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Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • 19

Location:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Hood Hero as Pitt Wins Over Syracuse, 14 to 0 Unix if a 7 A 1 4 ADI item flADI NEWS 4 IV-7T7. 1 1 hvi 1 1 MM i 4yiL yu- UaMSvaf A.le Mi 4ilUM IDkM r.rnraa. bttaaa) MM ir JUL DM ir nn ft LaJ 9 III I I -S ft i I .4 SHI 0M STAR FULLBACK I RIPLEY Urn with 4mmp4 m44rtu4 0mUp, Aerf ttiaJ mfi wmmi plt mm4 4tmU mmythtng 4pHi4 4 Awn in Am (tHM Believe It Or Not SCORES TWICE FOR PANTHERS TARTANS' LINE IS UNABLE TO STOP RAMBLERS Schwarlf Passes and Plunges For Bocknemen'i Scores' Witness Friy Eyth Sprints 68 Yards Sktbos Only Tally Irish Overpower Sco Scant 20.000 Witness Hard- II MM wmAi Fought Grid Contest in Salt City Stadium. Mi Setback is First of Season For Orange Machine: Only 1 1 First Downs Recorded. II I i I it I I I I 1 lit I raflltlilll flit rf.

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,1 II II III 4 Mn. pnaiHai I aarfc Mh rwi ai H4 i a ueaa, itaraaav im an fir IIARRT KICK. Hpartl HUor. SYRACUSE, N. Oct.

18, a marc in of two touch. dowm to none, the Golden Br JUS CASVLR Ifaaiawii Inaa Paw Pa (Ma. I Panther, of the University of Pittsburgh today tupped down I I Ba 1 1 A aST aaanana, -am sw I Aw aw i I a fiehtine Syracuse Uruvrraity ii i 1 1 ir: -viwr N- -i I i i i i eleven before a scant 20,000 ii be remembered that tha Skibos wer facing thrir Qrst real tei of the year, and ini up against an embattled foe. brought up to a I ii 11 dun I high peak by lh fire and deter mutation of the (treat Rorkn. UYE FAILS TO HOLD ui -'j I The Camegio tine failed to bold I it Mill Af TUt fAikm PnUitJt ij I U-1 TZj.

I up as was cxpcted to do. kl- HI I I Mmtl I vi 4i it if iwiniif iwiww i -v i f'lfWf WCtWSE HA58tEMKCPtCOMTlrUOUSl.y BURMlMG IM THE. 0PM though whether this was duo to lis own fuXings or to the remarkable performances given by every one of Rockne'a Luiemeo diSi cult to ssv. Notre Dime counted two touch- i i mi roP nn vrABs ir I in fana in the Archbold Stadium here. Inning.

14 to 0. It tu plenty lough tuwde and ImcMt anybody's contest bresli followed break with most of the bad ones going agulnrt Pitt. It was the Panthers' ability to cah In on both of their big chances and to take away the ball on downs In a number of pinches that derided the battle. Bunding out as the hero of the fray was Prankle Hood, who h.s been three seasons earning Into own at Pitt after a serwallonil scholastic career. The big full-bark scored both touchdowns on his line cracking, being called bark Into the cont 3t for Just one play afte two teammates had failed In their attempts to buck the ball over from the one-foot line for the second score.

Capt. Eddie Baxter kicked both touchdown goats, the second one twice, because both teams were offside on his first successful attempt. FEW FIRST DOWNS downs In the second period and one In the third, while Carries i "ij, r'ii escaped a complete rout when Dutch Eyth broke away for 68-yard run for a touchdown In the third quarter. Two of Notre Dame's touchdowns came on forward paves, which tipped through Carnegie's secondary defense and Into the arms of waiting Irish. The other marker was plunged across the line by Msrchmounl Schwartz, who drove over from the four-yard line.

