Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Daily Nonpareil from Council Bluffs, Iowa • Page 36

Location:
Council Bluffs, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
36
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Yankees Within One Victory of Eleventh Title; Win 2-1 Shea Drives in First Run Himself; DiMaggio's Homer in Fifth Proves Winning Bomber Margin By Gayle Talbot BROOKLYN, (AP)--Frank (Spec) Shea, brilliant freshman pitcher, and the great Joe DiMaggio combined their talents Saturday give the Yankees a tense 2-to-l triumph over the Dodgers in the fifth game of the world series at Ebbets field and move the Bronx Bombers within one victory of their llth world championship. Cookie Lavagetlo, the Dodger plnoh-hltter wlio bounced a carne-winninR double off the fence In the ninth inning to win Friday's thriller for the Flatbush crs. went down swinging for the final out Saturday with the i run on second base, it toe much to expect Cookie to do II Twice In a row. Homer Is Difference. Shea, In racking up his second victory of the playoffs, pltchct a superb four-iilttcr and knocked across the Yankees' first run young Rex Barney, the losing Brooklyn flinger.

DiMaggio smashed his second home run ol the series into the left field upper deck in the i frame to provide Shea i all the margin lit needed. Brooklyn scored its lone run off the Naugntuck, right bander In the sixth when he issued two walks and Jackie Robinson, Dodger first baseman drove a single off Shea's glove into center field for a single. Shea's dramatic strikeout ol Lavagctto as Dodger fans prayed for another miracle was his sov enth of the contest. Although Brooklyn' threw four pitchers into the fray, including the ever-ready Hugh Casey for the third time in as many days, it was not necessary as a tribute to Yankee power. Outside of the two vital blows by Shea and OlMajcgio, the only other hltn the winners collected were a single and a double by Tommy Henrlch and a double to the fence by Shea after two were out in the eighth.

DlMagglo's circuit blow, in fact, possibly gaved the clipper from going down as the i i a coat of the game. In three other attempts the Yankee star rapped feebly Into two double plays and struck out, each time with run ners on base. It was tight, well-played pame. the second in row in a series which had threatened to go into the books as possibly tin worst ever. For the second straight day the Interborough rivals left their faces at homo find played It stnilcht, nntl crowd of was appreciative Barney, old surprise starter for the Dodgers, gave up both Yankee scores before he hntl to be lifted soon after DlMagglo's blow, but ho did surprisingly considering everything, it was the first game the kid from Omaha had started since 4, and he was as wild as the north ern winds, but the American leaguers had a tough time get ting him out of there.

In the four and two-thirds In nmgs he worked the young fire bailer issued nine walks, within one of the new world series record set only Friday by the ill-starred Bill Sevens of the Yanks, yet only one of them figured in the wcor- ing against him. Shea's control, on the other hand, was i a a through the early part of the game, and he didn't let a Dodger reach first until Pec Wee Reese worked i for a walk i one out In tin; fourth. Thereafter the Yankee star gave up two passes in each of two following innings, and one ol them, opening the sixth, led to Brooklyn's only run. NEW A A II A. ll I I If I.M«KI:IU 11 i Hi i 3li A i i i 1.

Zll 25 A M.kus Ib nlmr rf a fn.ld'. rr- U. II. (I II I) II 0 0 1 II 0 i i O. A 2 I) 0 0 II 1 1 I 2 0 0 0 II 2 0 0 II 2 0 ii I llHlt in i cn In I 4 'J7 10 1 i In cfl fnr i i I 7 ft.i i I i i i i In in v.

t.r I A 1 .1 OIKI 1 III II III 2 I I M.I i i 1)1 I I HI I I i In- Kh-B. I .1 i ViuiKhftn. lUnt I I I xo, i and .1, i i i i rt Hum i A ii: i i i I 1. on i i Ni-iv A 11, in i i mi i i i i i i i i I 2 i i i. Jl A i i I i i Kt'Mi r.

mi i i I'M- 1C' I I i i I I i i i 3 I I 7 i i 3. .1 i a I i i 3 I.lni1r||, i Mir I i i i run. i In 3-3 i 0 rurm 0 in 1 1-3 I nn I till Iti I i bv (i hi! i i 1 I i I 1 1 II Ci uiiiii I Joe DiMaggio. his homer turns trick. I Bex Barney.

