Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 254, Decatur, Adams County, 26 October 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

GOPHERS CRUSH PURDUE UNDER SCORE OF 33-0 Minnesota - Northwestern Came Saturday May Decide Title Chicago, Oct. 26.— (U.R> — With Purdue's hard running Boilermakers kicked aside like an old shoe, Minnesota trained its heavy siege guns on Northwestern today and prepared to make the key team j of the Big Ten its 22nd straight I victim. Purdue, picked to shatter the string of 28 games in which the ] Gohpers are undefeated, collapsed; under a withering second half attack Saturday and lost, 33 to 0. leaving the unbeaten Wildcats the new “team of destiny." For 30 minutes, the Boilermakers battled Minnesota almost on ; even terms, three times threaten-! ing the goal that only Washington has crossed. A fumble and two intercepted passes stemmed these early advances and Bernie Hierman’s reverse power gradually ran Purdue ragged as they moved into the second period. Minnesota, ranking on free use of the lateral pass which matched a 6 to 0 victory over Nebraska in; the final seconds, scored in the ——i—. - - IfU-M W V|W W M - Tonight & Tuesday- - THE SAME AS 3 HOUR ROAD SHOW! FOR FIRST TIMES AT POPULAR PRICES! ZfeGRIAT ZIEGFELD with William Myrna Luisa POWELL • LOY • RAINER M-G-M's Mightiest ‘ Musicsl! —Admission This Picture OnlyAdults 35c Children 15c NOTE—First Feature at 7 o’clock. Come early! —o—o— Wed. & Thur*.—Chester Morris. Fay Wray, Lionel Stander. "They j Met In a Taxi’’ 11 O—O Coming Sunday — Fredric March, Katharine Hepburn and thousands ! more in “Mary of Scotland." - Tonight & Tuesday- - Mystery Thriller! “MURDER WITH PICTURES" Lew Ayres, Gail Patrick, Paul Kelly, Benny Baker. ALSO—Cartoon, Sportlight, Musical and Pictorial. 10c-20c —o Fri. 4 Sat.-Big Special Attraction! George O'Brien in "Daniel Boone.” Coming Sunday—2 Action Hits! JAMES DUNN in “Two Fisted Gentleman” and “Face in the Fog” June Collyer. : f» —>

ICORT - Tonight & Tuesday- - in beautiful natural color. Loretta Young - Don Ameche “RAMONA” PLUS—Fox New* and Pictorial Review. 10c-35c WED. - THUR. “BENGAL TIGER" Barton Mac Lane, June Travis, Warren Hull, and “Satin the Killer.” 1 ft Wed. * Thurs. Nites A" at 8:45 Coming—“STAGE STRUCK" Dick Powell - Joan Blondell Frank McHugh - Jeanne Madden Yacht Club Boy* Warren William*

first and third periods by dipping the ball away from luoklors, turned two Intercepted passes into toiululmX drives and counted again on a 36 yard run bj Will Malheny. The Wildcats, who mounted Into (the top brucket of the conference by defeiiting Ohio Slute. groomed their defense for Minnesota by stopping Illinois, 13 to 2. Don Heap went over from the three yard line after u 41 yard power drive and Don tleyer scored i again after a 75-yard march in the third period. Other games in the middlewest Saturday: Ohio State 7, Indiana 0 — The : Buckeyes gave Indiana its first con | ference defeat on a pass from Tippy j Dye to t'apt. Merle Wendt. I'ni able to shake loose their expert i passer and runner, Vern Huffman. ! thp Boosters soon found them I selves pinned back to their own I four yard line under another Ohio offensive hut pulled out when Dye dropped an incomplete pass into I I the end zone. ! Michigan 13. Columbia 0 she j ! Wolves may be down and out in i the western conference, but tnPii j ’ perfect 10-year record against in I tersectional teams still stands. A , i poor punt put Michigan in position ! lor the opening touchdown. and! Stark Ritchie scored the other as i ter intercepting a forward pass. Marquette 13. Michigan Slate 7j — Kay (Buzz) Bttivid boomed bis all Aineriean sto< k by tossing two- - passes for Murquettes i fourth straight victory. His first I traveled 40 yards to Art Gttepe in ithe second period and the second j went 20 yards to Herb Anderson in the end zone in the fourth. Tinvictory left Marquette the middle-' ] west's strongest non-conference | | team. o COLLEGE FOOTBALL Minnesota 33. Purdue 0. Pittsburgh 26. Notre Dame 0. Ohio State 7, Indiana 0. Northwestern 13. Illinois 2. Michigan 13. Columbia 0. Marquette 13. Michigan State 7 Tennessee 15. Duke 13. Fordham 7. St. Mary’s 6. Holy Cross 7. Carnegie Tech 0. Butler 9, Wabash 7. Bail State 40, Oakland City 0. DePauw 13, Manchester 7. Franklin 6. Karl ham 0. Evansville 0, Indiana State 0 (tie). Hanover 19. Valparaiso 18. Suit Is Filed For Coughlin Removal Cleveland. Oct. 26— (U.R) —John j H. O'Dinnell, of Pittsburgh, today ! [ filed suit in common pleas court i for removal of Father Charles E I Coughlin a« head of the National j Union for Social Justice and ap- ! pointment of a receiver for the , j organization. The suit, similar to | another filed in Detroit by O'Donnell. came %s the radio priest prepared lo make a major address here tonight. o Presbvterial Group Meeting At Bluffton The Presbyterial group meeting will be held at the First Presbyterian church in Bluffton Wed-1 nesds.v morning at 9:30 o'clock. I The ladies aid of the church will serve a dinner during the noon hour. o Stauffer Funeral Services Tuesday Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Stauffer, who died Friday night at the home of her daughter Mrs. .! | P. Leichty in P?rne. will be held 'Tuesday at 2:15 at the home, and at 2:30 o’clock at the Missionary church in Berne. Arrangements I were delayed pending the arrival I of the deceased’s son. Palmer, of Glendale, California.

