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The Lincoln Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • Page 9

Publication:
The Lincoln Stari
Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

HR SPORT SECTION THE LINCOLN SUNIMV STAR CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING TWENTY-FOURTH YEARLINCOLN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER IS, 1025. EIGHT PAGES Cornhuskers and Coast Team in 6-6 Deadlock I TIE RESULT ON NEBRASKA GRID Cornhuskers and Washington University Huskies Even Up at 6 to 6 After Hour of Football Jousting. NKBRASKA. WASHINGTON. 1 3 4 T.

1 8 4 T. down by I 1 10 T'Irai by I 3 4 Flmt rtoHVin by prtmltten 0 0 0 0 0 by pwoltliw 1 0 0 0 1 In 4 40 24 110 VtU. irnlned in 4S 18 50 180 Vdn. Imit In IT 5 2 5 29 lost In 15 0 1 Korw'd 0 8 4 7 14 nttrmptyd 3 2 0 5 Forw'd Inromplrto 0 1 2 3 0 Ini-omploto 1 0 0 3 4 Intorroptoil hv 0 0 0 1 1 by opponent 0 10 1 2 i 2 2 3 rompleto 1 4 0 I g-alnod on piissrs. 0 15 12 43 3'ds.

on 12 17 0 35 54 yardaco italnod ,19 17 50 31 120 Not yardaBO ------33 00 18 74 177 I 0 0 I I 0 0 0 1 yanlHKO ...............75 0 0 25 IVnulty .................1.3 0 0 1.3 2 2 3 1 30 45 32 37 5 2 0 20 27 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 1 nToragr rotiirnod KIckofT yardaoo Pombira Hall Ioni on fnmbin Hall lost on ririd foala attrmptMl T.inf« 1 2 I 2 Tnnt ayrragr ...................02 35 45 43 44 0 14 10 24 I I Itlot'ks rwov by 0 10 0 1 55 0 0 .35 110 0 2 0 2 0 0.3 0 05 Klrkoff yardnitr 102 0 102 2 0 1 0 3 rrtnrnrd ............23 0 0 12 85 10 0 0 I 3 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 Hall 2 0 10 3 0 0 0 0 0 Hall on 0 0 0 FIrbl Bool" attrmptrd .2 0 0 0 BY SHERMAN. The Cornhuaker.s of Nebraska and the purple-jerseyed Huskies of Washington university struggled for sixty minutes Saturday afternoon in the 1925 gridiron inaugural at the Nebraska stadium and at the termination of an almost colorless hour of jousting the record disclosed that neither aggregation had made definite progress in the general direction of victory. A 6-6 tie score was the ultimate reckoning and the final result provided a reasonably fair comparison of the scoring prowess of the contending elevens. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VARSITY SQUAD. Top row standing left to Coach John Sabo, Line Coach Karl Schlademan, Wall, Baker, Starr, Shenk, Wellman, Snyder, H.

Baker, Brown, J. Coulter, Blackburn, Taylor, Sanborn, Hawkins, Cloud, Kellsr, Voights, Roop, Testerman, Myers, Assistant Coach Alan Davidson, Head Coach George "Potsy" Clark. Middle Hamilton, Powers, Latin, W. Mullins, Cramer, L. Davidson, Capt.

Smith, Burton, Mackie. Bottom Kullman, Isett, Hodges, Lindley, E. Coulter, Rooney, Slifer, D. Mullins, Halpin, Anderson, Hart. Kansas and Nebraska will clash in football Saturday, Oct.

24, on Nebraska field. The combat with the Jayhawkers will be Nebraska's home-coming game this year. ARMY HUMBLES IRISH West Point Cadets Rudely Knock Notre Dame From Its Throne; First Loss Since Husker Game of 1923. BY STADIUM, NEW YORK. Oct.

N. ia to be will be. Back to Bagdad, or old Port Said, or somewhere east of Suez, the philosophical Arab spreads his philo.sophical sands and mouths the above the quotation when something happens that is destiny itself. Something happened to Notre Dame before a record crowd of 75,000 at the Yankee stadium this afternoon and it was not in the least a pleasant sight to those who had watched the great South Bend team smash through all opposition, year after year. This, however, was far from a great team and it suffered the inevitable penalty of a 27 to 0 defeat at the hands of the Army, a defeat so thorough that it had no parallel for Notre Dame since 1914, when Yale rolled up 28 points.

