The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 139, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 28, 1923 Page: 4 of 36
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PAGE FOUR
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1923
LONGHORNS CRUSH SOUTHWESTERN PIRATES
I
GARDNER'S CREW PUTS
St. Ed’s Grid Warriors
FOOTBALL RESULTS
Univer-
STARTS ON THE GREEN
By BOBBY CRUICKSHIANK
"r
TULSA UNIVERSITY
Bluestein
Dayvault
Dunean
Gorman
Camp
Right guard.
Eurns
... Gunn
... Magee
... Lyons
SAN MARCOS SOBCATS
MEN’S SUITS
PLUCK RICE OWLS;
ras
Steadfast Suits
—AT MUELLER’S SHOE STORE
.grip, but I wish to make clear in this
GOOD SHOES FOR MEN
COMBED, GLOSSY
$19.75, $24.75, $29.75, $34.75
OVERCOATS
g
$19.75, $24.75, $29.75, $34.75
Satisfaction
The lineup:
BOYS’ SUITS
4)
Left end.
Wiiams
Lowman
Dubose
I
Klotz
Allenson
$850
Morgan
Gary
I -
Brown
Hopkins
Wilson
Left halbac k.
Wilford
3
Coera
Smith
a
CHAS. ROSNER
the
r
My Theory For
Teaching Golf
UP PLUCKY COMBAT,
BUT ARE OUTCLASSED
Millions Use It - Few Cents
Buys Jar at Drugstore
Then, this being the case, does it not
seem reasonable that a short stroke on
the green can be guided with a greater
first
the
the
tl
tl
tl
ti
H
YALE CRUSHES BROWN
UNDER 21 TOO SCORE
periences. I
Later I will take up the stance and
upon.
Lineup*
Texas
Gilstrap .
II
g
Models for the young man—and the conservative man—blue
serge and all leading fabrics—
Swarts missed goal.
Rice.
Lamb ..............
Collegians From Austin Run Up
Score of 35 Against the
Oklahomans' 7.
Southwestern
......... Aiken
tl
g
hi
BL Ed ward's, 35;
sity. 7.
Normal.
.... Daily
t
1
I
ADDITION M. SPORTING NEWS
ON PAGI NINE.
SAN CARLO GRAND OPERA—MONDAY
AND TUESDAY
And are offered to you at prices to conform with values. We
originated this value and did not resort to reductions to
produce it. They are just original values.
year, was used at quarter during the
last period of the game, and ran the
team well. The fine work of “Blue"
Siith has already been commented
u
0
.....;..... Reynolds
Right tackle.
V
r.
Eozema en Feet.
One man says he had it over twenty
years and that one bottle Imperial
Eczema Remedy cured him. All drug-
gists are authorised to refund your
money it It falls.
t
o
u
g
1
1
t
]
and once a drop kick went over for which 1 hope becomes the reader’s, that
AAA.a r" -i. , . - 31. ' the person undergoing his or her bap-
ndded point.. In .11 but on. instance tm in gol Instructfon gains a mor.
theae touchdowns were the results of natural idea of the swing from start-
l Ing by putting.
HAIR
GROOM
"eGu"o
Keeps Hair
Combed
THE man who is hard to please
because he demands the ut-
most in appearance, durability and
foot-ease, will find satisfaction
here.
Introductory article the reason and the
benefit to be derived by the beginner
starting to learn the game on the put-
ting green.
In my next article I will explain
another one of my pet theories, which
I think will meet with the approval cf
advance players
(Copyright, 1923, by Public Ledger
Company.)
CARL H. MUELLER
•os CONoRESS Ave.
flame of Good Shoes -Hosieiy
Fifty Boys’ Cashmere Suits—with two pair of pants—ag^s
8 to 17 years. Taped seams, belt, strap, hip pockets. $4.95
Newen ........ Shipworth
Right end.
Robertson ........ Royal
Quarterback.
Excellent values in overcoats—heavy double faced coatings.
Models to fit your figure—and they are "STEADFAST"
make, too—
than collective and the boys
Austin had little dirticulty holding
their opponents in check.
