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The Marshall News Messenger from Marshall, Texas • 4

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Marshall, Texas
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4
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THE MARSHALL NEWS MESSENGER. MARSHALL, TEXAS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25. 1936 PAGE FOUR nn fo) Jl Ml 1 IIUIM TO 0 o) oil LfU 4,4,4 fr 'fr tv 4,4,4 4,4, J. 4. 4 4 4 4- v-rv PatH For Ricemen Aggies and Baylor Paddle to Scoreless Tie At Wq0 wear iian.esr.na Crashing Into the Picture PittSmashes MotEe Darner gSTp f1 Mud Stops Stars As Teams Remain In Center Field Owh Outplay Steers, Score With Two Minute to Play Fleet Sophomore ,1 Football Scores Jx-i i st I IP) Tex HOU Vith a Jefferson 6.

"Jt 1 tr.eir Western Maryland 32, St. powerful oiled by coitiy foes. the Rice Ov ever tre Lor.shorr.s in Saturday Mary's (Texas) 12. swept Texas Minnesota fe' Shatters With 33-0 Bli Mighty GopherUkjl Play to Wia fy In a Row No Breaks Come to Either Club On Sloppy Gridiron Leads Triumphal March On Micks 70,000 See Iriah 1ke Worst Grid Licking In 22 Year Wichita U. 13, Oklahoma City 6.

Colorado College 14, Colorado won Texas Tech 12, Centenary 6. T. C. U. 0, Miss State 0.

Baylor 0, A. M. 0. Rice 7, Texas 0. Tulsa U.

13, Okla. A. St M. 0. Oklahoma 0, Nebraska 14.

Hardin-Simmons 13, 7. Mines 0. Washington State 3, Oregon 0. U. S.

C. 14, Stanford 7. WACO, Tex. (U.R; Texas A. 'M.

College retained its Southwest Nevada 7, Idaho 6. UCLA 22, Oregon State 13. Washington 13, California 0. L. S.

U. 19, Arkansas 7. El Paso Mines 6, Sul Ross 0. Orangeburg Claflin-18, Voorhees MINNEAPOLIS, flm By HENRY McLEMORE L'niud Press SUff Correspondent PITTSBURGH. (U.R) Led by Marshall Goldbere.

a voune Jew Longview Splashes Texarkana, 20 to 0 Loboes Score Three Times In Last Quarter On Wet Field ish hov who will celebrate his 6. Kansas State 26, Kansas 6. Denver 25, Wyoming 14. Tulane 21, North Carolina 7. sotas mighty Gopher, i the inspired defense rf within eight minutes Salt crushed the BoilermS' with their 21st VrrTgJ' before 4, 830 fan, JV-Stadium.

Minnesota shattered v' high hopes with a ten early in the first quT. scored two in the thirt' more in the fourth 18th birthday Sunday, the Pittsburgh Panthers marched fcur times into the promised land back of Notre Dame's goal posts Saturday to defeat the Irish, 26 to 0. The defeat, the worst suffered by the South Benders since Yale licked them 28 to 0 in 1914, top Conference leadership and a record of no defeats this season as it battled Baylor to a scoreless tie Saturday on a rain-sodden field. Despite the rain, 7.500 spectators shivered in the stands to watch the game which Baylor had hoped would "stop A. contender for the conference championship after being an "under dog" for several years Individual stars, such as Todd of the Aggies and Russell of Baylor, found playing conditions on the muddy field a handicap they could not hurdle to display their usual spectacular style of attack Todd's end plays continually broke up on the sturdy Baylor line.

Russell's passing attempts invariably ended in failure. His long punts were matched by Washington St Lee 13, Virginia 0. Drake 20, Washington Univ. 18. Wichita 13, Oklahoma City 6.

