Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 204, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1935 — Page 12
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By Eddie Ash (LEONA HITLER IS HIGH PICKER • mm SCORES 23 HITS IN 28 GAMES
JT was another tough field of football problems last weekend and the amateur football experts entered in The Times search or a 100 per cent picker fell a little short, but the leader was well and close to perfection. High hoijors went to ( leona Butler, 328 X. Walcott-st, who turned in 23 winners out of 28 games, only having three misses, with the two tie games not counting. The deadlocked contests were Indi-ana-lowa and Fordham-Pitt. ( leona Butler missed out on Mississippi State-Army, Louisiana State-Auburn and Kansas-Oklahoma. Notre Dame was selected 31-7. John McGovern, 321 X. Arsenal-av, was second high with 22 hits, four misses and the two ties. His Notre Dame prediction was 16-44. liis misses were Minne-sota-Purdue, Duquesne-Carnegie, Mississippi State-Army and Vanderbilt-Georgia Tech. Charles Nicholas, 228 Trowbridge-st, with 20 winners, hit the Notre Dame-Ohio result right on the official nose. 18-13. E. G. Davis, 2653 N. Hardlng-st. with 18 winners, was close to the Irish victory with a prediction of 19-13 And the same for Patsy Jackson, 23 Maple Court, who lost out on several games, however. Many fans selected Notre Dame over the Buckeyes, including Carl Hermanny, 611 Board of Trade, 20-14, and J. J. Davis. Cincinnati, 19-12. The Irish were supported by The Times pickers and more than half of the entries named them to win. a a a a a a ONE of the many Times leader prognosticators was successful in picking 21 winners, with five on the wrong side and the two ties. He is Clarence E. Hopkins, 1509 W. Twenty-sixth-st. He missed Notre Dame, Duquesne, Duke, Mississippi State and Vanderbilt. Twenty hits were tallied by Harold Ernor. 1425 N. Gladstone-av; Garland Burris. 1122 Bradbury-st; Jack Stallings. 418 N. Kealing-av; Eugene Raftery. 1151 Churchman-av; Helen Brown. 55fr S. Woodrow-av; E. C. Anderson. 2924 E. New York-st; Dorsey Allison. 3600 E. Washington-st, who picked Notre Dame to win. 19-14; Ed Slinger, 16 N. Walcott-st. who selected Notre Dame. 17-14; Charles Quinn, 1403 S. Meridian-st, who was official on Syracuse, 7-3; Tom Flannery. 1941 Carrollton-av; Larry Heustis, 1828 College-av, who "had” Notre Dame, 17-14; Jack Naperstick, 827 S. Capltol-av; Emil E. Butler, 328 N. Walcott-st, and Edwin F. Constable, Ellettsville, Ind. a a a a a a J. EUGENE ZUKERMAN of 1919 Union-st. complains that he was missed completely in the Perfect, Picker Petes on games of Oct. 26. Mr. Zukerman says he picked 24 winners out of the field of 28 yet received no mention. That was high score in the selections for the games of that week-end. He also says he named the correct Ohio State-Indiana score of 28-6 It's possible that The Times score checkers lost Mr. Zukerman s score slip, or that the blank got lost before it reached this desk. At any rate, a search through all of the Oct. 26 selections failed to locate it. It's unfortunate that the slip went astray. It’s difficult for contest conductors to avoid making a fumole now and then. a a a a a a JUMPING JOE WILLIAMS of Ohio State jumped into the headlines—then along came Notre Dame. And Jumping Joe wras just another half back today. He was "good copy,” though, during his short reign as football's new phenom. Described as a “second Chic Harley,” the lad made a gallant effort to live up to the rating, but was swept off the greensward along with other O. S. U. aces durin£*the charge of the Irish brigade I hat toppled Ohio's football temple, a a a a a a COLUMBUS police tried to protect the Ohio Stadium goal posts after the game, but surrendered as the howling Irish followers swept onto the field. The posts were pulled down and then set up again in a dow-n----town hotel. The Columbus cops, iike the other citizens, simply turned the city over to Notre Dame followers and let it go at that, feeling that the visitors from Indiana deserved to do what they pleased. It was practically two games in one, all Ohio State the first half, all Notre Dame the second, but Notre Dame with a five-point advantage.