Colgate, 27; Ohio Wesleyan, 0.
Lehigh, 14; Muhlenberg, 3.
Iowa, 30; Ohio State, 0.
Minnesota, 0; Wisconsin, 0.
Ilnois, 29; North western, 0.
University of Kansas, 0; Kansas
Aggies, 0.
Arkansas, 26; Louisiana, 13.
Georgia Tech, 7; Notre Dame, 35.
Purdue, 6; Chicago, 20.
Drake, 41; Grinnell, 0.
well grounded in the fundamentals of
the game and an eleven that knows
the value of fight The Saint line is
march up the field that seemed cer-
tain to bring another touchdown. The
Pirates held well with the ball near
their goal, and on the fourth down,
the Longhorns had two yards to gain.
Robertson called for a pass over the
goal field. The tiny Gunn gathered
Sonsrsefski2klaboma Azgiehh.
Sooner, defeated the Oklahoma AgEles
12 to 0 in one of the hardest football
context, of the twenty-three years of
• competition between the two schools
_ here today. A heavy field made open
play almost impossible, although the
Aggies resorted to it effectively during,
the last half. The Sooners depended
on straight line plunge football and
pushed the ball down half the distance
of the field in the second quarter, when
Hendricks drove off tackle for four
yards and a touchdown. In the last
quarter the Aggies made a desperate
effort to score on the aerial route, but
Johnson intercepted a pass on the
Sooner one-yard line and raced the
distance of the field for the second
Sooner touchdown, which put the game
in cold storage. -
Eckhardt ..................
Left half.
Tynes .....................
Right half.
Marley ....................
considered by many to be the strong-
est aggregation in the Southwest.
Tulsa had a number of veterans from
1922 about whom to build its team, and
when this fact is considered, the vic-
tory of the local collegians becomes
all the more gratifying.
Coach Jack Meagher, former Notre
Dame University star, has an eleven
—
Special to The Austin Statesman.
TULSA, Okla., Oct. 27.—A squad
ot husky voung men from st Ea-jtmathxperemes the dishartnine
wards College, Austin Texas, for- sight of the ball going far off the line?
ward passed themselves into a victory! ' Get Wrist Movement at Start.
This is the first of a series of
twenty-four articles by Bobby Cruick-
shank. who became the leading golf
professional of the United States for
1923 by finishing in a tie with Bobby
Jones for the National Open title at
Inwood.
My theory for teaching golf might
be called different.
After a few years’ experience as an
instructor, during the course of which
I followed the generally accepted sys-
tem of starting with the driver and
ending with the putter, I grew dissatis-
fied with the results I obtained through
this method.
After closely observing the reactions
of beginners to the first days of in-
struction I found that something might
be added to create more zest for them
in the early stages of their golf edu-
cation.
It was after careful deliberation I
decided that the most progressive ami
interesting way for a golf tyro to
launch on a course of instruction was
to begin from the putting green and
work back to the tee.
That is, to start with putting, next
take up short chip shots, then the
longer iron strokes, until eventually the
pupil is ready for work on the tee.
As I go along I will get down to the
technical points of the game. Right
in BRILLIANT GAMEi-s^rr^:
hitting the ball into the cup. A miss
only makes the pupil concentrate all
, the harder, for right there in front of
him or her, whichever the case might
Left end.
.......... B. Bachte?
Left tackle.
than the heather All the boys who
played with me did the same thing.
We used to make greens and cups of
our own. Many a heated battle we had
nardt flipped two of the completed
passes, with Tynes and Robertson each
gathering in one of Oscar's heaves
The other pass was fired by Ward to
Robertson.
Fortunately, the visiting scouts
learned little of the Longhorn aerial
attack, for all the passes have been
used before by Stewart's charges.
Texas received the kickoff to start
the game, and the ball was returned
to midfield. After three downs had
failed to carry the ball ten yards, Eck-
hardt punted out of bounds on the
degree of accuracy than a lusty swing
'here the beginner oft-
be, is the object to strive for.
