Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1941 — Page 29
3c rackshots Share Spotlight In National Pistol Matches
CAMP PERRY, O., Sept. 5 (U. P.). distance for breaking ties. wi. ©
—Three marksmen shared the spot-{llam A. Sayres; Olncinnati, was To aan Sg . second with. 400-23. while New"
and Pistol matches moved into the Havens Seferding Svan Reig third day of firing. :
Reeves totaled 286 points to win Harry Reeves, Detroit police pistol | the Orton Trophy. Francis O'Con85% Maciel his Muy 18 the Hoge Be Ol nas OIW pulles wag’ rize yesterday by capturing the
second with 282, 4 Orton Memorial Trophy, but had to| James won the U. S. cartridge share the glory with a pair of un-|trophy match over the Dewar known riflemen. course with 400-20X, defeating a Kyle W. Snowhill, Quincy, ni, |fleld of 523. M. E. Jennies st. both classified only as “experts,”|399-26X. grabbed top honors in both individ-| The U. S. PistolpTeam ual siaiishon aiohes. Snowhil No. 1 set a new Basjonal reoord in. won the Vi comers winning e Colt Trophy Police sights match with the greatest dis- oy oe
; Team competition. The Treasury play of rifle shooting seen in this| marksmen shot a record-breaking year’s matches
score of 117, 20 points better than
The Same Plot: [Red Birds Win || And We Lose
k Times Special
COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 5~The Red Bird champs of the American
=i (|2-Minute Mile — ||Is Trotted by Milestone
4 Races Scheduled On Final Card
By J. E. O'BRIEN
The gentlemen who carry whips and ride the wire-wheeled carts were to harness their trotters and pacers ‘for the last time today — ready to close the curtain on another successful Grand Circuit meeting at the Fair Grounds.
The night of the All-Star football game in Chicago you could have ice skated on Central Lake, Mich, if the water hadn't been so rough. The Eugene Dorn fishing party huddled around the radio, listened to the game and then climbed under blankets for the night. The next-morning they were thawed out enough to troll for walleyes and talk about the game. John Machey of Detroit, a member of the party, felt most like talking. “That fellow Luckman—; he said, and a six-pound wall-eye struck. The excitement over and Mr. Machey started again. “Tommy Harmon never got—" and bang, another wall-eye hit. The talk followed general lines for a while, no names mentioned. But then Mr. Machey said something about Charley O'Rourke. At that instant he pulled in another fish.
PO: rookies under the lights last nigh and the game followed the us pattern—the Hoosiers were humped off in the ninth, 5 to 4. : Having bagged the pennant on Wednesday, the Red Birds sent 8 |Jack Griffore to the slab in the second of the series and he was opposed by Jack Bastien, rookie up from the Ohio State Seiltare also is a graduate of that
"9
“The rest of the party followed his cue and there was much concentrated talk about football stars, and the fish kept hitting. Mr. Dorn, the druggist, said the party spent two weeks fishing for ~ wall-eyes and rock bass with remarkable success despite the rough
For a whole week there has been speed and spirited competiton and there have been fat purses and big crowds—all the requirements for a good racing program.
it is that the daily cards required too much time. Of course, some of
If any complaint can be made,}-
held the Birds to seven hits ‘and Griffore allowed eight.” The home|boys got to Bastien for three runs in the second after the Tribesters scored one in the first.
i Indians’ kid right-hander
Columbus: increased its total to
- He fired a 400 possible with his 40 shots and 33 of them were within the one-inch X ring used at that
the favored Detroit Police Team, and shattered Detroit's old roa by nine points.
four in the fourth and the i Td scored twice in the fifth and deadlocked the game at 4-all by chalking a single marker in the seventh. But when the ninth rolled around the Red Birds put over a fifth marker and called it a night. It was the Birds’ 17th victory in 20 clashes with the Hoosiers this season. The series finale is to be played tonight, after which the Indians will go to Toledo to wind up the |schedule in a three-game series,
water and 30-degree temperatures. Other members of the party were his son, Bill, and his brother, Joseph, all of ‘Indianapolis.
the delays were unavoidable, but others could have been eliminated, had the starting gate been in use. Still these gentlemen with the whips and carts prefer the traditional getaways, and the crowds haven't seemed to mind watching and waiting until sundown-—so maybe there’s no Kick to be, made. ‘Today's program, . originally a five-race affair, was trimmed to four, the free-for-all trot being dropped. Still listed were the Hook
| Babe Horrell, pointing at screen, and other University of California at Los Angeles athletes study the reaction and co-ordination reflexes of Fullbacks George Phillips in a driving test at the Department of Vehicles. Tho voark figures koesias out of way of Uw
like dodging would-be tacklers.