PITTSBURGH SMOTHERS IRISH, 26-0 Pitt turned on the power Saturday at the Pitt stadium in Pittsburgh. Pa., to administer to Notre Dame the moat deoisive defeat 0 Irish have encountered in many years. The final fccore was 26 to 0. O’Neill, of Notre Dame, is shown as he gets off his punt to La Ri despite surging charge of the Panther line in the first quarter.

CHICAGO BEARS ! DEFEAT LIONS — Chicago Wins Thriller From Detroit Sunday, 12-ID j i Chicago, Oct. 26. — <U.R) — One minute to play Hronko Nugttrskl, toughest of all 1 Minnesota's hone-crushing fullbacks, standing in the dugout. biting Ills nails and Shifting from fool to foot. 1 Red Grange twisting and turning on the bench. I George Hulas yelling wildly, , "Squeeze it, Brumby, squeeze it!” Every face on the Chicago Bears’ bench utt eltehing in grimness. And then the final whistle and relief. Kyery player springs from (lie bench like an animal escaping . from his cage. And then a yell, a cry. and u sigh from every throat and heart on the winning side. Across the field, a picture of dejection, the beaten team. And in j this group the saddest figure of | j them all —Earl (Dutch l Clark. • quarterback of the Detroit Lions. I I world professional champion, who j played his heart out in a losing i cause. v He had a pass snatched out of his arms by Luke Johnsos | for a touchdown. It didn't matter i that he kicked a field goal, made la spectacular dash of 3S yards • Jwhiih paved the way for a touclij ilown, and kicked a point after « touchdown. ! t The score was: Chicago Bears t 112. Detroit Lions 10. Clark's team f Inad lost. t ~iafs a picture of Wrigley ( field in the last minute of a heart- 1 pounding professional battle before ' 1 27.424 spectators. The boys who - play for cash, play for keeps anil 1 their salaries aren't everything. 1 Koy Molting, Bears’ halfback, t | left the game w ith a deep gash t above his eye, had three stitches ! taken in it and returned to action i I again. . ' Danny Fortmann, Bears' guard, | with a deep cut ripped across his i eye, ready to play again. Ernie jCaddel, Lions' halfback, playing - ' until he could barely limp off the 1 field. Bears and Lions limping in t 1 and out of the game, in which 1 ! fierce charging, blocking, and tackl-. 1 i ing had the spectators in a frenzy. 1 Ohio State would have held t ' their 13-12 lead and beaten Notre < Dame in their thrilling battle last • ! year if they had had a quarterback i like Brumbaugh squeezing the i ball. Five Lions pounced on him. and fought for the ball. One De- I i troit player took a wild punch at | him *Ol Brumbaugh kept squeezj ing the ball. Twite Brumbaugh ! repeated thep lay, and then it was 1 over. TREES TESTED FOR ARID LUND Washington.— (U.PJ —Seven speci ies of bro&dleaf trees are recommended by the Department of Agriculture for windbreak planting in the northern Great Plains, where scanty moisture and extremes in ' temperature make tree life difficult The seven species were selected | from 18 tested for 20 years. They are Chinese elm. green ash. chokeberry. hoxelder. Siberian pea-tree, buffaloberry and American plum. Tests were begun in 1914 at Mandan. N. D . and plantings were ! completed in 1917. A few years ■ after planting, the willows, popiars and birches began to die and most of them were gone by 1925. Alj though the Norway poplar survived better than other poplars, it j cannot be recommended where 'moisture is scanty. Failures of early settlers to grow i trees in the northern Great Plains prompted the department to in-! vestigate shelterbelt planting ini j 1914. Although the department: ! points out that the seven reeom- ; mended trees tnay not be the only ! broadleaf species for windbreaks. ! they are the only one wfith a good , .record out of the 18 that seemed | most promising when they were 'i

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OVTOBF.R 26, 19116.

