Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 39

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
39
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Mm Football Results News on All Large Games Boxing Wrestling SPCST1FS AUTO NEWS With Trotter and Pacer Reaulta and Cardi on Running Track PHILADELPHIA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 1, 1931 a Green Ties Yale; Michigan Tumbles Tigers; Notre Dame and Drexel Victors PENN TOPS STUBBORN LAFA YETTE FOE 3 TO 0 -ii Villanova Battles Bucknell to Scoreless Tie; Cornell Routs Columbia Foemen This Picture Tells the Entire Story SMITH'S PLACEMENT GOAL IN 4TH PERIOD mm GIVES PENN VICTORY r. IIJ FfERY DUEL Bud Makes Three Pointer From Difficult Angle to Gice Quakers Slender Triumph Before Who See Leopards Make Gallant Fight and Threaten as Fierce Engagement is on Wane Villanova 1 1 i Readies I oi i ear in i Strong Best for IS Trs iWmkJkAjrs. ik'-smn w.y''; mm-m. J3 jgs si SSS 1 1 LJsw. ir U'v- SJ fj rVi-- jiC Scoreless Stalemate Meyers Crosses Goal 1 By OLD SPORT FORCED to wage war on its own terrain during the fust period, outplayed throughout the second quarter and ten minutes of the third, Penn's football machine suddenly started to function yesterday on Franklin Field and before Lafayette could again throw it out of gear the Red and Blue was waving in triumph over the Maroon, Only the accuracy and power that is within the right leg and foot of Monroe Smith, Penn back, whose home is in Haddon Heights, N.

and who came to Penn from Swarthmore Prep, saved the Quakers from a scoreless tie. With the leather placed In scoring position by a mighty Quaker assault late in the third period, It was Smith who, at the start of the fourth period, dropped back to Lafayette's 25-yard line and gave 40,000 gridiron devotees the season's supreme thrill by placement kicking the oval over the crossbar for three points that broke what appeared to be a hopeless deadlock. Thus did the Quakers keep their 1931 record undeflled; thus did Smith kick his way into PennJs Hall of Fame to take his place among Quaker football immortals who have downed a traditional foe single-handed; thus was Lafayette sent thundering down to dismal, disheartening defeat. It was no set-tip, that placement kick of Smith's. Perina, whose part it was to hold the ball, was kneeling on the 25-yard ribbon when he took the pass from centre.

Therefore, when Carl put the oval down the Quaker quarterback advanced to deliver a boot that had to travel at least 35 yards if it was to soar qyer the crossbar. Wind Puzzling Problem I But knell, Hut Play Is Called Batk Because Snavelyinan It Caught Holding Hy STAN BAl'MdARTM Il KC'RANTON, Oct. 31- An Insnind Vllliinova eleven, fighting as onlj nil Infuriated Wildcat cm hattie, reached its greatest height of Hit season here today when It the powerful Bison of Buclcnell to a 0-0 deadlock. Seldom has the coal region seen such a bitter, grueling, yet spectacular struggle as 10,000 Black Diamond football fanatics witnessed this afternoon. Heavy showers, which swept th field Intermittently, drenching players and spectators alike and turning tlie gridiron Into a veritable morass, fulled to tilin the lustra of the titanic struggle.

Ilisoti Touchdown railed flatk Sensational runs by both machine! were punctuated by spectacular forward passes, breat h-laklng punts and deadly tackling. It was almost a perfect game. Each team had opportunities to HCtue yet on each occasion tlie stalwart Indomitable defense prevented a score. II there was any edge it belonged to Bucknell the slightest of advantages. Once tho Bison crossed the Wildcat goal line on beautifully executed forward pnss from Hlnkle to Meyers.