Blazing Rallies Dominate Nation’s Big Grid Battles Notre Dame’s Fourth Quarter Comeback Headlines All; 65-Yard Pass Tumbles Army. BY GEORGE KIRKSEY I'nitrd Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—Notre Dame's “minute-men" today seemed to qualify as the nation's No. 1 football team after last week's wild, tumultous action from coast to coast. Out of Saturday's gridiron maelstrom, which riestroyqpl hitherto perfect records of six major teams, Notre Dame emerged as leading contender for the mythical football championship. In 14 thrilling packed minutes Notre Dame scored 18 points, won "the game of the year” from Ohio State’s wonder team and climbed back to the pinnacle the Fighting Irish last ascended under the late Knute Rockne in 1930.
Notre Dame has three stubborn foes. Northwestern, Army and Southern California, who must be conquered to complete a perfect season. Ten other major teams were left unbeaten and untied along with Notre Dame after Saturday's firing ceased. In the East, Princeton, Dartmouth. Syracuse and New York U. continued triumphant marches. Minnesota and Marquette rolled on in the Midwest. The University of North Carolina maintained its perfect record in Dixie. South Methodist and Texas Christian remained all-victorious in the Southwest. California is the lone survivor in the Far West. Michigan Works Fast It was an electrifying week on the gridiron, in which blazing rallies dominated major games. Michigan State scored a touchdown in the last 10 seconds to blast Temple from the unbeaten, untied group, 12-7. Syracuse beat Penn State in the last 90 seconds of play to stay in the select class. Northwestern scored 10 points in a flaming fourth-period rally to beat Illinois, 10-3. Louisiana State conquered Auburn, 6-0, in the last two minutes of play. Stanford scored a field goal in the last period to defeat Santa Clara. 9-6. Georgia beat Florida in the last few minutes. 7-0. Vanderbilt won a fourthperiod victory over Georgia Tech. 14-IS. Villa nova pulled a game out of the fire against Detroit, 13-7, Indiana's Tie Surprises One of the most amazing upsets was Mississippi States 13-7 conquest of hitherto unbeaten Amy. __ Em-Roe Bicycles $24.95 EM-ROE 209 West WH*hin*ton sum H | For Gentlemen Who ||FV ■ frj! Seek the Finest j flj I Suits—Topcoats I I Refined, refitted, remod- f leled at reasonable prices. I I enu TAILORING CO. I 131 E. New York St. | AUTO LOANS and Refinancing 20 Mouths to Py WOLF SUSSMAN, INC. 2A9 W WASH. ST. Established 34 Year* Oyipontte LI 2T4t.
The Southerners, coached by Major Ralph Sasse. former West Point mentor, pulled a 65-yard pass to win in the final period. Among the other surprising results were Cornell's 7-7 tie with Columbia. Duquesne's 7-0 victory over Carnegie Tech. Indiana’s 6-6 tie with lowa, and Gonzaga s 7-0 win over Washington State. Silents Wind Up Season in Victory Down Richmond B’; Sohedt ule Games for 1936. The Silent Hoosiers closed their football season Saturday with a 21-to-0 victory over the Richmond “B" team at the State School for the Deaf gridiron. Bowman scored three touchdowns for the locals, one resulting from a 60-yard run. Other outstanding players for the winners were Ayres. Lee and H. Jones in the back field, and Arnold, Alpha and Renner in the line. Thus was the first season of football competition for the Silents and proved successful. Teams already on the 1936 schedule are Indiana Boys’ School. Portland. Morocco. Richmond. Illinois Deaf. Kirklin and Wisconsin Deaf. Individual scorers this season were Bowman. 37; Ayres. 