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Show 17, 1929. THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUND AYtMORNING.NO VEMBER NOTRE DAME REPULSES TROJANS; PURDUE CRUSHES IOWA MSm IRISH HORDE TURNS BACK FOE FROM WEST IN launders' 95-Yar- Touchdown in Vin as Mustek Misses Goal. . By ALAN GOULD, Ajwefab Tirm 8 porta Editor. . U. v Yards from scrimmage . . Passes Attemp- spectacular pawing and Korlng vanquished plays, Notre Same Southern California, 13 to 13, and wept on unbeaten toward the Hoos ler goal oi a national gruuron Championship. In the lightning-lik- e surge of one of the greatest mteraectional games of the year, another thrilling chapter was added to the embattled history of Soldier field while greatest ' crowd in the history oftheAmerican Iren-ale- d In football 133,000, looked on excitement. Pillowed on his movable bed Just behind the Notre Dame bench, where he could pull the strings of team play personally for the first time In three weeks, Knute Rocke forgot his ailing leg as his charge scored a triumph that was more convincing than the one point margin 65 3 S INDIANA 34.7 Punts (average).. 38. 8 3 Fumbles , 1 by.. ....... returned Yards from klckoff ... Yards returned on punt . ,. BUYRAZORS 88 102 , MMTETOGO, rd to coniey. . Brm ramble Line. On The Ramblers displayed the stuff to have beaten Southern California by at least another touchdown. They probably would have gained It had not Marty Brill, big halfback, fumbled the ball on the Trojan line in the first period alter a sweep- yards, ing advanco of sixty-eigfeatured by two passes good for gains Brill first with yards of fifty-sevtossing to Cooler and then .taking from heave himself another Schwarta. . Southern California, on the other band, got Inside Notre Dame's line only once outside of the two plays on which touchdowns were produced, The Trojana dashed out to. front In the first few minutes of the game by catching the second string Notre Dam backfield napping on a long pass. Getting the ball at mldfleld on a poor punt by Schwarta, Duffield hit the line once, reaching the enemy mark, then dropped back and passed straight down the field. Apslt, halfback, got clear and snared line. the ball on Notre Dame's He made the rest of the Journey unimpeded, but Duffield missed th try ht en rd rd rd for extra point, LyjJ'' :' rtrward Fas. But Notre Dam aelaed and held the upper band as Rockne rushed Carideo Into the game to direct the first string attack. The Hoosiers, after missing the chance to score on the pasa that bounded from Oon-k- y to Carideo to be declared illegal, again took to the air and tied the count pn a single play, engineered by Jack Elder from his own line. The fleet Hoosler back let 35-ya-rd Carideo's klckoff his line, came roaring out Into the open, and. being aided by fine aInterference, sped across the goal in pandemonium of cheers. Muslck missed the uprights. The lineup and summary: rt IhM DuH u to .... So. .. Cat,Teopenn Cooler.... under, taklnc R in a corner on EVANSTON, Cornell Leads Throughout, Until Dartmouth Gets Victorious Break. y rd Dartmouth v , ,-- ' 'j TudlekTk EMrtmauth-JTauchdimi- a. Southern California Notre Mm aoortof: , iOMBTHrao elJ ...... 0 IS Con- - TmcMowiw pirntBErr l BOMS COOKDiO PATELLA LUNCH SUNDAV SPECIAL rHidtr." ' DIMS'EB "jiopirt.g" DAItr SPAGHETTI POIXCB SfKCIAL - wu (& Moa 5th South an UsUtrtta HC Hi, Nov. W. 16 The r-r A mild Indian summer afternoon attracted a horde of golfer to the Country club links Saturday to participate in the blind bogey. 75 being the mark to shoot for. Athol Rawlins and Dr. E. W. Browning were down. Ap.lt. aaundrre. Notre Dome Carideo for SubeUtutlone: Oebert. Brill for O'Connor, Slder for Bchwarti. Mulllne for Bovoldl. MeUeer for Low. Colerlck for Collint, Vlk for Conler, Keeeti for Cannon, Kaplan for Brill. Dono-hu-o for LeahT, Culver fior Donohue, Nuh for Morolhan. Savoldi for Mallln.. Brill for Kaplan. Cotlin. Tor Coterlrk, Center for Vlk. Law for Metvar. Cannon for KaatW, Ifornlhan for N.ih Southern California -- Hill for Moae. Ba ker for Barracer. Hoff for HaU. Mutlck for Hill. Saunders for Duffield. Hall for Hoff. Williamson for Dje. Shaw for Galloaar. n P'.taver for Aps't. Oowder for Shsw. for Plnr keri, Ji'hch for Arbelide. for ru('-l- d for HI1 -t ereree" and. KarMa ntttnpil -- XStf-Cor!.