Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Daily News from New York, New York • 163

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
163
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY NEWS, OCTOBER 18, 52 SOLDIERS TRIUMPH OVER NOTRE DAME Grid Scores YALE'S CLOSING DRIVE FAILS; PENN WINS, 1613 Armj Notre Dame. CutamUm Ohio Ma. for Record Grid Crowd of 70,000 Sees Army Victory, 270 By MARSHALL HUNT. South Bend, Iridvrith its famous Four Horsemen driven away, hardly is as much as a one hoss town any more. Notre Dame, a very large part of South Bend, has given up riding.

The Army mule is doing the traveling. Good Better! Early Lead Too Much Eli to Overcome. Penn Singer Pike Willson (Capt.) Yale Princeton Navy Colgate Lafayette Holy Cross Harvard ProTidenee Sc. 13 6 7 7 0 6 7 6 3 New Haven, Oct. 17.

A great Yale eleven was beaten by a greater Penn team this afternoon Robinson Pos. Q.B L.H 3 3 7 7 ...14 Tale Potts Richards Flaherty Sturh ahn Root Butterworttt Bradley Bnnnell Noble Kline Wadsworta 14 57 16 7 13 1 7 18 it 6 14 6 13 13 13 6 15 3-10 6 8 a a si 6 0 6 a 6 Capt. John J. McEwan's West Penn Stale Snyder Sieracki Thayer Leith Field Rogers Krues Hoo-Ray! Point football team yesterday in i tlu YiirlM stadium marched I Marietta Pittsburgh Gettysburg lown Illinois Chicago Northwesters Sr by periods; Penn Tale IS 13 Michigan Ann j- Pos. Notre Dame Born Wallace Saunders R.T..

MeManmon Sn-eaii R.G Mayer Daly MaiH! Schmidt LG Marelli Sprasue L.T Buland Baiur (Capt I Crowe Yurman i.B.-. Edwards WtUoa R.H Boyle TrapneU Hearruion Bueil FB Enngat Wisconsin Nebraska 0 Washington Touchdowns Leitb, Cutler. Allen. Points after touchdown Kruez. Allen (placements).

Field goal Kruez (placement. Substitutes Tale: Cntler for Noble. Cottle for Kline. Flaherty for Wortham. Foote for Wadsworth.

Joss for Richards. Osborne for Bradley, Gill for Potts. Fith-wick for Bunnell. Failing for Cutler, Wiencke for Failings. Wallace for Root.

Allen for Foote. Noble for Cottle. Burt for Sturhahn. Benton for Butlerworth. Vandergrift for Flaherty.

Pennsylvania: Lacid for Leith. Butler for Pike. Hayes for Singer, Harke for Snyder. Thomas lor Laird. Hake for Sieracki.

Referee W. G. Crowell. Swarthmore. Tmpire -C.

G. Eokles. Washington and Jefferson. Field Judge Ed Thorpe. De La Salle.

Linesman A. W. Palmer. Colgate. 13 14 C7 Score by periods: Army 0 Notre Dame.

Touchdowns Hewitt. Fullback Kruez Quarterback Leith Wilson. Sprague. -Yt liSOQ Baxter. Goals Irons touchdow.

3. Hardin 1. Wilson Tiny Hewitt Harry Substitution Notre Dame: R. Smith for Xahmen for earn den. Roach ch Army ground gainer a in Ci for B.yle.

Bemla for Wallar. While for Benda. Pollski for McManmon, oediscn or Crowe. Cody for Dahmen. Preili for Cody.

Mi Mullen for Boiand. J. Smith for MoreHi. Schlarer for Edwards. MeXally for Schlarer.

Quian for McMallen. Bolaod for Quinn. Riley for MeNally. Edwards for Riley. lanigau for O'Boyle.

Haaousek for Ennrht. Boyle, for Cody. Army: Hard-inx tor Teomaos. Hewitt for Buell. Buoil for Trapnell.

bctueirrer lor Wilson, leo-mans or Harding, Allan for Buell, Wilson for S.fiirirr. Referee E. J. O'Brien. TTmpire T.

J. Thorpe. Bead Linesman W. H. Eokersall.

Boston College ol. Boston V. 7. Cornell 41. Rutgers 0 X.

T. 41. C. C. X.

Y. Dart month 56. Maine Bowdoin 14, Wealeyan 6. Fordhaza 55. Manhattan 37.

Trinity 9. 58. Galtandet 41. Virginia 18. V.

M. I. 10. Alabama 57. Sewanee 4).

Botler 53. Franklin Delaware Swarthmore 0. P. 1- 3. Maryland George Washington 7.

ML St. Mary's 3. Rocheuter Buffalo 4. Dirklnson 7. F.

M. Lrblgh 3. W. V. W.

0. Georgetown 24. Detroit Brown 48, Bates Letdgk, 3. W. V.

W. TiHanwim Catholic V. BnekneU O. Haskell Buffalo Korhester Albright 3S. GaOandet Dickinson 7, F.

a M. Norwlrh 13. Tofts Johns 7. Rlrhmond Crsians 19. Jonitn 6.

