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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 6

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
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Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE SIX MAIN NEWS SECTION MIAMI DAILY NEWS, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1932 RUTH AND GEHRIG HOMERS SHATTER CUBS9 HOPES Van Wie Shoots Sub-Par Golf To Capture U. S. Women's Championship 1 STRONG CONTENDERS FOR DADE AMATEUR CROWN CHICAGO STAR DEFEATS YANKEES ARE EXPECTED TO END SERIES TODAY DMe County A3a VARE BY 10 TO 8 SCORE Br FRANK MCBPBC PEABODY, Oct. 1. (UP) Virginia' Van Wie, pretty Chicago girl, became America's 1932 golfing queen Saturday by defeating the veteran Glenna Collett Vare of Philadelphia, 10 and 8, in the finest performance in the his By DAVIS 1.

WALSH CHICAGO, Oct. 1. One by one, the lengthening shadows cast themselves across "VVrigley field late Saturday like so many of the ghosts of the hope that once abided here. Quickly almost furtively and practically in a body, the 49,996 saddened Chicagoans passed from the scenfe with averted gaze, convinced at last that the world championship in baseball for the year of 1932 was not for them. The World series between the New tory of the women's amateur championship.

Fitted against the "jinx" who hadO- halted three of her seven previous York Yankees and Chicago Cubs was bids for. the crown, Hiss Van Wie mastered the hills and hazards of the Salem Cpuntry club course, to establish herself as the country's outstanding woman golfer," not over yet. There will be a fourth ISLAND GOLF TEAM TO PLAY HERE OCT. 9 ith memories of overwhelming at Mrs. Vare's bands in the 192S QUALIFYING CLOSES TODAY IN DADE MEET finals, decisive defeat by the same player in the 1930 climax, and a close but equally bitter defeat by her in last year's semi-finals, the persistent The Miami Biltmore golf team win meet a picked team from the Key West Golf and Country club i the mid-Westerner set out Saturday to and probably a final game Sunday, but after what happened out there Saturday afternoon anything that happens hereafter can only be an anticlimax.

For Ruth and Gehrig made a two-man performance of winning the third straight for the Yankees, 7 to 5, putting on a show that somehow gave the illusion of giants romping with little boys or, better still, the Barry-mores playing with a No. 3 road company. The Cubs always had a chance and even went so far as to tie the score but, any time they made it serious, Ruth or Gehrig hit a home run play as no aspirant to the. title bad ever played before. first of a series of inter-city matches here Oct.

9, Punderford, man Drives that split the centers of the Qualifying for the Dade county amateur championship, Metropolitan Miami' most popular match play tourney, will close today. First round ager of the Gables course, announced fairway, chips that stopped inches to a few feet from the pins, and putts that could have walked chalk lines sent the Chicago girl into an early lead that mounted until the match ended on the 2Sth green with Mrs. Vare graciously conceding a three- off Charley Root's pitching and, once when the Cubs really threatened, there was only one thing to be done about it. So both bit home runs off or niaicu piaj win siari the Beach municipal course and continue through next Sunday. The tournament promises to have one of the fastest championship flights in the history of the annual classic.

Up to last night 15 medal scores of -80 or less -had been recorded. Howard Freed, Miami Conn-try club spring champion, and Jimmy Went. former Thiita titl bnldpr. re last night. The teams will play a series of Scotch foursome matches in the morning and four-ball matches in the afternoon.

Scoring will ba by the Nassau system, each match being worth three points. Members of the Key West taaia which ar expected to make the trh to Miami include GL C. Price, eap tain Joe Lopes, R. S. Spootswood, J.

Kirscheabaum, Sam Goldsmith, Dutch Wayswillia, Karl Thorn naosv foot putt. Two birdies and seven par boles gave Virginia a medal of 36, two un Charley Root's pitching. In alt Ruth accounted for five runs der women's par, for the first nine with an ordinary run-of-the-mill grade A homer into the right field stands with two on. in the first and an ex traordinary record-breaking blast that cleared the center field barrier the I I I I Hera they are, the cream of Metropolitan Miami's simoa pure golfers who will tee off tomorrow in the first round of match play in quest of the annnal Dade county amateur championship. Left to right, Jimmy West, 1920 Dade champion; Howard Freed, Miami Country club spring champion; Harcourt-Urice, holder of the title in 1929; C.