21: Gall. 8; Chapman. 8; Gibson. 6; Jones. 1; Lee, 1; Alpha. 1. The locals will lose Alpha. Nifilis. Beckman, Fields. Kyle and Able by graduation. • Pro Grid League WESTERN DIVISION W L T Pet TP OP Grpt>n Bov 5 2 0 714 80 40 ChicaEo Bears 4 2 0 667 120 48 Detroit ...4 2 1 .607 102 48 Chicaeo Cards 3 2 1 600 53 53 EASTERN DIVISION New York 4 3 0 571 112 82 Brookivn 33 0 .500 60 64 Pittsburgh 3 5 0 375 67 142 Philadelphia 2 4 0 333 37 120 Boston l 6 0 .143 38 84 WEEK'S SCHEDILE Tuesday—Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Sunday—Bears at Boston. Detroit at Green Bav. Philadelphia vs. Cardinals at Chicago. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. Football Yesterday PROFESSIONAL Brooklyn. 13: Pittsburgh. 7. Philadelphia 7: Boston. 6 Detroi'. 7 Chicago Cardinals. 6. Chicago Bears. 20: New York. 3. COLLEGE S* Bonaventure. 18: Canisius. 14 San Francisco. 9 Loyola Los Angeles' 0 St. Thomas (Philadelphia- 14. LaSalle. Si John's iCollegevilie. Minn.', 0: St Thomas (Si. Pauli. 0 (tie*. t Indiana's Laraest SELECTION of Men's Hof* LEVINSON Your Baster T
Indianapolis Times Sports
PIGSKIN PIPPINS FAMOUS IN OTHER STATES
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Bill Crass, left, Louisiana State's new half back star whom Mississippi State will have to stop at Baton Rouge during the coming week-end Center, kicking, is Joe Nazzaro. Army half back, who'll face Jock Sutherland’s Panthers in the Pittsburgh Stadium. Lower left, below Nazzaro, is Dick Bowdin, who will call lowa plays against. Bernie Bierman's Minnesota creation at lowa City. Lower right is Lloyd Russell, Baylor quarter back, who directs the Bear attack against Texas at Waco. Right is Bob Timm, St. Mary’s College end who will be a threat against Fordham in New York.
Local 11. S. Elevens Begin Final Drive Rivalry Reaches Peak as Season End Nears. Local high school elevens began the stretch drive today with the season windup looming in the next two weeks for all except Crispus Attucks. Technical and Washington collide at Tech field Friday with the city public high school championship at stake for the East Siders. It will be everything to gain and nothing to lose for the West Siders, who plan upon “shooting the w-orks” in an effort to take an upset. Shortridge, undefeated, takes on Broad Ripple. The Blue Devils are heavy favorites to wdn. Manual does not swing into action until Saturday when they invade Bloomington. Cathedral is idle this week and so is Southport, the two being carded to meet next Monday in Butler Bowl as an Armistice Day feature. Crispus Attucks also travels out of the city this week, playing Roosevelt at Gary.
Reeves , Griffin to Feature Mat Show Five tussles are carded on tonight's wrestling show at Tomlinson Hall'. Tarzan Reeves, Cincinnati. is booked to clash with Dick Griffin. Detroit, in the main event. Jim Lark is to take on Christy Elburg in the opening match, with Stanley Buresh being booked to meet Fritz Schmelling. Jack Smithers, scheduled for a bout with Pete Shuman and Irish Barker, lined up to Tackle Morris Cordell in other bouts. State College Card Games This Week At College Park, Md. —Indiana vs. Maryland. At Madison, W’is. —Purdue vs. Wisconsin. At South Bend—Northwestern vs. Notre Dame. At Indianapolis Franklin vs. Butler. At Crawfordsville—Evansville vs. Wabash. At Greencastle—Earlham vs. De Pauw. At Valparaiso—Valparaiso vs. De Paul. At Ypsilanti, Mich.—lndiana State vs. Michigan Normal. At Charleston. lll.—Central Normal vs. Eastern Illinois Normal. At Muncie—Manchester vs. Ball State.
