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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 25

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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25
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IDGraphic Weekly. Editor-tat 2Snorting, Autos, Markets. Beal Estate. 3Metropolitan. 4Comics.

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4 far go Frank Froschauer, Illinois ball' back, plunges off tackle for a small gain before he is stopped by Koenig, Wisconsin center (No. 46) and fellow conspirators in Big Ten battle at Champaign yesterday. No. 33 is Bobby Schiller, Badger halt back, but Froschauer didn't enough for Schiller to tackle him. The Illinois team, uncovering a versatile attack directed skillfully by Jack Beynon of Rockford, surprised even the Homecoming day crowd by piling up a 21-0 victory over Wisconsin.

tTKIDEINE Photo. pw: 3 i I it iJ IL- 1 A 4, T7 1 1 1 I 1, 4). 2'4' A EVERIIARMIS IS LEADER IN ROUT Yale ounds and L. Line; VI ins, 14 to 0 Second String Backs Batter Gophers' Line BADGER ATTACIt HALTED Sit LINE OF SCRIMMAGE lifills CARDINAL ON I YARD LINE AS 11111.F ENDS 11111110011 BACKS RU11 VIILD FOR 40 TO 0 TRIUMPH 6,5 i 1 I A .,1 AT i 4...., 4 04 re II i I m. 3t.

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4 4, i 1 7 Ai i 1 '''--1- i 4'''', 14,44, A 1 Flkuelt 1, 'A A. H. Daniels, acting president of the University of Illinois (left), and Gov. Henry Horner watch the home team defeat VI iSCOnSin.S Badgers, 21 to 0, yesterday at Champaign. 111111113VE Ph( to.1 Gary Boys Lead Notre Dame To Victory Over New Haven.

Oct. 14.In a jovial, neighborly football scene, enlivened by the collegiate pranks of a lot of young Ya les in clownish mood and costume. Yale's team won from Washington and Lee of Lexington. Suh. In the Yale bowl this afternoon.

Yale made two touchdowns and two placements thereafter for a score of 14 to O. There were about 20.000 witnesses. Including a group of uniformed orphan boys from the local county home who brought their band and tootled strident parade music on behalf of the southern party who. for reasons all too familiar and unhappy, derided to leave their own varsity brass ware at home. It chanced that some alumnus of Washington and Lee had come along in his career to the superintendency of this orphanage and he turned out the kids to pull against themselves In a very trying problem In loyalty, for they were the guests of Yale but strutting their art and their footwork in the interests of the 'boss' alma meter.

Penalty Helps Yale. The score might have been held as It7iNv as to 0., a. figure wlitch the southern young men, in their humility would have regarded as a moral standoff, if not a victory. But along in the third period one or more of the Washington and Lee linemen were caught off side On a play which probably made the difference. The first Yale touchdown wound up a progress of 54 yards early In the second quarter.

They had been tussling along on fairly even terms throughout the first session. although the Yales had a superior look and manner about them. Just before the rest period, Lassiter. the Yale captain and left half back; dropped a punt as he started to fetch it bb.11e. He made the catch on his own SO 34.td had pgroan; 1 i angfewansdtridtebseyibhaelni a'mndetd out of his grasp to be BY WILFRID SMITH.

(Pictures on page 3, Sports.) Tribune Press Serviee-1 Minneapolis, Oct. 111.Purdue's varsity fenced with a giant Minnesota team this afternoon, yielding continuously throughout the first half and finally going down one touchdown. But in the fourth period, when the driving power of the Minnesota attacle had vanished, a Purdue second team back field staged a vigorous line as sault which smashed through the Gophers for 37 yards and a touchdown. The final score was Minnesota, 7: Purdue, the Boilermakers' tying point having been scored by Quarter, Back Paul Pardonner, who returnee tb the game for thrtt purpose. Considering Purdue's pre-seasoni hopes, the tie today may be as disastrous as the 7 to 7 contest last season with Northwestern which prevented Purdue from claiming a share of the Western Conference championship.