A. "Skinny' Roberts, defending champion Dr. R. M. Harris, holder of the first crown, and Lee Chase, former state champion.

W. W. Watkina, H. M. Morton and L.

Plummer. Tentative lineup of the BQtmoaa team includes T. E. Price, captain. R.

H. Sappenf ield, A. TL Weiland, D. H. Redfern, H.

Cartee, S. B. Gibbs, Iranian Padgett, John Hardeman, Ralph Wilkins, II. Fraiier. Mr.

Punderford said the Biltmora team would play a return series of matches with the Key West team ia two or three weeks. The Biltmore team defeated ths Nassau golfers by a one-sided scora in their first international matches. football resultJQ leading the field with 74s. One stroke behind them are Bob Moffett, University of Florida ace, and Harcourt Brice, another former title holder. Qualifying scores have been posted ly 70 entries and the field is expected to pass the hundred mark before the medal play period closes at sUndown.

The field is qualifying in divisions of 32 and the beaten 16s in the first round of match play will form the lower flights. Second round of match play will start next Monday and continue through Sunday. Oct. 16 third round from Oct. 17 to 23 fourth round from Oct.

24 to 30. and finals of all flights on Sunday, Not. 6. Final chapter of the fifth annual (COXTTXTEr OJT NEXT FACE) i BATES HOLDS YALE TO TIE fifth for the longest hit ever made at Wrigley field. Some of the Cub understudies had been out on the edge of the dugout heckling Ruth just before the fell and quite amiably he kept time with them on his fingers Root burned across first one low curve and then another for two called strikes.

Like that other memorable occasion in the 1928 series finale at Stv Louis, he kept telling them that he was going to hit the ball out of the place, and this time, as before, he didn't fool them. In fact, be made his word so good that the Cubs retired precipitately to the cover of their bench, determined not to incite the man to further holes and left her 5 up on the stout Eastern star. Homeward in the morning, the Chicago player bagged three more birdies and played each of the other six holes in par. She went to lunch with a cheering lead of 8 up, and with a morning medal of 36-3773, four under women's par and only a single stroke over men's par for the course. In the face of such an exhibition, Mrs.

Vare lost the magie touch that won her the American title in 1922, 1925, 1928, 1929 and 1930. Half-a-dozen times she missed putts of three feet or less. Her woods and irons found rough, traps, and trees. But she never stopped trying. She started the afternoon round by winning the 19th holo with a birdie 4.

She went 8 down again on the next hole, and still she kept trying. On the 22nd hole, a perfect chip shot enabled her to card a birdie 4, and then the hopelessness of her. fight appeared mora clearly than ever as Virginia sank a 15-foot putt to win the hole with an eagle 3 and go 9 up. Going to the 27th hole, the match stood dormie 10 for Virginia, but the climax was forestalled as her second shot found the pond and she took a 6 for the bole. The match ended on SOUTH Tennessee, S3: U.

ot Mississippi, O. They will play them a return series V. P. 1., 7: Georgia, b. Virginia State.

Kluefield State, 0. Albama Poly. 77: Erskine. 0. Vanderbilt.

North Carolina. 7. Mercer. 21: Howard, fi. Alabama, 53; Mississippi State, 0.

Bowling Green. 7: ML Union, 6. 4o; Spring Hill, 7. Washington and Jefferson, 20: West FIRST hU ESSES in the early part of November. TECH'S VETS BEATCLEMSON ATLANTA, Oct.

1. (UP) An ef Virginia Wesleyan. 0. heroics. AUBURN POSTS 2ND BIG SCORE Virginia.

7: Maryland. 6. Tennessee Tech. 13: Lambutn. 9.

Kpringfield. SO: Strondsburs. 0. North Carolina State, Richmond, 0. Piedmont, IS; Cullowhee Teachers, 7.

Parr is Island Marines. 19; Louisburg. 7. Murfreesboro Teachers. 18; Tennessee Needless to say, no really smart football mentor can find it in him to go about shouting with glee over having his 7.

fectively versatile attack made Georgia Tech's veteran engineers too good for Clemson by three touchdowns and team picked in advance of the season as a mighty aggrega Tulane, 26; Texas Airgies, 14. Kentucky, 18: Sewanee. 0. Davidson, Washington and Lee. 0.

