Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 277, Decatur, Adams County, 23 November 1927 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Rock lie's Old Teacher Helps Him Prepare Team For Game On Saturday South Bend, Ind.. Nov. 23. -(UP) Jesse Harper, who taught Kunte Rocknt* foot hull fundamentals! when he was coach at Notre Dame 15 years ago. has joined his pupil, now recognized as one of the foremost stridegists in the game, in preparing the Irish for the game against Southern California at Chicago Saturday. Harper and Koekne looked over the team today and picked a starting lineup. The backfield combination of Brady, quarterback, Niemiec anil Chevigney halfbacks and Freddie Collins. fullback, will open against the Trojans. Christy Flanagan. Hay Dahnian and Elmer Wynne will go into the backfield as soon as the shock troops need them. Several line positions may lie strengthened before the game begins. o _______. “Tiger” Flowers Leaves An Estate Os $150,000 Atlanta. Ga., Nov. 23. (UP) An estate valued at $150,000 was left by Theodore 'Tiger’ Flowers, negro fighter and former middleweight champion. Under the will, $60,000 will be converted into a trust fund for his daughter, Verna Lee. The bulk of the remaining estate will be divided by his wife and parents. Walk .Miller, his manager, said the boxer had consistently invested his earnings in real estate. o Goshen Youth To Try Chicago-To-New York Run Chicago, Nov. 23. — (INS) —.Mike Kelly, of Goshen, Ind.. 19, starts today from in front of the city building on a run to New York City. Kelly plans to spend sixteen days on the road and will jog from 6 a. m. to 6 p. m. He expects to average 5 miles an hour. o . _ Woman Sues Ex-Purdue Grid Star For Breach Os Promise; Seeks $50,000 Chicago, Nov. 23. -(UP)—Because Edgar E. Murphy, Purdue University football captain in 1922, decided to enter the Catholic priesthood on the eve of his proposed marriage to her, Ethel Jean .Masden of Dallas. Texas, has sued him for $50,000, alleging breach of promise. Murphy is now in a California seminary, she said. His ideals were offended by an incident she said occurred during "a moment of worldly weakness'' while they wete waiting to be married, she said. “I was sorry after it happened, but was willing to forget," she said. "He proposed that we both don the cloth of the church to atone. He was such an idealist. As I was not a member of his faith I could not consent to his plans." —o Police Seek Cinderella For Slippers They Hold Michigan City, Ind., Nov. 23 — (INS» —So far no Cinderella has called on the Michigan City police to retrieve a pair of slippers of diminutive size. The slippers were taken by police from the pockets of Charles Chariwood. of Buchanan, .Mich., who was arrested on charges of drunkenness. Charlwod pleaded guilty to the charge of drunkenness, hut made no effort to recover the dainty feminine footwear.
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FRANK GETTY 7* ' titum prsss tmwa L——
Two Great Half-Backs For many colleges the 1927 football season ends with Thanksgiving game. Then It wil be time to light up and settle down to a little set ions discussion as to the merits of the star players of what has been in many ways a Remarkable season. When the arguments wax hottest on the subject of backfield men ol 1927. the odds ate that the names of "Swede" Gebert and "Al" Marsters will be heard as frequently as any. The Marquette tornado and the elusive Dartmouth will-o-the-wisp were two of the greatest half-backs of the year. Each may miss mythical Al! America fame, but not if the folks in Milwaukee and Hanover have anything to say about it. Wallie Gebert has been declared by several western critics as the equal of Joesting, Flanagan. Almquist. Kb.v and Gilbert—backs who attained more national recognition. Marquette’s "Swede", weighing only 171. hit the line like a wild'locomotive on the down grade. He could smash through or sift through, and once among the secondary defense men. Gilbert was elusive as an eel in a barrel of grease. When on the defense himself. Gebert frequently harassed Marquette's 1927 opponents by intercepting for-! ward passes, while men who have been tackled by him vouch for his terrific I power and ruthless disregard of in-1 jury. "He tackles the way ‘Tack’ Hard-' wick used to." said one critic who watched Gebeit in action. "Al". Marsters, Darynonth's great ground-gainer, won general recognition as the hardest back to stop in the East. Once loose in a broken field, Marsters threatened to score. Aganist Yale, the best team in th • east, the Dartmouth halfback ran 55 yards, eluding no fewer than seven Eli tacklers, all of whom got their hands on him. Slow-motion pictures of that run emphasizes Marsters' greatness and cast some interesting light upon how the master ball carrier doe-: his' stuff. "Al" started from his own 37 yard line, where he intercepted a pass from Bruce Caldwell. Practically the entire
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23,192/.
