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Chicago Tribune du lieu suivant : Chicago, Illinois • 27

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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27
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$4,. a 'y )) 4 4- 94 0. II IlirSEMIN Stop Olson! That was the cry of Illinois supporters in the Northwestern game at Dyche stadium yesterday whenever they saw No. 25 take the ball. The Illini slowed up the blond N.

U. sophomore on this play in the frst quarter, but later in the period 011ie got his revenge, goirg through the line for a touchdown- OISOn'S great punling (one of his kicks traveled 80 yards) was a feature of Northwestern's 32 to 6 victory. ITRIBMSE Photo.) IMBERS RUNS 55 YARDS WITH 111ISCONSETS HOPES OF TITLE RENTNER RUNS 66 YARDS TO START WILDCATS' EARLY EIIP LEAHY AND SHWARTZ WREAK IRISH VENGEANCE ON CARNEGIE Maroons Near Big 1 0 Upset for First Half Fay Speeds to 2Touchdowns; Michigan Wins BO At 'Em, Wildcats! COLLEGE FOOTBALL I For Old Grads I i NOHTWIS ESTERN I131. ILLINOIS tab M000ko L. rink a.

Forms Effirebrelses os.pirkel MrDona14 Refit Is Evans H. Perkins Starytt R. flunk Tend swam" K. a rriner Pottce Berry IL IL Elo ono Schalk I Moor. Rentner Olson Moor.

Rent new Olson WISCONSIN 0. MINNESOTA II. I Haworth Teeter 1 Bratton L. 1 Gay Kabat L. Munn C1 Kruger Stein Kranhold R.

Dennerly Cuthbert R. Boland Lossbin a Robinson Goldenberg Q. Somers Einfor L. Ull McGuire R. W.

Haas Schneller Menders Tonehdowns--Manders. Munn. Points after touchdownMantiers 121. SubstitutionsMinnesotaMacDougall for Somers. Detmerly for Koski.

Wells for Gay. Oe for Stein. Champlin for MacDougall, Reibsen for Wells, Kroll for Reihsen. Ander. son for Teeter.

Nelson for Robinson. Swarts for Haas. ItisconsinSch4ler for McGuire. Cuthbert for Bretton. Beget for Haworth.

Catlin for torshin. Kundert for Linfor. Strain for Saintlier, Nelson for Goldenberg. Elliker for Schiller. Edwards for Kranhold.

McGuire for Elliker. Lowsnin for Catlin. Referee James Masker Northwestern. Field JudgeM. P.

Gh.e Dartmouth. vireJohn Chicago. Head linesmanFerry Gravels plieblesnl. CoacheeTrits Crtslee. Glenn Thistlethwalte.

Wisconsin. WEST. 32; Illinois. (L Ohio State, 13; Indiana, 6. Purdue, 14; Chicago, 6.

Iowa, George Washington, 0. Minnesota, 14; Wisconsin, O. Syracuse, 15; Michigan State, 1, Iowa State, 13; Oklahoma, 12. Oklahoma Aggies, 13; Kansas, 1. Nebraska, 10; 3lissouri, 'Z.

EAST. Notre Dame, 19; Carnegie Tech, 0 Cornell, 13; Columbia, O. Pittsburgh, 41; Penn Et, Harvard, 19; Virginia, O. Yale, 33; Dartmouth, 33. Army, 27; Colorado, O.

Navy NV. Virginia Wesleyan, O. Oregon, 14; New York 6. Michigan, 21; Princeton. O.

Kansas Aggies, 19; West Virginia, O. SOUTII. Vanderbilt, 49; Georgia Tech, T. Alabama, Kentucky, 7. Georgia, 33; Florida, 6.

Tennessee, 25; Duke. 2. Texas Christian, Arkansan, O. Southern Methodist, 9: Texas, 7. Baylor, 32; Texas Tech, O.

Tulane, 59; Mississippi Aggies, 7. Texas Aggies, Centenary, O. FAH WEST. California, 25; Nevada, 6. 51ontans 37; Montana State, 6.

