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

St. Joseph Gazette from St. Joseph, Missouri • 30

Location:
St. Joseph, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
30
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

15h V.i. 1 Sunday ST. JOSKPn GAZETTE October 25, 1931 20 to 0 ers Lack Punch and Iowa State, llg to 35- 7 Triumph Over Longhorns Harvard Stampedes 54-YARD RUN IS DAY'STEATORE Arties Sub Tallies on Long Dash; Stuber, Johartnihg-meier Best for M. U. CHRISTIAN BROTHERS POWERFUL SQUAD Nebraska and Kaggies CRICKARD, WOOD CRIMSON STARS I ft vOs If'WWf iA' OaattU SUff Pbototrsph.

Above are shown the reasons why Christian. Brothers High School Is so powerful on the gridiron1 this season. Judging from performances so far, the Catholic eleven ranks as the most formidable In the city and a worthy claimant for the city championship. After nibbing out Benton, Coach Everett Shelton's crew scored victories over Troy, Kso, and Rork hurst Academy ef Kansas City. Top row, left to right.

Brother Henry, director of athletics; Schlnse, Detaney, Cxarinskl, Blakely, Ryan, Sonnenberg and Coach Shetton. Middle row, Baaan, O'Connor, Andres, Byrne, Captain John Kennedy, Olish, Danahrr, Snooka and Snead. Bottom row. Student Manager Enrlght, Balsa, W1H-mart, Spiek, Stewart, Mahoney, Zuchowskl, Sllbowskl, Rha and Negotio. 109- Yard Run Ranks 01' Miss Back High i (By the Associated Press.

1 VioThe ball In in kick-oft position on Alabama's forty-yard line lh the big stadium at Tuscaloosa. Spread out across the field defending their own goal are the players of the University of Mississippi. The stands are quiet. 1 1 WILDCATS DOWN OHIO STATE, 10-0 Pug Rentner and Ollie' Olson Lead Northwestern to Big Ten Triumph. By JAMES L.

REN1CK. COLUMBUS, Oct Rentner and Ollie Olson, two young giants from Northwestern Univer sity, passed and ran Ohio State out out of ths Western Conference championship picture this after noon before 41.455 persons, th Wildcats clawing their way to a 10-0 victory. Besides carrying the brunt th Purple offensive attack It was Rentner and Olson who accounted for the iO points, the former dashing forty-nine yards for a touchdown half way in th third period, and the blond Norwegian sending a beautiful drop-kick through the crossbars from the thirty-four-yard line Jutt as tha last period started. Northwestern successfully bottled up Ohio's fleet backs, Cramer and Carroll, to such an extent the Buck eyes never seriously threatened to score, advancing the ball within th twenty-yard line only once during the sixty minutes of play. Ohio's line which withstood the test last week at Michigan was found wanting today, the Purple making thirteen first downs and gaining 371 yards scrimmage, while the vaunted forward wall of Northwestern, led' by Captain Dal Marvir and Jack Riley, held th Ohio backs to Seven first downs and only 140 yards from scrimmage.

Throughout th first half Ohio battled on even terms with th Wildcat, th Buckeyes making a sensational goal line stand in the second quarter and took th ball from the Purple on it six-Inch line. HERE IN JANUARY Jack Demptey Not to Include St Joseph in Tour Next Month. Jack Dempsey, former world's heavyweight boxing champion who is fighting a serle of four-round bouts and who plan a comeback attempt, will fight In St Joseph, but not next month. It was learned Sat urday sight Plans had been mad to bring the Manassa Hauler her th middle of November, but they were changed Saturday. Demptey fought a long aeries of four-chapter bout on th Pacific coast He starts Another on wltntn a few day.

This on will carry him to th Wast coast again and hs will then work back East. This win djring him into this section again early next year. Leaders of City Win Huskers Eliminate Kansas From Conference Championship Race by Scoring 6-0 Victory; First-Period Of fensive, Starting: on Own 42-Yard Line, Nets Nebraska Only Touchdown. JCOLN, Nrt, Oct th well upholstered Jay-hawk line before It, the Husker squad defeated th University of Kansas, 6 to 0, today and eliminated ft from th 1W1 Big Six Conference race. At no time were th defending tltleboldcrs dangerous and th major portion of th gam was played well within Kansas territory.