Vale team wits between the Green 1 flash and the Blue goal. Yet the pictures show that Marsters I never went more than six yards from the sideline down which he started, • and, that each of the seven Vale men i who tried to doAti him lest a grip on "Al’s hips because of the eel like quaili ty of his maneonvers, . Without shifting head or feet from ’ the straight line for the gcal. Marster.i i threw his hips first to one side then to the othpr as men in blue flung themselves at him. “Red" Grange and other ■ great backs had this trick, but I never . have seen it demonstrated so strikingly as In these slow-motion pictures of Marsters run. Vale pla'ers declared "Al" the best back they hail to stop this season. He ran 75 yards for a touchdown against Brrwn, and 50 and St) yards for two others against Cornell, besides being an important cog in Dartmouth's pass ing game. • o— Butler Frosh Beat Varsity Indianapolis. Nov. 23. —(UP)—Butler's freshman team upset all precedent yesterday when it romped through to a 13-0 victory over the regular varsity team in their annual battle. Hubert "Curly" Hinchman led the I frosh 11 and smashed through the | varsity line for consistent gaitW at | almost every try. being more than a match for Watford and Collier, of the varsity. o . Mis. Roy Archbold and daughter Josephine. have gone to Toledo Ohio, for a few days visit with Dick Archbold and also with Mrs. Archbold’s father Mr. John Nachtrieb.
GIFT DAY Monroe, Ind. Saturday. Night, Nov. 26. You're Welcome. Monroe Industrial Assn
I New Football Captains Elected* By Colleges Lafayette, Ind.. Nov. 23. — (I P) Harvey Olson of Ravinia. Ills., was elected captain of the 192 S Purdue football team at a banquet last night in honor of the Boilermakers squad. Olson Is n junior in the school of civil engineering and played center on the team. Twenty seven major varsity football letters ti n minor letters and 47 freshmen numerals were awarded at the banquet. Robert Zuppke, head football coach nt the University of Illinois, made a stirring address. New Haven. Nov. 23. (INS)—Maxon 11. Eddy, '29. star Bulldog tackle, of Middlebury. Vt., today is the cap-tain-elect of the 192 S Yale football team. Chicago, Nov. 23. — (INS) —Saul Weislow, a tackle, of Chicago, has been elected captain of the 192 S University of Chicago football squad. Ann Arbor. Mich, Nov. 23. (INS) —George Rich, Lakewood. 0., will
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captain the J’nlversiiy of Michigan football team in 1925. Rich played ' full back thin year. Indianapolis, Nov. 23. — (UP) —Hui hert (Curly) Hinchman, formerly of , Greenfield, and n four-letter high school athlete, was elected captain of the 1927 freshman football squad of . Butler University at> u meeting yesterday following the annual freshman- ’ varsity game. The new captain is pne of six Greenfield men on the Butler freshman squad this year. ' — o t c. C. Schafer and son attended the 1 basketball game at F« it Wayne last 1 evening.
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<_ /eSS | ■ it i rite What They Had AndjWhat We Have - To Be Thankful For HT was back in December, 1620 ... as history tells us . . . that our Pilgrim forbears first set foot on these great shores. Coming into a strange land which, at the time, was largely a wilderness, their future was fraught with uncertainty and danger. Yet, with the “Faith that moves mountains," they set themselves to the task of establishing a haven here free of religious oppression. That first winter was one of suffering and hardship. But, undaunted, they sowed the seed for their first crops the following spring. Patiently they worked and waited. On those crops depended their very existence! And. thanks to the kindness of a generous Creator, the fall of 1621 saw them reap what to them was a happy Harvest. Thus, a day of Thanksgiving was designated and . . . though Twas little they had . . . sincere was their Thankfulness! But ... let us pass up three centuries. Today our great country is the richest on earth . . - the land of countless opportunities . . . the sought-fpr haven of millions from the Old World. Why? Because capital and labor ... science, invention and enterprise . . . working hand in hand, have made Life here enjoyable to the point of hardly wasting for more. Progress, Prosperity, Peace and Plenty are ours and the Future looks brighter than ever! Thank The Lord For It! Peoples Loan & Trust Co. “THE BANK OF SERVICE.” L u nw;. . j -
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