Navy Pleges, 27: Massanutten Academy Tech won its opener today by a 32-12 tion capable of booting the pants off any and all opposition to be along the treacherous schedule trail that must be traveled during October; November and, sometimes, score. of Virginia. O. the next green when Mrs. Vare, after missing a 12-foot putt for a 4, con AUBURN, Ala Oct 1.

(UP) A lad named Casey Kimbrell galloped long and often Saturday, as Auburn's strongest football team in many years raced away to its second impressive victory of the season, rolling over Erskine. 77-0. Coach Chet Wynne's Fumbling a bit in the first quarter and losing the baH on downs after marching to Clemson's 5-yard mark. parlv T)pffmhrr. ceded the hole and the championship For one thing, sky-high pre-season Duke, 44: V.

11. 0. South Carolina, Villanova. 6. Mercer.

21: Howard. Wofford, 34: Hish Point. 0. Georgia Tech. 32: Clemson.

14. LeMoyne, SO: Memphis All-Stars, 0. Bethany. Marietta, 0. fihurtleff, 14; Charleston Teachers, 13.

LeMoyne. Local All-Stars. 0. Mac-on Teachers, Knoxvilie. O.

Memphis Teachers, 20; Arkansas Col rating tends to make supporting fan- Rawls Will Attempt To Shatter 300-Yard Medley Record Today to her opponent. The now champion's performance had been consistently brilliant all week. She shot a par77 on Monday to share medalist honors with Maureen Orcutt. Her other match-play victims were Mrs. B.

P. Meckley of Silversprings, Edith Quier of lege, O. Virginia Union. SO; Greensboro A. 0.

The furore occasioned by the hit had hardly quieted when Gehrig hit an inside curve into the right field bleachers for this young man's second homer. It was the first ball pitched by Root. It also was the last ball pitched by Root, the gentleman being invited to step out of harm's way. Aftes that the pair subsided and calle! it an afternoon, and by the time they did, there was nothing left of this series "lexeept the possibility that either or both might break out afresh Sunday and tie or beat their home-run record of four created in the 192S event. There, Ruth put his three in the final game to equal his single game record made in 192G.

Here he has only the two homers he made Saturday as against a total of three for Gehrig. As to that, one more record awaits the Yankees if they win tomorrow, a record of having beaten three separate National League entries in as many world series, without the loss of a game. Up to Saturday night 'their total shows 11 successive victories, with the end "hot quite yet The Cubs, at that, were a more plausible looking outfit Saturday than they had been in their two New York appearances. That is to say, (COXHXCED OX PAGE EIGHT) Reading, Pa. Rosalie Knapp of iiuire uamo system cucaea.

The ever-recurring long runs by Captain' Hitchcock, Kimbrell and Dupree and the line smashes of Cham-bliss and Brown, were more than Er-skine could stand. The fleet Auburn backs galloped seemingly at will, with excellent blocking and a stout line opening the way for them. The touchdowns were scored swiftly. Soon after the opening, Erskine fumbled, Auburn recovered on Er-skine's 34-yard line, Phipps whipped a pass to Hitchcock and Phipps crashed tackle for five yards and a score. EAST Alliance, 40; East Reserve.

0. Hampdcn-Sidney. 42; Bridgewater. 13. Boston 13; New Hampshire, 6.

Ciarkson, 31; Hamilton. 0. Columbia, 41 Lehigh, 6, Delaware, 11: La Salle, fi. Georgetown, 26; Mt. St.

Mary, 0. Juniata. Gettysburg, 2. Manhattan, 32; St. Joseph, 2.

Princeton. 22; Amherst, 0. Rochester. Alfred. B.

Rutgers. 20: Philadelphia Military Col Glenhead, N. V. and Charlotte Glutting of South Orange, N. the novice who eliminated Great Britain's champion, Enid Wilson.

Miss Van Wie is 23 years old and is a member of the Beverly Country NEW HA VEX, Oct 1. (INS) Scarlet-clad gridiron warriors from Bates college, Lewiston, Maine, furnished one of the early football surprises of the eeason here Saturday in holding Yale to a nothing to nothing tie in the opening game of the season for the Elis. Not in a decade has Yale run against such stubborn opposition as that provided by the Pine Tree State gridders, who stopped Yale dead time and again and twice threatened to score. A closing period drive carried the Elis from their own 29-yard stripe to within a yard of the Bates goal line, where the latter repulsed them, twice before the final whistle game ending with the ball on the visitors' 10-yard line. In this march of the Blue, Charley Heim, a final period replacement, was the outstanding star of the belated attempt to score, a 20 -yard run featuring his work.