Of first downs Netfraska mad fifteen while Kansas mad three; in net yardage Nebraska gained 23T, and Kansas 68. Carrying th ball Nebraska covered 231 yards and Kansas 74. A first-period offensive gave th Huskers their lone touchdown. Driving from their own forty-two-yard line, Sauer, Bauer, Masterson and Kreixinger plunged twenty-sight yards. A pass from Bauer to Joy.

put the ball on th Kansas twenty-six-yard line. Masterson made three yards, Sauer made five and four more, then carried It to th Jayhawk eleven-yard lin as th quarter ended. Bauer plunged to th four-yard line and Bauer carried the ball over through th center of a mass of Jayhawk. Masterson' place kick was wide. Page, Jayhawk back, made Kan sas' frst down at the start of th second period after Smith, a running mate, had twisted for nine yards from his own thirty-three- yard line.

Schaake was soon com' pelled to kick, and the Huskers marched forward to be halted when Bauer's pass went over th goal. Th Husker ace waa forced out of th gam later with a leg injury, A team of substitutes finished ths half for Nebraska with the ball in mid-field. Th Cornhuskers, with Koby In Bauer's place, continued driving in the third period. The offensive halted again on th Kansas nineteen-yard line as a Husker pass went wide. Schaake kicked but Bosweil, sub Husker back, picked up the Kan tan's partly blocked punt and It was Nebraska's ball on th Jay hawk twenty-yard line Krelzinger plunged to the three-yard line, but Masterson' pass rolled over" th goal.

In th fourth period Schaake chalked up Kansas' second "first down with a fifteen-yard gallop. but was soon forced to punt aad Nebraska resumed a march that ended on the Jayhawk twelve-yard line, where Masterson's attempted place kick went wide. The teams then jockeyed up and down the field with Kansas in possession of the ball on its own ten-yard line as the game ended. A home-coming crowd of between 22 000 and 25,000 witnessed the annual contest, played under a sun mora suitable for baseball. Starting lineups and summaries: KANSAS Hanson Rost Kviterent Bausch Caslnl ry i.

O'Neill BmUh Pstefe) NEBRASKA L.E... Jor Rhea (o) Roster Kir Justice Ollbert Duraee Bauer. Haateraon Kreillnser Sauer R.O.... F.B..,. Msdlson Sohaake score by periods: Ksnsaa Nebraska .0 0 neorlnif Touriown: Nebraska.

Sauer. Officials Referee, I. c. Quiflef. St.

Mary's: umpire, Ira CarriUiers. Illinois Weslsyan; head linesman. Dr. J. A.

Relllr. Oeorietewn; field Judge, B. MeReary, Oklahoma. Hurley and McWilliamt tn Return Bout at Atchison A large number of St. Joseph boxing fan have mad reservations for th fight card at Atchison Thursday night Jo rabon, the veteran war-horse from Kansas City, is fighting In one ten-round bout which goes to make a double main event, while Jack Hurley of St, Joseph snd Hal McWllliams, Kansas City, meet In a return engagement in the other ten-chapter headlines McWllliams won a rather unpopular decision of th judge over Hurley on th last professional card, here recently and th 8t Joseph youth jumped at th chanc for a return go with th clever Kansas Cltyan.

Hurley believes he has an excellent chanc to win this week by a knockout CHAPMAN OF BARNARD CETS HIS 8-P0tNTER Jo Chapman of Barnard Is ths only northwest Missouri, sportsman who has reported to' th stats gam and fish department th killing of a buck during th three-day deer season which closed Saturday night Chapman made his kill of an eight-point buck In Taney County, according to Word received by The Gazette from Townsend Godsey of the game and fish department. The three-day open, season on deer was th first in Missouri sine 1925. Several hundred sportsmen purchased deer tags prior to th opening of th season. Only on deer was allowed each hunter. Six Contests McMillin's Crew Crushes Oklahoma, 14 toO, With Same Tactics Employed Against Kansas Score.

