Evening Star Newspaper, November 4, 1935, Page 10

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A—10 Colonials to Stick to New A PIXLEE PLANNING | FURTHER TRIGKS Davis and Elkins Is Next Foe—Maryland in High | Gear for Indiana. OT only will George Washing- | ten retain the new type of | offense with which it made an interesting battle out of the Rice game last Saturday. but it will strive to develop more variations | that may prove effective against | Tulsa, its next tough foe. | Davis and Elkins comes before Tulsa. the Scarlet Hurricane being | scheduled Friday night in Griffith Stadium, and the West Virginians are due to get a taste of what brought wry faces to a superior Rice team Rehearsed only five days prior to the Rice game, and with continued drilling the new Colonial attack figures to function much more smoothly against D. and E. It is not likely, however, that will be used to any greater extent, as Coach “Possum Jim” Pixlee, who originated the mnovation a week ago, oubt - lessly hopes to spring a surprise on the traditional riv Sprea most the entire width of the field nith backs and ends widely epaced from the tackles, guards and center, the new offense created a gensation when introduced on G. W.'s first play last Saturday. So puzzling were the maneuvers of the Colonials with this sort of formation that at no time did Rice seem to know what to expect. The statistics offer mute tesimony of this. G. W. having registered 24 t downs with a total gain of 425 yards on r ng and passing. | T Not a Leemans Show. | [ HERE several highly en-| couragi gles to the Colenials’ | gallant inst the powerful Owls. Tufly Leamans, though con- tinuing to flash his normally brilli; e. was b George halfba were NE. and clever running. skv junior back. likewi ed himself running in improved fashicn, passing acceptably in his initial effort at tossing the b and contributing many decisive block hat helped both Leemans and Even Joey Kaufman. the so whose work . previously had disappointing, came to life and showed ability at passing. tackling and running which some had thought wasn't in him. Joey needs only to repeat that sort of foot ball in practice this week to get con- riderable action in competition the balance of the season George Washington. strangely enough. won more supporters in taking a 41-0 defeai than ever it had in a winning performance ng the last two years. Like a fighter coming up off the floor swinging, G. W. was cffensive-minded from start to fi at &cored almost at The fans no: only admired this display of grit. but ectually thrilled to the Colonials daring offensive mpts right down to the final w Except bruises. a few Colonials emerzed in g conditio Leemans, for instance. after playing one of the best games of his career stated merely, “Gee, I'm tired.” Gloom Shrouds Brookland. T'S a glcomy lot of Catholic Uni- versity gridders who start prepa- rations today for their next contest. with West Virginia Weslevan Satur- day at Griffith Stadium. Their win- ning streak cr by De Paul at Chicago, the Redbirds are not expected to liven up for several days. Their goal now is to equal the best record ever achieved a C. U. eleven, one of Dutch Bergman's early ones, which won eight games. and lost one. His team of the previous year, inci- dentally, won only one and lost eizht Only C. U. and Maryland of the local teams have dropped only a single Maryland in Higa Mood. game this scason I\IAR\'LAND. though perked up after victories over V. M. I. Florida and Virginia since its hopes for a great season seemingly were dashed by North Carolina, looks for all it can handle from Indiana next Sat- | urday in a gzame at Baltimore. The Hoosiers, surprised the Nation by holding Towa to a 6-6 tie last Satur- day in a Big Ten game, and Bo Millin’s team is coming East full of ambition. That scuffie between Hora students and officers of the law at Richmond, following Georgetown's victory over Richmond University, apparently was a closed incident as the Hoyas rested on their oars. They have an open date this week and will welcome extra time to prepare for Manhattan, to be met in New York on November 16. It will be difficult for the Blue and Gray to surprise Manhattan, coached by the noted Chic Mechan, in view of | the great scrap Georgetown put up egainst New York U. but the Hoyas | are bent upon trying it. At any rate | they have the time to cook up some | National Guard Artillery team to nose | Tournament contestant, Holy Cross |that far west ever has been tendered stuff not viewed by Manhattan scouts. | Grid Folk, Dizzy, Wondering What Will Happen Next Layden, Dobie, Sasse, Crowley, Bachman, Kipke and Crisler Are Due Extra Bows BY EDDIE BRIETZ, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 4— All right, Mr. Layden, step right up to the head of the class and take a few bows for yourself . . . nice going out there, Saturday . .. what a wild foot ball day all around . . . the fans still are dizzy . . . also about a dozen coaches , . . what will happen next? . . . are you asking us? On the honor roll are: Prof. Gil Dobie of Cornell, who eried his way into a tie with Columbia. . . . Maj. Ralph Sasse of Mississippi State, who took our Army for a ride. . . Mr. Jimmy Crowley of Fordham, RS FROM THE Jocular Basque Says He'll “Keel Louis,” After Buying Car, Lauding *'Fine Contree.” BY JOHN EW YORK, November 4.