The Indiana Journal, Volume 34, Number 24, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 14 October 1937 — Page 5

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1937.

James Waltz Wins Wawasee P. G. A, Tourney

Goshen Ace Tops Field Tuesday So. Shore Golf Club Scene of Annual Fall Tournament James Waltz, Goshen, came through a cold and rainy Tuesday’ afternoon to win the P.G.A. In-1 vitational Tourney staged at the. South Shore Golf Club on Lake; Wawasee. Waltz was awarded thei Bronze trophy which the club annually gives. Art Merrill also of Goshen ran a close second, winning the beautiful trophy presented by the Tavern Hotel. H. King of Lake Wawasee finished third. A number of Indiana’s ranking golf professionals were guests of Bruce Wilcox, the club’s professional. Among those .attending were: Fred McDermott, Tippecanoe Country Club; Charles Higg, Kokomo Country Club, Donald Perry, Plymouth Country Club, ijJohn Watson, Erskine Country Club, South Bend; Art Hagan, Louiville, Kentucky; Cliff Scott, St. Pierce, Florida; Roy! Smith, Hillcrest Country Club, Indianapolis and others. Bears Favored Over Chicago Pro Riyals By F. B. FIELD Chicago Bears, staging their official 1937 home debut against the Cardinals at Wrigley Field, headline the National Professional Football League card Sunday. The Bears should win >y a decisive margin! Revamped, but still paced byi such key men as Bronko Nagurs-[ ki, Jack Manders, Joe Stydaharj and Beattie Feathers, the Bears < are a greatly improved team over last season.. George Halas has come up with a number of top flight new meh, wno have a deed speed to the club, and in addition, the spirit is all that a college coach could ask. How far the Bears will go remains to be seen. Halas isn’t talking championship these days, in j spite of his team’s perfect record, ( for there is plenty of rocky going ahead. All of the rival elevens are “laying” for the Bears —and this is particularly true of the Cards. Nagurski, who is playing his last year of football, promises to ’ wind up that career in a blaze of j glory. This is a different Nagur- < ski than last season and he was plenty tough then. This is the Bronk of 1934, perhaps the great- . est football player of all time. . His understudy at fullback, Sam ' Francis, is a pretty fair country ball player, too. Probable winners Sunday: 1 Chi-Cards vs CHI-BEARS 1 Philadelphia at NEW YORK <

Hunters Expect Big Year As Waterfowl Arrive

With the a’.'Aval of thousands < of , ducks and other migratory i i waterfowl at the Jasper-Pulaski ; state game preserve marsh and at|> other lakes, Indiana sportsmen are anticipating some exceptional! hunting during the November, open season., I; In Indiana the open season on ducks, geese, Wilson’s snipe orj jacksnipe and coot begins Mon- 1 Jay, November ! and ends on' Tuesday, Nov. 30, Virgil M. | Simmons, commissioner of the Department ’of Conservation, said today. There is no open season ini this state on Ross’s goose, wood I ducks, canvasback ducks, redhead ducks, ruddy ducks, buffle-' head ducks, swans or mourning | doves. For ducks the bag and! possession limit is ten, for geese and brant, five, for Wilson’s snipe! or jacksnipe, fifteen, and for! coot, twenty - five. Shooting! ducks, geese and coot is restricted to from 7 a. m. to 4 p.m., Central Standard Time, while snipe can be taken from 7 a. m. until sunset, Central ' Standard Time, while snipe can be taken from 7 a. m. until sunset, Central Standard Time. Reports during the past few days indicate that Mallard, Black and Wood ducks are arriving at the Jasper- Pulaski marsh in in-

Navy Slightly Stronger Than Harvard; j See Colgate Comeback Against Tulane i

The Pitt Panther invades New York City this week-end to bolster its claim to the season’s mythical national championship. Fordham plays host to Jock Sutherland’s big, battle scarred, snarling Cat. Regarded as one of the four strongest elevens in the east, Forham is expected to provide a real test for Pittsburgh. The Rams held Pitt even last year and Sutherland’s warriors I are out for revenge. Many experts had figured the Panthers were I pointing for Duqusne, but the | score .of that game indicates Pitis--1 burgh is more concerned with

