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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 39

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
39
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'tmvitv Jbmrt(a Section 5 10 Pases Sports and Classified Ads VOL. CLII. NEW SERIES NO. 22,558. LOUISVILLE, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 5, 1930.

SUNDAY PRICE 8 CENTS. Powerful Kentucky Eleven Swamps Sewamiee9 37 to 0 () () fir- :) () fir) fir- Centre's Great Defensive Game Holds Tennessee to 18-0 Win IRISH CONQUER EE5U1TS WESTERN WINS OVER PIONEERS BY 19-0 COUNT Elam's Team Conquers His Former Charges In Poor Game. 6 VOLS, AMONG THEM BRANDT, HUG, ARE HURT Winning Markers Come On Drives In Second and Third Periods. Ghief John Pays $101.44 As Downs Racing Opens; Pigeon Hole Easy Winner By THIX, MeCANN. While Pigeon Hole and Alcibiades, the popular choices that Hal Price Headley sent out for the South Louisville Handicap, rewarded their backers in the feature event of the opening day at Churchill Downs Saturday afternoon.

Chief John, owned by the Louisville stable of C. C. and G. Y. Hieatt; provided the real thrill when he won the Eastern Parkway Purse, the supporting feature, at odds of $101.44 for $2.

Hieatt Brothers may have overlooked a real opportunity by not nominating the son of Sir John Johnson for the Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes, but it appears that Headley has a real threat in Pigeon Hole In the STATE S. M. U. AT OWN GAME, 20 TO 14 Notre Dame Passes Pull Tilt Out of Fire In Last Four Minutes. Kentucky Manual F- Kelly and Urbaniak Run Wild In Opener; 9,000 Watch Game By GERALD GRIFFIN.

The Courier-Journal Lexington Bureau. Lexington, Oct. 4. Opening their 1930 gridiron season before 9,000 spectators, the University of Kentucky Wildcats tonight displayed the most powerful offense ever shown by a Wildcat team to down the Purple Tigers of Sewanee, a Southern Conference eleven, by 37 to 0 in the university stadium. The Wildcats, in their drive to victory, over an old rival, again introduced the mighty "Shipwreck" Kelly of the glistening heels, and also unccv- ered a new star who rose to great I there was no incentive to do mor St.

Xavier .37: Sewanee ft Somerset High Jasper High ft I', of L. Frosh Centre Transylvania 6: Eastern Nor. .71: Irvine 0 X5: Stursis K. M. I Tennessee Western Nor.

Sue Bennett Ashland llieh Owensboro Uich Keiti Hich 51; Henderson 0 Central Hirh Middles boro Winchester fineville Hieh Harlan Hieh ttenham High Hawthorne Gold Cup and an even SAV0LDI RUNS 98 YARDS 40-YARD RUNS FEATURE COLONELS NEVER MAKE SERIOUS SCORINGTHREAT Npringiieia ii Jeliico Delta T'rhrs II .18: Cairo I11.) Knoxville Col ti Booth In Form Morehead High Nor. Mayfield Hieh Ky. Industrial Hazard High Central High Flemins Danville Princeton I Lincoln Mem. As Vale Whips Hopkinsville Hi I. mon Col.

Liberty Morchead T'chrs. 0 harm to the visitors than already had heights for the Blue and White, in Maryland, 40-13 INDIANA New Albany IIigh.4!!: Columbus fi Ohio Stale 2a Indiana II Indiana IK: Ohio State It Depauw Indiana 7 Rose Poly Eariham Boonville Hish Owensville 7 Mt. Morris Valparaiso 6 chance with Alcibiades in the Latonia Championship Stakes. Once on top, Pigeon Hole had little trouble in beating Alcibiades, his stablemate, while the latter was a nose in the lead of Patricia Marian. Chief John did not get away as easy.

He gained his advantage when Cheatham slipped through on the rail as they turned into the stretch and he did not reach Polinos until the final sixteenth with Frigate Bird accounting for the show. Alcibiades Sets Pace. Alcibiades set the pace in the feature and Saxon raced with her for the opening half-mile of the mile test. Turning into the stretch Alcibiades moved away and Finnerty brought the victor to the front be- Special to The Courier-JournaL Knoxville, Oct. 4.

