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The Kansas City Star du lieu suivant : Kansas City, Missouri • 17

Lieu:
Kansas City, Missouri
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17
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SPORT5 WANT ADS lb ADS -11111- 5 A 13 A THRILLER TO AS 111111111 1 I To AS THE KANSAS CITY STAR KANSAS CITY SUNDAY NOVEMBER 2 1930 BELirw IT NOT' it pool-fort pei at 11141 A p1000100ol0000pwso on ov T4 tor I FINANCIAC WANT ADS I PEA NI 21 6 I The Score (ives Little of Ja) hawks' tireat Fight Against Penns WITH 621000 IN And the Kansas Play In Half Brings Many Thrills Big Crowd Jim Bausch Fails to Show Great Power Against Brilliant Eastern Defense I i I 71 1 1 I 1 1 THE KANSAs cI Ty 'STAR 1 FINANCIAC WANT ADS KANSAS CITY SUNDAY NOVEMBER 2 1930 1 110N zoommoommomxwesammisitmlossmomomsmo 1 I BELIENT IT OR NOTql PENN 21 6 I a 4 th 1 1 rC ATheBSIcTorTe GEI11es KListtlesindicatio: 1 1 of w' Great Fight I Against Penn a L' '1' 'I te) 0 1(42 0: Ici i 77f 1 WITH 62000 IN tr 0 (14 oe 41 Thrills a ualthreBrKi k- 1) 1 Jim Bausch Fails to Show 4 II And fp ii i (11 (461 111(4 Ja)haks 1 I N1 aBn gni gss IMIC taPonwlY: I 7 1111 ei -----7-' I 11' i )1 4t: ''41 ik AP 'w'd -0 ri 41 i if 4 i Great Power Against Brilliant It 1141 ClA 1 Alt It e' all ii i Eastern Defense AN 1 ''t pft 1 0: ft'? Ir414 coming ream Behind in Last half the Alanhattan Orldsters De feat the Bengali coming rrom Be the Alanhattar feat the id in Last Ilan De iridsters lama's TIGERS HAVE BIG PERIOD Ma rl Steals" Ball and Runs 40 Yards for One of Second Period Touchdowns TIGERS HAV1 Girl Steals" I Yards for One Touch( BIG PERIOD 11 and Runs 40 econd Period oommimm Oonmoommom omommemmo THERE IS AN ERROR II1 TRE PREAMBLE Of THE CON 511 tt0t4 OC Ts4t IMMO STATEI IT READS ff A moRE PERFECT AIM WHICI4 IS A GRAMMATiCAL ERROR CON IN A MORE PERPECT (MN Wm101 it A GRAMMATICAL ERRoR I ERROR Nigro and Auker Feature Wild cats' Drives to Goal In Last Quarter Nigro and Auke cats' Drives 1( Qual 3oal in Last Feature Wild rir A 0: -IC OA i4A114 1 17 tut 11-44 116Ikr --ILIF11517 74 0 sitctot BASEBALL DIAMOND IN 1830 I ea3AL remt et" 56(Cil BA177-L DIAMOND IN 1830 IRATAL BASEBALL DIAMOND fTir IN is 30 EAD)I14(1--- i) I A en C17 ilk '1' 1 sc A 7 2 viAs BORN WORE Ii4e RE-VOLOTiONARY WAR me 15 IS 6 Yeal5 ANCIENT ARAB IDUKN oisoKt HAL- RE-VOLOTIONARY WAR ow 14 411(2 cm" a OM 6 1 4X 7s 1 trWt i Pi ON el SD 11 OAS 4c4t filiRilLD BRACO1111k II II I IR TRAtIoR SENTENCED Si plirs' 111i LI NCOLti 10 tv SOLITARY CONFINEMENT AT EA WAS CONFINED IN A HOLD FOR 33 YEARS taNd hevtr knew the otkome ot 11e weir ot 11e weir 1 um MK in 11 I AS CONF AT LEA INED IN A HOLD FOR 33 YEARS Avvi minito id 4ka a CATCW112 1400 -7 ROO ifs 8Ai I 7 004141 4409'gi'alg ooko (1Zir4-a 411n mamma "Mo ir07-1N6 4 PAN-ab am "of ZteasL '11132 SAse 15 PAM 111 ScouT (CANADA) SAT it4 IRE SENATE rc THE EPITAPH Iti 25 YEARS AND Tool( PART IN SHORTIAAND tiCLENISTER tRAWLED ON HIS loleeS FROM OPORTOPoltvga To PARIS ORME Ira( Peottrevm 3voki IN 2 ocEANS IN Zit MINQTES- Puty 'foss) 71-- ONE itALS Of 13 tzENAT0R DE5SAULLE5 11 (CANADA) SAT IN TOE SENATE FOR cAp 2 5 YEARS AND I i 1 LL1 $01 Ill emu II enA 0 1 lit i 17 i :1 421 4' I VE le III Ile1' 11 7)(111 IN 2 ocEAN 24 mINQIIS--- i 020 Mei MCI 11 "1 -1 A A 4 oti Atm Sc? 0z5EssAAuToLlis 7 it (CANADA) zt edisi Amommungem" 30 eASI I PACE 3 tiCLENISTER ONE 14ter of 13 II 1 tRAWLED ON NIS kNEES HvitChg II 1 FROM OPORTOPoltui0 To PARIS Scovt ScouT i cEQ14erbt jtcl etI0Dr- owrsed by PAIti Nue Rowburvmass EATS CoRN AND CARROTS AND DRiNK5 Ilk AND COFFEE MAT- ouosect by PAitip Mile Rowbury Mass EATS CoRN AND RROIS AND Awl) Corn records wm born in 1774 and antedates our Revolutionary War Re is the only man still alive who has personally seen Napoleon I during his campaign in Egypt All during his life he claims to have freely partaken of alcoholic beverages Glentater Crawled from Oporto to ClientApr crawled on his knees from Oporto Portugal to Paris Prance in 1900 a distance of 1400 four minutes plunging Into the ilialantle at 7:58 a The Grammatical Error in the United stales first sentence of the preamble says: "We the people of the United States in order to form a more perfect union The term "more perfect" is not grammatically correct as anything can only be perfect or not perfect The term "more nearly perfect" should have been Used miles His gOal yak the great exhibition of 1900 and Glenister was one of a great many visitors who chose a highly