Lay den Reaches Rockne Throne as N. D. Is Lifted Back to Grid Heights
THE Notre Dame-Ohio State game lived up to advance notices. It turned out to be the ‘ game of the year.” and perhaps the "game of the century" to the more than 80.006 fans on hand at Columbus and to millions receiving the news by air and press. Coach Elmer Lavden. the “Thin Man of Notre Dame.” and a member of the 1924 Four Horsemen backfield there, earned the right to be rated along with the late Knute Rockne. In two years time Elmer has placed the Irish back on the football heights. The triumph over the Buckeyes was the sixth consecutive for N. D. this year and the ninth in a row under Lavden. The last three games on the 1934 schedule were won by the South Benders. Lavden's record last fall was six games won and three lost. * * m * ELMER succeeded Hunk Anderson. who had failed to solve the intricacies of the Rockne system. Layden had been a winning coach at Duquesne. Pittsburgh, and Irish hopes took on an instant glow when he returned to the Notre Dame campus. The "Horsemen" spirit prevailed again. The Irish mentor matched wits with the veteran Francis Schmidt SattlWay and the Ohio State coach was outwitted decisively in the second half. In other words, Layden figured a way between halves
INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1935
Boys Club Builds Lead by Downing Brightwood League Pacers ‘ core 12-0 Victory; Holy Cross, So-Athics and Ripple Take Other Em-Roe Tilts. A 12-to-0 victo iy oy the English Avenue Boys Club over the Brightwood A. C. at Christian Park yesterday afternoon gave the winners a commanding lead in the Em-Roe Senior Football League Deck intercepted a forward pass and raced 50 yards for the first touchdown. A forward pass. Steffey to Dietz, scored the second touchdown. Both scores came in the first half.
Holy Cross defeated the Irvington Merchants at Garfield Park. 21 to 0. Three thousand fans saw the game. The touchdowns were made in the first three periods by Donley, Carver and Purdue, half backs. Bob Commons added the three points after touchdowns for the Holy Cross team. Two complete teams were used by Holy Cross in winning the game. Tom Reedy, left end, was the star for the winners on both offense and defense. Hollett. Kliefton and Schwimmer made the gains for the Irvington Merchants and McGryger did the passing. The Merchants threatened to score on cwo occasions but lacked the punch once, and an intercepted pass halted the other march. The So-Athics defeated Shelby Service, 24 to 0, in another Em-Roe League game. Broad Ripple retained its hold on second place in the league by defeating Beech Grove, 7 to 0. in a hard-fought game at Beech Grove. THE STANDING. W. T. L. Pet. Boys’ Club 6 0 0 1.000 Broad Ripple 5 0 1 .833 Brightwood 3 1 2 .600 Holy Cross 4 0 2 .666 Slielby Service 2 0 4 .333 Beech Grove 1 1 4 .... So-Athics . 2 0 4 . .. Irvington 0 0 6 .000 26 Days Cut From State Fox Season Elimination of 26 days from the open season on red and gray fox in 12 southern Indiana counties was announced today by the State Conservation Department. The move was taken to prevent extermination of those species of fur-bearing animals Virgil Simmons, director of the department, said. The order affects Greene, Martin, Knox. Sullivan. Daviess, Gibson. Pike. Spencer. Perry. Crawford, Harrison and Floyd Counties. Under terms of the revised open season, hunting will be permitted between Nov. in and Jan. 15—the came as that for other fur-bearing animals. H. S. BASKETBALL(Games of Saturday) Smithville, 28; Nashville. 17. Galveston, 39; Versaliles, 25. 1 Royal Center. 24; New Waverly, 20.
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Elmer Layden
to halt the Buckeye hocus-pocus ball handling. It must have been a stirring emotional 15 minutes in the Irish dressing room before the N. D. warriors went out for the third quarter to snatch the entire play away from a team which had rolled up 13 points in the first hall to none lor Notre Dame.