The same fighting spirit that made the Centre College Colonels famous a few years ago when Bo McMillin, Red Roberts and Flash Covington were in their prime, was displayed by the gallant Colonels here Saturday afternoon when thej'- held the Albie Scores Twice, Tosses Flips That Lead to 2 EAST Lexington, Oct. 4. Jim Elam's Western Normal Hilitoppers took advantage of Transylvania Pioneer mistakes on Thomas Field here this afternoon to register a shutout, 19 to 0, over the Lexington eleven. Western scored first in the second quarter after Fieber fumbled Western's punt on his own 33-yard stripe, and Millard recovered for the visitors. An 11-yard dash by L.

Elrod and an 18-yard overhead gave the Hilitoppers first down on Transylvania's 4-yard line. Moore gained a yard at the line. A penalty for offside gave the Hilitoppers half the distance to the goal and Vaughan, a substitute, went over. The kick for extra point failed. The guests opened the second half by taking the defense and collected two more touchdowns and an extra point.

After an exchange of punts, Tran-(Continued on Page 5.) the person of Cecil Urbaniak, a junior who began the game in place of Ellis Johnson, regular halfback, who was unable to play because cf injuries. Kentucky Defense Good. Everybody expected Kelly to turn on, and he disappointed not a one, but Urbaniak was an unknown quantity when the play began. Before the play was five minutes old, however, the Fairmont, W. lad showed his heels to the best that Sewanee could produce and skimmed up and down the field like a blue racer from his native hills.

Kentucky's defence showed so well in the first half but all owed itself to lapse in the final two periods in proportion as the start-ine offense lost some of its power, been done. The Cats piled up twenty-five points i nthe first half on four touchdowns and an extra point, but fell off to two touchdowns in the last half, one in each quarter. Of the six touchdowns. Kentucky was able to make only one extra point. Sewanee never threatened Kentucky's goal seriously, although the Tigers showed a bitter defense on two occasions when they held the Cats within the shawod of their goal.

Fumble On 2-Yard Line. The Tigers also staved off a touchdown by hard fighting, coupled with luck, when a Kentucky touchdown was almost a certainty. With the (Continued on Page 5.) South Sept. 14 C4) Notre Dame pitted a hard running attack against the famed aerial offense of Southern Methodist here today, but was forced to revert to the overhead style of play to win out, 20 to 14. The game was played before a crowd of 25,000 in the new $750,000 stadium and the Rocknemen won after the hardest kind of uphill battling in the last four minutes.

With the score tied, 14 all, Schwartz completed a long pass to Conley, putting the ball on the 4-yard line. Schwartz plunged over on the next play. The game was full of thrills, most of them resulting from the continual and promiscuous use of the forward pass by the Methodists. In the first four minutes each team scored once. The Texans marched down the field, using forward passes from the outset, and Hopper plunged over from the 2-yard line for the first touchdown.

Notre Dame lost no time in answering this drive. Joe Savoldi received the succeeding kickoff on his 2-yard line and carried it straight down the middle of the field for ninety-eight yards and a touchdown. The Notre Dame second string, which had started the game, gave way to the regulars at the start of the second period. After University of Tennessee to an 18 to Oj victory. Harvard 35; Vermont 0 Harvard 33; Coast Guard 0 Lowell Tech 12; C.

C. N. 1' 6 Cornell Niagara 14 Bucknell Albrisht 0 Lafayette 13; Muhlenberg II Colgate Bethany 0 Boston New Hampshire. 12 W. and So; Westminster 0 Princeton Amherst I Army 54; Furman I Yale 40; Maryland 13 Trinity 27; New York Aggies.