Once on Long Pass and Again With 63-Yard March, Using; Sheer. Power. AHEARN FIELD, MANHATTAN. Kan. Oct.

24. Driving on to ward th Big Six Conference foot ball championship, "Bo" McMlllln' undefeated Kansas Aggies put on their power and aerial acts and defeated th Oklahoma Sooner, 14 to 0, here today before a crowd of ,500, Beaded by Governor Harry Wood" ring. Th Aggie used th Identical tactics the employed a week ago In crushing th champion Kansas University Jsyhawkers and with a two-touchdown toyed with the opposition's feeble attempts to fcor with a pass offensive. "Rambling Ralph" Graham, soph, omore halfback hero of the Aggie conquest of Jayhawkera, led a sixty-ftve-yard march for on touchdown scored through sheer power Use Long Pass. The first touchdown, late in tha initial period, was a re-enactment of the Auker-to-Cronklte pars that scored on Kansas.

Held by the Sooner forwards aflee one thrust to the three-yard line, tha Aggies cam back with a lin charge that placed th ball la scor. ing rang. Elden Auker, Aggie halfback, was swarmed by Sooner as he attempted to pas but heaved a wild flip thirty-thre yard In th general direction of th goal. Captain Hleh Henrv Onnl.it. lanky Aggie end, and little Guy warren, in uklahoma captain, jumped for the ball.

Warren reaching It first. Crarlkite took It out of' Warren's grasp at th twelve-yard line, smeared th diminutive Sooner with a straight arm and wobbled over the goal line. Long, Powerful March. A bruising, battering march from their own thlrty-flve-yard lin gav the Aggies their other score and Graham his fifth touchdown of th current season. The flashy sophomore earried th ball thirteen out of nineteen times on th touchdown march, making torn of th firtt downs with two cracks at th line, some with three.

Ray McMlllln, Aggie quarUrback, and George Wiggins collaborated with th battering Graham, but mainly it was the El Dorado flash who supplied the power. Auker contributed a thirteen-yard end run at on stage of the relentless, slashing onslaught. Graham continued ripping th Sooner line throughout the remainder of the game, making one twenty-seven-yard dash, another for ten yards. But -j-lth a two-touchdov lead the Aggie offense, played lacks- aasicauy ana McMillin's men, still in the throes of a fumblinr at. tack that marred their victories over Missouri and Kansas, took th defense.

The Sooner tried desperately to score on passes in th fourth period, but met with little success, tor the Aarrdee knocked down or tnln cepted most of Elittrom's tosses. Two More Gamea, The Aggies made fifteen first downs and 09 yards at scrimmage to eight first 'downs' and eighty-nine yards gained by th Oklaho-' mens. The fumbls count showed six by th Aggies and two by th Sooner, but the men of Purpl recovered three of their own bobble. With victorias over Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma, McMillin's crushing Purple team has yet to meet Iowa State and Nebraska, co-leaoer In th title race. Line-up and summary OKLAHOMA KANSAS STATE Curnutt Oraalmaa Wilson Jackson l.i...; L.T.,., L.O., B.O..., R.T....

F.B.... ralrbank Stepneneoa Weybrew Michael Becaeer Cronslle Hank sfeMlllin, Auker Wiggins Orebaas Teel Corey Welkins Dunlse Cllstrons Warren Makmsr score by periods: Oklahoma Kansas State ft-14 Soorlnt Touebdoems; Kansas State. Graham. Cronklte. Point after touchdown Kansas Stale, Auker (place kicks).

Offlrisls Beferee, Leslie Edmonds- aai. pfre, Dwlsht Ream; bead linesman, Larry Qulfley; field jude. C. B. atcBriee.

Drake Takes 46-0 Beating at Fordham NEW YORK, Oct. 24. bewildering forward-pas attack, bolstered by line smashes by a brilliant back field, today gav Ford-ham University a 4S-0 victory over Drake University. Starting Immediately after th opening whistle, th Fordham Rams carried the fight to ths Missouri Valley Conference champions throughout the four period. tallied on a 'touchdown in th first period and added two In each of th final thrc.

Only once did Drake threaten when Paul Schneeman, a substitute back, slashed oft left tackle to carry th. oval to the Rams' twenty-lx-yrd lin but trrr Intercepted forward fm halted, the low an effort. Mis Lulu Bell Gorman wen th Texas women's fancy diving champion hip In a contest at Austin, Captain of Eastern Eleven's Passes Pave Way for Two of Five Scores. By BOX KINO, lAtsoeiated Press Sports Writer. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Oct.

24. 0P Th Harvard tornado struck th Texas Steers today and stampeded them for a 88-7 4ntrsectional A Crimson whirlwind In th person'" of Halfback Jack Crickard smashed and battered ths Lone Star tackles for three touchdowns and Barry Wood, Harvard's sharp-shooting captain, paved ths way for ths other pair of scores with his deadly forward passing. Texas fought with, alt the wild rury or a rear-craaea nera out Wood, outstanding quarterback of the year, played the invaders as if they were an accordion. He pushed them out with aerial threats to en able Crickard to tear through their tackles and pulled them In when he found a situation that called for a Harvard not only generated tremendous power for Its running gam but also had enough defensive force to crush all but on of th Texas advances. Ths Crimson players were caught off guard In th third period when Howard Clewis, substitute fullback, ran fifty-five yards for th ion Texas touchdown after receiving a lateral from Jimmy Burr, who took the flat pass that Ronald Fagan, quarterback replacement, tossed over center.

After this, the Steers attempted several times to work this forward-lateral combination, but th Harvard forwards were on to the play and held It for slight gains. Th vaunted Texas overhead gam met with the same fate, so efficiently did tha Harvard secondaries operate during the few moments they were not rushing. the ball. The first Harvard score took less than three minutes and resulted from a 60-yard march, Crickard and Jack Schereschesky banging the tackles all th way. Colburn and Miller Enter Coast Meets Neil Colburn, professional of the East Hills Country Club and champion of th Mid-West P.

G. and Clancy Miller, former city cham pion and a member of the St. Joseph Country Club, will compete In virtually all of tha winter golf tournaments In California and In at least two In Texas. I The pair of young golfers, who have been burning up the St. Joseph and Kansas City courses this sea son; will leave Nov.

IS and probably will not return until the middle of January or Feb. 1. All of tournaments in California and' Texas are open affairs and both th local professional and amateur will be able to compete. In addition, there probably will be a half-dozen pro- amateur meets in which they can team. In those meets Colburn and Miller ar expected to be at their best Th first tournament th pair will enter will be th national match play open at San Francisco Dec 7 to 14.

Ths remainder of th tour naments will be medal play. From San Francisco the St Jos eph golfers will travel with tha large number of national stars who ar to make the winter meets to Pasadena for the $10,00 open there Th Pasadena tourney will held Bee. IS, 18 and 30. Then comes ths Gtendale, Cal, open, Dec to 28; ths Santa Mo nica, open, Jan. 3 to ths Los Angeles 110,000 open, Jan.

9 to 11, and then the golfers drop down Into Mexico for th Agua Calient open, which wilt bs worth $15,000 to the winners this year. Lest year the re sort's tourney prises totaled 120,000. Dates tor tha EU Paso and San-Antonio, Texas, tournaments. In which Colburn and Miller hop to compete, have not yet been arranged. 3te1ster More Expected in Indoor League; Meet at Monday Night.

Three team have entered th Commercial Indoor Baseball League being organ lied at. ths T. M. C. A.

A meeting of representatives of teams desiring to enter th leagu will be held at tha at 7:30 o'clock Monday evening, according to Fred Hoffman, physical director of the Th teams entering th leagu ar Street Railway, Swift and American Nationals. Several other groups wanting to enter th leagu have an Insufficient number of players, and th meeting Monday evening wilt tak np th advisability of allowing players from two firms to go together forming a tam In th leagu. Plana ar being mads for the leagu to play on two evening a week until De. X. More than 4,000 turtles, weighing eight tons, war removed from Lak Taneyeomo, Missouri, In two months la a rough fish sradtcatloa project, AMES, Iowa, Oct.

24. V-Sweet victory th flrrt in th Blr 81 tine 1924 came to Iowa Stat' football turn today when It tund back MlHOurt't punchlet Tigera, 20 to 0. Ten thousand home-eomr checrd th Cyclone ai tha.reguv" lara counted touchdown! In the second and third periods, and than they got thslr big thrill when Kern Ellerlck, ona of the substitutes rushed into the fame In the final minutes, smashed through tackle, reversed his Held and galloped fifty-four yards for the final The rest of the game lacked ny spectacular features, but the steady line-plunging of Crete and Schaf-roth, with an occasional flashy open field dash by Bowen, kept the Tigers constantly wstching their goal. It was ons of BoWen's spurts that started ths Cyclones" first score. caught GUI's punt In mid-field and reeled off thirty-seven yards before he was hauled down.

He broke away again for a thirteen-yard dash, and a pass from Schaf-roth to Templeton moved the ball to the four-yard line. The Tigers battled gamely, and it took four smashes Grt fj finally got it over. The third period scoring drive started In mid-field with Crete and Scbafroth punching the tiring Missouri line to the fifteen-yard mark. The ancient "Statue of Liberty" play was called into.use, Grefe taking the ball from Schafroth's outstretched 'arm and dashing wide around- end for the counter. Missouri'! attempts at passing were intermittently successful, but the fast work of Kenneth Wells, end, broke up several intended tosses before the Tiger thrower could get rid of the ball.

Bchafroth, the husky sophomore turned in a great performance, featured by his line-plunging and defensive work at backing up the Cyclone forwards. Stuber and Johanntngmeler gave Missouri Its best chance to score In the middle of the first-periods but an Intercepted pass ended the' rally near the Cyclone twenty-yard line. Eaves, sent Into the" Tiger lineup later, connected with receivers on several nice passes, but the attack always was snuffed out by a brae the Iowa State defense. Lineup and summary: MISSOURI madden Rawlins Hartmaa' Oth Austirf Moreaa Srhlele Stuber Johannintmelrr Collinta IOWA BTATB Templeton Trueedeil Obergnneer Beyer Kisel Nolle Wells Bowen Orefe Swoboda Srbafroth uiri Sco.by periods: 1 Jo state iitiiouri oo Srorins Ttfurttdowna: lows BtJite, Orefe 7. KllertcS (nik tor Orefe I.

Potnt slur toucltdawn: ion State, Orefe, EUerlck, The play-by-play account of the game: FIRST QUARTER. Tht Cyctonee kiclred off and after an ex-rhanxe puntl Johanntnsmeier and Stuber wnritol the bell to the Iowa State fony-four-yani line. The march ended when a pen and two Itne piays failed. TherMU- untTi punt went oyer the goat Itne Bowen'e return kick got only to Jow State thirty-five yard Itne. Stuher made eleven yard, 'but the drive ended "hen Rowen Intercepted a pajia on hte twenty- one-yard line.

Asaln, the Cyelonee failed to KB in and punted to the Tieer forty-ent-yard itn. Stuber sot away (or a eiaUeei- yard daab. but the Iowa State line stiffened ana took the bell on downs on the twenty-ainevyard Una as the period ended. Score: silaeourl, Iowa Stats, S. I SECOND QUARTIRV Iowa State openeA an aeeortment ef paaeeet and runs that smtifht a toucadoera In the middle ef the second period.