bizarre way of reaching the French capital in that year Senator venerable centenarian who died recently at the see of 102 established a remarkable record in the senate of Canada Although he followed the discussions very closely and was most assiduous in hill ingly Bragg was placed aboard the United States ship "Meduse" outside of the territorial waters of the United States and although he was transferred twice (to the "Car line" and President Lincoln's sentence was followed to the letter At the time of his death in 1894 Bragg never knew the outcome of the Civil War Sheich Real Rabat 158 Years Sheich Betel Rebel according to tribal attendance at meetings he never once participated in a debate nor officially gave expression to an opinion All parties united in doing him honor Bruce For Swam Two Oceans In Twenty-lour Fox who swam two oceans in lem than a half an hour jumped into the Pacific Ocean at 7:32 a then boarded a Hamilton sea plane of the Isthmian Airways and crossed the isthmus in twenty Ripley's ExplanatiOng Harald Bragg was in Solitary Confinement Thirty-three Bragg a United States lieutenant of artillery stationed at Ft Sumter was convicted of a treasonable act In 1859 The sentence of the court-martial was In 1861 modified by President Lincoln who directed that the punishment should consist of Bragg's complete Ignorance of bis country's fate Accord (By the esseeteted Press PHILADELPHIA PA Nov 1--Penne sylvania's rugged but erratic eleved rose today to fulfal the promise el power it has ahown all season and beat back with splashes of brilliance the beef and drive of the Jayhawkers of Kansas Penn pulled out of the struggle by 8 final count of 21 to 6 but the score gave little indication of the closeness of the bitter duel that thrilled 62000 in the big horseshoe of Frank lilt Field It was a battle of individual brilliance in the pinches against sustained power that finally got te rolling and the pinch-hitters of Penn bolstered by a line that ton" staunchly in the crisis ataggered down the stretch to the victory 'Miss Big Chances I Seven times in the half after being completely outplayed in the first two perioda as Penn moth ered their highly publicized liana ace Jarring Jim Bausch the KansanS had opportunities to score touch downs Out of those seven chances the Kansans salvaged one score and were baited by the final whistle with the ball on Pennsylvania's 6-yard line Yet in those same two final periods the Quakers had but one chance to score and they promptly turned It into a touchdown Bausch declared ineligible in the Big Sir conference necause of his insurance selling activities and the center of a storm that has eliminated Kansas Irons the conference wai completely overshadowed by the in dividual skill of Walt Masters Bill Graupner Dick Gentle and Carl Per ma the Penn backfield aces While Bausch plugged the line with little success and left in the third quarter before unheralded Kansas backs scored the Jayhawker's lone touch down Graupuer tore off one 49-yar1 run back of a kick to lead Penns first score Masters scored a 40-yar4 pass that wound up on the Jayhawk er's I-yard line and another for for ty-one that carried to the 2-yard mark Score After a Great Itua Graupner's flashy dash ended or 7 the Kansas 16-yard line in the first period and despite the power of the western line Gentle took a pass Irons Greene to the 3-yard line and Perini went over Masters passing beauti fully all day made his first long toss to Greene in the second quarter and gave Gette a chance to plunge over Again in the final session when Kan sas pressed the hardest Masters rote again to halt the rout with another lofty pitch this time to Gette assil again Gette drove across Pennsylvania seemed on the way RI an easy victory until the sluggish ness disappeared from the Kansas line -Penne elee Cl veri afr )n and -1 'Mance awkerS le by a Et score oseness at rm kagered 7' half tyed in' EMOth allbeell ansanS touch the id Were rith the 7cl line periods ance tn rned 14 in the of hiS aid the rainated Wal the 1114 Bill an Per While 'h little quarter backs touch 49-yard Perufl 40-yard tyhawk for for 2-yard en uled Od he first of the 'se from I Perini beautl ing tose ter and egnersKanorvoteera another tte and way to luggish mu line NEBRASKA 0 PITTSBURGH Yesterday's Results NOTRE DAME 27 INDIANA OPEN LATE TO CRUSH FOE OKLA11031A 19 IOWA STATE 13 SUBS THE' HEROES HUSKERS HOLD PITT IN THE VALLEY Kansas Agates 20 Missouri 13 Nebraska Pittsburah