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The Jackson Sun from Jackson, Tennessee • 12

Publication:
The Jackson Suni
Location:
Jackson, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fa PAGE TWELVE THE JACKSON SUN: JACKSON. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1947 WANT ADS 1106 Now for the Off-Season Penalty Points 2nd Annual Exchange Bowl Tickets Will Go On Sale Around November 1 i Tickets the second annual Exchange Bowl game, to be played at Municipal Stadium Dec. 5. will jro on sale around Nov. 1, Pierce Winningham, Exchange Club president and general chairman, said yesterday.

The place of sales har not beenS' Heavier, Mord Experienced Humes Team Strikes Bears From Undefeated Ranks By JIMMY HAMLIN, Sports Editor Some were by land but most were by air and on each occasion brother Joe would be there to hoist the hoghide down with his paw and to spread a gruesome, haunting awe A well fed and fattened Humesl i College Grid Scores Tennessee 26, Chattanooga 7. Kentucky 26. Georgia 0. Vanderbilt 10, Ole Miss 7. Middle Tenn.

State 19, Union 6. Alabama 20. Duquesne -O. Georgia Tech 20. VMI 0.

Duke 14, Navy 14. Mississippi State 21, San Francisco 14. Wake Forest 19, North Carolina 7. Rice 33, Tulane 0. LSU 19; Texas 13.

Arkansas 17, Baylor 9. Virginia 49. Harvard 0. Sampson Naval 7, Brockport Tchrs. 6.

North Carolina State 13, Clem-son 0. Patuxent Naval Air Test Center 25. Camp Lee 6. Catawba 44, Western Carolina 0. Canisius 25, Marshall 20.

Temple 12. Syracuse 28. Illinois Normal 7. Loras 20. Culver-Stockton (Mo) 19.

Dubuque 26. Cornell (Ia) College 21, Simpson 13. Santa Clara 13. Stanford 7. Michigan State 21, Washington State 7.

Missouri 21. Colorado 0. Notre Dame 22. Purdue 7. Rutgers 13.

Princeton 7. Vermont 7. Union 20. Bucknell 13. Delaware 12.

Shippensburg (Pa) Teachers 12, East Stroudsburg Teachers 7. starboard side for a touchdown and Larry Bell rammed through the middle for the extra and the ball game. Statistics: I vVP V-- 1 cr- HXi i d'y XA-i fan ii- In order that the Jackson football fans may understand the various rule changes, thereby enjoy the game better. Principals Lowell Crane of Jackson High and C. J.

Huckaba of North Side have requested the publication of some of the rules. Already this season at Municipal Stadium, the old familiar question has been asked often following a pei.alty "What did we get penalized for?" So here the first of a series of articles dealing with football rules and regulations. LOSS OF FIVE YARDS 1. Taking more than three times out during either half. 2.

Illegal delay of the game. 3. Failure of substitute to report to umpire. 4. Violation of kickoff formation.

5. Failure to maintain proper alignment of offensive team before ball is snapped. Also, backfield man illegally in motion. 6. Offside by either team or encroachment on neutral zone.

7. Attempt to draw opponent offside. 8. Taking more than two steps with ball after signalling for fa -catch. 9.

Illegal use of hands and arms by defensive players. 10. Flying block or flying tackle. 11. Running into kicker.

12. Crawling bv runner. LOSS OF FIFTEEN YARDS 1. Team not ready to play at schedule time, 2. Illegal return of suspended or disqualifi player.

3. Failure to stop at least one 1 second on shift play. 4. Forward pass by member of team which did not put ball in play. 5.

Forward pass touched by ineligible player. 6. Intentional grounding of forward pass. 7. Interference by member of passing team with defensive player eligible for pass.

8. Interference with fair-catch or tackling player before ball is caught. 9. Illegal use of hands and arms by offensive players. 10.

Defensive player striking opponent above shoulders. 11. Roughing the kicker. 12. Piling up, hurling, clipping.

13. Tackling player oilt of bounds. 14. Coaching from the sidelines. 15.

Illegal interference with defense by passing team. Squirrel Season Will Close October 15 In accordance with the State Conservation Commission, squirrel season will close midnight, Oct. 15. a spokesman from the office of Harris Meriwether. State Conservation officer of Madison County, said yesterday.