- Tllinol.: field jurt"r. Barl-ior- h. Chic.io. head Uneuiian. V.raU, Missouri. BLIND GOLFER. Blind since birth, Barton Cooper, aged 14. of Alameda, CaL, is an. excellent golfer, considering his handicap. He plays regularly on the municipal links. '..( , "Jl'-- It total ox 14 points, or better inan point a minute. . Hoosler Victory Stuns Indiana Rooters as WeD. The Hooskr triumph, its first of the 1929 race, stunned not only the ; H'j St WW . : throng of 39,000 Northwestern home coming fans, but amazed even the handful of Indiana rooters, many of them members of the Indiana Anti-shaclub, a Hoosler campus organisation pledged not to shave until Its team won a conference game. They stormed the playing field after the final shot, wild with jubilation and sharing at least second place in the conference pennant scramble. It was the second loss for the Wildcats, as succumbed to they had previously ' Minnesota Result CanUnues long T Jinx Over Northwestern. The result also continued the jinx the Hoosiers nom over northwestern. In three straight games they have entered as underdogs and emerged victors. . Indiana. Horthweitem. rTenaen. ......... Baker Shanahan. ...... It.. .., ,, Xnsebtritiea .. Anaerson UoloacU. ....... is Mankowakl Clark . Woodworth Seller ..r , MarWl , Jaaper . .prv , . , . ,..rt . ...... Oonra ..re.. Thomas.. Athbr Haniee Dauer ... Griffin .,.... .......... Koenlc. Baxter ..rh.. . .IB . , Calderwood Macnaboato Score Or periods; .. e e is 19 Indiana .... .... Northwettern .... Official Referee. Haddaohn. Mlchlran; Princeton: field iudae. moire. Davla. Gardner, Ullnoii; bead llceaman. Grave. IUlnoli. Touchdown. Bcallr Scortnj Indianal.uo ror uuer. i: kom duo tor Koenjf),.! DOlnte after touchdown. Roea. 9. North wejtern: Moore (sub for Orlfflnl, I: Bertnerm ceub lor caiaerwood), 1 point after touchdown. Bergherm. 2. ft s r ; . i . ' '. Outlaw Champions Begin Workouts Over Holy Gross Takes Lead in Island Tourm HONOLULU, Nov. 18 W).Scorlng 70, two under par, Horton Smith took the lead in the second annual Hawaiian open golf championship today at the end of the second day a play. The Joplin. Mo., star had a total score of 143 for the first 38 holes. Smith displaced Ted Benedict of Honolulu, leader at the end of the first day's play. Benedict s 78 proved disastrous to his leadership, dropping him to ninth place. Smith shot two under par on the first nine, and held par even for the returning nine. Craig Wood. Bloomfield, N. J.. up from twelfth place to take second honors, scoring a 69, three under par. for a total of 144 strokes. Wood got a 32 on the returning nine today to lead with the lowest tournament score for nine holes. Y. and T. Miyamoto from Japan each scored 71, as did Dan Williams, Westfield. N. J, to complete the picture of par breakers. a Ilorween Forced to Send in Full Strength to Beat Scrappy Opponents. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 16, (P). Harvard was forced to use almost all of Its football strength to subdue the light and scrappy Holy Cross eleven by a 13 to 6 score here today when the crimson and purple played their tenth consecutive game before 55.000 spectators. Arnold Horween, Harvard coach, with next week's Yale game In mind, started his second team against the crusaders, who always can be relied on to get off to a slow start in the stadium. Cleo O'Donnell's players ran true to form, but the Harvard seconds were equally ragged and the first half was reduced to a mediocre punting duel All of the Harvard regulars, except Fullback Wally Harper, entered the game late in the first half, hut did not get under way until the third period. Harvard had the ball line and Cross' on " forcedHoly "the-- purple Into .close formation. There was no one to stOD Mavs when he