There’s a Mr. Thomas, a Buckeye, who may at this moment be ° button holing fellow Ohioans and . telling them ‘what a’ trout fishing paradise Indiana really is. This is what happened: Late last month, during the very hottest spell and near the
AY
TOPCOATS
end of the trout fishing season, Mr. Thomas came to Indiana, bought a license, and visited his friend, Phil Phillips of Kokomo. Mr. Phillips knew the chances were slim for trout fishing, but he dirécted Mr. Thomas to the Little Elkhart River. Mr. Thomas, well equipped with flies, set out. The first fish he caught was a 34-inch brown trout. He was elated. The second fish he caught was a 12-inch rainbow trout. Then he
Chicago Is Doing Quite Well, Thank You, Without Football
with other Big Ten members wherever “practicable,” he said. “It did not withdraw ftom foot ball because it felt morally superior to other members of the conference,” he said. “It withdrew from football use it could not compete without industrializing the sport and without engaging in practices which, in addition to being beneath its dignity, were in violation of conference rules.” Hutchins said Chicago could not compete in “big time football” because of its small undergraduate body, the high proportion of selfsupporting - and non-resident stu-
Sill Dorn + . . three tines. sis pounds of wall-eyes.
was proud. From then on he caught plenty of seven and eight inéth trout but he threw them back, scorning anything under a foot. And even though he got no more big ones, he left the state feeling a little Alice-in-Wonderland-ish.
* CHICAGO, Sept. 5 (U, P)=— President Robert M. Hutchins of he University of Chicago said toy the university had not suf3 ed from its abolition of dnter- * egollegiate football and that the ‘campus had reacted with a feeling of “relief.” Terming football a “conspicuous adjunct of academic life,” Hutchins said some persons had feared enrollment and alumni interest would drop after the sport was abolished at Chicago a year ago. “As far as I can see, neither of these fears has been realized,” he " said in an annual report. “The en-
Drug Stake for 3-year-old pacers,
-Ithe 2:15 and 2:24 {rots and the 2:18
pace. % > Yep, a Two-Minute Mile
It was said before yesterday’s L. 8. Ayres Stake that the trotters entered therein had zip enough for a two-minute mile. And so they did. The colt to turn the trick was the Ohio-owned Milestone, steered by Wayne Smart. Trotting at Countess Belwin’s heels for three quarters, Milestone came out in the last turn of the first heat and romped on home for the two-minute mark. Milestone also took the other two heats in times of 2:01% and 2:02, while Countess Belwin took second place in all three miles. Already. a speed merchant on the half-mile strips, Senator Abbe found the Fair Grounds’ mile of clay to his liking, too, and he marked up three firsts in the 2:14 pace. Like the Ayres Stake, the best speed in this race was shown in the initial heat. Always in command, Senator Abbe carried his owner, O. H. Lowen, through the fi-
nal ‘quarter in 28% seconds for a
2:01 mile. Nobody was around the
Senator at the finish of the second heat, but a three-way fight for second went to Mr, Volodale.
Dusty Hanover a Winner Another three-heat winner was
the Maine-owned Dusty Hanover,
in against tough competition in the free-for-all -: pace. The first mile was the most spirited and the fastest. Fearless Pefer, who lost only one of 17 races last year, was on
rollment has been well maintained, Alumni interest is, I believe, at a highe? pitch than at any time since the foundation of the universi Hutchins said students” had not
dents, and the educational requirements of the university.
By WILLIAM BRINK JR. United Press Staff Correspondent NORTH MANCHESTER, Ind, Sept. 5~The Manchester College football team has lost but one home game in seven years, has been at or near the top in the
State 10 years, has had but one losing season in 13 years, andl in 1941—sorry, it’s sitting this campaign out. The Spartans, 1940 co-champions of the Indiana Conference, are taking a rain check and will cash it in when the draft and defense industries no longer need young men more than does the pigskin sport. . “It looks like a cold, cold winter,” moaned Coach Carl Burt today. He referred to the unprecedented ravages made on his team by graduation, the draft and defense jobs. Some 21 lettermen were shorn, more than in any season since Manchester took up the pastime in 1925. “Mind you I'm not complaining,” Burt said. “Well be back up when the boys get back from the Army and defense jobs. But we just don't have it this year.” Burt scarcely could remember all the men he doesn’t have this fall. Naturally, graduation was expected to take its toll of the 1940 team that batted .1000 in conference. But
Manchester Prefers to Dream This F ootball Season Out
one tilt tomorrow, two Sunday.