Bates, shortly after the opening of the second period, advanced to the Yale 10-yard line, but was thrown back for a loss and Stone's try for a placement goal went wide of the uprights. At the opening of the last quarter Bates held Yale for downs at the visitors' 35-yard line and on the first play Pricher raced around the Yale left end for 38 yards. He was forced out of bounds by Parker, the only man in the way of a clear field to a touchdown. This threat, however, was nipped three plays later when Joe Crowley intercepted a pass at his 20-yard line. Line weakness was the prevailing cause of the first stalemate a Yale eleven has faced in years in opening their season and as a result their offensive was checked before getting beyond the scrimmage line by the Bates eleven.

Yale reeled off 10 first downs against three for Bates, but were held for downs three times. Yale gained 150 yards to 103 for Bates completed two passes out of eight tried; Bates one out of five. Yale tried six laterals, gained 29 yards and lost one to Bates on a fumble. Yale was penalized 12, times for losses of 73 yards Bates six times for losses of 67. Pricher, Wilmot, Clemens and Moy-nihan excelled for Bates while Crowley, Levering.

C. Williamson and Heim shared Yale's high light accomplishments of the game. Score Yale 0 0 0 00 Bates 0 0 0 00 touchdowns on long runs, line driwlr' and an aerial Clemson took to the air in the last quarter to score twice. Cherry was first over for Tech, bis buck climaxing a drive from Clemson's 40-yard line. Shortly afterwards McArthur, who had replaced Davis, heaved a long pass to Williams who was stopped five yards from a score and McArthur took it over.

Shortly after the third quarter opened Galloway went weaving through the Clemson secondary on a 45-yard gallop. Puntiug and substitutions occupied the rest of the period and the fourth brought a heavy offensive by both teams. Hart, of Tech, pitched the ball 50 yards to Williams who ran 15 for a score. Then Miller, ef Clemson, passed to Woodward, who ran 60 yards for the visitors first score. A forward and lateral pass combination gave Clem son another score at once, Woodward scoring.

Score by quarters: 2 Clemson 0 0 0 1414 Tech 0 13 6 135? lege. 0. club, Chicago. Tall and well-proportioned, she plays golf with a businesslike determination comparable to that of Helen Wills in tennis, and on the course, her smiles are just as rare as DAILY tt'EWS BJRKU Kort Lauderdale, Oct. 1.

Katherine Rawls, holder of four national swimming championships, will attempt to break the world's record for the 800-yard medley for the 20-yard course Sunday in the Las Olas casino pool. The present record of four minutes SO 3-5 seconds wan set by Eleanor Holms at Cleveland in 1928. The attempt, which is sanctioned by the state A. A. will be timed and judged by John Thelen, Newt Lummus, Bob Gordon and August Burghardt, all officials of the state organization.

Other features pf the program will include diving exhibitions by Evelyn Kawls and Marshall Wayne, and. a Chinese life-saving act by Sonny and-Peggy Kawls. Later Lee Johnson blocked an En the tennis star s. POWER CARDS TRACK MEETS TIDE SWAMPS MISSI STATE The third annual Florida Power Light Co. track and field meet will be W.

Maryland. 12; St. Thorns s. 6. Toledo, 18: Capital.

0. Tufts. Middlebury. Waynesburg, 19: Slippery Bock. O.

Davis-Elkins. W. Liberty Teachers. 6. Pittsburgh.

40; W. Virginia. 0. Pennsylvania, Williams, fl. Bowdoin, 20: Mass.

State, fi. Brown. 19: Rhode Island, 0. Colby. 19: Trinity, 7.

Mercersburg. 0. Brooklyn. Arnold. 0.

Dartmouth. 32: Vermont. 0. Fordham, 6S; Baltimore. 0.

Penn, 38: Frank Marshall, O. Pena State. 27: Lebanon Valley, 0. Boston Cellege. 20; Loyola, 0.

Catholic 47; C. C. N. 0. Lowell Textile, 19: St.

Michaels. 0. Army. 13: Furman, O. William and Mary.

6: Navy, O. Carnegie Tec-h. Geneva. 0. Colgate.