—Pao- lino Uzcudun, the fun-loving Basque, is with us again. I did oot see him unloaded from the boat, but they say he was laughing merrily at the prospect of fighting Joe Louis next month. It's probably true, for he was still laugh- ing when I ran into him a day or s later. “Hallo,” said the Basque with a gay smirk that split his face in two and exhibited a whole showcase of golden nuggets nestling i his teeth. “Fine contree you got again. I always like it He seemed on the point of leaping in the air and clicking his heels together, so your cor- respondent withdrew to a safe distance. The Basque loves acrobatics. It was his custom i days of yore, after absorbing 15 or 20 rounds of solid punching, to turn a somersault in the | ring, sometimes with one hand. Every one got a laugh out of this except his opponent, who was busy pulling splin- ters of Basque jawbcue out of his knuckles. He's Still Same 0ld Cot-Up. JELL. Paolino is the same old cut- up today. The first thing he did \) on arriving in this port was to apply | the hotfoot to that dignified manager and exploiter of fighters, Nat Rogers. The hotfoot i1s a fluffy, mischievous prank which consists of slipping a live match between the sole and upper of the victim's shoe and -lightng it with another match Mr. Rogers entered into the spirit of the thing and addressed the Basque with a stream of vivid cusswords. some of them rare and almost obsolete, but Paolino had no time to listen. He rushed out and bought a new car, which is the first thing he does in any city. The car was a modest and useful vehicle, something on the order of a chromiuum battleship. If Max Baer could see the way the Basque is shocked and surprised. was preparing to meet Louis he be- in the decent fashion of an er with a hangover. Carnera was even more impressive in the same spot, for his teeth chattered like a corps of castenets, interspersed with cymb: But the fun-loving Basque has no conception of etiquette.® Far from writing his will, adjusting his affairs and putting in an advance order for floral horseshoe inscribed in white cArnations with the phrase “We Miss You, Pal,” Senor Uzcudun is going behaving he would be | When Max | The Foening Stad Sporls WASHINGTON, " PRESS BOX LARDNER. | around chuckling like a lark and | promising to “keel thees Louis.” “Do you know anything about him, Paolino?” he was asked. “Only from peectures,” said the Basque happily. “That don’t mean nothing. T see the Baer fight in peectures, only Baer don't fight, so I don't know nothing.” “He's a good fighter.” “Yes. maybe.” sald Senor Uzcudun with a jolly laugh. “But he’s young. He don't know enough for me and I | leeck him." Motives Not Understood. SDME of the critics are puzzled that | Paolino should come all the way over here from his happy home in | iSan Sebastian to throw his chin | | against the stoutest pair of dukes in | | the world. | They reason that at the age of 36, ! with cash, cattle. houses, barns and a hdithy gambling joint in his pos- session. he ought to know better. They figure that he must be motivated | by sheer animal spirits or a brain of | | #olid iron. | But it strikes me that Paolino is not 100 per cent dumb, or even 60 per cent. | Nobody, no matter how much the | Spanish real estate business is boom- |ing, can afford to pass up $40.000, | which is roughly the amount promised | to the fun-loving Basque for giving Joe Louis his December read work. The Basque savs he will kill Joe, {but I imagine he would choose his words more carefully if he were tes- tifying in a court of law. If he really believes it, he will have his mind changed before the fight by Mr. Lou | Brix, his American manager. Already it must strike him as peculiar that ‘Mr. Brix, instead of advising him {how to win, is upping him off on different brands of headache powder and adhesive tape. This sinister counsel has not affected Senor Uzcudun’s sunny disposition to date, His gold fangs flash along the bou- levard and he discourses in his merry wayv on the peculiarities of American | civilization “When you got probition you drink.” he said in the course of one of these | philosophical orations, “and when you got repeal you stay sober, fonny contree. But I like it.” The fun-loving Basque is