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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 53

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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53
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Wollyrood's Stirring Drive in Home Stretch Wins Pimlico Futurity SPORTS FOOTBALL POLITICS SPORTS FINANCIAL AUTO NEWS a (I Public ledger PHILADELPHIA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER NOTRE DAME FLOORS BUCKEYES; DARTMOUTH WINS JjyJ jlJ a mm OTS SCRATCH TITANS AND TIGERS SINK MIDDIES Temple's Armor Seemed Impregnable at This PointThen Lancers UroUe Through I cms Tin LAST PERIOD Lit SCORE IN FINAL QUARTER Michigan State Scores I Twice in Final Canto for Victory; Brandstatter's 59-Yard Run Tabs First iarza Crosses Uwl Line in Closing Minutes After Gritty Temnle Stand; Warnermcn Kui lisli I allies, But Counter Is loo Late; Vier-pever Kicks Placement for Victors' Last Points Pass, Rcnncr to Volpry, M.ikrs hrsl Wolverine. Score, Then Sweet Moves Across from 18-yard Line for Second ret ry Lew is ANN AHP.OR, Nov. 2. first football invasion of this collcpi! town since 11)16 ended in disaster this afternoon the (Junkers of Harvey ilarman were savagely mutilated by the fangs of the Michigan Wolverines. The score was Hi to 0.

Make Six-pointer at Start vSr CXu 11 'sl 1 2 thirty -AssStA Vfc5 4 frj F5. By Stan Baumgartner The Cherry and White of Temnle is draped in black 'j rii iv "tr -w. 'r pss Of In the. neighborhood spectators, about thousand of them loyal Quak Hcri" we re in the third period of the Michigdn Stdlf-Tfmple (imr ynterrlajr aflernonn with ihf Chprry anrl Whitn ahead 7 to 0, nd the OwI apijarently on their way to th lixth itraiijht triumph of the enon. Kualto, hard-running ball currier, it iwerping off tarkle for a gain nf five yarda nd the Warnermen are in full cry.

Then came that diiaatroui laat period and the TempUrt had fiiatained ihrir ftret reverae' of the eson. er rooters and band members, saw the Maize and Jiluc scoro a touchdown in the first period, another in the third and a field goal in the fourth quarter. Meanwhile the visitors were able to cross Michigan's goal line only once and that single score was not developed until the fourth period. nmm scores Trio of Touchdowns in Final Period Brings this morning. Hopes of Rose Bowl recognition, dreams of an unbeaten season and national acclaim were shattered and pinned to the ground by the Spartans of Michigan State yesterday at the Owl Stadium in one of the most thrilling battles of the year.

The score, written in large but doleful figures, for 25,000 thrill-exhausted fans to read as they dragged leaden hearts from the oval, was 12-7. Facing a 7-0 defeat as the fourth quarter got under way, due to a first period touchdown by Walker, of the Owls, the minute men of Michigan masters in moleskin who run faster than the wind and are more elusive than eels in a pool of oil raced through the Cherry and White for two touchdowns and victory. Brandstatter Gallops 59 Yards Brandstatter, a man in a mask, a fleet, hard-running fullback, ncored the first touchdown forState with a mighty 59-yard dash through left tackle. This made the score 7-fl, still in favor of Temple, and when Sebo missed the try for extra point, it teemed as if the Owls might win bv a single point. But the Spartans would not be 18-13 Win lo Sonih Benders Before Mooo YALE FIRST TIME li li EVER! QUARTER J'lit, irom a Penn view.

point, the saddest, i ice i the afternoon was the failure ITBALL HIST FOOTBALL HISTORY TO UPSET MIDDIES 52,000 See Tigers Ex Wild Demonstration Follows Sensational Upset as Bulldogs Lose' 14-6 ploit Breaks, Overpower Fighting Navy, 26-0 of the Quakers to take advantage of their many opportunities. Jfarnian's pupils had no less than six opportunities to score and cashed in on one. rumbling Hurts Penn Costly fumbling-and there was plenty of it by both teams seemed to damage Penn more than Michigan. The Quakers were continually letting the ball slip away from them when they most needed It. One Is not discounting the performance of tho triumphant tional blocking, galloped 70 yards down the field for the first score.