Sportsmen of this area are asked to abide by the regulations or else face the possibility of arrest and fine. i I I I i With baseball over until the spring, baseball players turn to their hobbies and a rest period. Here the Philadelphia Phillies catcher Andy Seminick looks over his two newly-purchased pointers for the coming hunting season at his home in Pierce. W. Va.

selected. Mr. Winninghrm said, but will be "in the the next few days." All box seats will be auctioned off first by the club at a place to be announced later. All bids at the auction will be on the basis of a contribution to the scholarship fund of the Exchange Club. boxes will be offered as a unit first, with the best located boxes being offered first.

If all boxes are not disposed of in this manner, the seats will be sold in groups of four, then, if necessary, in pairs, etc. This, Mr. Cunningham said, is being done in an effort to offer the citizens a chance to contribute to the scholarship fund. and. thereby, obtain choice seats, and at the same time, will assure a fair and equitable sale of all box seats with equal opportunity for everyone.

The auction will be opened to the pubic. Reserved seats will go on sale shortly after the auction and will be sold on a first come-first serve basis. General admission tickets will po on sale at the same time. Out-of-town mail orders will be accepted. The club is ilready active in laying plans and checking out standing high school teams through-i out the nation, and another thrill-! ing game as last year's between Holy Cross of New Orleans and Central High of Knoxville is in the making.

Mr. Winningham said. Box seat tickets will go for $2.50. including tax: reserved seats for $1.80 and general admissions for. $1.50.

Alreadythe various committees! have been selected and are at i work. The committees include: Tickets John Sawyer and John Cade. C. Womack. Senter Crook.

Tom Pollard and Kenneth Wyatt; Publicity G. T. Holland, chairman. Dr. Hal Baker, L.

W. Birmingham, III. Jimmy Breen and Basil Companionette. Reception and entertainment: Harold Simpson. Dr.

W. C. Newman. Mayor George Smith, Roy Gilbert, Amos Teasley. Dr.

John Pearce and Wayne Henderson. Program: Loyce L. Pearce. chairman, George Gardner. Earl Seaton, Sam Wahl, Robert Baldridge.

Dan McCarthy. Harry Hudson. Tom H. Lt'ft 13, iiai. i lac.

iviii i aiiuu, and Joe Clemmons. Team selection Van Thompson. Willard Whitlow, Amos Teasley and Russell Rice. Stadium Russell Rice, chairman. Aubrey Bronn, Bond H.

Little and Dan Schualb. "Every good high school team in the country will be under Mr. Winningham said. incream glass cushioned sgainat read shocks, torsion, vibration! New FRAMES carry greater (heated in cold loads for a longer time! drawn in, and LONGER WHEELBASES forced out! give better load distribution! Only in Chevrolet trucks will you find all these ADVANCE-DESIGN FEATURES! Kice nus tomeoacK Trail With 33-0 4 Win Oyer Tulane HOUSTON. Oct.

11 Tt Rice Institute's Owls hit the comeback trail today, presenting a smooth running and passing offense and a double tough defense to overwhelm the young Tulane Green Wave. 33 to 0. It was the Owls first victory in three starts but the fleet running of George Walmsley. 168-pound halfback, the kicking of Huey" Keeney, and a forward wall that was never in serious trouble, gave indication the Rice squad is set for starting defense of its Southwest Conference co-championship next week against Southern Methodist. Short Tulane punts and a Green Wave fumble started four of the Rice touchdown drives, but the Owls moved whenever they desired and Held the upper hand from the early minutes when Virgil Eikenberg plunged over from the one-yard line for the initial score.

The Owls took a 12-0 halftime lead with a second period 63-yard drive. Tobin Rote passing to Huey Keeney. who raced 30 yards to score. That was more than enough points to win. Bama Wins 20-0 Over Duquesne Without -T Harry Gilmer TUSCALOOSA.

Oct. 11 (An Alabama's Crimson Tide, relying almost entirely on a ground attack instead of its vaunted aerial offensive, punched out a 26-0 victory over a hard fighting Duquesne eleven today, Bama did not even attempt a pass until late in the fourth period, when Freshman Ed Salem, playing in place of Harry Gilmer, tossed two long ones. One was incomplete, the other fell into the arms of Duquesne Back Vincent Sundry. Gilmer, taking a day oTf. got into the game only "for a few minutes in the second quarter.

