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Beatrice Daily Sun from Beatrice, Nebraska • Page 10

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Beatrice, Nebraska
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10 Dtfttfitt OftQy Stift, Beatrice. Netm, Oct. 8, 1950 Huskers Upset Gophers Bob Reynolds Sparks 32-26 Surprise Win MINNEAPOLIS, ka's dofnhuskers, sparked by and elusive Halfback Bob Jteynelds, upset a favored Minne- 16ta football team with a 32 to 26 trtuniph Saturday. crossed Minnesota's foal line twice once on a fancy exhibition of trick running. He also contributed important yardage, in ground plays, helped otlt in the tossing department of Nebraska's aerial game, and kicked two points after touch down, Reynolds was outscored but no outshown, by Minnesota's half back Ron (Skip) Engel.

Enge celebrated his 20th birthday by Statistics Neb. Minn First Downs 10 13 Rushing yardage 284 310 Passing yardage 79 79 Passes attempted 15 21 Passes completed 5 9 Passes Intercepted ..1 1 Punts 7 Punting average 38 37.75 Fumbles lost 1 Yardage penalized 30 35 scoring three of the four Gopher touchdowns. He took passes for two of them and plunged over for the other. Proves Victory Margin A Minnesota fumble, recovered by alert center Verl Scott early in the fourth period, proved the margin of victory for the Corn buskers. The period started with Nebraska ahead, 26.to 19.

Minnesota's offensive was showing signs of coming to life. After the Gophers had taken the ball on downs on their own six-yard line, Halfback Kerm Klefsaas fumbled the pass from center. The ball bounded back across the goal line and Scott fell on it for the score. The Cornhuskers went ahead by scoring the first time they took the ball. Starting from their own 43-yard line, Nebraska moved irresistibly down the field.

Fullback Bill Wingender raced over the goal line after taking a 32- yard pass from Quarterback Fran Nagle. Reynolds added his first touch-; down of the day, stepping around right end for five yards. Darrell (Shorty) Cochran. counted for Minnesota late in th period, going to his left on a re verse. Raynolds's 67-yard run came came early in (he second period.

Halfback Ron Clark made an other Nebraska counter in (ha period. Just a play or two after he entered the game, he cut to his left and down the sidelines and over the goal line. Engel plunged to his left for ive yards and the second Gopher tally to bring the score to Nebraska 26, Minnesota 12. Then Engel took a pass from Halfback- George Hudak late in the third period, with Halfback Dick Gregory adding thp pom, to bring the Gophers (o within one touchdown of Nebraska. Fumble Recovery But then came Scott's recovery of the fumble.

Minnesota tried to catch up. Engel counted his third touchdown on a pass over tho line rom Johnson, with Fullback Pave Skrien contributing the point. Toogood- Hoy, Harper, Poll; left Boll; centers McGill, Scott; right guards Strasheim, Mullen: right tackles Godfrey. Goeglcin; right Reesen, Roper; lef Chirk; n.eh Bloom; full Adduci, Cur (is. MINNESOTA Hendrick- John Johnson; left Cannkes, Marker).

Carlson. E. Johnson; left guanls- Mertes; Wells, Hammel: right Olson, Stolen. Coates, Heiden- eich; right Johansen. Sundin, Mundinger, Ravel- but that was the end of the Gophers scoring.

The lineups: NEBRASKA Left Prochas- Carney, Maxe: left right Edhng. Foss- Durda; Wheaton, Anderson. Score by periods; Nebraska 13 13 0 Minnesota 667 Nebraska scoring: touchdowns. Wingender, Reynolds 2, Clark, Scott. 2.

Minnesota scoring: touchdowns, Cochran. Engel 3. Skricn. Indiana II. Upsets Favored Iowa 20-7 BLOOMINGTON.

