Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1948 — Page 22
Photo by Lloyd Walton, Times staf Photographer
GEORGE GOES DOWN-—Hickey (11) and Marable (72) of T. C. U. stop Indiana's George Taliaferro after a short gain in the third quarter of the inter-sectional clash Saturday in Bloomington.
Horned Frogs Roped IU’s Running Attack
By BILL 8 0 Coach Clyde Smith's pre-season remark that his IU grid squad would be slowed down to a walk because of reserve strength has been proven. And just where. Indiana will place in the Big Nine now depends on how topsy-turvy the Western Conference race can get, Texas Christian University is the first | team to stop Indiana this season. The Horned Frogs from — Ft. Worth threw a lariat on the diving" “interception of one of Hooslers’ running attack Satur. Berry's passes on the Indiana 12. ~day at Bloomington to score,/Tallaferro had to punt out when what some people want to call, three line plays netted only 5 & 7-to-6 upset. yards. TCU’s two-team system liter- Homecoming Next t Berry went to work and rang : the Texans’ ithe bell with three straight passes 10-year-old Lindy for first-downs. His last went for played 58 minutes of 31 yards .tp end Morris Bailey, a ; and 6-foot-4 cowboy who was re on the 8, Berry crossed up the ~ Touchdown Pass IU 5-3-3 defense with fullback gL scoring 35 points in the Pete Stout hitting the line for 2 opener against Wiscon-|yards, Berry then zipped around right end, evaded two tacklers for the tieing TD. Sophomore Homer . Ludkiker. place-kicked the extra
== by passing, Indl far with 8 for 8. His coach, the midfield only Dutch Meyer, says he hasn't Dot Hines in into ir missed in 75 practice attempts, on At wen a : Coach Smith shook off the deeat with, “You can’t be a col o Taliaterro, who Playe and not lose some, tough ones.” set up the dale wi with a 29- Now he has to get his boys ready return to TCU's 29. for next week's homecoming batyard punt Chick got 2 tle with Ohjo State. yards through the line then Talia-| Coach Meyer was the happiest ferro passed to end Joe Bart-/man outside Texas after the vicTwo TCU defensemen tory. If I know Texans, that orepoint margin will. shoot to 10 when the Horned get back inn thélr own “Solintry and start)
hands on the 13-yard lne. went. over - untouched. George talking up next week's Southwest Parker, ' Indiana's hiace-kicking Conference . battle with Texas specialist, missed the target for A. & M. at College Station; Tex. the first time In seven straight Saturday's statistics:
tries. This proved to be the down- Indiana fall. BY Raine Ard TCU crossed pd rduns terri- {vou penalty Gained oti 2T 183 tory four ilies completely out-| By Rushing (Net) ....... 111. 74 playing IU in passing and run- Total ey ented ee 10 i The Horned Frogs were Total Passes Completed .... 11 8 with 247 total yards, 136 sn tes ners 0 § | a 2 i Yards Returned ar ’ from 11 -completed passns..in. 171300 ar Tp wel " c ‘advantage also is shown Own Bumbles Recovered ... 0 [J] * by the fact that it ran 73 plays{Reaaiies ovumvers 3 8 during the 60 minutes while IU Yardage Lost on Penaides . 28 40 a. threatened mid Ears : oo Ricketts be i 1 “2 The Frogs reaten midway Kickoffs urned (Number in the final period and the 28,000 ponce®’yiickofl Returns 10. 4 fans sighed in relief when half- Sardage on _Punts—Average 34 “3 back John McDonnell made Al ardage on Punt ‘Returns . 36 Pt
Football Fans, Here's Chance to Win $25
The third week of The Times BEAT THE EXPERTS contest for football fans opened today. “Pick the most winners of the 18 games listed for Saturday, Oct, 16, and you'll win $25 in cash for your skill as a football forecaster. List the scores for each game. Winners will be judged on whether they selected the winning teams, regardless of scores. Scores will be considered only in case of tiesy™ among contestants. TO drop err Ha el Tee: If you think any of the games BEAT THE EXPERTS blank in|
will be tie games, designate them The Times. A reasonable fac-| that way, Indicating scores. Isimile will do.
BEAT THE EXPERTS
Football Entfy Blank _ Here are what I think will be the probable winners and scores in the football games selected for the Oct. 16 week-end in The Times’ BEAT THE EXPERTS Contest.