But as tor'ay's game was played the Boilermakers must return thanks for the tie. Third Rush Pays Off. Three times In the first half Minnesota rushed downfield, shoving' the 1m. Purdue linemen aside, and whlle the avalanche was stopped on the first two spurts Minnesota could not be denied its touchdown, which with Bill Bevan's place-kick sent the Gophers to the lockers at the half leading 7 to O. Purdue never threatened until Its scoring march at the start of the fourth quarter.

The deadlock is the second of the season for Minnesota, which ended its first conference game with Indiana one week ago. 6 to 6- Today's attendance. as bellowed over the loudspeaker system just before the end of the game, was 26,497, a gain of some 8,000 over last year's figures, which indicated the enthusiasm this year's Minnesota team had aroused In this region. Thousands In the concrete stand disagreed vociferously with the officiating, since all penalties except one were levied on the Gophers, and when Bob Termer. a Gopher end, was called for Interfering with Fardonner on a Minnesota forward pass, many evidenced a desire to take over the officiating on the basis of popular vote.

BY STEWART OWEN. IChirsgo Tribune Press Fervieel Champaign, Oct. 14. --Illinois question mark football team straight. ened Itself out into a Mg, black ex.

clamation point to punctuate a stirring 21 to 0 victory over Wisconsin at the Il lint's 24th annual home coming game In Memorial stadium today. It was the first home coming victory for the Orange and Blue since 1929, and bore out predictions that Illinois this year would be represented by its strongest team in four years. While an Illinois victory had not been unlooked for. the size of the score and the superiority which the Mint evidenced over the Dadgers this afternoon was a startling upset. The Mini outclassed the supposedly-stronger and more experienced Cardinal eleven In every department of the game and after the first quarter, when Wisconsin made its only sustained attack: the Illinois goal line was not threatened until late In the final quarter when a team of reserves was backed up deep In Its own territory.

7 Beynon biretta Mtack. Illinois' victory maybe attributed to hard charging, clean tackling line, a hard running back and some of the finest generalship witnessed on a Big gridiron. While Frank Froschauer, Dave Cook, and Les Lindberg did the touchdown scoring, it was the excellent judgment of little Jack Bey-nun, junior quarter back from Rockford. that was a great factor In the victory. Beynon mixed passes judiciously with his running attack and the first Illinois touchdown came on the old Illinois flea-flicker play.

which Beynort. Freddy Frink, and Froschauer executed perfectly as soon as the Mint moved into Wisconsin territory for the first time. Beynon was quick to take advantage of such breaks that came Illinois's way, and the smart. ness with which he directed his eleven Is attested in part by the difference in first downs made by the two teams. When Figures Lie.

I College Football I 1 BY IRVING VAUGHAN. (Picture on page 3. Sports.) The purple of Northwestern and the farning cardinal of Leland Stanford blended in a drab, scoreless tie before 28,000 yesterday at Soldiers' field. There was power in both elevens but It was att defensive, so they ran, plunged and passed sparingly through their flO minutes of play. with the Californians making two scoring threats and Northwestern compensating for this by piling up more yardag.e both in the air nnd on the ground.

But the Purple never came close. The cardinal clad back feld, which, behind a powerful line, swept three California rivals into the discard. wasn't able to get started. Here and there were limited gains but there was none of the swashbuckling. daring end runs that lift an ordinary football battle into a spectacle.

The Northwestern defenders, partieWarly the ends, were too shifty to permit such demonstrations of prowess. Purple Passes Puzzle Foe. 'rile Purple attack, although never suthviently sustained to drive the Cardinals into the worry Zone. at least furnished the invaders with few football lessons. The Californians were repeatedly annoyed by the Northwest-erns insistence on mixing lateral with forwat'd passes and varying It occasionally by leaving out the lateral feature entirely.

It Is highly probable that Stanford saved itself considerable embarrassment by Intercepting five of its foe's twelve attempts by air. Another item with which the fornians had to cope after Northwestern recovered its wind in the second half was Harry Leeper. the fleet footed youth who sprang into regular 1 employment as the result of the shakeup VI the wake of the defeat by Iowa. When the Wildcats were going at their best just as the final period started. Leeper rolled the Cardinal back 16 yards with an erd run but the benefits of this were lost a moment later when a Northwestern pass was intercepted on Stanford's 26 yard line.