"Other Exchange Clubs throughout the country are giving us some assistance in putting us on to some good teams." INCREASED LOAD SPACE In panels and pick-ups. Chevrolet truck BRAKES are inclusively designed for greater brake-lining contact. New cab has 12 inches MORE FOOT ROOM 8 inches MORE SEATING SPACE I Co. Phone 108 High Tiger team from Memphis made two maddening thrusts into the protected Jackson High Golden Bear promised land Friday night at Municipal Stadium a statement which could today be proven by more than 5000 folks) and left the Bears dinglintr from the roughened edges of a 13-6 tabulation. And to jnake a long story short.

It was the needte-threading heaves of Larry to brother Joe Bell that upset the basket of Bears hopes. Huge slices of real estate were covered in this fashion, because a Bear line tight as a number four girdle on, a watertank) saw to it that it couldn't be done any other wav. But this 13-6 thing wasn't disap- I pointing: it could have been much vorse the Bears departed from Ihi field of battle with great quan- tities of glory draned from their weary shoulders. vie- tory would not have been beyond the realm of possibility, either, be- cause a well-lectured-to Bear team returned to the sod following a short intermision and looked the Tiger straight in the eye until the I fading seconds of the well-played conflict. Summing it up, Humes presented a bigger, faster and more experienced aggregation outman- i ning the homelings from end to end as well as in the backfield depart- merit.

Had it not been for the booming kicking of Freddy Henry (his kicks kept Humes in their own territory a great deal of the evening) the score might have been sickening. Fred compiled an over- all average of 43 yards per. Humes scored fairly early and surprisingly easy, bringing about a question of "how much will they beat us." It appeared at the time that the final outcome might run in the forties but as been said before, the Bear line tightened. Statistically speaking, the 13-6 score doesn't tell the tale at all. The winners rang up 13 first downs seven of them in the first pair of quarters to nine for the Black and Gold.

Jackson was able to manipulate only one first down in the first half, but got eight during the last two cantos. The Tigers covered 129 yards by land 121 of them coming in the first half to Jackson's 54 yards 21 of them coming during the same length of time. Humes completed nine passes out of 16 heaves and here's the differences) for 131 yards to 52 yards for the home team. The Bears completed six out of eleven. The Humes pass completions came with the simplest of efforts always from Iarry Bell to Joe Bell and when Larry wasn't passing to his brother, he was toting it.

Humes needed two scores to win two which they got in a very impressive fashion. The first one came the first time they took po-session of the ball. Taking over on their own 27, Larry got three at right, Cunningham added six at left and Larry chalked up four more through the middle for a first down now being on their 40. Cunningham hit right for four and then added 12 at the same place for another first down. Larry Bell faked a pass, took off to the left and was finally brought earthward on Jackson 15 by R.

T. Blackstock. Cunningham hit left for five and Larry added i three. Billy Clemmons broke i through to smear Cunningham for naught and then rammed his way to the Bear four for another first down. Joe Bell found one at center, and Larry was stopped on the halfyard line.

Larry tried to pass to Cunningham but was unsuccessful, and Joe Bell skirted left for a touchdown. The try for extra failed and Humes took a six point lead a lead that looked at the time as safe as a bubble bath in a lumber camp. This bit of doings irritated the Bears somewhat, and they took over the show for the remaining portion of the first half. Quarterback Jackie Webber set up Jackson's score by Intercepting one of Larry's throws on his 34 and returning to the Humes 45. Jimmy Ward rammed left for two.

but Humes was caught offside, putting the oval on the visiting 40. Wallace found one at right, but the Tigers were guilty of an unnecessary roughing penalty, taking the ball and all hands to the 25. Weber tried to pass, was smeared for a seven yard deficit, but Humes was guilty of five yards worth of something else and the Bears were on the 20. Weber threw a 10-yard strike to Henry. Wallace added four at left and Jimmy Dcaton was knocked out of bounds on the one-hair line.

But the Bear backfield was too anxious on that play, costing them five precious yards. Jackie Weber fired a pass into the end zone. 14 or more performers went up for it. and Jimmy Ward brought it down for the score. Wallace tried to boot the extra and mised by an unestimated number of yards.