Sosonehannn 14. Drexel Mahlrnberg 14. Lebanon T. Pnrdno 44. Kose Polo Syrarnse 14.

Indiana Minnesota 3-2. Wabash 6. Alabama 57. Sewanee Virginia IS, V. M.

1. Georgin Tech S3. Florida 7. Vandrrfciii 34. Tennessee 7.

Amherst 19. Hamilton Springfield 6, Vermont New Hampshire 56. R. I. 8.

Field Juse A. C. Taylor. Periods 13 minute. Penn backKeld men whose speed won game for Penn.

in the first football engagement between the Bulldog and the Quakers since 1892. The score was 16 to 13. More than 50,000 saw the Elis beaten for the first time 'since 1922 after making a terrific fight for victory in the face of almost hopeless odds. Completely outplayed through the entire first half and most of the third period, the big Blue team came from behind with a rush that swept the Quakers completely off their feet in the final fifteen minutes of play- and, but for a fumble on the one yard line that robbed them of an apparently certain touchdown, probably would have won. All Penn.

Pennsylvania had things pretty much her own way through the first two periods and scored a carrying the ball to the Western ers 10 yard line. Two smashes failed. A left-end run by Wilson fetched the ball to the Notre Dame 3 yard line. The same soldier Fields, Rogers and Kruez and a couple of short gains had planted the ball on Yale's five yard line and Kruez scored another in the seeend quarter after a 29 yard forward pass from Rogers to Leith had put the Quakers within striking distance. A Yale fumble on her 80 yard line put Kruez in position to kick a field goal in the third quarter and then, with the score 16 to 0, the fun began.

Cutler, Captain Johnny Joss, Ed Cottle and others the Yale coaches had wanted to keep on the sidelines were rushed into action and the Penn line, that previously had held like a stone wall, began to yield. The Line Smash. Starting from midfield, with Cutler and Cottle alternating as carriers, the big Blue team went crashing down the field, smashing the Penn line or driving through the tiring Quaker tackles until they had reached the 5 yard line for a first down. Three tre Yankee stadium battle. roughly over the Notre Dame eleven with drams booming and trumpets blasting.

Not since back in 1916 has an Army football team trampled the Hoosiers under foot. Bat they did it yesterday, and there was no doubt about the way they did it. The Male's at Home. The score was 27 to 0. The famous four horsemen had been driven away- by graduation.

The Army mule galloped into the stalL llore than 70.000, the largest football crowd in New York's long history, saw Knute Rockne's bewildered cohorts fall beneath the onslaught of the determined, tough, but not particularly brilliant squad from the military academy. Seventy thousand, perhaps believing they would see another gigantic, ingenious eleven like the Rockne battalion cf last year which rode rough-shod over all that got in its boisterous way. But here was no i comparison between the Hoosier I teams of 1924 and '25. West Point, of course, is improved. Not So ColorfuL The crowd of yesterday, vast as it was, was not the colorful spectacle it would have been had not broke through the Hoosiers right defense for a touchdown.

Busy Sir. Wilson. It was a West Point crowd. Volumes of cheers spurted from the stands when Master Wilson nosed his way over the Wilson also kicked goal. Later touchdown in.

each. Leith accounted for one in the first period after a brilliant series of triple passes by OHIO BLANKS COLUMBIA; 9 TO 0, BUT ONLY AFTER BITTER FIGHT mendous drives against the middle of the line yielded only three After You, Pease! military regulations prevented the Marek, State's Great Back, Shows Up Real Star. Columbus, Oct. 17. Present entire, student body on the plains Ohio State Pos.

Columbia Cunningham L.E Wagner above the Hudson from attending. Every seat was taken in the im ing a solid line and a great back Tackle Sprague Soldier lads Fullback Buell vhose playing mense popularized by in the person of Elmer Marek, a G- Herman KritJ, and thousands helped down Notre Dame. stood in the ramps and behind the ft a forward pass, Harding to Bax seats. That multitude was late arriv ter, and not far from the goal, gave the soldiers their second touchdown. Harding failed to ing.

Many tickets conveyed the information that the game would get started at 3 p. m. Two-thirty to the well known dot did Master ir. Wiberg Myers Osnato Klein Schhnetisch Hess Raphael Cndil R.T Auliclt Rowan R.E Br a4y Grim EanUn Marek L.H.... Sait Clark Rjl Macklen karow P3 Kirchmeyer Ohio State 0 ,0 3 0 Columbia 0 0 0 0 0 Touchdown Earow.

Field goa! Uri-dil. Substitutions Ohio State: Cilery for Klein. Re-d for Hess. Hews for Reed. Reed for Meyers.

Wenu for Marek. Slough lor Cilery. Ackerman for Rowan. Maefcay for Cndil. Gornlt for Cunningham.

Columbia: McAnarnxy for Raphes, h'orru for Kirchmeyer. Williams for McAnarney. Ho-ris for Kiivhmeyer. Rieger for Kaplan. Zgrt for Rieser.

Jaecer for MaiUen. kick. Then the score was 13 to 0. More fiddling in the third quar Capt. Johnny Joss Dan Allen O'Boyle of Notre Dame swin? a ter.