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planted. An ideal windbreak for the northern Great Plains might include, the department suggested, beginning on the windward side, a roweach of choke-cherry, Siberian pentree, green ash. hoxelder, two rows of Chinese elm, one of hoxelder, two of green auih. and one each of buffaloberry and American plum. A clean, cultivated strip at least 12 feet wide on each side should be included. Other trees might be used, providing the low growing trees are kept to the outside. o 1 Raymond Fortune Denied New Trial Huntington, Ind., Oct. 26 — (U.R) —Denied a motion for a. new trial. Raymond Fortune, sentenced to electrocution for slaying Orris M. Dokken. Kohler. Wis., during holdup of a poker game in Fori Wayne last February, was taken to the state prison at Michigan City today.

Fire Hits Downtown San Diego Damage estimated at $2,000,000 was caused by a blaze which broke out during the early morning hours in an apartment store of San Diego, C'al., requiring the efforts of 200 firemen for hours before the blaze was got under control.

Simpson Divorce Case Up Tuesday Ipswich, England. Oct. 26— (U.R) —The Ipswich assize court adjourned late today until 2:15 p.m. tomorrow when it will definitely hear the divorce suit of Mix. Earnest A. Simpson, close friend of King Edward. Wasp Army Advances Budapest —(UP)—An “air force" of wasps, 21,000.1)00 strong, is on | its way to Canada to wage a war against caterpillar®. Dr. Kenneth Morris, aided by an army of 400 laborers, collected the wasps in the birch forests of Hungary. They will be used to combat catenpillara which are ravaging Canadian pine forests. — Hear Hon. James E. Watson, 1). C. H. S. Thursday Night-

* ——-♦ Today’s Sport Parade (By*Henry MeLemore) V — “• Pittsburgh. Oct. 26. --(U.R) ■') f, ' w short notes on the Pitl-Notre Dame game which saw Elmer Laydeu get the first, and probably the last booing of his life: Doctor Jock i Sttotherlund. the Dundee dentist who roaches the Pittsburgh*, thinks Notre Dame too fine a team to be beaten 26 to 0 by anybody . , which is very nice and considerate, but doesn’t mean much when 50,000 of the 70,000 crowd which saw the game agree that the score 1 might easily have been 40 (or more) to 0 . . . The half-time whlsle a minute after Bobby Larue's 6, yard run to the Irish three-yard line cost Pitt six or seven points, and had Marshall Goldberg known ) enough to cut to the sidelines on his return of the third period kick off he would have had a run of 100 yards instead of fifty, and another touchdown , . . .*.nd on Mar shall's 50-yard return of a punt there wouid have been another score if tne Pitt center, Hensley, hadn't decided to do a little' daydreaming and fafled to cut down : the Notre Dame safety man. But it's a critical man indeed who would spend much time finding fault with the Panthers on Saturday . . . After all, the didn't yield a single first down until the first play of the fourth yuarter, which 1 certainly must be some sort of a record against Notre Dame . . . The Irish got hut four all day. and one of them was the result of sueicessive offside penalties . . . Notre Dame brought four full teams, and perhaps that's the reason for the rout . . . The Irish never seemed quite sure which combination to use . . . Notre Dame had one playdown to perfection, however . . . The out-of-bounds pass . .*. Three times they threw long and vigorous passes which were completed just as the receiver stepped off the fairway into the rough ... O'Reilly was on the catchiug end of two of them, and when the second one was called back his temper got the better'of him. and he slammed the ball to the ground . . .

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, | This probably was a warm-tip for | ] his fourth period outburst when j he took a short right hand swing [lot Hensley, wkra Uiikl earnesl | young man knocked him out of a , play . . . This was the incident ,| which brought Coach LttydeTi J bounding onto the field . . . Cm. . | pire Al Slack saw the punch ami 11 ordered a penalty for roughness !. . . When O'Reilly attempted to |i protest Slack waved him uwuy und ,; Laydeu, thinking his man was be | ing ordered off the field, did u ( | Jesse Owens to the scene of con , diet . . . The penalty stuck and , when Elmer walked back to the . bench he was given a very lusty razzeroo . . . Layden's action,came . as a shock for he is known as a , gentlethan of exquisite poise, coolI ness under fire, und all that sort ! of thing, you know. , John Wood, who intercepted the Notre Dame pass late in the game • j and went 45 yards for a score, was . given credit for a magnificent bit !of heady sunning by the crowd . . . . Catching the hall on the Hide-

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