The outlook was extremely brilliant for the home team at this point and a 6-6 tie appeared to be the worse they could afford to settle for. But Humes, having the stronger team, could not be denied and came back to score the clincher in the final period. Humes took over on their own 45 with something like six minutes to play and a Larry to Joe pass was good to the Jackson 42. The same pass clicked for seven more and Murphy plowed through the middle for 16. Larry added four at right.

Murphy four at center and Larry three more to the Jackson three. Murphy went to the MEN! KEEP UP WITH YOUR YOUNG IDEAS! New pei; New vim! New viaw! Thet'e what muMle-aBwl men emrn tor when they becin las tx'hind in life's youthful activities. LH umethin about it when uu feel your vital energy ebbing away! A borderline. blood-Iron deficiency iny aipine your strength, causlne you to feel unduly old. In tht caw, try Tramone.

an amazing new formula made to help Sou feel youniter iv you new sip rwi increase viaur vitality I Combat the common penalties ot arrowin older' Uet tht wonderful new aid and se how ouH'kly Tramone may help you regain that priied feelmc of youthful, stalwart lrencth! Tramone ia aold by Standard PruK store. Finkaton and Scruggs and drug alorta vcrrwber. Jackson First Downs 9 Fumbles Fumbles recovered 4 Kickoff returns 29 No. kickoff returns 3 Punt averages 43 Punt returns 36 Yds. gained rushing ..54 Yds lost rushing 25 Rushing plays 22 Yds.

gained passing ..52 Humes 13 3 0 32 1 34 53 129 23 41 131 90 Humes Strausser Fike Johnson Bertrand Martin Penalties Jackson Gibbs Clemmons Floyd Bowers Pos LK LT LG Gaffney RG Anderson RT Proctor RE Wooten Henry Weber OB Jordan Blackstock LH L. Bell Ward RH J. Bell Deatoa FB Cunningham Score by quarters: Jackson 0 6 0 6 Humes 6 0 0 713 Scoring touchdowns: Humes J. Bell, Murphy. Jackson Ward.

Point after touchdown: Humes J. Bell. Substitutions: Jackson Maxwell. Murchison, Williams, Baker, Lewis Wells, Wallace. Beamish, Newman.

Humes Lamberth. Doty, Hathcock, Moore, Gatin, Summers, Martin. Turri, Chiles. Benderman, Murphy, Parsons, Jones, Cox. Baylor Gets Hot In Last Heat To Beat Razorbacks, 17-9 WACO, Oct.

Hp) Baylor stunned Arkansas' big undefeated Razorbacks with a lighning fourth quarter rally today and came off with a 17-9 victory. Arkansas had played for the breaks and cashed in for a touchdown and a safety in the second quarter before the Bears broke loose on the first play of the final period. Steed White blocked Baylor Bobby Griffin's punt for a safety when it rolled into the end zone. The Razorbacks picked up a touchdown when Kenny Holland climaxed a steady drive with a seven yard pass to Ross Pritchard. Baylor bounced back on the first play of the final period when Lyle Blackwood skittered through the entire Arkansas team on a 26-yard touchdown trip.

Then with the Porkers' defense in ribbons Henry Dickerson booted a field goal from the 18 yard line to put the Bears ahead. A desperate flurry of Arkansas passes netted Baylor's final touchdown. Frank McKinney snagged one of Kenny Holland's long aerials and raced 47 yards. Dicker-son booted a 17 yard placement after a penalty had set the Bears back. Breaks Help Gophers Beat Northwestern MINNEAPOLIS.

Oct. 11. (ZD-Minnesota's football team, aided by a pair of fumbles and a bad pass from center on the part of Northwestern, swept to a 37 to 21 victory today in the opening game of the Western Conference season for both teams. A sell-out crowd of 60,609 watched in 76-degree weather as Minnesota's Gophers quickly took a 16 to 0 lead in the first period, an advantage the Wildcats never could overcome. Except for spots, Northwestern's ground game netted little yardage and most of its decisive gains were made by passing.

Jim Farrar, Wildcat quarterback, did the pitching on a jump pass over center that worked for two touchdowns and contributed importantly to another. It wasn't until the second period that Northwestern could The Wildcats then marched down the field from their 28-yard line with end Ken Wiltgen catching Tarrar's jump pass for the touchdown. Farrar tossed another pass to halfback Art Murakowski who counted the second Wildcat touchdown on the first play of the fourth period. Minutes later. Halfback Art Murakowski closed out Northwestern's scoring by dashing around right end.