Omahan's wlldness fatal. Barney's Choice Shocks Harris By Joe Helchler EBBETS FIELD, series of the second guess," as it has been called, now is being termed "the series of surprises." Even Uucky Harris, the gambling manager of the Yankees, could hardly believe that Bur.I Sholton had nominated Rex Barney to sturt for the Dodgers. "You don't say!" he explained, when informed of the move. "I don't believe it." For four innings it looked like Barney who had failed to hurl a complete gamu during the regular season, and who had not been entrusted with a starting assignment since the Giants pinned his ears back last July fourth, might accomplish in a world series game what he had been unable to do all year. But his wildness, the only consistent thing about Ills pitching all year, finally flooded him In the i What prlt'u fame.

A photographer askud Cookie Lavagctto, Friday's batting hero for the Dodgers, to pose with a couple of bats which the smiling Call- fornlan obligingly did. By the way, the lensman asked: "How do you bat, lefty or righty?" Al Schacht, the baseball clown, sit- i nearby, then cracked: "Why don't you u.sk him what team he plays for?" Hi The Dodgers must have set some i of a record foi futility. i Gene llermanski opened Brooklyn's half of the fifth inning, they had gone 13 consecutive innings with only one hit, that by a plnchhltter. Hermanski's single snapped Frank Sheu's hiring of five and one- third consecutive hlllcss I i against them. The freshman righthander held them hitless in one and two-thirds innings lust I On Olfl-- Texas Overwhelms North Carolina AUSTIN, Tex jT--The Texas Longliorns overwhelmed the Tar Heels of North Carolina, 34 to 0 icre Saturday, making a strong bid for national college football leadership before 47,000 at Mem- nal snUlium.

Texas used its 'uincd passing game, i Bobby l.uyne doing much of the throw- a.s well a.s strong i Mine to wore In every period but lie third. --KHWI. 1561) On Dlnl-- Brown Footballers Run the Gauntlet PROVIDENCK, (NEA)--Coach Rip Knglc has adapted the old iborlglnal scheme of i the i i to modern football. The goal Is to cure Brown backs of any tendency toward loose ball- or 10 squad nembers kneel In two equal lines facing each other with runway "'tween A a takes a ball on a a charges down i iviieelliif; I en in males i i i i hi Meal a knock I I lllOSI 1 Kansas Rallies, Nicks Cyclones LAWRENCE, Of Outplayed in the first quarter the University of Kansas Jayhawks struck back with a rapid-fire attack lo defeat the Iowa Slain Cyclones 27 to 7 In the opening Big Six conference football game of the season here Saturday. Ray Evans, Kansas back, was the standout player of the day, taking a pass from Lynne Me- Nutt for one touchdown and running six yards for another.

Approximately 17,500 witnessed the game. ---KSWl, 1500 On Your Dial-Bobcats Beaten by Kansas Deaf lowans Drop From Undefeated Ranks THE STATISTICS: Turds Rained i First down 7 a lost 13 Pusses ultompleO Passes completed 'I Yards gained on 32 Not yardage pained .....132 Intercepted Punts Avoruice yards puiitt, punts returnpcl rorovorctl liy Yariln penalized 4 30 '1 251! 1 1 8 SPORTS lllini Serve Notice Eliot's Eleven Crushes Iowa I. S. D. lost its first homecoming football game since 1941 Saturday, to Kansas Deaf by a score of 13 to 0.

Kansas put on two sustained drives for the counters, one in the first quarter and the other in the fourth. There was no passing or punting in the Kansas attack until Irte in the fourth. Power plays through the line and end runs made up the necessary recipe for victory. It was Mog, Kansas left half, who scored both through the line. Rader punched over guard for one extra point.

