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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 46

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Detroit, Michigan
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Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I THI DETROIT FREE PSEIS SUNDAY OCTOBER II HIT SPORT ECTIOS U. C. L. A. Scores on California But Bears Stay in Stride Bottari Mows Some Savage Tackling Features Villanova's Triumph Over Titans 'Badgers Fall Uclans from Top Rung Wildcats Haul Them Down, 14 to 6 Bruins in from mmar rir era mm mmt mmrn saaaT mm-mm at mmamm-m i Command -ii 'iV K1 ITiS 1S iL-S ikt cry MADISON.

Ot 3ft-f a Northrtem pushed Wi. from th ranks iT th unrletp- im Big Tea fuotbaU com today 1U a victory crowd ol 300UO LB a tiv drajrred repeatedly becauae cf aeaaoiully mam weather. Northu-eatern, resuming ita defenae atncle after a aetba Vv Ohio State laat week, found wekneaaes of the Wisconsin ward all weaknesses esrly stuck mainly to round plays. The Wikicats through big holea In the Ba I 'Jt I I I S- I I 4ae' I 1 I i 'i i -ca ,..,7. -A 1 I I 17 1 1 11 MIMMMIV, (IK II.I.A0 A.

RMMi INf.Mr.N AITf I.AIMVU THRf.K YARD) AT DKTROIT'M t.M) Youthful Star from Britain Makes Thistle Eleven Click Montague's Future as Golfer Depends on Ability to Work Grantland Rice Believes Mystery Player Can Become No. 1 Figure of Links "i A I Clifrr.i I ri lira "led throwt.il htri tiy i their steady n.aMh to U.c Kat J. I pu.n r.g to d-lt tr.e I'nuers'y tf 1 Arrr-Ws tT to 14 A I' I. A ir-g day read if as Okj ll.e iinir Xlnrv ilTlt-d H'iMirl, tts-t I ra'v aiMMut.tv. t-jr the in lr- I of 'he Lr-ms to, sem the oniuih -f Mi.

and from the N.Tth re, if sry. i pc( Im an upiwl form brigade tr.e 1 1 lans 1 with in the better part of the fame. ic ltd tan. Jm ChapmMn, Anlriv4) nl Jfhn Una lurf.J th tU ip ftlit (town tt.r titil lbMaii Ika-orr iinrH ff th lr tu hin. Ante twin another nd bt iKmnt itwn h.

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Calif O. t. 30-( A IM Oregon Stat College and Ktanford t'nlveraities battled on a slippery field to a scoreless tie today in their Tscific Coast Conference gam before lO.ooo fans. Halfback Gray, flash of th Oregon Stst sttack. went out of the contest early in the aecond period with an injured leg.

With rum went the power of the Northern team. During the firat period had spatked Oregon State to Stanford's 11-yaid maiker. Karlv in the contest, quaiter- back Punian intercepted a pass snd ran 0 vai'ls to Stanfoid'a A lateral and thiee plunges put the ball on 'he It -yard line, hut Stanford intercepted a pass on th next play. oari.n si it siyvumii uaimlnc atar t.an TMaUnaa t.kan Stnnr fiataoM i rt t. rt.tr nnna Sumter rr H.

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a I a is knlhrrg ewtMi State ta.far Trojans, Cougars Tie PULLMAN, Oct. 30 A. The University of Southern California Trojans and the Cougars of Washington State College battled to a scoreless tie here todsy. Both teams tried tlcsperately with passes in the closing minutes. Navy Is Surprised by Pennsylvania Quakers Register a Big Upset, 14-7 PHILADELPHIA.

Oct 30 (A. Pennsylvania handed Navy a stunning 14 to 7 upset defeat todar before a crowd of 63.000 at Franklin Field. The Quakers, holding off Navy's repeated thrusts in the first quarter, twice struck for touchdowns in the second quarter. An eighty-yard march paced by long passes gave Penn its fust touchdown, Daly going over for the score. Later.

Mischo, substitute end. recovered the ball after Gustafson blocked Ingram's kick and ran 43 yards for the second score. Navy came back in the third quarter to score on a thirty-yard drive. Wood carrying the ball over. Boston U.