Just let me insert right here that at
the start few persons have a sense of
direction. They have to be guided.
penalized five yards for offside on the
first play. Lyons punted thirty-five
yards. Eckhardt sped around right
end for twenty yards. The famed stiff
arm of 'Big Os' knocked off two
would-be tacklers as the Austin boy
fought his way across the chalk lines.
Une bucks negotiated tbe rest of the
way to the goal. Marley wen: over for
Corduroy Suits
Boys’ brown Corduroy Suits, specially featured for school
wear—seams taped and triple atitched. Ages 07 Ar
8 to 16 years. Price........ .................. 6.3
the Varsity three-yard line, the Cor-
sairs fumbled on the third down, and
Gilstrap recovered for Texas. “Big On"
Eckhardt punted to midfield and the
Longhorn goal line was never seriousiy
threatened again.
Coach “Doc’’ Stewart had said all
week that he feared the Pirates. The
Longhorn coach was afraid lest his
men, rendered overconfident by the
victroy over Vanderbilt, be caught
napping by the scrapping Pirate crew.
Captain Tynes and bis men carried
the fight to the enemy from the start,
however, and showed considerable pep
and dash. Eckhardt was not asked to
carry as heavy a burden as he has in
other games played this season, but
when given the ball, the husky Austin
boy could not be stopped on his mad
dashes off tackle. Bobby Robertson
ran his machine well, returned punts
consistently and booted a field goal
from the thirty-seven-yard line. Cap-
tain Lane Tynes gained easily. The
Longhorn leader received a blow on his
injured hip that forced him out of the
game before the first half had ended,
but “Buddy” did plenty of damage to
the Pirates. Jim Marley, the line ram-
mer of the Longhorns, had gaping
holes torn in the line for him and
gained at will.
“Blue" Smith, deceptive sidestepper
of the Longhorns, early in the third
quarter contributed one pf the pretti-
est runs of the season. Smith received
a punt op the Pirate forty-yard line, <
and after completely reversing the I
field, crossed for a touchdown. i
Gunn, tiny half of the Pirates, was
the whole show for Southwestern. In '
the second quarter he intercepted a »
pass back of his own goal line and
sprinted forty-three yards. Eckhard*,
ran down the little fellow and brought
him to earth with a crashing tackle.
When Gunn was forced from the game
because of injury, the offense of the
visitors became harmless
Although the Longhorns had little
difficulty in gaining by straight power
plays, they mixed in five passes just
to give variety to their offense. Three
of these passes were completed. Eck-
Texans tried the line a couple of
times and did not gain. They com- '
pleted a pass for 25 yards and.!
You have noticed those good looking suits being worn
around town. You have judged the splendid fit. You re-
marked how becoming the model was to the wearer. You
have seen the excellent materials. You have admired the
expert tailoring. Those were—
Speaking of upsets, the gang of foot-
ball players here represented kicked
over the badly battered bucket, when
the SL Edward’s College Saints.
Saturday, trounced the Tulsa Univer-
sity Golden Hurricane eleven, 35-7 at
Tulsa, Okla. Last season, Tulsa Uni-
versity defeated the Texas Farmers,
and the Golden Hurricane team was
Even obstinate, unruly or shampooed
hair stays combed all day la any atyle
you Ilke. "Halr-Groom" to a aiznifed
combine eream which udives that natu-
ral aags and well-groomea effect to
your hair—that final touch to good
dress both in buniness and on uncial
pecaedona ’Hair-Groom’. to grease-
lean; also help, grow thick. heavy,
lustrous hair. Beware of greaay. harm-
tul imitations,—Adv
eight-yard line. Southwestern
Southwest Texas Normal Eleven
Outplay* Houston Outfit in
Every Department.
Left guard.
Bralley ................. Whitehourst
Center.
Fullback."
Officials: Referee. Whittaker; um-
pire Viner; hwd linwman. Kinney.