Xavier 12, Texas College 6. McMurray 0, Howard Payne 0, SpaefaU to Nm MatMBg LONGVIEW, (Spl). With Frank Lebus and Captain Jack pled them from the ranks of the undefeated and completely smash Arkansas State 29, Philander Skipper alternating with the ball lugging, the Longview Loboes ed their national championship as Smith 0. Mississippi 14, Catholic U. 0.

splashed out a 26-0 win over the pirations. The Panthers, rallying magnificently from their setback a Southwest onf-renc-f victory, 7 to 0. A crowd 17.000 siw the contest. The teams battled scorc-lessly the i.i.st two minutes of the game. John EeStcn, Rice tackle, intercepted a pass from' Judson Atchison, Texas halfback, on the Owl 33-yard Torn Vickers and Buck Friedman reeled off a f.rst down, Vickeis rr.ade another.

Williams plunged for 6 and a Texts offside penalty gave Rice a first down on Texas' 26. Vickers made 7 and another Texas penalty placed the ball on its own 14 With 'ess than two minutes to go, Jake Schuehle rr.ade 13, and Vickers plunged for the extra yard and a touchdown. Vickers kicked goal. Both teams played such tight defense ball during the first half that there were frequent fumbles, and four passes were intercepted and only two completed out of 13 attempted. At the outset of the game, Schuehle intercepted Atchison's pass and ran it back from his goal to his 27.

Parker, Friedman and Vickers marched the ball to Texas' 20 yard line, but the attack faltered. Wolfe almost got away for a touchdown late in the second period-He plunged off tackle for 24 yards, but was cut down by Neece on Rise's 42. In the same period, Vicke. 5 failed in his attempt for a field goal from Texas' 27-yard line. In the third quarter, Texas was forced to make three goal line stands, but managed to hold off the driving Owls.

Rice lacked the touchdown punch, however, until the last minutes of the game. Warrensburg 20, Missouri Mines at the hands of Duquesne a week ago, executed their rout before a Texas High Tigers, of Texarkana, here Friday night on a sloppy field in a light rain that did not let up. A crowd of scarcely 1,000 0. Morehouse 0, Morris Brown 0. Oglethorpe 20, Emory Henry 0.

crowd of 70,244 which packed ev equally long returns from the Ag-1 In the middle of flu ft-J ter, Minnesota snatched at cepted pass and string of laterals aaT plays that sifted throughfc ermakers for 42 yardi opening touchdown. Bud Wilkinson rambled I to Purdue's 42-yard lint if-; tercepting IsbeU's short his own territory. Julie and Andy Uram made fcr.s-on the 26 in two plays and man Rork smashed tnth.j saw the game. ery seat in the mammoth stadium. Goldberg, a swivel-hipped soph The two Lobo backs had a big A newspaper photographer' life is filled wjth hazards, including such times as when he sticks the schnozzle of his apparatus into a football game G.

Felix, the shutter snapper on the ground at right, was thrown for a 10-yard loss and a wrecked camera when Kal Hirshon, U. C. L. A. back, crashed into him upon being run out of bounds at Washington whipped the Bruins, 14-0.

at the Los Angeles Coliseum. omore with the speed of a deer, Sewanee 0, Tenn. Tech 0. Wiley 18, Southern 0. Southwestern 14, Hendrix 0.

Tennessee 15, Duke 13. night, each making 13 points. Af was the spearhead of a Pitt at tack which functioned with relent ter a scoreless first quarter in which the teams did hardly any less pressure for a full sixty min i thing but exchange punts, Skipper finally broke loose and climaxed utes, and which rammed across a touchdown in each of the second and third periods, and two in the fourth. Notre Dame's famed attack a 70-yard drive with a 13-yard jaunt through left tackle for a counter. His kick was weak.

T.C.U. 'Mississippi State Scoreless On Wet Field No score was made in the third broke completely in the face of a period but early in the fourth the Loboes started another drive that carried to a score. Skipper again Montana 27, Montana State 0. Utah Aggies 23, Utah U. 0.

West Virginia 26, Centre 13. Coe 6, Cornell Col. 0. Dubuqui; 6, 2. KnoxVille 14, Fisk 7.

Auburn 20, Georgia 13. Missouri 10, Iowa State 0. Kansas State 26, Kansas 6. Williams 6, Tufts 0. Butler 9, Wabash 7.

Kentucky State IC 9, Tuskegee Depauw 13, Manchester 7. Holy Cross 7, Carnegie Tech 0. Colgate 41, Lafayette 0. Iowa 18, Iowa Frosh 14. Ohio State 7, Indiana 0.