Takes Close One, 14-12 ST. LOUIS. Oct 30 (API By the margin of points after two touchdowns Boston University's Terriers defeated Jimmy (That's Football for You I Conielman's Washington University Bears. 14 to 12. today.

Fullback Gary Fa-miglietti scored Boston pair of touchdowns and plate-kicked one extra point. wouldn't Vnow. Maybe yes and maybe no." Icorge von Elm "The greatest golfer I ever ssw. I've played with him four rear. I played a month with him over different courses snd never beat htm a game- As I recall it, his highest score was 69.

And he was down around 65 or 66 more than once. At hia best, he could win any championship." Hagon Ready to Play Him Walter Hagen 1 never asw him play, but he can make It any amount for 36 or 72 holes and It will be all right with me. I've lwtin taltincr rhinra frit i-aari I II still take one. On vou 'fix lt 1 II even be on tune forward wall connatfntly to ha uie niaconsin Dams Captain Don Heap, left back, put N'orthweatern in the midmay In the first period, ing to a touchdown from the yard line after he led a (.:.. from his nwn 3J.

Nu-k Ci quarterbsck. kicked the e-ri Iint The Wisronain paaa sparkling bnefly near the of th second quarter, pior, fi th Badgers' lone touchdown r.i Hartman. reserve quartet threw a long paaa to Bill halfback. In the end tone to i a march from mid-field. Howard Weiss missed the kh f-r extra point.

After a punting duel Ntvwf Roy liellin. Wisconsin hnlfht, and Bernard Jefferson. North.ti ern halfback, had given neither side an appreciable advantage th Wildcats atarted another h-down march from their own fullback Jay Iaaksy carried the ball over the goal line and Cm. gain kicked the extra point Th defeat was the first i Wisconsin in three confer" starts. Northwestern hat three and lost one.

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itaHilattb I ntr Itamri I laittt-l taiaa Hratle I lira l.a llkiraaal. Ramblin1 Wrecks Crush Vanderbilt ATLANTA. Oct. 30 (A. -In a dazzling exhibition of footle! alertness, the like of whiih ft fans had ever seen on Grant the Engineers of Georgia T'Jl rose from the doldrums of defeat today to crush the hitherto undefeated and untied Commodores of Vanderbilt.

14 to 0, before 20.0.C spectators. Humbled on successive Saturdays by Duke and Auburn, snd taking the field as the undera. Ihe golden-shirted grid. lei a alertness for power r1 their famed razzle-dazzle to i-nnllate the Commodore touthdown thrusts in the sc. period both coming within minutes.

Lawrence Takes to Aerials to Win Holbrook Bows 19-6 Defeat in MANCHESTER, Oct -Unable to gain consistently through the line Lawrence Te-h took to the air to defeat Holbrook College. 19 to 6, hff a homecoming crowd here tod a v. The visitors acored in the first, third and fourth quarters. Holbrook scored Its one tn'ii h-down in the second quarter ft made 13 first downa to 10 fnr Lawrence Tech. Red St.

A iv and Louie Jelch starred for tl Blue Demons, while Gains wt' outstanding for Holbrook. ttjwsr.M Tr noi.aaoos Mra s. l.ar I. T. It.nvrn rait Mik a fOrt-maa a.

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let lair H. I 11 11 f.n TnarknVian at. Anhltt 3. Jrlrk. o.a ie for a a a Cacitint lOOK ik 4 Paul would icnnws.

I ne ciuos sieging verv glad to meet Montague nv th let him name his own terms anywhere or any time. Charley Iacey "I've played a lot of golf with Montague. I'd say at hia best he could beat any pro or amateur I ever saw six times out of 10 atari. Whether he can get back to his best depends on Montague. He can't loaf and do It.

Not against this bunch." Ieo Deigel don't know what Montague would do In an Open. I was the first pro to play with him, about four or five years ago. I've played with him since. The last time I played, I shot a 68 and broke even. I still class Hagen, Armour and Montague as the best money players I ever saw.