So precise and I Jl WA U5tD A S-tNNINC, WK. If a SI III perfect wsi the execution of the Pitt outrushed the home team plays and the checking of Carnegie's by Notre Dame that It is all but Impossible to pick out an but the first downs were few, seven for Pitt and four for Syra Individual star on Rockne'a team. cu.se. Pitt failed to make a first down In the opening period, while FIRST PEEIOD SCORELESS Syracuse not one on a long run. The first period was scoreless.

but the Panthers took the lead though not without its share of with three In the second period as (Ceattner aa Poarej SI. Tata Part. I Syracuse was bringing up Its total wXW iM'W AmJ trs7 ranKSsr and lived rtttrvkrtJutesiothohQmat if JO, SkZ Ji A tl )fi7' "S- i27 20 YCArS 600 Ih UlinOlS HIS A6N0RMA.U NECK mJ lllrKJX CAT 2 TAILS 15 wvw7Ty-- IVXY-V 'ft Mass. io (CMllnarS Tw. TMa Part.) Albie Booth Stars, Yale Army Tops Harvard in Close Fray BeatsBrown NEW HAVEN, Oct.

CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 18. (AP.) Albie Booth, mighty little man of Yale, flit. POWW5 18. (Ap.) The poorest punt that Barry Wood ever kicked ted through a rugged Brown a A PHCKOMENON Of NATURE OM CtNtRAt TREXURo PR0PER.TV, Cjhile 77 0'9 I gO AREA- PRESENTING A PtRFtCTLV UVEL SURfACE rr I HAS WORN iHt SAME COLLAR.

Bottom for 4-9 var eleven today with all the fire and improbability cf a sports for Harvard gave the hard fighting Army team a touch tTaaaf hiliwi rsm laaft. CrtaM Sfttaki mtrvasL I hero of fiction, retired to the down and a b-0 victory over side lines, and then came back EXPLANATIONS OF RIPLEY'S CARTOONS OF LAST SUN DAY: MONTY, THE FIRST AND LAST CASUALTY OF THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR OF 1870 This modest French pollu with the roars of 40.000 worshippers in hit ears to stave ofl tha desperate bid of the enemy and turn a football game into a rout. was the first to be wounded In the war and the last one to be tall of his own plane as it came out of the dive, and reaefUyl the ground safely. UNLAWFUL TO CARRY PUERS IN TEXAS During- the early days of the cattle-raising industry in Texas, the cutting- of wire fences proved to be such a menace that a state law was passed making It unlawful to carry any Instrument that could be used to cut wire. This law never has been repealed, hence it Is unlawful to carry a pair of pliers in your car.

TOMORROW AN UNIQUE RECORD SERVICE. Volume 31. A statue was erected to Monty In Southern France by the French government. "THE LUCKIEST MAN ALIVE" While flying over Belgium, in February, 1918, Captain Hadley was acting as observer and machine gunner In a fighting plane piloted by Jimmy Makepeace. Due to a misunderstanding of prearranged signals, Makepeace put the plane In a nosedive so quickly that Hedley was thrown out of his cockpit and clear of the plane.

He fell 300 feet through apace, suddenly landed on the killed. It is an appealing case of Providence's peculiar ways with human destinies. The story Is told in detail in Figuier's "Hlstolre The little fellow was all Yale had for an offense, but he was all de Merveilleux" snd Is based on the French Parliamentary debates as reported in the "Archives Parlementalres," Second' the Crimson here today before the entire Cadet corps and other spectators who crowded the stadium to Its limit. This victory, the second the Cadets have scored In the series of 16 football battles with the Crimson, was earned early Jn the opening period when Wood, who tied the Cadets last year by completing a last-minute scoring forward to Victor Harding, stood on the Crimson's 20 -yard stripe and was so rushed by the Army's veteran (Conlinurd on Pnne Thn. Thla Part.) Yale needed.

Starting hia first game for Old Eli. withdrawn from the "climax" role that has been WasTyrrn Tal 40,000 See Cornell Top Princeton Eleven, 12-7 Glenna Collett Retains National Golf Laurels his part in the Yale plan of attack since he first dazzled the opposition last fall, Albie led every sustained attack, scored one touchdown, put the ball in position for another, and neatly drop-kicked a (Cetitlrara- Paw Twa. Title Part i PRINCETON. N. Oct.