Karly in the second period, Ohio State continued her downward inarch to send Joe Williams flying across thp Green goal line for another touchdown. Through these first two periods Ohio State had outplayed the Gold and Blue at almost every turn. There were signs of a Scarlet deluge a.s the third quarter opened am! Notre Dame's attack still broke down at every chance. Notre Dame Is Off Then with the third p'uiod waning, the nstoriislunir Pilney, aided and abetted bv Mike I.avden, Front -hart, Gaul and olhets, began to get in his deadly woik. Ohio kicked lo Pilney, who look the hull on the Scarlet 40-yard line ami ripped of! 27 yards in a fine run before he was hauled down.

As the lourlh quarter looked as hopeless as life at the edge of the grave when Pilney, the wild man, ran 32 yards from mid-field to Ohio's 18-yard line, where he was badly hurt and carried from the field. His limp body was on a stretcher fading out through the stadium's gates as Shakespeare threw the winning pass to Millner and the roar that followed told him the story ot a great play he could not see. Hut it was Pilney's final cyclonic rush through a swarm of Scarlet tncklers Ihrt, marie this play possible and gave Notre Dame her final chance wilh only a few seconds left. Through the first two periods nf this dramatic show Ohio Stale dominated the field. Karly in the baltle Aiilenurei, the Scarlet fullback, inlereepled Shakespeare's pass with a high leap on Ins own 30-yard line and lateralled In Boucher, who, behind some exeep.

thunder that comes in unbroken waves. I'ilney the Leader It whs Andy Pilney, the Chicago entry, who led the winning assault in the last two periods, the spearhead in all three touchdown thrusts. Pilney's dazzling rushes and his passing not only cut Ohio's defense into scarlet ribbons, but i left this defense bewildered and baffled as he kepi, his amazing attack moving up and down the 'field I'ilney today Rave one of the finest exhibitions of all-around football that, a great crowd ever saw on nn' field at any time. lie wrus as unstoppable as a wild' horse, while his deadly sniping I.ayden nd 'others broke up the Scarlet, defense and finally pulled the 193') miracle throuch. Notre Dame was still trailing.

13 to VI- with onlv a minute and the South Bend cans" still By GRAXTLAND RUE COLUMBUS, Nov. Dame came out of the maw of hell to beat Ohio State, 18 to today before 81,000 and gain the greatest football victory in the long and brilliant history of the Blue and Gold. Completely outplayed In the fust two quarters, trailing 13 to 0 as (lie final quarter started, with every killing break against her- breaks that would crack the heart, of an iron ox this Notre Dame team came surging back in the final quarter to score three touchdowns as the final winning thrust, came on a 30-yard pass from Shakespeare to Millner with less than a minute to play. As Millner went high into the air for Shakespeare long and came down with the ball beyond the Scarlet, goal line the roar that swept bark and forth across the field sounded like storm By ART MORROW PRIfcETON. N.

Nov. 2. That the Princeton Tiger is of the sabre- YALK BOWL, NEW HAVEN, Nov. 2 i A. They dragged out the obituary of the "Blue Jinx" today and read it aloud to 45.000 spectators in Ihe big concrete bowl as Ihe Dartmouth Indians scored their first football victory over Yale in more than half a cen-turv.

The score was 14. to 6. The Hanoverians' triumph, the woncnne.s in asserting Hint Penn toothed breed the Midshipmen of Navy learned to their sorrow in packed Palmer Stadium here today as fanes flashed nnrl claws Old nor, even approximate its form oi the Columbia game. Today ihe denied. Inspired now, running like mad.

sweeping the ends and plung scratched to a 26-0 victory. Subdued bv Yale. 7-6. and bat Quakers were the same outfit that lost to Princeton and to Yale after being out in Ihe lead. Their tackling and blocking wrr atrocious- and a team that Isn't tered by Notre Dame.