First Defeat in Two Yeart. 1 TURNE BACK A in Were Beefy. The Huskies pre.Hented a trio of beefy, hard plunging; backs who outdrove the Nebraska ball-lug- gers and the sent Into action a forward wall which had ju.st enough edge over the Washington line to offset the western advantage in the backfield, Kach eleven registered one touchdoivn, each fizzled Its single attempt to execute goal for the extra point and each was within of a second liuskers were quite alert enough to unto the bull and thus take advantage ut the inability to hold fast to the oval. Penalty Punt, liuskers and Huskies battled on even terms in the opening period, a jienalty for hacking otf- aetting a punt by Captain Weir winch spiralled the ball deep Into Washtngtun territory. Neither eleven was able to display a cun- sl.stent gt'uund-gainiiig otfense and the struggle resolved itself large- striking distance of Punting duel between the touchdown, 5 'Ct failed in Cornhusker leauer and tluttormsen, A Si MC'll 1 Tl IM.

to achieve second scoring peT iormance. The combat, therefore, had as its climax a knotted count which brought neither satisfaction nor disappointment to either of the rival football camps, Argu msnt Undscidtd. While performance was not featured by any of the blunders which tossed away a. victory in the MUssourl game of a week ago. the scoring punch which made Cornhu.sker teams fa- nioiis a few seasons ago was con- splcuou.sly missing.

offense was equally Inadequate and the gladiators from the far west headed out of Idncoln last night on the return journey to Seattle with the argument between' Missouri Valley football and the Pacific Coast conference article as com- undecided as It rs before teams lined up for the opening kkkoff. Locke Sprinted 50 Y.vdt. The combat featured by a meagre contribution of thrills. Halfback Roland Ixieke, premier of the pigskin realm, once snared a Washlneton kickoff and reeled off a spectacular 50-yard return. Halfback Wilson of the svestern Huskies executed a clever forward pass of 25 yards to Knd gain which placed the coast aggregation w'lthln striking fllstance and ultimately resulted In successful plunge to a touchdown.

Ifalfhark Avard Mandery of Nebraska, standing on the W'ashlngton goal line, received a pass from Quarterback Hte- phens, hut the oval trickled out of his graap and fell to the Just over the final chalk- mark. by Pistol Shot. This denial of a promised hu.sker tourhdow'n had Its counterpart when the western warriors Inaugurated a plunging parade late In the second period and were within a Bcant yard of the Nebraska goal when Field pistol barked out, alg- lilfylng that time was up for the half, and balked the Huskies of their prey. Fumbling also factored in halting the Washington te.ani's drive on several occasions and the Washington quarterback. Hutchison Biocktd Punt.

The tide shifted quickly early In the second quarter, when Hutchison, Nebraska center, broke through the lluskle.s’ forward wall, blocked a Gutturmsen punt and ilowued the bull on 19-jard line. was Interjected for Brown at the Cornhusk- quarterback station at that Juncture of the combat and a 12- yurd pass, Stephens to Sprague, placed the crimson garbed Nebraskans In position to score. I'lunges by Rhodes and Locke netted thiee yards, but the Huskies were resisting stubbornly and Stephens hurled a short pass over the scrimmage line to Avard Mandery. The muff of the pass, after getting the ball within his grasp, nullified the Nebraska onslaught and the ball passed over to the Husklf as a touchback. Weatern Team on Rampage.

The oval then changed hands on a series of punts and the Huakiea speedily uncorked a passing and plunging rumpuge which advanced the ball deep Into Nebraska territory. A Wllson-to-Tesreau pass netted 17 yards and Wilson followed with a plunge off tackle and subsequent eut-lmck smash which lidded 18 yards to the Washington team's parade. Wilson and Tea- reuu alternated In ripping through the Nebraska line, advancing to the one-yard line, when the pistol shot sounded the termination of the first half. Reels Off Run. kickoff at the start of the third period brought a response from Halfback Ixieke, who received the kick, tucked the ball under his left arm and sprinted 45 yards to the middle of the field.