18. LOS ANGELES. Oct. 18. (AP.) Val Jra 4ft Pena Jr.

Glenna Collett won her third Muhlenberg 1 Dleklnaoa 0 6 up and to go. Her afternoon successive and her fifth all-time (AP.) Cornell's most powerful Big Red eleven since 1923, with an alert defense to match its hard-hitting offense, withstood a out pine was two strokes over par. natiohal women's golf champion COLLEGIATE. I.Ot AI, TKAMH Vntr Dame DuqimM FM" mtt Fraahmen. 0 Tar.

leth 4 w. LOCAL TEAMS ABROAD Nnt Duma .581 arnenie 'tern. Pitt 14 Syraeme Tampla to ann-Jeff DUTRK'T TKAM" ship today when she defeated Miss sensational rally by Princeton to Nlacara BafTulo YUlanova rainua nlon Ielaivara Cornell Nprlngneld Rhode I. 8Ut Wllllama Ronton L'nl IS HI. Lawrence Hamilton 7 Ronton ..1 Frank, a ManhaU (iallaiidrt 1 I'rlnrelfln to lbanon Valley Hate.

.04 Hobarl 7 '''dleboBrne Virginia Van Wle, of Chicago, 8 and 5, In the 36-hole final of the Miss Van Wie's putter would not behave. She had a 41 on the first nine and 83 for the-mornlng 18 against Miss Collett's 76. The card: MORNING ROUND Mill Collett Out 6SSSS441 440 Mill Van Wle 1930 classic. 28-yard mark, with less than a minute to play. There was Just one route open to Princeton, through the and TrU Bennett twice dropped back to let loose long heaves.

The first bounded harmlessly over the sidelines. On the second and last play of the game, Bennett threw diagonally to the goal line as Levick. substitute Tiger end. raced over. Levick.

with the goal a stride away, reached for the ball just as Eddie Smith. Cornell halfback. Onra Clfjr 10 Wantmlnalar The great Glenna played superb at. Kraneia Tennessee Gets First Setback Since 926 Race TUSCALOOSA. Oct.

18. (AP.) Alabama defeated Tennessee, 18 to 6. today, giving the Volunteers their first beating since 1926. All three touchdowns were made on smashing line plays. Tennessee's passing attack was 13 Kllpperjr Hork ThW 41 Hne.lnr Hanover .20 Lebanon Local Hockey Club Transfer Is Sanctioned TORONTO.

Oct. 18. (AP.) Official notice of the transfer of the Pittsburgh club to Philadelphia and the resignation of Referee-in-Chief Cooper Smea-ton were the principal developments at the meeting of the National Hockey League here today. The Pittsburgh dub will play under the name of the Philadelphia Quakers. A He'aheny Oenev golf from the start, turning the first nine one over par with a 40, St.

John. (N. Irrrl r. N. Out l)i I III I 441 Mliia Collett In 43354444 6 3S 40-74 day to whip the Tigers, 12 to 7.

More than 40,000 spectators saw the Ithacans gallop rough shod over Princeton in the first half. Then survive a succession of bad kicking breaks in the last halg as the Tigers came within inches and seconds of recapturing the game they appeared to have lost completely. The climax packed plenty of thrills as Capt. Mestres, of Princeton, recovered a Cornell fumble at leading 1 up, and then went out on th6 home stretch of the morning round to shoot a S6 on the par 42 layout, moving 6 up. miss van wie In IIMI4II 42 41-83 Allien Ill Toon.

Auxlrn I'olambla in larknon 3.1 llopklnn KMer II l-ehlah 'HKOer .3.1 iVanhlnttnn C. Jfl St. Joneph 15 V. Aaalea .13 Hpnnneiaer a Miivrrford AKTKHNOON HOI Ml Mlu Collett Trinity Dartmouth rrovlnVne Itntaera I mmhIh tletty. bnrjr Junlitta Kuarthntore Penn.

Montrlulr Mnnhnttan Kenyon Nlahl fame. KAST Penn Blnte I Vale Itrimn lonlham a Holy I'nna nlliv 1 liwell Tea Hnwdnln 1H Ttiftn Vlllanava Frenh. t'relnua Krrah. Army Hnrvttrel New Vork Mlnnnurl Ammriit "ft Wiircenter Tprh. Hurknell II Thnmaa On the first nine of the after Out IHIIUi 441 came tearing along.

The ban Van Wle grazed the finger tips of both noon round she maintained the lead, 5 up, and terminated the Out 4453658R 441 Ul Collett In 4 3 I 4 players, then bounded to tne It'entlaier) a Pate Thla Part.f match on the 31st with a birdie Mlaa van Wle I the scrimmage line on the Red in 5 3 4 1 Helra 12 RwKntet (ffeatlnwre an Pa Five. Thin Parti sinking a 10-fqot putt to win,.

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About Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
450,564
Years Available:
1927-1960