14-0 the first in gridiron engagements with Ell, precipitated one of Ihe wildest demonstrations ever staged in the bowl. Misled by Ihe big lime Navy had little left but tight to offer Princeton this humid after i (nntinued nn fagr 2. Column .1 noon, and against a Tiger team mat exploited every break, even the Middies' gallant spirit was not sufficient. Princeton's Dower was MISS.STATE UPSETS ILIOO'S DRIVE at the top of the stadium which lolled Ihe end of the game i about 10 before it was over I officially, thousands ot spectators I poured from the stadium onto the Held. Fist, fights broke out In sev- eral quarters and the goal posts i were uprooted and broken into bits.

undeniable, its fifth successive 11 either blocking nr tackling wi'li finality, and ir, fumbling, cannot expect tn got to first base. They gave their runners little protection, and repeatedly the enemy ball carriers would slip away from Penn tack-lers who seemed to surely hava them nailed. Penn got into trouble right, at the start when the opening Michigan kickofT got away from Warwick right on the goal line. The Penn back recovered, but. the Wolverines triumph uievitable, as that Nassau machine took every hill in high gear and rode over the bumns with Villnnovo Rallies lo Take 13-7 Win Over Detroit to Even Up ARMY iCI U3-7 Rl hardly a tremor.

Officials, with the aid of special officers, managed to clear the field in several minutes and Dartmouth, in mid-field, ran one more play to seal the victory officially. And then pandemonium broke loose again and lusted un hour. were ca sing in Eddie, and he ing the line, they kept pounding at the Temple, line. Once they were turned bark when ft lion-hearted Cherry and White eleven took the ball away on downs on their one-foot line, but with the clock showing only one minute and 42 seconds left to play, Zarza, on an end around play, cut back through left tackle for three yards nd a touchdown This in brief tells the story of that last period avalanche which wept the Owls to defeat. Now for the battle as it progressed from the opening whistle! Warner's men completely dominated the play throughout the first half, scoring once and threatening the State goal on three other occasions.

Owls Dominate Early riay So complete was the mastery of the Owls in these two periods that the visitors carried the ball from erimmage on only four occasions Rained a meagre eight yards and failed to make a first down. Eight minutes after play opened the Owls scored their touchdown on a pretty nine-yard forward pass from Kusko to Walker, which the Continued on Page 2, Column -yard got no luither out than the 1: line. Favorite Finishes Second, Ned Reigh Runs Third in Maryland Classic the last quarter Villanova surged Capacity Crowd Attends Fifty-two thousand persons, as many as the Tigers' horseshoe could hold, witnessed the slaughter of the Midshipmen. This gay assemblage of spectators, some showing Navy's blue and others Princeton's orange, formed a background of color to a game which in itself reflected the hues of but one of the combatants. Action was all orange.

Not once did the Tigers lose their sense of direction, for they fought Armstrong's Pass to Walters Brings Second Score and Victory to Invaders WEST POINT, N. Nov, 2 (A. P. i. Army's vaunted football arrav, victor over Harvard and Yale on As a result, Murray's first ta of the game was to punt from behind hl.s own goal line.

His boot, aeainst Dartmouth played hard, heads-tip I football all afternoon to hand the sons of Eli their second successive detent of the and themselves remain In the undefeated and un-j tied division. The Indians scored in the second By EDWARD J. WALSH In the twilight of a drab November iiy, Villanova's Wildcats yes-terciav finally found that coveted pot. of gold at the end of the rainbow, for they achieved their first grid wcory over Detroit University's Titan5 The seme was 13 to 7. liefm nn enthusiastic llie wind, was lame too nourishing, and after it was delivered Michigan jhad posses; ion on the Quakers' 33.