The Washington line balked the plunging efforts and Gaptaln Weir kicked across the VVa.Hhlngton goal to a touchback. Punta were exchanged and the ball eventually passed into the Huskies' posesslon on flieir 23-yard line, after going out of bounds on a Weir kick. on A Washington biirkfleld man fumbled on the next play and (Continued on Page Three.) Proud Bird Neatly Plucked In Gridiron Joust With 'Bachman Team. Manhattan Farmers Harvest Touchdowns, While K. U.

Scores One. LAWRENCE, Oct. Kan.sas Aggies took their second straight victory in two years over the University of Kansas football team this afternoon by 3vinnlng 14 to 7 and thereby made new record of two ki a row'. Prior to last year the Agglea had not beaten Kansas except back In 1906. The showed more ag- gres.siveness in the game today and blocked two Jayhawker punts which had much bearing on the Aggie rush to touchdowns In the first and third periods.

Kan.sas put on a sixty-five yard march down Ihe field In the late second quarter only to be halted on the Aggie five-yard line by the half-time whistle, w'lth yet another down to try for the score. Aggies Outdowned. Statistics Kansas made tem first down to the six, but the Aggies held a slight margin In yards gained from The Agglea took the ball on the K. U. 45-yard line after five minutes of playing.

Gochrane punted to Hamilton on the Kan.sas four- yard line. The Kansas quarterback dropped the ball and Captaki McGee of the Aggies fell on it. Hol- alnger plunged over on the first play and McGee kicked goal. That was all the scoring until the third quarter. Again the Aggies blocked punts and recovered the ball on the Kansas 44-yard line, Tw'o attempts at the line netted nothing and then Holalnger flipped a forward pass of 20 yards to Price and he out-raced two men for the remaining 24 yards to the goaUline.

McGee again kicked goal. The Kansas score came with but two minutes left to play in the fourth period. Cloud, who had substituted at center for of K. Intercepted an Aggie fitrvvard pass on the Kamsas 47-yard line and raced to the Aggie 15-yard line before he was caught. Mackie, K.

U. fullback punched the line four times and carried it to first down on the four-yard line. Two thrusts by Mackie and another by Wall h.ad the bull on the one-foot line and Wall plunged over on the fourth for the score. Wall also kicked goal. Wellman was the Kansas stai', his work In punting being good and his forward pass snatching exceptional Htarr, who went In the second period, also was respoiialhle for much of Kansas yardage.

Captain McGee of -the Aggies did grrat work In rcooverkig fumbles and blocked kicks, but Holslnger was the main Aggie gruund-galner. Lineup and Summary. College Fob'TBALrlv IN THE WEST. At Washington, 6. At Drake, 0 At Lawrence Kanaae 14; Kaneae 7.

At 32; Rolla Mines, 0. At St. Washington, 0. At Iowa 12; Illinois, 10. At Normal, 29; Wayne Normal, 7.

At Northwestern, 0. At 21; Wisconsin. 0. At Bloomington Syracuse, 14; Indiana, 0. At 32; Wabash, 6.

At Terra Haute Purdue, 44; Roes Poly, 0. At State, Columbia, 0. At Mount Union, 0. Aggies, 16; Denver 0. At 43; Colorado 0.

Mandery Crossed Washington Goal Husker-Husky Observations. AVARD MANDERY. The former Tecumeeh high school halfback scored touchdown in 6-6 tie score At Detroit-Georgetown, 24; Da- i Washington univereity. A fake plunge at center by Rhodes was converted into a run around right end. ing the Washington goal.

The crowd lacked but little of tho attcndiituo at the game which opened the season In the husker camp. The Neluaska management estimated attendance at 15,000. Coach Rearg of N.diraska de. that he was satisfied with tie acoro, "YVe conceded conslderahb? weight to Washington In the back, field anil give the away, as we did at the Nebraska mentor said. liegehaw brought a well team to l.ln- coln and I say that I have reason to complain over the tie score." roach Ragshaw was equally reticent to discuss Ihe proceedings on IPs field.

tie suits ha was 44 ftfty-flfty footb.ill game. We hoped to win, but I am While the Waahlngton Huskies accounted for the greater yardage total from scrimmage, the hiisWers had the adt.tnlage In first downs, Nebraska reeling off ten to nine. A regiment of oulhfnl knot-hoi- given free admission by the Nebraska management, viewed the game while perched on the hlllstde aoulh of the gridiron. The breaks in the luck were evenly distributed. bnlr- V- forward fmss l.alked bid fur a touchdown during while the ending the tIr.Ht half, apparently ch.Hle.l the la nglsteiing shol puint.maker.