Tuttle, alone, was effective for the home team on the ground and it was Tuttle in the air that kept Nate Lahn's boys moving. Wnync Christian took the only Kansas punt en his own 45 and went all the way to score only to have a team mate nullify his effort by being off sides. Culver, Kansas end, made the longest run of the game when he took a short flipper from his quarter and went downficld 34 yards. Iowa Deaf made its greatest bids iij the second and third quarters, moving two-thirds the distance each time toward pay ground, only to be halted by fumbles or lack of flmil punch. The lineups: Tlio I.S.D.

K.S.D. i i MI; i Mays Kutihurt a i Anderson llarrall linker KG Grcathou.se Taylor LoiiKdon I'Yoelilo tils Culvcir i a Qn Covort MOK Koyoo Ulf Rader KB Will laker Score by quarters: I. S. 0 0 0 (I-- 0 K. 7 0 0 Ii--II! K.

D. Hearing touchdowns, Moy Point after touchdown. I-tader. I. substitutes: Halfback, Carlson; tackle.

Hay ward K. substitutes: Halfback, Knoll: fullback, Weber; end, Cer- vcnloH. Offlt'lals- Referfe: Gay Sluelke of Coo; umpire, Chuck McConnell, of Iowa; head linesman, Bob Miller of i --KSWI, 1560 On Your Dial-Says Bosox Will Again Be Threat Under McCarthy By Harry Grayson. (NEA Sports Editor.) NEW YORK, (NEA)--Joseph Vincent McCarthy's appointment alone restores the Red Sox us an American league threat in 19-18. Baseball men long have figured that throughout a 154-game haul a club deployed by Joe McCarthy has a 30-game advantage over the others on his managing.

Marse Joe reduces baseball to its simplest form. "Give me four to hit it, three to throw it and two to make the double play and I'll win in any league," he says. He's a great tactician. In Boston McCarthy should have four hitting it with Williams, Pesky, Mele, the little professor, DIMaggio, Doerr and some more. From among Dobson, Ferriss, Harris, Galehouse, Johnson, Dor- Ish and others ho should find at least Ihren starting pitchers capable of throwing It up to his standard.

He has the double play combination in Johnny Pesky and Bobby Doerr. Under Owner Yawkey General Manager Cronin and Advisor Collins, McCarthy will have the free a he demands and obviously lost when Larry Huel i a took over the Yank'ees McCanhy moving to the Hub starts a new era on the Amori- THE STATISTICS. IOWA ILL. H'lrsl Downs 8 I'l Vards pained SB 166 Forward pannes attempted 20 18 Korward passns completed 11 Yards gained from forwaid passes 77 115 Forward intercepted by 0 2 Averse distance of punts SB 41 Total yards all Itlohs 4 107 fumbles .1 Vards lost liy penalties 40 21) By L. E.

Skelley IOWA CITY, IP--You can count Illinois in on the battle for the Western conference football championship too. The lllini, although minus several of the stars who led Illinois to the 1946 title and a Rose Bowl triumph, showed a tremenduous running and passing game Saturday as they opened their 1947 bid with a 35 to 12 victory over Iowa before a crowd of 52,294, Moss Brilliant. Expertly guided by Perry Moss from the quarterback slot, the lllini piled up a 21 to 6 half time margin, and continued their domination through the second half against an Iowa team anxious to make amends for a loss lo UCLA, the team Illinois toppled in the Rose Bowl. Iowa had its moments, but Coach Ray Eliot's boys were too tough in the pinches. Illinois struck fast in the first period.

Sam Zatkoff, lllini end, jumped on Em fumble on the Iowa 17-yard line and big Army Rolls Over Heavy Colorado WEST POINT, N. Earl Blaik and his Army football team staged an experimental Saturday at the expense of a big but lumbering university of Colorado squad, entertaining a crowd of 21,000 by rolling up a 47 to 0 score. Blaik used 46 players, including 18 backs. Most of' them gained ground through and over the bulky Colorado line, which was able to stop the Cadets only once. Elwyn (Rip) Rowan, who is trying lo i Doc Blanchard's place nl a was the Only CadPt to score twice, lie did it in the fiist quarter, when the Buffaloes still were putting up strong resistance, on a long pass from Bill Gustafson.