Dartmouth 26, Harvard 7. Princeton 7, Navy 0. Michigan 13, Columbia 0. gies. The game bogged down in a loblolly in center field and ended with the ball in Baylor's possession on the Aggie 36.

Lineups: Baylor Pos. A. M. Boyd Morrow Left End Blue Young Left Tackle Huessner Routt Left Guard Reynolds Dewarc Center Kriel Phythian Right Guard Parry Whitfield Right Tackle Kimbriel Stages Right End B. Gernand Vitek Quarterback Russell Todd Left Halfback Master Shockey Right Halfback Brazell Cummings Fullback Substitutes: Baylor Patterson, rh; Clark, le; Wood, lh; Bar-tosh, fb; J.

Gernand, re; McDon provided the scoring punch by slicing 'off right tackle, cutting back and skipping 13 for the coun Pitt line which was wicked in is charge. The Irish made only four first downs, and the first one didn't come until the opening of the final period when Pitt was safely out front and its ranks sprinkled with substitutes. Notre Dame gained but 64 yards from scrimmage and was in Pittsburgh territory but once during the afternoon. Pitt, on the other, hand, moved Mississippi nor the governor of Texas oould collect on a bet of a bale of Mississippi cotton against a Texas bale. TCU's Slingin' Sam Baugh, na Rice Position Texas Nance Collins tionally famous passer, was un able to get into the game because Left End of an injury.

The Christians, how Hughes Keeling forward almost continuously. The DALLAS, Tex. (U.R) Mississippi State University's football team invading the Southwest for the first time in several years, fought Texas Christian to a scoreless tie Saturday in a pouring rain, which made a quagmire of the playing field in the Texas Centennial Exposition's Cotton Bowl. The 6,000 spectators who braved the rain appeared forlorn in the huger stadium. Floodlights were turned on during the last half, because of the mur-kiness.

As a result of the scoreless game, neither the governor of Left Tackle ever, had little opportunity to use their usual passing attack because Western Reserve 14, Toledo 0. of the slippery ball. Terry Small left guard. On the first play, Unat' into the line and as a sic Boilermakers hit him, he a lateral to Alfonse, win toward the, opposite sidelitieii fell into the end zone for it down. Wilkinson's try far fel tra point was wide.

Purdue opened the mil by kicking off to Uram. tH turned to the 35. FjHbail Spadaccini made it first fe' the 50, and a forvrard is Uram to King to Antfi, wt ball to the 37. Soadatn the snap from center on fcs play, started around rtjfcti then tossed a lateral to Urta-j bounced into the clear i raced his secondary for 1 1 down. Wilkinson's pla made the score 13 to 0.

After the kickoff, led a desperate drive to t' sota's 40, but Uram again ftr in and intercepted a pis, dashed far downfield to Pit 30 before hit from behind, Uram whipped around It! aj for 20 yards, and Rork scortdj three bucks at left gurir the 10-yard line. Again i son place kicked the point Before the final period three minutes old, Bill SK added the fourth touchdoi a 36-yard sprint over left tv and Larry Buhler, sophonffit i back, scored from the fm line after a quick 42-yard following another pass fc, tion. Faust added thetxWK Ard Arthur Rogers Frankie Forbes Left Guard Center Right Guard Right' Tackle'' TCU punts and rushes drove the ball to the Mississippi 9 in the second period but the Bulldogs punted out. Most of the game was played in the quagmire in mid-field. King Tullos Launey Panther despite the use of three full teams, piled up 15 first downs and gained 306 yards.

They went thr6ugh, around, and over the completely outclassed Ndjtre Dames from start to finish, Pittsburgh made its first scoring threat early in the first period when Goldberg ripped off successive gains of 21 and 14 yards to Notre Dame's 17 yard line. The Irish held, but shortly after Pitt started a drive from its own 24 yard line ancrnnafcled 78 yards for a score. Goldberg was unstop ter. Skipper plunged across nr the conversion, making the count 13-0. Lebus then started his spree with a series of brilliant runs that ended in an 8-yard sprint through left tackle for a score.