THRIARE +o ssvevereivivesnsin Ohio State ..... Towa Nebraska ieceecesrisnnanine
sansssssbBI LE Is ION, Purdue ......ivcqeeeevesses Notre Dame Washington (8t. L.) ,eeeese
Harvard ...
Butler cesesnsssssssssticcces
Army
” Columbia. . FRNA a IIIs tentine
Michigan Brats snares eiaee ’
BANA NNI ERE Ranta Sessa
CER fests santenn
Pennsylvania
Northwestern chess
Cesare
WISCONSIN «ossssnsnrnincine YRI0 turercorersnererpetsves MIDDOSOtA +. eoveinrerersers THNO vuvvnesrsessernsases - Navy sassaseseentiriiiaiiie Missouri ...ienenqersvnneins te So. Methodist — ,
“UMiskisstppl
Alabama
evr.
BASE setae natn
“Arkansas”.
ix Carolina VI. MEARS TESTA 2 Durtmoutn
Name Sassasiaaesnsanahenaietinienntneinniiiiiiian wr
; Address Fess PRONG. sss sss vsses
N. Carolina State .......... 80. California COIBALE covrsnseivisnnnones
Sess snsennnn
SAB ssss abana ninn
y “entrant submitting the bo winners’ and scor closest 1 os “ot dissed wi red . ie public iy this bla will be final nd all entries
Shan iniqnignt Friday, Ost ph te
Addron cies 8 1 PEAT THE EX
hy an imiviaua in 1 in ok ois dus of HE of Co Supt. on
Iman since last Wednesday with
x--booting 1.000 thyser's-office. .. The money is used
campaign: anapolis Indians finished sixth.
5
By JOE WILLIAMS, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer BOSTON, Oct. 11—Putting one little word after another and whatever became of Bob Feller's baseball magic? It deserted him completely in the fifth game of the World Series before an alltime record crowd on the Cleveland lake front yesterday. The Boston Braves made more hits off him in the first inning than they did throughout thé opener when they beat him on a | two-hitter. . After the game the Indians’ ace said, “I just didn't have it.” And he didn't. Even the grandstand managers in the press box were wondering as early as the third inning how long he could hang on. It is not very easy to stir up sympathy for a baseball player who, considering one thing and another, probably makes §1 000 a year, but Feller was a tragic figure when he was taken out in the seventh, an inning which was to see the National League champions score six times, keep the series alive, win their second i game and shift the battle back to their own reservation here
today. : ” ” ” » » ”
AS HE walked from the mound to the dugout, his shoulders sagged and he looked neither to the right nor to the left. He | was a picture of utter dejection and frustration and at that moment you felt that if it were “within his power he'd glady give up a sizable hunk of his opulent earnings to get his name irto the records as the winner of a “World Series game, Repeatedly he has stated his ond remaining ambition in baseball is to win in the series. 'He lost a toughie on opening day, and excuse could be made for him, but yesterday it was a different story. He looked incredibly bad. Of all the Cleveland pitchers who have worked in the series he looked the worst. And there is no way to explain it. - As he says, he just didn't
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
And Now A Feller Really Needs A Friend
Somewhere between the. first. game and the fifth he lost
« In a World: Series.
*
MONDAY, OCT. 11, 1948
‘have it; all of his magic,
LJ »
om
- BOTH MANAGERS started ‘the wrong pitcher yesterday. Bill Southworth's second guess, Warren Spahn, who failed to last
five innings in, the second
because he did, the Braves are back in the Series.
e, came through for him, and Lou Boudreau
had no such luck with his second choice. ‘As a matter of fact, he used, all told, five pitchers in a frantic effort to stop.the Braves. Even Satchel Paige got Into the act briefly and you should
have heard the roar that went almost legendary old Negro's time the game was just about I
was a fine thing that Satchel was being He pitched to only two- hitters, but he got
up from the huge mob when the name was announced. By ts ost and everybody was sayin, given a chance to p or
them out and ended an .inning that was threatening to go on and on endlessly. The plate umpire called a balk on him, which surprised him and mystified most of the customers. It turned
out that Satchel had moistened
his finger tips before taking hold
of the ball and this.is not considered cricket in the National
~ League.
- The plate umpire was a National Leaguer.