He repeated in the fourth on a 12-yard end run. Other touchdowns were made by Amos Gillette, Bert Aton, Bobby Stuart, Winfield Scott and Karl Kuckhahn, Jack Mackmull converted five times in seven attempts. At the outset, Army's first drive was stopped a foot short of a score and the Cadets didn't ring up their first six points until Gustafson hit the ball behind his leg until he could toss a 32-yard pass to Rowan, who ran the last four. After that, the roof slowly began to cave in on Colorado and it finally collapsed in 'the final quarters when the Cadets made three touchdowns, two set up by pass Interceptions. --KSWI.

On Your DM-Texas Christian Due This Season FORT WORTH, (NEA)--Texas Christian was relegated to fifth or sixth in the final Southwest Conference, standings by the pickers, but the experts overlooked the fact that this is 1947. The year is important, for it means the Horned Frogs are due. For nearly two decades, the Frogs have hit the football jackpot evs-'ry three years. The last time was 1944, when Dutch Meyer's men won the league championship. They opened the current campaign by holding the Big Six co-champion and favored Kansas to a scoreless tie for the second consecutive fall.

--KSWI. IGdO On Your Second Skladany Headed for Top P111LADELPS1A, A -Listen to Line Coach Josh Cody of Temple and he'll tell you the famous football family of Skladany will have a second all-America in the next year or two. Se is speaking of Tommy, playini? ben tor for the Owls. Joe, or Muggsy, Skaldany gained top honors as a Pittsburgh end 10 years agn. Two ether brothers won fonthall lelteis, one at Pitt, the at VMI.

Two more, on the National. I 1580 On Tour Penn State Swarms Orer Bueknell Crew STATE COLLEGE, Pa JP Powerful Penn State "college scored its second football victory of the tieuson Saturday rolling over a hapless Bueknell university eleven, 54 to 0, before a shirt-sleeved ciovvrl of J4.000. 'j'l i by (he i a UoriN WHS I i i ever achieved iti series i Buck- begun fit years ago. tending Temple. As a league baseball player, Eddie is not eligible.

Porky is a freshman. --KSWI. 1510 On Your Carl Harris' Will Covers Two Lines DES MOINES, Harris, widely known former Des Moines coach, who died Sept. 25, left ope of the shortest i on rccbra hern--two Jines. Mis.

Lois Brown linn Is, I wife, was made hi.s sole bpiic- Russ Steger capped a touchdown drive with a plunge from the one-yard line. Don Maechtle rushed off the bench to place- kick the first of his five extra points. A few moments later Zatkoff blocked Bob Smith's punt and Illinois had the ball on the Iowa 36. Moss, who completed 11 of 16 passes for 116 yards, tossed three straight aerials and the lllini were on the six. Dwight Eddleman went over from the two.

Iowa scored early in the second as Ron Headington drove across from 'the one after a pass interference had given the Hawks the ball at that spot. Headington's kick was no good. But stubborn Illinois bounced right back for a third touchdown when Moss wpnt over from the one after a long lllini march. Iowa, at the start of the third period, went 77 yards to score. Al Dimarco climaxed advance with a toss from the nine to End Jack Kelso of Atlantic in the end zone.

Headington again missed the extra point and Illinois led 21 to 12. Challenge Again Met. Illinois again met the challenge as flipped a screened toss to Steger on the Iowa 30 and big Russ went all the way. The lllini finished their scoring in the fourth period, after Bernie Krueger intercepted an Iowa pass on the 35 and ran to the six. The lineups: IOWA Pos.

