13 Penn......... ..14 Pittsburgh.......34 7 Columbia...... .13 So. Methodist . . . . 7 Notre Dame .... Carnegie Tech. .7 .0 Northwestern . . . 13 Michigan State °. . 19 Colgate Illinois......... 0 Syracuse...... ..12 Iowa . . . . . . . . 14 .. . . 0 13-0; O.S.U. Routs Chicago, 42-7 Blocks Yale's Hopes Ohio Out ained But Posts Win Over Maroons Three Sophs Supply Most Of Scoring Punch As 63,000 Watch Game COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 22-(W)-Chi- cago's Maroons out-gained Ohio State's husky team, 401 yards to 381. today, but lost a Western Conference contest to the Bucks, 42 to 7, as Jim Langhurst, 187-pound sophomore full- back, put on a one-man show. A crowd of 63,069, which boosted the Buckeye attendance for four games to 231,044, saw Langhurst score the first three touchdowns for Ohio, Don Siegel blocked an attempted two in the first five minutes and one Yale punt in the first period, the early in the second period, before he ball roiling through the end zone for went out of the contest until the clos- an automatic safety. These two ing minutes. points ultimately proved to be the Bucks Score Early Wolverine's margin of victory over The Bucks, clicking on ground the Elis, as they later scored two plays and taking advantage of pass touchdowns to win, 15-13. interceptions, madeatwo touchdowns _____________________________in the first period and three in the second, despite the fact the field was Kfansas State flooded with substitutes in the latter session. Both teams went scoreless in the third stanza, but both counted in Trips Indiana the final. _ _ The Maroon touchdown came on a 50-yard pass from quarterback Sollie Powerful Big Six Squad Sherman to Robert Wasem, senior end, who became eligible just in time Sinks Hoosiers, 13-6 for today's game. Wasem also added' the extra point on a placekick. BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 22.-(P) Thirty-four of Ohio's points were -Kansas State's powerful Big Six registered by sophomores, Don Scott football machine, sparked by the bril- and Jim Strausbaugh adding touch- thant passing of Melvin Seelye and downs to the yearling total, along with the long range punting of Bob Briggs, two points each after touchdown. rode triumphantly over Jndiana's Ohio used 47 players and the Big Ten outfit, 13 to 6, here this af- Maroons 33. ternoon before a homecoming crowd Sherman Stands Out of 20,000.hs It was a homecoming in reverse Sherman was a continual threat for for Alvin "Bo" McMillin, Indiana's the invaders, standing out as one of head coach. McMillin coached at the best on the field. Alongwith Capt. Kansas State before taking over the Hamity. he engineered the Chica- Hoosier cause. go aerial atta dwhich y gained 134 Seelye, 170 pound substitute quar- yards, and he did practically all the terback, drew first blood in the sec- n n the ground for the Ma- ond quarter when he fired a bullet- The husky Ohio fullback, Lang- like pass into the end zone to Don hurst, carried the ball 12 times, gain- Munzer, substitute left end, for a ing 61 yards to hold his average of touchdown. Jim Brock, substitute five yards per try this year; ran an halfback, placekicked the extra point. intercepted pass back 23 yards, re- In the third quarter, Tim Bringle, ceived a 20-yard pass, and returned a sub Indiana halfback, tried to punt kickoff 22 yards for a total gain of out of danger from his goal line, but 126 yards for the day, along with his the ball went almost straight up and 18 points. He has gained 376 yards came down on the Hoosier 5. Jack this year, while playing about half of Blanke, Kansas State quarterback, each contest. sped around right end into pay dirt. Ohio made 16 first downs to Chica- Brock failed to convert. go's 9, but the payoff came as the Bucks intercepted eight of the 30 SSeMaroon passes, while the invaders d y1 completed but nine. Chicken Plate Tfcn Q> 'Lnc r~r .. w.."