Farrar kicked all three points after touchdown. Pen State Plasters Fordham, 75 To 0 NEW YORK. Oct. 11 Penn State strengthened its claim to one of the top grid rankings in the East today by handing a sub-par Ford-ham club a 75-0 going over that went into the Rams records as the most lopsided rout in their history. Although Coach Bo! Higgins of the unbeaten-untied Nittany Lions cleaned his bench of his entire 38-man squad, invaders awed a small gathering of 12.000 in the Polo Grounds with a display of raw power.

Rushing over 40 points in a second period attack. State completely outclassed the Fordham club which had been trying to cancel the game ever since its 68-0 rout in 1946. Jeff Durkota. a husky senior wing back from Colver, who usually romps with the reserves behind Starter Wallace Trivlett, smashed across the Fordham goal for four touchdowns on a 24-point scoring spree that boosted him among the eastern leaders. Trivlett added another pair and the rest were split among Joe Co-lonen Elwood PetcheL Bill Luther, Clarence Gorinski and Francis RogeL BIGGER SEATS, fully ad just- NEW WINDSHIELD an FLEXI-MOUNTED CAB It Franklin Marshall 41, Leba- non Valley 0.

Waynesburg 7, West Virginia 60. Kent State 6. Wooster (O) 13. Sewane 40. Kenyon O.

Muhlenberg 67. Swarthmore 7. Geneva 26 Grove Citv 0. Olivet 13. Port Huron (Mich) Junior College 6.

Western Michigan 20. Central Michigan 12. William Penn 0. Upper Iowa 48. St.

Mary's (Winona, Minn.) 13, St. Johns (Minn.) 20. Depauw 13. Rochester 12. Caoital 14.

Hiram Oi 6. Allegheny 14, Dickinson 14. Lehigh 7. Drexel 0. South Dakota State 6.

Kansas 86. St. Olaf 7. Concordia (Minn.) 6. Southern Methodist 21, Oklahoma Aggies 14.

Tulane 0. Rice 33. Drake 13, Wichita 21. Texas 34. Oklahoma 14.

Florida 14 Auburn 20. St. Paul 0. Shaw. 71.

Harvard 0. Virginia 47. Potomac State 16, Shepherd College 0. Otterbein 8, Heidelberg 14. Washington 35, Oberlin ,7.

Lane 12. South Carolina State 13. Cornell 27. Colgate 18. William and Mary 21, Virginia Tech 7.

George Washington 0, Washington and Lee 15. Furman 8. South Carolina 26. Catholic University 7, Western Maryland 21. Northwestern 21.

Minnesota 37. Nebraska 14. Iowa State 7. Indiana 14, Iowa 27. Alfred 19.

Clarkson 13. Ithaca 6. St. Lawrence 21. Mansfield (Pa) State Tchrs.

6, Cortland 13. Ithaca Freshmen 6, Cortland Freshmen 0. Quantico Marines 29. Davis and Elkins 0. West Virginia Tech 13, Glenville 0.

Bowling Green 19. Miami 33. California 48, Wisconsin 7. Denison 50, Beloit 7. Pittsburgh 0.

Michigan 69. Southern Calif 32. Ohio State 0 Yale 17, Columbia 7. Gettysburg 13. Lafayette 14.

Coast Guard Academy 20, Colby 6. Boston University 38, New York University 7. Williams 0. RPI 40. University of Mass.

33, Worcester Tech 0. Wesleyan 12. Connecticut 0. Springfield 42. Norwich 0.

Bowdoin 8, Amherst 6. Main 7. New Hampshire 28. Ohio U. 7.

Western Reserve 20. RI State 6. Brown 55. Randolph-Macon 7, Guilford 6. Capital 14.

Hiram (O) 6. Indiana Central 14. Manchester 12. Carth.ie 7, Wheaton 32. Wabash 21.

Lake Forest 6. Lawrence 13, Knox 19. Illinois Wesleyan 17. Elmhurst 0. Michigan Normal 6, Northern Illinois State 21.

St. Mary's 6. Washington 26. Oklahoma City U. 69, Colorado College 6.