prepared to go right on liking it. He feels | more like a pal toward Joe Louis than anything el (Copyright | 1935 by the North American | spaper All:ance. Inc.) NARRDHED T 7 Arkansas Tech Only Team in Country With Goal Still Inviolate. By the Associated Press EW YORK. November 4 —The foot ball fields of the Nation PERFECT RECORDS BEARS, “RISH" HIT 0SE BOWL TRAL Lead Dwindling Field of Aspirants for Big Game at Pasadena. BY PAUL ZIMMERMAN, Associated Press Sports Writer ASADENA, Calif., November 4 — { | | chalk marks—the Tiger clawed the | were strewn today with the Notre Dame’s Ramblers and recumbent forms of teams I California’s Gold Bears today undefeated until last week end. | lead the dwindling list of as- The list of undefeated and -untied pirants for berths in the annual Rose coilege teams was reduced to 23 de- Bowl evidiron classic. spite a couple of additions to the | Coach Elmer Layden's crew from ' earlier round-ups. Missing were such South Bend not only stayed in the fine teams as Ohio State, Temple, running for the coveted bid, but Baylor, Army, U. C. L. A, Catholic gained much ground over other un- University and Wabash, most of which defeated elevens by its showing went down before members of the still against tough Ohio State. unbeaten brigade. | Two Southwest Conference entries, California sent University of Cali- fornia at Los Angeles to its first de- Southern Methodist and’ Texas Chris- | feat and became the only team in the tian. continued to set the pace along Pacific Coast Conference—which se- | with California’s Golden Bears and 'lects the Western representative—to Superior (Wis.) Teachers. They had keep its slate clean. The Western seven victories each. representative chooses its Rose Bowl T | foe. Western Reserve Is High. ! WWESTERN Reserve led the scorers | in the unbeaten group, with 220 [NJOTRE DAME must dispose of points, six more than Dartmouth, | Northwestern, Army and South- Arkansas Tech, a six-game winner, 'ern California if Layden is to return was the only one to add unscored-on as a coach to the scene of his brilliant to its record. playing in 1925 when the late Knute | The list of undefeated and untied Rockne’s team smashed the hopes of teams, as compiled by the Associated Stanford, 27 to 10. Press, follows: | The Golden Bears have WaShing- Opp. | ton, College of the Pacific and Stan- | i+ ford to cope with and should they 29 lose to either the Huskies or the In- & | dians the race for the Western privi- “j: lege is certain to open up chances for Tough Schedules Ahead. Southern Methodist Texas Christian___ California . Superior (Wis) Teachers. Western Reserve. Arkansas Notre Dame__ Alma (Mich) = Idaho (Southern Branch). 3 Princeton ___ : - (Pa) Teach University LA w York Umversity___ " 3 nnesota __ Svracuce 2 = Micddle Tennessee Teach Albricht (Pa.) = = Tampa GUARDS BEAT SEAMEN. A first-quarter touchdown enabled "8 b 14 out the Seaman Gunners, 7 to 0. who all but skinned the Pitt Panther . . . Charlie Bachman of Michigan ‘State, who gave Temple its first reverse . .. and Harry Kipke, whose Michigan team beat Penn, which Fritz Crisler still insists is the best he's seen in the East. ‘With Princeton and the Big Ten teams ineligible, Notre Dame and North Carolina stand out as the hottest Rose Bowl prospects . . . unless Army or Duke spill them . . . how that Princeton team ever loses & game is a misery to us, as Ring Lardner’s Jack Keefe used to say. You ought to see that bunch of freshmen at Cornell. . .. If Gill Dobie sheds any tears next year it will be the kind Connie [ Washington, Stanford and U. C. L. A. | Should Coach Jimmy Phelan’s eleven |from the Northwest beat California |Saturday it would stand the best | | chance, since it plays seven conference | | contests against five each for Cali- |fornia, U. C. L. A. and Stanford. and | could take the unofficial coast title on | percentages. Others Seen in Running. WHILE the East's leading team, in | mouth, Syracuse, the eyes of the West, was Dart- | & previous Rose | and New York U. have unblemished | Mack used when he sold Lefty Grove to Boston. Heard at the Tenth avenue Tech pro game yesterday: “When Ken Strong threw that collateral pass I knew we was all right” .., Mike Jacobs, who spends most of his time in planes these days, soon will have as many hours in the air as Lindy . . . A Virginia sports writer, who has covered five games this season, has yet to see a touchdown scored . . . The strange thing about that Carnera-Neusel affair .was that Primo actually looked good in spots. Sid Luckman, one of the best schoolboy foot ball players ever de- veloped in the Metropolitan area, # | Tigers of a bid—probably is all the D. SPORTS copE Rice Stars, Tricky G.W. Attack, Game Leemans Are Thrillers. BY JIM BERRYMAN, T'S some three weeks yet before the blessing