The homesters' npctittsfc offensive ig'stme was lor peiiuer t0 rifle a I forward tn KTUiiulus a very f.m-cv play ii.it evi-b! i lie Perm niifmc-d r.v.d the Continued on Page 6, Column 7 PIMLICO, Md Nov. 2 fA. P.L-Hal Price Headley's 2-year-old bay colt, Hollyrood, put on a tremendous burst of speed on the home stretch todey to outstep the Bnmar Stable's Grand Slam, me favonie, and win the $25,000 added Pimlico Futurity by a length and a half before a crowd of $15,000. Grand Slam, first by a head en forward to pull the game out of the lire. And they did it in the same manner nt Detroit employed to conquer the Wiidcat.es a week aKn.

With the score standing 7 to fl in the Titans' favor. Villanova real. ml Ihe game was quickly slipping away. To avert the impending defeat, the Wildcats suddenly released the full fury of their emotions. launched a relentless rime, the like of which has never been seen at the Villanova Stadium, and drove on from their own 28-yard line to Detroit's 19.

Once under wav Ihe Villanova attack swept everything before it One first down followed another Da. I in fVtui.s fonr and game Continued on Page Column 2 FORDHAM SURPRISES IN HOLDING Pill 10 HE crowd of 10 "00 spectators, the game was in everv wav as thrilling as the one which won from Villa-nova last pa'urdav at Detroit. Still. 1 for a long time it seemed as though I the Wildrais were going to suffer 'the same fate as their brethren had was nn two minutes; oid. Km, irre the and Bin" got i)' A'r.

The as given Continued on Pase 2, Column 7 tering the stretch, could not withstand Hollyrood's closing drive and KEEP SLATE CLEAN Bubble "Pops' experienced against this foe in prcv-ious years. Yet, no hope did Villanova lose. With but four minutes to play in Didn't Have It MEMORIAL COLISEUM, LOS Continued on Page 4, Column 4 ANGELES, Nov. 2 (A. University of California displayed a Miciiinn jute.

Poiitiont. Left tackle Bihlaren left r. puzoltti fuzoliti Warner Ttit, rugged defense and took advantage of the breaks today to score two siii'eessive Sat ijtcla vs. was tumbled from the ranks of the undfeated toriav bv a. fighting hand nf Southerners from Mississippi Stale who tan and pav.cd then way to 13-7 victory.

While an est una ted crowd of looked on in stunned, silence from the horse shoe stands of Stadium high above the Hudson River, Ihe hard-fighting football warrmis of Major Ralph Sas-e drove to a touchdown early in the fir.st period and then connected wilh two long passes In the fourth period to clinch the victory. Army, which had hoped to save something for the three hard games ahead acainn Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Navy, threw all its resources into the fray without avail. The Cadets were able to match State's first touchdown with a passing attack in the second quarter, but their desperate efforts in the wining minutes of the game found them steadily losing ground against State's fierce defense. The Southerners trotted out one of the fastest, hardest, most accurate passing backflelds the Army had looked at this Ike Pickle, a 177-pound pt r.ncheaii back from Memphis. was a threat Temple.

Walker Dahertv Zanin Laiulia Gurzynski Zastrw Ippolit1) Frey Rrnzo Davidson FOOTBALL SCORES Bifder Allman Cnlina Warmbeia Kiaht tackle Rijht end Quarterback halfback touchdowns and remain in the un toward. NEW YORK. Nov. 2 tA Fordham dealt a stunning blow to Pitt before 38.000 spectators in the rain-soaked Polo Grounds here today by holding the highly rated Panthers to a scoreless draw in their first football meeting. The Rams outrushed Pittsburgh out passed them and had the only genuine scoring opportunities of the game, which looked in the preview like a soft touch for the Panthers, who have been beaten this season only by Notre Dame.

The listless Panthers were so Ineffective that their longest excursion into enemv territory in the Halfback ru back Michigan state LOCAL TEAMS 0 1212 the Headley colt won going away. Grand Slam was second by two lengths with Ned Reigh third by four, Hollyrood Earns $48,850 The value of Hollyrood's victory was $45,850. Second money was $3000, third $2000 and fourth $1000. Delphinium, owned by Brookmcadi Stable, was fourth. Today's running of the Futurity was the first since A.