The ball was on the une-yard line and Halfback ilsiin was pulseq fur the scoring drive. final The Cornhuskers paid their re. spel ts to Captain Tesreau of Washington, de.HcribIng him, fuUowIng game, as a plunger who Is mighty hard to bring duwn. Qu.irterback Bub Ht. system of left-paw forward passing, worried Wnshlugton.

first to Mandery gained substantial yardage anq put the Huskeis po.sttlon for the fake center piung and auhsequent end run which scored touchdown. Robert Morris, who officiated as umpire, is a Seattle man and made the trip from the western coast with the Waahlngton party. Kansai i atennan Sanborn Davidson Burton laittin Hamilton Wall Wellman Mackie Gftklals: Fos. le K. A.

C. Randalls Bullard Reed Tombaugh Mctiee IN THE EAST. At New 27; Dame, 0. Notre troit 0. At 16; Tranayl- Mandary going five yards and cross At East Stats uu i 15; Centre, 13.

At St. Louie 25; Drury, 7. 53; New Mexico Normal, 0. At 28; Ripon, 0. At ern Reserves, 6.

At Wallace. Heidelberg, 0. At 20; Ashland, 0. At Weeleyan, 24; Ohio Northern, 0. At 14; Case, 7.

At St. Xavier, 0. At 27; Muek- ingum, 0. At 17; John Carroll, 0. At Provo Brigham Young, Qolorado college, 6.

At 74; Northwestern college, 0. At Minss, 14; St. M. 6. At Dakota State, North Dakota Aggiea, 3.

At Ivers, 13; Chicago Rivorside, 0. At Kalamazoo Kalamazoo, 45; Valparaiso. 0. At Sioux 20; Morningside, 6. At Grand Dakota South Dakota.

0. At U-Regis; cancelled, snow. Illinois Victim of Second Defeat of 1925 Season; Score 12 to 10. SUGE Oklahoma Upsets the Dope By Turning Back Drake; Score 7 to 0. Drive of 60 Yards Scores Only Touchdown; Lamb Goes Over Goal.

IOWA CITV. Oct. Despite all the efforta of Grange and hlH occasional flaahe.s of old-time hrlHlance, Iowa defeated Illinota here this afternoon by a of 12 to 10. Grange atarted off like the terror of old when he can 75 yards for a touchdown In the flrnt ten rnln- iitea of play. Then Iowa stiffened smeared Grange on nearly every other effort he made and amashcd through a victory, Iowa numbed by spectacular on the kickoff and did not reco3'er until the ond quarter.

From that time forward, the had the upper hand except an uncertain few in the last period. Won in Final Period. Fry and Kutach were tho pair that bolstered the faith of Iowa fol. lowers. Alternating, they pounded away at the Illinois line for consistent gains until it gave way in NORMAN.

Oct. Oklahoin.a. Soonera staged a startling upset of dope here today by defeating the Drake Bulldogs by the 7 to 0. The Sooners In the first quarter. After receiving the ball on their own forty-yard line, they started a drive down the field which netted four first downs and ended when Lamb hit the line for two yards and a touchdown.

Captain Brockman kicked a field goal for the extra point. The return of "Goat I-amb, vct- er.an Sooner punter, to the lineup was largely responsible for victory. The husky fullback remedied the evil of poor kicking which was evident In the Kansas game and made several long gains through the line. After Oklahoma had cliargcd acro.ss for a touchdown, Drake kept the ball In Sooner territory most of the remainder of the half. The Bulldogs had their first chance to score when Lambs kicked out of bounds on 25-yard line.

But the Sooner line held. In straight football, the two were about on a par, but the Sooners took advantage of the breaks, recovering two fumbles and Intercepting five passes. Lineup and Summary. Hampel Roy Lecrone Henr.v Hunter Brockman Don Carlos Everett Wolfe Tipsord Morris Hloan Brown Hiitherla nd Hlough Cook 1 Potts Hpears Hill Cronkhlte Lamb by periods: Oklahoma 700 Drake 000 mb. after tonrhdown- -Brockman, High School At 10.

York 6. At City, 14; Omaha Tech, 6. At 91; Arapahoe, 0. At Reserves, 6. At 14; Wilber, 6 At 14; Peru Prep, 0.

At 12; Beatrice, 6. At 91; Wayne, 0. At Nebraska City, 13, City, 10. At 14; Scotland S. 0.

At 7, Broken Bow, 0. At David City 79; Geneva, 0. At Big Springe, 62; Sutherland 0. At 42; Superior, 0. At 27; Neligh, 0 At 26; Culbertson, 0.

At Battle Creek, 18, Newman Grove, 0. At Red Cloud, 14; Guide Rock, 0. At Stromebtirg Aurora, .2 Stromaburg, 0. At 27; Polk, 6. At 18; Madison, 0.

At 37; Pilger, 6 At 28; Clay Center, 0. At Auburn 0 At 22; Chester, 0. At 20, Lexing. ton, 0. At 32; Ana- elmo, 0.

At 16; Beaver City, 6. At 54; Butte, 0. At 38; Lodge- pois, 0. At 14; Ravenna, 7- It was ul.so Notre first defeat since 1928, last team finishing the without a reverse, the remarkable victory by Nebraska the preceding fall. But all exclusive of brook, must end some time and Notre dynasty over eollegiate football ended this afternoon, st.artlng with the second period and ending only with the music of the final whistle.

On defense, the Rorkne line was lorn to tatters by Hewitt, Wilson Buell. On attack, not a single ball runner Rockne could uncover made the slightest lasting Impres- Sion on the Army wall. Only two first downs were made by rushing, a state of affairs that forced the Irish into the open with an overhead game. It 3va.s not the game of their forefathers. It much of anything, In fact.

No Gipp Nor Wynne. There was no Glpp playing for Notre Itoger K.lle\ and Chet Wynne were elsewhere: 13urlas was only a inenmry. Roekne euuld only glower from the sidelines and the great four were afoot somewhere in life. In lulef, it probably 3 vas the most inept Notre team the east has seen and It took its defeat first downs from the rushing, four from forward passes and another as a result of a penalty. The four passes completed lost immediate caste 3 vhen it was remernhereii that all of twenty.f*)ur were tried.

The Arniy slmply charged through and eitiuV foreetl a liad pass or threw the pas.ser for los.ses up to fifteen yards, mostly the latter. Only once in the game dlil Notre Dame iiave possession of the ball In mld-flehl ami then and McNally quickly took It back, far back, toward the Notre Damo goal. Scoreless Firet Period. The middle weaternera contrived to hold the Army seoreleBa through the flrat period, although on the throughout. In the period, poor punt slaked to the ball on own 40-vanl 19 lo me nalJ on Its own 40-vanl At Morrill-Scottebluff, 12.

right down At Csmbridgs Holy Croee, i fourth quarter, when the wln- Hsrvard, 6. touchdown was made. Navy, 10; Prince- State, 13; Rutgers, Pearson I g. At ton, 10. At State Colteg Gettysburg, 0.

At 41; 0 At Buck- ITice Cochrane Holalnger Meek Douglaa E. Mc- Yale, The HuRkiea ere unacriistomed to playing on a turf gridlrcm. Their liome field a dirt affair on which the Cornhuskers must perform when they play their return game with Washington si Heatile on Thanksgiving day of 1924. Bride, Missouri Valley colleKe. Williams, Iowa.

Head linesman L. MeCreary, Dkla- homa. Flehl judge A. Heha- blnger. College of Emporia.

Hubstltutlons: fcttarr for Wall. Anderstm for Hamllt.m, Coulter for Mackie, Peterson for Mulllnn for Hmlth, 11. Baker for Testerman. Bnyder for Mullins, Mullins for Burloti. Hart for Mackie, Anderson for Hamilton, t'ouUer for Wall, Kramer for Tes- terinan.

Rooney for Mtarr, Hhannon for Rooney, Mackie for Wall for Ibderson for Powers, Cloud for Davidson. H. Baker for Kramer, Voights for Hmlth, Halpin for Blackburn for Halpin. Taylor for Hnyder for Taylor. K.

H. A. C. Urbane, 6. for Randalls, Fleck fur tTlee, Krysl for Pearson, Wilson for Douglas, Meek for Wilson, Enns for Cochrane, Hmlth for Holslnger, Dayhoff for Douglans, Wilson ftir Meek.

Hprlnger for Hmlth. Heore by periods: Kansas .............................0 0 ft 7 A C. .........7 0 7 Earned first downs 10; K. H. 6.

Yunls from scrimmage fexclusive of f.irward passes) Kansas, 104; H. A. 185. Forward pa 12 for 82 yards, incomplete, 8, K. A.

3 for 60 yards; Incomplete, I. At New 16; 13. At Lafayette, 7. At 19; Hamilton, 0. At Hanover Dartmouth, 56; 0.

At college, 61; Boston 7. At Providence 0 At Brunewick- leysn, 6. At Allentown Lebanon Valley, 0. At Newark Delaware, Swarth Q. At Washington Cathelie Villa Nova.

0. At Poly, Maryland, 0. At Washington George Washington, Mt. St. Mary, 3.

At 45; 48; Bates, 'Bowdoin 14; Wes- Muhlenberg, 14; 0: Twice this defense forced Iowa to give up slashing drives and he content with field goals Instead of Kutsch and Fry were the ball carriers In the second quarter when Iowa advanced to Illlnl 18- yard line. There the Illinois back- fleld defense came to the and Iowa had to choose the easier read, kicking a field goal In the third quarter Kutsch and Fry pounded through the Illinois forwards to the 25-yard line, from vihere Kutsch kicked for three additional points. Britton Boots Field Goal. Grange and his team mates maile a last sfunil at the opening of fourth ter. Galllvnn and Grange drove to 2.8_yard line and Britton back nine yards and place-kicked, making It 10 to 6 in favor of llllnms.

Illinois line and backfleld had worn out In the final effort. Fry and Kutsch took up the offensive burden for low'a and ripped off large gains, then ran 29 to two-foot line, from w'here he went over. kick for the extra point was blocked. Lineup and Summary, Hubstltutlons: kle for I-amb, Howard Martin for Wolfe, Lamb for Guffey for Morris, Crider for Potts. Drake, Robertson for Tipsord, Frye for Hutherlaud, Everett for Rrye, Sutherland for Cronkhlte, Dalby for Hampel, Dunn for Ambellng, Newton for Everett, Amend for Don Carlos, Du.stln for Hpeura, Fitch Cook, First Drake, 7.

gained lii Oklahoma 198; Drake 13ft. Yards lo.st In 10; Drake, 13. attempted completed 4 for 13 At North Piatti 41; Sidney, 0. At 28; Alb- Om.h., 12, Creighton O. guai line and the Army needed threi I yards on the fourth down, but Wll- the score.

At" March of 63 Yards. Cambridge, 0, second ti.u<-hdown At Odell Beatrice 32; from a inarch of Odell, 0. At Grand 19; Grand Island, 7. At Horton, City, 12; Horton, 0. three yards and on a forward pass to Baxter over the goal line, while Hewitt faking a plunge Baxter, by tlie w.ty, f.layecl great football throughout the afternoun.

At Central, a matter of fact, not to eni- Abraham Lincoln (Co. Bluffs, la.) 0. At 32; 0. At Lincoln college high, 11: College View, 7- At 13; Fullerton, 0. At 7i Chadron Prep, 0.

At 32; yards. 11, com i Holdrege, 0. pleted 2 for 60 yanls. Oklahorna 6 65 yards; Drake, 4 fur 2 yards. i)fficlals: Dana.

Nebraska. Referee Denny, Brown. Umpire-- Houston, Kansas, head- llnesman. Virginia Wesleyan, 0. At New York Fordham, 55; Manhattan, 0.

At 3i; 5. At 14; Drexet, 0. At Rochester 0. At A. Marshall, Dickinson, 7, At 68; Gal laudet, 0.

(Cuntlnued on Page Pos Illinois Rlee Kassell i Kaffensperger Krasuakl Hhlvley Griffen Reltsch Rod.awlg rg ------------Britton Nelson rt Reeder Roiney Ambrosio Hi Hall rhb Kutsch Ihb Galllran Fry I 1 ty Hc'Oie hy fieriods. wa 0 3 6-12 Illinois 7 3 ft 1ft Touchdown Grange, Kutach. Point after touchdown Britton (Continuedon Page Three.) Aggiea Tie H'r. LDUJH. Get.

Oklahonja Aggies and Ihe Washington Pikers fought four quarters here ihts afternoon with neither eleven being able to cros.s the goal Hue, the game ending In a deadlock, 0-0. The game was mainly a punting baltle betwe. Perry of the Aggies and l.evy for the Plkera. The of each was effective enough to place the ball back In the center of the field when either opponent made much progress In the territory. Bowman, the Aggie fullback, gained considerable ground.

The game waa featured by tight defensive work by both Eac team put up a desperate fight to gain a victory, as both lost their first two games of the season and were anxious to chalk up one on the winning In the Missouri Valley conferem-e race. Hebron Hi Defeats Wilber Gridsters HEBRDN, Oct. high school defeated Wilber high in football here yeaieriluy, 14 to 6. a safety and four safe kick At high, 0, Beth any, 0. At 12; Liberty, 7.

At Bird City, O. At Exeter, Harvard, 0. At City, 19; Merna, 6. At 44; Friend, 0. At 28; Friend 0.

At St. Paul, Arcadia, 6 At 69, Cornstock, 0. Nelson Walks Over Superior Hi Team NEl.HON, Oct. 17. l'or the fourth time this season Nelson High school held her to a blank score at Huperlor Friday afternoon, when chalked up 42 to 0 agalnut Kuprrior High.

The weather was cold and dieaiy and the game waa slow Ihromrhout. After falling to hold Xelsoo line Huperlor resorted to hut they were outwitted In every attempt and unable to get It lo Nelson danger zone. hackfleld played alrong throughout the some and penetrated the line at w'lll. With six tomh- phaslze Notre Inefficiency too heavily. It was great Army team allog.

ther. probably great enough to play and loose with the 1924 Noire team as It did with outfit, hut 11 seemed fntlrely capable of more than holding own with anything seen In these dm Ing reccnf years. The final two touchdowns c.ime I in the ftiuiih iierioil and hardly all. Ilewltt trashing t.ff tackle after a blocked kick for the third Intercepting a forward running yards fur the fourth. The Lineup and Summary.

A Baxter Hprague Hchmldt Duly Boi Veoina Trap), nell Wilson Buell Pos rt. Crow Holand Mt.relli Mc Mrinnon EdwanP vi lauiglit 0 14 27 0 0 Wllaof, Hehron led at half-time hy a 7-0 ma rgl n. Wilber -cored early In the third qtiarter Wilson, Ifebron halfback, ran sixty yards for a Hebron biuehdown and ran twenty yards for the other. i for point, with w'ell dis. li United gave Coach tt aiii 42 while the boys from 111 tropolia fuibul to make a count I by .0 .1 Nof re I In me (, Touchdowns ili-wlft Bpragiie, Baxter.

Goals from touchdown 1. Hubatllules; Notre Dame for fo, learmlen: R.nich for Bemla Wallace, White for I f'T for Dahmen: Preiii for Cudr Mc.Mul iH. IT for elu, for Nally for Quinn for Mullen; Boland for (juinn; Rllev for McNally; for Hanlgan for for Enilghf: for Ariny HewlH for Buell; Buell for I rappnell hh for Wil.on 1 coman- f.o Harding AIbn II. V4 Hi hb-lfer f. ici horp.

Colum Hehron next FrI- tnphe Tom Th day at Hebron. Thle should be an i linesman Eckn gime Hebron f'hago. Field Judge- U. rued Wilbur 13 to 6 last Fiiday Princeton..

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