DETROIT SUNDAY TIMES C p «* ?. Page 2-Oct. 7, 1945 Purdue Trips Central Plays

Bob Tales ¦'* (l ''* Badgers, 13-7 ^ i | ;' I ,? »^^':^‘^t a In Rochester 's Antics on Mound Win Boilermakers Take Seeks Second Recall Nonchalance of Gen. Crowder Over Easterners Big Lead at Half By TOM HARPER B> 808 MrVPHY N, Y.. Oct. MADISON. Wi*.. Oct. 6 (UP> ROCHESTER. *wk Sport* Editor ’s Catholic Central Hign Purdue took a 13-0 lead over Wis- CHICAGO, that snarling School football team will attempt Oct 6lt was back in 1935-in duel consin at the end of the first half l etween Tiger* and Crowder, on tomorrow to make it two victories the Cubs that old General Alvin the here this afternoon and then man- mound for Detroit, pulled is still talked in a row over eastern prep elev- a nonchalant stunt that about aged to stave off the Badgers sav- whenever men gather this autumn festival. ens, when the Shamrocks take the tor age second half onslaught to That was airplane field against Aquinas, the afternoon an flew overhead and the squeeze through with a 13-7 vic- general calmly stood out there in the renter of the diamond and Last Sunday the Shamrocks de- tory High of Buffalo by watched the Wisconsin dominated play in the feated Camsius illgBl(v> second half, hut missed one scor- the score of 13-7. fumed. ing opportunity after it had driven This will be the second meeting general to a first down on the Purdue of the two eleven?. In 1941 at De- Badgers 9-yard lino. The also lost troit, defeated Aquinas, another scoring opportunity in Central 88, the first half when quarterback 19-13. ¦ • Bob DeMoss intercepted a Wiscon- But Central coach Hal Shields sin pass in the Purdue end zone. expects no easy time in repeating Wisconsin had the better of the that victory. statistics, hut cashed in on WK9 , • Purdue Both teams will enter the con- Fj ; Us only two good scoring oppor- test undefeated. Central having tunities. beaten Detroit’s llamtramek, 33- had first downs to Sunday ol the game M ribes jn Wisconsin 13 13, and Camsius. Last Hs M 9, Family |BH jB press b' >v mutt fieri Purdue's made 166 yards rush- Aquinas took Holy of ing to Purdue’s 122, and gained Auburn, N. Y., into camp with a Jjpl.'' tie S 7 yards passing to the Boiler- 19-0 victory. si::. maker's 86. More than 100 Catholic Central Purdue owed its victory to the students, who are coming by autos sharp passing of a gangly fresh- and train, were to be in the stand* Jj||||gß v xflßßft? ¦ ¦ man quarterback from Dayton, for the kickoff. K> , Bob DeMoss. p;i'r turned his hark the wall front JOHN WARNER n •" X of his shoes. Gophers Sweep says: GENERAL CROWDER , # “It's the Only laughter swept the press box. Head went across the faces of the fans and Huskers, of Hair You Have" Gets a , Takes Drink, Scores 61-7 In the big Tiger uprising In the third Inning Roy Cullenblne, LINCOLN. Neb., Oct. 6 (UP) array powerful and alert against southpaw Prim, got his first hit of —An of hitting right-handed Minnesota backs and ends pa- Int»m*t»nn»l Round Phofo the series, a down the right field foul line to drive tn a run raded almost at will across the Don Johnson of the Cubs sliding safely into third he* scored the only Cub run. The umpire furnished the and drive the left-handed Mr. Prim to the quiet of the clubhouse. Nebraska goal line today and base on his in the sixth inning yesterday. Later best action in this play. Roy figured this called for a drink. So while scored a 61-7 victory in a Big look his warm up pitches Roy trotted over to the Tiger dugout and Ten-Big Six intersectional football game. did business with the water fountain. This over, he returned to Minnesota's powerhouse, operat- Tiger for Series, Fans Go to “M”Game four runs. at the tute- No Tickets second and scored one of the ing full steam under lage Bierman, of Coach Bernie By 808 MURPHY a goat on the field with a sign Today Moriarity was around time to take York'* throw and scored nine touchdowns to ad- again no retire Vprk re- r reading, "We Got Detroit s but was .getting hearty the/left Squares World Record CHICAGO, Oct. 6—MicbJgAP - Series * His ‘ /vj? **?Pj* nneven a hos grounder which V'V> ' . ... *r‘ ,e I*. ¦ . J fafis, of Tigers 'W 6utr :ne ever given a Nebraska team. nbtn followers the of had been deflected off hla glove. But Paul Trout of Sancut, Ind., did more than klek mud out University of ’s loot- The band then blared away and out baseball. George and Minnesota suffered a short-lived and with Rain No son, David, dropped in of his shoes this afternoon. He really pitched a ball game and ball team, took over Chicago Fri- “It Ain’t Gonna his aJSfhej manpower shortage when big Vic More,” and nobody seemed con- Tigers’ hotel to pay their respects; BEAT TIGERS IN *4O who know the Tiger right-hander and the “team” spirit he injured day night and Saturday morning those Kulbitski was on the third cerned, whether the rain came to traveling secretary Clair J. Derringer, who replaced Prim Your head of hair ha* to last felt satisfying glow Kulbitski, in the mpst jovial, back-slapping haa shown both last year and this season a play after the kickoff: : down or not as long as the Berry. in the fourth, heat the Tigers you all your life, and one® gone starting on his own 26, sports festival since prewar days. to see him In this hour of triumph. tore i game was played. twice in the 1940 series, pitching it is lost forever. We will not through the line for 23 yards. On Trout, in the third, was victory , tickets at Wrigley for Cincinnati. His second <>!>• Paul was in that 1940 against but the next play he plunged his 200 With FM4 In fourth. Trout, with hit w hen Hark made practically impossible to get at the robbed of a was achieved over Newsom in the for ti