7 Brown 54; Worcester 0 Williams 20; Middlebury 0 Dartmouth 2(1; Bates The Vols were touted to win by atifore reaching the three-sixteenths least thirty points, but the Colonels crossed to the spoiled all well laid plans bv putting poje' unce ciear ne crossed to tne tip a great defensive game, although inside and at the end the son of they never seriously threatened to Hoiiister was galloping, lour lengths in front. but the deeds had been done and Maine 13: Rhode Island .12 Springfield .33: Colby score. Captain Grabuck. Shearer and Nemecek all played brilliant all-around games, and were all three demons on the defense. Ofter when the Vol ball carriers managed to evade the first line of defense one of the three pulled them down.

Centre Line Play Well. The Centre line also proved a stumbling block to the Vols. Occa Cooper Union. Ill Lebanon II Providence II Cong Island ft .19: w. 6 ...16: West Hi 3: Villanova II 1 St.

Joseph fi I Penn II; Mass. Of Sharing the spotlight with the features was the Shady Brook Farm Stable, owned by Theodore E. Mueller and trained by Jim Moody, which scored a double triumph when Cayuga accounted for the Dandelion Purse, the sixth number. The winner raced closest to Current to the stretch where, under Finnerty's guidance, he drew out to lead Chimney Sweep by two lengths. Current got the minor award in the six-f urlnni? test.

Ms- an exchange of punts, Carideo ran back a punt to the Texans' 16-yard for FALL i 3M STYLE NOTES line and a few minutes later Schwartz Drexel ftnn State Holy Cross Rensselaer Navy Pitt f.ettysbure Delaware I.ehijrh Bowdoin Susquehanna I'rsinus Juniata Penn F. N. Y. Carnegie Tech American Fordham Allegheny Wagner 7 sprinted across the goal line. II Haverlord The visitors came back with some sionally Buddy Hackman, Paul Hey- 1.

Broad 2. Narro shoulders "RiCV hips Lr more long passes to score their second drick or Ty Disney would slip through chete had previously carried the touchdown iust two minutes before Dickinson 63; Swarthmore 2-i: Catholic V. 41: Wesleyan 5-J; Thicl fi; Shepherd 1: rfuffalo Fdinboro 25: I'ninn ior good gams, but many times the Mueller colors to victory in the third fighters from Danville were on their event. Finnerty was riding his sec-toes to snag them. ond consecutive winner.

Nellie Custis, Shearer's punting and passing were which came in for the public's sup-on par with anything that Tennessee i port, showed little speed after break- the end of the first half and left the score tied, 14 to 14. Launching a desperate drive in the last half, Notre Dame twice battered its wav to within scoring distance, Columbia 3.. Slim 4. Peak 5. Athle Hamilton 12; Clarkson II Rider 7: T.oynla (Md.) Continued on Page 5.) (Continued on Page 4.) only to be repulsed by the Methodist forward wall.

It was then that the running attack was discarded in favor Svractise Hohart 0 Marshall Morris Harvev IVnn T'ehers II: W. Va. Ii Mt. St. Mary's St.

Vincent fi Kiki IS; Navv Flehes Millersville Clarion T'chers 0 MIDDLEWEST of the forward pass that took the con test out of the fire. Other Markers. New Haven, Oct. 4 (P) Once again it was proved in the Yale Bowl this afternoon that as Booth goes so goes Yale, in a football way. Scoring two touchdowns himself and throwing passes that resulted in two more, the pint-sized quarterback led his team to a 40 to 13 victory over the University of Maryland before a big early-season crowd of 50,000.

Except for part of the second and fourth periods when the 144-pound dynamo. Booth, was in the game, Maryland fully held its own, but when Coach Mai Stevens sent his star into action along with his backfield running mates, Beane and Muhlfeld, the tide turned. Booth Passes for Two. Once in the second quarter and again in the fourth Booth threw a long, unerring pass to Beane for a touchdown and each time he followed up a few minutes later with a great brokenfield run of his own for another score. The first of these was tkirty -eight yards and the second for forty-two.

Yale's victory served to atone for a series of lean years in the annual strife with Maryland, the fighting Southerners having beaten the Bulldog in 1926 and 1928, and tied them last season. A year ago the Yale coach took Booth out too soon, but today he kept him in action until five touchdowns had been tallied and the game was safe. McLennan Scored First. McLennan, who started at quarterback, scored the first touchdown on an off-tackle plunge after a pass from McLennan to Snead and a 10-yard dash by Taylor had placed the ball on the one-yard line. Snead kicked the extra point from placement.