The euerter opened wilh an oxchaase of pun la. Bowea runnlnf back Olll'e kick thlrty-ewven yards to the Missouri tMrty-foaT-yard tin. Bowen sot thirteen yard and Schafroth's pais Tentpietoa after eevtnl ana plays ulaed fineea yards, placing the ball the Tljree four-yard line. Orefe and Schaf-roth needed four seaaahas to earry It over. Orefe making the aenr.

His place kick for ah added point waa wide. Missouri Jowa state The Cyclones threatened stats warn Half leW. a sub back, fumbled, and Iowa State reeered on the Tiger forty-eevea-yard Una. Ths advance ended when Sehef-ma toaaed a pass aver the goal Una (rasa the tvrenty-eH rirJ mark. Eavew, another Three reeerve, opened Bp with Basses hi ths waning eelaetee.

but the flurry adai at the twenty. eoe-yard ltwe wheat a aas failed and Eares eras toaaed for a twelve-yard loae on a bad jaas from eentar as the half ended. Soora Missouri, Iowa State, THIRD QUARTER. The ryeleaes started a parade after were euaansaa la the uurd period, they were et unwed whee oia tntp- eepted Sobafroth't paas aa the Titer twelve- yorw una. urere na laaea otu aunt a ssid-nald sad sained seven yards, then raced twealy-few yards to the Tleee twente-an.

yard Ha. He and Sehafroth nads aaothar flret downs before Olll tatereapted the taea. oill punted and low en was dowsed oa UM esipeuun imny-na-yara The Cyriones added another touchdown star ths third period. BUrtlng at the Titer Utlrty-sevea-yard Has, where Bowen waa owwnow ens a punt. Orefe, ana weparrota- aovaaead ins ball for stie osastea nrst dowas a tha twenty-eta and unwn naea eejore urate swans aroaod tart and ea a trick alar and for a touchdown, Orefe added the extra Pat- akln ths sears, Iowa.

Stats, II; The period ended a few slays attar Bowen kicked eft te Btuser. Missouri had tha ball oa Its ewa tnlrty -eight-yard ttae wiraa wnw waa up, Soore: Mieeourt, Iowa stats, Is. ftlCTTH QUAXTSK. leva state weened another drive after Olil Punted le open the nasi eertoa. Orefe, Senafroth and sowed cracked the lisar tiue i-ir ivn puiaawene nrst oowne carry uva aatl irons ssld-neld te the Tlsar seventeen-yard line.

Three Hat plays failed aaa were peeeea aver the soai naa la ena uia nnve. Miasourl started a paeetnf attack with Ktuber detet moat of the throwuui, met Tenpwtaa halted the drive when he tav teraaptad a pass en the Miasourl forty threa-yare) Una. Oollinga heterospted aa ai-t em wed paee by Orefe and the ttgwre startad an asala, hue wwre anable to oon-nact. lo-wa stale fawny taktag the bag aa awwua tm at eww xony-rovr-yara nee, a sab Oelaas back, through left taskle tww stays ktter and daehad nftr-four yards lot a teuchdaww. Johneoei.

tub for Swoboda. added the extra point, majrtns tht aeora, Missouri, lawn tew, 7U. The cyetanss kicked edr and las parale Tlaars aaaned a narrate ef sassis that atwusM ths ban to the Iowa state fwenty-yard Una. The Kavea haared a kwg complete. final sexeret Miasonrt, Iowa Kate, M.

SCHMIDT STABS, BUT TtGEB FBOSat XvOSst ML -COLUMBIA, Ko, Oct Ecooplng. aa. fumbl- thJ aa. aa a a onaaaaans pa i lUMBLti BADGERS, 27-1 3 Pennsylvania Announces Its "Prowess to Eastern Teams by Beating Wisconsin. By GALE TALBOT.

(Associated Press sports Writer.) PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 24. OV-The University of Pennsylvania's high voltage football machine, striking swiftly and with deadly precision, served notice, on Its East-, ern contemporaries today by defeating a powerful University of Wisconsin team, 27 to 13, before 65.000 spectators at Franklin Field. Favored beforehand to take a beating from the Western eleven, which last week was strong enough to humble Purdue, the alert Red ana Blue team completely turned the tables, scoring at times with ridiculous ease and running up a '27-0 score before the Badgers collected themselves to rumble down the field for their two. touchdowns late In the contest All four of Penn's touchdowns came swiftly, unexpectedly, two of them on brilliant runs from mid-field by Carl Perina, big fullback, and Jerry a reserve halfback.