caught Devens' lateral pass 20-- 0 and widely circled his lert end lor a touchdown. Harvard scored again the fourth Penn- - period after White intercepted one NEW YORK. Nov. 16 f yrtramar-mKsBetni b m jyaa.ML 0 of, p'Connell s long passes and ran before a crowd of 35.000 at Baker field T 30 yards To HorrCro-ine4,f,'ILaWood then missed for an extra point. today. The Red and Blue had four real when all but five minutes had exand cashed pired Horween withdrew the reguscoring opportunities three of them for touchdowns by lar; and replaced them with most Gentle. Al Ratowskl and Mote Will-ne- r. of the starting subs. .Batchelder with Gentle adding two of the kicked off to O'Conneli on the Holy Cross line and that speedy three goals, m-v- Ya-su- da ,10-y- Penn Defeats ""Columbia, m r-f 15-fi- rd . . mil H w.i...MgwwWi. Harvard Triumphs Horton Smith g In Blind Bogey : T Special to Th Tribune. Xer. Part X named George Ross, emerged from football's wilderness dramatically and suddenly today to defeat North western, 19 to 14, in one of the most stunning upsets ox the Big Ten cam rjaien. . Trailing by the ominous margin of eight minutes of the battle left to play, Ross turned -- defeat into victory with as brilliant a performance as any football crowd ever witnessed, racing 13 and 89 yards, respectively, for, touchdowns, and adding one point from placement for good measure a ve P Tlrt Many Take la: w i.aaa. .b too i. OonwD Touehdewn. Bqvard Muuoa Point. n.r touch down, Wakomaa. omciau: P. Hushttt (Mtehttin). rjmplra C. X. O. Brf.ro RochUr. Pt.ld Junto A. w. BlMl,r. X. Voa Kenhura. Head iumman j Mr.' Martmeii h A a . Corofll Ia , .....to .....we ' &y U :pi Yml PF Jrtif&k 'm y t Boom Cote 3 St. HANOVER. N. H., Nov. 18 ("). A bitter, surging Cornell team, fighting with all th brilliance of the great red wave of the past, led Dartmouth by point with less than ft minute of tens play remaining late this afternoon. Through the dusk "Manr" Stevens, the Cornell hero of the day, threw one more pass, fighting to add to bis tight margin. Another hero, this man Bill Me- Call. In the men of Dartmouth liv ery, leaped Into th air, snatched the ball on Cornell's line, and in less than a dosen plays Dartmouth smashed down the field, over the Cornell goal, to one of the greatest conquests In all Dartmouth's history. The score was 18 to 14. Dartmeath Holds Edge Figure. It was ft fitting ending to ft gor geous struggle. A pigskin epic wherein Cornell, the underdog, lashed at a mightier Dartmouth team witn dogged, conquering courage to bold the big green even in th first period, forge ahead by ft single point in the second, aaa anoiner toucn down in the third and then wilt into defeat through exactly th kind of play that cost, Dartmouth th Yale game. Dartmouth; outdid Cornell in ev erything but courage. The kind that rose to th greatest height In the Dartmouth greatest emergencies. mad 11 lirst aowns rrom in senm-mae- e to 4 for Cornell, gained 170 yards that way to the Red's 71, out- kicked corneu, ana was interior oniy in forward passing. Dartmouth completed only 5 in 23 tries, for 70 or gains, wnue corneu maae ?ards good for 109 yards, but threw away the ball gam in the xinai try. Green Fays Back Fer 19X8 Bally. Hlstonr went back in today's strug gle as Dartmouth smashed through a valiant but tiring Cornell line for the final touchdown, In 1938, with only seconds to go, ft Cornell field goal nipped th Big Oreen, 24 to 23. So today was th paying back of more than one old score. The defeat Cornell's- - unbroken also smashed string of victories this season. Uneup ana summary; c. . J' yJk nd closest in class A with 71. while O. M. Oadsby and E. V. Smith with 73 each ranked in class B, with J. M. Anthony Lean OaUewar Wheatlake of class C with a 76. ..to.. Cennoa. The regular greens again will be Moraines. IC Lew iCI.. ,.....rg ...... Berragi.. Hall the scene of another tournament on Twomer ... rt.... Arbelbtde Collin. ... Duffield Sunday. Oefeert..., APlt Bchwerti., Pinrkert O'Connor. ..rh.. . Point ler. Baroldi. alter touchdown n.. ,...ioe Cerldeo iploce kkk. aeoiai., Boon w Southern C.lifornit . ecortna; Toucht T Hotre Deme ptntw . "e1 Upset Victory Oyer North' western Returns Shaving Mug to Good Grace. ' Battlin' Hoosiers from Indiana, led halfback by a wingedf oot rd point, :, yJ 'H t' GREENWINS . BromMrs. Andrei . Nlnu. ......rt . rd Annitroiur ...rt ... 