NODAKES, DE PAUL FRIDAY TOPS

Several close grid engagements are carded for Friday, Oct. 15. The De Paul-North Dakota U tilt at Grand Forks headlines the bill. 1 De Paul was upset by Illinois Wesleyan last Saturday, after holding Illinois to a scorele.-s tie the previous week. The Demons should be “up” for Jack West’s’ Nodaks, th£ top team in the North Central Conference, how-1 ever, and are accorded a slight i I edge. ! Drake should continue its drive ■ to the Missouri Valley championship by trouncing Creighton. Marchy Schwartz’s Bluejays have' been a disappointment to date but! may emerge from the Slump] against Drake. Led by George Gonzaga should re-, turn to the win column at the ex-' pense of Cheney, and Duquesne will prove too formidable for scrappy St. Vincents- 1 Probable winners Friday, October 15: • 1 Alma vs YPSILANTI 1 Apprentice vs RAND.MACON 1 ARKANSAS TECH vs Magnolia ! Beloit vs RIPON iBUCKNELL vs Miami 1 Canyon Thrs. vs SIMMONS CHATTANOOGA U. v Oglethorpe Coll. Emporia vs PITT. THRS. COLL. PUGET SD vs Albany Creighton vs DRAKE Decautur Bapt. vs J. TARLETON I DOANE vs Dana

GIVE PURPLE EDGE OVER PURDUE IN MID-WEST

Northwestern continues its bid for a second consecutive Big Ten crown at Evanston today, with Purdue providing the opposition. ’this is one oi three crucial conference games on the Wildcat schedule. Minnesota and Ohio State are more important, but first must get by Purdue before it can hope to edge out the Gophers and Buckeyes. Lyn Waldorf’s champions managed to win a close one from Michigan but had better be clicking in better style, else the Boilermakers may spring a surprise at Dyche Stadium. Northwestern has in Heap, Jefferson, Vanzo and Pittsburgh at WASIHNGTON GREEN BAY at Cleveland

creasing numbers, along with many teal and coot. Ducks and geese have been seen on many of the drainage ditches throughout the northern part of the state and on the Tippecanoe River. The twelve-hundred-acre marsh at the game preserve, started three years ago, has been plant-' ed with grain and other food for! waterfowl, hundreds of ducks and! other waterfowl nested there this year, raising their broods in the| protected area. A large number; have stayed at the marsh each; year, indicating that the area isl I attracting more and more water-' fowl to Indiana with a resulting ; improvement in hunting. Habits of the Bee Family Although drones are the fathers of queens and worker , bees. they. ! themselves, have no male parents. , strange as it may seem. Drones 1 hatch from unfertilized eggs laid by j the queen. In the queen’s body, sperms which fertilize eggs from which females hatch are contained in a sack. When the queen desires to lay a drone egg, she simply does not release the sperms and hence the drone eggs are unfertilized. Strangely, too, worker bees —which are undeveloped females — can, in the absence of a queen, lay : drone eggs bat have no way to fer- ; tilize eggs so as to bring forth , queens or workers. t

either Fordham or Notre Dame.' We like Pitt by two touchdowns. Yale should defeat Army in another outstanding grid battle. Clint Frank, as usual, will be the Eli siege gun, and the Cadet line does not seem to be strong enough to stop him. Canny Andy Kerr can be expected to have his Red Raiders at tops for Tulane, 1 and these intersectional rivals are a certainty to put on one of the 'most spectacular games of the day. Although Navy is favored, Harvard has a chance to spring an upset. Columbia should trounce

DUQUESNE vs St. Vincent FINDLAY vs Ashland Geneva vs WEST CHESTER GONZAGA vs Cheney Greeley Thrs. vs UTAH GRINNELL vs Central (la.) HOWARD PAYNE vs Austin John Carroll vs DAYTON U. KALAMAZOO vs Bluffton 'KEARNEY vs Wayne Lenoir Rhyne vs ELON I LOUISIANA NORMAL v La. Coll. ; LA. TECH, vs Hattiesburg Louisville U. vs UNION U. Marietta vs WITTENBURG , MARY VILLE vs Milligan MARYVILLE vs Springfield ] MILLSAPS vs Miss. Coll. Morris Harvey vs CONCORD NEW RIVER vs Potomac North Dakota vs DE PAUL N. DAK. SCIENCE vs VaLey City Northland vs JORDAN PRESBYTERIAN vs Newberry Redlands vs SANTA BARBARA ; ROCKHURST vs Mo. Valley ROLLINS vs Hammond ST. AMBROSE vs Augustana ST. LOUIS U. vs So. Dakota Southwestern vs WICHITA U. TENNESSEE WES. vs St Bernard Transylvania vs CENTRE Union Coll, vs GEORGETOWN WARRENSBURG vs Mo. Mines Washburn vs OKLAHOMA A.-M. WAYNESBURG vs Salem WEST MARYLAND vs Upsala WHITMAN vs Pacific U. Whittier vs FRESNO STATE WINONA THRS. vs Aberdeen '