But the Bison stands had scarcely an opportunity to break loose cheers before the ball was brought back and the Lewlsburg Here we see "Bud" Smith delivering the placement kick in the fourth period that won for Penn and tent Lafayette down to defeat yesterday afternoon on Franklin Field, to 0. Wermuth, Lafayette end (No. 20), was the only vuitingplayer who had any chance at all to block the boot, Ambrose (No. 10), being cleverly blocked by Ford. Nipped by "Bud WOLVERINES SPILL FERRARO, OF CORNELL, POISON TO COLUMBIA Penn ItftlTpl Nukollii Willwm KoMiiMoti lilllflMiin Positions Lafavette I.pft end Wermuth Left taekle Cook Ltft Kuard K'lrnnt'v Oittre Iteutfr ItlKlit guard Huatt Nor was the matter of distance Smith's only problem.

As a matter of fact, it was the lesser of the difficulties to be overcome. It happened that he was forced to kick from a difficult angle, and in doing, so correctly gauge the "carry" of a brisk but fitful breeze blowing straight down the field a factor that might help him get distance, but certainly not accuracy. Smith was equal to the emergency, the master of difficulties that beset him. The human walls fram TIGERS TO I'ult'liower It'L'nt tacKie nnmnKy Itihlett HiKlit fii. I Hiilttvnh INDIANS FLARE AND TIE BULLDOGS, 33-33 Dartmouth Makes Magnificent Spurt in Closing Quarters for Stalemate; Booth, of Elis, and McCall, of Jack o' Lanterns, Get 3 Touchdowns Apiece Kord Qtiartprtuir-k Muruli MunRer lAft hnlftiaelt 'Wilcox (Jt'ttp HiKlit linlfbiuk MiJlfr Porina iTullbaek Fox Hodre br periocls; rptin ft a IT Big Red Remains Unbeaten as Brilliant Ithacan Sophomore Runs, Passes and Kicks 13-0 Vic- Lnfii.vette 0 0--0 ing the churned turf over which two embattled teams had fought each other to a dramatic standstill were i RrVree Wilmer ftwnrtlmiore.

Fmidre W. B. Crowlev, Bowdotn. Head Hni'sman S. J.

GIn. FiPid JudL'e V. H. Wallace. rtlire.

Time of iipriods 15 minutes. Field ca! Smith tory; First Defeat of Season for Lion Foes 'Michigan Wins, 21 to 0, Be silent In tense expectancy as the youth, who was to become the hero of the hour, poised himself to deliver A fplm-t'tiient). Substitutions: I.afs yette Jrwln nis kick. fore 25,000, Evening Score Fifty Years Old Tying the Bulldog Eighty thousand eyes were fo-cussed upon the kicker as he drove his toe into the leather, eighty thousand lips twitched convulsively Bearding the Lion for fox, Fischer for Hjiih, Amhrose for I'utllo for Sullivan. Wright for Wilcox, Somiow for Miller.

nx for Irwin, Wilier for Soeolow. Sullivan for ('uillo, Haas for Fiprlier, Hughes for Edraney. Yount for Cook. Bugen for Fox. Mans for Marh.

Wrigtit for Miller, t'ulllo for giillivnn. 111 for Wermuth. Irwin for Fox, Hocolow for Btieen. Siegel for Hushes. Fisher for Haas.

Cliff tun for Ambrose. Penn YaMonski for Cilherson. Kellett for Ford. Smith for Kel-lett. Lewis for Gette.

Tanseer for Haffel. Ford for Smith. Itnffel for Tanseer. Lewis for Gette. Hmlth for linger.

Tnneer for Itnffel. YahlotiBki for Willson. Ondcrdonk for Ford, Collls for Smith, Mnsavace for I'erina. NEW HAVEN, Oct. 31 'A.

Down from the hills of Hanover today came a courageous band of Dartmouth football players to fail in a quest for a victory over Yale, but gain glory enough In coming back from almost certain defeat to tie the Blue 33 to 33. Since 1884 the green clad warriors from New Hampshire have sought in vain for victory over Yale. Today they had it within their grasp for as the cval soared gracefully up, up, up, curved toward the goal posts as it caught the "push" of the wind, Iturl mom Slacker Hi Klmliall By GRANTLAND RICE ITHACA, Oct. 31. Cornell's fast Red team remained in the ranks of the unbeaten this afternoon as Columbia, conquerors of Dartmouth, fell by the wayside.