receivers of the coun- try give their annual belt-stretch- | ing festival as a token of grati- tude, but the foot ball gluttons took their prize stuffing this past Satur- day. Jaws still dre wagging over that hectic and_super-dramatic climax of the Notre Dame-Ohlo State spectacle, which eclipsed what ordinarily would have been interest stimulators of high order. Such grid news as the “man biting the dog” when Dartmouth’s unde- feated eleven from the big North country finally wrote finis to the half- century-old jinx the Elis have held over them. And Princeton’s slate still bears no | Navy Goat far beyond the most gen- erous predictions of the out-on-the- limb boys. Minnesota's twenty-first consecutive win, achieved by hurling | the wrench into the works of Purdue's | Boilermakers, didn't even make the | first page hereabouts. Army’s retreat before Missis- sippi State’s onslaught provided something of an upset for the thrill seekers. L. S. U. gathered more momentum in its drive for the Southeastern Con- ference title by a last-minute scoring play that snagged a 6-0 victory over Auburn. No doubt about §. there was plenty grist in Saturday’s gridiron mill—but, | after all, these are bulletins of foreign armies on a far-flung battlefront. and it is the war at home which really concerns us primarily. ‘ Capital High Lights. N THE campaigning of the local legions, three features particularly impressed me: The performance of Rice’s two all-America backs, George | Washington URiversity’s new style of attack and Tuffy Leemans' self-pun- ishment. Many stars of the foot ball firma- ment have come here in the last few seasons. They have been preceded by ballyhoo and much shrjll trumpet- | | ing, but few have lived up to expecta- | tions: some plaved so briefly they | could have visited the White House instead of the shower. i T recall that one highly her- { alded back frem ‘'way down yonder failed even to don his padded panties. But this McCauley-Wallace combi- | nation was in the game—and if you ! don’t believe me, just ask any of the ‘weaws! 15 minutes in Notre Dame's this point Ohio State gave vou the 10 pass after a recover Colonial gridders who bucked up against the Owls in Saturday’s massa- cre at Griffith Stadium. These stellar | aces {from the Southwest proved that | their reputations are not standing on’l feet of clay—but are firmly propped on 100 per cent marble pedestals of ability. The most cynical scoffer wouldn't dare to shake an accusing finger and say they “coasted through the game!" | In fact, they played so hard that John McCauley received the first injury of | his varsity career, which necessitated hiz removal from the field of play. New G. W. Game Delights. AP G: W adopted its tricky and | spectacular offense earlier this/ season, some of its scores might have | might have taken considerably longer to figure. There has been much grumbling | from local fans that the G Streeters | were a stodgy, uninteresting delega- | tion to watch—continually banging away at the enemy line. | Jim Pixlee didn't have time to | notice that the customers were leap- | ing to their feet Saturday, when the Colonial backs were rifling those long passes—they were getting a show for " (See SPORTS SCOPE, Page 11.) riecords‘ Prmce{m also was unde-i feated, but one rejection from the | voting they will be allowed in the matter. North Carolina stands alone in the undefeated list of the South, while the Middle West has besides Notre Dame and the untouchable Big Ten leaders—Iowa and Minnesota—little Marquette. In the Southwest South- ern Methodist and Texas Christian have unblemished records, byt no team an invitation to the Rose Carnival . is at Columbia, but he isn't playing frosh foot ball . . . He's concen- trating on book learning and piling C., "MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1935. Colina of Michigan State was one of the principal reasons Temple U. absorbed a 12- (1) He swerves and (2) tackler hits grour adelphia Saturday, as this series of action shots attests: more Temple plavers coming up, (4) he swirls and throws one to ground, ¢ and (6) finally is brought down. ttack : Dejfeat of Bucks Seals “Irish™ 7 shellacking at Pl i, (3) two 5) breaks past still another tackler —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. | ond touchdown and again her tr THE SPORTLIGHT Only Part of Answer Is Discernible As Notre Dame Triumph Is Analyzed. BY GRANTLAND RICE. OLUMBUS, Ohio, November| 4 —This devastated foot ball | center still is in a dazed and | faster. smarter team. bewildered state. While | Then another foot ball game began, South Bend still is celebrating the with just about 20 minutes left. At | up outfit, brought to the top layer | of modern play, definitely the 1 long and gallant foot ball history, the impression that the