Bulldogs Bow to Pitt Cinder Foes Capt. Griffin Forced Out With Cramped Leg. Timex Special PITTSBURGH. Nov. 4.—The Butler University cross-country team from Indianapolis was defeated in a dual meet with the Pitt harriers over Schenley Park course here Saturday. The Bulldogs’ highest score was a tie for third, Weiner sharing that honor with Cook of Pitt. Tost paced the field, winning in 23 minutes and 36 seconds, with Leggin, a teammate, second. Tyner. Pruyn, Sazkowitz and Olsen of Butler took the last four places of the ten that meant points. Butler hopes suffered a blow when Capt. Winston Griffin, who had been undefeated, suffered a cramped leg at the three-mile mark and had to withdraw from the race. Griffin was leading the field at that time. CUE ARTISTS TO OPEN TOURNEY AT COOLER’S Lou Spivey, defending state threecusion billiard titleholder, will cross cues with Frank Dougherty in the opening match of the thirtieth annual state tournament at 8 tonight at Harry Cooler’s parlors. In other contests this week, Leonard Quill will play Sonny Piltz Wednesday night and Larry Shapiro will meet A1 Greenberger Friday night. Other entrants in the tourney are Lew Vogler, Harry Rubens, Walt Ramsey. Neal Jones, C. McGregor and Cooler. H. S. Football (Games of Saturday) Bosse ("Evansvillei. 26; Bloomington. 0. Memorial iEvansville). 12; Reitz (Evansville i. 7. Central iSouth Bend'. 0: Rilev (South Bend i. 0 (tie). Mishawaka. 27: Michigan Citv 0 Silent Hoosiers. 21: Richmond B 0. Muncie. 30; Elwood. 0
T AYDEN'S dressing room oration inspired his men to overcome what appeared to be a hopeless situation and they fought with a new courage that refused to be denied. Perhaps Elmer told them that Knute Rockne. in spirit, would be perched on the Ohio goal posts beckoning for them to come to him and to come with a rush. It was the greatest come-from-behind victory in the long history of Notre Dame football, including the Rockne regime. After Rockne's death, at a time when he was the No. 1 coach of the country, it w-as said “there never will be a second Knute Rockne.” * * * WELL, there is a second Knute Rockne and Elmer Layden is the man. He earned the rating Saturday when he battled odds, battled the breaks and beat a machine that was supposed to be too powerful and smooth for any kind of opposition. Like a true general, Elmer attributes the triumph to the gameness of his soldiers, their “will to win" and to squad team-work, with every man carrying out his assignment. A great Ohio eleven, “threedeep" in strength, was bewildered and unable to cope with a bristling running and aerial attack that saw the Fighting Irish of Hoosierland “riding for Rock," and for Layden,
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Armory Wrestling Card Is Completed Hanson and Stewart Sign for Opener. Signing of Karl Hanson, 233 Newark. N J., and Bob Stewart, 260, Nashville, completes the all-heavy-weight WTestling card of the Hercules A. C. for tomorrow night at the Armory. The two huskies will meet in the opener at 8:30. Matchmaker Lloyd Carter is bringing Ray Steele, 218, crack California grappler, to the local arena to battle "Rowdy" Rudy Laditzi. 235, New York, in the feature encounter. It promises to be a bout filled with action. Laditzi has cuffed his way to victory over three opponents here and most of the Armory fans w r ould enjoy seeing him flattened. The semi-windup tomorrow will place Rudy Strongberg, 229. Milwaukee. against Jack Warner, 220, Kansas City. Strongberg has won his only two matches here, both victories coming in quick time.