Stanford, 12; California south branch, 6. Washington State, Oregon State, 6. Washington, 77: Whitman, O. Utah, 60; Colorado Aggies 6. OTHER SCOIMS ON FOLLOWING PAGE) IronehdownoRentser Olson.

Eottet t2j. Jindrkb, Yank. Points snot louchdcrons Olson. brollies SubsetstIonst Northwesters rylar fog Manske. Diller for Engebretsen.

Eroberg for Me Donaid, Ball for Ireful. Lewis for Potter. fluimetels for Moore. Bernal' for Bornstein. Toaster for Sullivan for ler.

O'Meara for bloore. Jens for El bar, Rost. bad for Jens. W. Kiley for d.

Kiley. Is Rococo for fritsilty for Evans. Youngberg for triseviity. for Batt, rhisien for aindrieti. Mritin for Lewis.

Kap einet for Menlo. Lenhardt for O'Meara. As. gamins for Olson. for Farina.

O'Keefe for Bedtko. Straw for terkins. Schestek for Marrtner. Suavely for Schalk, Cook toe Evans. Pallier for Er Ink Gorenstels for Now, Jebel.

Citroen for Mahler. Morgan for Snavely. ILefereoDr. P. 1E Lambert Mille.

D. Knight IDartmoutbi. Yield JudgeBeier Morton IMkbrnn. Bend linesmanLes Daniels Loyola'. ConchesNorthwestern.

Dirk Hanley; tiro nois, Robert C. EutoSks. BY WILFRID i (Picture on page 3. sports.) For thirty minutes yesterday afternoon at Et agg field Chicago's Maroons were on the trail of the greatest upset of the Western conference football schedule. At the end of that time Chicago led Purdue, 6 to 0, but after the rest period.

Roy Horstmann, Fred Hecker and Jim Purvis took charge of the Boilermaker offensive. They lugged the ball around the Maroon flanks until two touchdowns were manufactured. which, with Paul Pardonner's drop kicks for the extra points, gave Chicago a 14 to 6 Bolling. Five a rather inflated estimate, watched the game. The attendance.

was a new low for conference competition, but faithful adherents of the Maroons and several hundred visitors from Lafayette. were rewarded with one of the best games played at the Midway in recent years. It is true that Purdue's score did not represent the superiority of its running ttack. Where the Maroons gained only 09 yards from scrimmage, the Boilermakers were up near the 400 mark. From this immense yardage, however.

Purdue could only score twice. its other marches being frustrated either by errors in judgment or Chicago's defense. which twice turned back the invaders within the 20 yard line. Few Forward Passes. Neither team utilized the forward pass to any extent.

Purdue had no reason to pass, for most of Its running plays. directed wide because of Chicago's tightly drawn line, gained as designed. Four times Purdue passed. but it completed none. One of the passes was intercepted.

frustrating an offensive deep in Chicago territory, while another sailed into the end zone, where it was batted down by alert Maroon defenders. Chicago tried three passes, two of which were euccessful for 16 yards. This added to the yardage from running plays gave Chicago a net gain ifor the afternoon labor of SS yards. Against Tale and Indiana. which conteets Cbicago lost by top-heavy BY WESTBROOK copyright: 1931: By The Chicaso Tribunt.) Princeton, N.

J. Oct. beat Princeton this afternoon, 21 to O. in a quiet, compact football game which moved along like a modest little police.court trial in which the defendant says, that yes, he did It. as charged by the and takes his 30 days without surprise or Michigan scored three touchdowns v.ith the consequent extra points against it team of kitten Tigers who were for the mott part eager juveniles up from last year's freshman squad.

The crowd, which grew to about 000 as the first quarter moved along, was deposited mainly on the Michigan side of the horseshoe structure behind the Michigan band. which out-bugled Princeton's unpretentious outfit by a loud margin and outspelled them in the marching formations. Tigers Fail to Get First Down. The game was the first meeting of the two schools since a day along about this time of the year In 1881 when Michigan's team came east and The game was not really a contest. Princeton achieved a net loss of 7 yards rushing the ball to Michigan's gain of 201 yards, and the Tigers were unable to score a single first down, much less a touchdown.