27: Case. 0. Harvard. 6: Case. 0.

N. Y. Hobart, 0. Maine, 33; Connecticut State, fl. St.

John. 19; N. T. Normal, 6. Tale, 0: Bates, 0.

Holy Cross, 28: Providence, 6. Cornell. 7: Nisgara, 0. Johns Hopkins, 21; Washington College, 0. Muncie Teachers.

28: Farlham, 12. Manchester, Depauw, 6. MID-WEST Kalamazoo Teachers. 27: North Central. 0.

Otterbein, 18: Berlin. O. Lacrosse Teachers, Colombia held Saturday at Flamingo park, Mi skine punt on the lattpr's one-foot line and Tom Brown piled through for a second score1. The second quarter brought Auburn substitutions ami three more touchdowns, one from Kimbrell's 43-yard scurry, another from Kimbrell's 15-yard plunge after recovery of a fumbled JSrskine punt, and Dupree winding tip a drive that Hitchcock began with a 30-yard return of a punt. The third quarter brought a 59-yard run off tackle by Dupree for a score, and shortly afterwards a 42-yard dash to Erskine'a one-yard line, with Hitchcock scoring.

Talley opened the fourth period by intercepting a pass and hauling the ball 27 yards to the goal line. Then Kimbrell went on a spree touchdown runs of 35, CO and 53 yards- That ended the scoring, which in the minds of all present, was sufficient. ami Heacb, it was announced last night by George Hussey, director of VANDY BEATS N. C. BY- 39-7 WILDCATS USE POWER TO WIN Power-Light athletics.

There will be 13 events for men MONTGOMERY, Oct. 1. (INS) Brawn and beef of Alabama's Red Elephants, one of the weightiest Southern Conference elev including a singles and doubles tennis championship tourney and a diamond- ens, crushed out a 53-to-0 victory over ball game, while five events are booked Mississippi. State in Crampton Bowl Saturday afternoon. Alabama used nnlimited man power for the women.

Prizes will be awarded to first-place winners in each event. in a steam roller attack that left the Officials follow Judges, William P. Glass, D. T. Caldwell and Willard Erskine fought its best but was no Blackwood; starter, Harry Ebright; track events, Fred Demo, H.

Kahler (Iowa). 6. dom expect entirely too much of 11 mere human beings; it puts the most ardent supporter in a mood to feel worse than a death cell inmate at the first signs of his dear old alma mater's gridiron gods not living up to all those expectations unfairly fostered ere the whistles began blowing and time came to tabulate actual strength of the various teams with final scores. Also, any highly-touted; eleven always is "pointed -for" by every foe; and that naturally makes consistent winning all the tougher. In fairness to his proteges, themselves, there's a certain outstanding Southern conference coach who takes particular pains to see that bis team's possibilities aren't overrated during training prior to the real campaign.

His name and the name of the university he has placed in a prominent spot on the football map are left unmentioned since the little yarn I'm about to repeat to you was related to mc by the gentleman himself in confidence. Here 'tis With three out-of-town newspaper scribes as honor guests of the afternoon, the 'squad in question was engaged in a supposedly heated scrimmage that held most every kind of bum football imaginable. Yes, the boys fumbled all over the lot, spilled passes smack dab in their bread-breakers, let out a yelp for the water bucket every two or three plays and made a mess of everything in general. In fact, they did a swell job that should have been worth a first mortgage on the cellar- berth in the big Dixie football circle. Ye scribes, however, were not out of kindergarten they'd seen such lousy exhibitions in scrimmage on the part of the team of this same school in past years, only to bend over their typewriters a couple of months later and laud the same outfit as undefeated.

"You wouldn't rib us. would you. Coach?" sea one of their number to the head mentor. "Rib you? Why, of course not. ITou've seen em running plays most all afternoon.

Xame the- three you like best and I'll send one of the assistant managers out on the field with instructions to the quarterback to get all he can oit of 'em. Then we'll call it a day. It's beginning to get a bit dark, you know, and most of the boys seem to tire easily," was the reply. Well, the three preferred plays were instructions sent by the coach to the varsity quarterback "run 'era for all they're worth." and the coach and scribes settled tight on the bench to await eventful happenings. The three plays were run, as many touchdowns were made.

