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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 29

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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PART TWO 10 PARTS Part. Part. 3 News. Editorial. Women' Feat ores.

2 Sporting- Markets. Fashions. Antos. 7 Drama. Mavies Music Kcal Estate.

8 Society. 3 Metropolitan. Resorts and Travel, 4 Comics. 9 Granitic Weekly. 5 Want Ads.

10 Picture Section. SPORTS AUTOS MARKETS WORLD'S i 4 GREATEST NEWSPAPER." NOVEMBER 14 1937. A I 1 it uu PURDUE 7-7 THE OHIO, INDIANA, TRIUMPH; TIES WISCONSIN, IT'S A TIE BADGEHS, B0ILEI1.Y. AICEItS GET T0GET DIVERT IRISH Ml TO UtlG BRINGS llwllllll iiiil lllli a i "fc St. score on Cecil Isbell's long pass to End Jim Zachary.

Purdue fought off Wisconsin on the five yard line in the first period and again held on Robert Selby of Purdue sprints around end in first quarter for a gain against Wisconsin in 7 to 7 Dads' day battle at Madison. Walter Cole (60) and Robert Weigandt (68) are Badgers and Frank Winchell (at Cole's right) is a Boilermaker. Wisconsin recovered Cecil Isbell's fumble in the end zone for a touchdown early in the second period to gain a 7 to 0 lead, but before the quarter was over Purdue tied the the three yard mark in the third quarter. tribune Phoio. wm III Pass hi 2d Wisconsin, 7-7 College Football YESTERDAY'S RESULTS.

WEST. Ohio State, 19; Illinois, 0. Michigan, Pennsylvania, 0. Minnesota, Northwestern, 0. Purdue, Wisconsin, 7.

Indiana, Iowa, 0. Chicago, 26; Beloit, 9. Oklahoma, Missouri, 0. Kansas State, Kansas, 0. EAST.

Notre Dame, Army, 0. Dartmouth, Cornell, 6. Pittsburgh, 13; Nebraska, 7. Yale, 26; Princeton, 0. Harvard, 15; Davidson, 0.

Syracuse, Columbia, 6. Georgetown, New York 0. Michigan State, 13; Carnegie Tech, 6. Penn State, 21; Maryland, 14. SOUTH.

Arkansas, 32; Mississippi, 6. Alabama, Georgia Tech, 0. Georgia, Tulane, 6. Vanderbilt, 13; Tennessee, 7. Southern Methodist, 13; Baylor, 7, Texas Christian, 14; Texas, 0.

Louisiana State, Auburn. 7. North Carolina, 14; Duke, 6. Rice, Texas A. and 6.

FAR WEST. Stanford, 23; Washington State, 0. Washington, 26; U. C. L.

0. California, 26; Oregon, 0. So. California, 12; Oregon State, 12. OTHER SCORES ON NEXT PAGE.

Big Ten Standing Kilian-Vopel Win Six Day Race on Points Final Standing Miles. Laps. Points. Kilian and Vopel 2,400 9 1,444 Isnat and Diot 2,400 9 1,013 W. Peden and I).

Peden 9 958 Debaets and Thomas 2,400 556 Letourner and Keboli 2,400 8 423 Rodman and Wals 2,400 8 423 Walthour and Crossley 2,400 7 383 ARMY FUMBLE INTO VICTORY Simonich Goes Over in First Period. Precedent Prevails NOTRE DAME 7. ARMY 10. Kobe Isbell Stella Hartline Skacr Mather Samnel Long Schwenk Brown L. Beinor L.

T. Ruetz L. McCarty C. Kubarich R. A.

Shellogg It. Sweeney R. O'Reilly Q. Stevenson L. E.

Arboit R. Simonich F. Ryaa Wilson Touchdown Simonich. Point after touchdown O'Reilly placement. Substitutions: Notre Dame Kerr for Brown, Emanuel for Beinor, Puplis.

for O'Reilly, Mc-Goldrick for Ruetz. Longhi for McCarty, Bossu for Kuharich, Kell for A. Shellogg. Zwcrs for Sweeney. McCarthy for Stevenson, McCormick for E.