THIS WAS a game which found the young men reverting to
type. For the first four games
they were posing as throwbacks
to the stone age for’ baseball when a two bagger was a long hit
and 1-0 scores were common.
Yesterday they looked more like
themselves and for the first time the customers had a lot of fun
and excitement. Elliott hit two in succession.
Five home runs were hit. The Indians’ Jim Hegan put the
The Braves’ Bob’
American League champions ahead with a three-run homer in
the fourth, to make the score 5-
4.
Sports Roundup
By Eddie Ash
A. B. CHANDLER, commissioner of baseball, is the No. 1 sideline executive during a World Series and he's been a very busy
Hegdqbarten both in Boston and Cleveland and " back ‘to Boston. . ++ His office keeps books on the game reiceipts and the idifferent shares when the melon is cut up. . . . The split-up of Series receipts is covered by major agus rules and a A. B. Chandler son's and groups connected with the classic usually know approximately the amount coming to them when Chief Chandler mails. the checks after the completion’ of the title event. . . . The first cut in the Series revenue is 15 per cent from each game for the Commission-
©
Photo by Henry E Giesing, Times Staff Photographer.
™ PARADE—Michigan's Lenkz Sroshe: over for a second-half score in the
to meet expenses of that office, including salaries, umpires, business representatives during the Series, official scorers and others approved by the Commissioner. . The owners of the contenders and the league offices also receive slices ofthe “gate”
per cent of total gate receipts from the first four games. . .
per cent of players’ pool. . .. The losing club's share is 28 per cent of . ._._. Each second-place| team’s share 18 Tig per cent; each ing alumnt third-place- club's share is 5 peritoday. cent and each fourth-place team’s share is 2% 2, ‘cent. » 40 to 0. ITs NOT T00 LATE to point out that the Boston Braves won five straight World Series games, four straight in 1914 and the first battle in the current competition. . . «. That's right, they've won six and lost. three in their last nine World | It was the disintegration of the Series stirts . . .'even if there |jine which allowed the Wolverines ‘was-a- long-time (34 years) be: ito. trap. Purdue _ball:carriers be- ' tween appearances.
“Saturday by.
lapse of Purdue's forward wall in
the season. Disintegrated Line
hind the line for. a total loss of - 60 yards. Lov old-time baseball fans forget theijng hut the net gain was only 36 great Napoleon Lajoie, the firstiyarqs Frenchman to achieve baseball" Michigan, which couldn't have prestige. . . . He was a Cleveland covered the passing zones any player SHOFLlY. after the turn of petter with a tarpaulin. inter-| the Century. ... Lajole was a seC-/cepted three of Bob DeMoss’, ond sacker. . As a tribute to passes and turried ‘them into! him, the Cleveland club was nick-leventual scores for the Blue and
named the “Naps” for several|paise, Two Purdue fumbles were years. . ., He was a great hit-|g15, recovered by Michigan, one ter and a smooth workman ss which led to a touchdown.
around the keystone.
. - ” » THIS CORNER was too hasty in “giving” the World Series title to Cleveland in five - games... .-We underrated the Braves’ staying qualities. . . . But we still think it will be Cleveland, this time in six
. +. » Mainly because of No Comparison sames. saueere. Michigan, on the other hand,
a played a Purdue team subdued THE RAILROADS got a tre- by two consecutive losses and mendous financial lift when. the| Weakened by numerous minor inWorld Series teams had to re-|jurles. There can be no compariturn to Boston to complete play, |soh. .. It became a passenger To the Purdue fans. it seemed agent's “dream Series,” dining|impossible that the team could car bonanza, a porter's delight(be so impotent against Michigan, and a Pullman and club car gold|or that Michigan could appear so mine. . . . Baseball delegations/powerful against the same line
Saturday's game was definitely nt a proving ground for the question of whether Michigan is a greater team than Notre Dame. Notre Dame played a Purdue football team keyed to the breaking point and in good working order. .
The reason was Purdue's sécond loss to a Big Nine foe. Riveters were ignominiously overwhelmed by Michigan Saturday, World Series yesterday by de-~
It was not so much the pla | of Michigan that allowed Jlayiig [that last year was acclaimed one behind the three-hit pitching of
scoring spree as the complete Sol,
2 = The Bollermakers ac-| BOUDREAU has made ty,jly gained 96 yards by rush-|
Wolverines six-touchdown parade over-Purdie-Saturday-at-Lafayette.. Kerestes. (33) and Samsen (#2) of the Boilermakers just can't stop him, while Purdue’ s Schnaible (70) and Michigan's Bartlett (26) look on.