And the coach tells me his team, should be able to win about half of its games if he can uncover a smart quarterback. VITAL STATISTICS: Born to Tommy Freeman and, lest I forget, wife, one boy who tips the beam at 12 pounds in safety pins and napkin. Tommy says he'll knock the kid's Mock off if he ever hints of entering the professional fight game. And LEXINGTON, Oct. 1.

(CP) Ability of Krouter, substitute end, to recover fumbled punts, and the running and plunging of Ralph Kerche-val, big. halfback, enabled Kentucky to turn bactr a stubborn Sewanee eleven Saturday afternoon, 19-0. Kentucky had to use its weight and power to wear down the lighter team before scoring began. After a bitterly fought first quarter, Bach got ip steam in the second to return a Sewanee punt 51 yards for a touchdown, Kereheval kicking goal. Krou Mississippians helpless.

Coach Frank Thomas ran in 40 men during the game. The Tide got under way slowly, scoring but once in the first period on a 30-yard jannt around end by Capt. Johnny Cain. Lawrence, St. Norbert.

n. Oshkosh Teachers, 13; Marquette Teach D. Fosworth; field events, T. Lewis, J. B.

Hobbs, E. W. Earle; tennis, ers. 7. match for the Auburn steam-roller.

Growers to Play 8-Football Tilts Indiana Fenn Teachers. 12; Loekhaven Cleo Godbey, W. W. Luehm; volley Teachers, 0. ball, R.

Y. Pool; tug-of-war, J. n. White archery, L. B.

Hicks casting. F. Cammon diamondball. IP. Gradually gaining momentum, the Elephants marched over the line twice in the next period, rushes through the Miami Ringmen Book Lauderdale Miami boxing team will clash with Fort Lauderdale in another inter-city CHAPEL HILL, N.

Oct. 1. (INS) A fighting University of 1C team led Vanderbilt in first down here today, but could not halt the flashy Dixie Roberts, and the Commodores won, 39 to 7. The Tarheels gained 19 first down to seven for Vandy. Roberts scored two touchdowns snd was instrumental in gaining two mora markers.

He ran 75 yards across th( goal line and bucked another touchdown over from thet five-yard line. Two other scores resulted after Roberts passed for 31 and 43 yard gains to Henderson. Askew drove through center 10. yards for another score, and the final tally came whe Jordan intercepted a pass and rati 37 yards across the double strijies. Phipps of N.

C. passed 10 yards to Groom for the Tarheels' lone score. N. gained ground consistently with their aerial attack, but running plays were crushed by the heavy Van derbilt line. Score: North Carolina ft 0 7 0 7 Vanderbilt 7 12 13 7 S3 HOMESTEAD, Oct.

1. An eight- Simpson; committees, G. C. Estill, chairman, H. II.

Hyma'n, A. L. Rey line carrying the ball down the field. Five markers came in the second ter, hawking the ball constantly, re nolds and C. R.

Preston. boxing program Wednesday night at Program follow: Men'a events SO- State's resistance having crumpled nnder the powerful drives of the beefy Elephants. One was scored on a pass, Howell to Turner, yard dash, fat man's race, eight pound shot put, running broad jump, hop-step- covered a fumbled Sewanee punt on the latter's 10-yard line and Kentucky had the ball on the one-incb line when the half ended. Just after the second half opened. jump, relay race, tennis tennis the Tuttle Garage arena.

The series will be the third between the two teams, Miami winning the first two bv 10 to 4 and 8 to 5 scores. doubles, volleybRll. tUK-of-war. archery. Indiana.

Ohio University. 6. Minnesota, 12; South Dakota. 0. Wabash, Franklin, n.

Wisconsin. 7: Marquette, 2. Oklahoma, 7: Tulsa, 0. Michigan Min. Tech.

American Lesion. O. Presbyterian. 9: Lenoir Rhyne. 0.

Northwestern. 27: Missouri, 0. Illinois, 20: Miami, 7. Iowa, 31; Bradley-Tech. 7.

Rice Institute, 10; L. S. 8. Baylor U-. fi; St.

Edwards 0. Wooster. 12: Ashland. 0. Wesleyan: 16: Union.

Upsala. 37; Cooper Union, 0. St. Paul, II; Shaw. O.

Western- Reserve. Dennison. 0. Michigan. Michigan Stste.

f. Drt'xel. 18: Westchester Teachers, 6. Hope, KsImuzK, 0, Kent, fi: Hiram. It.