Arboit. Thesing for Simonich, Burnell for McCormick, Corgan for Burnell. Tonelli for Thesing, Gottsacker for Tonelli, Lynn for McCarthy, Hofcr for Pupils, Harvey for Kcll, Race for Bossn, Mulca- hey for Bossu, P. Arboit for Kerr, Foster for McGoldrick. Army Rogner for Kobes, Lotozo for Skaer, Blanchard for Mather, Craig for Wilson, Lit tle for Stella.

Referee W. H. Friesell Princeton. Um pire L. Conover Penn State.

Field judge -W. T. Halloran Providence. Head lines man G. H.

Bankart Dartmouth. Coaches Elmer Layden Notre Dame, Lieut. Gar H. Davidson Army. BY ARCH WARD.

Chicago Tribune Press Service. (Picture on Page 3, Sports.) New York, Nov. 13. Notre Dame, as usual, put on its finest perform ance of the season to whip Army today in the game of the people. Eighty thousand sat through a rain that varied from a drizzle to a down pour to watch the Irish win, 7 to 0, at Yankee stadium.

The score is a poor index to the comparative strength of the two teams. Notre Dame capitalized on only one of seven glittering scoring opportunities. Army got past mid- field only twice, once to the 41 yard line and again to the 31. Aside from the touchdown drive. Notre Dame's other marches collapsed at the 6 inch line, 1 yard line, 2 yard line, 3 yard line, 6 yard line and 16 yard line.

No. 17 for Irish. Some day the Sphinx will talk, the tide will stand still and Army will beat Notre Dame, but the present generation of Cadets, none of whom ever has seen his team conquer its oldest intersectional rival, is begin ning to doubt it. Army hasn't defeated Notre Dame sines 1931. The series record now stands seventeen victories for Notre Dame, five for Army, and there have been two ties.

The Irish, who were supposed to be physically tired from the fierce schedule they have gone through in recent weeks, opened the game with a terrific bang. The touchdown came after only seven minutes of play. Ed Beinor, whose work against Minnesota, Pittsburgh, and the Army, stamps him one of the finest tackles in. the country, set the scene by recovering a ball that squirted out of Woodrow Wilson's hands on Army' 14 yard line. Ed Simonich smashed over his right tackle for five yards and hit the other side of the line for six and a first down on Army's 3 yard line.

He blasted his way through right guard for a touchdown, going over the goal line without a Cadet laying a hand on him. Chuck O'Reilly place-kicked the extra point. Plenty of Heroes. That's a thumbnail scenario of the scoring play, but it doesn't begin to tell the story of this hard fought football game. An attempt to point out its most interesting features is like looking for the biggest stone in a hail storm.

There was the effective work of the Notre Dame line, the brilliant end play of Chuck Sweeney and Earl Brown, the punting and passing of Notre Dame's sophomore half back, Harry Stevenson, and the fine all around work of Ennio Arboit, relief man for Nevin McCormick at right half. All these developments, however, were overshadowed by Army's magnificent goal line stands, especially in the closing period when the Cadets were finding it increasingly difficult to match Notre Dame man power. For suspense and historical importance the closing quarter of this ball game will be included in the star spangled chapters of a series that stands almost alone in romance and valor. The statistics give you an insight into the heroic defense Army had to put up to hold the score to 7 to 0. Notre Dame made thirteen first downs to Army's three and gained a total of 217 yards to Army 89.

Army gave Notre Dame all the fire and fight it had, but there were too many guns on the Irish side. The Continued on page 4, column 2.) 7 TO 0 62,121 See Gophers Get Revenge. Vengeance! NORTHWKST'N tOJ. MINNESOTA 7J. Kovatch L.

Kecd Catlich IT Sc.hulti Ciuritz L. i Bell Human C. Kulhitski Goldak R.G. Twedcll Voigts R.T Midler Kby R. Ring, Vanzo II Spadaciiiii Heap Van Every Swisher K.

Gmitro Lakay F. Buhlcr Touehdown Kins. Point after touchdown Bell. Substitutions Minnesota Mariucci foi Reed. Nash for Kins, K.

Johnson for Schultz, Kilbourne for Midler. Bell for Weld, Kork for Twedcll. Faust for Spailarrini, Gould for Faust, Moore for Gmitro, Mathcny for Van Every. Northwestern Grefe for Kovatch. Daly for Kby, Diehl for Daly, Werd for Kovatch.

i Klanun for Daly. Wells for Guriti, Young for Voigts, Irving for Cntlich, O'Leary for Youns, Armutu for Method, Heitman for Veils, Method for Goldak, Conteas for Vanzo, Jefferson for Swisher, Uinton foi-Jeflerson, Kyan for Heap. MrGurn for Las-kay. Referee Fred Gardner Cornell. Umpire H.

