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The Sedalia Democrat from Sedalia, Missouri • Page 8

Location:
Sedalia, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
8
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ETGBT THE SEUAUA. DEIHIH-KAT KOVKMRFP io, 1935 HASKELL HAS TOO MUCH POWER AND TIGERS LOSE, 0-7 burg, referee; Ramsey, Clinton, urn-1 pire: Morrell, Hieginsville, linesman. Haskoll sroring Touchdown: fai shall Csub for Washington). Point after touchdown: Cnristy (sub for Wilson), place kick. Hmith-Cotton I tin and Stockton, ends; Hudson, jter; Dean, guard, anri Meyers, half- Veteran Redskins March 1 ihe summary: 1 H.

I. HUSKERS DEFEAT KANSAS 19 TO 13 FOR BIG SIX TITLE 'HOPPE WINS; REISELT STOPS KIECKHEFER IN THREE-CUSHION MEET brother Veri varsity cheer leader. of night matches on page 78 Yards to Register in Third Period MAKES TAVO SCORING THREATS A Fourth Quarter Drive Is Halted Only Four Yards From Goal The Haskell Indian high school of Lawrence, possessing unlimited reserve power, down a stubhoni Smith-Cotton high school eleven and registered a 7 to 0 triumph on the Liberty Park gridiron Friday night before a crowd that probably was the greatest in local football history. After halting a Smith-Cotton scoring threat at the 11 -yard line In the second quarter to finish the first half deadlocked, 0 0 the veter- an Indian team took the third per- iod kickoff and marched 78 yards to the only touchdown of the game. I Carshall, who was a big star in 7 to 6 triumph over the Sedalialians here last year, nego- tiated the last eight yards on a Bpinner to score and Clirisiy converted the extra point from placement.

A 32-yard dash by House, Haskell fullback, who counted the touchdown in the 1934 contest, was the outstanding run in the for their third quarter tally. Consistent five and elx yard gains by Carshall, Skena- dore and House put together In the only real scoring threat. Smith-Cotton launched a counter attack early in the fourth quarter and marched 78 yards to the Haskell four-yard line where it was first down and the goal to go, but the Indians threw back the challenge when the weary Tigers were unable to match the fresh replacements the visitors rushed into the game. After a fumble of the Haskell kickoff late in the third period had given the Indians the ball on the Smith-Cotton 25, the Sedalians put up a stout defense, holding for on their IS and then came hack with their spectacular bid to even the score. 'a 30 with pair of off tackle dashe.s, then Robb passed 20 yards to Dickman who downed in midfield.

Robb added another ten then four, then passed twice to Campbell for ten: and six yards, respectively, putting' the ball on the Haskell 20-yai(l' stripe. Campbell picked up six yards through tackle and four straight; plunges by Robb carried the' ball to the four-yard marker. Here, Robb was spilled for a yard loss on the first play, Meyers also tossed for a five-yard setback on an attempted reverse, llien Robb picked up four yards before his fourth down jiass over the goal' line was iiicompleted. Haskell maintained possession of! the hall in its own territory final four minutes of play after i halting the Smith-Cotton threat. The play of Captain Keyte, Dickman, McFniry, IVIartin and Rohh especially outstamiing in thei best performance since they! rose to great heights to hip i unbeaten Cyclones here last fall.

was simply a case of too much manpower for our young Coach Donald Davenport said after the game. had seven or eight men in their lineup that ed against us last year. Tlie Tigers pla yed a eat came and I'ln proud of he added. The defeat was the third for Smith-Cotton in its 23 gimes, two of them being adinini.stered by Haskell and fh'' other by l.ebaiion No centra! Missouii eleven ha.s repulsed the Sedalians since Marshall triumphed in 1932. Richmond wiiicli conquereii the Redskins, 19 to eaily in the season comes to Liberty Friday nigrit, ember 17, to provide the Tigers their next opposition.