A slashing Cornell attack, led by the brilliant Johnny Perraro, the brilliant Ithacan sophomore, beat a strong Columbia team 13 to 0 and so avenged the defeat of last year as 25.000 spectators looked on from the most spectacular scenic setting in Fay Crosses Line Twice for Victors, While Captain Hudson Tallies Touchdown and then slowly descended. I'oalllona I if I aijnril. in. kl-. lu lit tiiiirtcrlvii li fl letlll' i.

k. Illulil Killliinclt For a split second it did not seem that the ball had enough impetus Vale llawlejr Wlllmr Ni'-lioL Mulli Ho'nn Ilall linrr.H tooth Toild I iik in hurt inoiit li Inlc Scoring II. Hi II Hi to get over the crossbar. But it had the distance, and it had the accu M' ill I III im a fleeting moment while persons stared down from the big gray II bowl in breathless attention. Bill McCall, stocky Dartmouth miliar lc racy.

Umpire Crowley, who had hustled down under the goal post3 In order that, he might be a'jle to assist Referee Crowell in what promised to be a difficult one to call, flung up his hands to indicate that the oval was over, and then from rrcH, i II in in mi, i lloli (oili for -o li Milncc i kl I'ollll llflor IOIII 111 Siimi'iil ImiiIi for Cornell Ponitlonti Columbia Rether Left eml Mntal Hothatein Left tarkle Sherwood Tuiliir Left iruiirt pr.amha IVimj Centre M'Ifffe Ww ub HI Klit Kiiard Nohflettf T. M. Kit: lit tn.kle 41 .1. M. Zorrilla 1 if lit (-N, Ktllititr Ferrarii Quarter I mr-lc Jlmvitt Medilen Left htilfhnt-k nivoro ivianu ft.

glit Linehan Kline Kulilui'k Hclnvi-rt C'li'mll II 7 0 0---13 LolimiMa 0 0 Cornell, ('rrnnr, J. Martinet Zorrillu. Points nfter tmirhd.MviiH Kline. Niilmlitiitioitw; Cornell. Al unlock for Mnrtlnez Kealer for Meiber, Ilandehnau for Kim': Cfiliinihia, Van V'oor-heen for Kdlinir.

Montgomery for Hewitt. IIoilupp for Itlvero, Muhhit for Linehun. Hewitt for Montgomery. Uivero for IlorliiPli. I.iiielian for MoHNer.

Hoilnpn for Liti'ln. Montgomery for Itlvero. Jteferee. Ed Tlnirrn'. Delnnalle.

T'mnire. W. II. Kleoelt. linrt-month.

FTead lineman. G. K. Kelthler. II-linoiti.

Fit-Id Judge, C. L. Bolster. Pltia-hurgh, Time of uerloda. mlnulee, Rams Top Teachers Remaining Unbeaten NBW fA.

P.V Fordham'a PRINCETON. N. Oct. 31. The University of Michigan Wolverines, playing steady, consistent football, did exactly what was expected of them here this afternoon in Palmer Stadium and turned back Princeton's inexperienced eleven by a score of 21-0.

Thirty thousand people witnessed the game in which Wlttmer's charges showed improvement in llool li (drop It Ick In back, had Just Intercepted a forward pass intended for Captain Alble Booth, of Yale, and had run 60 yards for the touchdown which made the score 30-33. At half time trailing Mor 2 'li Morton mill. loin mhiiii iiooio-r, Kl l.iice klikKi. I'oint aft .1 Iploce kicks). collegians penalized five yards for holding.

Vlllanova's nearest chance to crossing the Bucknell goal line occurred early in the tilt after ten minutes of the Initial quarter when Trosky recovered a ball fumbled by Priest, of Bucknell, on the Bison 15-yard mark. Two slashing thrusts at the tackles by Potts and Casey toted the pigskin to the Bucknell 8-yard slrioe, but their the advance halted and Casey's pans over th" goal line was butted down by Priest. After this Stuhklrcher'a men never threatened the I.ewisburg goal. Coach Snnvely's men, on the other hand, kept battering at the Villanova posts and in the fourth quarter twice marched into the muck to tlie very threshold of the Wildcat goal. Vllliinova Stops Hin Herd On these occasions the defense of the Main Mners was Inspired, thrilling and something magnificent to behold.