G. Hedges Dartmouth. Field judge Ira T. Carrithers Illinois, Head linesman C. C.

Krieger Ohio university). Coaches Lynn Waldorf Northwestern Bernie Uierman Minnesota. BY WILFRID SMITH. 'Chicago Tribune Press Service. (Pictures on page 3, Sports.) Minneapolis, Nov.

13. Minnesota made good this afternoon on its year old promise to give North-western's Wildcats a licking to atone for the 6 to 0 defeat last fall which ended the Gophers' victory march at 21 consecutive games and cost them a Western Conference football championship. Minnesota won today, 7 to 0, before a homecoming throng of 62,121, and while this was eminently-satisfactory to the Gophers, the manner of accomplishment was far short of the rout that had been predicted. Minnesota's men, who had waited 12 months for a chance to smash Northwestern's line, found that while that line, presumably weakened by the loss of Erwin Wegner and Mike Calvano, gavs ground grudgingly, it could not be stampeded. After 60 minutes of labor, protracted by nine penalties, the decision rested on the success of a first quarter pass from Harold Van Every to Capt.

Ray King for a gain of 14 yards. Horace Bell placekicked the extra point. King Intercepts Heap's Pass. Northwestern provided this scoring opportunity when Don Heap's long forward pass was intercepted by King. The Gopher captain's brilliant return of forty-seven yards to North western's 17 yard line, where he staggered and fell after avoiding one of his own blockers, was as important as the subsequent successful air attack.

Thereafter Minnesota piled up ten first downs by rushing, at one time linking four of these in a seventy-four yard march from its 9 yard line, but when the final statistics were compiled the Wildcats had a total of nine first downs compared to Minnesota's eleven, and a net gain oi 189 yards to compare with Minnesota's 220 yards. The game was replete with material for second guessing, particularly because of the number of penalties and because of fumbles. Minnesota fumbled twice and Northwestern had three errors. All fumbles were recovered by opponents. Northwestern can point to Bernard Jefferson's long forward pass to John Kovatch in the third period which covered thirty-one yards.

Kovatch was tackled a step after he caught the ball on Minnesota's 36 yard line by Van Every, the only man between the Wildcat end and the goal. Capt. Don Stands Out. By its victory today Minnesota moved within one step of the conference title and this ascent to ruler-ship, after a year's absence will assuage memory of defeats by Nebraska and Notre Dame. Capt.

Don Heap of Northwestern, who excelled in passing and in kicking, assuming the latter assignment in the absence of Jefferson from the starting lineup, was outstanding. Bob Swisher, paired with Heap at half backs, was the leading ground gainer until he was injured while returning the kickoff at the start of the second half and forced from the game. For Minnesota, none was more prominent than Gmitro, speediest and lightest of the Gopher backs, and Van Every, a sophomore, who figured in almost every offensive play because of his triple duties of running, passing, and kicking. Wildcats Start Snarling. Northwestern took the opening kickoff, after choosing to defend the West goal with a favoring wind, and, when Heap ran the ball back thirty- Continued on page column 5.

CTORY lilili UCKEYES REGAIN SCORING PUNCH; IIP ILL1NI, 13-0 BY EDWARD BURNS. Chicago Tribune Press Service. (Picture on Page 3, Sports.) Columbus, Nov. 13. Something happened to standard football psychology here today.

Ohio State's Buckeyes, said to have been woefully depressed by a surprise defeat by Indiana, handed Illinois, supposedly pepped up by a victory over Northwestern, a 19 to 0 licking. Moreover, Illinois was adequately represented by its end of the score but Ohio State's tabulation didn't represent the difference between the teams. The pepped up Illini operated their offensive on the Ohio State half of the field only twice, once in the first period progressing to the Buckeye 38 yard line. Again, just before the half ended, they reached the 20 yard line, only to be thwarted by a pass interception as the second period ended. Otherwise the lads from Champaign were quite helpless.