Fes sis oie ‘gwes 1 Purdue’ s Petals Fall, om ie fro ee Bowl Fades From View] More Game
By BILL PITTMAN That Sat Dieture of Purdue in the Rose Bowl painted for i]
ur-gtudaats. was. jaded and faded * The
of the best in the country. Much of the credit for the vic-|
their most poorly played game of tory should go to the Michigan Royals crash ‘out nine hits from
halfbacks, Chuck Ortman, Wally Teninga and Leo Koceski, who {ran and passed for a total net {gain of 335 yards. Fullback Tom Peterson was the bohe erusher
“used to-score two-of -the. Wolver-,
ine touchdowns. Ortman, who worked flawlessly, in the tailback spot until injured, appeared to be All-America material, passing and running equally well. DeMoss Ineffective DeMoss on the other hand, probably because of the rushing by the Michigan line, never appeared more ineffective. However there was no one else on the Purdue team who could do better, as Purdue completed only 9 of 22 passes. Michigan's record was 10 of 15. Purdue threatened once after a long pass from DeMoss to Halfback Norbert Adams put the ball’ on the 5. Four straight running
plays failed to furnish a score
and from then on the handwriting was on the wall. The game could very well have ended there. Later in the game Purdue sum-
moned strength to turn aside a began preparing for .next Satur-|snd Lea
pair of Michigan drives, otherwise the Wolverines appeared to score at will.
ond Big Nine defeat for the Boilermakers and the first defense of| the conference title by Michigan. |
that follow World Series competition from city to city are classed as the world's greatest spenders. ” ” u DID YALE'S football team Michlean 4, Pur rd play ‘possum on Oct. 3, by de- |Fiee FREELRS “Ingians feating Connecticut only 7 to Qirervein 48, Jhdiana Central 0 0? ... It could be. . Colum- er 13 Chaterbury bia had a hectic time defeating Yul paaiso, 2. 2 Josep 4 the Bulldogs Saturday In a [Bg state 53, Huntington 0 free-scoring thriller diller, 34 Prankiin o, 5.1 Poly 0 (tie) to « « And on the same |southe afternoon Springfield defeated [Wabash 20. Cas Case8 ~Connecticut.. 10 te 1, toes (OTHER. BIG X NINE SCORES . » + THE PITTSBURGH PTIRATES|Ah. 5, Jiinels Nahnewts 10 are on the point of naming a new California Srnero 1" manager for their New Orleans |aifred 27, Clarkson 7: club in the Southern Association, Ama a7 ‘Bowdaia 1 ©
39, 0 “Indiana State 6
replacing Jimmy Brown, who was|Arisons 320, Hardin. Simmons 1" _|released the other day. . The aioe ‘35 A Eel 7 Pelicans finished fifth the past n 31, ‘Bri port 0
ow ing Sian
wee
Brown's 1947.Indl
32, Bmporia (Kas. Teachers 6. 33, Rhode row 0 : pen fred xh RE hl
. didn't survive the fourth, the ultimate result, thanks to
: “game muintained-a-quality of compe! of 3 until the pid ign when the ane Sion 10 men to the plate, scored six runs-on five hits and two bases on balls and looked at four different Cleveland pitchers. This was twice as many runs as the Braves had scored in all four of their preceding games, It Was, Fa fast, the biggest inning of ie Series,
THE DEFBAT ot Feller and the Indians was a p to ‘the.
form players. This looked like an unbeatable combination, especially with the Braves two down and hanging on’ the ropes. Manager Southworth scraped the bottom of the barrel and came up with old Nels Potter as his starting pitcher and while Potter
to Spahn's relief chore, was a Boston victory. It should be noted, in passing, that Southworth has had unusual success with his relief pitchers. For .the most part they have turned in better jobs than his starters. Spahn was wonderful yesterday. He yielded only one hit in 5% innings, fanned seven, including the side in the eighth and . . . well, he was everything you have a Tight to axpoct Feller to be.