Ind. Stubby Ix)u D'Achille, pass-pitch ing and end-running sophomore quartcrbacked Indiana university to a 20-7 upset victory over Iowa Saturday and cracked a five-year- old Western conference record in he process. One of D'Achille's two scoring passes, to Bobhy Robertson, covered 91 yards, including Robertson's 6G-yard run after lie caught it. The old record on a Big Ten scoi ins; play was 76 yards, a pass from Bill Butkovich of Illinois to Ray Cisczeh on Nov. 18, 1944, also against Iowa.

Iowa's Hawkeyes had set themselves up as a Big Ten title threat with a 20-14 victory over Southern California last week. But Saturday they ran into a hard- ackling. clean-blocking Indiana earn that never acted as if it had the slightest idea of losing. D-Achille was the priceless ingredient added to the Indiana which won only one game last year and failed to take a Western conference contest. 27-21 Oklahoma Dumps Texas 24-28 In Final Minutes Of Play Purdue Cracks Irish's Long Reign Of Terror LAWRENCE, Kas.

The University of Kansas came to life here Saturday after taking a first FOOTBALL SCORES HI SCHOOL Mid-East a Big Seven conference football Central 0 game featured by a spectacular 86-yard run by the Jayhawks' Hastin 8 at Columbus, cancelled Charley Hoag. The Kansans went into the last half trailing 14-0, and badly outplayed in every department until Barneston 30; Wilber 0 Floag sparked an attack with his Liberty 32; Hollenberg 6 long run after taking a kickoff sta 0 iS JJard ab Ut midwa Platte Center 49; North Bend 26 of the third period. Colorado had Elkhorn 38; Ceresco 20 Local 20; Wymore 6 City Peru Prep 6 a comfortable 21-0 lead long broke loose. Once the Kansans had when Chester 40; Tabor, la. 7 Waverly 25; Louisville 0 tested College View (Lincoln) at Wahoo iay dirt, there was no stopping Postponed hem.

The Coloradans hung on Omaha North at Creighton Prep desperately, but that was all they Postponed, could do. Mitchell 27; Sidney 10 Minatare 27; Bridgeport 0 NORMAN, Okla. desper- Pcnder 13: West Point 13 ate passing attack covering 65 darks 6 feffs Bounce 20-12 Score Nebraska City Halted By Fighting Fairbury Eleven (The Sun's Own Service) to the Beatrice OrangVmen! A revitalized Fairbury football team swarmed all over Nebraska City here Friday night, defeating the 20-12. Orangemen, Discoverers Meet Here Friday Night yards and capped by a 4-yard Siollx Cit Ia Central 32; Om- touchdown run by Leon Heath aha Central 13 with 37 seconds remaining pulled Fremont 26; Fails City 0 Oklahoma past the Texas Aggies Omalia Benson 19; Abraham Lin- 34-28, here Saturday. coln (Council Bluffs) 13 The last minute victory extend- rand Isla 33; Kearney 0 ed Oklahoma's string to 23 games.

rth PIatte Alliance 7 Beatrice will be seeking its second victory of the present football season next Friday night. one touchdown in its three outings. York was the first team to dump the Discoverers 6-0. Next A crowd of 40,000 watched the aerial drive that started with 1 minute and 44 seconds left and the Sooners behind 28-27. The touchdown was the third The Orangemen meet the Col- came Northeast which swamped nhllS af 1 umbus Discoverers at Athletic! Columbus 01-1.

Grand Island park in a Mid-East conference tilt. ousted the Discoverers a week The game will be the second i ago Friday 53-0. meeting of the teams since the! Columbus was scheduled to plav Tjmpnvnwsi-c tu T. Discoverers joined the Mid-East conference last year. Beaten Last Year Columbus was defeated 25-6 by- Hastings Friday night but the game was cancelled because the death of Bob Murray, Discoverer backfield star who'suffer- a strong Beatrice squad.