Rain Deters Fans. It was the Ohio State homecoming. A night rain had dissipated the prospects of the perfect day that smiled on the spectacle, attended by 41,921 paying spectators, some 20,000 under the total that had been expected before the rain scare. It also was the Buckeyes' last home performance and thus it was a fittinar development that three seniors, DickJ iNarai, Jim McjJonald, and Nick Wasylik, were able to steal the show before saying good-by to the gridiron they have graced for three years. A dozen other seniors also bade adieu to the home arena.

Incidentally, nine of the young gents in the starting lineup are seniors. The touchdown which was enough for Ohio State victory purposes was made before the game was five min utes old. It was on a forward pass irom wasylik to McDonald which was good for fifty-four yards, thirty-five of which were negotiated on foot. The point was added by Alex bchoenbaum. The second touchdown, by Nardi, was scored in the third quarter.

It wound up a march which started witn Mike Kabealo's intercep tion of a pass, and included a fourteen yard gain by Nardi before he essayed his short plunge for the first ot his two touchdowns. Passes Lead to Score. The third touchdown was made early the final quarter. Nardi's scoring effort was preceded by compietea lorwara pass and one awarded for interference. Kabealo failed to add the points after Nardi's touchdowns.

The Buckeyes' great advantage was renectea most of the statistics, in. eluding the first down ratio, whinh was nine for Ohio State and three for Illinois. Neither side was so hot on total net yardage from rushin but the Buckeyes' had ninty-one to a total of four for Illinois. Ohio State completed seven passes out of fourteen and had one intercepted The net gain thereof was 153 varris Illinois completed five out of passes and had four intercepted. The Continued on page 9, column 5.

a-: 1 Indiana Beats Iowa, 3-0, in Last Uuarterl BY FRENCH LANE. Chicago Tribune Press Service. Iowa City, Nov. 13. Indiana's Hoosiers, each with a rabbit's foot in his pocket, came out here into the Iowa tall corn country this after noon and snatched a 3 to 0 football victory from the University of Iowa Hawkeyes.

This triumph, scored by the magic toe of George Miller, Hoosier cen ter, on a place kick from the 14 yard line early in the fourth quar ter, made it possible for Indiana to remain in the race for the western conference championship, even though the fight it is making ap pears to be a futile one. But back to this rabbit foot vie- tory the Hoosiers scored over Iowa this afternoon. It happened while a frigid wind blew in from the north west, a wind so cold th' the players and the 15,000 spectators were chilled thoroughly soon after the game started. How It Happened. It happened after the Hawkeyes had made eleven first downs to Indi ana none during nearly three-quarters of the game.

It happened after Iowa had been in possession of the ball nearly all afternoon and after only a break in the luck had put the Hoosiers within reach of the cherished three points which George Mil ler's toe gave them. Late in the third quarter, Indiana, which hadn't seemed to do anything the right way, finally made a first down. Graham had intercepted Kin- nick's pass to Lannon. Next came an Indiana pass, Filchock to Heistand, who lateraled to Graham, who carried the ball to the Iowa 28 yard line be fore being brought down. Heistand skipped around left end to the Iowa 19.

Corby Davis, who had carried on nobly all afternoon for Indiana, went to the Iowa 16 on a delayed line buck. He picked up two more around left end. Cheers Are Heeded. The few hundred Indiana rooters were screaming iranticaiiy ior tne Hoosiers and for Davis to keep going. Davis did not fail them.

He took the ball on the next play and made it a first down on the Iowa 8 yard line. Again Davis took the ball. He picked up two more yards over his right guard. Then the third quarter ended. Davis took a breather and let Heistand carry the ball on the first play of the final quarter.

Kinnick and Anderson knocked him down on the Iowa 4 yard line. The Hoosiers appeared to be touchdown bound. They tried a pass, Filchock to Gra ham, but the Hawkeyes broke it up behind the goal line. Then it was that Indiana decided a place kick might win the football game. Miller dropped back ten yards for the kick.

Weiss, a chubby kid, went in at center for Indiana. Mil- ler's kick was perfect, and it sent Iowa down into defeat in its fifth straight conference game, Iowa outplayed the Hoosiers in every department of the game except Continued on page 5, column 2. PANTHERS' LATE DRIVE CONQUER 0 NEBRASKA, 13-7 BY CHARLES BARTLETT. Chicago Tribune Press Service. (Picture on Page 3, Sports.) Pittsburgh, Nov.