Lafayette, tl: Muhlenberg. Ohio Slate, Ohio Wesleyan, 7. Iowa State, 32: Morningslde, (c urdue. 27; Kansas Aggies, 13. FAR WEST castlna, diamondball Rame.

Women's for 22 yards, the other being rushed over. events: 30-yard dash, diamondball throw. Krouter flattened out on another relay race, tennis doubles and tennis The, upstate boxing aggregation has been strengthened considerable since the last time it fought here by the singles. N. Y.

U. LOOKS GOOD Newt Godfree, Dilby and Carney Laslie led Alabama's attack. Waits, diminutive Mississippi back, was the Aggies only, threat. Runs by Waits carried the ball to Alabama's 4-yard addition of several fighters, and the game schedule for the 1932 Homestead High school football team was announced late yesterday by Coach Jimmy Hudson. The Growers, who lost their opening game of the season Friday to the Cavaliers of Ponce de Leon, will play five of their games away from home.

Next Friday they will meet Pahokee High school at Pahokee and close the season with the Miami High school B'' team here Nov. 25. The Growers will meet Ponce de Iieon in a return game here Nov. 4. The schedule also includes two games each with Lake Worth and the Miami High "B' elevens.

The schedule: Ot. 7 High at Pahokee. Oct. 14 Dania High at Santa. Oct.

Lake Worth at Homestead. Oct. 28 Miami Hiirh 'B" at Miami. Nov. 4 Ponce de Leon at Homestead.

IN OPENING TUSSLE line just before the half ended. Score: OHIO FIELD, N. Oct. 17 fumbled punt, on Sewanee's five-yard line and Kereheval drove over in three plays. Sewanee was weakening from the battering of Kentucky's heavier forwards and a few minutes later, Kereheval broke through with a 39-yard gallop for the third touchdown.

Gamage, Kentucky coach, tried out his substitutes on the last quarter and the subs made three first downs but no score, the teams seesawing in mid-field. competition Wednesday is expected to be much closer than before. Fighters picked to represent the local cluh follow Robert Thompson, paperweight; Rembert RIchbnrK, junior flyweight: Edmund Plnder. junior flyweight; Earl New by, bantamweight: Rudolph Tur-nipseed, bantamweight; Dick Fernandez, featherweight Herb Watters. liEhtwelght: Sevmour, Robertson, middleweight: Ed Alabama 7 14 19 1353 (INS) New York university's eleven, under its new coach, Howard Cann.

Mississippi State 0 0 0 00 West Utah Aggies, 2H: Montana State. New Mexico Military Institute, 7 began its season with a drab 33 to 0 victory over the up-state Hobart. OHIO STATE BEATS Reddick, lishtwelsht: Bud Mullins. light The Violet levcn showed plenty of WESLEYAN BY 33-7 power, little of deception and enough possibilities to warrant an interesting Texas lech, Stanford. 27: Oreon State.

0. California. 22: Olympic Club. fi. Whitman College, 19; LInfield, 7.

St. Mary's, 3o; Nevada, 0. Utah University, 54: Colorado College, 6. Wasb.incton. 2ti: Montana, 13.

U. S. 20; Washington State. 0. Colorado, 2.T: Colorado Mines, 0.

Ca'ifornla Frosh, 63; Oneonta Military Academy, 0. Compton J. 19: XJ. S. C.

Frosh. 0. weight; George olker. welterweight. CARNEGIE WINS BY SINGLE TOUCHDOWN season.

worth at Lake Worth. S. C. NOSES OUT VILLANOVA, 7-G VILLANOVA, Pa Oct. 1.

(UP? South Carolina defeated Yillitnova college, 7-C, Saturday, when Whiter Pandour failed to kick the extra point for Villanova after scoring the touch down in the third quarter on a 35J yard run. Wolfe, of South Carolina; made the visitors touchdown in tb firxt quarter, after receiving a Ion pass. Miami High at Home- No v. 2." tead. SCHMELING HAPPY, SAILS FOR GERMANY COLUMBUS, Oct.

1. (INS) A Scarlet and Gray -avalanche from ery few passes were attempted and N. Y. U. punts were negligible.

Hobert proved more successful in CRISLER'S TIGERS Ohio State university Saturday afternoon brushed aside a scrappy Ohio Colorado. University, 31; Colorado PITTSBURGH, Oct 1. (INS) completing torward passes, with a Mines. i. Wyoming.