They flattened the Bisons first on the 9-yard murk and then repeated on the 11-yard stripe. Even the great Hinkle, a human batler-iir! rvn if ever v. its one in c'p siins. f. tiled eve to th" 3Mie and While Hie.

"etter and Wo "its tver? bonne ,1 line i.l their like rubb-r bal's hitting against a stone wall. Penalties and fumbles. In Continued on 2tl I'jje. Tth Column the college world. It was Johnny Ferraro, the fast, hard-running Cornell sophomore, who struck down the Lion with the trident in the way of a triple trust.

He ran, he passed and he kicked Columbia into submission for the first time trtis year. A Columbia penalty on his long pass to Joe Mar-tinez-Zorilla paved the way to the first Cornell touchdown In the opening quarter, but even then Ferraro had to carry the ball six yards across 40.000 throats cascaded a torrent of cheers whose thunder could have been heard op the East bank of the Thirteen minutes later the final whistle brought the struggle to an end, with Lafayette clouding the setting sun with forward passes in a desperate effort to pluck victory from defeat. Because neither team was able to successfully press an offensive within the other's 20-yard line, three attempts were made to score from the field by placements two by Penn and one by Lafayette. As the third quarter waned a 26-yard runback of a punt by Bob Wilcox, Maroon backfield ace, brought the oval to the Quakers' 20-yard ribbon. Here Penn stood as firm as Gibralter, and on the fourth down, Alan Cook prepared to deliver a placement kick.

Poor judgment robbed the Maroon the Blue 10 to 26 and In a headlong da.sh which brooked no opposition, Dartmouth htwl come within striking scnuyiklll. Moorestown Friends Tie Unbeaten "Colls" Then DandemoniumI Newspapers. hats, even blankets and coats were flung into the crisD autumn air. Down on the field, Smith's team passing and blocking, although failing to make a sintile first down by charging during the four quarters. The victory evened a fifty-year score, Princeton winning a half century ago in the last meeting.

With Captain Yeckley out of the the goal line on the fourth down. mates danced with toy and slapped of I.oaUiie loslri III IngMMood IIIl'Ii girls, loader I-I l.l (I'm key lie Unit tin. forty ion a mil. on "i- In the second quarter f'erraros him on the back as the rival elevens trotted back into position for the kickoff. 30-yard pass to Joe Martinez-Zoril-la led to the second touchdown as the fleet Cornell end took the ball line-up due to an injured leg, the ele vfii mitn-ntcn record intact d.

nil li i en! .1 froiMiring Vel l.Swrtv Teaehera' College if Ill ot I on the dead run and rushed 23 yards lineman of whatever chancs he might loi In Defenses Gain Proof Everyone seemed to realize that ol have had to accomplish the miracle distance. Bill Morton, who played brilliantly all the game at quarterback for Dartmouth, tossed two passes, one to W. C. Blister, his left half, ant! another to McCall, to carry the bull to Yale's 15-yard line. Morton Saves Green He made a futile plunge himself at a thin blue line which thr back without a gain.

He culled a reverse, faked a pass to another bnck then gave the ball ttj McCall. Blue clad, white hclmeted figures came charging through. McCail tried to outrun them to his right, saw an eligible receiver over the goal and faded back, but as he pulled bark his arm to let the pass go he was smothered KlI'inK' Mini the artistic performance they had 1 of lin in IVIli.ni I that Smith was to spin a few minutes rrcliinii mi mm n. MiioroH I li aiil'Nlitiitlnir in tlia li later. For, Instead ot kneeling ten or perhaps eleven yards behind the line just witnessed would decide the issue.