The line play was the only phase of the Princeton effort In which the team resembled the Princeton teams of former years. The youngsters fought like fanatics from tackle to tackle on the defense. Fake Place Kick Works. So Innocent these young men were that in the second period the Michigan boys deceived them with a revival of a play as old as East Lynne, this being the fake place kick. In this case, with the ball on fourth down just inside Princeton's 40 yard line.

Fay knelt down and took the pass from center. Three young Princetonians Intruded right away to block a kick and flung themselves at Newman just as his feet swept through in a mock swipe for field goal. Pay then hopped up. tore off to his rizht as far as the side line, re BY STEWART OWEN(Picture on pogo 3, aports.) Northweetern's football team just keeps on rolling along. It roiled past the second milestone in its march to a Big Ten football championship yesterday by crushing Illinois.

32 to 6. at Dyche stadium before a crowd of 40.000. It started Its rolling early and kept It up more or less until the final gun had ended the game after twilight had settled down over the gridiron. As the Northwestern machine rolled along. encountering only feeble resistance from a weak but willing Illinois eleven.

it rolled up a total of 14 first downs to six for the Illini and a yardage of 354 to 126 for Its opponents. And its rolling activities were varied. Wildcats Ease Up. It scored from scrimmage and It scored from a kickoff and it scored 1ora passes. crossing the Illini goal line four times In the first quarter before the Wildcats decided to rest on their laurels and let the rest of the game take care of Itself.

The game was only a minute old when Pug Rentner, Purple half back. galloped 86 yards for a touchdown and less than ten minutes of the first quarter had passed when he wezit out of the game with Northwestern holding a comfortable lead of 25 points. sharing with Rentner in the honors for brilliant performances were George Potter. quarter back. and 011ie Olson.

sophomore full back. Potter contributed the feature run of the game. racing 83 yards to return a kickoff for Northwestern's fourth touchdown. Olmon's punting and plunging were big factors in bolding the Purples advantage after the rest of the first string back field bad retired to the sidelines. With Rentner went considerable of the sparkle and dash of the Wildcats offensive.

Though their superiority over the Mini thereafter was marked. they maintained no consistent drive toward the goal line. Illinois. after its first disastrous quarter. perked up in the second period and on four successive passes scored its only touchdown.

Again in the third quarter the Ahowed x.yrillitorpo of auetained of BY EDWARD BURNS. (Picture on page 3, Mileage Tribune Press Sers-ivra Pittsburgh, Pa.1 Oct. took Notre Dame two quarters of today's football game with Carnegie Tech to avenge the surprise 19 to 0 licking the Tartans hung on it five years ago. Notre Dame had just 19 points when the first half ended and Carnegie had none. The perfect revenge having been accomplished.

the Irish generously refused to score further. The game ended evith Notre Dame, 19; Carnegie Tech, O. The touchdown that was enough to win was made by Marchy Schwartz with a 59 yard run in the eleventh minute of the first quarter. The other two were accomplished in the second quarter by Bernie Leahy, former star at St. Mel's, Chicago.

be of a. fluctuating Notre Dame career. The Irish first team was working while all three of the Notre Dame touchdowns were registered. The first stringers returned early in the final quarter, end though they were right Pprightly, they blew three excellent scoring opportunities. Penalties Thwart Irish everybody on the South Bend team had been as successful as Schwartz and Leahy.

the neat coincidence of avenging 19 to 0 setback 1 with a 19 to 0 victory never could have been written into contemporary literature. The game would have been an Irish landslide, for Merrily gained 188 yards on 23 plays and Bernie rang up 60 yards on ten plays. There were reasons however. that other backs did not make so much progress. Among these was the blight of penalties suffered by Notre Dame.

