Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1940 — Page 10
i
SPORTS...
By Eddie Ash
2
There is no rest in sight yet for Hoosier college grid- - ders and after completing a weighty menu today they _ Will begin pointing Monday for the Nov. 9 slate. . . . In- ~ diana will get top billing within the State next Saturday, ~ playing Michigan State at Bloomington in the Hoosiers’
last home game of the season.
~The Hoosiers and Spartans fought to a 7-7 deadlock last year * and again look evenly matched. . .. At any rate, the tilt comes under ( the heading of a major tussle.
Notre Dame treks to Baltimore
to battle the Navy and from all
reports the Middies do not fear the Irish in spite of the national football ratings. ... There is plenty of talent at Annapolis and Middie observers declare this year’s squad is superior to the 1939 crew that held Notre Dame to a 14-7 score. :
Purdue’s Boilermakers are going
traveling to the big town a week
hence, playing the Fordham Rams at New York. . . . The teams did
not meet last fall. . tilts of Nov. 9.
. |. It will be one of the featured intersectional \
In the hometown grid precinct, Butler's Bulldogs will tackle Ball
State of Muncie in the Blue Bowl. . .
. It will be Butler’s final Hoosier
Conference game of the season. . . . The Blue warriors prevailed over
the Cardinals last fall, 16-0.
Incidentally, the Bulidogs will close the season two weeks from today against the Toledo University Rockets in the Bowl. . .. Toledo’s coach is Doc Spears, former Western Conference and Oregon mentor.
Lake Forest Travels to Wabash
TWO STATE rivals will hook up at Valparaiso next Saturday when Manchester invades the Uhlans’ home grounds. . . . In a free-
scoring match last fall Manchester Wabash is to entertain
won, 26-13.
ke Forest of Chicago at Crawfordsville
. sand hopes to erase Forest's huge edge last year when it was 39-0.... - But that’s a huge deficit to make up.
}
In 1939 University of Louisville trounced Hanover, 20-0, and per=
‘haps the Panthers can do someth over. . . . Franklin will be host fans ‘will recall that a victory of the season.
2 "
ing about it next Saturday at Hanto Evansville on Nov. 9 and State year ago Franklin won 19-14, for its lone
2 2 8
THE St. Joe Pumas, idle this week, are slated to tackle St. Norbert’s of Wisconsin on St. Norbert’s field oa Sunday, Nov. 10. . . . It was a thriller a year ago with St. Joe on top, 18-13. DePauw’s Tigers go to Richmond a week from today to grapple
Earlham. , . . Last fall the Tigers
‘Monday, Nov. 11, Armistice Day, Rose Poly has a date with Milton
won going away, 48-6. . . . On
at Terre Haute. . . . The teams engaged in a stirring struggle in 1939
with the Engineers winning, 13-12.
Only Hoosier eleven idle next week will be the Sycamores of, In-
diana State Teachers’ College. Off-Season Baseball: Krause’s
Debut Recalled
HARRY KRAUSE, former big league pitcher who died in San Francisco recently as the result of injuries received in an auto
smashup, made a sensational debut back in 1909 by winning his first 10
with the Philadelphia Athletics games.
Coming up comparatively unknown, the southpaw was the talk of
the American League in
the early part of the 1909 season. .
«He
won 10 straight, including six by shutouts and three decisions over
the champion Detroit Tigers, before
his streak was broken in an 11-
inning struggle by the St. Loui8 Browns. DE had a record of 18 won and eight lost that year and his
work was one of the, reasons why
the Athletics, not figured as a
serious threat at the beginning of the season, came within 24“percentage points of tying Detroit, which won the pennant.
” " ”
# td 2
PEEWEE REESE, the up-and-coming brilliant fielding short-
-stop, still is wearing a brace on the left ‘Aug. 16 while sliding into second base. .
foot which he injured last . . The top heel bone was
broken and Reese was put out of’ action for the balance of the year. The Brooklyn rookie was confined to a New York hospital for gome time and then left [for his Louisville home after the brace had
‘been constructed. » = n IT is said Louisville doctors have
» 2 ” advised Reese to wear the brace
‘ until about a month before going to 1941 training camp. . . . The medicos have assured the Dodgers that the youngster’s bone will be
cobs demanded a return title match |
fully mended by early March.