13 Pittsburgh's Panthers were cornered once more today and once again they snarled, pounced "and struck with the same terrifying swiftness which has made them one of the nation's few unconquered football teams. Their victims this time were Nebraska's Cornhuskers, Panther foes of respected standing and undefeated until this afternoon. Even as Notre Dame last week, the Huskers fought the good fight before 71,267 to the last quarter. They held a 7 to 0 advantage, born of a punt reception, a lateral and a 60 yard touchdown return, into the fourth quarter. Then the Panthers snarled and struck for the kill which brought them a 13 to 7 victory within six minutes.

4.fl3r five minutes of fourth quarter play big Frank Pat rick, the Panther full back from East Chicago, culminated a savage 80 yard march by diving over for a touchdown. Luck dealt the Panthers a cuff across their whiskers when Frank Souchak's attempted placement for the tying point struck the top of the right goal post and bound ed crazily out of the field. But They Come Right Back. That break was adjusted shortly on a Nebraska fumble wnicn gave Pittsburgh the ball on the Husker 32 yard line. At the eleventh minute, Bill Stapulis, Patrick's understudy, drove over for the winning touchdown That score required only six plays, every one of which smacked of the tremendous power of the Panthers.

Only Penn State and Duke remain between the Panthers and their am bition of a second consecutive appearance in the Rose Bowl game, where last year they smashed down the University of Washington. Behind them lie Ohio Wesleyan, West Virginia, Duquesne, Wisconsin, Carnegie Tech, Notre Dame and Nebras ka. Only Fordham's stubborn Rams, with whom they played a third con secutive scoreless have met the 1937 Panthers on anything approx imating even terms. The Panther power as reflected the final statistics today is a thing to behold. They made thirteen first downs against Nebraska's two.

They made a net gain of 250 yards from scrimmage while restraining the cou rageous Huskers to a net loss of nine yards. Only that sixty yard dash Dy Trackman Johnny Dodd, after Harris Andrews had slipped the ball to him upon receiving a Pittsburgh punt, is worthy of mention for the Husker offensive. First Half Is Quiet. The first half of the game gave no hint of what was to come in the en suing two quarters. Only two first downs were recorded in the opening quarter, both by Pittsburgh.

Johnny Howell's kicking and the stubborn resistance of the Husker line left the Panthers with no opportu- Continued on page 5, column 7. Purdue's Long Period Ties BY IRVING VAUGHAN. Chicago Tribune Press Service. (Picture on Page 3, Sports.) Madison, Nov. 13.

Wiscon-sins' Badgers today offered the sort of a fight no one anticipated. Rated underdogs in their struggle with Pur due's supposedly rugged Boilermake- ers, the Cardinal clad youths marched into a 7 to 7 tie in a battle of fum bles and reckless forward passing. Only an amazing forward pass, fifty-five yards through the air and seventeen yards on foot, saved the Boilermakers from extinction before a Wisconsin Dad's day crowd of 22,989. They dropped this spectacu lar piece of work into the second period proceedings. The lad who started the deadlock ing aerial on its way was the versatile Cecil Isbell, who only a few min utes before had been guilty of a fumble on which Wisconsin scored its touchdown by recovering the ball in the enemy end' zone.

Purdue Starts Shock Troops. The Badgers blew their underdog rating to pieces at the start and continued to be an unexpected menace to the finish. Because Wisconsin was accepted as a foe not likely to be troublesome, the Boilermakers started with a shock troop combination in action. The shock troops had vanished and the regulars were in the fight before the first period had been concluded. They were summoned hurriedly when the animated cardinal hued sweaters surged down to Purdue's 5 yard line.

The regulars halted that threat. That wasn't -the only drive the Boilermakers had to fight off. Late in the third period, as the result of one of its six thefts of Purdue passes, Wisconsin rode down to the 3 yard line only to be driven off. A bit later the Badgers attempted, to cash in on a -field goal, but failed. Against this pair of threats the Boilermakers, barring their touchdown feat, charged no closer than to the 20 yard lme, and they didn't do this until the last few minutes when desperate passing was waranted.

Purdue Leads in First Downs. In the production of first downs, despite its inability to shove the Badgers into precarious positions, Purdue piled up twelve against ten by the enemy. The Boilermakers, supposedly accomplished passers, completed only three out of eighteen at tempts. The Badgers, who had been told to open up, tried 22 aerial thrusts and were successful nine times. Cecil Isbell, although well handled by the Badgers most of the time, topped all the ball carriers in action.