To get rid of worms in children give
then. White’s Cream Vermifuge. The
little sufferer improves at once and
soon becomes healthy, actve and ro.
bust. Price, 35c. Sold by Brown A
Odiorne.—Adv.
fifeen yards for roughing. Marley
carried the ball over.
The last scoring of the first half
was a place kick by Robertson from
the 37-yard line. Robertson inter-
cet led a forward pass, and carried the
ball twenty-five yards on the play
that I receded the place kick.
In the second half, the tired Pirates
wrro easy for the Longhorns. Stewart
used a large number of substitutes.
“Big Joe” Ward was shifted to full,
and gained many yards through the
line. Sidney Fly, captain and quar-
terback of the freshmen team of last
Fullback.
-—..------- , ui ~. .. । Substitutes: Texas, Luhn for Giz.
in the pass back of his own goal line strap. Smaller for vnag Smith 417
ana carried the ball forty-three yards,smaleymwara-oromnynpes.mith.tor
before Eckhardt piled into him. The Newell Higgins Burns,,Shearer
arenauarterwendedcust arter thus foste
bhetune"wormAheadvancine «h. Nara «^„:°yr
quarter. The Varsity captain was in- Eri°aorcamPPerrin.for Aiken,
lured after he had made a substantial -mr Bachte! for Reynolds
gain, and the Pirates were penalized J •••
over the University of Tulsa here! The wrist movement that can
Saturday afternoon 35 to 7 be acquired at the start by beginning
a -nmn‛ *2 to i. jon the putting green will increase as
r ive times the invaders put the ball, the player advances to the lengthier
across the goal line for touchdowns strokes. Moreover, it is my belief.
Texas University Saturday buried
the Southwestern Pirates beneath a
44-0 count Coach Gardner's eleven
put up a pretty battle and in the first
quarter carried the ball half the length
of the field on a series of beautifully
executed shift plays that had the
Longhorns guessing. With the ball on
now, however, I wish to Impress on the
reader what I think is a very excellent
reason for starting from the green in-
stead of from the tee.
Explains the Theory.
I hope to aid the good player as well
as the beginner, trusting that the ad-
vanced golfer will see the merit in the
system of instruction I adopted and
found more beneficial to pupils than
the generally accepted way of teaching.
When the beginner is started out on
the green, his or her fancy is caught
Wooster. 20; Cincinnati, T.
South Dakota State, 7; University
of South Dakota, 0.
Nebraska, 7; University of Missouri,
7. f
Marietta, 56; Kalamazoo, 0.
Ohio Northern, 21; Baldwin Wal-
lace, 43.
Heidelberg, 13; Muskingum, Jl.
Kentucky Wesleyan, Id; Morris
Harvey, 0.
Hobart, 7; City College of N. Y. 0.
Stolaf, 6; Carleton, 0.
Gustavus Adolphus, 12; Concordia, 0.
North Dakota University, 10; North
Dakota Aggies, 3.
Hamline, 6; McAlester, 0.
St. Thomas, 40; St. Mary’s 0.
Riverfalls Normal. 13; PlattsvilX
Miners, 0.
Clarkson Tech, 7; University of Buf-
falo, 7.
Elon, 6; Emory and Henry, 0.
Pennsylvania, 24; Centre, 0.
7 Third Army Corps, 14; Georgetown.
Penn State, 13; West Virginia, 13.
Johns Hopkins, 9; Haverford, 0.
Yale, 21; Brown, 0.
Vermont, 28; New Hampshire, 7.
Bates, 12; Bowdoin, 7.
Tufts, 6; Middlebury, 3.
Colby, 7; Maine, 0.
Canisius College, 13; Day ton Uni-
versity, 0.
University of Maryland, 14; Uni-
versity of North Carolina, 0.
Dartmouth, 16; Harvard, 0.
Springfield, 0; Syracuse, 44.
Juniata. 14; Drexel, 7.
Gallaudet, 7; St. Joseph's 6.
University of Detroit, 0; Washing-
ton and Jefferson, 6.
Otterbein, 19; Case, 7.
Rutgers, 6; Lafayette. 6.
Princeton, 3; Navy, 8.