Condition of Costas Reported as *Good l Methodist Hospital attaches reported last night that the condition of Spero Costas, injured Butler University quarter back, as “good.” . Costas was admitted to the hospital Saturday after receiving a back injury during the Bulldogs’ annual clash with Wabash at the Fairview Bowl. Early Basketball Co-operative League members have named Ned Dansforth as president for the coming season and William Chamness secretary and treasurer. The league will open a ten-week season at the Dearborn gym on Nov 13 and play three games each Wednesday night. Carl Burroughs will referee. The league, sponsored by Smith-Hassler-Sturm, has six members. Brinks, Inc., U. S. Corrugated Box Cos., Inland Container Corp., Indianapolis Remodeling Cos., Republic Creosote Cos., and Real Silk Hosiery Mills. Games will begin at 7:30. A girls' league needs two additional teams to bring the total to six. H. G. Englehardt. organizer, has lined up Real Silk. Townsend. S. B. A. and Ferndale feminine netters. Teams desiring to Join call Cherrv 7550. The South Side Merchants, with such stars as Boeidt. Wolf. Lammr. M. Yohler, Kaiser and H. Yohler, desire games with city and state teams. Cumberland. Beech Grove, Greenfleld. Plainfield and New Palestine notice. Call or write, Martin Yohler. 1130 Linden-st. Indianapolis, Drexe! 2498. Ryker and Wooley Shoe Rebuilders are back in the field this year with a lineup composed of Kellermeyer, Kline, Koup, Patterson brothers. Stilles and Clarke Elmore. Frankfort. Bloomington, Franklin, Martinsville and other state teams are requested to write Paul Patterson. 717 W. 31st-st. Indianapolis, for games. George Templin has organized the English Avenue Boys' Club net team and is coaching the squad through practice sessions each Monday. Wednesday and Friday night. Players who survived the final cut are Collier, Curry. Dible, Kauffman brothers, Mellon brothers and Ropeke. For games call Drexel 5257 after 2 p. m. and ask for George. The Manufacturers’ League has been organized, with O. Smith as president and W. Giffen, secretary and treasurer. The loop will open its season Friday night, Nov. 22, at the Dearborn gym and the six rrfember teams will play a full round of three games each week, beginning at 7:30. Citizens Gas, league title winner last year, is back, along with P. R. Mallory, Beveridge Paper Cos., Real Silk Hosiery Mills and Crown Products. U. S. Corrugated Box will play in this league and also the Co-operative League. PRACTICE IN MIAMI Time* Special MIAMI. Fla.. Nov. 4.—The Galloping Gaels, of St. Mary's College, Moraga, Cal., stopped off here yesterday for a prao.ee session in preparation for their annual grid battle with Fordham next Saturday at New York. if
Searches for ‘Mat Hope ’ ( tanning that T)anno O s Mahoney, wrestling champ, mu oof on him, Aurelia Fnbiani, Philadelphia promoter. is at ranging a tourney in which 150 grapplers may compete this winter. Danno, Fabioni asserts, will be “ forced ” to inert the winner.
Notre Dame Grid Squad Is ‘Toast’ of Nation; Bulldogs Step Ahead in Conference Courageous Indiana Eleven Battles to Tie With Hawkeyes: Purdue Runs Into Trouble Against Gophers; Other State Teams Shine. BY DICK MILLER The inspired Notre Dame football team that produced three touchdowns in an almost unbelievable fourth quarter rally to defeat a powerful Ohio State eleven. 18-13. at Columbus Saturday before 81.000 frenzied fans was the toast of the nation today. Even Ohio State's supporters were forced to cheer the gallant uphill battle of the Fighting Irish from South Bend as they came from behind 13-0 to sweep to a one-touchdown victory with only a scant five seconds
left to play. The Butler University gridders took a commanding lead over the Indiana Intercollegiate Conference race with a 20-0 win over Wabash and now only need a win over Franklin this week to lay claim to the title. Indiana staged a big upset in the Big Ten by tying lowa. 6-6. and Purdue ran into a galloping Minnesota team that was too tough and the Boilermakers dropped their second straight. 