game was over | Horsemen for goal failed. this was the k low. A minute to play holding the ball around midfield. Figure that one out and try alk the odds. There is only one answer. All through this final period Notre Dame was riding the warpat with savage, driving speed—with ney playing the role of the “Four rolied into one wild mus tang—and all through this period Ohio State was in full r AL jitters were on full bla Even with a minute to play. holding the ball. Ohio Staie’s pa under way. When Pil ed fumble he lay, which the entire was driven into a run netted 32 yards throi [ 4 omeback SPIRIT OF ROCKNE ERA FIRES TEAM Notre Dame Following Now Satisfied Layden Has Restored Prestige. BY ALAN GOULD, | Associated Press Sports Editor EW YORK, November 4.—For | I the first time in five years the fighting “Irish” of Notre Dame are back in foot ball | power, so much =o that they can look forward today with some confidence to the prospect of an unbeaten season and a possible bid to the Rose Bowl rest of the Dame’s national rappens during the however, Notre 18 is satisfied regime of in its sece the resulis r ever since the height of tunder Layden on mi electrifying or more | the drive that finally hauied Ohio State with only 10 seconds to go. Second-Stringers Turn Tide. THE possible loss of Andy Pilney, halfback hero of the conquest at Columbus, may prove costly. Then again it may onlv mean the chance | for some other hidden star or benche warmer to come through This Notre Dame team unquestion= ably has acquired inspirational powe It second stringers. led by Pile turned the tide Saturdav. In the dressing room after the game the victorious subs were chanting “‘We're | the first team now! Notre Dame has no vear. captain this The plaver elected to leaders ship at the end of the 1934 season, ed last March. Lave posely avoided playing on ns of his squad, on this ves Saturday the simply told his had “given away" two on intercepted passes, it was up to them to go out hem back. Best Record Since 1930. " not only got them both back, er made it three. with a ack that Ohio State could horseman passing a not check Notre Dame’s record of six straight victories this season is the best since Rockne ciosed his coaching career with two undefeated teams in 1929-30. 2 Thereafter the course of Notre Dame foot ball zigzagged until 1933 and the end of Hunk Anderson’s ten- ure as head coach. That year the Ramblers lost five out of eight games, They were shut out four times in suc= cession. In the subsequent upheaval and re- organization, Layden. a star fullback Rockne in the “Four Horse- period, was called from his coaching job at Duguesne to assume athletic leadership Last vear Lavden's first team won six and lost to Texas, Pittsburgh and succession this vear Navy and Ohin over 4 State, removed any lingering doubt home of the Scarlet still is wondering how it all happened. | “How," they ask, “could a team that has been outrushed, outcharged, out- blocked and badly outplayed for near- ly two-thirds of a foot ball game, suddenly turn on its winning oppo- nents and pile up 18 points in 15 minutes—18 points that might just as ! well have been 24 points if it hadn't and that 13 points were quite enough. Why bother about it? 3 Then Pilney, Layden, Shakespeare | and the rest went to work. It was Notre Dame's line now that was get- ting the jump. It was Notre Dame doing all the blocking. It was Notre Dame taking full charge of the of- fensive program. with Pilney popping all over the field like a giant fire- r loaded with nitrogiycerin or (See SPORTLIGHT., Pacge about the revival of the spirit of 12) Notre Dame. DRY SOLES been for a goal-line fumble that cost i;i!(‘ke f PROTECT over 60 yards?" 3 No one can slip in more than part of the answer to the sud- Ohio State still was leading, 13 o 0. | as the final quarter opened, but by | | been different. and the gates receipts | and passed over an Ohio State de- | pened to Ohio State? den turn that took place. this time Notre Dame was under full You can start with Andy Pilney, steam—not only fighting desperately | who gave an exhibition that not even against a forlorn and fading hope, bu* the immortal George Gipp possibly e€xecuting her plays with fine skill and could have surpassed. He was the Judgment, now for the first time a lad in blue and gold who ran through €0-ordinated machine playing foot ball up to the hilt against a great looking fense that first was serenely over- |tcam that was beginning to bog down confident, then worried, and then, and fall apart, v through the closing stages, in com- | After Notre Dame's first touchdown plete panicky rout. all hope seemed lost when her try Outside of Notre Dame’s skillful and | for goal failed. At 13 to 6 she was courageous counter attack, what hap- | Still far away. A few moments