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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 23

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

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The Wolverines won. 13 to 0, and brushed aside the team expected to be its- biggest obstacle to another Big Ten football championship. Perhaps are ready to believe the task is A section of the huge crowd of 93,000 is in the background. (TED3U1E Photo. ROCKERS STAR AS CARTER GOES FOR 53 YARDS AGAINST MAROONS 93,508 SEE WOLVERINES' LINE SMOTHER BUCKEYE BACK FIELD' 1.100S1p3SD,QQGLIG.HININO;'-',0,0T.

Mini Pass in Vain; Army Wins, 6 to 0 Carnegie, Pass on Third Irish, 7-0 1 IToo Much' Punch I BY ARCH WARD. (Pictures on page 2, Sports.) Chicago battled grimly for 25 minutes, slowly cracked under pressure, end eventually lost its opening Big Ten football game to Purdue at Stagg i Rolling Along 1 OHIO STATE 101. MICHIGAN 1131. 1 radiant ThE Petoeiteal Conrad L.T Wlatern Monahan Sanaa nehlnIch Bernard Gallus E. Kowallic Romanist Anal R.

Ward Cramer Q. Far. Heekla Everhardna Smith ILK Heaton 1 Wetzel 8 Etdeezd CHICAGO 0. PCRDITS Id. Wells Baas Deem L.

W. Testing Perretz L. Dennis Patterson Skoroaski blanelkis R.G 'rebel Bush lingers Weiner R. Ir purging nine R. Pardanner Zimmerman Keegan Rerwanaer R.

Purvis Smith P. It Becker TonehdownsCarter, Purvis. Points after touchdownsTor1en4 Purvis. Substitutionat ChleasoSablin for Mina, Nyoulst for R. Smith, Rite for Bush, Baker for Worrier.

Langley for Wells, Wallet for Zimmer, Rapp for Ferrets, R. Smith for Langley, Gold for Mantikis. Cullen for Patterson. PardueLowery for Baas; Perlis for Carter for Keegan, Toriells for Fettle, Basket, for Carter, Daily for Purvis, Loebs for Dogging, Huggins for Dennis, Moore for Carter, Carter for Becker, Lawrence for Skoreskl. T.

Faring for Caters, Sandefur for FebeL RefereeMasker Northwestern. Unspire Mucks Wluonsinl. Field JudgoMaxivell Ohio State. Bead lineaman-Wratt MU-loud. CoachesClark albaughscsap Chicago: Noble Kiser Purdue.

TouchdownsRenner, Everhardus. Point after tonehdownSavage. SubstitutionsMichigan: Renner for rays I Hildebrand for Austin, Westover for Heston. Borgmann for Kowalik, Oliver for Bereczie Ford for Bernard, Chapman for Ward, Vier. for Hildebrand, Singer for Savage.

Ohio State: John Kalsoalo for Wetzel. Flick for iteekin. kards for Conrad, Deficit for Gallus, Oliphant for Cramer, Rees for Oil. man, Jones for Fisch, Pineura for Oliphant! Me Afee for Smith. Thomas for McAfee.

RefereeFred Gardner Cornell. Umnirei John Sehommer Chicago. Field D. B. touris Prineetool.

Bead W. D. Knight Dartmouth. CmsehesSamtiel S. WI Hainan Ohio State.

Harry Kink Michigan. BY WILFRID SMITH. 'Chicago Press Service." (Pictures on pato 3, Sports.) Cleveland, 0., Oct. in marched 68 yards in the first period this afternoon at Municipal stadium to score the touchdown which sent the University of Illinois eleven home defeated. to O.

An intricate Illini passing a which repeatedly threatened to reverse the decision in the second half broke down when one more successful play might have retrieved a lost cause. Thirty thousand watched the intersectional battle. It was Army's second victory and Illinois now must win next year at Champaign to tie the Cadets, after which no Big Ten team, under the present ruling of the conference athletic chiefs, will be permitted to play Army. Stancook Goes Over. Joe Stancook, who expects to receive his commission in 1935 was the lad who crashed, through the Mini for the winning.

touchdown, but he received credit for a score which largely bad been manufactured by the superb work of Paul Johnson, quarter back, and Jack Buckler, the throwing, kicking and running half back around whom Army's attack had been built. Even so, Jack Beynon, Illinois quarter back, stole the show. Re flipped accurate passes to his mates for 12 completions in 17 attempts, and it was Beynon who, with some assistance from Lindberg, kicked the ball out of danger on several occasions. Ideal Weather Conditions. Football games seldom are won by a team which has an inferior line.