Fumble Helps Cardinals. It wasn't altogether Stanford's skill that enabled it to make the first of Its two serious thrusts. With the second period almost over. Olson fumbled and the Californians recovered on the Purple 20 yard line. In three plays the Cardinals charged up to the one yard mark but the Wildcats held on the next down and the pistol, marking the end of the barked before another play could be made.

Stanford's other bid was on a pass which went wild in the end zone in the early part of the third period. Icorthwestern's advantage In yards gained from scrimmage was 125 in 60 attempts against 90 in 49 attempts. Of Its 12 passes. 5 were completed for a 40 yard Stanford completed one pass In seven for a ten yard gain and two of its tosses were Intercepted. Northwestern led in first downs by 9 to 6 and had a big edge in penalties.

The Purple was shoved that enabled it to make the first of Its two serious thrusts. With the sec- period almost over, Olson fumbled and the Californians recovered on the Purple 20 yard line. In three plays the Cardinals charged up to the one yard mark but the Wildcats held on the next down and the pistol, marking end of the half; barked before an- other play could be made. Stanford's other bid was on a long pass which went wild in the end zone in the early part of the third period. Icorthwestern's advantage in yards gained from scrimmage was 125 in 60 attempts against 90 in 49 attempts.

Of Its 12 passes. 5 were completed for 40 yard advance. Stanford corn- pleted one pass In seven for a ten yard gain and two of its tosses were Intercepted. Northwestern led in first by 9 to 6 and had a big edge in penalties. The Purple was shoved BY CHARLES BARTLETT.

(Pictures on page 3, Sports.) 'Chicane Tribune Press Service. Ann Arbor, Oct. 14.The big bad Wolverines of Michigan, shedding the sheep's clothing with which they have been deceiving their own pub-lie this last month this afternoon chawed up a band of nice. well behaved students from Cornell university by the brutal score of 40 to 0 at Michigan stadium. More than 35,000 Maize and Blue supporters shuddered during the carnage.

and thereby for. got their own shudders about next Saturday's dreaded game with Ohio State. Michigan showed a precision and power which almost made last week's mediocre decision over Michigan State seem a hoax. It was the same brand of football which has been manufacturing conference championships at Ann Arbor for the last three years. The boys who didn't look so hot last Saturday were verily ablaze today, and the entire team (for.

everybody and his brother and his cousin broke Into the Wolverine lineup before the game was overl, let Ot that it Will tolerate nu abuse, if any, from the mighty Buckeyes In the first conference game of the season here next Saturday. Everhardus Scores 21. It should be pointed out once more, of course, that the Cornell boys were just so many nice boys who were outweighed and outsmarted before the game started, and did nothing to refute these handicaps during the contest. Nevertheless, the victory was sweet to Michigan fans, for Cornell, an Ann Arbor foe from 'way back when, had won 10 of the previous 15 games played against the Wolverines. A flying Dutchman from Kalamazoo, Herman Everhardus, scored 21 points personally.

One was made on a 62 yard break from tackle, another on a 91'yard sprint with the opening kick off of the second half, and a third on a pass from Capt. Fay. The latter. playing far better than he did in the Michigan State game, scored a touchdown of his own, and John Begeczt, the Muskegon Heights Magyar, In addition to punting all over the place, broke out of a kick formation and went 79 yards for a touchdown. despite the clutching hands of almost every Cornell party on the field.

10 First Downs to The statistics are sufficient testi mony of the Michigan power, which will be felt throughout the conference if today's pace is maintained. The Wolverines scored, ten first downs against Cornell's two, and made 385 yards by rushing against the Red's 58. Ten out of eighteen Michigan passes were completed. a majority' of them from the paw of Bill Benner. Renner tossed one to Mike Malashevich, a substitute end, for the sixth touchdown, a pitch which sailed 85 yards across the field.