8oU Morton. ............ ftt.Tone In loose a long pass. It traveled fully McCtU....; Hoverd rh WoUf.... jornuon on the HrniT Johuan. . ... . .( , He.nd.lman fifty yards and was grabbed Scot rd line by Conley. who sprinted Dartmouth. poriodt: ....... 1ft 1 J distance to th goal. the remaining Carideo's failure to make th extra point on a placeklck left th teams deadlocked. run back of ft It was short punt by Carideo that led to the decisive scoring. The Notre Dame quarterback twisted his way to the mark and Elder, on enemy an end sweep, maae it urst aown on line. Savoldi made the the remaining distance in two lunges at the Trolan rurht tackle. Carideo then kicked the goal for the extra t y sfU)-S- ad rd MAY Fumbles recovered -- air-tig- ht Only three men are now living who played on the Princeton team that participated in the first intercollegiate football game against Rutgers 60 years ago. They are the Hon. William S. Gummere, "70, of Newark, N. J.; Homer D. Boughner, of Denver, Colo, and Alexander Van Rens selaer, of Philadelphia, Pa, 8 ....... Lafayette Eleven Needs Only One More Victory to. Clinch Big Ten. ' 13 Grid Tumblers Suffer Severe :, Penalty at V Fumblers on- - the football aeam at South Carolina are compelled to sleep with the ball, take it to class, and carry one to meals. The idea is a of the coach to Erescription which has proven so costly in the past. purple ball carrier raced 82 yards to line before he was Harvard's downed. Baker then smashed through center for two yards and Clancy found the same spot open and went over for a touchdown. Baker missed the try for the seventh point, Alabama Beats Georgia, 14 to 0 ATLANTA Ga.. Nov. H Wl. Old Tony Holm, Alabama's - battering buckeroo from Tuscaloosa, shattered Georgia Tech's forward wall and disrupted the Tornado's passing attack to carry Alabama to a 14 to 0 triumph at Grant field today. Not until Holm plucked a Tornado pass out of the air late in the last period and raced 50 yarsd for his second touchdown was victory assured for Alabama. In the opening quar ter the valiant Tony hadiput across the Crimson Tide's other touchdown rles L fjjline.- - smashes Missouri Bows Again to N.Y. U. AMERICAN FALLS, Idaho. Cage work for the Damslte Athletes, twice winners or the Gooding outlaw trophy, started In the high school gymnasium last week, and regular ses sions are now being held. Wednesday the organization elected R. M. Wheeler secretary and treasurer, and Coach .T. A. Selbert will again lead the Athletes this season. All of the regulars of last year have reported except a guard. scott, w nee ler, zanng. A. selbert, Evans and Cronkhite are the regulars of last year's quintet New men who will try for positions on the team this year Include Pinder, M. Evans, K Colllngs, Coon and Nel ColUngs, son. Meehan Machine Proves Kama$ Jayhaickers Beat Ball Hawk Against Washington Univertity Westerners. LAWRENCE. Kan.. Nov. 16 (IP). defeated Washington university, 13 to 0; on By OSLO L. ROBERTSON. a muddy gridiron here today and . NEW YORK. Nov. 16 A New gained a verdict for the Big Six conYork university eleven overcame a ference over Missouri valley foot. stubborn defensive team from Mis- ball. souri today to win, 14 to 0, before 30,000 fans on the Yankee stadium England Defeats Ireland field. Two smart plays, one early in Amateur Soccer Play the second period and the other late in the closing session, were enough LONDON. Nov. 16 m. Ensrland to send the mid westerners back home defeated, for the second consecutive defeated Ireland, 7 to 2, in an amayear. The Missouri invasion last teur, international soccer match at The feature palace today. yesr ended In an even more decisive Crystal Vidk