But Illinois almost did that this afternoon. The Hint gained less than 40 yards by rushing. Even with five man secondary, Army was hard pressed to cover the Mini receivers, and but for two fumbles, one in the third period and the other in the final quarter, the boys from Illinois might not have been checked. The game was decided under excel BY IRVING VAUGHAN. (Picturo on pogo 3, Sports.) Northwestern's Wildcats, after going scoreless In two battles, finally 'went wild yesterday and the Indiana jinx was properly crushed at Dyche stadium In a setting of driving rain, lightning, thunder, semi-darkness, and 15,000 huddled, bedraggled spectators.

The Wildcats, tame enough in the first half, suddenly started to claw in the third period and the Hoosiers, apparently slipped backward in the mud until a 25 to 0 defeat had been recorded against them The Hoosiers, If the 25 point rout hurt, can thank one man that it wasn't The one man was Robert Zones, the punting guard, who on defense backed up the line to make sure that nobody broke through. Time and again he was the entire Indiana defensive wall. But fate would have it that one of the Wabash, lad's punts, popping off the back of one of his mates, rolled Into the end zone for a safety that started Northwestern On its mad scoring spree. Augustson Runs 52 Yards. The safety for the first points of the battle came in the first few minutes of the third quarter.

A. moment later, on the Purple's first play, in fact, Roy Augustson uncorked a thriller. He raced 62 yards for Northwestern's first touchdown of the year. A few minutes later teeper the same thing on a smaller scale. Not long atter this, a Jones punt having been blocked, 011ie Olson sneaked through for a touchdown.

And then to complete it, Chambers, early In the fourth quarter, playfully booted a dazzling placement between the uprights from the 34 yard line. Indiana's efforts on offense can be written off the books with one play. The first period wasn't many minutes old when Olson, In Hoosier territory, sailed a pass through the air. It went into the hands of Ray Dauer, a Hoosier back. -The Purple battlers grabbed him before he could move, but he a lateral to Louia utherlarkd, BY EDWARD BURNS.

Tribune Press (Picture on page 3, Sports.) Ann Arbor, Oct. brilliant gathering of 93,508 football fans this afternoon saw a superb- Michigan team 'whip ratio State's ambitious giants, 13 to IL It was the largest crowd that ever saw a Maize and Blue team perform, and those of the thrilled mass of humanity who were Michigan partisans tonight were basing early claims of a national championship on the almost flawless exhibition of all around football skill which the Ann Arbor heroes turned in against their most popular enemies. Ohio State, encouraged by the ringing up of a total of 95 points this year in games against Virginia and Vanderbilt, rarely reached the skill, the intelligence and the dash of the Wolverines. Only twice did the Columbus warriors progress to points within the Michigan 30 yard line. Buckeyes Go Backwards.

At the outset of the second quarter the Buckeyes recovered a fumbled punt on Michigan's 29 yard line. The advantage evaporated -when a carefully planned pass flurry promptly lost It yards. In the fourth quarter Ohio's Only display of verve carried the ball to Michigan's 28 yard line and this chance went into the warm autumn air when Willis Ward, Negro Michigan end, grabbed a long Ohio pass and ran 12 yards before he tripped and fell on Ohio's 25 yard The Michigan backs played throughout with the assurance that whatever they attempted would be protected by an invincible line. And that line never once threw them down, this despite the fact that Ohio State partisans before the game had said its 200 pound forward array of bone crushers would tromp down the Wolverine van. The Michigan backs were a bit cautious in the first quarter, but soon became convinced that their line was eminently superior to that of their foes.

Then they started fancy bustnese that mad ths contest a. colorto4 BY FRENCH LANE. tChiciage Tribune Press Service. Pittsburgh, Oct. 21.There were old Notre Dame echoing among the bluffs of t'niver'! sity Heights tonight; They had blended away into the haze ri of an Indian summer shortly before 5 o'clock this afternoon when the Notre Dame teamdejected remnants, perhaps, of the once fighting -Irishfiled off the field- In Pitt stadium with the lights in the big scoreboard blinking down a doleful story, Carnegie Tech, Notre Dame, O.

The football magic of Notre Dame had fled long before the last hopeful Notre Dame cheers went up. It had fled early in the afternoon when 57,000 spectators here for the Carnegie Tech homecoming watched a Notre Dame fumble on the opening kickoff converted into seven points a mountainous seven pointswhich finally decided the game. Shock Troops Are Shocked. Shock troops, made famous by Notre Dame and which have come to be known around the football world, were in the battle when Carnegie Tech, with almost the speed of a rifle bullet, shot over the only touchdown of the game. The shock troops were soon relieved by the Notre Dame regulars and the great crowd, which nearly filled Pitt stadium, settled down to see the Irish machine grind the Carnegie Skibos to pieces.