The conversion was short. Ted Brannon, Lobo center, blocked a Tiger punt late in the game and fell on it on the Tigers' one. Lebus carried the ball over on the next play and then rammed the center of the line for the point after. That ended the scoring at 26-0. Only the beautiful punting of Egbert Heath kept the Tigers out of more trouble than they found.

He punted 22 times for an average of 38 yards and kept the Wolves away from the door consistently. Tommy Mills was the best defensive man on the field. The big end went into the game as a sub in the first half and stayed in the Lobo backfield until he was taken out in the fourth quarter. He and Heath were the standouts for the Tigers. Right End Penn 48, Brown 6.

N. Y. U. 7, Georgetown 7. De Paul 46, Omaha 0.

Maryland 20, Syracuse 0. Pittsburgh 26, Notre Dame Q. Detroit 20, Manhattan 0. Yale 28, Rutgers 0. Fordham 7, St.

Mary's 6. Cornell 13, Penn State 7. Army 33, Springfield 0. New Hampshire 54, Vermont 0. Villanova 25, Boston 7.

Roanoke 13, W. M. 0. Dickinson 55, Swarthmore 0. Northwestern 13, Illinois 2.

Maine 21, Bates 19. Minnesota 33, Purdue 0. Missouri 10. Iowa State 0. Bears Block Well Schuehle Mittermaver ald, It; Coleman, lg.

A. Jones, re; Hogers, Nesrsta. lh; Pitner, Manning, rh; Coston, Britt, It; Kirby, rt. Referee: Ab Curtis (Texas); umpire, C. Y.

Schwartz, (Rice); field judge, Harold Winters ((Ohio State); linesman, C. J. Alderson, (Texas). Statistics: First downs: Baylor 1, A. it M.

0. Quarter Parker Atchison Left Half To Defeat Lions Arnold Wolfe Louisiana Drives In Rain to Whip Arkansas, 19 to 7 Porkers Fizzle After First Period; Crass On One 75-Yard Trip Gladewater Running Attack Vickers Right Half Friedman Fullback Extra points: Vickers. Substitutes: Rice LE Punts: Baylor 26 for 275 Works Well Against Tylerites North Carolina State 13, VPI 0. Wil- wiarquette 13, Michigan State pable on this drive. With a minute to go in this first period, Bobby LaRue swept the end for 67 yards to Notre Dame's 3 yard stripe, but the whistle blew before Pitt could hammer it over.

The Jewish youngster paved the way for the second Pitt score on the third period kickoff. Taking the ball deep in his own territory, he swept 50 yards to Notre Dame's 41. On the first play, Fullback Stapulis went for a touchdown but 7. GLADEWATER, (Spl). Kentucky 7, Florida 0.

Miami 3. Ohio U. 0. A hard-smashing and superior Besides-Skipper and- Lebus, Gladewater High school eleven Boston College 26, Providence took quick advantage of two tor the Loboes. First downs were Read the Want Bucknell 28, Washington, and! 13-0 for Longview, faulty Tyler plays and added a spectacular broken-field run as liams, LT, Morns; Trice; RG.

Moore: RT, RE, Sleen, Steakley; Q. Cogdeil; LH, Coffee, Neece, Brandon; RH, Rus.li; Hancock. Texas LE, Tippen; Hughs; RG, Naiser, Butler; RE, Peterson; Sheridan, Forney, LH, Lawson; Gilbreath. Referee: Harry Viner, Missoruri. Umpire, J.

C. Higgins. S. M. U.

Head Linesman, C. Ktnney, Mississippi State. Field Judge, R. Fischer, St. Mary's.

Statistics: Rice Tex. First downs they defeated the Tyler Lions IS the play was brought back and Pitt penalized 15 yards. Undis to 7 in a District 9 conference at m. 13 ior eat yaras. Passes completed: Baylor A.

M. 1 for 2 yards. Passes attempted: Baylor 1, A. 4: M. 8.

Passes intercepted: Baylor 2, A. M. 0. Yards gained from rushing: Baylor 36, A. M.