The other two resulted directly from the alert play of the Penn forwards, who recovered a fumble and a blocked punt deep" In Wisconsin, territory. CAULFIELD, SMITH WILL PLAY IN CLASSIC GOLF MATCH TUESDAY JEFFERSON CITY, Oct Governor Csulfield's golf match with Horton Smith, prid of th Ozarks, for which th chief executive has been preparing for several months. Is to be held Tuesday at th Jefferson City Country Club. Ben Harrison, Springfield, secretary of the Missouri athletic commission, and Chester I Brewer, Columbia, director of athletics at ths University of Missouri, will play In the foursome. Governor Caulfleld, an enthusias tic golfer even though not In the expert class, I looking forward to the match.

'But I would much rather play with Horton than against him Tuesday," said tha governor. Among Bowling PURDUE TURNS BACKTARTANS Boilermakers Emerge From. Stubborn Battle With 13-6 Win Over Carnegie Tech. PITTSBURGH. Oct.

24-tPl Purdue University, Carnegie Tech's" first Western Conference foeman. Carnegie, 13 to 6, here to day In a well matched, stubborn battle in the rain. A crowd of 20,000 was, in the stadium. Matters were virtually even through the first half and until late in the third quarter, when tha boil-ermakers got their ffrst touchdown on a brilliant sixty-yard run by Halfback Heckler, supported by excellent interference. Heckler place kicked the extra point.

Before the third period, ended ''jrdue began another offensive that wound with the second touchdown In the early minutes of the final quarter. The boilermak- ers took the ball on downs oil their 27-yard mark and drove down the field until Pardonner crashed through from the one-yard line to cross the goal. Tartans were trailing, 13-41, when they pushed over their one. touchdown. With the game near an end.

reserves were rushed in, Carnegie's offensive began on Purdue's thirty-nine-yard where botlerniaker fumble was recov ered. Pounding the line steadily. the Tartans reached the twenty- yard line. A pass scored. Navy Fires 15-0 Blast Into Tigers By EDWARD i.

NEIX. (Aseoclsted Press Sports Writer.) PRINCETON. Oct. rose up today to pour another blast into the ragged hulk of Princeton's football team, already torn by the firs of Brown and the might of Cornell. While a crowd of 30,000 looked down from the wld cement reaches of Palmer Stadium upon a futile remnant of Princeton glory.

Navy, anything but a mighty array Itself; fired a pair of broadsides In ths second period and another In ths final quarts to smash the Tigers, 134. Ones th lira died out of a line that outcharged ths Nary forwards through the first quarter while the backs ran In almost all but the right directions, ths Midshipmen took full command fc-ihe situation and never relinquished th advantage. Half way through tht second quarter a short kick rave Navy the ban on the Tiger forty-five-yard Has and the Mtdahipmaa backs, Jo Tschlrgi, Eddl Konxad and "Soup" Campbell, drov to the nineteen-yard lin befor tha Princeton forward wall stiffened. Tschlrgi then dropped back ten yards to place-sick a field goal, standing oa th twsnty-olne-yard Una, and tht gams might as well hava ended there as far a the element of comptlUda was concerned. first four minutes of play, Lloyd Han ley of Marshall raced sixty-five yards for a touchdown and Dor-ranee Edmondson of Mexico kicked goal to give th University of Mis souri team if let victory over me Tigers freshmen her today.

Th game was marred with nu merous fumbles. After th touchdown play, th contest wa largely an exchange of bobble and nunta. Aside from Hanlcyia run, th rear- lings provided the more spectacular plays, in ti.e second period, a pans by Schmidt, a St. Joseph product to iHisny, was good for thirty yards. wad In th third period Schmidt mad another gala of thirty yards en an end run.

Neither team, however, could tak th ball deep uie. eoesnj temirojt- i It! The referee's whistle shrills. The Crimson Tide rolls forward and tho ball goes whizzing far down the field. Dashing back nine yards behind his own goal line, Edmund Burke, Ol' Miss back, squeeies the ball to his chest and heads for the other goal line 109 yards away." Ten, twenty, thirty yards he goes. players swarm In but he fiithU hls way clear.

White line- after whits line passes under his flying feet until Alabama's goal line Is crossed. The run to be only a gallant gesture in a losing cause as the Tide rolled over Of Miss but it gained Burke the honor of maKlng the longest run of the year to date In a football Burke's 109-yard run, however, is only one of ten made by college football players from the kickoff, according to statistics gathered by Parke Davis, national football statistician of Easton, Pa. Other Lengthy Races, Abraham Eliowlti, Michigan State's plunging fullback, ran only six yards less in registering a touchdown on Alma in his team's first game of the year Other long runs from tie kickoff have been made by Deacle, sub-': stitute Washlngtonand Jefferson back, who ran ninety-seven, yards to defeat Western Maryland, 13-12, at Baltimore last Saturday, and by George Stuber, who ran ninety-six yards for Missouri's only scors in a losing 7-20 game with the Kansas Aggie. Six other runbacks of kick-offs for scores covered seventy-five ysrds or more. Th longest run from the scrim mage for a touchdown was ninety- seven yards by Donald Wheaton of De Pauw against Cincinnati, and it won the game as DePauw kicked the goal for the extra point and a 7-6 victory.

Eight other runs of eighty yards or more from scrim mage have been recorded, but only one, George Knot's eighty-yard dash for Olivet against Manchester, won a game. Ten on Funis. There have been ten long run- backs of punts for touchdowns according to Statistician Davis' figures, th longest being for ninety- two yards by Louis Bush, little halfback of State, against Bowdoln. Bush, one of 'the country's leading scorers, also ran Back a kickoff ninety-five yards against Bowdoin in the same game to score. Long runs for scores, made 'by college football players to date this year, either from th kickoff, from punts or from scrimmage: Runback of klckoffs for Burks, MlsalaslM.

1" yards: Elktwltt, Michigan State, 1031 peaaie, Stubwr, Miasourl. se; juider, Fttte-burtn. So; Linfor, Wisconsin, ad; Bush, Musarnueettg Stats, to; Kuanano, Brown, so: Peacock North Carolina, aft; WUaoa. Sprtagfleld. Ta, JRunback of punts for touchdowns: Bish, Maeaaehueetts A tales, tj yards: Knaaf.

-North Dakota. Oroaaman. Rut-fere, at: Hewitt, Cotumbta. so and 40; Pause. Oklahoma, so; Dracha, Gettysburg, fluuermaa.

Clark wet, at: Cevenaufh, Mi Cheep. le, Alabama, to, Runs from scrimmage for touchdowns: wheatan, Tje Panw. IT yards:" wllent. Heidelberg, to; Hitler. PM lebu rati, SO; Wad low.

Trinity, S.1; Marriott, VTuanora. St: Woods, Marylaad, do: Fanthers, Tea-nsasea, SO; aaca, kaedachy. SO; snot. Ottret, so. Texas Wallop Amazed Baylor Team COLLEGE STATION, Texas, Oct M.

Aggies smashed their, way through a weary, bewildered Baylor football team la tha closing periods of their Southwest Conference gain her today to win decisively, S3 to Baylor was helpless befor th I running and aaseina- attack of ths Aggies la th last two periods, when i. their goal wa crossed fiv tiaaeev f'i .7 (A M. g. Millet (left) ts prenWewt ef ta Baak Store BowBnf League, white O. ef.

Deraorter (right) Is utenUkj. Th eight teevsa circuit fcoMs Its weekly saascts Use Beer Men Club tilers..

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 St. Joseph Gazette
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About St. Joseph Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
509,610
Years Available:
1845-1988