BOSTONIANS now feel their idols will go on to take the series just as another Braves entry did back in 1914. This team has shown a remarkable capacity to bounce back from defeat. They were written off by the experts two or three times during the season but in spite of injuries to such key men as Stanky, Russell, Heath and Potter they continued to make the good fight and in the end were rewarded with victory. The Braves are a team that can be faulted in many respects but not in the matter of resolution. The Indians may yet beat thém but won't make them quit.
Braves Have Decided Edge in Home Park
By ROGERS HORNSBY, (As Told to John P. Carmichael, Times Special] Writer) BOSTON—If the Braves win this afternoon, they'll win the series. Johnny Sain will beat anybody Cleveland can throw at him tomorrow. Bob Feller can't come back. Gene Bearden must be pretty tired by now, because he had to carry the pennant strain the last days of the season.
Fifth Game "Box Score
Boston Braves
After four games in which pitching virtually was airtight, the hitters finally came into their {own. I picked Bob Elliott to be
Royals Need
MONTREAL, Oct. 11 (UP)— (The. Montreal Royals of the Inftérnational League games-to-one lead in the Little
|feating the St. Paul Saints of {the American Association, 8 to 3,
|Don Newcombe. A crowd of 18515 saw the the offerings of five St. Paul pitchers, including a two-run homer by Third Baseman Oscar Grimes.
took a threest
ABR H O A FE the Braves’ star and he certainly Holmes, rf .... 5 2 2 0 0 0 was against Feller, driving in Dark, ss ...... 4 1 1 1 1 o four of the runs with those two Torgeson, 1b.. 5 1 210 1 0 homers. He may yet put Boston Elliott, 3b .... 4 3 2 1 3 0 on top. : . Rickert, If .... 5 1 1 3 0 AL Salkeld,'c .... 4 2 1 8 0 BACK HERE the Braves have M.M'Corm’k, ef 5 1 1 2 0 02 decided edge. They'll be in Stanky, 2b .... 3 0 1 1 2 o their own park where they won Potter, p ..... 2 0 1-1 0 o the flag. They'll have the home Spahn, p ..... 2 0 0 0 1 0 crowd on their side and, further- — — — —— — more, they are bound to be ~ Totals ~.... 39 11 12 27 8 0 pepped up from beating Feller, * Cleveland Indians ' |the guy who held em to two hits . ABR H.O A in the first game. . ‘| Mitchell £ ...3 1130 There's a tufring point in every Doby, of erin 8 00 4 01 game and while home runs setBoudreau. 3s .. 4 0:2 0. 3 0 tled this one, Cleveland still was - Gordon, 2b .... 3 1 12 1 0 in the battle going into the Keltner, rb .:. 3 1 0 1 1 1/°¢venth Judnich, of ... ‘3 1.130 0 The Braves had taken a oni. eck, Tf vriase 0 0 0000 20 lead. with. men on first and. Robinson, 1b%. 4 0 0 8 % 0 second and one out. Marv RickHegafi, ¢ co... 4 1 1 4 1 0 ert got that single through the Feller, p ...54. 2. 0 0 1° 0 o 00% to keep the rally going. Kliemany p ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pitcher Klieman should have Christopher, p. 0 0 0 0 0 0 fielded it. The ball wasn't hit |Paige, p :++... 0.0 0 0 0 0 hard. Even if he had deflected Muncrief, p ..«0 0 0 1 0 0 it, somebody might have fielded ROSeN .........1 0 0 0 0 otn time. Boone ........1 00 0.0 of Jfter that, the Braves got five Tipton «ive0eee 1 0 0 0 0 0 Eh . piBdisrdiBen i SOMEBODY was due to break Totals ..... 5.627 8 k out in a rash of basehits, and, in oe Rosen popped out for Paige in case. both teams did it. anager ill Southworth Soom wiruck -eut-for-Judnicl took Chee or Ea ng in the first inning, instead pen struck. out for Muncrief or punting with men on Arst and ,
[second and nobody out. Earl Boston ........ 301 001 .600—11 didn’t hit, but Elliott’ s home run Cleveland ..... 100 400 000— 5 took care of that. Runs Batted In — Elliott 4,| The point was that Southworth Mitchell, Judnich, Hegan 3, Sal- saw Feller didn't have, his stuff, keld, Spahn, Torgeson, Rickert, that he looked tight = Billy figM. McCormick, Stanky (Elliott ured they better get to him early scored on Doby’s error in 7th). and not concede anything by sac-Two-Base Hit—Boudreau. Home rificing. ' It worked; in fact, Tor-
But Newcombe’ was the big story. in..the early innings. |fire-balling ace of the Montreal |°" ‘staff held the Saints hitless until two were out in the seventh inning — and by that time the Royals had an 8-to-0 romp. | Martin Out Early Morrie Martin opened on the ‘mound for the Saints and lasted | only until the third, Then came the parade. ? Pat McGlothin will start for the
The Hon
Runs—Elliott 2, Mitchell, Hegan, 8eson hit the pitch hard and |Salkeld. Sacrifice — Dark: Left Judnich had to make a running - Bases<=Boston-§; Cleveland-4.. C81ch... |Bases on Balls—Off Potter 2, Fel-| Boston has |ler 2, Spahn 1, Klieman 2. Struck Pitching this series, although it |Out—By Feller 5, Spahn 7. Hits hasn't always saved the game. | —Off Potter, 5 in 313; Feller, 8 in, Voiselle did a fine job the other 6%; Klieman, 1 in 0 (pitched to 3 day and Warren Spahn allowed 'men in 7th); Christopher, 2 in 0 Only one hit after he got in there. | (pitched to 2 men in 7th); Paige, Potter just isn't strong enough to 0 in 24; Spahn, 1 in 523; Muncrief, Start any more, He doesn’t have {1 in 2. Balk—Paige. Winning enough on the ball to keep the Pitcher—Spahn. Losing Pitcher hitters off balance.
— ay . Saints tonight in an attempt to fees pire - ip A, : keep the American. Association] . (N), 2b; Grieve (A), 3b; foul - us club in the series. Jack Banta, lines, Paparella (A), Pinelli (N) 2 boo Sore: Montreal. Yesterday's rime 2.39, Attendance—86,288. 3B ATTERIES 8t. Paul ........,... 000 000 030— 3 M 1 — ) Martin, Bankhead a Himes 8 : J Series’ Figures , | 18 Months Poke iT JSauptee, 4) ‘and ARdérsot| CLEVELAND. . Oct. 11 (UP)—. tee ————————— Facts and figures on the 1048 Quaran * World Series: | All “sizes in Red Cat Passing Jesterdays Jlgtendance — 36.399. . PFive- stock for a Yesterd Total 78,178.73 | Beats BU Gridders Commissioner's ohare Shanes . Clune 3 ! ediate agues ar elivery a oe Butler University's Bulldogs; PuxCi, Toil, Secufatisss uost reduced nes’ are—3$68 . day's homecoming clash with Shares 31399, (Players share in rst » prices. Washington University of st! Scofes of Games — Boston 1, Clevzland| BLUE AUTO : |Louis today, still licking the, o Th: Guviand «Boston 1 aectnd)| POINT SUPPLY Saturday's game was the sec- scratches administered by West- 3, Boston 1 (fourth); Boston’ 11, Cleve- | Delaware, Madi & Ray 8 ern Reserve's Red Cats Saturday|land § (fifth): ! ! son ay Sts. in Cleveland. Bonen nt 7. Soar nd. won 3, lost 3. The Bulldogs received a 6-0, Remiining Games — AL Boston, today. | setback in their first start in Mid-| sRecords Sel Total players’ n American Sonterence play. both- Bens high Was. the $493 .874 84 hich JOHN y. P ENDER*
College Football Results
Kings Foint 8 Hartwick 0 Knox 6, Grinnel Lafayette 86, Washington and Jefferson ‘18. | T age,
Pret Lebanon Valley 41, Bisa 0 Lehigh 45, Drexel 0 Loras 48, St. Marys (Minn.) 0 Louisiana State 14, Texas A. & M 13 Massachusetts 26, Worcester Tech 7 Marquette 47, Bt uis 7 ar and 28, Virginia Jock 0. ‘Mid lebu 13, \fontana State 12, North Dakota State 6. Morris Brown 7, Morehouse ichigan Normal 6, Northern M Michigan 0
IChigan 20, Vanderbilt 7 Minscurl” 20, Southern Methodist 1". Marietta 21, y Cihegle Tech fonmout Nevada 48, Korth Texas State 7 1 Mexico A. M. 0.