Pons' Swivel won it in 1932 when 'c was a adder1, event. Swivel collected more than $60,000 for it that year, The Futurity first was run in 1921, Hollyrood's time of 1.40 3-5 was considerably slower than the track record of 1.44 for the distance, but was a fifth of a second faster than that of Swivel in 1032. The track was slow today. Grand Slam went, to the post a 2-to-l favorite, with lioilyrood a 42-to-l shot. Hollyrood paid $11.10 defeated class by vanquishing the hitherto unbeaten University of California at Los Angeles 11 to 2 before 80,000.

0 07 Fordham Rutgers Gettysburg. F. and St. Mary's. Syracuse Ppn viva rii Positions Kkhigan end r.itanelU 'H'Mm.

tMT V.tMgevrr Rufttd Hiss-il Ha' 7 ru Vr.nt Stofk.i Rtht fciianl S- human TnoUiill titk! jf-inur Nvo ht n. ilppy Murray Mil irtmj.v Hernfr Warwii eft half 'nark Evfrh-nl Elvf't'son hiHb.v Smirrin Kurluli fullback tiwort Pnnvlvamii a I) 0 (j 6 Miolijrn 1 7 0 3-16 PfMjimyivftrna sr-unrig Tom inlou-n Kur liih. Michigan ToiKhdow ft' Val-pry. P-iint l'rnm try Mm Mown ftrnna for Virnr-wcn i i. Firld (fin I Vierjf "Vcir, li el free Yitul Oar-i-ner i Cornell Umpire Ambmv Ha'nes (Yale).

Vifhl Ft nnk Tn nati. Had lin-isman Jav Wv.v.t Mis viitri i. Siitii Penn erwh, iVluiRiiP' trmnn. Kvr tackios. Carr.

Gur.iiis; fsrfi, Cbfslf.v; r'rtfrns. -1 1 i haHhurM. M' O-icfcen Knklfski, Prrshi-r, Btown. MKtVRin Fttrtt, Savat a. Johfnnn ta'-kl't fiarbfi.

V'bft Ffrifrn QiMif-rSs' k( hVitharki, R.U i 9, O.iipx.l; t.ll After Ucla moved out in front with a first period safety, the visit ors came back to block a kick and 0 Pitt ,.31 Lafayette ..21 Lehigh .32 7 St. Vincent 7 Penn .12 Washington. 7 W. and .1 .45 Edinhoro ...16 Grove City .14 Bucknell Clarion Tea eh 13 Wilson Tech. score a touchdown in the second.

The final score was counted on a Michigan 16 Penn 6 Michigan State. 12 Temple 7 Villanova 13 Detroit 7 I rsinus 20 Ilrexel 6j St Joseph's Delaware. 13 1 Lebanon Valley. 7 P. M.

(' 01 Hamilton 7 Swurthmnre 0' Havrrford 6 STATE TEAMS Albrieht V. Moravian Duqucsne 7 (arnefie Tech ft Dirkinsnn 4t Allegheny ft Ithaca 33 E. Stroudsburn 0 I meni), Daherty Win for Walker 1r DahertT pfr.r..Bkf 05r Lfndls- for uT" for Kiuko. Andenon iir. a H'cn'Kan State.

Oainea for i "'STr 4' "'War" Xilh'n lL Sneelman for Zm Ib.n line.man. O. ruu lime of periodi. forward pass, good for 36 yards. Susquehanna.

Geneva Westminster. Slipperv Koi'k N. V. I Indiana Teach Millersville. Both lines played such brilliant half was one scant yard across i the midfleld' mark, while Fordham's joflensive carried up to the 19-yard jmark once before intermission.

All in all. neither team got wi'h- defensive ball that California gained only 40 yards rushing and two first downs, 92 yards and five Continued on Page 4, Column 1 Continued on Page 3, Column Continurd on Tagf 2, Column 6 Continued on Page 5, Column 8 Continued on Tage 2, Column I i.

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