Brooklyn at DETROIT Ryan the classiest backfield in this! section. However, the forwards do not match the backs. I We favor Northwestern ove; ■ Purdue. Minnesota will encounter! stiff opposition but figures to hand! Michigan its third straight loss. I Marquette will fall before Kansasj State and Nebraska should continue unbeaten against Oklahoma. I Schedule and probable winners' indicated by caps; BUTLER vs. Evansville Carleton vs NO. DAK. STATE CEDAR FALLS vs Kalamazoo CHARLESTON THRS. vs Eureka Chicago vs PRINCETON Cincinnati U. vs CASE COLUMBIA vs Buena Vista DANVILLE vs Oakland City Denison vs MUSKINGUM DE PAUW vs Ball Thrs. Earlham vs WABASH EMPORIA THRS. vs Edmond Ferris Inst, vs HOPE FT. HAYS vs Weatherford Franklin vs TERRE HAUTE Hamline vs CONCOBTHA ILLINOIS WES. vs SLymtor INDIANA vs Illinois Kansas vs IOWA STATE KANSAS STATE vs Marquette KNOX vs Jas. Millikin Lake Forest vs CARROLL Lawrence Tech, vs ASSUMPTION [ Macomb vs ILLINOIS NORMAL Michigan vs MINNESOTA j Missouri vs MICH. STATE ' MOORHEAD vs Mankato I Mt. Pleasant vs WAYNE U. J NEBRASKA vs Oklahoma NORTH CENTRAL vs Elmhurst ! .1 NORTHWESTERN vs Pardue I I OHIO U. vs Miami U. Ohio Wesleyan vs MARSHALL OMAHA U. vs Haskell. Rose Poly vs ST. JOSEPH ST. JOHN vs Macalester St. Mary vs DEFIANCE IST. NORBERT vs Gus. Ade.phus SO- DAK. STATE vs Morningside Stout vs SUPERIOR THRS. TOLEDO U. vs Akron U. WASHINGTON U. vs Bradley WES. RESERVE vs Bald.-Wal-

PICK TENNESSEE OVER ALABAMA

Tennessee faces Alabama Sat- t urday at Knoxville in the most, important football game south of the Mason-Dixon line. Southeast-' era Conference honors, as well as the Rose Bowl bid, are at stake.

; / ■ ■ $ THE INDIANA JOURNAL

| Penn and the powerful Big Red jteam from Cornell will prove too strong for Syracuse. Eastern card with caps denoting 11 probable winners: J BRIDGWATER vs Wilson Thrs. i Brown vs DARTMOUTH BUFFALO U. vs Alfred i Carnegie Tech, vs NOTRE DAME Catholic U vs DETROIT U. ■ Clarkson vs BOSTON U. . COLGATE vs Tulane i COLUMBIA vs Pennsylvania CORNELL vs Syracuse Delaware vs LEBANON VALLEY Forham vs PITTSBURGH Frank-Marsh vs MUHLENBERG GEORGETOWN vs Lafayette GETTYSBURG vs Drexel Hamilton vs OBERLIN Hartwick vk MORAVIAN HOLY CROSS vs Georgia INDIANA THRS. vs Edinboro ITHACA vs Panzer JUNIATA vs Grove City LA SALLE vs (Sun.) LOCK HAVEN vs Kutztown Lowell Text, vs NORTHEAST’RN MAINE vs Arnold MANHATTAN vs Villanova MANSFIELD vs Bloomsburg MIDDLEBURY vs Rensselaer MORGAN vs Lincoln i MT. ST. MARY vs American UNAVY vs Harvard NIAGRA vs St. Bonaventure (Sun ! NEW HAMPSHIRE vs Colby I NEW YORK U. vs St. John ; NORWICH vs Coast Guard ' PENN STATE vs Lehigh RHODE ISLAND vs Mass. State Rochester vS AMHERST St. Anselm vs PROVIDENCE ST. JOSEPH vs St. Thomas (Sun. SHIPPENSBURG vs Snepherd i SLIP. ROCK vs Westminister Springfield vs RUTGERS Susquehanna vs C.C. NEW YORK THIEL vs Clarion TRINITY vs Hobart TUFTS vs Bates Ursinus vs ALBRIGHT Vermont vs UNION Wagner vs BROKLYN, COLL. WASH. JEFF, vs Dickinson WESLEYAN vs Haverford W. V. WESLEYAN vs D. & E. WILLIAM-MARY vs Gullford Williams vs BOWDOIN Worcester vs CONN. STATE 1 YALE vs Army