But Maryland came right back to tie the score by sending Chalmers over on a short buck as the climax of a drive from near mid-field and adding the extra point by a place-kick by Chalmers. Maryland was having slightly the better of it when Albie Booth and company made their bow shortly before the middle of the second period. Just three plays later came Booth's touchdown pass to Beane. On the next play Booth side-stepped off right tackle for thirty-eight yards and another tally. His drop-kicks made it 21 to 7.

but Maryland picked up sixty yards and a touchdown on a pass from Evans to Berger. Yale subs went in in droves and Levering, third string fullback, bucked the ball over for a sixth touchdow-n in the closing minutes. Gopher Plays Go "Askew" i Ac JL tl liU Cl KJ 11 lllO VJ till, Minneapolis, Oct. 4 (P) A substi- again, this time on a forward pass Ashland Wooster I) ISolins Green Baldwin Wallace. Otterbein 25: Crdarville II Capital 2: Bluffton II Adrian 14: Findlay 12 Chicago 19; Ripon Michicn Michigan II Mnskingura 18; Keserve fi Wisconsin 28: Carleton II Wisconsin Lawrence 6 Ilridelberc 25; Ohio Wesleyan Xavier Denison (I Vanderbilt 33: Minnesota 7 Notre Dame 20; S.

M. II Notre Dame Detroit C. Oklahoma Ags fi; Iowa I'urdue 2(1; Bavlor 7 tute halfback, Johnny Askew, com-! irom j-arKer, wnicn again lmmeaiate- ly followed interception of a Gopher bined forward lateral and intercepted passes with flashes of terrific speed, to lead Vanderbilt to" a 33 to 7 victory n-pr Minnesota, todav. pass. A'andy Earns Victory.

Askew made his third touchdown Ohio State Fells Weary I. U. In Last Half Push Field Goal Only Score Until Last Ten Minutes; Count Is 23-0. Columbus, Oct. 4 (A1) Developing its latent scoring power with the injection of fresh, hard-running substitutes late in the game, Ohio State shattered Indiana's football hopes with a 23 to 0 victory today.

It was a last-round knockout of an opponent groggy from punishment, sapped of reserve strength by the hammering of the early play. Prevented by penalties, fumbles and a Kans'as Aes II; Washburn Colorado Missouri Illinois Iowa State Olivet 7: Defiance Ohio Northern. fi; Toledo Marietta 31; Rio Grande Northwestern ....14: Tulane Nebraska 13; Texas A.AM. It was the first victory for the I shortly after the start of the second Southerners in three annual invasions half when he hugged the ball on a into the Gophers' Northern strong- Iong pass from Parker after it had hold, and a defeat for new coach, Fritz Crisler, in the first Slanced off the arms 01 a would-be major game since he took over the intercepter. Minnesota coaching reins.

The substitute's final thrilling per- While the versatile Askew sped for i formance of the afternoon made in four brilliant touchdowns, his team- i the final period when another Gopher mates effectively broke up the aerial misplay, this time a fumble, gave the game Crisler has cultivated and seven Southerners possession near their t. John's TJ 13; Ilamline 1.3 MacAlester 52; Luther (I St. Olaf 211; S. Dakota 11 Concordia fi; Hibbins Col II Moorhead Vallev City tl Lake Forest Beloit St. Cloud T'chrs 2fi: Remid.ii Oshkosh fi; Northern T'chrs fi Virginia Col 13; Duluth Jrs II Stevens Point Stout Inst II Knox 15; Western II Iowa Wesleyan Graceland If Central Col 25; Parsons Iowa Teachers.

Luther II times the Southerners intercepted SOUTHWEST blocked punt from scoring any touchdowns in the first half, the HY-SET by Fashion Park a Suit witi New Ideas own goal. Askew spun through the Minnesota line and then outsprinted the Gopher secondary defense with a burst of speed which carried him across the goal line. Statistics of the game showed that in addition to winning the breaks of the game, the Southerners earned victory. They made ten first downs to five for Minnesota, gaining a total of 282 yards from scrimmage to 166 for the Gophers. Only Ken MacDougal, a midget quarterback, had any success in penetrating the Vanderbilt line.