23. Lards lost from rushing: Baylor 15, A. M. 14. Fumbles: Baylor 1, A.

M. 5. Penalties: Baylor 3 for 45 yards, A it M. 1 for 5 yards. WileyCorjslio Southern Victory game here Friday night before a i i 5 I i scant 1,500 crowd.

SHREVEPORT, La. (U.R) Undeterred by a driving rain, Louisiana State University pounded the University of Arkansas for a 19 to 7 defeat Saturday, in a football contest featuring the opening of the Louisiana State Fair. A crowd of 17,000 sat in the rain to watch the game. Arkansas threatened constantly in the scoreless first period, then LSU opened a touchdown drive in the second period which brought mayed, Stapulis flipped a pass Hoffman, right end, who took it on Notre Dame's 30 and went down the middle for a score. Dad-dlo failed on the conversion this time.

LaRue went off tackle for 39 It was Tyler's opening conference game, while it was Glade-water's third win in conference play. The field was wet but not sog THE ANSWER TO YOUR HEATING PROBLEMS -for- ADTO! lotai line plays 55 38 191 34 two scores and a third shortly after the third period opened. Despite the rain, both teams re 157 14 2 lied on an open style of play. The first Louisiana score came after gy. From the time the Gladewater line rushed a Tyler back and smothered him as he fumbled behind the goal line in the second quarter, Gladewater had a good scoring advantage.

A moment later, Tyler's safety scraped his knees across the ball after a punt and allowed Gladewater to cover the ball, which ultimately resulted in another score. xards gamea by rushing 243 Yards lost by rushing .41 Net yards gained by rushing 202 Passes tried .....14 Passes completed 4 Intercepted by 5 Yards gained by passing 60 Punts 5 Punting iiver (yds.) 39 Penalties 2 Yard) lost by penalties .30 a pass by Coffee, fullback, to Aerial and Interceptions Help Wildcats In Louisiana Tinsley, left end, carried the ball to the Arkansas 4-yard line and 1 22 7 30 11 123 yards to start Pitt's next touchdown drive. He was aided and abetted by Notre Dame's quarterback, O'Reilly, who with the ball on his own 42, took a punch at Pitt's center, Hensley, and the Irish were penalized down to their 13, despite the argument put up by Coach Elmer Layden, who ran out on the field. A few plays later Goldberg skipped through right tackle for the score and Souchak converted. John Wood, halfback, gave Pitt its final score when he intercepted a desperation pass late in the final period and, behind beautiful blocking, went 45 yards without a hand being laid on him.

Milner darted around end for the goal. Coffee converted. Late in 8pclal to tht Nrwi Ktwnfif Gladewater's final tally came the period, Rohm, substitute back, carried the ball to the Arkansas in the third as the result of Ash' ton's 74-yard run. Tyler only marker came at the one-yard line from his own 42 and Crass bucked across to score. Crass scored the third touchdown ith a spectacular 75-yard Fordham Defeats St.

Mary's, 7 to 6 outset of the fina' period, when "Goodyear" Auto Heaters Years and years of experimenting were necessary to perfect the Goodyear Heater but it finally broujht forth an "Auto Heater" that surpasses them all GOODYEAR IS THE MAKER so it must be goodl It is good! ffo matter what claims you hear about others Just as good See this one before you buy I Argyle Tucker broke loose off right tackle and scampered down the north side of the line for 68 SCOTLANDVILLE. La. Coach Long and his spectacular Wiley Wildcats, of Marshall, Texas, decisively defeated the battling Southern University Tigers 1R-0 Spr-urday before a crowd that braved a steady rain. It was Wiley third conference game. Saturday's muddy affair was made a Wildcat victory by a 15-yard run by McCrimmon" In the first quarter; Cnpt.

Thomas' snagging a pass whipped over the heads of the Tiger secondary by Halfback Robinson, in the third quarter; and the contribution by Robinson, who intercepted one of yards and a touchdown. After Throughout the game. Glade REYNOLDS SMITH IS TEXARKANA MEDALIST Passes Save Record Gaels Boot Two Field Goals water's powerful running attack left little doubt as to which team run soon after the third period began. The kick for extra point was wide. Arkansas' only touchdown resulted om a pass in the fourth period, which an LSU substitute batted into the hands of Brown, fullback.