later | the final Irish chance was apparently Part of the answer might be in a blown to shreds when Steve Miller, a squad so large that few of its line-up | Yard from the Scarlet goal line and had been brought along to November ©nly a foot from & first down, fumbled form—too many part-time entries not &S he reached the 6-inch line. To well enough seasoned for such a final make matters worse, Ohio recovered Notré Dime assanit the ball for a touchback and a 20-yard | gift before kicking far into Notre HEALTH Resole. for Winter Weather With Hahn's Viscol ( This is what with all resoling. you get Fine factors Viseol bath treatments for Skilled treeing with cor Jil-Treated Soles Another part might be in retaining | a seven-man line on defense to bottle up Pilney, Layden and others—espe- cially Pilney—with Notre Dame throw- ing passes up and down the field as the fast-flying minutes were running | out. This seven-man line, with the | November air full of flying foot balls, was the point that baffled such ex- | perts as Dick Hanley and Aubrey | Devine, the latter a Southern Califor- | nia scout charting Notre Dame. It was this combination, mixed with the panicky mental state which sud- | denly struck the Scarlet as its big lead | began to slip away that tells most of the story. Two Different Games. MILL!ONS at various times have asked why good foot ball teams | can be so far apart in form from one | Saturday to another. On Saturday you saw two teams a thousand miles | apart in form from 3 pm. to 4 pm. | For the first two periods and part of the third period the Scarlet of Ohio State flamed all over the field. Here was a big. fast, smartly coached team | we had all heard about. “One of the |place in the Big Ten individual foot greatest teams I ever saw” was com- up & lot of credits to be able to run wild for Dr. Lou Little next year . , ., The jockey brother team of Laverne and Elmer Fator is clicking on the Eastern tracks. Did the Brass Hats at Princeton force Fritz Crisler off the airways? «.. The story is Fritz was told such activities were not consistent with the coaching post at Old Nassau, and that in the future would he please restrict his orations to the varsity foot ball squad ... Anyway, it was a break for Jimmy Crowley of Fordham . . . He stepped right into Fritz's place—and no pro- ’ grams missed. » mon comment from the towering press stand as speed and deception were mixed with laterals which involved as many as four men on one play. Not only that, but the Scarlet line was outcharging and splitting Notre Dame’s forward wall wide open. Ohio State was doing all the high-class blocking, with Notre Dame badly de- ficlent in this vital fundamental | There were times when the Scarlet | The 'was flashing through the Blue and Gold line like swarms of redbirds fly- ing through an open hedge. In those first two periods Ohio State was a great looking Dame country. When Panic Sets in. There now were only a trifle more than two minutes to play and Notre Dame needed two touchdowns to win. Two touchdowns in two minutes against one of the best foot ball teams in the country—I2 points in 120 sec- | onds or thereabouts—that was all. | When Notre Dame scored her sec- THREE TIE FOR LEAD | IN BIG TEN SCORING Thompson, Minnesota; Williams, 0. S. U.; Wilson, Wisconsin, Have 18 Points Each. By the Associated Press. CH]CAGO. November 4.—John Wil- | son of Wisconsin and Ohio State's “Jupping Joe" Williams, co- leaders last” week, today shared first ball scoring battle with Clarence | (Tuffy) Thompson of Minnesota. The Gopher sophomore counted once against Purdue Saturday to boost his total to 18 points, while Williams | was engaged in Ohio State’s non- conference beating from Notre Dame. Wilson and the Badgers were idle. ‘The leaders: liams. Oblo State HB yiwlhon, ‘Wisconsin_HB o resr: *Chicaro-HB B ANger, k3 Heekin." Ohlo State _HB Ohio State_ HB Crayn owa HB Simmons. Towa PR McGannon. Purdis HB 3 Heab. Northwestern HB 4 Duvail, Northwest ri_FB 4 z <] o0 @ = £ ] woss535masad it (oo joen JUrers—- lasts to r Linings and welts repaired witheut ex t1a charge, New laces wi cut ext charge, Uppers eleaned and polished— n'e extra charge, Pu to t Hahn's 11-Point Repair Service work on vour worn shoes—and protect vour health against the cold, wel Dynamie used exel sively: work supervised by a dye expert. Sole teather used is the fin- est seleetion of o call-and- service. Extra fast service on rush . when roam 2t w! 11th and G Sts. services, damp-resisting VI means extra wear, too!—at no extra t weather ahead! We use only heavy oak-tanned leather that's been immersed 24 hours in sole-preserving, OL OIL. It charge. WHILE-YOU-WAIT SERVICE 14th & G Phone Service. District 5470— or leave at any Hahn Store < 14th & G

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