Norman 4S: New Mexico T- C. II; Simmons II R're 211: St. Edwards II Tulsa TT 2d: Arkansas fi Texas Centenary 0 Texas Mines N. Ariz. fi Howard Payne San Marco 0 Buckeyes summoned their substitutes in the last period, marched half the length of the field for their first touchdown and then capitalized perfectly on two serious blunders by the Hoosiers for two more, turning a close game into a complete rout.

With less than ten minutes to play, Ohio had only three points to show for an immense margin in yardage. SOUTH Battle Scars Tomtrfr Armour, professional solfinsr chompion. is a veteran of the game and the World War. He lost an eye and has limp. throws by Minnesota backs.

Gophers Tally On First Play. Only once did Minnesota's aerial challenge succeed in its first play of the game. Jack Manders, giant fullback, hurled a 38-yard pass to Walter Hass, who sprinted twenty-five yards for a touchdown. But eighteen pass attempts by the Gopners during the remainder of the game failed to produce scores with only four completed. Vanderbilt quickly balanced Minnesota's scoring start, when after a fumble by Manders, Benny Parker tossed a forward pass to Amos Le-ciard, who went across.

Askew began his deadly efforts in the second quarter. A Minnesota pass was intercepted. Parker passed to Schwartz, and Askew on the next play, dashed through the line for six yards. On the next play he took a lateral pass and dashed through. A few minutes later Askew scored 32; Vireinia I) ....13: Guilford Richmond it 12; High Point fi Duke Wake Forest W.

VVofford Florida .27: N. C. State The Bucks never permitted the Georgia .51 Mercer Davidson 7: Frskine E'on 45; Atlanta Chris. Miss. College ...13: Miss.

A. Purdue Plays Poorly But Tops Baylor, 20-7 .211: K. Texas T'chrs ...58: Southwest. La. ...64: Mississippi St.

Johns La. Normal L. S. Alabama V. M.

I Presbyterian Southwestern Teran. T'chrs North Carolina Georgia Tech Chattanooga fi ...50: Lambuth fl Jonesboro v. P. I South Carolina II Catawba Lynchburg 6 Lyncounrs Tennessee Poly. ..211: Carson-Newman Pope to Purvis was scored in the fourth quarter.

The line-up: Purdue Pos. Baylor Louisiana Col. 33; Mexico V. Or I Cardinals Fall suits have gone athletic this yeaivand Fashion Park interprets the new style with the HY-SET, a model that is several steps ahead of the field. The slim narrow waist-line--the broad athletic shoulder "-the snug hips--combine to give one a more masculine and youthful appearance.

This model in the new dusk blues will be especially smart. But in addition to the clever styling and handsome fabrics, you have the luxury of fine silk linings without the customary additional cost. Moon L. Pierce Hoosiers to get the ball more than a few yards past midfield. With the ball on the 18-yard line in the first half, Carl Ehrensberger, substitute center, went in to kick and his boot was good.

In the fourth, Ohio State began its touchdown drive, Bill Carroll, a sophomore, Horn and Hinchman took turns at carrying the ball for fifty-seven yards, Carroll getting the last three yards around Indiana's right end. Ehrensberger place-kicked the extra point. Ohio had no more than kicked off than it took the ball on Indiana's 14-yErd line. Six plays were necessary before Horn could score from the 2-yard line, hitting the Hoosier center for the second touchdown. Joe Benish had made it first down on Indiana's 2- -yard Ehrens-berger's kick again was good.

Brubaker, Indiana's quarterback, fumbled on the second play after the T. Witcher Husar Anbnrn 13:. Spring Hill Benedict fi; Clark t' Morehouse 32; Allen V. Tuskagee 41; Lane Col Hampden-Sydney 25; Rridgewater Aopalaehia 13; Tuseulum Morris Brown 13; Tort Kenning Kocn Paradeaux Winton Morris Runnels Wilson Lewter L. C.