The game a fractured neck during the was played at Columbus. Duane jay, the Ex-Orange and Black jack-field star, led last year's Mid- East champs to the victory, scor- ng three touchdowns himself and Northeast game. Principal L. L. Patterson immediately called off the game when he learned of the lad's death.

Young Murray died Fridaj, On paper, this gives Falrbury assjn to Bill Hawkins for the! morning. The youth was the first football fatality in the history of Pawnee Edges Peru 7 To 6 Ned Eckman Tallies For Indians; Rutt Clark The PAT Sun'i Own PAWNEE Pawne iCity Indians eked out a 7-6 vie tory over Peru Prep here Friday afternoon before a Pawnee Coun ty fair crowd estimated to be over 2,000. Both touchdowns were scored during £he first quarter of the game. Pawnee City tallied firsl when tackle Alvin Vance blocked a Peru Prep punt on the Bobcats 19-yard line. A series of running plays took the ball to Peru eight.

Ned Eckman rammed the middle of the line for six points and a touchdown. The extra point which proved to be Pawnee City's victory margin was made by Rutt Clark who split the Peru Prep line and rolled over the double-chalk mark. The Peru squad quickly tallied its touchdown. The Bobcats took Pawnee City's kickoff and on a a two-point advantage over Beatrice. The Orangemen conquered Nebraska City 19-13 in Athletic park, Sept.

29, a week ago Friday night. Six Points The victory margin for Beatrice was six points; for Fairbury, eight. Statistics, however, usually do not mean much when (he Orangemen and Jeffs meet. This has been proven time and time again down through the years. The game, not for two weeks will be played at Fairbury.

After a scoreless battle during the first quarter of Friday night's game, a pass play clocked for the Jeff's first touchdown. A short Nebraska City punt set up I lie score. Thiesfeld punting from his own two-yard line let the ball slip off the side of his foot and it went out on the 19-yard line. Richardson passed to Hock ivho scampered over for the touchdown. Hammond ran over for (he extra point and Fairbury led 7-0.

The Orangemen who have won the sport at Columbus (Lincoln Northeast and Scottsbluff) should have little trouble defeating the impotent Discoverers. Columbus has yet to win a game. The squad has only scorec series of running plays scored their touchdown, Duane Rains, one of the state's fastest backs, ran across the goal line from the 25-yard line. John Henning's try for point failed. Henning tried to punch a hole in the middle of the Indians' forward wall, but failed.

The game, however, wasn't as close as the score indicated. Coach Joe kids knocked on the Peru goal line four times but cashed in only once. The Indians in winning the game chalked up their fourth straight victory 6f the season. It was the first loss of the season for Peru. Score by periods: Pawnee City 700 Peru Prep 600 Track Will Be Fast For Hot Rod Racers "If it doesn't rain between now and tomorrow afternoon, the track at the fairgrounds will be the fastest ever," Jack Wright, chairman of the VFW racing corn- mi ttee said Saturday, The VFW is sponsoring Hot Rod races at the fairgrounds tomorrow afternoon.

Time trials are sched- vied to start at 2 P. the races Rt "That track because of last night's rain will be packed the best Us ever 1 Wright continued, adding that If rain will only stay away, records will fly out the window tomorrow afternoon 20 Hot Eod rac- '-s take fo With two seconds left to play and the ball in possession of the 3 ioneers on their own 43. jDon vvder heaved a long pass to Ailes which was good for 57-yards and a touchdown. The try 'for point ailed and Fairbury led at half- ime 7-6. Neither team scored during the bird quarter, but Fairbury came )ack in the fourth quarter to tally wo quick touchdowns.

The first ame on a pass from Richardson i Hammond who lateraled to Hock on the Pioneer 25. Hock ran over the double-chalk mark for the touchdown. The extra point failed. Third Touchdown Fairbury, two minutes later, rackPd up its third marker when Rolfinf? intercepted a Ryder nass on the Nebraska City 10-yard line and ran fo the four. On the next play, substitute backfielder, Jerry T.iken rolled over for, the touchdown.