_ Bowling Notes
Bruce Wood, stellar guard, and Louis Cameron, whom Burt described as the “best plunger we have ever had.” Then came the draft. It toook Sam Schlemmer, United Press allConference guard; and Burdette Hoke, Goshen ghost who was the last available quarterback on the squad. Basil Thompson, a veteran tackle, also was inducted. Finally, defense jobs claimed a trio of veteran linemen, Gordon and Gaylord Turner and Junior Schubert. The latter was to have been co-captain this year. “And these were arly a few of the more important,” Burt sighed. But standing amid the wreckage of his team he was prepared to fashion some sort of an eutfit to;
bowling alleys:
Jack Ave Briner, P. k. Ma
ner, Fred Helier. 2iailery Recreation.
Queisser , Intermediate. . . 846 Blo ,_ Automotive eae Uniyersal . $31 Sohn Colvii n, Printeraft.. sossesacosases 622
ing the Coca-Cola League are to meet at 1 p. m. Saturday at the Pennsylvania
South Grové golf championship will be played Sunday. Contestants are Clayton Nichols and Dick Carlstadt. The other semi-final was played last | week, Bob Sage defeating W. D Hamilton, 4 and 2. The final will be Sept. 21.
Last night's leaders on the city's
Ilory
Ladies or teams Inte interested in joinAlleys.
Near Golf Finale
The second semi-final of the
.
put on the field. “We'll have to work in almost an entirely new backfield and many replacements in the line,” he observed. His list of some key men still available indicated a sturdy nucleus would be on hand. But plugs ‘for the inevitable gaps plus reserves were in doubt. In the secondary he’ll have little Glen Kistler, Garrett senior, at halfback where he is expected to renew the speedy footwork that carried him near the top in conference scoring last year. Kistler is cocaptain. In the other halfback spot will be Bob Brafdon, Celina, O.,
starter if an injured knee of his holds up.
veteran tackles in Jack Summe, Silver Lake senior, and Richard McClintic, Wabash junior. bulky Summe rated a berth on the United Press second all-Conference team last year. Patenelli, Elkhart sophomore, and Harrison Richardson, Ft.
junior, as end candidates.
find enough men to cope with the following 1941 schedule:
The Spartans will have a brace of
The
Burt tabbed Mike Wayne Someway, Burt hoped he could
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among those lost were Bill Milliner, [senior who is the ace kicker of the
squad. : ’ Burt also listed Everett Huth, Pt Wayne junior, as a likely backfield
top at the three-eighths pole, but the rest of the pace down the backstretch was a head-and-head fight. The Hanover horse emerged in the curve and came dowh the middle to win by a length from Blackstone. The winner was in the care of the veteran Bill Fleming. Doctor Baker was second in the other two heats. Doc Parshall, the match-chewing driver-owner from Urbana, O., experienced a change of luck yesterday and urged his own colt to victory in the 3-year-old trot. Behind Volarign and Acrasia in the first heat, Perpetual won with stretch drives in the second and third miles.
§ Mrs. Kahn Champ «| Of Riverside Club Of Riverside for Aonday when : : rte wlio od ay tournament The dies Were sit of golfing! Other es ton t include: Meter vs.| news today—the result of play at 0 oR 3 CE Line va.’ Gems.| Riverside and Pleasant Run, mers of the o thres games to- Mrs. I. G. Kahn scored a 3-and-2} ihe first. game of | victory over Mrs, John Emhardt to 1:30 p. m. win the women’s club championship at Riverside yesterday. The Highs championship went to M: L. 3, Murray, who defeated Mrs. Sam also elected ox year’s officers and named Mrs. Ralph Duncan president, Mes, Kahn vice president, Mrs. G. Brinkworth gecretary and re ‘Herman Metzel treasurer. At Pleasant Run the dish was a comic-dress tournament, won by Marge Wuelfing. She produced an 88-10—78. Mrs. Earl Bilsky led in Class B with 103-21—82, and Mrs.
Victor Landis. topped the. Class C shooters with 111-31—80.
Old Stuff
APOLIS
Sept. 29—At Indiana State, ~ * Oot. 11—Valparaiso. Oct. 1 tral Normal. Nov. 1—At Ball State. Nov. 8—At Western te. Nov. 15—At Hanover.
lost opportunity for recreation and exercise because 83 had: played with informal campus teams last
fall. “I believe that the feeling of the university community about the abolition of football is one of relief,” he said. : He praised the Big Ten Conference for “performing a great service to intercollegiate sport in leading the way to higher standards.” Chicago will continue/its association
Colas Open State | Softball Series
HAMMOND, Ind., Sept. 5 (U. P.). —The Superheaters of East Chicago engage the Indianapolis Pepsi-Cola Boosters at Hammond Civic Center tonight in the first of a three-
game series for the Indiana Recreational Softball Championship. The second game will be played tomorrow and the third, if necessary, will be played Sunday. 2 8 2
Softball
Winnets of tho league charplon the Tnaloo Sotual, Teague com co £1 3 Ottice team, will see
regular fullback for three years; 5 pr
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