In an Open I don't know. I doubt that he could win one. Mac Smith hasn't in 27 years And there's a great a golfer as I ever saw." He Connect Under lire KIT HAR1 RV TWO 1. OK I. I Terriers Lead in Dog Shows Big Entry Expected in City Next Week Prominent among the fall dog shows will be the eighth annual specialty show of the Associated Dog Clubs next week Sunday at Naval Armory.

Advance Inquiries and entries Indicate that this will be second of importance in the country. It is expected that 500 quality show dogs from many atates( and Canada will be here for the competitions. Seven breeds will make up the show Boston terriers, cocker fox terrier bull terriers, Scottish terrier, collies snd chow the available, A big prize list I offered for the classes. In addition to cash for all winners, there will be no fewer than 308 special prizes. 71 of which are up in the fox terrier group.

Others are: Chows 6I, cockers 47, Bostons 43, bull terriers and collies, 27 apiece, and Scottish terriers 24. Among donors of the specials are Mr. and Mrs. John S. Sweeney, and Mrs.

Henry Stephens, of Grosse Pointe; Albert Payson Terhune; Charles A. Backus, of Huntington. Henry P. Fischer, Sidney S. Ferriss, J.

P. Hack-ett, the Detroit and Oakland County Kennel Clubs and The Detroit Free Tress. The show will be held on the main floor of the Armory, with the dogs benched around the outer edge and with judging rings in the center. Aisle space will be available for those who want to expeciea mil mere win be 10 or more, including fox terriers, bull terriers. Scottish.

Irish, Welsh, Cairn Airdales and others. Boxing to Reopen atFairviewA. C. M'Intyre Will Battle Barnett in Big Bout The Falrview Athletic Club, once one of the most prosperous little boxir.g clubs In the Midwest, will be reopened for boxing Monday night with Bert Lamb as the promoter. Bobby Mclntyre and Ralph Barnett have been matched to meet in the eight-round main event, while Georgie Kell.

the little Windsor flyweight, will make his debut as a professional in the semifinal with Kid Bermodez. In the other bouts Bill Wassill enages Les Paterson. Vince Man-die opposes Jack Gorsky and Cecil McClelland will swap punches with Forest Dixon. 'Hilltop Passes Bring an Upset Unbeaten Kentucky Toppled, 13 to 7 KALAMA7AXJ, Oct. 30 Two forward passes, less than half dozen plays apart, enabled Western State Teachers College to oust the Western Kentucky SUle Teachers College eleven from the list of unbeaten, untied and un acored upon teams today.

13-7. Neither team was able to gain in the early play. Late In the quarter, Kribs fumbled a punt when he waa hit hard on Western State's 38, Cook recovering for the Kentuckians. On the first play Bihlrh went around end on a sweeping run and was given fine Working to the goal Cill pine i kicked to give Kentucky the lead Guse, center, intercepted a Ken turky pas in the second quarter on the Western Michigan 44 to pave the way for the first Hill-topper touchdown. Huabeck mied the point and the Kentucky team led 7-6 Western State's second score followed Ihe klrkoff after Intermission.

A partially blocked punt gave the ball to Western on the 33. Vandeherg passed to Morris on the one-ysrd line and Ockstadt cracked the line for the touchdown with Morris adding the point. The Kentucky team threatened perilously In the third quarter, nut bogged down when Guae intercepted a pas for Western Michigan on the 17. In the final quarter, Western made a similar threat, getting a first down on the Western Kentucky 17. Western Kentucky rolled up seven first downs to four for the Western Michigan team and had 20 yards in penalties to 40 for the Gary men.

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B.rH: lanOlmi atif. Mrtttnk. Mrna. nlliat. Arret, I Now Olivet Can Sing Praises of Elkhart OLIVET.

Oct. 30 Several athletes from Elkhart, have figured prominently on Michigan teams during recent years. Among them have been Matt Fatanelli, John Nicholson and Joe Rinakli. This season the Olivet College aggregation has an Elkhart boy in Jack Jones, three-sport star. Jones comes from the aame neighborhood aa the Michigan trio.