undefeated Hiekman New- pies come lure the folK-wing Friday to wind up the 1935 season. The linr ip--- First dowms 14 Yards from scrimmage ..198 Forward passes attempted 1 Forward passes completed Yards gained on passes 8 Passes intercepted by 1 Yards gained on intercepted passes 0 Punts 2 Total yardage of punts 50 Punting average 25 Punts returned 0 Yards punts returned 0 Fumbles 3 Fumbles recovered 4 Penalties Yards lost on penalties TO 10 108 6 3 38 0 0 0 74 37 1 12 3 2 1 5 Nebraska Forced to Come from Behind to Turn Back Jayhawks By WHITXEY MARTIN Associated Press Sports Writer LINCOLN, Nov. Cornhuskers regained the Big Six Conference football cliampionship here today by defeating Kansas 19 to 13, in a dizzy, delirious game which setback in spectators babbling incohei-i of times. Hoppe made a run of 10 THE SPORTS ROUNDUP an By BILL BRAUCHER Central Press Sports Editor Manufacturing of superlatives, old football industry, reached peak production during the Notre Dame- Ohio State game. Nearly all the superlatives on tlie shelf sold easily by the journalistic clerks covering that gajne.

But there may be a few remnants they oxerlooked, and if you can stand it, here they go, three for a nickel, while they last. BEST KICKER Bill Shakespeare of Notre Dame. MOST VICIOUS TACKLER Corner Jones of Ohio State. HANDSOMEST PRO Berry, former Illinois star, running and passing for the Chicago Cardinals. LARGEST AND MOST TROUB- iLKSOME TRIBE OF FOOTBALL FANS IN 50.000,000 Notre Dame alumni who never went to Notre Dame.

BEST COMEBACK which lost to Mississippi State and came back to beat Tennessee, Georgia and Kentucky. WORST Paulino Uzucudun, who sold himself into a bout ith Joe Louis for $40 000 TOUGHEST GRID PROBLEM How did Vanderbilt, which lost to Temple and Fordham, manage to Robb ami Campbell made a first I beat Mississippi State hich beat dcwn on the Smith-Cotluu 30 with a I Alabama and Armv? daffy, 29,000 ently. They regained it after handing the rugged, tenacious Jawliawks a touch-! down on a silver platter in the first 10 seconds. They came back to score; two touchdowns to take the lead.j watched that lead vanish, partially! through their owm misguided and then scored another touchdown; when Nebraska fans w'ere beginning! to wilt from sustained apprehen-' siou. The fans who turned their heads at the opening kickoff missed the.

first touchdown. Lloyd Cardwell, tlie' of the Cornhuskers, also missed it. Cardwell, temporarily in' a meneal iiaze, watched the ball hound past lum into the end Tlie staccato pounding of Riither-1 ford cleated feet brought him' to his senses, but not before speedy Jawhawk end flitted him to down the ball. Tom McCall placed-kicked the point. With the first quarter half the Nebraskans pulled one of their famed one-play touchdowu drives.

It was Cardwell redeeming himself. He cauglit a pass flipped by i (Results i 6 I CHICAGO, Nov. 9 Hoppe. the old balkline king furnished the fireworks in the afternoon ses- I Sion of the three cushion billiard championship tournament today as he gave Kinrey Matsuyama, the tiny Japanese, a 50 to 35 lesson ill 35 innings. The first upset of the meet was staged by Otto Reiselt, Philadelphia veteran, when he defeated Augie Kieckhefer of Chicago 50 to 38 in 42 innings, it was first victory in three starts and Kieck- an equal OKLAHOMA SPOILS M.

HOMECOMING WITH A 20-6 WIN Sophomore Line Unable to Stem the Sooner Attack a run of 10 in the 21st inning to better Welker Cochran's previous tournament high of 9. set yesterday. Matsuyama was unable to get started, his high run being 4. The left Hoppe one of the four undefeated contestants, the others being Cochran, the Californ- backfield ian; Johnny Layton, Sedalia, defending champion, and Jay Bozeman, another expert from the Pacific coast. The Reiselt-Kieckhefer match close to the 40th inning, when Reiselt, leading 40 to 37 got a high run of 8.