ftnai iHri-at era ma fwtb v a aa v Tla wjii VIt ttsa ajtutiv defeat ptoj u't' The first play that labelled the of Claude Ashton. English, forward, Meehan coached eleven as a team of wbp scored four goals. ball hawks came on the third play of the game when Beryl Follet, a again added the extra point with a football workhorse, shook off the en kick from placement tire Missouri eleven and scampered down the field 67 yards for a touchdown. He then completed his all Important role by placekicklng the ex- tra point The sun was setting behind the gi gantic arena when Captain Len Grant stepped into the picture to complete the portrait he had paint ed on the gridiron during the afternoon..-Missouri, desperate in an effort to tie the count, had been backed down in the shadows of its own goal posts by the well placed punt of the New York- - leader. straight through the Captain John j Missouri back Waldorf; WOMEN COMPETE. line to stepped back on his The third women's international pass. The ball flipped from his hands. meet will be held at Grant rushed in. grabbed the bsjl track and field Prague. C zee ho --Slovakia, next year, out of midair and romped 15 yards on September 6, 7, and A, for the Violets' second scon. Toilet, TO AIR. SCORING LONE COUNTER OVER HAWKEYE ENEMY First Princeton Football Eleven Players Dwindle 12 8 Passes completed Yards gained on 15T passes 1 Passes intercepted 55 Penalties (yards) , saunders, taking Carideo's on his own line, turned in the most spectacular piay oi a soectacular came when he dashed pellmell through the whole Hoosler team in the third period alter wotre Same nag rained to jorge into a 13- -t jead. It was a marvelous run. but, so far as the final result was was wasted when MuIt concerned, stek's kick went wide of the uprights, for thereafter Notre. Dame put up defense against all an machine threats. The blue-clfrom South Bend demonstrated Its clear a superiority by margin. Jiioox the trusty toe of Quarterback Frank Carideo, In kicking the extra point after the second touchdown to decide the issue, but Notre Dame outrushed. outkicked and outpassed the buriy, hard charging Trojans from the far west The first downs, twelve for Notre Dame to seven for Southern California, testified to the more oan-- gerous attack of the Hoosiers, although the brilliant backf teld work of Duffield, Saunders and Muslck came dose to making the game at least a stand on, Southern California broke through at the outset to score on a passing play. Duffield to Apslt, after wrucn noire uame erenra uw km aerial maneuver. Elder on a c center; Lou Gordon (4), Illinois tackle; Captain John Law (S), guard, Notre Dame; and Captain Henry Anderson (6), guard, Northwestern. All have acquit' ted themselves gloriously during the present season. are these Bidding for holders of forward wall posts on various teams: Jhn Mooney (1), Georgetown's kicking tackle; Victor Harding (2), larvard end;F. TP. Loesser (3), Yale recognition as 128 .... ted. Rnn ERMAKERS TAKE Play Big Parts in Their Teams' Successes Notre Dame. VJB.C. ...... First downs Who Nov. 18 W) S. C. statistics: CHICAOO. Notre Dame-- SOLDIER FIELD, CHICAOO, Nov, IS In a dramatic, fiercely fought battle, punctuated by a succession of . BATTLE 2 Ramblers Much Superior, Prove Cold Statistics Ran for d 13-1- . Linemen The Kansas Jay hawkers In ' By CHARLES DCNKLEY. LAFAYETTE, Ind, Nov. 16 VP).h long forward pass that sailed through the air, straight as a shot behind Iowa's goal line, gave old Purdue, the only undefeated eleven In the western conference, a brilliant 7 to 0 victory over the Hawkeyes today. Purdue, undefeated in six games, four of them In conference competition, conquered the Hawkeyes with two amazing aerial shots after the powerful Iowa line bad refused to yield to the smashes of the Boilermakers' great backfield trio Pest Welch, Harmeson and the battering ram, Yunevich. Purdue cut loose With its winning aerial stroke early in the second period, with Glenn Harmeson, sensational halfback, tossing the passea that moved the