ILLINOIS Hal Shoener Zatkoff Shoof Orothua 1X3 i Wooilwaul Levant! i HO Slegnrt Knv TIT Cunz HK Owens Klntf QB Mpss Tunnell TCsUs RII Eddleman Hendlngton er 0 6 6 0--12 Towa scoring: Touchdowns. infrton, Kelso (for Guzowski). Illinois scoring: Touchdowns, Ste- cer 2 Rddleman, Moss Maggloll (for Folnln aHor touch- "dovui; a i i 5 (for a i i i Towa--TCndn--Kolno, Woodaril, Dlttmer, Hfrb Shoener, McKenzle Tackles--Winslow, Zencler. Byrd, Geigel. Guards- Hanks, Benda Centers --Lawrence.

Snydor, busier. Barks--TJImnroo. i Todoip, T.oiiKlov, Snillii. TOndH-Maoehlle, Valnk HUB- cunl, Schlossor, Kernulls. Tackles-U i i a I i Krankt Button, a i MarlRnuifO, Pllt- Centers--MailranKcll, ficllirer, Unnoho.

Hacks--Stewnrt, GnllrKner, ICrucKCi', Valid son Mnprplnll, Kvann, Bray, Zaborac, Schmidt Lazier. Kvasnlcwski. Purdue Nips Bucks LAFAYETTE, JP--Purdue university's Boilermakers, losing the lead three times, hammered back to defeat Ohio State's Buckeyes, 24 to 20, Saturday. The 34,000 fans were repaid for a pre-game drenching by a gridiron foot race that made 50- yard boxes the poorest seats in Ross-Ade stadium. It was Purdue's first Western conference victory in two seasons and the first for Coach Stewart K.

(Stu) Holcomb, former Army line coach and one-time team mate of Ohio State's Coach Wesley Fesier. Only two breakaway sprints by Halfback Dave Sensanbaugher-- one a 97-yard kickoff return--enabled Ohio State to make it a close game. Purdue turned loose a ground attack, something it wasn't supposed to have this year, that did most of the damage. --KSWI, On Dial-Football Finals I i i 35, Iowa 2 Pamo 40, 6. i i a 19, Stanford 13, Northwestern 27, UCLA 26.

Purdue 24, Ohio State 20. Wisconsin 7, Indiana 7. Army -17, Colorado 0. Pennsylvania R9, Lafayette 0 Colgate Kings Point 0, Massachusetts 7, Bowdoln 6. Holy Cross 13, Tomple 13.

Penn filalo Bucltnell 0 Michigan State 7. Mississippi State 0. Vale 1-1. Coinell 0, Columbia 13, Navy West Virginia 35, WashinRton and Princeton 21, Brown 7. a 2S, Syracuse 7, OoorKla LSI! 10 Harvard II), HosUm I).

H. Kansas) 27, Towa a 7 Georgia Tcoh 20, Tulane 0. Duke 19. Tennessee 7. "Mississippi 33, South Carolina 0.

'I'nxnK Carnllim 0 A i Ixiululann Tcrli 0. i a 28, 13. 14, Knox 6. 14, Alabama 7 Arkansas 6, Texas Christian 0 CoHece 7, Western State Lawrence 34, Carleton 0. Simpson SB, Coe 6 Cornell (Iowa) 20, Rlpon 7.

Western Michigan 14 Was (St Louli) 6. On Yonr Dial-Open Golf Tourney Sunday at Malvern MALVERN--A onp-day open golf tournament will be held Sunday at the Fairview goll course south of Malvorn. --KSWI, 1560 On Yonr Friday Prep Games Tee Jay 16, Abe 0 Shenandonh 13, Clarlnna 0 fri'slon 6. Vllllrtca 6 Red Oak 14, Cllcmvood C. A a i 20, earning 7 Kockport.

Mo. 13. Hamburg 6. Greenfield 25, Wlnterset 7. Missouri Valley 7.

3, A 0. iH'nox 12, Briton! 0. Qrliuvokl 21, A 0. Carroll 7. Manning 0.