Beach kicked for (ho extra point and Hairbury wns ahrad 20-7. Nebraska City tallied its final touchdown in the last two minutes of thp game when Ryder passed to Hebard from 31 yards out for the score. The try for point failed. Nebraska City out-ynrdcd the Jeffs but Fairbury outdowned the Pioneers nine to eight. Score by periods: Fairbury 7 0 City 6 0 Four Tied In Grade league Leslie Kennedy, Jim Mott Tied For Scoring Honors Team West St.

Joseph Fairview East Belvidere YMCA STANDINGS 1 Columbus junior chamber ot commerce, was sponsoring a benefit game for Murray slated to be played Oct. 18, said the game will go ahead as scheduled. Proceeds wil be used to defray hospital, medical and funeral expenses. If there are any funds remaining after these expenses, some type of memorial will be placed at the high school, it was announced. Meanwhile, Coach Eugene "Red" Littler said Saturday Columbus would be here as far as he that he had heard nothing' of the contrary.

The Orangemen, idle Friday night, will get down to serious business Monday night as they swing into three days of heavy drills. of the day for Heath, who is the only returning starter from last year's Sugar bowl champions. The Sooners' last defeat was to Santa Clara 17-20 the first game of the 1948 season. The game appeared all bu over and a few fo: the exit after Claude Arnold pass ed to Billy Vessels for a 32 yard touchdown with 34 minute; remaining and Jim Weatheral failed to make the kick good leaving the Sooners one point behind. Comes Back But Arnold, whose quarterbacking was shaky at times during the game, came back with a brilliant display of passing to move Oklahoma to the winning score.

He hit six out of seven passes in the victory drive. AMES, la. State, taunted by the short end of an 8-6 halftime score, roared back in the second half for a 26-8 football victory over Iowa Teachers Saturday. The youngsters bearing the small college classification threatened to make a mockery of class distinction by out-playing Iowa State in the half, but they ran out of gas under the pressure applied by the Big Seven conference squad in the last half. COLUMBIA, Bulldoz- Weeping Water Friend 0 Omaha South Omaha Tech 0 Red Cloud 19; Dcshler 0 Holdregc 26; Curtis 6 Friday's Games College Miami (Fla) 18; Villanova 12 South Carolina 21; Furman 6 Wichita 21; Detroit 13 Oklahoma A 14; Drake 14 Marietta 20; Anderson 7 Mt.

Union 53; Clarion (Pa) 0 North Dakota 26; Bemidii Tchrs 6 Baker 13: McPherson 6 Ottawa (Kas) 27; Bethel 0 Doane 20; Iowa Central 0 Concorida (Neb) 13 York 0 Bethany (Kas) 12; College Emporia 7 i BIG SEVEN Nebraska 32, Minnesota 26 Oklahoma 34, Texas A and 28 Kansas 27. Colorado 21 Iowa State 26, Iowa Teachers 8 Southern Methodist 21, Missouri 0 BIG TEN Ohio State 41, Pittsburgh 7 Maryland 34, Michigan State 7 Wisconsin 7, Illinois 6 Indiana 20, Iowa 7 Michigan 27, Dartmouth 7 Purdue 28. Notre Dame 14 OTHER COLLEGES East Army 41, Penn State 7 Ohio Wesleyan 14, Connecticut Colgate 47. Western Reserve 6 Carnegie Tech 34, Bethany 3 Holy Cross 41, Brown 21 Columbia 28, Harvard 7 Tulsa 21. Georgetown 7 Boston University 21, Duquesne Princeton 34, Rutgers 28 Yale 21.

Fordham 14 Mississippi 54, Boston College 0 South Tulane 64, Louisiana College 0 William SOUTH BEND ay Cnded Notre Dame 's ofut ror of the gridiron hrmlh ne unchecked through 39 games without defeat of modern football re- -r soph omore Boil- ermnkers buried the Irish giant "iK-il in a stunning upset that shocked the Notre Dame and left 56,748 fans shaking heads in disbelief. It was no fluke. Purdue, a 20- poinl underdog, ouflayed the Irish every category-including an fi8hting spirit 2T Half Time 91 llcrm i lke '-s lashed to a 21-0 halftime lead. Notre Dame had cut it to 21-14 by the outS of the fourth period. But the rally, unleashed as drizzle slicked Into S' ly PUmped re The pent-up wrecking crew came right back to score on a 56 yard pass play, Sophomore Dale ke Ma and lhe door in Notre Dame's Wake Forest 47, lary 0 Georgia Tech 16, Florida 13 Georgia 0, North Carolina 0 tie) Tennessee 28, Duke 7 Midwest Ball State 27, DcPauw 13 Ohio University 21, Butler 14 Nebraska Wesleyan 19; Kearney Teachers 12.

Omaha 26; Washburn 6. Par West Southern California 20, Washington State 20 (tie) Oregon 21, Montana 13 California 14; Pennsylvania 7. Washington 21; U.C.L.A. 20 Stanford 21; Oregon State 0. Superior Dampens Wymore Hopes Of A Victory 20 To 6 Polish Offense i Central 1 1 South Glenover Four schools are tied for firs place in the YMCA grade schoo touch football standings at the end of the first week of play.

West, St. Joseph, Fairview and East each won their games during the past week. Two teams have played a pair of games, Belvidere and Glenover. Belvidere split while Glenover lost both of the games. Central and South have each lost one.

Games this week will be: Central vs. East. Oct. 10; St. Joseph vs.

Fairview, Oct. 11; Glenover vs. SoUth, Oct. 12 and Belvidere vs. East, Oct.

13. Leading scoring honors for the week are shared by two boys. Leslie Kennedy, Belvidere and Jim Mott, Glenover, have each scored 30 points. Ladd Hubka, Fairview is next with 18 points. Three lads are tied for fifth with 12 points apiece.

They are: Larry Howe, St. Joseph; Jerry Lang, St. Joseph and Larry Janssen, East, Eight lads have scored a touchdown apiece. They are: Hubert Ullman, St. Joseph; Larry Hausman, Fairview; John Rosenberg, Fairvievv; Tommy Redmond, Central; Larry Williams, East; John Rudder, South and Jim Sutten, Belvidere.

On the schedule will be more work on fundamentals and the polishing of the offense and defense. The squad has been working out during the past week, in order to keep in form. Most of the work was on polishing the offense and fundamentals. Running with the first eleven have been: Jack Shalla and Ted Nyden, ends; Rollin Lohmeyer and Tom Woodward, tackles; Burrell McMasters and Don Brandt, guards; Chan Carpenter, center Bill Hawkins, Marvin Howe, Dick Reische and Marvin Macy, backs. St.

Play Sterling Won. The weatherman Friday night won several of the six-man football games scheduled to be played around the Beatrice area. Heavy rains forced postponement of the St. Joseph's-Virginia game scheduled for Riverside park last night. Red Raven coach, Fr.

Jerome Murray, said Saturday the game would be played Monday night at 8 p. in Riverside. The Adams vs School of the Deaf, Omaha, game was another of the contests postponed. It was scheduled for Friday on the Adams gridiron. Coach G.

A. Young said Saturday that a re-play date had not yet been set, and it would probably be decided on Monday. There was no game at Sterling either. Scheduled was Nehawka on the Sterling Gridiron. er Kyle Rote struck for two touchdowns Saturday to lead the Southern Methodist university's Mustangs to a 21-0 rout of the Missouri third successive victory of the season.

The second largest home crowd in Missouri history, near 36,000 sat in as Missouri buffered second straight shutout since the tail-end of the 1937 season. That year Kansas tied the Tigers 0-0 and U.C.L.A. beat them Missouri played better than it did in losing 34-0 to Clemson last week, but the Tigers couldn't stop the running of Rote and the spotty, but effective passing of Fred Beners. Liberty Team Is Victorious Mustangs Hit Hollenberg 32-6 To Win 1st Game In History (The Own Service) firs quarter and the absence of first team Wymore backfield rnei gave Superior a 20-6 victory ove the Zephyrs here Friday night. The Superior eleven capitalized on the inability of Wymore to ge rolling in the first period and smashed across two quick touch downs.

Backfield members absent dur- ng the game were quarterback 'unior James and Halfback Jim tfall who earlier in the week hac training rules and hac been left home by Coach Sam Bell. Score From Eight Superior's first touchdown came after Wymore had received, then punted after being stopped on four successive plays. Superior took the ball in its own territory, scoring from the eight-yard line after a sustained drive. A drop kick, unusual in football circles these days, was good for an extra point. The second Superior touchdown after Wymore fumbled the bail came in Superior territory.

The home team captured the loose ball on their own 48. A pass clicked to the Wymore 18, and the touchdown was scored on another pass, seven yards, after two running plays. Wymore caught on fire during the second scoring its lone touchdown in that period. It came on a Collier to John Marshall pass which covered 65 yards and the score. The try-for-point -failed.

Superior led the Zephyrs at half-time 13-6. During the last half, Wymore outplayed and outpassed Superior, but the home team was able to score another touchdown in the fourth quarter. A pass from eight yards out gave Superior its final toUchdowrlt The try-for-point was good. Wymore Passing Good According to Coach Bell, the Wymore pasing attack was the best it has been during the season. The Zephyrs completed 10 out of 20 attempts, but only one was good for a touchdown.

Wymore nearly scored on several other occasions; but bad luck kept them from crossing Superior's goal line more than the one time. Playing in place of the two men eft behind because of infraction of the rules were Bill Seymour, substitute quarterback, and Dedie Husman, halfback. Darrel Kostal called the signals during most of the game. The score by periods: Superior 13 0 0 kVymore 060 6 The Notre Dame giant dipd without his sevcn-league boots on Missing was Its vaunted aerial attack and pulverizing running that had geared the gridiron goliath through four seasons without a set back. The jast time tho Irish were beaten was by the Great Lakes' service Dec.

1, Since then thirty-seven teams folded before them while two others Army with a 0-0 deadlock in 1946 and Southern California with a 14-14 standstill in 1948 came close to victory but that was all. It was Notre Dame's first loss at home since Michigan won 32-20 the eighth game of the 1942 season. It also was only the fourth defeat a Frank Leahy coached team absorbed in eight seasons. His Irish have won 62 svhile tying five. Bit Of Salt Leahy's pre-season plaint that Notre Dame would drop several engagements this season was taken with a bit of salt.

But after the Irish had to go all out to shade North Carolina 14-7 in the opener a week ago, observers could see that Leahy might be right. Purdue's victory over the nation's top-ranking team proved it. Notre Dame's line was ripped unmercifully; its pass attack and offense failed miserably. The giant was thoroughly murdered. All-American Bob Williams, the great clutch shooter, tried 20 passes and completed only seven.

A recovered Purdue fumble set up the first touchdown for the Irish after two minutes in the third period, Williams passing four yards to End Jim Mutschel- ler. Bill Barrett's 33-yard run ignited the second which came in the first 10 seconds of the final. John Petitbon jarred over from the six. This capped their only sustained drive, 57 yards in five plays. Outcome Inevitable Purdue's one touchdown in the first period and two in the second left the outcome inevitable.