The defense of both teams was so adamant when the other threat for Hiiiiiith In- I and i of scrimmage. Marsh, who held the on. IIIHI IP. Il'la I'liUin. Hi-ttc IlilliiiL's were the foriviinlH wti I olilngNH noil.

is i fiilli'd fori ened to score that the chances of ball for Cook, took his position a tieeiing. if! Virginia. tu O. at ord-hani Held today. A eind of Hl.ftliO watrhed the Dowerfnl Maiotiii biieliB ring up tht' tonWulowna In the openirig hulf.

IUI Dntiow-ki making a thrilling rnn uf aixtv yarda to aeure after Inten-etit-ing Met'iuckin a iata. Cttreletta handling of the hull and frrimnt penaltfea prevented tlie Mtiroun from gcoring Iti Hie neeond lialf. It1 aidea. Liberty, led by Boh Carntiiglio. a great coniehaek imd almost aeored.

The vtnltura bnttled evenly wltli Korrlham Jn this hnlf Camptglio rtpped off aeveral largegiijni. lrteiiiding a Wlynrd rnn nn a aninner I'tav, which carried the tareat to the FordUam 10 vurd line. Liberty waa helpleaa In the flrat half, however. Captain Jim Murphy aeored on two rmta of twentr and fifteen yard. Donownki on thirty and aiitv yard runs mid John Jani reserve back, on a plunge from the B-jard mark.

a touchdown Tjy either seemed very remote indeed. And so it was to be. Continued on 2d Page, 4th Column SCHWARTZ BOSS RAMBLER Continued on 2d Page, 3d Column DRAGONS SCORE A WILL ON WASHINGTON, TALLYING FOURTH STRAIGHT VICTORY Tigers were powerless before the hard-charging mid-Westerners, who ploughed through the Princeton forward wall for a total of 223 yards. In the second quarter Fay, Michigan halfback, on a fake field goal, got away for the first touchdown after his team had failed to cross the line in the first period. Adding the extra point, the Wolverines did not score again until the last period, when Fay ran for another tally, soon followed by Captain Hudson, who got away off tackle for Michigan's third score.

Petoskey made the second placement good and Newman added the third, making the final score 21-0. Ball Mostly on Tiger Loam The ball was in Princeton's territory during the entire game, except for a short skirmish which Princeton made into the visitors' area in the last quarter, when Wister blocked a punt by Heston and recovered on the Michigan 30-yard line. It was the first punt which the Tigers have successfully blocked this season, but the ball was lost on downs and it was across the goal, but while all this was happening it was Ferraro who kept Columbia's Lion in heavy the one Cornellian that Columbia could not stop. The Lion defense stopped Bart Vi-viano most of the afternoon, but the Lion's savage claws could not check the rush by land and air which Johnny Ferraro hurled at the Blue and White all afternoon. He was the bounding Leopard that had more speed than the Lion could meet.

Ferraro had the speed of the gray-hound and he, was as hard to pull down as a young rhinoceros. Ferraro is one of those fast twisting, elusive backs who is hard to pull down. The driving type who holds his feet. Ferraro Colossus Hewitt and Montgomery played fine football and so did the Zorilla brothers for Cornell, but Ferraro towered above them all. He was the colossus that bestrode this field today.

Columbia fell, and yet the Lion died fighting gamely. Three times in AS IRISH TOP CARNEGIE 19 TO 0 BEFORE 52,000 Purdue Triumphs Over Stagg's Men Holy Cross Defeats Brown Bear Handily MORf'ESTKR. Vase Oct. nt 'A Tile llrown Itear t.iir nt th. By JAMES ('.

ISAMIVM aiitl UiT fall! IllVI PITTSBURGH Oct. 31 (A. ttiu nevi-r 'f iindefi-ated foottwll teams t.Hlav with a 33 to drutiliing at tiie bantls of Hnlr ii- v.lr Hi'! gi Notre, Dame's powerful football ar Tartans No Tartars ray, led by the irrepressible March- Tliere were ttiree hreaks and ea ti one of them Hnlv Croa. ukiuIiIimI into a two of tticm with onlv tlie amount of time it take for two stieedstera to ilii.lt L1 ami 711 varrtn. Two drives, one following ioi- In subduing the Washington College eleven, of C'hestei town.