R. R. T. R. E.

Q. L. Trimble Oehler Voinoff Boswell Montanus Weaver Risk Kissell FAR WEST AB. K. II.

PO. A. E. 4 0 3 0 2 0 McElreath R. H.

F. Smith Horstman S. California 27; Oregon State 7 Washington California 0 Stanford 20; Santa Clara 0 San Jose II; California Ags Idaho 311; Idaho Col fi Montana State Regis PHIL.A. (A) Bishop, 2b Iykes, 3b Cochrane, Simmons, If Foxs, lb Miller, rf Haas, cf Boley, ss 0 110 0 5 0 0 2 110 1 12 1 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 3 5 0 i ran Mate Colorado Col 7 Score by periods: Purdue 0 7 7 6 20 Baylor 0 0 7 0 7 Touchdowns Purdue: Kissell, Moss substitute for Moon). Purvis (substitute for Kissell: Baylor: Koch.

Points Alter Touchdown Van Bibber, 2: Lewter, 1. Referee Magidsohn. Michigan. Umpire Coffin. Illionois.

Field Judce Morrison, Kansas. Head Linesman Ray, Illinois. Washington IT. Greely T'chers I'tah Nevada V. .27: Montana IT A .11: Western State Wyoming Brigham Voting fi (Continued on Tage 4.) Walberg, 2 Shores, 0 Quinn.

0 Moore 1 jMcNair 1 LaFayette, Oct. 4 OP) Although they managed to chalk up a victory over the Baylor Bears, 20 to 7, in the Ross-Ade Stadium here today, Purdue's football team looked like anything but a Big Ten champion. Its play was ragged throughout and It showed no sustained drive at any time. Two long passes and a brilliant 75-yard run pulled the game out of the fire. The score fails to do full credit to the invading Baylor team.

Jake Wilson, one of the speediest quarterbacks ever seen on this field, played great ball throughout, as did Captain Koch at guard and Paradeaux at center Wilson received a punt in the second quarter and ran through the entire Purdue team for fifty-five yards and a touchdown, but Baylor was offside on the play and the ball was brought back. Koch scored the only Baylor touchdown when he intercepted a partially blocked pass from Chasey and ran thirty-five yards to the goal line. The Boilermakers' line, which had been rated unusually strong, was responsible for most of the ragged play. The line played well on the defense, but its offensive play was disappointing. More than 11,000 persons attended.

Purdue's first touchdown was scored by Moss when he received a pass from Pope over the goal line in the second quarter. The gain was fifteen yards. Kissell scored in tfce third quarter on a 75-yard run. A 20-yard pass from 50 Bruder of Nor'westem Dams Tulane Wave, 14-0 Totals 33 0 7 24 11 0 Batted for Hass in ninth. fBatted for Quinn in ninth.

ST. LOITIS (X). AB. R. H.

PO. A. E. Others $60 and $75 DMthit, cf 4 Adams, 3b 4 Frisch, 2b 4 Bottomley, lb 4 3 0 2 14 0 1 1 6 Hafey, If 4 NEBRASKA DRIVE BEATS TEXAS AGGIES BY 13-0 Lincoln, Oct. 4 (A) Convincingly demonstrating that the days of "powerhouse" football have not yet passed out of the gridiron curriculum at the 4Jniversity of Nebraska, the 1930 Cornhuskers today blanked the Texas Aggies.

13 to 0. With Marvin Paul, subbing at fullback for Robert Red) Roung, Husker ace and leading tallymaker of the Big Six Conference last year, lugging the ball, Nebraska marched from the 25-yard line in the third quarter without a stop, Paul plunging over from the 2-foot mark. Frahm's kick was good. Paul carried the ball eleven of the twelve times for seventy yards, Rowley, halfback, making up the balance of the distance from the 25-yard line, where Mathis, quarter, carried the kickoff. The second Husker counter was made in the fourth period, with Young scoring.