28: Chadron. 6. total of three completed. SMOTHER AMHERST Wesleyan eleven by a 34-to-7 score, to inaugurate its 1932 football season Western State, ti; Brigham Young Uni Seventeen first downs for N. tells a story in itself.

Hoba was and prepare for future Big Ten oppo PRINCETON, N. Oct. 1 i nents. versity, viK. Santa Clara.

0: Oregon. 7. SOUTH WEST T. C. 53; Daniel Baker.

0. Missouri Mines. Arkansas, 19. Centenary. 13; Texas U-.

6. able to gain a first down in each half. Score: Ohio State took advantage of three isf jjaunenuig me coaening regime of Fritz Crisler here Saturday breaks and turned them into touch' arternoon, the Princeton football illltlllUAil OIAIL 33 0 N. Y. .13 7 7 Hobart 0 0 0 Tiger recorded a satisfying if not nar- downs, but two other markers were hard earned in triumphant marches BILTMORE SLATES SCOTCH TOURNEY ticularly impressive 22 to triumph down the field, J.

up inguiigiit ot the game came Tommy's planning an active winter MIDGET WOLGAST BEATS VILLANEUVA Carnegie Tech took a hard-fought decision, 7 to 0, over a fighting eleven from Geneva college, Saturday afternoon, after a hard-fought tussle in which the Tartans were able to score but once against a team that had been expected to furnish no more than a workout for Tech. The teams battled on even terms through a scoreless first half. In the third quarter, co-Captain Kavel took the ball and crashed through for Tech's lone touchdown, after Spisak had placed the ball on the one-yard line on first down. Score: Tech 0 ft 7 0 7 Geneva 0 0 0 0 0 NEW YORK, Oct. 1.

(INS) -Max Sclimeling, happy over his victory over Mickey Walker, and certain that it entitles him for first call on Jack Sharkey, is on the high seas today bound for Germany. He left on the Bremen without expressing willingness to fight big Primo Camera in January or February. The German heavyweight is due to return at that time and Jimmy Johnston of Madison Square thought he had the match between Max and Primo bottled. Joe Jacobs, manager of Max. assured Johnston that Max would fight Bit Bootsie on his return.

When' Joe put it up to Max, Schmeling balked and said "no" with gestures. Jacobs was expected to line Max for the bout shortly, however. over Amherst. To achieve their three touchdowns and a safety the Tiger needed fortune's favor. Bad passes from th on a 53-yard run by Charley Yander- The Miami Biltmore golf club will hold its semi-nionthly Scotch 'mixed vort, Wesleyan quarterback, for the Red and Black's only marker.

It oc center permitted rnneeton to score one touchdown and a safety and an foursome tourney today. The tirst foursome will tee off at II p. m. Members' of the" c'ub will draw for part curred during the third quarter when Wesleyan played State off its feet. ANN Alt HO l.

Mich, Oct. (INS) A Wolverine steam roller; crushed Michigan State, IX to 0, here Saturday, as Michigan universitj opened its football season. Forty thousand fans were amaied l.y the ease with which Coach Harr Kipke's new and largely Nin galloped over the veteran Stah "iron men. The score Michigan .7 7 fi 21 State 0 0 0 0 oiuer umcnuown grew out ot an intercepted forward pass deep in Am campaign in the rjrig to soak away money that'll help keep his boys there's another about three years olrl from giving though to fishting for a living. ALL OF which reminds me: A letter from V.

Duckworth to say the bead horse of his stable, Joe Knight, (CONTINUED ON NEXT TACE) but that was the only period. where ners at the starting tee and the nine- LOS ANGELES, Act. 1. INS Midget Walgast, agile flyweight champion of the world, Saturday had proved again to his hstisfac-tion that he can go out of class and win. Wol-gast took a popular decision from Pedro Villaneuva, Mevico City bantamweight, after 10 fast holo tourney.

will be followed with a herst territory. Score Princeton 7 fi 2 Mate supremacy was 111 danger. Score: Ohio State ........14 0 ft 20 34 splash party in the club's pool. About i0 members of the club are expected Amherst .......00 OUT 0 0 0 0 7 to take part in the tourney..

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Pages Available:
1,386,195
Years Available:
1904-1988