Another “concern” over Reese from the Brooklyn standpoint is that Peewee is unmarried and just 21... or “ripe” for the draft army after he becomes physically sound on the hoof.
Overlin Wins;
Rematch Asked
- NEW YORK, Nov. 2 (U. P).— The public and Promoter) Mike Ja-
between Middleweight Champion Ken Overlin and Steve Belloise of the Bronx, the youthful challenger who almost “moidered” Overlin during last night's electrifying battle
at Madison Square Garden.
. . yeteran Overlin made his first
i
l } | |
| .sixth session.
is
"defense of the 160-pound crown before 13,071 fans by rising from the floor in the sixth round and staging .one of the most amazing rallies in ring history to wind up with the 15round decision. { This decision was unpopular with
' “the home town fans who booed it
r nearly five minutes. But it was 30 Fh verdict, with the two “judges, George Kelly and George Le Cron, voting for Overlin, and Referee George Walsh calling it a “rhe home town fans, who contributed a gate of $20,838, did not
boo Overlin who gave them all the
ills of a resurrection in the sevthe round, when he came back from groggy-lane to carry the fight to the 21-year-old, dark-haired “talian who had him in a coma during a minute and 20 seconds of the
De Franco Is G-Man
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2,—Joe, De Franco of last fall's Notre Dame {football team is a G-man| here.
Out of Sight
NEW YORK, Nov. 2 (NEA). —Lee Artoe missed setting a National League record by one yard when he booted a 52-yard field goal against the New York Giants, but he set another mark. Artoe probably is the fist player to kick a football completely out of sight. The big freshman tackle of the Chicago Bears is near-sighted . . . couldn’t even see the goal posts, to say nothing of the ball sailing over them.
Students Injured On Way to Game
WILMINGTON, Del, Nov. 2 (U. P.).—Three North Carolina University students, en route to New York City to see their team play Fordham, were injured when their
automobile overturned at Stackdale, Del, last night. Three other boys in the car were shaken up. Jerome Shack, 18, driver, and Robert Taylor, 18, both of Chapel Hill, N. C. were treated by state police. James Byrd, who suffered a head injury, was taken to Delaware Hospital.
St. Joe Is Winner
Times Special RENSSELAER, Ind. Nov. 2.—St. Joseph’s College scored a 39-8 victory over Valparaiso in a freshman football game here yesterday. Bob
Kanne of the Pumas scored three I touchdowns.
.H. S. Basketball Scores
> : 16. Avon, 283; North Salem, | , 56; Milan, 34. Aue Ground. 29; Jackson Twp., 19. zellmore, 27; Russellville, 26. 3arne, 36; Clifford, 33. 3oswell, 30; West Lebanon, 16; 22 3rookville, 41; Whitewater TWp., 22. Areek. 33: Adams Twp., 18, Hill, 25; Greentown, 19. ton. 26: Windfall, 24. 40; Galveston, 21.
21.
Clarksburg, 58; ;: Swavzee. Clay Twp.. 22 Whitestown.
Castleton, 23, | Brownsburg, City, 13.
; Gal , 18. | $4; Greencastle, 25. |
25; Waveland Fulton,
7; Carrollton, 32. Yiagoville, 27. Montpelier,
hy A reek, nkirk, ’ a Daston. 28; time
t pri Yorktows, 4 . ope, . 2h Hap in. 31. 29; Moi
non, 26. $2: Goldsmith, 18. 9: Williamsburg, 18. New Palestine, 17. Mount Ayr, 14. nion City 2 Kendallville, 26. ie P50 Van Buren, 12
od ger Hartfor
otee, i 24: New London, 14, 35; Sulphur Springs, Klondike, 33; Brookston, 20. Kitehell 51: Webster, 4. ville, 30. : ightstown, 49; Char 2 ER 22: Darlington-Bowers, 10. + 4a grange, 47; Rome City, 38. anes sic « 26: Ricine Sw >
33.