He ran out with one carom In each of the next two innings. CHIGACO, Nov. i.P) Layton. Sedalia, veteran seeking his 12th Avorld three-cushion billiard championship, defeated Otto Reiselt of Philadelphia, 50 to 34 in 53 innings last night for his second straight victory. high run was 8.

best was 7. Layton, defending champion, led from the start and by the 22nd Bauer on the Kansas 40 and stumbled and fought 20 yards to the goal. Sam placekick was wide. Midway in the second period, after l.anciue had plucked a pass from Bauer while lying prone on the Kansas 18, Francis surged over from the one-yard mark. placekick was blocked by Wade Green, end.

On the opening kickoff of the third period, Lanoue tossed a lateral in the general direction of the w'est stands. Emil Wienecke, Kansas quarter, recovered on the Nebraska Henry inning had a He was off to margin of 20 to 4. By The Pre.ss. MEMORIAL STADIUM COLUMBIA, Nov. Soon- ers w'recked Missouri football recovery aspirations and disappointed a crowd of 8,000 Tiger home- comers here today by punching out a sound 20-6 victory.

Big Bill Breeden, 201-lb. Oklahoma halfback, and little Mel Robertson, 155-lb. substitute for tw'o injured regulars left behind at Norman, led the Sooner onslaught that produced two touchdowms early in the second period and added another in the third. lone tally came in the minutes as a substitute connected a foiwvard-lat- eral pass for 34 yards. It was the only time the Tigers threatened.

A weak Missouri line made up almost exclusively of sophomores replacing injured veterans gave way to the Oklahoma stabs from the outset, but it was not until the first play of the second stanza that Breeden plunged over from the one foot line to score. Hew'es, left half, gave Oklahoma its first chance hen he inter-j cepted forward and returned I it to the Tiger 40 late in the first period. The Sooners were tackling the ball consistently and the strategy bore fruit when Right-end 5Iiskov- sky grabbed the pigskin out of arms as the Tiger halfback completed an 8 yard sweep on a slow' start, but had 37 no trouble pulling from Reiselt. who could not make the ivories behave except in the 27th, w'hen he Hew'es made 12 through the line. Breeden pierced center for 4.

and Robertson w'eaved through his own ran five, and the 32nd he I right tackle and secondary to score the second Oklahoma! made seven. Layton put together his cluster of eight in the 31st. The defeat was Reiselt's second ill two starts. Score by innings: 100 Oil 031 322 104 010 110 001 801 401 202 100 200 100 100 000 001 000 001 010 001 300 005 000 070 000 010 012 041 212 000 The of the 17. Two line plays were piled up.

Ihen Hayes slipped through world, left-handed Augie eluded the secondary and raced er, Chicago, pulled anoth- I er thrilling victory out of the fire to register his second suc- MOST PEACEFUL RELATION BETWEEN PRESIDENT AND COACH OF A Maryland, where Curly Byrd, coach, agrees with Byrd. that the Green Terrors are doing the best they can. WETTEST Gilliam, an Australian who swims three and a half miles a day in an attempt to eomplete 1,000 miles in a year. BIGGEST 256 to 0 victory scored by Haven, High school er Sylvia High. Yes.j it happened back in 1929, but it's: still decisive, isn't it? TOUGHEST TROUNCING THIS mighty football is uot the custom of tlii.s department to pick on a man when he's down.

So if you desire in- the goal. Bernie Scherer, game captain, blocked McCall's placekick. The Jayhawks again were leading, 13 to 12. Liiter in the same period Francis, from the 35, passed to Bauer who tossed a lateral to Lauoue and he squirmed his way to the two-yard line. The Jaw haw ks ere fined half the distance to the goal on the first! his thrillinj play, and on the second Francis; billiards in took it over, then placckicked goal for the 19 to 13 victory.