An end. he has been out of action for a time with an infected arm. He also competes in basketball and track. His father attended the homecoming game with Alma last week. Chicago Guard Should Be a Wow on Wet Gridiron CHICAGO (A.

The Chicago Bears have a deep-sea diver on the squad. Kay Bell, guard, started diving while doing dredge work at Seattle. Last summer he continued the work, off the coast show his stuff. He was a bench warmer until this season. The Chevies broke up, the Thistles grabbed him and last Sundsy, sfter several weeks of fitting into his new berth.

Outside Left Geoffrey Coombs found his scoring eye with two neat goals that placed the Thistles In the semi-final round of National Challenge Cup eliminations. Their foes will be the powerful Chrysler team and the match i the headline game of Sunday's Stale League schedule. Against Hugh Plthie's Motors team, there'll he Eddie Willocka, Nell Lindsey, Frank Harker, Dirk Donnell and Stan Trantor, all formidable and proved players But Coomb will be the lad who'll be watched. He hopes that this year or next he'll be able to scare up the necessary funds to start him at the University of Michigan. A player who carries the equipment for that step, plus a natural old-country cunning for the game, is a msn who'll be worthwhile to watch, Pithie believes.

Coombs' youth fits into the Chrysler scheme of things, which I another factor. Pithie signed Jack Lyle, a veteran goal keeper with a brilliant reputation in the past. This step perhaps will bring surprise change in the Chrysler line-up to meet the challenge of the Thiatle The match will be played at Mack Park. In regular league games United Germans will meet E. and B.

at Northwestern Field, while Northwestern club will face A.B.C.'s at Atkinson Park. Suldi and Peninsulars will be idle. The Division Schedule will bracket German snd A B.C. Juniors at Northwestern. St.

Clair and German at 8. Clair Field, where Bloomers and St. George's also will play. Final plans for the entertainment of the Stelco eleven from Hamilton, Ont were made last week by Charles Leech, secretary of the Michigan Soccer Commission. The Stelco will meet an all-star Detroit team Nov.

6. Detroit ha not been host to a team from Canada since the visit of the Ulster team of Toronto in 1P27. when it defeated a Detroit all-star team. 3 to 0. The Stelco team is champion of Ontario, leading a strong league which includes Toronto.

London. Sudbury and other cities, rractically all the I'in'ti a Vll LUC Irani air minjuiu of Glasgow, Scotland. Only one ncl on English player is on the eleven. Reading Eleven Faces All-Stars Night Loop Leaders Will Play Today The Richard Reading championship football team, and one of the leaders in the Detroit Night grid league, will attempt an "iron man" feat Sunday night, opposing an invading all-star eleven at Mack Park with only two days of rest since their last game. The Readings.

Class A champion of the DNFL, will meet the Moore A.C of Saginaw. Readings played their Class A rival. Ferndale. Friday night but win enter th (arm without Injuries. For over 10 years soccer ofB-rials, manager and spectators have bemoaned the Federal barrier that closed United Ststes doors to Immigration.

New play ers from the old-coimtry football fields no longer hsve kept Detroit clubs replenished with talent. Last year a twenty-one-year-old player from Britain's achoolboy leagues-almost the first genuine article since settled In Detroit snd Chevrolet Motors snatched him up. Clever, fsst. hefty and brainy, the Chevies gave him only an occasional chance to Irish of Old Beat Gophers Sweeney Blocks Try for Extra Point Continued from First port Page hia 26 where he was stopped and the Gophers met a stone wall. After repeated crashes, with no gains and a five-yard penalty for offalde.

Van Every kicked to Puplis who ran from his 28 to his 43. Then with several passe and after another exchange of kicks, the Irish rushed the bell to a first down on the Gopher seven-yard line. There followed some tense moment with the Gopher being penalized five yard for offside and the Irish five for the stme reason. Following several ineffectual smashes, Puplis. on a quarterback sneak, ran through his left guard for four yard and a touchdown.