29-7. De Pauw, Indiana State, Earlham. Central Normal, Manchester and Notre Dame "B” all turned in victories on Hoosier gridirons. a a a The “Almost Impossible” WHETHER it was memories of the great idol of Notre Dame. Knute Rockne. that inspired those Irish gladiators of the gridiron, or whether it was love for a trio of heroes passed on, George Gipp, Tex Young or their own captain. Joe Sullivan, who died during the past year, or all of them matters little. But it must have been inspiration that urged those young men to victory. Their feat of performing the almost impossible ranks them in the eyes of the grid world today as one of the greatest teams of modern football. It took great inspiration to overcome disappointin' it when Ken Stilley’s place kick for the extra point after the first touchdown hit the cross bar and bounded back. It took even greater inspiration and determination to continue battle when a bad pass from center nullified Wally Fromhart's effort to place kick the extra point after the second touchdown and tie the score. With less than two minutes to go the Irish were still one point behind, 13-12. an a Flawless Play at End USE any adjectives you desire and you still fall short of describing the perfect, flawless play of the Notre Dame eleven during those final seconds. The coaching strategy of young Elmer Layden was little short of masterful. Top honors go to Andy Pilney, whose passing was the zenith of perfection and whose final effort to gain victory left him lying helpless on the sidelines after a vicious tackle ended a 32-yard run to the Ohio 19. To Bill Shakespeare, Mike Layden. Steve M.htr, the last-named a reserve full back who went in after Fred Carideo was injured early in the game, a second string line that held the State's vaunted offense to one lone first down in the final half and to all the others who did their parts nobly although they were in the game for only a single play, must go credit galore. Few realize the tremendous edge Notre Dame gained in the punting end of the battle. So accurate were the Irish booters, Bill Shakespeare and Pilney, that Ohio State safety men only were able to return the kicks three yards in the entire game. On the other hand Notre Dame returned punts 117 yards. a a a Hoosiers Halt Hawkeyes INDIANA refuses to claim moral victories any more and the Hoosiers are disheartened that their after-touchdown attempt by their
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old reliable, Reed Kelso, was blocked. That their 6-6 tie with lowa was an upset still is unchallenged. A couple of passes. Huffman to Antonini. who latcraled to Walker, accounted for seventeen yards. Corbett Davis plunged 21 and fumbled four more to get the ball to the lowa five-yard mark, where Dick Zoll of the Hoosiers fell on it. Walker and Davis made that distance for a touchdown, but Kelso failed on the kick. It took a ereat 58-yard run by lowa's mighty runner. Oze Simmons, late in the third quarter to tie the conut. After their try for point was blocked it fell to the Hoosiers to do the same thing to the Hawks. Antonini smothered Lamb's attempt. It was a gallant fight on the part of Indiana that knocked lowa's hopes for a Big Ten title into a spin. a a a Boilermakers Over-Powered PURDUE, still upset over the setback at the hands of Carnegie Tech, could not muster enough power to cope with Minnesota s Big Ten title-bound team and dropped a 29-7 decision at Minneapolis. The Boilermaker back field stars performed well and the touchdown meant 39 consecutive Conference games in which the Purdue team has scored upon its league rivals. But the Gophers were too stout at the goal line. In addition they were alert and turned a Purdue touchdown drive into a score for themselves early in the game. Breaks favored the Gophers and a 96-yard runback of a kickoff for a touchdown by Tom McGannon was nullified by a penalty. A pass completed on the Minnesota four-yard line was disallowed. Roscoe, Thompson. King and Eiken scored six pointers for the Gophers, Levoir place-kicked two extra points and Beise one. The Minnesota team scored a safety and passes, Cecil Lsbell to Guirl, and Loebs and Wright, gave Purdue her touchdown and Isbell kicked the extra point. tt ft a Bulldogs Strong at Finish THE Butler-Wabash rivalry scrap was full of thrills. The let eleven battled with all its heart, tackled viciously in the first half, and while holding the Bulldogs scoreless in the first two periods, also found time to threaten the Butler goal when a pass fell from the fingertips of a receiver in the end zone. Once under way in the last half the Blue offense, with Wulle and Martin running 20 and 44 yards in two attempts, set the stage for Blackaby to drive seven yards for the first touchdown. The second touchdown came immediately when Butler recovered a Wabash lateral on the kickoff and Wulle passed 20 yards into the end zone to Eddie O’Connor. Another fumbled lateral late in the game gave Butler another chance and the Bulldogs drove 20 yards with Stout tallying. Blackaby and Musgrave place-kicked extra points. tt a tt De Pauw Runs Wild GUS VILLAPIANO, with four touchdowns and nearly 200 yards of gained ground, paced the De Pauw Tigers to a 58-6 win over (Turn to Page Thirteen)