Oklahoma 19 Iowa State 13 Kansas Freshmen 41 Mtasourt rreahmen 6 Baker 57 Ottawa Central Wesleyan 14 Flat River Junior colette 0 Baylor 11 oklaboma Egotists ft Bethel 33 Santa Apprentices 5 Central State Teachers 21 NorthWestern of Alva Ok Kemper Military Academy 46 Hannibal La Orange HOOSIERS WILT AFTER HOLDING RAMBLERS IN FIRST HALF A Valiant Nebraska Line Three Times Checks Powerful Pan there at Lincoln The Sooners Spurt In the Last Quarter to Register a Victory Sato Idl Rig Roane Gun Unreels 39 Yards to Score In Third reriod to Set Olt the ryroteebnles A- PASS -DECIDES IT RALLIES IN LAST PERIOD period but the Oklahomans were on their toes all during the final stanza and scored two touchdowns The first was the aftermath of Tegland's fumble on his own 36-yard line A pass Warren to Kirk netted Oklahoma twenty-five yards and after four tries at the line Kirk went over Mills tallying the extra point on a place kick to tie the score When Iowa State's secondary defense commenced to break up Sooner passes Coach Ad Lindsey of Oklahoma sent in the subs Buxton and Snell and they combined to score after Oreele fumbled in Iowa State territory The lineups: Iowa State Post Don Oklahoma Swoboda Ewing Spear Fields Duesenberg 0 Teel Nagel a Young Bennett 0 If Lee Smtth Berry Moen It Cherry Trauger Stogner Bowen Massed Wells Mills Teg land Score by periods: Oklahoma 0 6 0 13-19 a State 0 13 0 0-13 Oklahoma scoring: Kirk Snell (sub for Cherry' Point after (place kick 1 Iowa State iroring: Swohoda Moen Point after Sananda (place kick Eagan Grinnell: moire A Graham Michigan head linesman Taylor Fairmont field judge Steve O'Rourke Holy Cross Buxton Throws 34 Yards to Snell Who Falls Across the Uoal Line Great Threats of Easterners Ent ploying an Aerial Attack Brings Cheers From Fans Indicatio4 STANDS Secon4 to 114 a 1 I 1 i 0 ir 1 I itiii' -tio4 1 It I 1 i ND i 3 l'''' econct tO 111 Ili lent a II i 1 ''1 I''''iiill PiI 44 tt ti 41 1Iirti1 I 1 lt i- 1 i '1 4 Ititi -4 i fii 11: I -1 1 IP i 4 it'h ii dr I 1- 3 7' 1 ii 4 i -1' 4 's I 1 1 i 't- ti It! It 4 1 i I ti i I Id 't i'l' tn" 1 t' tr tr -7-yard ill tr 4 I I it I- t' 4 2 7 1 1 li 0 i i' 1 I 1 1 1 STANDS Secon4 a I to a I' Ili 11 a 'i 11'1' 1 Penalties Twice Cost the Ok mans Touchdowns Long Runs Being Called Back Captain Baker Quarterback Is Author of the Long Fail by Inches THE BIG SIX STANDINGS Pet OM a 3 0 I 000 Ls 2 0 1000 ska 1 1 500 Ls Autos 1 2 333 State 0 3 000 Jr1 0 1 000 3 0 2 0 1 1 Agates 1 2 State 0 3 0 1 Oklahoma Kan MO Nebraska Kansas Ina a M166011r1 Ise a Member at The Star's Staff) MANIIATTPW KAS Nov 1--The Missouri Tiger had to put his tail be twecn his legs today and If the sic count of this weren't being put in the newspapershardly anybody would be the wiser because there were only otrie 6000 here in the stadium to sec him do it A game as thrilling as the 20 to 13 Aggics' victory hardly deserved to be fought as it was far from the maddening crowd although truth to tay these 6000 were mad' and at tunes mad enough to be 12000 persons If they saw the annual struggle be 'n as a lethargic' gridiron enterprise they were moved by the heights to 1Nhich these rival elevens ascended they went at each other in the ccond half like Kilkenny cats A Great Football Show That period saw everything there is see in football: barrages of far iung passes the field thickly strewn ith fumbles paper-hoop opposition uddenly become steel metal long orming gallant runs acrobatic leaps Jr the long flips It saw feverish Inges after writhing ball carriers ackles by boys fashioned out of haiebone and whipcord it saw all inds of football anomalies Then too it saw the shadows of a Prene autumn day fall on a gridiron Inch had found Alex Nigro the zgie captain one of the heroes uker a half back is an athlete as lert on defense as he was aggressive a attack McGirl and Armstrong in he Tiger line playing so well they ould almost be said as Knute ockne once observed of a star to be a the other teams backfield The Aggies were first to score and was Auker's interception of a Mis- uri pass which indirectly led to the iuchdown The goal was kicked but the second quarter Gwinn Henry's esperate Bengals began to assert I ilemselves They scored once and en came back to tally again and so half ended with the Aggies lag ag the game rather lagging eel lough interspersed with brilliant shes when the crowd cheered to i movements of cieven synchro1 ed men i The Aggies Take Lead I Then came that last half and the I