Cornell corn! pleted none of ten passes attempted. negeczi and Everhardus, who did the Michigan Tcking. averaged 27 yards, as did Ferraro and Switzer of Cornell. St. Louis, Oct.

jerseyed Maroon ball carriers ran loose all over Francis field this afternoon as the University of Chicago football team, contrary to predictions, rolled up 40 points to Washington university's O. Five touchdowns resulted from long runs by the shifty Chicago backs and a sixth score climaxed a 41 one yard march. The outcome was the more surprising since Washington's Dears had held Illinois to a two touchdown margin of victory the previous Saturday, and it set up the Chicago-Purdue game to be played at Stagg neld next Saturday as something like an even contest. The first Chicago team, although playing most of the contest, came through with only minor hurts. Zimmer, Wells Slightly Hurt.

Capt. Pete Zimmer, tackled hard during a 30 yard sprint in the third quarter, was taken out of the game, but showed no ill effects. Rainwater Wells, right end, took a crack on the head early in the contest, and, though dazed for half an hour, recoveren to watch his team mates score their last two touchdowns. A crowd of 9,000, watching this first match between the two schools, cheered the sturdy Washington line twice In the first quarter when tne Bears repulsed Chicago's attempts to smash over the goal line, once from the six yard mark with four downs to do it in, and again from the seven yard line, also with four tries. One of these scoring opportunities resulted from Nyquist's 46 yard dash through tackle on a reverse play.

The other came when Zimmer passed 21 yards to Berwarger. A third Chicago drive in the first period came to naught wnen Barton Smith let a 80 yard pass from Zimmer trickle out of his hands on Washington's 2 yard line. Berwanger Goes Over. Starting again from the 41 yard fine the Maroons smashed their way to their first touchdown, which came In the second quarter, using straight line plays, with Berwanger, Wallace, and Nyquist alternating, interspersed with one pass, from Flinn to Berwanger for 10 yards. Berwanger required four plunges to make the last live yards.

Thereafter the game was ripped wide open by runs and passes. Meanwhile the Maroon line, hitherto a question mark, resisted every effort by Washington to advance the ball. Long Pass Brings Touchdown. Chicago's second touchdown resulted from a long forward pass. Jay Derwanger, workhorse of the Maroon team, heaved the ball from his :5 yard line into the outstretched arms of VIII Sahiln, who bad outrun the Washington secondary to past midfield.

Sahlin galloped 88 yards to the goal, weaving to elude tacklers who were overtaking him. Washington then made its only first down to the half, a daring if not wild effort starting from the 20 yard line, and encouraged to try it again, gave Pete Zimmer his chance to show the handsomest legs of the day. Zboyovski, Bear quarter back, tossed a pass straight into the arms of Zimmer, WEST. Michigan, 41; Cornell, O. Northoesiern, Stanfo'rd, 0.

Notre Dame, 12; Indiana, 2. Ohio State, 20; Vanderbilt, O. I'urtlue, Minnesota, 7. Illinois, 21; NVisconsin, O. Chicago, 10; Vashington L.

Louis, O. Nebraska, 20; Iowa State, O. Kansas State, 33; Missouri, O. EAST. Yale, 11; Washington anti Lee, O.

Princeton, 15; AVilliams, O. 'Harvard, 34; New Hampshire, O. Dartmouth, 14; Rates, ()- Army, 52; Delaware, O. Pittsburgh, 31; Navy, 6. SOUTH.

(Continued on page 7, column 8.) BY EDWARD BURNS. Chicago Tribune Pre 3tiNervicci Bloomington, Oct. 14.Two Gary lads, Nick Lukats, who did his prepping some time back at Froebel, and Don Elser, late of Horace Mann, each scored a touchdown for Notre Dame today to give the South warriors a 12 to 2 victory over their Hoosier adversaries, Indiana university, before contributed his part to the All-Hoosier festival by racing 53 yards to wipe out a 2 to 0 advantage which the I. IL fellows had acquired on a safety resulting from Bill Shakespeare's fumble in the first 30 seconds of the contest. Eiser did his scoring on a ten yard dash midway in' the final quarter, but this was far from being his sole accomplishment.