He reeled off seventy yards in fourteen tries. None of five Badger ball carriers was held to less than twenty yards, Howard Weiss being limited to that total in eleven tries and Bronko Malesevich leading with thirty nine yards in eight calls. In rushing, Purdue advanced 143 yards against 139 for Wisconsin. The Badgers balanced this by passing for 115 yards to 90 for Purdue. But Purdue fumbled seven times and Wisconsin only three.

Four Purdue fumbles were recovered by the Badgers. After fumbles had caused the ball BY HOWARD BARRY. Two German riders, Gustav Kilian and Heinz Vopel, combined speed, alertness and caution to win the six day bicycue race which ended at 12:07 o'clock this morning at the Chicago Stadium. The Germans finished in a mileage tie with three other teams the Frenchmen, Emile Ignat and Emile Diot; the Canadians, Torchy Peden and his brother Doug, and the Belgian-Americans, Gerard Debaets and Bobby Thomas. The Germans, however, had piled up 1,444 sprint points to 1,012 for the Frenchmen, 958 for the Pedens and 556 for the Belgian-Americans.

Through a last hour of mad jamming and reckless maneuvering the Germans protected the point lead they had built up in the course of the week. They rode wheel to wheel with their leading rivals and caught them every time they attempted to go out after a lap. Debaets, Thomas Threaten. In this last spectacular hour, which was marked by two smashups on the turns, Debaets and Thomas did some of the most exciting riding. They were two laps off the pace at 11 o'clock.

At 11:23 they picked up one lap and at 11:40 they took another, throwing the race into a four way tie. The first of the smashups occurred when Thomas and Torchy Peden fell on the southwest turn at 11:06. Both were shaken up, but returned after a brief rest. The other spill occurred on the southeast turn at 11:50. Alfred Letourner and Alvaro Georgetti were involved in this.

Georgetti was so badly hurt that he and his partner, Fred Ottevaere, withdrew. Due to the time taken out for these mishaps, the race was allowed to run an extra seven minutes. Sprints Decide It. In the all-important sprints from 11 o'clock on, the Germans won seven. Inasmuch as seventy-two points are awarded for first place in these as compared to four for second, the Germans added to the advantage they had already accumulated.

They had gone into the last hour with 892 points while their nearest rivals, the Pedens, had 640. Only seven teams finished. The combination of Henry O'Brien and Russell Allen withdrew in the final hour when Allen became ill. Three teams went into the 8 o'clock sprints tied for the lead. These riders were Kilian and Vogel, Ignat and Diot, and the Peden brothers.

Wal-thour-Crossley and Rodman-Wals combinations were one lap behind. Le-tourner-Reboli, Debaets-Thomas, and Georgetti-Ottevaere, were three laps Continued on next page, column 2 W. L. T. Pet.

Pts.Op. Minnesota 4 0 0 1.000 87 16 Ohio State ....4 1 0 .800 78 10 Indiana 3 1 0 .750 26 12 Wisconsin 2 1 1 .667 53 27 Michigan 3 2 0 .600 33 70 Northwestern .3 3 0 .500 35 33 Purdue 1 2 1 .333 27 34 Illinois 1 3 0 .250 18 39 Chicago 0 3 0 .000 12 79 Iowa 0 5 0 .000 22 71 to change hands three times in the first five minutes of the opening quarter, the Badgers settled down to the job of giving Purdue's shock troops a real shock. The Badgers took a Boilermaker punt on the 18 yard line and on a pass, Schmitz to Malesevich, moved out to their 34 yard line. Malesevich cut in at tackle and raced to Wisconsin's 47 yard mark. Gavre went round his left end for first down on the Boiler maker's 40 yard line.

The Badgers then tried a long pass, but it went wild and along with It drew a fifteen yard penalty for holding. Gavre recovered eleven yards on a spinner and then threw a pass to Malesevich who twisted a path to the 22 yard line. Here a half dozen of the Purdue regulars came charging into action. The assemblage of rega lars halted the drive on the 12 yard line, the Badgers being inches short on the fourth down. A moment latar Doyle intercepted a Cecil Isbell pass on Purdue's 28 yard line and this Continued on page 6, column 8..

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