Army and Hoosiers did little sophomore, Ohio State defeated Columbia, 9 to 0, in the big i er-sectional game in the Buckeye stadium here today. 1 ia's attack, which had piled up 170 points in its first three games, amounted little here. The inability of the save practically ruin the midfield newly shod toe against a shining pigskin ball and cause it to spin for baseball purposes. Of course, dizzily over the Army goal line. Hoosier 's Take the Air.

baseball is still a long way off. More in the Fourth. -Notre Dame tried an aerial game tried it desperately. But the meyer for SesiL In the fourth, however, the Army added more points. The period Ray Kirchmeyer Army mule knocked those tactics Referee H.

P. McGrath. Umpire H. P. Swain.

Dirkinson. Field Judee Don M. Hamilton. Notre Dame. Head Linesman M.

J. Thompson. Georgetown. was not long under way when Roach's punt was blocked by Saun fiat. Twenty-four forward passes were tned.

Only four were sue ders of the Army and picked up cessfuL Was that the great team by Born on the Hoosier 20 yard line. Born raced the ball to "about of the famous' Four Horsemen Only once did the Hoosiers get the 2 yard where he was flat cast mid held while thev were in tened by some unidentified youth. Hewitt ran the bail over. Wilson possession of the balL The Army Blue and White offensive to get started was due not only to the steadiness of the State line, but also to the absence of Capt, George Pease from the game. Pease, the brilliant Blue and White tactician, who has so ably been directing the Columbia machine, suffered a-chipped shoulder in- the Wesleyan game a week ago.

Elmer Marek, the much heralded backfield star of the victorious combination, lived up to expecta toed the ball between the for a considerable period then every attempt was made by Rushed in to save day when Yale line crumbled. yards, but on the next play Captain Joss opened a gaping hole in the Quaker line and Cutler drove through for a touchdown. More Yale subs were thrown into action in the fourth period, but accomplished little until Sturhahn recovered a fumble by Rogers on Penn's 44 yard line. With Noble and Weincke leading the charge, the Elis rushed to Penn's 24 yard line, where Noble unleashed a long forward which was retrieved on Penn's 4 yard line. Allen made 2 yards on a savage line smash, but on the next play Noble fumbled and.

Captain J. H. Willson recovered for Penn. Yale Still Dares. Even after this heartbreaking setback Yale wasn't through.

Starting from their own 20 yard line, they peeled off a couple of short gains, then took to the air One forward pass from Noble to Fishwick was good for 25 yards and a moment later the same gifted pair completed another that planted the ball on Penn's 1 yard line. Allen crashed through for the touchdown and was given the extra point when Penn was declared offside after his attempt Kocicne eleven to buck the Army Buckeyes were stopped momentarily when Sesit intercepted a pass on his nine yard line. The Lions made nine yards and then were penalized fifteen yards for holding. Another punting duel took place during the early part of the second quarter and when Ohio managed to get possession of the ball on Columbia's 30 yard line, it started an effective offense. Marek heaved a 25 yard pass to Grim, the latter being dropped on the Columbia 5 yard line.

Marek then made four yards and Karow drove through the line for the remaining yard and a touchdown. Marek's effort to add line, nut tfrey met witn serious losses. isorre name, made an tions by featuring regularly. He did not directly account for any other desperate attempt to make use of a forward pass. It met with utter failure.

The pass. cannon were hurling them back. Substitute after substitute was sent into the fray by Rockne, kneeling along the sidelines. cerstand that on occasions of this kind the Hoosiers travel with the numbers of a circus. Substitutes came and went.

None could top the soldier boys. Neither eleven accomplished anything in the first quarter. They fiddled about the midfield for the most part. The Army did, "once, almost secure a safety. The heroes cf yesterday were Cadets Born, Harding, Wilson, of the nine points made by the Buckeyes, but was largely respons from Roach's arm and intended for McMullen, was intercepted by ible, lor the advances that made fcprague.

ot tne Army on the tallies possible. Dame oa-yard line. Soraeue During most the first quarter carried the ball across for another neither team was able to sustain soldier touchdown. He ran through a Tieia as clear ot oostacles as a Baxter, Hewitt and Buell. Thev its offensive.

A punting duel resulted, with Marek having an advantage over Kirchmeyer. As the praine. the extra point failed. Wrhen Hess blocked a kick in the third quarter the victors made eight yeards on two plays, but when a pass was incompleted, State elected to try a placement goal on the fourth -down. Uridle (Other pictures oa page 56).

period drew to a close, JLirchmeyer punted out of bounds on his forty yard line. Cunningham heaved a pass to rode the mule to triumph. In the second quarter the Army got down to business and scored 13 points. The period was not old Iwhen Hewitt of the West Poiners made the best line plunge up to that tiro-, training 13 yards and KREBS VS. DUNN Fred Krebs and Tommy Dunn clash at the Richmond Boxineclub dropped back to the 31 yard line and booted the ball between the from placement had gone astray." Marek for a twenty-one yard gain.

VWr.7.n&hhn... the final threj-oints. Qther.pkirire.on page.56).

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Daily News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
18,845,690
Years Available:
1919-2024