The Irish lost a total of 105 yards in penalties. mostly for holding. The contest might have been a rout in the first few minutes but for the officials' failure to sympathize with the South Benders' impassioned zeal for holding. Sixty yards that meant much were lost in the first quarter. whereupon the western boys concluded this wasn't such a slick technique and behaved thernsclven long enough to hang up their scoring total for the day.

i Aside from the nonviolent holelinied BY IRVING N'ALIGIIAN. 1 (Thiess, Tribsse Tress 1.44esirel Niirneapolis. Minna Oct. 31.The li fo'C-1514 MLR pow er vi I ich wreclied I I le title hopes of Purdue. couldn't Its the tetra to Minnesota.

whose Gold -11'11532'00n remains unsallied In the It 'stern tonfarence football race. Gophers. functioning' smoothly i Al tever faltering in the pinches. back the supposedly versatile itclgers, 14 to 0 today almost with- enrt. It was a fght only until As Cardittal clad Warriors committed 4 tittible before the first period was ka itC.nutes old.

LI The Gophers, given that break over 4 teens they actually had went to work immediately on the Boort et of two tcuchdowns, and then tl'e remander of the afternoon 4tvled 10,900 homeoomers with their defense against a sensa" t141 Pasg attack attach the "ttre uncorked when there al no .4 t.tirer need for caution. i ramble Leads to Touchdown. '11, came back toward the 1 to Late Itself front a sad instcztd of defeat. The fumble 4 NI sent the Gophers bouncing along I te their fret touchdown in the open- i I quarter lack the heart out of the 1 They were a badly charm- 't aggregation. There was no of teaxa play.

The jinx that 4 -'4' rears has havered or Madison kkhl. to be operating again in all I 1,4 P'Tilier. It was still operating in 1 i period when the ntethodloal tere picked up their other reven The the Itadgera end tenly I Lirl'k c' vhatever it was that was 1 Uteri ''Ili quarter was about half ID.4)e-1 'alien the Badgers served no-t-li that the tarty wasn't over. Until 4 th47 hatift even worried the i But. with the help of- a I thoy gm They revealed 1 rob-teething altat nature of a con: te attat aril the Gophers were 1 i k-rd back to their four yard line th, coa2.1 kill or the PIN'at-- s.

1 Ire 4.dgers 11,11.1 tl-, 1011, Ncitil Illele long 4assra i 1 IALI.r.s tareaElt, the cr, thPy i twice marched right up to the Gopher goal, to be turned back. If NV ISCOnSin had any edge at all It was only in the yardage gathered by their reckless passing in which Clair Strain featured. But the Badgers couldn't 'penetrate the Gopher line I consistently. Neither could they run 1 the ends. And they werent prepared to combat bits of trickery revealed by their One bit of this scored a touchdown on a forward pass linked with a lateral.

Another bit I was the constant pulling out of the line of Capt. Clarence Munn and tising him as a ball carrier. not Only plunged like a full back, but occasionally went sprinting off tackle after the fashion of a 'Dalt back. There was 'One other thing the Badgers did passably sk ell. They IN t9ppe41 the squirming little Scot.

Kenn( th MacDougall. in his two limited ernloaran(ea. There ix important eeetteeed ea vete iS 4.) kCoottlineed pop 8, eolums 4.) fensive drive until an intercepted Pass cut short their gnalward progress. Thereafter their gestures toward scoring were negligitle. Score Soon After Kickoff.

'Northwestern -etarted out for its rat touchdown right at the kickoff. Berry booted the ball to Moore. who was dropped on his :3 yard line after a short return. Olson failed to gain on the first from scrimmage. but rientner ran wide around Elitiois left end for eight yards before he as shoved out of bounds.

Olenet ftyls, however, the Irish played a clean, snappy brand of football, and at no time were title Skibos to be compared with them, either in skill or phybical condition. Not a Notre Dame player was seriously injured. but four of Tech 's regulars had to be assisted from the tell when they went down from the drive of Notre Dame's attack. The worbt of the casualties was a fractured right Continued en next pags, toltunn fa leentinued on eolumn Continnett en pogo' 5, edictal' 15.Coolisee4 ea 8, cilium, 8.).

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