-.. . Scores Boilermakers I Late Trojan Rally Wins Over Indians TripBadgers 1 PALO ALTO, Calif, Oct. 22-(R)- Byelene Leads Seconad Half Southern California had to come from March To Victory, 13-7 behind to defeat Stanford, 13 to 2, today but when the Trojan Horse LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 22-(A)- started galloping after the intermis- Wisconsin's Badgers looked like win- sion there was nothing the Indians ners over Purdue this sunshiny after- could do about it. noon until a young sophomore from Thirty thousand spectators, includ- Massillon, O., named Mike Byelene, ing James Roosevelt, son of the Presi-1 got into the football game in the dent, sat under a warm sun to see' second half. Thereafter, with the the home team- take an early lead. Massillon Marauder at large, it was- a different story, and the Boilermak- ers emerged on top, 13 to 7. A homecoming crowd of 21,000 saw For That Purdue win its first Big Ten Con- ference game of the current campaign. The Badgers couldn't stop Byelene. He passed and he ran and two Purdue touchdowns were the result. WithoutuD inn Byelene the Boilermakers were .just another football team. With him theyEat looked like two other teams. Wisconsin capitalized in the first the SUGAR BOWL period on a fumble by Lou Brock and Howie Weiss swept widely around end COMPLETE DINNERS 'for a touchdown that kept the Bad- gers in front until Byelene entered the f rom Soup to Nuts fray. In the fourth period Byelene shot off tackle ant raced 73 yards for the CHICKEN DINNERS winning marker. ROAST DUCKLING Oregon State Rally Nips Washington State, 7-6 PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 22-()P'- Oregon State College came from be- hind today to edge out the oft-beaten Washington State Cougars, 7-6, in a Coast Conference football game. Prescott Hutchin's successful try for point after touchdown left the Beavers with an outside chance of winning the Pacifiq Coast Conference title. The Cougars had allthe best of it in the first half. Norm Purucker played a major role in Michigan's win over Yale yesterday as he scored the first of the Wolverines' two last half touchdowns on a plunge from the one yard line. Norm also caught the pass which set up the winning score. er b ., "y' l i S SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 22-()- Undefeated, untied University of Santa Clara, one of the two great football teams of the West Coast, strengthened its bid for national recognition today with a smashing 21 to 6 victory over the University ofj Arkansas Razorbacks. From the opening kickoff until the final.gun barked it was the wildest game seen here this year as the ball changed hands time after time on in- tercepted passes, punts and recovered fumbles. The Broncos, two-time Sugar Bowl champions and rolling ahead behind a finished, powerful club again this year, moved into a lead in the first period, scored another touchdown in the second quarter and piled up its margin with a third counter in the final fifteen minutes of play. Arkansas made its lone touchdown shortly after the second quarter got under way after a 75-yard advance. The Broncos scored their first touchdown on a forward lateral play, sub left halfback Clark tossing to right end Anahu and the latter flip- ping a lateral to John Schiechl, center who sped some 20 yards to cross the goal. It climaxed a spurt of 76 yards. California Beats Fighting Washington Eleven, 14-7 SEATTLE, Oct. 22-U)-The Uni- versity of California's marauding Bears, heading for a second Pacific roast Conference football champion-, ship and the Rose Bowl, dumped a fighting University of Washington eleven, 14-7, before 25,000 spectators today. The Huskies, seeking their initial win of the season, made a battle of it in all but the third quarter, when California pushed over two touch- downs in quick succession. After fighting off a Washington attempt at a field goal, and getting nowhere, in the first half, California finally got its trick reverse functioning in the third period and rambled away for two touchdowns. All-America candidate Vic Bottari scored the first Iand Louis Smith, the second. The touchdowns were made in two long, sustained rushes. Colgate Whips Iowa, 14-9 IOWA CITY, Ia., Oct. 22-P)-Col- gate's Red Raiders, football aerial artists from New York State's Chen ango Valley, struck twice with their favorite weapon today to humiliate Iowa, 14 to 0, in an intersectional game before 10,000 shivering fans. TURKEY DINNERS ..........}... SIZZLING T-BONE STEAK ... SEA FOOD of all kinds .65 .65 .75 1.00 Pre ketes'SUGAR BOWL 109-111 SOUTH MAIN STREET PA 1 I ?i'PDcnXI AII I® a III I-IU tGG r; IN C W L. t.. 31111411 d.llU %. V1 Vlld7 1 Gd4l1LL W %.L6111-5 III