An instant later he made the extra point. Toward the last of the quarter after a double lateral pass, Moore to Christiansen to Van Every, Vain passed to King. and. running alme down the left, the Gopher captain grabbed the ball, stepped fast for five more yards for the first touchdown for Minnesota. Faust failed at the kick and the score waa Notre Dame 7, Minnesota 6.

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Py Grantland Rice NKW YOP.K. Oct. 30 -What place will John Montague, the mystery golfer, take, now that he is in a position to prove his place among the stats of the game? The seven-year shadow has been removed by a Jury. He can afford to step back into the spotlight and prove his place among the rtcanis. Coopers.

Guldahls. Runvana, Haratens. Hagrna. Smiths and others. It will be an interesting experiment.

John Montague's hief claim to sthlrtic iMme ha Iwen golf. It hia polf ability that broucht mm uIH-chI to Khzahrth- to-n. Y. It will be bv his golf ability largely in the future that he rises or falls. In any financial way.

after the opening guarantee. I would sav that the answer is up to John Montague-up to his willingness to get bark in top physical condition and rebuild the game I knew two or three years ago. Mut Re Ilia No. 1 Job If golf becomes only a sideline with him. if too many other interests take over his time and sttention, he will undoubtedly lose much of the mystery glamor he has knowTi.

If he becomes just snother golfer, he will lose much of his present prestige as a sixty-somcthing shooter snd one of the game phenomena. My first introduction to John Montague was on a rainy day at Riviera, Los Angeles, one of the best courses in golf. Tommy Armour nominates this course as No. 1 in the United States. That day I played with Montague.

Dick Hanley then coaching North-weatern Frank Craven and Bahe Hardy, the far from anemic comedian. I had heard about Montague before. I believed about 20 per rent of what I heard. But that day he shot a 6633 out and 33 in. He plaved the first hole 4H0 yards with a drive and a 6 iron.

He played the second hole 450 yards uphill with a drive and a niblick. I soon found his bunker play, his chip shots and his putting were his soundest points. I knew at least I had seen a great golfer. In the course of the last three years, I have played with Montague 100 times. Up until last winter.

I had rarely seen him over 70. Last winter he played only casual golf and his long game suffered but never his niblick, his chipping and his putting quite unusual in a 225-pound athlete who is as strong as anyone I have ever known. Short Game Holds I But his long game had lost 30 or 40 yards; his long iron play had fallen off through lack of timing, practice and play. Just how his amazing short game held up is still a mystery, for. at that time he was far from being in top physical form, being 20 pounds overweight.

Here are some suthoritative opinions concerning Montagues golfing ability- Gene Sarazen "A fine shot- maker with an unorthodox style A fine competitor. I'd like to see what he could do in an Open. I Onlv a few weeks ago a ihe Judging. Three rings will ber of widely known golf writers i6 starting at 10 a. wanted to see Montague in action.

m- Tht children classes will be At that time he was under ln--mlged 6 P- bX c- H. Body-dictment. He had played president of the associated three rounds of golf since last winter. A new set of clubs had Th' curtain-raiser to this event lust arrived, which he had never wU1 th first annual how of used. 'the new All-Terrier Club at Hotel I told him he was on the spot.

jTuller Saturday afternoon and The round was at North Hemp- v'ning. While 26 breeds are eli- stead. with Clarence Budington Kelland, the novelist with Alex Morrison, one of the star experts of golf with Dr. Leander Newman. That day Montague, under this pressure, shot a 65.

As Alex Morrison said later 'It was a 65 that could so easily have been a 61 or a 62 a matter of four or five putts that lipped the cup and refused to drop from six or seven feet. "In my opinion, Montague has the soundest and most compact golf swing with every club that I have ever seen. By this I mean that his mental and physical reactions blend more consistently when It comes to a matter of getting results. He has -unlimited power and amazing control of the short game. It all depends upon his willingness to get to work upon his game.

Winning golf is not a sideline for anyone." This happens to be the answer in the case of John Montague. Condition, play and practice can bring him back to as fine a golfer as anyone hss ever seen But he can't reach that point by the sideline route where other things become more important, (foomrht. 19371 of Alaska..

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