Army, 73; Lebanon Valley, , 0.
University of Michigan, 37; Michi-
gan Aggies, 0.
Holy Cross, 13; Boston University, 0.
West Virginia Wesleyan, 14; Carroll,
Right guard.
.......... E. Kallina
Right tackle.
NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 27.
—With a powerful attack nd a strong
defense, Yale showed improved form
la defeating the strong Brown eleven,
21 to 0. Two EM touchdowns were the
result of rushes while the other came
when Yale recovered a blocked Brown
punt over the goal line. The other
three points were made when Stevens
scored a drop kick from the 15 yard
HOUSTON, Texas, Oct. 27 — South -
I west Texas Normal from San Marcos
this afternoon upset the dupe when
they outplayed and defeated Rice In-
stitute in football, 19 to 6.
The defeat came as a complete sur-
prise to all football fans. Rice had
not shown any great strength this sea-
son, but there was every reason to
believe she had an easy game against
I the Normala
I The first touchdown, made on a
forward pass from Caviness to Daily,
did not serve to anger the Owl players,
I as was expected. Instead, it seemed
to have no effect on them. Within
a few more minutAa Caviness inter-
cepted a Hice pass and crossed the
goal again. Brown missed the first
attempt at goal. but kicked the second.
I Normal's third touchdown came in
the third quarter, when Shelton ran
forty yards through the line and shift-
ed off all would ■ be tacklers:
The Rice touchdown came when the
Owls rallied and fought for five min-
utes at the beginning of the second
half. Charlie Swartz, Rice captain,
who had been out because of injuries,
went into the lineup and added much
to the spirit of the Owla His long
runs. Smith's bucking and a pass got
the ball to the Normal five-yard line.
From there Smith bucked it over.
This single exception, the second! Whether the pupils be portly. thin.
Saint Edward's touchdown in the tall or small persona, I think this is
second quarter. was bucked over. The true. ,
drop kick was worth forty full yards I You know yourself that there is a
There were times when the locals' fascination in attempting to achieve
showed brilliant flashes of form, but. something. It is the competitive spirit
this brilliance was individual rather i inour make-ups.
the boy, from j I will give you an illustration. Born
and reared in Scotland, where golf is
the national game. t began to manipu-
late a putter before I was any higher
DEFEAT IS DECISIVE
_ played a smart attack. It was, too.
Varsity Piles Up Score of 44 to
-Corsairs' Nothing; Latter Exe-
cute Brilliant Shift Plays.
the touchdown. Robertson added the
extra point with a place kick.
Eckhardt received the second kickoff
of the game and carried the bull to
the fifty-yard line, where he fumbled.
Southwestern recovering. At this
juncture the visitors launched a for-
midable offensive. Royal Worked his
way on a shift play for seven yards.
Lyons plunged througi the line for
five yards; the fleet Gunn sped around
the end for fifteen yards; Magee got
away for a fourteen-yard gain. The
ball was on the seven-yarl line. A
rather complicated cross buck was
“bulled up,” and the ball was fumbled.
Texas recovering. Eckhardt punted
out of the danger sone.
Shortly after gaining possession of
the pigskin, the visitors passed into
the arms of Captain Tynes. The
The Longhorns started a forced
heavy and charges low and fast. The
Saint backfield has speed, brains and
power.
It’s a safe bet that St. Edwards
College is as strong as any eleven in
the T. L A A.
ST. EDWARD'S DEFEAT
line on the final play in th.
halt. Pond started for Yale on
ottenme making a touchdown in
firat and fourth perloda.
Yala bcored in every periol.
Some 45,000 wpectators maw
game.
Len guard.
Heflin ....................... Norman
Canter.
Campbell ...............
> Right end.
Chambers ...............
Quarterback.
Loyola, 33; Marlon, 0.
Auburn. 34; Camp Benning, 0.
st. Mary’s, 22; University of Ari-
zona, 20.
Southwestern State Teachers Col-
lege. »; Phillip. Univeraity, 55.