posing athletes almost seemed to ap from their chairs and bound to 1 le center of the ring which is a Mese occasionally associated with At it they went and in the 41rd quarter the Aggies scored and hen they kicked the extra point ley forged ahead 14 to 13 The Tigers fought back furiously ad there was a Missouri thrust far Ito Aggie territory which was turned side on the home stretch There as another Missouri advance gotten ader way only to be frustrated by ne of those intrepid Aggies who folowed those Tiger passes like So many leuths It was early in the opening period hat this Auker whose home is in 'oreator found his vigilance re: arded when a Missouri pass came 'thin reach of his arms That gave he Aggies the balion Missouri's 43- ard line and they marshalled their atteries into action A Great Nigro rass Two line plays by the black-browed Igro gained little ground and then Ile action shifted to the air Nigro an back wheeled and flung the hall 0 Aucker for a 20-yard gain On they went with Nigro given the runt of the work to do and today his Aggie leader-was at his best He Peled off six yards around an end ehind a thick screen of purple'rsel'ed interferers He sidessiped hrough the tackle for four more lien he went over but the play was Riled back and thqAggies were tenaliZed five yards That stopped ihe Manhattan crew but hardly two ninutes later the Wildcats were down mocking at the scoring door again igro lugged the ball to the Missouri -yard line and then Ray McMillin Toed around the right end stopped when he saw that advance efficiently blockaded and slipped in through the tackle for the touchdown i Aucker was used to boot the ball for the seventh point and the first lime he tried he missed He was given another opportunity when both teams were discovered to have been If side and on his second attempt 'ne succeeded Tigers Start Air Attack Then Donald Eaves a Cameron boY inserted himself in the picture for Missouri The second quarter Tl'as on when this boy began his passIne bid for a score His first attempt as batted down by the zealous Wild(v'ets and his second was at Johnny an Dyne who had to make one of those lunging diving tries for it How he managed to make that Iris Speak- es catch no one knew but he came up )nth the ball The Missouri 'passing pyrotechnics i continued Eaves threw one thirty lards and again to Van Dyne and f)ance more the ball was cradled in the rins of this receiver and this time rie reached the Aggies' 20-yard BM came the third act in this iliant exhibition for once again raves went back with that ball once Rain he chose Van Dyne and once lAnactin there was that tense split sec- stile the leather sphere was its way to the receiver Van otne caught it Stumbling and ithling on he crossed the goal line tner kicked the goal and there N''re 41 the teams fiercely locked In a 3441 nitthrier Missouri scored again Int a Member of MANIIATTPiN KA Missouri Tiger Lad tween his legs tod count of this weren newspapershardly the wiser because Anc 6000 here in Min do it A game as thrilli iamas Aggiee to be fought as it crowd BEARS HIT THEIR STRIDE A Late Attack Produces a 40 to 0 Victory Over MOtitallitt Attendance Figures on Yes terday's Big Grid Games Yes es (By the Associated Press) SOUTH BEND IND Nov Dame routed Indiana's fighting Hoosiers as predicted today by a lopsided score of 27 to 0 but was forced to employ its first string men on an overtime schedule to accomplish the trick During the first two periods arid ten more minutes of the third the Hoosiers surpdsed the Rockne forces and the 20000 spectators by holding the 'Fighting Irish" even with their first string in the field for some time to a scoreless tie But the task was too hard for the Hoosiers and they folded up thereafter before the furious rushes of Notre Dame's new "four horsemen" crew and the brave stand turned into Just another rout at the hands of the Ramblers "Jumping Joe" Savo Idi the big hod lugger from Three Oaks Mich was the first to break the Hoosier spell Tucking the ball under his arms on the Indiana 39-yard line he smashed his way for four yards and then came back with a gallop of thirty-five yards and the long-awaited long-expected touchdown Carideo kicked goal for the extra point and the pent-up fury of Notre Dame's attack broke loose with such 'devastation that within the next twenty minutes of Play three more touchdowns had cracked the Hoosier defense into bits Fight as they might the Hoosiers couldn't gain after that or they