lace < I WISCONSIN vs lowa WIS. MINES vs Mission House ! WOOSTER vs Kent Stale 'Xavier vs WEST VIRGINIA ; Yankton vs AUGUSTAN A Huskies Picked Over I- Cougars on Coast -—. Pacific coast elevens settle down ' to normalcy this Saturday. California’s Golden Bears take on a pair of setups—-College of Pacific and California Aggies - and therefore will remain in the undefeated class. Although the race is only two weeks under way Southern California, Washington, U. C. L. A. i ( Oregon State, Stanford and Wash-i ( ' ngtotn State and Oregon have! been beaten. As a result, Calif or-[ nia remains top heavy favorite to win the title. The Trojans are favored to stop I Oregon in the week’s leading L I game. Washington should return . 'to form and turn in another vic-;, tory at the expense of Washington ' [state. This game is at Pullman i and the Huskies may encounter'! !plenty of trouble, for the Cougars!' are all hell on their home grid-} iron. p Probable winners in Far West: CALIFORNIA vs Vol! Pacific ' CALIFORNIA vs Calif. Aggies 1 Chico State vs NEVADA [COLORADO vs Brigham Young Color State vstWYOMING [ DENVER U. vs Color Coll’. | Flagstaff vs NEW MEX. STATE ' [IDAHO vs Utah State ! Loyola West v ST MARY’S (Sun.) ' MONTANA vs San Francisco U. I MONT. STATE vs Idaho S. x 1 I NEW MEXICO vs Texas Mines | Oregon State vs U.C.L.A. POMONA vs Caltech SANTA CLARA vs Portland U. SAN DIEGO STATE vs La Verne 'SO. CALIFORNIA vs Oregon Wash. State vs WASHINGTON 1

I Major Bob Neyland’s Vols man- 1 aged to hold the favored Duke 1 Blue Devils even last' week-end. |'i I This is Alabama’s big game sea-h son, while Tennessee —unless it isl i a greater team than we believe P

Culver Lettermen ■* _ ■ ■ ■ .■

Culver, Ind. Oct. 14—These lettermen on the Culver Military Academy Flying Squadron are expected to play a vital part in the inter-sectional battle which faces the cadets Saturday night in Memphis, Tenn., where they meet the powerful Tech High school gridders in one of the important prep battles of the season. Twenty-three players are expected to accompany Head Coach Russ Oliver on the cadets’ first invasion of the mid-South and for the first cadet tilt under the lights. J

is likely to have a let-down. In. spit" of this, we picked the Vols. In the southwest, Texas Aggies' [battle Texas Christian in the spoti light tilt. Is in our opinion that I Homer Norton’s crew from College Station is the strongest . eleven in this section. The Aggies are picked to setback the Homed Frogs. I The Auburn-Mississippi State ! game shapes up as a tossup. Al- I though defeated by Texas xx. & M. , Major Ralph Basse’s Maroons are favored to upset Auburn. Probable winners, south, south west: [ Auburn vs MISS. STATE [CENTENARY vs Baylor . [Citadel vs FURMAN ERSKINE vs Wofford

LOW-DOWN ON COMING WEEK BOUTS

■ This column has called more [than 80 per cent of fights every [week, ever since the first of the year. , - OCTOBER 15 John Henry Lewis (300) vs. Isadoro Gastanaga (214) at 10 rounds—Lewis by a knockout: inside five rounds. Junior Munsell (214)- vs. Ralph Carpenter (203) at Detroit, 61 wunds —Pepper Martin’s scrapper [ - Munsell will cop the duke. Andre Lenglet (239) vs. Jorge Brescia (221) at New York, 10 rounds Lefiglet shapes up as an; easy here. Lee’ Ramage (239) vs Sonny Walker (232) at Hollywood, Calif. ! 10 rounds —Ramage figures to outpoint Walker. Buddy Knox (218) vs. Barney Brock (208) at Chicago, 10 rounds —Knox figures to win handily. 1 OCTOBER 16 Lew Feldman (226) vs. Frankie; Terranova (217) at New York, 8 rounds—Feldman should win eas-' ily. OCTOBER 18 Maurice Strickland (234) vs. ! Walter Neusel (220) at London,] England, 15 rounds —Neusel is all washed up and Strickland should gain the award. Sammy Angott (233) vs. Johnny Pena (223) at Chicago, 10 rounds !

i To date the Culver Squadron has been undefeated, winning from the Michigan City Red Devils, 14-6, the Valparaiso College freshmen, 40-0, and Howe Military Academy, 33-0. Last year, the cadets in their first season under Cui ver’s first alumni coach, Russ Olover, former University of Michigan %tar, were undefeated and untied, scoring 223 points to 6 for the opponents in an eight ‘game schedule.