Kiacies, ri Vatkins, rf Wilson, Gelbert, ss Haliaban, .33 5 10 27 10 0 12345678 9 T. Totals Innings: A fitting companion to your HY-SET Suit The Pargora Topcoat $50 A new top coat by Fashion Park; made of fine Guanoco and Angora wools that give warmth without weight. Silk yoke and sleeve linings. The new belt-back model is featured. New oxfords, tans and navy.

Philadelphia 00000000 0 0 St. Louis 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 1 5 Runs Batted In Douthit. Gelbert, its own territory and a poor Tulane punt gave Northwestern the ball on the Green 26-yard line. Bruder reeled off fourteen yards off tackle, then Rentner, sophomore fullback, got eleven more on a spinner. Rentner tried twice from the 1-yard line, but failed and Bruder took the ball and hurled himself clear into the end zone for the score.

After Bruder left the game at half time Northwestern still was too good for Tulane, but not good enough to score without the aid of its leader. Bruder, hwever, received impressive support from a big, veteran line, and after he left, the same forwards had much to do with wrecking whatever offensive attempts Tulane made. Clearly Superior. Northwestern, rated as the team to beat in the Big Ten Conference race, was clearly superior in everything but courage. The Greenies never stopped trying to find something that would work, shifting, passing and running until the final gun.

Hugh Whatley, a reserve halfback, Evanston. 111., Oct. 4 (Pl-s-Hard Luck Hank Bruder of Northwestern, shook his jinx today, took personal charge of proceedings and reduced Tulane's big Green Wave to a mere dribble. Playing in his fifth game since he became a regular in 1928, Bruder-scored two touchdowns and kicked both goals thereafter, to give Northwestern a 14 to 0 victory. Bruder was hailed as one of the greatest backs in the West in his first year, but injuries kept him out of all but parts of three games.

He came back better than ever last year, but in Northwestern's opening conference game with Wisconsin, which he won almost single handed, he fractured his left leg and was out for the season. Races 54 Yards. Bruder's first touchdown was the result of a bit of alert defensive play which permitted him to intercept a forward pass tossed by Dawson, Tulane quarterback, and race fifty-four yards over the goal line. He was not used for the next five or so minutes, but when he went back into action, another touchdown promptly occurred. His punting drove Tulane into CALIFORNIA UPSET, 16-0, 51-YARD PASS HELPS COLORADO WIN, 9-0 Columbia, Oct.

4 OP) University of Colorado defeated University of Missouri in the first football game of the season here today, 9 to 0. Pete Middlemist and Warren Colorado veterans, were the heroes of the game when they cooperated in the first quarter to com-olete a 51-yard pass for a touchdown. George Newton, substitute fullback, stole part of the show late Wilson, 2 Hafey, Two-base Hits Simmons. Bottomley, Hafey. Home Run Douthit.

Double Play Gelbert. Frisch and Bottomley. Left On Bases St. Louis, Philadelphia 11. Bases On Balls Off Hallahan) 5 (Cochrane, Dvkes.

Shores, Bishop) off Walberjr. 1 "(Hallahan). Struck Out By Halla-ban, 6 (Dykes, Simmons, Miller, Haas, Walberg); by Walberg, 3 (Bot-tomlev, 2: Hafey); by Quinn, 1 (Hallahan). Hits Off Walbergr, 4 in 4 2-3 innings; off Shores, 3 in 1 1-3 innings (none out in seventh) off Quinn, 3 In 2 innings. Losing: Pitcher Wal-berg.

Umpires Geisel, Reardon, Mo-riarty and Riffler. Time Two hours and five minutes. BROS LEVY BY WASHINGTON STATE Berkeley, Oct. 4 C43) Washington State turned in a big upset here today by decisively defeating California in a Coast Conference game. 16 to 0.

Washington scored their first touchdown in the first quarter, added three more points in the second quarter in the final period when his place MARKET at THIRD made most of the Tulane gains. TheJ kick sailed across the goal post for three extra points. The game was kicking of Nome Felts, with the exception of the bad one that led to the with a field goal and another in the I marked by numerous fumbles. second touchdown, also was excellent, final period..

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