He was a ripsnorter offensively and defensively most of the time he was at work. User carried the ball 84 yards on 17 tries and Lukats negotiated 61 yards in 11 tries, his 53 yard jaunt obviously constituting the bulk of his success. Pane, Leads in Gains. Neither of the Gary lads carried away yardage honors, however. This distinction went to Andy Hunch Pilney.

Lukatss first string alternate. Pilney, as all Chicago prep fans know, was a star for Harrison Tech, and today, as they do not know but may have artnised, he gained 93 yards in 11 attempts, two of which were failures, for an average gain of eight and one-half yards per try. Notre Dame partisans, alarmed by suspicions that Notre Dame football prestige is endangered by the potentialities of the current outfit, got little to calm them in the first quarter today. Afterwards the boys got to clicking and never really had to open up. But just the same there was little about the offensive today aside from the work of Elser and Pilney to throw the Notre Dame followers into fits of ecstasy.

0,1 At times Notre Dame looked downright -clumsy, an observation that is supported by numerous fumbles, rarely Georgia, 20; North Carolina, O. Georgia Tech, in; Alabama, Poly, 6. Tu lane, 20; Maryland, O. Oklahoma, Texas, O. Texas Christian; 20; Simmons, 0.

FAR WEST. Southern California, 14; St. Diary's, Oregon, Washington, O. NVashington State, 13; Montana, 7. California, 23; Olympic Club, O.

OTHER, SCORES ON YOLLOWING PAGE. I Iowa Freshman Player. Dies of Football Wisconsin made eight first downs to only three for Illinois. but this advantage in statistics does not tell the story. Beynon took advantage of a strong wind and excellent, accurate punting to keep the Badgers deep in their own territory during the second and third quarters Wisconsin wasted Its man power early in the game attempting to advance the ball by a driving attack through the line, when punting, with a gale to carry the ball, might have been served to better advantage.

Despite the difference in first downs, Illinois gained 217 yards from scrimmage to 146 for Wisconsin, and scored two of its touchdowns on long runs. Froschauer galloping 32 yards on the forward-lateral flea-flicker play for the flrst, and Lindberg loping 74 for the final score. In the matter of punting, the II lint were superior. both in updance and accuracy. BEknon and Timer Fools Everybody.

Then, too, lack of cooperation beond tween the timekeeper and the score. board completely smothered what might have been a climax with each striving to break the tie. The huge sign at the north end of the gridiron showed four minutes to go. when with-the out warning the subdued pop of the timer's pistol carried weakly to the stands. The boys stood around, scarcely believing the game was over and willing to argue that it was a mistake.

But the referee marched solemnly toward the sideline and the players dispersed without demon. stration. there being no particular ma casion for exuberance by the Gophers, who should have won, or by Purdue. which bad hoped to win. The unofficial timer on the Minnedowns sota bench reported afterward that his watch had two minutes 4r.nd 45 seconds back 40 yards for four rule infrac to run to complete the minutes, and Iowa City, Oct.

15 Sunday. (SpecialArthur Ehlers of Oetwein, 21 year old freshman football player at the University of Iowa, died in the university hospital at 12:55 this morning following a second operation for Injuries to the head suffered In practice last Thursday. Ehlers, who never regained consciousness after being straight armed while attempting a tackle against the third team, was operated on Immediately after his injury. He suffered a recurrence of hemorrhages last night and a second operation was ordered. He died on the operating table.

Ehlers was a tackle and a graduate of Oelwein High school, where he competed In both football and basketball. observed on a Notre Dame team 'under Ideal weather conditions such as prevailed for this game. The Irish also were assessed 70 yards in penalties, including two in tough jams for holding, the penalty most resented by the Notre Dame coach. Statistics Al! Irish Though they failed to awe the populace with their precision and skill, Notre Dame can ponder the statistics with few apologies. The South Benders gained 292 yards by rushing against 30 for the Hoosiers.

Notre a tf Continued on page 6, column 6.1 (Continued on page 7 column 6.) Montinued on page 5, column 4. Continued on page 6, column 5.1 (Continued on page 4, column 61 (Continued on page 7, column 5.) 1. AJ.

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