Manilla Ilayaid 7. "Luke City 19, C.lidilen 13 33. Poon R.iplil.- S'prinM'i 2C. IS, i a 7. A A i a 21 I I I i i i 11 Sn 12 Uf'mson 2M, ix)jsnn 0 Co-favorite Is Loser to Breda DYSART, if Monona, the pre-tournament a i came through Saturday 'afternoon In the state high school fall baseball a i i a 5-3 win over Sioux Center, but the other favorite, Dysart, fell, 2-1, to Breda.

In morning games, Kanawha nipped Clarence, 1-0, and Truro slugged out a 16-hit, 11-4 victory over Newell. Pairings in the semi-finals Monday afternoon will pit Kanawha against Truro and Monona and Breda. The finals will be Wednesday afternoon, Rrcda 000 nil 0 'i Dysast 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 4 2 Polking and Boes; Kopriva and Raub. --KSWI, 1560 On Your Dial-Huskers Lose; Threat Fades Gophers Score Two in Fourth LINCOLN, handled Nebraska mercilless- ly in the first part of the fourth period Saturday to crush the Huskers 28-13 in a Big Nine-Big Six interconference game before 36,000. Playing with the temperature in the high eighties, Minnesota marched 68 yards to score on the opening kickoff.

In the second period, the Gophers scored again on two pass plays covered 56 yards to lead 14-0 at the half against a Nebraska team that hadn't man- anged a first down. With the second half, Nebraska came to life and scored on passes from Del Wcigand to Ralph Damkroger, covering 18 and seven yards. The Huskers, trailing 14-7, scored again, but lost the extra point that would have tied it because of a holding penalty. Minnesota got the touchdown that settled it early in the fourth. The Gophers advanced to the one-foot line and Jim Maloskl sneaked over.

Don Johnson scored the last Gopher touchdown on a short smash. --KSWE, 1560 On Your Rutenbeck Named to Girls' Union DES MOINES, if--O. H. Rutenbeck, superintendent of schools at Avoca, was elected to the Iowa High School Girls Athletic Union's board, Rod Chisholm, executive secretary of the group, reported Saturday. He will represent the southwest district.

He defeated W. A. Butt, superintendent of schools at Slater, In the final voto. Rutenbeck, who has been at Avoca for 20 years, is also a member of the representative council of the Iowa High School Athletic association. He fills the unexpired term of Chisholm, who was moved to the newly created executive secretary office, and will serve three years.

Rutenbeck coached the Avoca high girls' team from 1928 through 1935, his 1931 team winning the state meet, the first one sponsored by the Union at the Drake fieldhouse. His teams won 124 games, lost 31. At a reorganization meeting of the union Saturday, M. O. Moo of Lake Park was named President and John King of Allerton was elected treasurer.

Ken Amsberry of Steamboat Rock, who was re-elected to a four-year term two weeks ago, is the fourth member of the board. --KSWI, On Your Dial-Bulldog Harriers Outclass Cornell MT. VERNON, by a Drake university cross country team that swept the first five places, Cornell college's harriers went down to defeat, 15-44, In a dual meet here Saturday. Drake's Howard Johnston and Fred Shoeffler ran the three- miles course in 16 minutes and one second to tie for first place. Lofe POSJ Inspired Wildcats Tip UCLA By Jerry Liska.

EVANSTON, 111., fourth- striiiR halfback, speedy Jules Sickle, grabbed a 33-yard touchdown p.uss In the fourth period to hand inspired Northwestern a sizzling 27-26 win over heavily-favored UCLA before 44,000 at Dyche stadium Saturday. Farrar Boots Point. The actual victory margin was provided by Quarterback Jim Farrar's point-after-touchdown, but Siegle--in his first and only play of the game--broke the back of the heralded Uclans with his payoff snatch from Farrar in the closing period with Northwestern behind, 26-20. The Uclans blew a 13-0 lead in the second period and were demoralized by two sensational Northwestern touchdown runs In the third period--a 93-yard kickoff return by Frankle Aschenbrenner and a 66-yard punt return by Tom Worth ingtqn. UCLA had been rated a 13- point favorite, over the Wildcats, who were defeated in their opener last week by Vanderbllt, 3-0.