MINNESOTA STAGES A LAST HALF COMEBACK TO BEAT IOWA, 13-6 IOWA CITY. Iowa. Nov. scoring 15 eight innings, force, stalled 30 minutes by a furious Iowa, offensive loosed a cruising counter-i today to whip the Hawkeyesj 13 to 8 in their battle for the West-' formation on this subject, please to Gil Dohie, coach of Cornein ern Conference leadership. uiiiversily which met Princeton Oct.

28. SUREST SIGN OF The fact that the University of eleven in being outgained, which happens be the way the Wolwnius win hall games. MOST DESPERATE who recently held up Ernie Quigley. National league umpire. MOST NEGLECTED Ruth.

Fifty thousand homecoming chilled by a cold drizzle, saw' ihej Gopher horde vise for a two touch-1 down rally in the last half after! Iowa surprised with a first quaiteri touchdowu. cessive triumph. Kieckhefer, ten time champion, conquered Arthur Thurublad, a rival Chicagoan and also a former champion, 50 to 47 in 58 innings. The game was nip and tuck all the way, with Kieckhefer displaying one of finishes by the last running out Aviih an run of 4. It was the second straight defeat for the ex-draftsman.

Welker Cochran, San Francisco, 18.2 line champion, smothered Kinrey Matsuyama, Tokyo, in the shortest match of the innings. The score was 50 to 33. The Pacific coast star, w'ho held the three cushion title in 1933, also clustered the highest in the first inning. Bozeman, Vallejo, turned ill a sensational game in defeating Allen Hall. St.

Louis 50 to 29. in 32 innings in the shorest game of the tournament. Bozeman had a high nm of 6 and overshadowed the performance of Cochran, in winning his game in 33 innings. counter within 15 minutes. Breeden added the extra point.

Robertson returned punt from his own 42 to the Missouri 39. Shortly after the second kickoff. Breeden went to the 28 on two punches and Robertson galloped to the 11. Hewes to the Missouri one on a three way pass from Corrotto to Breeden to Hewes and Robertson plunged over on fourth down. Breeden kicked the point.

In the fourth period Murray passed to the Sooner 33 after returning punt to the 45. Turnbough gathered in forward, lateiailed to Mason as he was tackled, and Mason dashed to the goal line. A soggy gridiron seemed to bother the Sooner attack but little, while it was hopeless for Missouri to try the center of the Oklahoma line. Coach Don Faurot substituted liberally as Missouri was handed its second straight Big Six defeat under his regime. Coach Biff coaching his first year at Oklahoma, used all of 34 men but hold substitutions down until the last quarter.

Missouri won her last conference game when she defeated the ers 14-6 in the 1932 season. Score by periods: SMITH-COnON COURT Tlie Goghers. consistently outplay.j squad is advancing i deception, to its thir Big len SLOWLY BUT SURELY iin ith Ten £rame and continued as one of the favorites for the championship. Oklahoma Missouri Scoring: Breeden (2) Missouri: touchdow ments). Statistics .....0 13 7 0 0 0 8, and Robertson.

1 Mason. Points after Breeden (2) (place- of the game: Okla. Mo. Princeton Rambles On. George Roscoe.

Sheldon Boise and Tiiffy Thompson, burly Gopher 1 Routing HsrVSrd, 3o-0 backs, were the big ft-atiire as Min-j I nesoia piled up 2o9 yards fiom; scrimmage, most of it in the last, half, while Iowa collected lo3. Oze Simmons, the Iowa Negio star, could not break through the lieavy Minnesota line for any touchdown sprints, but was a constant' threat. Oze started the Iowa ttouchdown drive when he returned a punt 25 Cy The PRINCE rox. X. Nov.

footliall juggernaut, us-, iiig nearly three complete I out lassed Haiward and handed thei an artistic shellacking, 35 to 0 before today. The Tigers registered their sixth straight ictory ithout being seriously extended. The Crimson thixatcned. penetrated vards To his 35 and Minnesota was HaskellPos. Smith-Cotton Grant i.