21, ollege 7. Jlarth Carolina 28, Wake F est 8
MISSOURI'S VICTORY over|ce: ST: 8 Southern Methodist was the foot:|Snial fa isons 0 ball upset of the week but the Clemson 31 ali State 7 University ot TINGS KImiost|Eollege oF Pacthe 11° wi ely Bigs eiu-1e
duplicated it. . At any rate, Nebr ska ornell 40, Lo . ’ : Javis an fie Concord 1.
don't sell the Illini short in fu early in the third period.” the Day ~Marshall
2
» on Baten Portland, = iw CCNY 7
2, Pennsylvania 29, Princeton 7 Pennsylvania Military 8 Sw arthmore 2 Pittsburgh 16, West Vir
|B 26, California” ech 0 Rockhurst 1, St. Benedict’ 8 0. Rutgets 34, e 20
Temp! Shop: Ciara Bod dans iy per Edinboro Ambrose: 31 !
pringneia 10. Con nectiey
ture games. . . . Leading, 26 to 0, Army eleven thought a cyclone|R* avy . had struck. . . . Illinois staged|Esstern such a fierce rally the Cadets had tue to fight for their lives to preserve a winning margin. 26 to 21.
High School Scores {Crispus Atty a or Tanoer (0) 13 Cincinnati Withrow 21 ane
Pht 21, South Bend Washi;
ry ESRI
1] 13, Dickinson 6. or pr sbie is 13.
then. California 1 , Rie 26, Chat Attalioogs 0
wich "0-
rinity Norw| * Tufts 28, tes 7. ulane 14, uth Carolina 0. Jtah 30, ham 0.
ins Teach. 32
loligah J} Central Mienign 0. Westininater 0, Thiel'0 (tie).
Wheaton 38, gitmes Millikin 1, , Tutksase ton lltary 8
Bouth Side 13, Sou re Adams : ! Ceftral 0. Ravin s. Memorial - 7, Loujsyille St. Dakota State 7. 3 College 0. Vin, ps A di hd State 8. "tl te est is Btate 6.
A
: rR .
Coast Ouard land 21 toe U. 8 st Tennes-
latk of aecurate passing and! |alertness on pass defense. ‘ Both teams were almost even{ly matched on the ground. with | Butler rolling up 155 yards to| |Western's 166. But the Red Cats {connected for 178 yards through |the air, while the Bulldogs were (held to 69. | Western... Reserve put over a touchdown late ih the first {quarter--and ‘both teams settled |down to scoreless play for the [remaining three periods. The un|derdog Red Cats marched from [their own 23-yard line, with left {half Len Corbin crashing 10 [yards to give the Red Cats their first points of the years.
Butler sent five thrusts midway|w,
“Red Cat territory; «reaching the 17, bit. intercepted passes and a strong ‘Western line stalled each attack.
~~ Rangers- Get Hockey Help From Cleveland
NEW YORK, Oct. (UP)—
enture Boston college T (tw). |The New York Rocsor. who lost four players for an indefinite time because of an auto accident, today obtained Wingman Church Russell from the Cleveland Barons of the American Hockey
League.
AUTO-SEAT COVERS Custom ASL
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ILLINOIS AT 10TH ST
members of the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees shared in the 1947 World Series 2. Attendance for one Series ame at Municip 1 Largest previous total was 81897, in fourth game of current | | series 3 sui Game Receipts—$378,788.73 (ttn gam Records Tied) Fo west Auli In One Game—Boston 3 ( gam Equals | mark set by Athletics Ya 1030, Gardinals, 1930, and Cardinals again in 3. Most Putoyts > Outfielders “in One| Game—Boston ™ ea Equa als | mark set by Giants in Most Putouts 3 SPiicner 1 One| | GameBob Le! on Clevel 3. game). Equals mark set by Nick rock, White Sox. 1906, and Jim ih Alt Vaughn, Cubs, 1918
Big Nine Standings Automobile dealer
maa, 1 1 8 switched to Calvert i © 10% 37 because “it’s a better
3 Hr —ooo
ri Hy ri iil
linols Pe . 2 0. 61 [vot 502 East Nn North, Memphis Tenn: TT
.000 THIS WEEK'S GAMES
Illinois at Minnesota. Ohio Shia State at Indiana.
Purdue. at. SE "Northwestern at Michigan. . Yale at Wisconsi
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