TUES~DAY, OCTOBER 7, 1930 THE MICHICAN DAILY __ _ Purdue Mentor Drills Men Hard for Encounter at Ann Arbor on Saturday. TWO BACKFIELDS READY (Special to The Daily) LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 6.-Real- izing that the clash with Michigan at Ann Arbor next Saturday will be the "key" game of the season,' and. considerably impressed by the reports of Purdue scouts concern- ing the power already displayed by the Wolverines, Coach Noble Kizer will overlook no bets during the coming week in preparing the Boilermaker Big Ten champions for the start of their title defense. Kizer intends to take no chances on new men in the tilt, and will call upon veterans whenever poss- ible in an effort to get started off on the right foot in the Big Ten campaign. tLooking forward to the Michi- gan encounter, two complete back- fields have been groomed for the past two weeks that will undoubt- edly see action against the Wolver- ines as units. The first, or starting, backfield combination, which looks like a 1930 edition, of "Four Rivet- ers," will contain Alex Yunevich, crashing fullback, who scored three touchdowns against Michigan last season in less than ten minutes; in4 leading Purdue to a spectacular 30 to 16 triumph. Aligned with Yune- vich will* be Jack White, regular from last season, at quarterback and Lewis Pope and James Purvis, a pair of likely looking junior halfbacks. Match Play in Golf Meet Begins Today Having completed the bracket of sixteen who will enter match play in the varsity golf tournament, Coach Trueblood yesterday an- nounced the pairings. Play will begin at 1:30 this afternoon on the new University course. Penniman defeated Clark Sunday in the play- off for the last place open. The pairings for match play, which will be *at 18 holes for the first two rounds, follow: upper half of bracket, Royston vs. Menef e, Loveland vs. Penniman, Howard vs. Root, and Hobart vs. Fischer; lower half, Hicks vs. Bergelin, Park vs. Montague, Livingston vs. Hanway,' and E. Dayton vs. Lenfestey.. JIMMv Y FOXX WINS FOR MACKSO (Continued from Page 6) swinging hard at the third strike. Frisch bunted to Earnshaw and was tossed out. Earnshaw made a one- handed scoop of the ball. Bottomley struck out again. No run, no hit, no error. Seventh Inning. PHILADELPHIA- Dykes walked. Cochrane popped to Wilson. Sim- mons flied to Watkins, who made a running catch. Foxx struck out, swinging hard. No run, no hit, no error. ST. LOUIS - Hafey struck out. Watkins flied to Simmons. Wilson doubled to center. Gelbert was pur- posely passed. Grimes flied to Haas. No run, one hit, no error. Eighth Inning. PHILADELPHIA - Gelbert threw out Miller. Haas, beat out a bunt. Haas was called out stealing, but the umpire reversed his decision when Frisch dropped the ball. The entire St. Louis team gathered about Geisel and protested long and loud. Boley hit to the box, Grimes deflected the ball, picked it up too late and threw to third. It was a hit for Boley. Moore batted for Earnshaw and walked. Bishop forced Haas at the plate, Bottomley to Wilson. Dykes forced Bishop, Gelbert to Frisch. No run, two hits, one error. ST. LOUIS - Douthit popped to Bishop. Dykes threw out Adams. Frisch singled to center. Bottomley struck out. No run, one hit, no error. Here Is AE BARGAIN Combination We thoroughly clean your} HAT-Block and Refinish' to your favorite style- NEW LEATHER BAND1 and outside ribbon replaced -Total job up to $2.00. OUR SPECIAL PRICE VALE'T SERVICE SHOP 117 South Main Street (In the heart of the Business T Section) This price until further announcement. FIFTH GAME ST. LOU T I AB N HOMER IN NINTH Douthit, cf. ...... 4 Adams, 3b.,...... 4 Ninth Inning. Frisch, 2b........4 PHILADELPHIA - C o c h r a n e Bottomley, lb. ... 4 walked. Simmons popped to. Gel- Hafey, lf.........3 bert. Foxx hit a home run over the Watkms, rf....... 4 left field stands, scoring Cochrane Wilson, c......... 4 ahead of him. Miller struck out. Gelbert, ss. . . . . . . 1 Gelbert threw out Haas. Two runs, Grimes, p........2 one hit, no error. s .l . St. Louis failed to score. Totals . .33 Jis .R. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 S0 H. 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0. 2 0 0 9 1 1 9 2 0 A.E. 0 0 1 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 (Continued From Page 6) their conquest of last season turn-t ed in a rather ragged performancet against the Baylor Bears. The game was a much closer affair than the ' 20-7 score would indicate with3 Coach Kizer's men showing only occasional bursts of real football. Illinois' team, composed largelyi of sophomores, eked out a 7-0 win over Iowa State as Coach Stagg's Chicago Maroons were taking a; double header from Ri~on and Hillsdale, 19-0 and 7-6, respective- ly. For the first time in three years the strong Vanderbilt eleven suc- ceeded in cr jshing the Gophers under a 33-7 =;core. Ohia State Turns in Impressive Victory Over Hoosiers to Open Conference Schedule 0 3 27 13 11 PHILADELPHIA AB. R. H. O. A. E. The First L e s s o n f o r t h e Fall T e r moo S c h o o l Bishop, 2b ....... Dykes, 3b ........ Cochrane, c...... . Simmons, lf..... . Foxx, lb .......... Miller, rf. ....... . Baas, cf........ Boley, ss........ Earnshaw, p. .... Grove, p. ........ Moore ........... 4 3 3 4 4 4 4 3 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 5 3 14 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 0. 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .w. b., + +-' jo Rdm ADVERTISING NOTION BOARD BY WEEK or by single meal. Mrs. Palm, 332 E. Jeffer- son. Phone 7716. 612 OUR MOTTO is satisfaction to every customer. Our laundry service cannot be excelled. Moe Laundry, 204 N. Main. Dial 3916: WANl ED WANTED-A few student washings. Work done carefully. Phone 7027. 61 INSTRUCTOR desires kitchenette, one, or two rooms. 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