Brown ran five yards to scote. Sloan converted. Arkansas made 17 first downs to 11 for I.SU. was superior. They smashed off the two tackle posts for gains time after time, marking up a total of TEXARKANA, Tex.

(U.B) Reynolds Smith, of Dallas, Walker Cup golfer, advanced to the semifinals of the Texarkana country 12 urst downs as compared to NEW YORK. -uf Striking in the first field Tyler's six. 'BraBantfire1 Space Heaters And you'd better check up on your af Umi nAcr wea- ii club invitation tournament Sat- urday sifter taking medal honors OHIO STATE UPHOLDS WW MISS SAENGER MEETS FORT WORTH CHAMPION FOR FEM GOLF TITLE RECORD WITH INDIANA ii 1 1 west. i-ynnarn pre its perfect fiviiror. SMunby a 7-6 vi'tory over St.

Mary's in a 1 ui'1-. K.m.e at the Polo Ground; txfore a capacity crowd cf A pass, from Quarterback Andv Pabu to Hank Ja run ski, a substi HVUIt. WClViE VVf.v.-- ther comes. An ineffective heater can be quite expensive in the wasting or ftiel The favorite economy buy of the season is the new "Brightf ire" It will last for years and save you many dollars cost on the fuel bill. We urge you to see this line I the i'elican State passes to streak CO yards for the final score tin-fourth quarter.

Wiley failed to convert after either touchdown. The first two quarters of the game the Louisianans outplayed the visitors despite the fi-0 score at the half, but in the Inst two chapters the Texans unleashed a real Wildcat attack and subdued a team which, earlier in the season, spanked Wiley's ami enemy, Bishop College. Monday of this week the Wildcats played Prairie View at the Centennial and won 7-0; Saturday they beat Southern: this week the nation's busiest eriddon wnrit with a par 73. He eliminated J. K.

Wadley. Texarkana veteran, 4 and 3, and defeated Whitney Harb 4 and 3 in the quarter-finals. Sunday he will play Jimmy McGonaglll of Dallas, who defeated Misk Over-street 5 and 4 in the quarterfinals. Other semi-flnalists were BUI Clark of Cason, who won a 7 and 8 victory over Vance Lid-dell of Shreveport, In the quarter-finals; and Don Schumacher, Dallas, Texss champion, who eliminated Paul Reverra, of Texarkana 7 and 5. COLUMBUS, O.

0J.F3 Ohio State maintained a 12-year record against Indiana University here Saturday when it turned back the Hoosier eleven, 7 to 0. A crowd of 44,410 watched the Bucks score their first western conference triumph. Wells In Northwest New Mexico produce the highest grade of oil obtainable in commercial FORT WORTH, Tex. (U.B Miss Edna Saenger of Shrevepori I-, and Mrs. Frank Goldthwalte ftf Fort Worth will meet Sunday tn the 36-hole finals of the Texss Women's Golf Association tournament.

Miss Saenger advanced to the finals Saturday with a 3 and 2 tute end, tied the score. A conversion by Palau put the Rams ahead and they held their slim advantage through three periods of savage play. The victory over the highly favored green and red-uniformed players from California's Moraga Valley was the fourth straight this season for Fordham and it kept alive In the New York team's hope of playing in the annual East-West Tournament of Roses game In Pasadena. victory over Mrs. David Gaut of Memphis.

while Mrs. Gold WA thwaite was defeating Mrs. E. R. Joshu; Reynolds, Thomas Ludwig von Beethoven, and miry of San Antonio 5 and 3.

The finals will be Dlayed over I l' hard to be in top shape for their game with Arkansas State, who have not lost a game so far and who recently turned back Southern University, 16-6. The termite queen, which may live five or 10 years, lays eggs without stopping, day and night, at Harriett Martineau were among deaf persons whose lives were the River Crest Country Club rcurse, soggy from an all-dsy 309-313 West Houston Dial 4233 the rate of one every 2Vi second. notably successfuL ram..

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About The Marshall News Messenger Archive

Pages Available:
595,300
Years Available:
1919-2024