Southwest Texas Normal; (San
Marcos). 19: Rice, 6.
Mississippi University, 3; St. Louis
University, 28.
Austin College. 68; Daniel Baker, 8.
Rollins College. «; Piedmont, 0.
Oklahoma. 12; Okla. Aggies. 0.
Union. 14: Trinity. 0.
LAke Forrest. 0: Beloit, 0.
Butler, 2; Wabash, 0.
University of Tenn. 7; Mississippi
A. & M. 1.
Virginia. 33; Trinity. 0.
At Cedar Rapids la.; Knox, 14;
Coe. 7.
Ames, 54; Washington University, T.
Gettysburg, 17; Villa Nova, 0.
Swarthmore, 6; Franklin and Mar-
shall 6.
Vanderbilt, 17; Tulane 0.
Florida, 18, Wakeforebt, 7.
Wittenberg, 28; Kenyon, 7.
Loulsville Univ., 13; Rose Holy, 0.
Washington and Lee, 12; Virginia
Polytechnic Institute 0.
Des Moines University, 7; Creigh-
ton University, 8.
New York University, 31; Rhode
Island state. 0.
University of Kentucky, 35; George-
town (Ky) College, 0.
Hanover, 40; Earlham, #.
Eastern Illinois Normal, 1«; Indiana
State Normal, 0.
132Findlay College, 8; Defiance College.
Colorado Aggles, 26; Utah Aggies, 7.
Auburn, 34; Fort Benning, 0.
Oglethorpe, 0; Sewanee, 13.
Medical Col., 7; Carson Newman, 0.
Dickinson, 14; Albright, 0.
Vrsinus, 52; Temple, 0.
Carnegie Tech, 7; Pittsburgh, 2.
Furman, 22; Richmond, 7.
Virginia Military Institute, 22; N. C.
State, 7.
Marines, 40; George Washington
University, 0.
Hamilton, 14; St. Lawrence, 12.
Rensselaer Poly, 27; Stevens, 0
Williams, 10; Columbia, 0.
Amherst, 7; Oberlin, 14.
Bowling Green Normal. 0. Tol'do
University, 27.
Depauw, 14; Franklin, T.
went around end for first down after }
a line play failed. They went through |
Herndon for 4 yards. Two line playa |
went for short gains and then St. Hd- ■
wards passed over the line for a touch- !
down. Tulsa retrieved, tried a couple
of plays and kicked.
SL Edwards tried end runs and
came to striking distance Niemac
drop kicked one from the 40 yard line.
Tulsa received and after an exchange
of punts the quarter ended.
In the second quarter, Lee punted
about 10 yards outside and the Texans
scored shortly after on plays. t line
recovered a fumble during this quar-
ter and put Tulsa in a position to
score which they did shortly after.
The half ended Tulsa, 7, SL dwards,
16.
Tulsa was never really dangerous
during the second half and St. Ed-
wards continued the work egun.
They made three touchdowna. Tulan
made several individual attemts
that were fine but were not able to
carry through for a score.
a sustained attack. The interference
was of high calibre, and once started i for putting supremacy, just as young-
for a touchdown, they drove relent- sters in this country wage spirited
lessly. There is a great punter on that marble contests.
St. Edwards team. and the quarter, I could name several of my boyhood
playing a nice game, used him often. chums who have gained prominence as
The team as a whole was well bal- 1 players. As they started in the game
a need and aggrassive, ’on the putting green, I think, perhaps.
The first quarter saw St. Ed- that my Inspiration for my method of
wards kick off. Tulsa punted, the instruction cam from my boyhood ex-
Left tackle.
.............. H. Kallina
Right half bn ck.
............ Caviness
after another had been knocked down ---------
they tried to kick a field goal. It did ggigge auamagg
not go over Tulsa tried the line for II A I N V I A V\
two yards and then Ally punted 20 fl M 111 11 I M 1 11
yards outside. St. Edwards hit ■■■■III V I FI I V
the left side for 10 yards and then'
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 139, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 28, 1923, newspaper, October 28, 1923; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1435129/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .