4; Doane. 4 (tie). St. Ambrose. 21; Delroit Tech, 0. . Superior (Wis.) Teachers, 25; Stout Institnt Fin

rak

\

alem, 7 : Easter 8 Coliese, 40; Lewiston (Idaho) State Next al, 0

hd

Howard Payne, 10; Southwestern Tex., 2. ‘Wichita, 14~ Washburn, 6. Kansas Wesleran, 20; College of Emporia, 0 Maryland, 6; Western Maryland, 0. College of Pacific vs. Loyola (Los Angeles), postponed, rain (will be played this afternoon), Midland, 33; Nebraska Wesleyan, 0. Jamestown College, 20; Valley City, 6. Mayville Teachers, 14; Minot, 0. 7; C Stockton, 0. hany,

t 3 erson, 0. Rockh.rst, :4; Warrensburg, 7. Chattanooga, 20; Sewanee, 6. Newberty, 36; Lenoir-Rhyne, 0. York, 31; Concordia, 12. Louisville, 38: Holbrook, 7. : Central (Mich.) State, 24; Michigan Normal, 0.

pas ville, ulvér

STATE HIGH SCHOOLS

rt, 27; Goshen, 0. %; Lew Wallace (Gary),

ti Tolleston (Gary), 13; roche

Elk Fmerson (Gary), 7 (tie). \Whitizs. 6; Hammond, 6 (tie). 1 (Gary), 0. Crown Point, 7; Lowell, 0. La Porte 64: Adams (South Bend), 0.) Reitz (Evansville). 15; Sullivan, 0. Washington (South Bend), 13; Muskegon

special train to the Notre)

quarter pushed Drake back to its According to reports here, Zivic own 10-yard line. Anderson tumbled agreed to give 25 per cent of his a bad pass from center and St.|earnings to Mead before he was Louis recovered on the one-yard| permitted to meet Armstrong. It line. Weber plunged over. Aussiker|was pointed out that the agreement scored agdin in the fourth quarter had no bearing on the bout’s outafter Weber passed 45 yards to:come. Zivic defeated Armstrong

Capt. Jim Miller of Central fin- right end, was a feature. Henniger, ished first in 23:07. Second place |Green and White tackle, was also a was taken by Montoya of Central. standout on defense. Three Earlham runners were tied! Although Tech came out on the for next honors. They were Bye, long end of the 6-0 score, Cathedral Jordan and Rogers. Adams of Cen- had a slight edge in first downs. tral was sixth and Welles of Central, Score by periods: seventh. Miars of Earlham was Tech

Ofterholt on the Drake three-yard!at New York's Madison Square ' Garden Oct. 4. ;

/

| line.”

“Win for Good Old Butch Who

a temporary condition. What Mr.

By JOE WILLIAMS Little may be telling his Lions about

Times Special Writer

Coach Now Uses Real Finesse to Steam His Gladiators

eighth. | Cathedral

Is Up With the Angels’ Is Out;

little boy had looked up at him before game time, and sent everywith pleading eyes . . . “Dad, don't |body out except the eleven of us

NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—It may surprise you to know that the modern

Cornell the week the game actually comes is, or could be, something

else.

Most college teams are made up of youngsters with impressionable minds. They. are more likely to be sublimely confident than otherwise. An intelligent, understanding, sympathetic coach can be of enormous value. Obviously conditioning the youngsters’ minds requires a more subtle gift than hardening their sinews or perfecting precision plays.

The coach’s approach to the

player is different today. It has changed along with the formula and technique of the game. The fight talk, the fake telegram, the “win this one for good old Butch who is now up there with the angels” all this charlatan stuff is as outmoded as Jeffersonian Democracy in. the vicinity of the White House.

We recall a New England coach who once got an inspired game out of his players by reading them a fake wire. ‘It seems his little boy, aged eight, a campus favorite, was critically ill—or was supposed to.

football coach pays as much attention to conditioning a player's mind as his muscles. It may surprise you for a variety of reasons, one of ¢ which is that it is not popularly admitted that football players have minds. But this is true just the same. As a randoin example we will take Mr. Lugubrious Lou Little of: Columbia whose undefeated Lions Williams -play what appears to be a sub-par Syracuse team today, and whose subsequent commitments call for a meeting with the super-par Cornell team. By some strange system of mental hocus-pocus Mr. Little has managed to get his Lions nervous about the outcome of the Syracuse game and

Mich.), 0. Riley (South Bend), 25; Michigan City, 6,

let ’em get whipped today.” ; Then there was the day when

Jess Hawley sent an emotionally aroused Dartmouth team out to meet Cornell. It was in 23 or ’24. Anyway it was the day they dictated the memorial stadium, Hawley took the players over to a tablet on which was inscribed the names of Dartmouth men who had died in the prelude to World War No. 2. The solemn significance was not lost on the youngsters. They went into the game with a lump in their throats. . . . Cornell kicked to the Dartmouth safety man. He fumbled. Panic set . Dartmouth was routed. ' Some of the old line coaches had a change of pace. Eddie Casey used to tell about Percy Haughton, the Harvard drill master, and how he'd fire the cantabs up until they hated everybody and everything except themselves—and they weren't too sure about that. But one day the haughty Haughton pulled a fake reverse in the dressing room. “It was before the Yale game,”

cocky about the outcome of the Cornell game. This may merely be

~

be. Just before the coach left the sick bed for the playing field his

related Casey: “Haughton came

who were to start. We were tense, strained, prepared for one of his typical blasts. Haughton had the most commanding walk I've ever seen. Eight or 10 times he walked up and down that little room. We wished he would start talking and get it over with. : “Suddenly he stopped, took off his derby hat, laid it on the rubbing table and said in a quiet, almost soothing tone, ‘Now you men know what you can do and what I hope and expect you will do. I know you'll do your very best. I'm not worrying about that. Just go out there now and God bléss every one of you.” .

rience I ever had before a game,” Casey admits today. “It isn’t much of an exaggeration to say of us were prepared to break our legs and arms for Haughton that afternoon in the bowl.” But coaches like Little believe that just as you can’t get a player in physical shape on the day of the

shape a few

“It was the most amazing expe-| Geo.

game, you can't get him in mental pay

tle

Wy

{ 7 7 |

t (in the # | Leagues.

Duquesne Gets

The Last Word

PITTSBURGH, Oct. 26 (U. P.).— Duquesne University came from behind after an early Manhattan score to defeat the New York team by a 10-6 score in a football test before 13,000 people at Forbes Field last night. 3 J Duquesne took ‘the lead early in the second half after Manhattan had pushed across a touchdown in the opening minutes of the initial period. The Manhattan kick for point after touchdown was bad, and Duquesne pushed ahead, 7-6. Duquesne added a .further margin of safety in the last period on a field goal by Rokiskey. Manhattan end Dave Farabaugh scored for the Jaspers within the

first two minutes after he blocked a Duquesne punt on the Duquesne

Jim Supulski and scored standing up. Gnup's kick was wide. But that-ended the Manhattan scoring. Although outgaining the | Jaspers by a wide margin, Duquesne |scored for |second half. On Duquesne'’s second |play after gaining possession of the ball for the first time in that half, end Hank Maliszewski scored on a long pass from Phil Ahwesh on the Manhattan 45. Ahwesh's kick was good. Duquesne added three more points midway in the last period as back John Rokiskey kicked a field goal from the 32 despite a bad left ankle. Manhattan continued with a furious passing game, but Duquesne captured the ball and was headed toward the goal line when the game ended. The Pittsburgh team had a wide edge in statistics, making 17 first downs to six for Manhattan, and scoring a net yardage of 439 to 237.

SATURD

the first time in the |

jo

1940

Y, OCT. 2,

Hockey Fans Get Preview of New Players

Game Will Be the Final Of Pre-season Series

The hockey Capitals will be put on ice at the Coliseum next Tuesday night to jell a lineup already well-moulded

in a fortnight of practice. This tussle will be the final of the

six-game series between the Caps

and their Red Wing kin from Detroit, after which the two teams

will part for their respective chores American and National So you can see that the blue uniforms of Indianapolis and the red ones of Detroit probably will be distributed for keeps that evening. Perhaps the biggest deciston still to be made is at goal. Tiny Thompson's transfer from the Wings to Buffalo left Manager Jack Adams of Detroit the choice between Johnny Mowers of Omaha and Jimmy Franks, who minded mesh here until his injury last season.

Caps. to Get Jimmy

Judging from their performances to date in the city series and the fact that Manager ‘Herbie Lewis wants Franks here, Mowers ‘ap= parently will be made a Red Wing, It will not be decided definitely, however, until next week. It looks like Lewis’ defense probe lems are solved. One guardian com bination is that of Bob Whitelaw and Eddie Bush, while Buck (Rough-'em-Up) Jones has been paired with hefty Dick Behling, a newcomer in the skate-for-pay game, Apparently Jones is with Indianapolis: to stay in spite of his wide popularity at Detroit's Olympia. There's a bumper crop of right wings on the Capital roster at present, including returning lettermen Butch McDonald, Hec Kilrea, Joe Fisher and Ronnie Hudson. A new= comer seeking employment is Bill (Cyclone) Jennings.

Your Center Candidates

Center candidates at the present reading are (Art Herchenratter, Connie Brown and Gus Giesebrecht, Herchenratter is the novice here but he has been delivering the pucks efficiently so far. Carrying a big smile as he carries the disc, the streamlined Herchy is the ideal candidate to become a Coliseum hero this winter. In the left wing department there are Carl Liscombe and Jack Keate ing of the 1939 Caps and Jud Mc-. Atee, 20-year-old star of the world Junior champion Oshawa, Ontario, Generals last season. Two of last year’s Capitals, Scotty Bowman and Bob ' Gracie, have been sold outright to Buffalo of the American League, and it's quite possible another man or two may be trimmed from the squad. Incidentally, = Buffalo has gone whole-hog into the player market since its proposed working ‘agreement with the Toronto Maple Leafs fell through. .

Rangers to Play Here

Any possible transfer between the Capitals and the Wings may involve the kid line of Archie Wilders-Jose Carveth-Les Douglas, but this trio still wears the scarlet of Detroit. The Red Wings won their third straight game from the Caps last night at Windsor, Canada, 8 to 3. The result, however, did not count . in the city series. : Mud Bruneteau [rammed homa two goals for the Wings, while Car veth, Syd Abel, Ken Kilrea, Jack

. 4 9 - * Ai Tain'’t Fair MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 26 (U. P.).—It hadn't rained for more than a week when Macalester met Augsburg here, but the cleated shoes of the football players sank three inches deep in {| mud. The light Augsburg team [| lost 26 to 0. { Augsburg field custodians had {| forgotten to turn off the sprinkling system.

100 Expected In Inter-League

More than 100 teams are expected to make up the entry list for the 1050-scratch classic that opens at Pritchett’s bowling alleys today. Eighty-two squads already were |signed with the deadline still a few hours away. b The meet is the first on the program which has been arranged by members of the Indianapolis Bowlling Alley Proprietors Association for the season. Each team is allowed a handicap equal to 75 per cent of the difference between 1050 and its own league average. Rules of this year's meet have been altered so that any team bowling in rthore than one league must enter under its highest average. No quintet will be permitted to substitute more than two bowlers in its regular lineup. Bob Wuensch hung up the high score for the. week on last night's program when he clicked for 226-. 249-235—"710 in the Classic League at the Fox-Hunt Alleys. Those who hit over 600 were:

Ed Gallema, Classic Paul Stemm, Classic Harry Poole, Washington Joe arker, Washingion apt rvey George Godwin, Was ington a John hington gton

*% een Re a a. a on -

a >= precy

Koepper, Fred Bet Bob Hugh H

geanze

883

Al Burkhardt, N. Y. C./ Bertha Urbancic, Kernel ne, ngion Shorr. Switzer-Cumming Tate, Bankers , Art Haymaker, Washington Richards, Construction Ivan Hyfield, Insurance . .. Vernon Williams, Ashington MOTYIE National Mal le Fred Estle, Washingto: . Ray Landers, Washington .... Harmon.

Ladies

“teen ies sn »O0

a George Volker, Li

into the dressing room 10 minutes

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minutes before the game either, , , ,

Stewart, Syd Howe and Eddie | Wares each tallied once. Indiane |apolis goals were scored by Giese |brecht, Jennings and McAtee, Following Tuesday night's exhibi(tion game here, the Capitals will drill for three days before Jumping [to Cleveland for the league opener, [They'll be back here a week from {tomorrow for the local league in=|augural, |another

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And after that they have exhibition engagement—

[this with the world champion New

York Rangers on Nov. 8. Lewis is expected in town Monday morning and“the other two squads will unload here sometime later in the day.

The Secret Is Out; Wrestles Tuesday

Pat Fraley, 225, the Lincoln, Neb,, grappler who formerly was known as the “Black Secret,” will engages Ray Villmer, 222, St. Louis, in the semi-windup on the Armory mat bill Tuesday night. ‘Fraley wore a mask when he was here several seasons ago and ene Joyed .a long winning streak. He tossed Kay Bell last Tuesday. Villmer has-not dropped a bout in eleven starts. : ‘ Two speedy and skilled light heavies, “Lord” Lansdowne, and Stacey Hall, came to grips in the feature. Lansdowne 1s listed as one of the most colortul performers to visit this territory. Hall is assistant mat mentor at Ohio State Unie versity.

Creighton Arrives.

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 26 (U, P.).—Creighton University’s football team arrived here today for a short workout before its game with the University of San Francisco in Kezar Stadium. tomorrow. Coach Skip Palrang brought 30 men with him from Omaha.

GRANPA'S POPCORN

- Truly a Wonderful CONFECTION Plus large assortment of home made : candies

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Roth, Construction .. Tillie

Kagel, Kernel Ladies ............ 601

2913 E. 10th St.