Northwestern outgained UCLA, in first downs, 13 to 11, cashing in mainly on 12 completions in 23 forward pa.ssse for 132 yards. The Uclans wasted a ground attack which out-stripped the Wildcats, 205 to 153 Old Elis Avenge Negro Teammate NEW HAVEN, JP-Yale's footballers, aroused by the rough treatment given their ace Negro back, Levi Jackson, un- leased two long marches to pulverize scrappy Cornell, 14 to 0, in the spacious bowl Saturday It was a rough, tough Ivy league battfe. More than 50,000 fans saw the Elis avenge the loss of Jackson, their Ebony Express, who suffered a head concussion the first time he took the ball early in the opening period. His was a thrco- gall surrcd fie i ales on to complete a savage 68-yard sortie for the Blue's first of two touchdowns. Ironically, the score was made by Jim Fuchs, a rookie and former Chicago school boy star who replaced Jackson.

Big Jim went over from the eleven --KSWI. Ifieo On Your Dartmouth Explodes SYRACUSE, N. The Dartmouth Indians spotted Syracuse a first period touchdown Saturday, and then exploded for a 28-7 triumph before 18,000 fans. The scoring merry-go-round started with all the ear-marks of an easy UCLA i Ilic I CLANS cruised yards and yards for a lead In the second period. Jack Myers climaxed the first drive with a smash over from inches out and the second score came on a 15- yard pass from Carl Benton to Johnny Roo.sch.

Northwestern banged to its first score of the season when Burson flipped a 16-yard payoff pass to Worthlnglon, capping a 37-yard sally. Then came the thrilling kick returns for touchdowns by Aschenbrenner and Worthing to give Northwestern a 20-13 lead in (he third period. UCLA Flares Back. ULCA flared back for two more touchdowns In thc same period when Chuck Page goose-stepped three yards around end Into pay- dirt and End Tom Fears blocked a punt on Northwestern's 40, scooped up the ball on the 15 and ran across for a touchdown Relges' second conversion gave UCLA a 26-20 lead. Then came Northwestern's game-deciding pass in the fourth period.

--KSWI. 1560 On Your Nicks Feller for Win VAN METER, Audubon Cardinals, Southwest Iowa semipro champions, nicked Bob Feller for two runs In six innings here Saturday and went on to defeat Adel, 5 to 1. Feller pitched six innings for Adel. Don Black of Salix, Feller's Cleveland Indian teammate, pitched for Audubon. The game featured Bob Feller homecoming ceremonies here.

Feller disclosed -that he and group of other major league stars would start a barnstorming tour Wednesday at Atlanta, Ga. VOUR CAR DfSIRVES SKILLED MACHINE SHOP SERVICE REBORING Equlpmtnt 2 to 5-Inch DlamcUri BAIN 4UTO SUM.r COMMNf 114 W. Phone STfe COMFORT WINTER DRIVES! HEATER REPAIR Wo Can Any Typo Hot Air and Hot Wator HEATERS Authoriiad Saloi and Sonrlco for STEWART WARNER "South Wind HEATERS DON'T DELAYI fiiifoH a "South Wind" HEATER MODERN SERVICE Service Station and Garage C. T. and f.

F. "Brock" Tinml 48 H. Main Phono 9921 MEN! Here's How You Can Keep Feeling "Fit," Healthy, Relaxed All Winter Long GOING TO MISS THIS SUMMER'S RELAXING EXERCISE? Let Stauffer System Help You RELAX FROM OFFICE STRAIN EXERCISE IN A MILD MANNER INCREASE YOUR CIRCULATION IKtOt NAMC i 415 Broadway Phont 3-3257 TUESDAY AND THURSDAY EVENINGS APPOINTMENT FOR INFORMATION CALL 3-3257 INEWSPAPERif NEWSPAPER!.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Daily Nonpareil Archive

Pages Available:
956,309
Years Available:
1867-2024