Md Drexel Institute ran up its biggest score of the season, winning at Drexel Field yesterday afternoon by the bulging figures of 44 to 0. Tlie youths from Maryland were no mnlfh for Woltpr Hilti' nnuerful Oner" l' 1 1 1 Cipliiui Mike La Drive was the Iivdme in tlie clean cut triumph ef tl.e Wear the top it.r mdiv.riual in Eastern rnlii ft.ti!bll tanks. I a Huve add' ii mi re touchdowns mont Schwartz swept down the field for three touchdowns In the first half Carnegie Positions Notre Dame IIH'A'iO, (H, 31 (A. "Ol-I Jinn" Rlnrir'x iniifKllnir Miiroofis tl.ri-w mar inlti tha wriiigi-r ft rid n-pTior l'tirdnc mar hi iff ticlitv. Imt in tit eini wr KriiuH'1 wiiler 0 In I rain In Hi firt Iwlf wvlii'li i-nd-ffl with tlie Miinwui la-Htlinx (1 0.

Knt I'ur-iluc Vuine tkmiIhiIii tui' t.i n-Ki-K-r two (iiiirli'tiiu ii in th third nti'l Mi int" m-ni tiiiiiMmr down to deft-nt tii" Kurd trni In "Hi 'Jen Porn tt tit ion lln nh.ii Td. rsnlf -fl ft ftiinirtw ft th crnwi of mtmNfut 1 Tfti'la ti- nt mn lor Km nt Hiiitrff Kief nirn nrlT 1.i I'tir'liif li'id eniiiitcd niton to rtnt nil ot Ciit-ruiro. hilt lii' Jiiro f.mlit vnlinntlv tn th Hritt two perioiln. Tt-K lt Inir toil lulnu ri, then tiri-d tn tin- third with ho renlrii'iiint to chci'W 1'iirdii' i)iiimc Htlnk, win ti result 1 in two markers mediatelv after a Hrown fnttihle deep in lta own territory added two more touchdown. and the final wore pnlled everv one of the IH.iasi spectators out of their aeats.

Continued on 2d Page, 6th Column ensemhle. which rnrkerl nn its tiitn-th to Ills y('-t'Tl to humble a hard-fighting Carnegie Tech eleven, 19 to 0, before 52,000 spectators at Pitt Stadium today. The Tartans, who have been poison to the Ramblers in recent years, Continued on 3d Pace. 5th Column straitrht. win still lt fifth trinrrmh of Pott' llll'de two and Burns T.eft thfl Left tR'kle Left guard Centre Right guard ltight tackle ltight end Quarterback -Left lutlfliHi'k Bight Imlfluuk Kullbai'k 7 12 0 Koftkr Culver Ynrrni Hoffman Kucak Ma honey JjtNkwIiioh Si'luvurts Slu-eketNk! Vehnkoviteh otre Pame Carnegie Tech Stewart Fletcher Smil luania HfiniMV Fornmn I.evia fJllwter Armantront Kavi-1 0 1 0 0 a.

Fointa the fall. Only Rutgers has been able to take the measure of the Dragons this year. I I FOOTBALL SCORES nth'T touchdown. Ii. iovr was and wiifn h' hit the enmv liiic it.

Dwrv: fcrr? cam ii'iiiii a l.iii H.iU came back to hold their famous ad- V)ruer(? IV tts Davis-Elkins Wins; Remains Unbeaten folrtatf. Ilofo-itc I Drexel won a brilliant victory with-, VvUIJicllC LClCdl any of Its regulars being crip-; lorward pass th" Una I rii'iKht niiai Leahy. Touchdowns Schwnrtf cclccinni TaOirvi plf'd find Coach Ilalfls will devote tin I .1 a after ttucliUown Juckwlilcii Bethany Clarion T. LOCAL 3 Lafayette i vain res, rest of the week in tutoring his men 81 fnr tho Imanrtuat i.m. ith I With IllUklilK Slll.ie tni'l UClJVl Hamilton o-1.