FLORIDA vs Sewanee Georgia Tech vs. DUKE ! HAMP.-SYDNEY vs Swarthmore KENTUCKY vs Louisiana vs Mississippi. LOYOLA SOUTH vs st. Edwards' MOREHEAD vs Holbrook NO. CAR. STATE vs V. IL Inst. RICE vs Tulsa U. Richmond U. vs VALL SO. CAROLINA vs Davidson So. vs VANDERBILT i SUL. ROSS vs Weatherford Talladega vs LE MOYNE TENNESSEE vs Alabama t Texas vs ARKANSAS Tex. Christian vs TEXAS A.-M. , TEXAS TECH, vs Arizona Tusculum vs CARSON NEWMAN' Virginia vs MARYLAND Wake Forest vs NO. CAROLINA WILLIAM-MARY vs Guilford

— —Angott will win here. Pena should force Sammy to the limit, ! but the latter’s ruggedness should decide the issue. Angott should be 2 to 5. OCTOBER 20 Gedrgie Salvadpre (234) vs. j Chuck Wodds at Chicago, 110 rounds—Salvadore figures best [ here by a wide margin. OCTOBER 22 l John Henry Lewis (300) vsHank Hankison (216) at St. Louis,' 10 rounds—Lewis has too much; class for Hankinson. Enrico Venturi (261) vs. Davey; ! Day (246) at New York, 10 rounds) p Figures to be a corking scrap.) We are picking Venturi to win six of ten rounds. Harry Thomas (235) vs. Otis! Thomas (220) at St. Louis, 10: , rounds—Harry Thomas is the selj ection here. Every Notre Dame major mono-' gram winner graduated in 1937 ' has been placed, and most of the! ; graduated “B” team letter winners i have jobs. More than half of them : took high school coaching positions. Bob Wilke, all-Western halfback, will work in his home town,"-Hamilton, Ohio, and will 1 drive to Cincinnati 20 miles distant, after work to coach the backfield at Xavier University. n

Attend Goshen’s Corn Festival FRIDAY and SATURDAY and visit our fall display of men s clothing, and furnishings. FALL SUITS FALL TOPCOATS all sizes all styles & Regulars Balunacous Shorts Raglans Longs * Hlf. Belted Models Stouts Half Stouts P°l° Coats all prices P r^ces 1 §ISOO s ls°° 5 19 50 sjepo so $9150 $2500 s3qoo S 3O OO 33500 52500 Emerson Hats Goodwear Hats Star Hats . $4.50 $2.50 $1.95 Many Nationally Famous Lines Arrow Shirts Daniel Hays Gloves Duofold Underwear Carter’s Leather Jackets B.V.D. Pajamas Perfect’n Work Clothes Cooper Shirts & Shorts Arrow Neckwear Champion & Kohler Goshen, Ind. ‘

Page Five

WORKERS CAN SUE UNION FOR LOSS New York, Oct. 14. (IPS)-Ar industrial employe«-has legal re. dress if he is damaged through the action of a labor union in calling an unauthorized strike or if the union is guilty of negligence 01 misconduct or commits some othet wrong in the calling of a strike, Justice Evans, sitting in the spec, ial term of City Court here,’ ha: ruled. , - , The ruling was made in the stii of Marion Candido against officers oc the Confectionary and Tobacct Jobbers Employees Union, Loca 861. In his suit, Candido com. plained that he was “perieStij with his job,” but as s unton member, was forced to joii a strike and to picket his employer. Justice Evans dismissed the suh because of failure of the coin, plainant to properly establish his loss, but tin his opinion pointed out that “it is not to be assumed that a member of a-labor Union is without remedy if damaged thereby when the officers of .a lot: al call an unauthorized strike.”> Milk Important to A Balanced Mea It is impossible to prepare i balanced meal without 11 the use o milk. Therefore it is classed a one of our most important foods Milk is rich in vitamins vhich ar so necessary to our systems. It i an excellent source for calcium which builds »up and helps- t maintain good teeth and bones. I is never too.late to prevent toot] decay. Milk is also rich, n pro teins, which keeps building an repairing the body. Include it a the beverage of the meal often Although you run off & food budg et, cut in other ways, not 01 'milk, will find it iho:e ecdn omical than .medicine. ■ Billion Tons Steel Used During 193< ’ Approximately f , tens of steel were put into use ii America du ing the year 1936 production and purcnate figure show. This is a daily average o .4.9 pounds for every man, wo man and child .in the Unite States.