Boilermakers within one step of their first championship since the Rig Ten was formed 33 years ago. They need now only to conquer Indiana a week hence to become undisputed title holders, victo rious in every contest. Hawkeyes Make - The largest crowd that ever jammed Purdue's bandbox 'stadium, 36,000 spectators, saw every kind of football in one game. They saw two rugged teams fight each other to a standstill. In as fiercely fought 'and sensational a game n as the western conference has seen-iyears. After Purdue had scored Its points, the Boilermakers showed they had the fighting hearts of champions. As darkness settled over the field, with only a few minutes left to play, the Infuriated Hawkeyes made a desperate challenge to tie the score, rushing the ball to within five yards of Purdue's goal, only to lose the oval by failure to complete a forward pass back of the goal Mnv Purdue registered Its victory at the start of the second period, after a bitterly fought opening session In which the Hawkeyes outplayed their foes. The Boilermakers started their victorious drive after Willis Glass-goIowa's brawny captain, punted to White, Purdue's quarterback, on Iowa's line. Just as the first period ended. After Yunevich and Harmeson Buieicu wiv uic itn uuo7 yoiuB, Harmeson heaved a surprise pass, the ball sailing 25 yards into the outstretched arms of Bill Woerner, Purdue's crack end. He had a clear field ahead of him. but Glassgow charged across and bumped him out of bounds on the line. hard-hittin- g, w, rd . Pnrdae Threatens In Closing Minutes. -- The Boilermakers tried two more plays at the line and then executed ariucsftJU MM UJV nic eiuiuuf ball and ra.i to his left passing the oval through .the air for 17 yards, while on the run. to Woernar. who stood behind the Hawk, eye goal line waiting to each it Harmeson added more glory by kicking the goal from placement for the extra point Purdue made another threat to score in the closing minutes of the fourth period wher. they beran a savage march through the exhausted Iowa line, scoring four successive first downs, going from their own lie to Iowa's line. where Welch failed to make the first rd rd down by inches. The courageous Hawkeyes. who. a week ago, ruined the championship aaniratirmx nf Kflnneanr. ruirnlavasl. Purdue in running offensive for three of the four periods, but lacked the punch to go through the desperate Purdue team when within scoring distance. The Hawks had three opportunities to score, once in the first period, another in the second, and the last desperate charge in the fourth. Iowa registered 11 first downs to ten for Purdue and gained 204 yards from scrimmage to 208 for the Boiler makers. In forward passing. Purdue had the good fortune to complete two out of four for a gain of 46 yards, while Iowa completed onj out of eight tor & yaras. attempts Iowa. Roiie. 1 . West.. Roberta... .......it.. Ig . Mrera..... Hr ..r , rt . re.. Marnuwen Reedqulit Pannatelll Glacow. rarron.. Hairertr c. ..ob.. .In.. ..rh ..fb . Purdue. Woemee Van Bibber Bteara .. .. ....Miller , Buttner ... .... Sleight Mackle Whit . .. Hanneaort ... .. .... Welch xunevicn Referee. Nlchol. Oherllm um- Hedges. field radge, Dartmouth; 8Ire. :eam. Da Paul; bead llneiman, Daniel, Official Loyola. Army Guns Wipe Out Dickinson WEST POINT. N. Y Nov. 16 (JR. Army's football team had a field day at the expense of Dickinson today, winning as it pleased by a score of 89 to 7. The Cadets scored 23 points in the first Quarter. 27 In the second. 27 In the third and 12 In the fourth. Dickinson, although outclassed all the way, never gave up trying, and Its efforts were rewarded In the final quarter when Angle, fleet Dickinson back, sped throuKh a mass of tackiera for fifty yards and a touchdown. He added the extra point to make the Pennsylvania ns' final score seven. Head Coach Biff Jones sent vir tually every member of his squad into action at one time or another, and all of the many combinations operated with equal effectiveness against the weak Dickinson defense. of the |