31 pi of forward pessts. was nus at Drexel field next Saturday 0 Penn Villanova Drexel Dickinson afternoon. 0 44 18 Bucknell Washington Swarthmore 1 I'lii. in it i Waoiu- brint i.f ttnli. i oln-af i 't-ati-il rot'2f i.tTi- todflv if-j for ii crowd of frMiiifl liv th ti'irtt 21 in tlie Iarotiai' Ut liouie Kline of tli H'-ynoMn.

Airlr K-rr'! uniinMhtT hnlf on k. ttKrfl out In th Murom 'a trv in uroririf tr, tourh1(iwni on mm 'on tain 2 Fairmount 6 Edinboro FAST 33 Dartmouth 0 W. Va. Wesl'n 14 N. V.

27 Mississippi 27 Colo. College 19 Virginia 19 W. Virginia 21 Princeton Missed uolnt after jasKwu-ii, Knkeii. Substitutions Nitre Itaroe. i.ahj fur JI.HnkoYk-ii.

Harris for fireeney. Krau for Culver. Host for Kosky. for Sheeketski, Koken for H'-hwarta. Murphy for Jnskwhtt'li Horuian for Yarr.

lievore for Mabouej. Fierce for Hoffman. Kurth for Kozak. Latjorne for Iaby; tarnffte Terh. Kobe for Heinaer.

Ewlna for O'Tnole. Be-revino for Dueger. Dresliar for Sample. ta-trntk. for Stewart.

Stewart for Ontrosky. Oitiwwtj for Lewis. Jonea for Tiuranis, Fouc-cer for Kwlna. Sample for Drestiar. Dreshar for Kebe.

Keferee U. B. Uatkett. West Foint. Fmplre C.

G. V. antl J. Head linesman J. J.

Lil-p. Chieasro. Fteln Jmlae E. E. Miller.

Penn State. lime of periods 15 minntee. 12 0 0 0 0 0 on Washington's 4.i-yard line whta Potter made a brilliant catch of a pass and ran the remaining distnncs for a touchdown. Potter also made the final Drexel touchdown under thrilline cucum-stances. He leaped in the air to take a pass from Fleming and straight-armed his way 40 yards for the final score.

Besides La Bove, Kiiupp, Potter Yale Navy Oregon Colgate Army Harvard Kansas City Michigan The Dragons tabbed two touchdowns in the first quarter, one each in the second and third and then for a hot finish they excited the emotions of their followers bv scoring three more in the final quarter. Before Drexel's varied and powerful attack the weak and light Washington College line caved like match wood. Johns Hopkins 19 Havrrford Albright 20 St. Joseph'e P. M.

20 Callaudet Niagara 20 La Salle Portsmouth 14 Frankford STATE Wriods, three times halting them within their 10-yard line, but it didn't alter the result. The damage ready had been done and the fight-Irish had chalked up another one for "The Rock." The dazzling array from South Bend went into the game steamed the limit, determined to keep its wcord of twenty-three starts without a defeat Inviolate. Preceding the initial kick -off two gaily caparisoned oilers stood beneath the opposing posts and blew "Taps" for Miute Rockne, late coach of the fnsh, and he contest was dedicated 10 his memory. Schwartx on Rampage Was a beautiful gesture, but It Mled disaster for Carnegie. With we All-American Schwartz breaking ay for one brilliant dash after nother, Notre Dame's great back-JW corps tore the Tartans' Big Red to shreds from the start and its "ie smashed Carnegie weak offen-Ve.

gestures. Within three minutes Jnhn trrsi tlav4l a trlin? mn- mi -tnl fr fiointne MiHsiaaltipi la ka time after tlnif tliiii'I tho line Ttit K-iutti-rD atrrrfKitln. fnactiM hw Ittan-Ifv if atilf to ar ntT a riuin-hr of toiirh'Jnwua whn hcv tiarhK-n'. urt their own goal line ami hl.l tlie Ma ro-Jti for donna. 51,000 SeeGophers Rout Badger Foes KI.KINK.