ne T, Lawrencebur 21 lle. 27: Raleigh. 21. Lewis 88; Hillsboro,
be
+ 19.1 24 (double over-
27 (double over-
uiberty, 35; Brownsville, 24. Lizton 26; Pinnell, 19. Logansport, 45; Royal Center, 20. Manila, 25: Fairland, 24. arengo, ‘33: Borden 21 Martinsville, 43; Mooresville, 80. Maxwell, 43: Mt. Comfort. . MvKinleyv- Twp., 28; Winchester, 27, Mexico, 32; Amboy, 26. Milroy, 46; Laurel, 19. Mooreland, 28; Center, 24. Monrovia, 29: Unionville, 22. Montmorenci, 22; Monitor, 21. Morgantown, 25; Helmsburg, 24. Mulberry, 30; Jefferson, 11. Nashville. 30; Whiteland. 186. New Market, 25; Jamestown, 15. New Ross. 85: New Richmond, 20. . © New Ng id 30; Bainbridge, 26. North Manchester, 43; Oak'andon\, 24: Fishers. 0il Twp., English, 15, Orleans, 31:“Austin, 15. Otterbein, 24; Earl Park, 23. Oxford. 38: Ambia, 25. Paoli, 33; French Lick, 27. Parker, 35; Lynn, 16. Pendleton, 39; Summitville, 17. Perry Central 29; Thorntown, 27. Pulaski, 34; Idaville, 27. vs
ty), 21 Rockville, $1: Tangier 17 Romney, 20; Clarks Hill, 12, Russiaville, 23; t Middleton, 19. Sandusky, 30: on. 23. Seircleville, 26: Forest, 20. Sharpsville, 26: Michigantown. 22, Spartanburg, 24; Jefferson, 1 Spencer, 28: Gosport, e, 38: Alumni, 21. Tipton, 28; Delphi, 26. Union, 26; Edinburg, 25.
. Unior. 32; Jackson, 26.
Walton, 31: Young America, Warren 31; Union Center Covntv), 29, Washington Twp., 35; Luce Washington Twp. (Whitley Binnus, 21
Ww . 20; 3 Wilkinson, 28; Carthage, 27. Williamsport, 32; Freeland Park, 22 N .
Beaver Dam, 286. 23 (overtime).
11. (Whitley
25. (Huntington
rne, 30. County), 28;
Tech Favorite
For Title as Blues Stumble
Irish Win in 7-6 Upset; Tech Tied; W.H.S. Loses
Tech High School’s football forces, undefeated in two games, became the favorite today to grab the city championship.
Cathedral’s upset 7-6 victory over Shortridge yesterday knocked the Blue Devils out of the unbeaten ranks and left only Broad Ripple as the. other undefeated club. The standings in city competition:
L Pct.
, Tech .. = . Broad Ripple . Cathedral Shortridge .... Washington
Manual 3
GAMES TO PLAY
Next Friday — Washington at Tech; Cathedral at Manual.
Nov. 15—Shortridge at Tech; Cathedral at Washington.
In other games yesterday Tech
and Richmond battled to a 7-7 tie; Terre Haute Gerstmeyer shut out Washington, 12-0; Broad Ripple and Warren Central deadlocked, 13-13; Sheridan shoved over Manual, 13-6; Louisville Central downed Crispus Attucks, 19-0, and New
| Castle bested Southport, 21-0.
~¢
Hurrle’s Toe Is Factor
In the end, it was fullback Ott Hurrle’s long accurate punts that kept Shortridge from overtaking the Irish. A Hurrle kick in the first period was downed on the Shortridge 2, from where the Blue Devils kicked back to their own 35. Jim Dilger ripped off a first down and a 15-yard pass from Dilger to Tom Broden gave the Irish a first down eight yards from the goal. After the Shortridge line had held for three ground plays, Dick McCalley bulleted a payoff’ pass to Broden in the end zone. Left-foot-ed Ken Geiman, who has missed only one conversion all season, place-kicked the important extra point. Shortridge moved down to Cathedral’s five in the second quarter on rush plays by Bill Allerdice and Chuck Benjamin, a 10-yard pass from Benjamin to Dave Strack and a holding penalty against the Irish. But after four thrusts, Shortridge still was a foot short of the goal and Cathedral took over.
Bullet Pass Is Good
Hurrle’s booming boots kept Shortridge pinned back in its own territory in the third quarter. Twice in the last period Hurrle’s toe protected the Irish goal before Banjamin’s 40-yard pass to Bob Paddock carried the Blue Devils to the 8-yard line. Two plays later a bullet pass from Bernie Casselman to Dave Strack scored the touchdown, but Van Duncan’s extra-point kick was wide.
Gerstmeyer its 12-0 victory over Washington. Late in the first period © Flynn of Gerstmeyer blocked Bud Cole’s quick kick, and the “Terre Haute team recovered on the Continentals’ 23. George Coleman on a reverse went down to the 10, from where Petrowsky rifled a pass to fullback Timko for Gerstmeyer’s first score.
Richmond Gains Tie
Ted Colbert’s fumble paved the way for the second Gefstmeyer score. Petrowsky’s pass to Deardorf was good for 20 yards to the Washington 1, and on the next play Timko plunged over center for his second touchdown. Richmond scored in the final six minutes to erase Tech’s early edge and tie the Big Green. After J6hn Godsey had intercepted a Green pass on the Richmond 12 and returned it to the 20, Bob Dickinson pitched a pass to Bryant Leavell, who went downfield for a touchdown. Leavell also skirted end for the point. Tech scored in the third quarter, a blocked Richmond kick on the 30 setting up the tally. Jack Hanna and Willard Reed alternated at carrying the ball to the 5, and Reed ran his left end for the score. Hanna plunged for the point, The high wind aided both Broad Ripple and Warren Central in scoring their two touchdowns, Warren made its tallies in the third quarter while the breeze was playing tricks with Rocket punts, and Ripple did likewise in the final session. Warren scored first on a 25-yard drive, Dick Fulk going over from the 4 and plunging for the point. Then Bill Lewis danced 45 yards down the sidelines for the second Warrior touchdown. Scott plunged the last yard for Ripple’s first touchdown to climax (Continued on Page 11)
Breaks and a freshman quarter- |! back named John Petrowsky gave|j
Hea? On New Cap
®
Jud McAtee . .
1
#,
. fresh in the skate-for-pay ranks.
Joe Dreams of
By JOE WILLIAMS
NEW YORK, Nov. 2.— Baseball owners are resigned to the fact that a certain percentage of their stars will not be available for full-time, if any, duty next season. Draft eligibles will simply march off to camp and that will be that. No efforts will be made to obtain deferred service. ’ This being so it strikes us strange, if not inconsistent, that hockey will probably not lose a single star this season. Practically all hockey players come from Canada. If our understanding is correct any hockey star who has served a two weeks militia hitch has done his duty for the time being. We are told all the stars have done this and will be on hand when the ice games start. All of which is fine for the hockey owners. Much finer than it threatens to be for the baseball owners. What makes this seem strange to us is that Canada is actually at war and America is never going to war—
Mioland Runs For 1940 Title
By UNITED PRESS The 1940 horse-racing season staged its last big Saturday of the year today when racing in four of the six states operating drew to a close. At Empire City in New York, C. S. Howard's Mioland made his bid for the 3-year-old championship in the $20,090 Westchester Handicap which headlined the closing of the New York racing season. The Oregon-bred 3-year-old carried high weight in the mile and threesixteenths stake. He ran against Dolly Val, Belair Stud’s entry of Foxbrough and Dusky Fox, Salaminia, Volitant, Carrier Piegon, Sickle T., and Pretty Pet. The 19th running of the Pimlico Futurity headlined the day’s races at Pimlico in Maryland. Eight stake winners were entered, including Whirlaway, Our Boots, Bryan Station, Swain, Cavalier, Bold Irishman, Monday Lunch and Magnificent. The winner was crowned king of the 2-year-old colts and installed favorite for the 1941 Ken-
Williams
tucky Derby.
Draft Breezes by Hockey;
Sewanee
or haven't you been listening to Mr. Roosevelt's mammy songs of late? Anyway, it’s too delicate a subject for us to rassle with at length. We just can’t help wondering about it, that’s all.
” Fd ” WE GET the darndest notes. G. PF. T. postcards: “Is it true Gypsy Rose Lee invented the naked reverse?” Our Saturday special last week was Cornell and Michigan. Today it’s Northwestern and North Carolina. We don’t fiddle around with soft touches. Our respect for Lou Little as a coach who can point for a particular game, in this case, Cornell, practically verges on rapture, but even so we can’t see Columbia beating Cornell. We haven't forgotten last year, éither, when the Lions gave the Big Redders their toughest game. We also know that practically the same lineups are meeting this year. But—don't forget Matuszczak and McCullough, the two stand-outs in the Cornell backfield, operated in only one period last year. That could make a whale of a difference. We have a dreamy, nostalgic feeling about the Dartmouth-Sewanee game up in the Green mountains. Some of our earliest sports idols played on Sewanee teams. Tremendous, magnificent fellows like Lanier, Stone, Browne, Faulkenberry, Little Shinny Shipp and Jenks Gillem who could kick a football clear out of the State of Tennessee. In those days Sewanee, then as now, a small school with a microscopic enrollment, was something of a power in southern football. Every
once in a while the Purple would|
win the southern championship. We remember the year they stopped Dan McGugin and Vanderbilt, the first time it had been done. We clipped an account of thetgame from a newspaper and pasted it in our scrap book. But that was a long time ago. The modes and morals of college football have changed. Sewanee didn't change with them, which is to its credit. It's still .a little school, playing students, fighting - valiantly for points and, we hope, having fun.
Jockey Dew Ties Taylor for Lead
SAN MATEO, Cal. Nov. 2 (U. P.). —Jockey Earl Dew moved into a tie with Jockey W. L. Taylor of Rockingham Park for the distinction of being the leading rider of the country today. : Dew rode five winners in six starts at Bay Meadows yesterday to run his season's total to 221, equaling Taylor's mark. Dew rode four winners Wednesday.
period of
left end before being shoved out of bounds by
They Made a Path for Hustling Hurrle
as Hockey Seaso
Recall of. Line Gives Rookies A Real Test
Hershey Plays Here Tomorrow Night
By J. E. O'BRIEN
The heat’s on our Indianapolis hockey rookies — tonight at Cleveland and tomorrow at the Coliseum. The Canadian youngsters were to have been eased gently into American League competition, supported by experienced veterans. But such strategy had to be thrown out the window when the Detroit Red Wings yanked from Manager Herbie Lewis the Wilder-Douglas-Carveth line. The two front-ice trios of McAteeBrown - Jennings and McDonald-Herchenratter-Liscombe will carry the brunt of the Capital attack this week in the first two league encounters. And half of this sextet— Jud McAtee, Cyclone Jennings and Art Herchentratter—are fresh in the skate-for-pay ranks.
Ice Hockey
AMERICAN LEAGUE Western Division LT GF GA Pts. Cleveland 0 4 INDIANAPOLIS © Buffale 0 Pittsburgh Hershey
0 0 0 0
1 Eastern Division w L T GF Springfield .... 2 0 0 1 Providence .... 1 1 0 4 New Haven .... 0 1 0 1 Philadelphia ... 0 1 0 0 WEEK-END SCHEDULE TONIGHT—INDIANAPOLIS at Cleveland, Hershey at Pittsburgh, Providence at Philadelphia, New Haven at Springfield. TOMORROW-—Hershey at INDIANAPOLIS, Cleveland at Buffalo, Springfield at New Haven, Pittsburgh at Providence.
Although the Red Wings were kind enough to replace the speedy kid line recalled with Cecil | Dillon, Joe Fisher and Jack Keating, Manager: Lewis is wary of letting the newcomers serve eqiial time with the two lines already moulded. Dick Behling, another rookie, will be on duty at defense, along with Buck Jones, Eddie Bush and Bob Whitelaw, : Against this young talent will be thrown the experienced Barons tonight and the equally experienced Hershey B’ars tomorrow evening. On paper, the Cleveland club looks like one of the high-scoring outfits of the league. Norm Locking, procurer of 31 goals for Syracuse last season, is in Baron livery, along with Bill Summerhill, recently of New Haven, and Les Cunningham, center and Joffre Desilets, both exNational Leaguers.
Hershey Is Stingy
Hershey, on the other hand, goes more for defensive ice play—mainly because it has stingy Nick Damore guarding the awning. New members of the Chocolatetown crew this season are Red Doran, defense, and Cliff Barton and Joe Krol, forwards. All are old hands in the American League. Director Lewis worked the Capitals for more than two” hours yesterday on offensive maneuvers, giving particular stress to power plays. Bill Thomson, utility player who is suffering from a cold, took it easy during the practice and will remain at home nursing his ailment this week-end. Hec Kilrea, the other all-around man, is making the trip. The Caps left last night and will stop at Detroit today to pick up the three new players before moving into Cleveland. They will return home tomorrow for the 8:30 engagement with Hershey on the Fairgrounds ice.
Challedon Afte Higher Stakes
BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 2 (U. P.). —Challedon broke training today firmly established as the sixth richest thoroughbred winner of all time but he won't quit racing until he supplants Seabiscuit at the top of the ladder. Seabiscuit won over $425,000. That was the word from Owner W. L. Brann shortly after the big Maryland-bred celt loafed to a twolength triumph over Myron SelzNick’s Can’t Wait in the fourth running of the $10,000 Pimlico Special. Definitely scotching all ‘rumors of a Challedon retirement as premature, Brann said his colt would
r
excess weight forced him off the tracks. nN
Amateurs
BASKETBALL
The St. Roch’s and Sacred Heart C. Y. O. teams will play at 5 p. m. tomorrow at the Pennsy Gym. St. Roch’s players and tryouts are to report at 4:30. Other games tomorrow at the Pennsy Gym: Morning 11—Omar Bakery practice. Afternoon AR in mee Bearcats.
3—Drikold vs. Trimble Oil. 4—Royal Crown vs. Mt. Jackson Tires.
The Bush-Feezle Basketball Association is organizing an independent league to play at the Y. M. C. A. on Thursday and one to play at the Broadway gym on Friday, Call Carl Callahan at RI-4453,
FOOTBALL
Keystone, Boys Town players are to report at the clubhouse at 12:30 Pp. m, tomorrow, ;
Prefers Baseball
PHILADELPHIA. Nov, 2.—Jim Thorpe, the football immortal, is coaching his 13-year-old son to play baseball,
Warren Harriers Win
Warren Central High School's cross-country team scored a 15-40 victory over Broad Ripple’s harriers
yesterday. Junior and Chester Perkins of Warren set the pace.
w=
continue to race until injury or (
McKinney '
SATURDAY, NO
n O
- y
ens 5
Snavely Scores Touchdown in | - Post-Mortem
NEW YORK, Nov. 2 (U. P.). =Only reports from the officials who worked the recent Cornell-
Ohio State 6 football game were needed today to officially exonerate Cornell Coach Carl Snavely of charges that he signalled from the bench during the game. Asa Bushnell, executive director of the central office for Eastern intercollegia te athletics, announced in answer to a letter from L. W. St. John, Ohio State Director of Athletics, who accused Snavely of “unsportsmanlike conduct,” that he had written to the four officials asking specifically for their further views. “I am confident,” Bushnell said, “that they would have inflicted any penalty due had they believed any such rule was being violated. Preliminary reports, now on hand, include no evidence of coaching from the sidelines and some definite indicd#tion of apinion that it was non-existent.”
Sheron Winner
Snavely
|By 2-to-1 Vote
James Sheron, Hill Community Center lightweight, gained the nod over Buddy Jones of the Leeper A. C. in a lively five-round clash which topped the weekly amateur boxing card staged at the Armory last night. Sheron piled up an early lead in the first three sessions with
an effective left jab and although Jones rallied to take the last two heats, one judge and Referee Roy Rodgers gave the decision to the Hill C. C. Battler. There were no knock-downs.
In the four-round semi-final Earl Paul, Rhodius Community ' Center mauler, took a shade decision over Raymond Glenn, Washington A. C. featherweight, Paul shaded Glenn two weeks ago and [this was a rematch. A. C. Lee, Hill Community Center, and Alfred Osborne of Evansville provided plenty of action as Lee edged out a decision. The crowd booed lustily, many fans believing the Evansville lad had the better of the going. It was a three-round affair. In other three-round supporting battles Billy Carlisle, Leeper A. C. won handily from LeRoy Simmons, Hill Community Center, featherweights; George Linder, Washington A. C. welterweight, out-slugged Clinton Brooks, Leeper A. C., in the best bout on the card; James Stone, Leeper A. C., decisioned Garfield Foster,” unattached, middleweights, after a dull fight; Harvey Caine, Washington A. C., took a thumping from Eugene Simmons, Hill Community Center, middleweights; Robert Woodson, Leeper A. C. decisioned Earl Alderson, Northeast Community Center featherweight, and Arnold Deer, South Side Community Center welterweight, decisiened Charles * Spurling, unatatched.
Biff Jones Gets East-West Call
CORVALLIS, Ore, Nov. 2 (U. P.).—Orrin E. (Babe) Hollingbery of Washington State College and Lawrence M. (Biff) Jones of the University of Nebraska again will coach the Western squad in the annual Shrine East-West football game in San Francisco on New Year's Day, Percy Locey, committee chairman, announced today. Committee members, in addition to Hollingbery, Jones and Locey, who will pick members of the Western squad, are J. B. Howell, Joe Hickey and C. D. Woods, San Francisco, and Dena X. Bible, University of Texas. .
Packers Fight 4 To Keep Bear Paws Off Title
Giants Battle Dodgers To Stay in the Race
WESTERN DIVISION
Fo 3 3-0 . 531 _ 4 3 .333 4 .333 EASTERN DIVISION
w Chicago Bears ... reen Bay etroit . Chicago
Cardinals Cleveland
ew Yor Pittsburgh Philadelphia THIS WEEK'S Green Bay at Chicago Bears, New York at Brooklyn, Detroit at Cleveland. Pittsburgh at Washington,
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS
Chicago Bears. 87: New York, 21. Washington, 20: Detroit, 14. Green Bay, 24: Pittsburgh, 3. Chicago Cardinals, 17: Cleveland, 7,. *Brooklyn, 21; Philadelphia, 7. *Saturday night.
“IUD
Times Special CHICAGO, Nov. 2.—Divisional races in the National Football League reach the show-down stage tomorrow with the crippled Green Bay Packers battling the mighty Chicago Bears and a hardy band of New York Giants hazarding an in-
vasion of Brooklyn. Two other contests round out the day’s schedule. Pittsburgh ventures into Washington to meet the une beaten Redskins and Detroit goes to Cleveland to complete its sea=son’s series with the Rams. But interest in the afternoon’s activity will center in Chicago and Brooklyn where the Packers, Dodgers and Giants all will be fighting to remain within striking distance of playoff berths. . A capacity crowd of 40,000 is expected to see the Packers and Bears clash for the 44th time in the oldest rivalry in professional football. The Giant-Dodger game has been sold out for several weeks.
Packers are Limping
Green Bay sets forth on the task of preventing the Bears from virtually clinching their first division championship since 1937 with two key men ailing and three other valuable players definitely out of action. Center George Svendsen, Full Back Eddie Jankowski and Half Back Joe Laws are lost with knee injuries. Cecil Isbell has been sick and Clark Hinkle, veteran full back, suffered an accident to his back in last week's 24-to-3. victory over Pittsburgh. The Packers have operated successfully against the Bears with greater handicaps in other seasons, however, and are confident they can avenge the 41 to 10 humiliation suffered at the hands of the Chicagoans on Sept. 22, despite the fact that the Bears appeared to be the greatest team in football history last week when they overpowered the Giants, 37 to 21, with 30 points in the first 25 minutes.
/ Title Hepes Dangle
The Packers, with a record of 18 triumphs and 4 ties against 21 defeats in the Bear series, must win if they are to remain in the running for their third consecutive division title. * A Bear victory will make it necessary for the Chicagoans to win only two of their four remaining games—against Detroit, Washington, Cleveland and the Cardinals— to finish in a tie if either Green Bay or Detroit sweeps the rest of its schedule. Qn_the basis of their recent showings, “this is not, a great deal to ask of the Bears. Brooklyn and the Giants find themselves in the same position as the Packers. Each has suffered two defeats, one apiece by the Bears. Another will leave the loser too far behind unbeaten Washington to have any reasonable hope of reaching the playoff, even though the Redskins have yet to face the Bears, Giants and Brooklyn.
Rifle Club Elects
Dr. Charles A. Pfafflin is the new president of the Hoosier Rifle and Pistol Club, Inc. Other, officers elected last night were: L. K. Rybolt, vice president; D. E. Christie, treasurer; Frank Brady, secretary,
and L. O. Darnell, executive officor.
Football Results
LOCAL HIGH SCHOOLS yen Ripple, 13; Warren Central, 13 e
Cathedral, 7; Shortridge, 6. Central (Louisville), 19; tucks, 0. Gerstmeyer (Terre Haute), 12; Washing0
n, 0. Tech, 7; Richmond, 7 (tie). Sheridan, 13; Manual, 6. .
Crispus
OTHER HIGH SCHOOLS Kirklin, 19; Silent Hoosiers, 13. New Castle, 21; Southport, 0. / Bloomington, 7; Garfield (Terre Higute), 0. Noblesville, 13; Westfield, 0. Crawfordsville, 13; West Lafa¥ette, 12. Central (Evansville), 12; Elkhart, 0. arsaw, 20; Alexandria, 6, Mooseheart (I11.), 19; Kokomo, 7. Marion, 6; Wabash, 2, Vincennes. 20; Linton, 19, . Filey (Terre Haute), 41;
(IL). 6. Worthington, 19; Bloomfield, 0. Sullivan, 47; Brazil, 0. Manual (Louisville), 13
Vincennes 20: Linton, 19. Lew Wallace (Gary), 2; Whiti Washington (East Chicago), (Gary), 6. Muncie, 7; Clinton, 6. Huntington, 25; Goshen, 7.
§
Marshall New Albany, 13; e.)
ng, 0. 3 Froebel
COLLEGES
Hendrix, 7; Monticello A. and M., IMinois Normal, 36; Western (Ill)
rs, 0. Penn (Ia.) College, 7; Tarkio, 6. _ Lnther, 7; Simpson, 0. Moravian, 59; Juniata, 0. : Union (Ky.) College, 20; Hiwassee, 7. Lenoir khyne, 8; Naval Apprentice, 0. Marshall, 33; Morris Harvey, 6. Villanova, 33; Kansas, 7 Presbyterian 3; Mercer, 2. DeSales, 81; Grand
ford, 8. : George Washington, 0. ey Tech, 14; New Mexico Aggies, 7. entral 14; Henderson, 0.
0. Teach-
East
PRICES $2, $1.10, 75c,
At- s
Wentworth Military, 19; New Mexico M.
In Y. . Midland, 40; York, 0. Moorhead, 18; Duluth, 0. - South Dakota State, 7; North Dakota
tate, 0. Bemidji, 13; Mankato Teachers, 7. St. Cloud, 1}: Winona, Grinnell (Ia.), 9; Beloit, 6. Kirksville, 10; Warrensburg, 7. Chillicothe, 12; McKendree, 7. North Texas Teachers, 22; Southwest a migon. 20; Tuseuluin, 0 illigan, 20; Tusculum, 0. West (Tenn.) Teachers, 31; Troy State, 7. Peru Teachers, 22; Hastings, 0. Doane, 10; Nebraska Wesleyan, 7 San Francisco State, 24; La Verne, 6. College of Puget Sound, 0; Pacific Uni-
ity,. 0. . veins JC., 13; Marin JC. 6. ’ JC., 6; Menlo JC., 0. San Jose State, 27.
Janta Rosa JC., 6; Men 1 20; Chico State, 7. Pasadena JC., 20; Modesto JC., 18. St. Louis U., 18; Wichita U., 0 Tola JC., 19; Joplin JC., 0. Maryville Teachers, 18; Cape Girardeau, 0.
PLAY GOLF
SPEEDWAY GOLF COURSE
Pay as You Play
Green Fees, 15¢" Week Days; $1 Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays
Mondays and Thursdays bargain days «3 play for the price of one
Telephone BE lmont 3570 for Playing Reservations
Loyola University, 12; California Polytechnic,
HOCKE
AMERICAN LEAGUE OPENING
Indpls. Capitals vs. Hershey Bears :
SUNDAY 8:30
44c. TAX INCLUDED
Reservations: TAlbot 4555 or L. Strauss & Co., Lincoln 1561.
AIRGRO
a
CER