It waited patiently for the first three quarters, hardly daring to let out a good old fashioned whoop for the Skibos. It still was waiting for the onslaught when the last period began. They Waited In Vain. The big Notre Dame drive never came and in the final minutes when Carnegie fought the Irish to a standstill, outplayed them in every maneuver, finally demoralizing their attack, the crowd became aware that a fast, smooth working, hard playing Carrie-Continued on page 5, column 6.1 College Football TESTERDAT'S RESULTS. WEST.

Mkhigan, 13; Ohio State, O. Purdue, 14; Chicago, O. Northwestern, 25; Indiana; O. Army, Illinois, O. Iowa, 26; Wisconsin, 7.

Minnesota, Pittsburgh, S. Nebraska, Kansas State, O. EAST. Carnegie Tech, 7:1 Notre Dame, Yale, 14; Brown, 6. Princeton, 20; Columbia, O.

-Holy Cross, 10; Harvard, 7. Dartmouth, 14; Pennsylvania, 7. Navy, 13; Virginia, 7. George Washington, 19; Alabama Poly, 6. SOUTH.

Tulane, Georgia Tech, O. Washington and Lee, Kentucky, O. Alabama, 12; Tennessee, 6. Vanderbilt, Mississippi State, 7.1 FAR WEST. Southern California, Oregon State, o.

California, Washington State, 6. Stanford, 20; U. of San Francisco, 13. IL C. L.

20; Loyola IL.A.1, 7. Washington, 14; College of Puget Sound, 6. tOTBER SCORES ON PAGE 2.1 who was standing nearby, and the lat ter darted down the field until bumped out of bounds on the 20 yard line by the last man between him and tht goal. A. fumble by Joe Sablic ended that threat.

I Manske, Jens Spill Hoosiers. Except for the above the Hoosiers never came close. When they tried the line they found it immovable, alst hole proof. At the ends they were help less. The brilliant Manske, whose bah resembles a- wheat field, and flu Leontinned on page- 4, column I.1,1 teld yesterday, 14 to O.

On this particular afternoon, at least, Purdue was great football team. It bad punch and brilliance and versatility. And it had shining back field stars the like of whom historic Stagg field had not seen in years. No game ever was played under worse climatic conditions. It opened after a 14 hour downpour that dotted the gridiron with pools of water and ended in a blinding rain and electrical storm.

Fifteen thousand Maroon fans sat huddled under umbrellas giving the north stands the appearance of a field of toadstools. Most of them remained to the flash, although they no longer could distinguish the players in the wet and the dark. Band Plays as Fans Float Away. The Chicago' band, perched on a raft in a lake on the north side of the field, was true to maritime traditions. It tooted bravely, although croupily, while the spectators were drowning.

Nobody knew what became of the Pun, due bandsmen. When last seen they were floating up and down 57th street between Ellis and University avenues. The Purdue line, which had looked none too robuzt against Minnesota, was so effective yesterday that the Maroons were able to advance inside the Boilermakers' 40 yard line only once. This was late in the fourth quarter, when the Maroons recovered a fumble on the 37 yard line. Purdue Tackles Stand Out.

Simply because Purdue was so smooth and generated so much power the Maroons looked awkward and at times helpless. Their fast back field never had a chance to operate. Their running plays ere usually halted at the scrimmage line and their passes were slapped into the sod. Their kicks were rvAttjt and they were kept I spectacle as befitted a show before a record gallery. 1.

Everbardus Leads Attack. Herman Everhardus, known for good reasons in top flight football circles as the flying Dutchman from Cal. amazoo, was the scintillating artist his following had predicted. He was a combined thoroughbred and plow horse. Among the many things he did just right was carry the ball nineteen times for a total of seventy-seven yards, his gains including the second touchdown.

The name of Heston being such a factor in Michigan football tradition. It was fine, of course, that splendid son. Jack. should be one of the luminaries In this engagement be. fore Michigan's largest football crowd.

Jack's heroics Included one run of so deep in their own territory most of the time they at no stage developed a serious scoring threat. Purdue refused to be fooled by Chicago's plays and formations. Its linesmen were tricked at rare intervals and never en masse. When this occurred the backs came up like express trains to smack down the ball carrier. And the Purdue tackles, Fehring and never were fooled at all.

They played intelligently and aggressively all the way. Purdue scored Its first touchdown In the second quarter and the second touchdown in the third. It was inside the ten yard line, headed for a third touchdown, when a 15 yard penalty ended the march. A brilliant 53 yard run by 31m Carter 1 I 9 Continued on page 4 column 5.1 1Cont1nued ea page 6, column 5.2 Leontinued en rage 4, f.2 i --I 'I.

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