couldn't stop the Notre Dame rushes The first string Irish peppered them from every angle except the pass route and Rockne kept them in the game until the last three minutes of play when he relented and sent them home to supper Today's victory was the fourteenth straight triumph in two years for the "Fighting Irish" and their fifth straight of the 1930 campaign The lineup: Position Notre Dame Richardnn Host Rascher 1 Roffman 11araksa 3 Harris a nkow skl Rovers ZI11 ci Terlaak fasner D011OgitliP frnekev a Mahoney Srubaker 0 Jaskwhich FM'S Koken lialuskt O'Connor Mullins The summarv: Score by Indiana 0 0 0 0 Notre Dame 0 0 14 13-27 Notre Dame lsub for O'Con nor 2 Savoldi )60b for Mullins) 1 Sehwarts 'sub for Koken) I POInth atter (sub for Jaskwhicht 3 Referee (larriner Cornell: timnire 'Yount Wesleyan: head linesman Graves Illinois: field lodge Coffin Cornell IN THE WEST Notre Dame 27 nolana Northwestern 27 Minnesota Princeton Chicago Iowa '7 Detroit 3 Wisconsin Ohio State 0 California 46 Montana Washineton State 14 Oregon State 7 Southern California 33 Denver 13 Purdue 25 Illinois Penq college Iowa Wesleyan 0 Morningside 13 South Dakota State Depauw 25 Franklin 7 Akron 7 Oberlin Wooster 14 Case 6 Ohio 48 Cincinnati Heidelberg 45 Ohio Northern Brigham Young 39 Utah Aggies Colorado 14 Colorado college 13 Coe Cornell 0 Colorado Mines 13 Western State college Utah 30 Colorado Ageles 11 Colorado Teachers college 6 Wyoming 6 Simpson 6 Iowa State Teachers 0 Knox 12 Beloit 0 Washington 00 College of Puget Sound San Francisro 20 Nevada 13 Butler 13 Wabash 7 t'aloaralso 27 Concordia 0 Ohio Wesleyan 41 Western Peiterve 14 Kansas School for Deaf 12 Illinois Scheel for Deaf Brigham Young 39 Utah Armies 14 New Mexico 13 New Mexico Normal 6 Arizona 20 Pomona IN THE EAST Pennsylvania 21 Kansaa 6 Army 33 North Dakota 6 Navy 37 West Virginia Wesleyan 14 Yale Dartmouth Harvard 13 William and Mary 13 Colgate 34 Mississippi 0 Brown 16 Erraglige 16 Marquette 6 Boston colleee Fordham 18 West VirPtnia 2 Celumbia 10 Cornell 7 Anthem 22 Massachusetts Melts 6 Williams 14 Union 0 Susnuehanna 7 Hamilton 7 Worcester Tech 13 Norwich 12 Delaware 13 Swarthmore 12 Oklahoma City 13 Davis and Elkins 2 Muillenbere 24 Lehigh Tufts 10 New Hampshire ft Rhode Island 14 Boston Providence Lowell Textile 0 Lafayette 74 Upsaia 0 Burknell 19 Penn State 7 Holy Crnss 32 Rutgers 20 New York 20 Carnegie TeCh 7 Duke 12 Villa Nova iL Maryland 14 Virginia IS Rochester 24 Buffalo Washington and jefferson 20 Thiel Maine 14 Colbv ft Snringfield 34 Middlebury weleyon 13 Trinity 0 Rennsaiaer 7 Vermont Niagara 39 Clarkson 7 IN THE SMITH Chattanooga 13 Howard 9 Texas A and 7 Centenarv 6 Springhill 7 Miasissipoi Teachers 6 Tuisne 53 Mississippi Aeries Milisaps 48 Union of Jackson 7 Louisiana State 27 Arkansas 12 Tenneasee 27 Clemson Western Teachers 25 Kentucky Wesleyan Presbyterian college 2 North Carolina 0 wahhington and Lee 0 1 Oglethorpe 12 Furman 6 Alabama 19 Kentucky Vanderbilt 24 Mississippi Centre 28 Louisville Georgia Tech 6 North Carolina 6 Emery and Henry 6 Richmond Mercer 13 Birrningligni Southern el Randolph Macon 31 Bridgewater 7 Auburn 38 Wolford ft Louisiana college 18 Southwestern Louisiana 13 Georgia Florida Rice Inatituto 12 Serene Texas Christian 11 62 Abilene Christian college TgaRt 23 Southern Methodist 7 BaYler 31 Oklahoma Raptials 0 Joneabero Ark college 13 West Tennessee Teachers 6 Tuskegee 31 Knoxville college 6 Negro Morris Brown 7 Alabama 0 Negro Wilberforce 20 Clarke Arkansas Citv 13 Winfield 7 Texas Mines 20 New Mexico tY 13 MOH SCHOOL GAMES East 0 Central Southwest 16 NOrthragr 20 Manual Parkhurst 25 Westport 13 Folooria 25 Marlon Knox 12 Beloit Written 20 14cigwiek nirrion 6 )4000180n Reserves NOrtnn VtfinPharn Polion 28 Trov 6 North Junior high 34 Holton Junior high 7 (By the Associated Press) BERKELEY CAL Nov with the dash and smash followers had looked for earlier in the season California's Bears crushed University of Montana's Grizzlies 46 to 0 here today in their annual Coast conference game A crowd of about 20000 saw the Bears who were held to one touchdown at half time come back for a touchdown parade that netted three In the third quarter and as many more in the fourth The ground and aerial attack completely routed the visiting team Dolph Timmerman Bear tackle climaxed a series of long runs when he caught a kickoff and ran seventy yards through the entire Montana eleven for a touchdown tee the Associated Press) New I I -1 Philadelphia ns ylvanta- Kansas-62000 1 Minneapolis western- -ttJit Minnesota-50000 1r Columbus Wisconsin 0 10 tt'''' i State-40480 1 1 tChicago 33000 i nouth Ants- -''''''t' tern- -IIlit )hie i i olt 1- Nobody seemed to know exactly how it happened The Tigers had kicked off to the Aggies and the Wildcats were preparing to play upon the Missouri defense as though it was an accordion Me Girl "Steals" the Ball Harsh a peppery ball lugger came driving through but something happened the goggle-eyed crowd Saw Harsh and he had lost the ball and there stepping off the yards toward the Aggie goal was McGill the Tiger left guard Porty yards he ran for that touchdown after an investigation learned he had sneaked the ball away from Harsh A pretty bit of thievery perfectly admissible in football done with the magic of a Herman Harsh has the ball and now it's gone Presto there goes Mc Girl a 'person felt like asking McGirl if he could pull eggs and rabbits out of hats and do things like that Eaves missed the kick this time but Missouri wasin front and there it stayed until the third quarter and then the Aggies took the ball on their 36-yard line after Missouri had punted The march began with Nigro wiping out fifteen yards in one flashing stiff-arming end run in which he was forced out of bounds He passed to Auker and that very spectacular player left the ball on the Missouri 26-yard marker Nigro Over for a Touchdown Another flip after several line plays this time Nigro to Harsh diminished the distance considerably and when Nigro made two yards through the center the Aggies had the ball on the Missouri 4-yard line and from there the Wildcat captain carried it over and those Aggie rooters did everything but turn somersaults for pure joy Auker kicked the goal and thatscore it was to result was enough Late in the fourth quarter the Aggies stormed down into Missouri's section and there McMillin uncorked a pass to Cronkite who leaped in the air and then came down on the Tiger 1-yard line On the next play the Indefatigable Swartz careened across That goal was missed but it made no difference the game had ended A game had ended which left out not one single thrill a football fan is properly entitled to receive But there weren't enough football fans' and that is why this is aTitten up for the newspapers: more should know about it The lineups: Kanaaa Aggies-20 MiS8our1-11 Fairbank Vett DNne Daniels Kilgroe Siraba 0 Norton Armstrong Yeager 0 Brayton Weybrew McCeolev FiZer Campbell McMillin Teurct Nigro Bittner Auker 1R1 Doarn Swarts Asbury Ed Cochrane Kalamaarm umpire Dennie Brown: head linestnan Larry Quigley St Benedicts field lodge Reaves Peters Wutconsin The note by periods: Kansas Agates 7 0 7 6-20 Missouri 0 13 0 0-13 Substitutintut: Kansam for Weybrew Harsh for Nigro Stephenson for Brookover Cronkite for Daniels Michaels for Norton Zeckser for Yeager Smith frr limbs Resell for Smith Hasler for rairbana McMillin for Harsh Daniell for Easier VeRar for Zeckser Norton for Michaels Lrig for Flom Kimes for Doan Eaves for 14 Kirnea Collings for Bittner Edmiston for Eaves Rawlings for Vnn flVflP Soecktneter for Campbell Turner for Faurot Baker for Kilgroe Morgan for Brayton I Kintes thr McCauley Crane for Asbury McCauley for 1 Kimes Austin for BraVtOn Edmiston for Eaves Faurot for Dinner Asbury for Edmiaton DORM for Fatirot Kimes for Collinga Garvin for Boeckmeter Schubert for Warn Heitz for KIMen The atiriltaarY: Earned first 8 A 18 7 Yards gained from scrimmage exclusive of forward 8 A 139 38 Offensive playa In- cluding forward A 77 45 Average gain per A 3 3 6 9 Forward 8 A (7 attempted I completing 7 for 120 yards: attempted 28 completing 11 for 208 yards Passes IC A 5 by 7t4 3 Fumble recovered- fly 8 A 1 A 6 for 223 354 yards an average of 44 yards varda an average of 37 Yards: 8 for AVernae run bark of punts-K 8 A yards tit 38 vards Total vards gained from acrimmaao and pamea lorludind Jima after A 259 44 Kick offe--K 8 A 4 for 213 Yards 3 for 148 verde Penalties- A 4 for 30 yards 11 12 for 70 yards Yards lost from A 33 2 Tittles 8 A 5 4 Sooringi 8 A McMillin Nigro Swartz: Van Dyne Polote after A Aulter2 (place iiICIi0 11 Bittncr 1 Nrw 25000 Chapel Hill Caro- lina-Georgia Tech-22000 South Dame-In- 1 diana-20000 I Si- Mary-18000 West of s' North Dakota-15000 nen-- Caro- I 1 in e- 1 1 a er Ity of l' (By the Associated Press) LINCOLN NEB Nov valiant Cornhusker forward wall thrice stood as the barrier this afternoor between the Panthers of the University of Pittsburgh and the Nebraska goal line When the easterners needed only a matter of inches for victory instead of a scoreless tie with the UniYersity of Nebraska It all occurred in the fleeting minutes of the last period of the fifth Intersectional game between the two schools after the Huskers had played the easterners on better than even terms during the first half 'anthers Revert to the Unable to penetrate the Husker line any better in midfield than at the end zone the Panthers took to the air and what a display followed! Time and again Captain Baker quarter tossed to Reider half or to Walinchus or to the nimble footed Reider skirting the ends for substantial gains At the start of the final period Baker's pass to Heider was good for eighteen yards and a first down On the next play Walinchus heaved one to Heider who trotted twenty-two yards before be was forced outside on the Husker 18-yard line Walinchus could not gain through the line but Clark Pitt fullback could and he made a first down on the Husker 5-yard stripe Walinchus I came back with another bolt at the Una that netted two yards but Clark was stopped dead on the 2-foot mark folder Fails to Gain The sturdy -Wider could not budge the Huskers on his next attempt to skirt right end and the ball went to Nebraska on downs Young fullback punted to Heider who was downed on the 30-yard line and the threat was stopped for a moment By passing and plunging the Panthers invaded the Husker 7-yard zone but in four downs they were unable to produce the scoring punch The Panthers were not to be denied however and on the first Husker play Manley sub quarter fumbled a lateral pass and Pittsburgh recovered on the Nebraska c15-yard line Two more plunges and two attempted passes by Hood and Baker were futile and the ball went to the fighting Huskers on downs as the gun cracked It was a colorful occasion for the fifth game between the two schools played before an American Legion holiday crowd of 30000 ('alifornia In Late Drive BERKLEY CAL Nov furious second half attack that netted three touchdowns in both the third and fourth periods gave California a 46 to 0 victory over the University of Montana here today It was the Bears' first conference victory of time year (Ely the Associated Press) AMES IA Nov pair of Oklahoma substitutes today broke up the annual Big Six conference battle with Iowa State college completing a 34- yard pass in the closing minutes to give the Sooners a 19 to 13 decision Before the Cyclones' homecoming crowd of alumni Buxton heaved the ball to Snell livho fell over the final chalk mark to break a 13-13 deadlock It was the eleventh straight defeat for Iowa State and the third conference victory for Oklahoma this year The Sooner total might have been more had not the Oklahomans been penalized on two 'seeming touchdown plays Late in the third stanza Mills Sooner half raced eighty-four yards across the goal but was called back to the Oklahoma 43-yard line where he stepped outside After the Buxton-Such winning touchdown pass Lee Sooner guard Intercepted a forward pass by Wilcox and raced for the goal but the Sooners drew a 25-yard penalty for clipping The homecoming fans were hopeful of victory shortly after the start of the game when the Cyclones took the ball on their own 34-yard line and marched down to the Sooner 2-yard stripe There Tegland's fumble upset any chance of scoring At the start of the second period Coach Workman called for Richard Greele sensational sophomore quarter to replace Trauger The tall blond whose high school coach had said he was too slight of build for such -a rough game as football tossed a long pass to Swoboda who tore the ball from the hands of two Sooner backs to score and then place kicked the extra point Oreefe's fumble soon afterward gave the Oklahomans the ball on the Cyclone's 26-yard line and after they lost five yards on mixed-up signals Mills passed to Massed on the State 1-yard line Massed plunged for the touchdown but Mills's attempted place kick was wide Young Greele broke loose on a 57- yard sprint late in the second period and seemed headed for a touchdown but Young rangy Sooner center hauled him down from behind on the Oklahoma 23-yard line Failing at the line Oreete then hurled a long pass over the goal line which was touched by an Oklahoma back but which Moen sophomore end snagged from the Sooner's hands for Iowa State's second touchdown Swoboda's try for the extra point failed and the half ended 13 to 6 in favor of Iowa State Nelt14 team scOic4 in the third FIG 11 TS FF PR I CETO Cilleago Holds Eastern Athletes to a Tie Before 33000 Fans My the Associated Press) STAGG FIELD CHICAGO Nov courageous band of Chicago's football warriors who haven't won a game or even scored a point in their last three contests refused to allow Princeton once a gridiron terror of the East to beat them today with their 68-yearold coach Amos Alonzo Stagg inspiring them and his 20-year-old son Paul in the thick of the battle as quarterback The Maroons fought Princeton to a 0 to 0 tie in their Intersectional game before 33000 spectators balking three attempts of the Tigers to score The Maroons were without the services of Erret Van Nice their captain who almost single-handed scored the 1929 15 to 7 triumph over the Tigers Young Stagg son of the Maroons' femous coach handled the passing in Van Nice's absence and twice missed scoring touchdowns by an eyelash TIIE SEIVANIX TIGERS LOSU Mee Institute's 'Youngsters Score Tu lee In Gunn) ut Houston in the second half and the backs be gan to run and pass The Jayhawker line with Tom McCall guard Chancy Smoot center Stuck and Paden 'bit the ends standing out particularly pushed Penn all over the field and substitute backs Lee Page and Johnny Madison along with Forest Cox and Beach made the Kansas 1 attack something else entirely Kansas made eleven first downs most of them in the second half to ten for Penn Bausch was in one harassing drive that traveled forty seven yaids in the third quarter be fore bogging down on Penns 7-yard line but he cost Kansas a beautiful opportunity a moment later when Musters kick was partly blocked and came to him on Penn's 16-yard line But Bausch fumbled Penn recovered and kicked to the 34-yard mark where Madison and Shaake the latter re placing Bausch came hammering back for the Kansas lone score Madison drove the final fourtecit yards straight through center btops a Score In the final quarter Penn held for dons talce within the 20-yard line and only the final whistle stopped another score as Beach smashed down the field A field forward pass that wound up in a lateral added to Penns confusion in the final moments The game was rough and hard all the way and sprinkled with liberal penalties The defeat was Kansase fi4t 14 the 6C4011 While Eentuyilmalla cks he hawker 7harley den -on cularlY id an4 and Forest! Kansaa 'downs halt tn In ono forty ter lie 7 i-rut when ed and rd line overed where ter re )nulerloecnreo: rt 3c told foe rd lin itopped down ss that led te LI mO ard all liberal arisasO yslInttile les Ali in the Score lIonstoN 'Ile Nov the old-time method of grabbing the ban and tearing out Rice Institutes big young eleven threshed the Sewanee Tigers 12 to 0 today Two of the Owls backs Wallace and Mueller who did not start the game got loose In the fourth period for touchdowns Wallace squirming through eight yards to put it across and Mueller plunging erect twenty-five yards to make his six points Jamerson missed both tries for goal TnE TnoJANs MARCIf ON Reserves Play Rig Part in Trim ming Denver University 33-13 (By the Associated Press) Los ANGELVS Nov a game which saw the University of Southern California's first team in the lineup only three minutes the Trojans defeated Denver university 33 to 13 in an uninteresting contest before 20000 spectators here this afternoon Denver's scores were the result of passes Cougars Stiii in the Lead PORTLAND ORE Nov 1--(A P)The Washington State college Cougar crushed an ever threatening Oregon State college Beaver 14 to 7 today to continue in the lead for the Pacific Coast conference football championship Spectators numbered 32600 BAYLOR S10111ERS tOL: (By the Associated Press) CHICAGO Nov van fibber giant Purdue tackle kickh the extra point after a touchdown for the that is sometimes he does Last week George was a hero He sent Wisconsin reeling with a well-directed effort the Boiler makers winning by the margin of his 1-point boot Today big George tried three times and three times lie failed George was just another football player today because Illinois tailed to gore The Oklahoma Baptists Are Beat ce a B) 0 tit Siotmttee SHAWNEE OK Nov Baylor university Bears of Waco Tex thrashed the Oklahoma Baptists 31 to In the Bisons' homecoming game here today acoring In every period except the first when the second str14 AAtoct yiao 7 611acTil-cki laa6 II IMMIIIMINNIIMNIMMMMIMIIIIMMit.

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