In rolling up the 21-0 margin, Notre Dame was pushed from pillar to post and pierced beyond midfield only once. That was in the second quarter. It came with the help of a 15- yard roughing infraction against Purdue's high-spirited brigade, thoroughly drilled by Coach Stu Holcomb in crisp downfield block-; ing and tackling and supercharged in the line. The Irish outrushed Purdue 237 yards to 201, but most of the ef- fots were in midfield and out of threatening territory. LIBERTY Owm There was jubila- ion in Liberty Saturday, and rightfu lly so.

The Liberty six-man football team had posted its first victory In the history of the school. The Mustangs defeated Hollenberg Pirates here Friday night by a top-heavy 32-6 score Liberty inaugaurated football for the first time this year, and had played two games this season, the one to other to Elmwood. Barneston Trounces Wilber By 30-0 Score Sua'g Own Service) Own Service) Barneston's steamroller pressed the Wilber Wolverines flat hero Friday nijjht. 30-0. 30-0, and chalked up its fourth straight victory of the 1950 season by winning the game.

The powerful Otoe Indians led by 165-pound Russell Beran and 167-pound Charles Bohner, plus herculean play by the Barneston line had little trouble disposing of injury-riddled Wilber. Beran, one of the slickest backs in small school circles, scored 18 pf Barneston's points. Early In Quarter His first TP came early in the first quarter when he snared a pass from teammate Bohner to cross Wilber's goal. He scored his next marker during the second quarter svhen he skirted through the Wilber defense for eight yards and the TD Climaxing scoring quarter. The senior backfielder broke loose on his own 45 and ran the distance for thojouchdown.

Bohner scored Barneston's other touchdown on a 30-yard end run during the first quarter. Barneston's line helped build up the score against the Wolverines, too. In addition to fine blocking for the runners, the forward wall broke through the Wilber defense twice to help Barneston to a pair of safeties. Both times Wilber's Bob Prokop attempted to punt from behind his own goal, but was tackled on each occasion before he could get the ball away. In losing, however, Wilber did salvage some distinction.

Barneston coach, Uonard "Tony" to he Wolverine's coach, Wohlers that Friday night a had Wilber was hampered by the lack of an experienced signal caller. Shortly before game time Coach Wohler's only remaining quarterback, Bob Havel was ken with the flu. He used Paul Novak who has had very little experience and little Jerry Fuhrman, 110-pound sophomore. Coach Wohler's regular quarterback, Don Searcy has been out for several weeks with an appendectomy. Also needed Friday night by Wilber was a passer.

Barneston employed practically a nine-man line against the Wolverines, bwt Wilber's only passers are sidelined by injuries. Beran drew praise from Coach Wohlers. He said the Barneston lad is very clever and a good runner. Score by periods; Barneston J3 9 9 Wilber 0 Coach Ron Anderspn'i team ored in every quarter. All of the touchdowns were made on running plays.

The field was comparable to a field of mud, hindering passing. Scoring touchdowns for the Mustangs were: John Moore, Ro Bates, Laddie Patterson and Jim Zvolanek. Moore's TD's were the result of 15 and 20-yard runs. Bates scampered 45 to tally his score; Patterson scored on a running ay and Zvolanek recovered a blocked kick in Hollenberg's end zone to rack up his touchdown. Liberty's lineup: Zvolanek, Van Winkle, Wishman and Hosea; Homan.

Larry Bates; Craig, Searcy, a terson, Mopre, R. Bates and Ruyle. Score by periods: Liberty 13 7 6 000 6-32 ANN AKBQR, The grasping fingers of Michigan's lanky Negro end, Lowell Perry, gave the Wolverines a hard-earned 27 to 7 decision over Dart- nwuth Saturday in an tional fc befo.fi 4m, I HOT ROD Auto Races On Newest and Fastest I Mile Track GAGE COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS Beatrice, Nebraska pl Admission $1.00 tax Incl. Children .50 Tax Incl. FREE Parking FREE Grandstand Time Trials ...2:00 P.M.

Races P.M. Sunday, Oct. 8th Sponsored by Post 1077 Beatrice, Nebraska.

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