U. 1 )ir 2 Spofiio 1. 1'. Fttqdicns Hall M' Unii i lirocticr Wil G. Keyte r.

Turner 1.. 11 CVS I. -i De Poe li Sumuers He 1 Gampbell Sc'-'i 1 (, eH 7 (' 7 Sri 1 i leiritory only three times and iii.mIp P-i deeppst advance, to the Ti-. 1 the last few monir-nts. back to midlield wlien Thomiiscii pileil on Simmons he cs dow ned.

Stanford Beals U. S. C. On Moiicrip's Late Goa! STATE APPROVES A MIXED BOUT BOXER VS. WRESTLER By Tl As iaied Press.

AXGELFvF, A Id gcal by Jin in the la-t 4't abled to Nov. 9. M-nik) Moscrip may nds of defeat By The Prcis. ST. LOUIS, Nov.

question a wrestler beat a be settled here November 19 play a mixed match approved tuday Southern bv the state athletic commission. G. bfi rn a to 0 i 1 -d I fore il ju.OoO aG'-nipUng to Hgu 'Cip KiUi; Chiong-i i.nd lU.y St. --he s'-. I.

uis i vC iU The Smith-Cotton high 1935-38 basketball squad is moving along slowly but surely imder the direction of Joe Benson, former Maryville college couit star, who joined the athletic coaching staff this fall. Branson, who has just made thej fiist cut in the squad's ranks, haS; been devoting the three practice sessions each week entirely to fund-j ameutals and may not call for thej first scrimmage until next week. Handling of the ball, passing and shooting are combined' and emphasized thoroughly in a routine diiils the new in- -r ha.s up for the squad. Iwo leuermeii. McFatrich and and a half dozen reserves fi-m lasT year aie working out! tlie squad and two additional! moiiozram winners, Robb and der, as well as some promising' prospects will report at the close of the football season.

The Smith-Cotton schedule has not been comideted. but the Tigers- ly will mu play their first' liefoie the Christ-. 1 vlr-n rim traditional; I the Alumni I First downs ...17 8 Yards gained from scrimmage .247101 Awards lost from scrimmage 2827 Passes attempted 2 13 Passes completed 0 6 Passes intercepted 1 1 passing 1 75 Punting average 38 42 x-Average yards kicks returned 36 42 Penalties 6 1 return of punts am kickoffs. California Vanquishes 14 to 0 to Boost Rose Bowl Hopes i BERKELEY, Nov. dreams of an undefeated i football season and a bid to the Rose Bow 1 came a step closer ity today when the mightiest Golden! Bear eleven in year.s out a i 14 to 0 victory over of! Washington's Huskies.

While 80.000 cheered a display of power unequalled since the days of California's of fifteen sca.sons back, the Rears; rammed the Washington defense to score touchdowns in the second and third periods, convert the extra! points and stave off a spectacular closing threat. The team that had been charged with owning no offense batfering ram powpr. that clif ked at crucial niul a i increasingly strong defense. FOOTBALL RESULTS INTERSECTIONAL 7, F'ordham 7. Rucknell 0, Detroit 53.

Cape Washington and Jefferson 12. Indiana 13. Maryland 7. Randolph-Macon 3t, American U. 7.

Duquesne 20, Oklahoma A. and M. 0. Hawaii 7, Denver 14. MIDWEST X'orthwestern 14.

Notre Dame 7. Oklahoma Alissouri 6. Minnesota 13, Iowa 6. Kansa.s 13, Nebraska 19. Kansas State 6, Iowa State 0.

Drake 0, 13. Purdue 0, Wisconsin 8. Michigan 0. Illinois 3. Marquette 13, Michigan State 7.

Ohio State 20, Chicago 13. Chadron 19, Peru 13. Carthage 6. Bradley 4. Manchester 0, Ball Slate 0.

Arkansas State 0, Conway 27. Toledo 41. Douisville 7. AVichiia Reserves 30, Sterling 0. Cincinnati 39, Marshall 13.

Emporia Teachers 27. Haskell 12. Grcighton 6, South Dakota 7. Gonire Xavier 27. Iowa, Teachers 7, Grinnell 7.

I4e Paul 46, X'alparaiso 0. St. U. Frosh 0, Cape Girardeau 0. Western Reserve 7.

Ohio Wesleyan 7. Muskingum 17, Ohio U. 20, Cai'leton 6, Cornell (Iowa) 9. Of-rrlin 0, 0. Transylvania 0, Denison 26.

Canisiu.s 6, Dayton 0. Ottcrbein 13, Ashland 20. Hiram 13, Capital 25. Adrain 0, -Miami 59. IS, Baldwin-Wallace 40.

Heidelberg 6, Akron 7. Wittenberg Ohio Northern 12. -Marietta 31, Bowling Green 0. Carroll 0, Findley 13. Kalamazoo 0, Bluffton 0.

Illinois College 12, North Central 7. Euthei- Columbia 0. Beloit -Monmouth 33. St. Thomas 0, St.

Olaf IS. 0. AVabash 2S. 17aiiham De Pauw IS. Oakland City Rose Poly 21.

EAST Harvard 0, Princeton 35. William and Mary 0, Dartmouth 34. Brown 0, Yale 20. Syracuse 14, Columbia 2. Villanova 13, Penn State 27.

Navy 13, U. -'vrmy 6, Pitt.sburgh 29, Carnegie Tech a. Holy Cross 7. M'oiaester Tech 7, Rensselaer Poly 0. Thiel 16.

Allegheny a. Western 12, Bo.ston College C. Paitger.s 12. Boston U. 6.

C. C. N. V. New York U.

45, R. I. State 7. Conn. State a.

St. Thomas 0. Springfield 7. 11, a. Baltimore 0, Lafayette 26.

La Salle 13, -Manhattan 54. Bowdoiii 13, Maine 13. -Muhlenberg 6, Lehigh 26. -Moravian 19, Juanita 7. Gettysburg 12, Dickinson 32.

Slate 12, Northeastern 13. Hamilton 20, Flaverford 27. 0, Franklin and -Marshall 59. Lebanon Valley 12, St. 6.

Susfiuehanna 7, Drexel 16. M'cst Chester 7, Albright 6. Niagara 6. 20. Tufts 0.

Hampshire 21. 0, Trinity 7. Clarkson 7, St. Lawrence 0, BrookLvn 7, Lowell Textile 26. Grove City 0, Bethany IS.

Buffalo 13, Hobart 12. Swarthmore 6, 40. Roche.stcr 12, Union 13. West X'irginia XVcslevan 6. Catholic U.

19. SOUTH V. M. I. 0, North Carolina 56.

J9uke 26, Davidson 7. Virginia Poly 0, N. C. State 6. Clemson 0, -Alabama 33, Mississippi 13, Tennessee 14.

Georgia 26, Tulane 13, Florida 6, Kentucky 15. -Auburn Georgia Tech 7. Texas 25, 6. 7. Rice Mississippi State 13, Louisiana State 28.

0. Centenary 22. Sewanee o. X'anderbilt 46. (Memphis) 0, Birmingham Southern 12.

Virginia 0, Washington and Lee 20. Hampden-Sydney 7, Richmond 15. XVofford 0, Furman 29. Oglethorpe 0, Emory and Henry 28. Newberry 0, Citadel 20.

Mercer 7, Chattanooga 12. Daniel Baker 0, McMurray 8. WEST Stanford 3. Southern California 0. 7Vashington Slate 6, Idaho 0.

Oregon State 0. Oregon 13. Colorado 11, Utah 0. Washington 0. California 14.

Brigham Young 21, Western State 2. 3, College of Idaho 0. AVyoming Ftah Slate IS. College of 2(t, Chico State n. San Diego State 6.

Loyola (Los Angeles) II. Puget. Sound British Columbia 0. QUAIL SEASON OPENS IN STATE TODAY ffrrH A GOOD BIRD SUPPLY JEFFERSON CITY, Nov. Ducks and geese are due for a in Missouri the opening of the 52 dav quail hunting season.

The State Game and Fish Department predicted that if weather prevailed many sportsmen probably would desert duck blinds for the day to tramp through fields search of the elusive birds. NOTRE DAME IS UPSET 14-7 BY NORTHWESTERN in Wildcats Capitalize Late Fumble to Ruin Title Hopes of Irish BY PAUL MICHELSON -Vssociated Press Sports Writer SOUTH BEND, Nov. Although the department said reports from game w'ardens in 75 new w'onder team of counties disclosed few ex-! football, perched the highest since ceptions, a sizeable in the! Gw days of its immortal Knute supply of quail, it pointed out tliatj Rockne. fell into the ruins of an al- bobwhite would be more difficult toj niost unbelievable 14 to 7 defeat to- find because of an of i day. cover this and that are' particularly essential to point out and to retrieve The season ends December 31, Hunters were urged by the ment not to this season in order to plenty of brood quail for next Quail nimrods will hunt under the same regulations as last year.

They are not as rigid as they for migratory Hunters use dogs, employ any NoiThw'estcrn, which had won only one Big Ten game this season and hadn't triumphed over the P'ighting Irish in 34 years, accomplished the stunning upset amidst a setting of rain and twilight before i.OOO who hardly spectators realized it was true. The Wildcats, defeated three times in thf'ir own conference, came through with a copyright Notre can I Dame by 7 weapon almost 14 as one Irish touchdow'ii and can hunt from sunup to sun- was called back because of holding Wildcats rushed back to tie down. The daily bag limit is 10. Tlie possession limit 15. SliootinK is in oUihitcd in state ed another touchdown in the'fourth lllll.Si^iid thon otrkorT Cli r.

the score in the second period, add- parks and in seven of Missour quail is not legal game in Moniteau. i DeKalb, Scotland, Harrison, Frank-1 stood like a Gibraltar 114 counties. Because oflocai same full fury that brought them from nowhere to victorv over Ohio lin, St. Clair and Lafayette counties, It also is unlawful to ship quail i out of the state or to tell them. ern backfield, Wally Crucie.

Steve Toth, Hugh Duvail I and Slippery Don Heap turned the happiest Notre Dame dream in five years into a nightmare. -All hopes of The duck season still has 10 to go before it closes November 19. The season on fur bearing animals! opens November 15 and closes two months later. Wild turkeys will be legal game during December. a week ago.

The scored liy Northwest- Early Score Beats Iowa State AMES. Xov. State scored in the utes to win a to Iowa State here shivering fans. a national championship to match the last Rockne model of 1930 and a place in tlie Rose BowT went tumbling. 6-0 aul Tangora, a senior guard from Washington, 1).

push f). I Gie inning tirat three f'Gd that with a 5 yard 0 victory the hero of heroes, today before 5,000 Tangora. a square chinned six- 1 footer, turned the tide. As the The Cyclones comideted 22 passes Irish flayed the center of of 33 attempted for 155 their passes in the spots ed fizzled or w'ere intecepted. yards, in to stop Uiat Gi the final period, he pounced on Wally fnmblf' to set in motion the wTn- The game barely was under way, the Wildcat's'drive from the 30.

when Ted Warren, big fullback, and Leo -Ayres, back, slashed to Iowa 49! after taking a Cyclone punt. Warren fired a pass to wiio raced over the goal. ST. M.4RY’S TIES FORDHAM, 7 TO By The -Vssociated Press. NEW A'ORK, Nov.

a touchdown each in a thrill-studded second period, Fordham and St. of California battled to a 7-7 tie in the fifth renewal of their colorful football rivalry today before 50,000. St. Mary's has won three and tied one of the five games. Except in the second heat, when almost everything in the football book happened, it was mostly a story of powerful lines whicii stood shoulder to shoulder and battered a wav at each other for sixty The game started like another -Xolre Dame victory march.