Va Oct. 31 U. Darla and Klkina College remained undefeated and unscored upon in Its aeventh' consecutive erame today aa It defeated OeorEia state, 33 ta O. The local aqoad scored twice lu tbe first and aecond perfode and once In the third. Both teama took to tbe air in the fourth witlioat eertouo reaulte.

Todajr'a polnte enhanced the Scarlet Riir-ricane'e total to 26. Argue Winters, halfback, added two toucbdowne to bring hfa eeaaoo'a total to St. Sheltoa also ecored twice and Talbott once. Davis and Klktns proved superior In all departments of the game, making eleven first down, to five for the Hontbernera. Boston College Tops Georgetown Rivals BOSTON', Oct.

31 (A. Boiton Coll tnt Into the win column today after losing three tvuecesxWe iramei, and defeated Georgetown, 20-to 2, at Fenway Parle. Georgetown acored fta two pointa on i safety in th flrat period, but wai unable to crn the B. V. line for a touchdown.

The Efialea arored toiffidiwoi in tha aec-ad. third and fourth yarioda. and Fleming were brilliant perforni- Dame ornell 13 Columbia Notre Pitt Dragons Start Early Righl from the start, the Dragons 0 6 0 ers for the winners, vhi'-" RoNnsoa looked to be the of he riary- Lehigh 33 VINNK.WOI.Ki, ll.t St (A 1 n(T a tln-miim lint (u-riml m-nnl "fault tut' 1 rur li' tl II I'. to- Boston Col. Holy Cross Fordham W.

Maryland I'nion Wrsleyan Mass. Aggies Alfred Carnegie Tech Penn State Geneva Mt. St. Mary's Grove City St. Vincent Westminster Wagner sational victories of 1926 and 1928 over the South Bend crew.

Schwartz opened the avenue to victory midway in the opening period, when he spilled through a hole at tackle, shook off two men and raced fifty-eight yards down the side line for a touchdown. It was only one of a dozen sensational sprints by the slippery halfback in the course of the game. He gained 20 Georgetown 33 Brown W. Liberty 7 Loyola (Md.l 7 Williams 13 Trinity 13 Amherst 2 Hobart 0 Worcester showed their mastery and made their first score in jig time. In the last quarter the Dragons opened up witn a well conceived and daring air attack which caused their score to mount with leaps and bounds.

Washington players could not stop the Dragons either when they rushed or hurled passes. Washington's own I Mint a 14 tn vl. tiir.v ovr its nl.lst land backs. Drexel's first louchdwn w. 5 th fruit of an intcnrpfid pi- thit Gabriel, of tlie Dr.io;r;, caught.

Gabriel i wav to Washington's four-yard r.ns before he could be spilled. The ball was then snapped to Captain La Bove, who charged through. 6 23 I 7 6 7 18 Crsinus F. and M. Lebanon Allegheny Thlel Waynesburg Moravian Slippery 8 rim).

Wt.i-onsln, h-f-iri' r-m ii of r.l tssi. T', tln-ir ilia 'I i-ti slat" rli-an anrl 1 ilimr, st'iiitril'li' wimni a ini-i't ni-t Saturrlar nt Kviiiitun, In tha nil- i Iwatea alaTi-n rluas of tlii WVsti'rn t'ntifer- 0 I nr. tin tifiihra brmial't intr, i.lnv a rrrat Arnold Ulft Stat 1t tnaa n- i ilefinslia wlii'h battel thi. liailacrs twin, tn nlavs were reeled off slowlv and lacked i cohesion. Interference tot tho ball Continued on 5th Pare, 3d Column ftt were not to repeat their sen- Continued on 3d Face, 8th Column 26 Indiana T.

ttif last quarter artfr iisssi-t a'lvaocad tarn Continued on 3d Pae, nth Column witm tt ta kd..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Philadelphia Inquirer
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Philadelphia Inquirer Archive

Pages Available:
3,846,583
Years Available:
1789-2024