After Bis: Don 13 yard dash over tlie goal in tlie first period had been nullified with the holding penalty. Notre Dame marched 41 yards on 10 plays to score with Mike Lay- I den and Elser smashing and spin- 7 i iiing to the one foot mark, from i where Fromhart sneaked over. Fromhart kicked the extra point. Coach Elmer Layden, at that point sent in his second stringers hut before he could rush back hi.s first team the Wildcats on their way to the tying touchdow'n. A 27-yard dash by Heap to Notre 14 set off the fireworks.

In rushed the regulars, but on the fourth down, Crnice tossed a high. 20 yard pass over the line to Henry Wadswoith Longfellow', who like poetry by the w'ay. Duvall kicked the extra point and how it stood until the Wildcats reallv got wild. minutes of savage football. ------------------------------------The shiggins Krew entluisias-; yf grOUettC TumS Back tic in the foiii th that Referee W.

T. Halloran, after many oral warn-: mgs, called both teams into a huddle and lead the riot act. Once; Fordham was iienalized half the distance to the goal line for roughing things up. I mini Dash Big 10 Title Hopes -The. Washington U.

Moves Up in Valley Race by Defeating Drake, 13-0 The AssociateOr Press. CHAMPAIGN, 111., Nov. 9 fighting mini at their fightingest wrecked whatever Western Conference gridiron title hopes Michigan entertained by whipping the Wolverines, 3 to 0. in rain swept Memorial stadium today. The lethal blow' wa.s delivered by Low'ell Spurgeon, sophomore half W'ho booted a 31-yard place kick in the w'aning minutes of the second period.

Michigan State 13 to 7 By The Press. EAST LANSING, Nov. Marquette's brilliant avalanche swept to a bitterly-fought 13 to 7 ictory over Michigan State today to keep its undefeated record intact and mar homecoming for 20,000 fans. A pair of long forward passes, rifled by Ray Buivid stellar Mar- fillette halfback, to Art Guepe, fleet- footed quarterback, handed the Spartans their second defeat of tho season. Mary- 6 I A New I ow'ns an P) Carolina, Some Success I York business man.

estate in eastern North where game i.s always goes down for a couple of' weeks during the deer season. A Negro boy on the place aceomitanied him one day on a hunt, and was Blnmherg. gave Pretty 'soon a deer, started bv the 1 niversitv a 13 to 8 victorv ovei headed toward the buy station. The hoy him bang later. ST.

LOUIS, Nov. 9. touchdowns by Bob Hudgens, Washington University left half, and a from plai ement by subst it ute, ton University a 13 to 0 Drake in a Valley Conference football game today. he placed Wasliington in a tie for first place with Tulsa University in the conference. Washington was superior throughout.

For three quarters the Bears kept the ball in Bulldog territory. Xitt uniil the last period, with George Setrabian. For Exehan.ge haek. for Drake, did thej ads find interested in the ury tbp hall beyond mid-' Democrat A- Capital. Try one and (see Phone 10 RESULTS Iviiksviile Teachers 20; ville Teafdb rs 8.

TarKio 7: Missouri Valley Ivnox Coe 13. St. Benedict's Warrensl)urg cot he 7. Carbondale 0 Bethany 13, Friends 0. North Dakota 7, St.

Louis U. 6. Davis-Elkins 7, George Washington 53. Central 0. Springfield 12.

Wf'leyn Upper Iowa 52. Golb ae 28; Concordia Teach- r--- 7. 7: Washburn Freshmen 19. Rockhiirst 7. Teachers 40, Chilli- Cape Garardeau 14.

0. otliers heard the away. When they saw the business man asked; you see him?" you hit know, boss, put him in Parsens 2: University of Dubuque T'achers 12; Wayne but I Kenriiey I Teachers I Missouri School of Mines Oki lahoma City University 27. Texas Christian 14: Loyola 0. I P.nkt-r (Baldwin, Kas.) Williaiii 0 (lie).

Louisiana Tech 21 Gelb u' i lin ia i College.

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About The Sedalia Democrat Archive

Pages Available:
317,214
Years Available:
1871-1978