Idaho 6. Oregon State 33. Ursinus 6. Haverford 0. Corpus Christi Navy 6.

Randolph Field 33. Stetson U. 27, Southwestern (Memphis) 0. St. Francis 26.

Glassboro (N.J.) State Tchrs. College 0. Bluffton 0, Cedarville 9. Akron 12. Case Tech 6 Ohio Wesleyan 19.

Baldwin Wallace 27. Youngstown 7. Toledo 21. Dayton 26. Cincinnati 21.

i Mankato Teachers 0, St. Cloud Tchrs. 12. Winona Minn Tchrs. 7.

Univ. of Minnesota Duluth Branch 0. City College New York 13, Rider 0. Presbyterian 6. Erskine 0.

Davidson 12. Wofford 7. Carleton 35. Coe 0. Augsburg (Minn) 6.

Luther 13. Hanover 26. Anderson 7. Ball State Tchrs. College 20, Culver M.A.

14. Colorado Mines 6. Wyoming 53. Western Colorado 8, Arizona State (Flagstafft 12. Oregon 7.

UCLA 24. W.Va. State 13, Kentucky State 9. Wayne Tchrs. 0, Peru Nebr.

Tchrs. 0. Indiana State 21. Southern Illinois 6. University of Nevada 51, University of Portland (Ore.) 6.

Huh School Scores Humes 13. Jackson 6. Gleason 27. North Side 0 West Libertv 33. Concord 15.

West Va. Wesleyan 20, Morris Harvey 0. Marietta 13. Rio Grande 7. Franklin 26, Rose Poly 0.

Earlham 13. Wilmington 0. Knoxville High 27. Chattanooga Central 7. Maybe That's The Way They Felt NEW HAMPTON.

Oct 11. The New Hampton High School marching band got its formation mixed while spelling out -Hello" between the halves of the football game with Osage last night. The turned up on the wrong end of the word. The football team did better. New Hampton won 34-0.

Virginia Puts Double Whammy On Harvard CHARLOTTESVILLE, Oct. 11. iP Harvard ventured south of the Potomac today for the first time in its long gridiron history and took its worst pasting in years, a 47 to 0 shellacking by a University of Virginia club that produced a powerful running attack and sharp passing. The Crimsons, victors in their first two games, made only a few feeble gestures today and never threatened, and whether Virginia concentrated on a running attack by Grover Jones, Bruce Bailey and Billy Penkel or took to the air on passes by Joe McCary and Bailey, Harvard was helpless. It was the worst defeat of a Harvard team since Dick Harlow became coach in 1935 when Princeton whipped the Crimson, 35-0.

The victory was sweet for Virginia which had lost all of its eight previous games with Harvard beginning in 1915. UN I WELD ALL-STEEL CAB CONSTRUCTION. Advance-Design College and Church Streamlined in body, cab, fenders and with ADVANCE DESIGN! Truex Tennessee Plays Like Vols Of Old In Win Over Chattanooga KNOXVILLE. Oct. 11.

(JP) Displaying intermittent flashes of its old time power, Tennessee's football machine rolled to its first victory of the season today over a scrapping band of Chattanooga Moccasins. 26 to 7. A crowd of 20.000 saw the Vols start their touchdown parade early, marching 73 yards on straight football for its first score after the first seven minutes. George Balit-saris plunged over. Three minutes later the Vols scored again when Hubert Becker, sub tailback broke off left tackle and raced 50 yards down the sidelines.

It was the longest run of the game. Chattanooga took the play away from Tennessee in the second' quarter. Hartford Granitz' brilliant kicking kept the Vols within the shadow of their own goal until Jack Hoover connected to Captain John Kovacevich with a 32-yard pass to set up the Moccasins' line touchdown. Kovacevich was run out on the Vol 8. Fullback George Carden dived over.

Tennessee's offense failed to get clicking again until late in the third period when they began a drive from their own 31 to score on the second play of the last frame. Proctor spinning over from the 10. Nine power plays, with Becker, wingback Ronald Bergmeir and fullback Mark Major marching 72 yards, produced Tennessee's final tally. Major diving over from the one-yard line. North Side Indians Bow To Gleason Again, 27-0 A Gleason grid team, held to a 7-6 win over the North Side Indians three weeks ago, came back to register 307 yards in rushing to crush the same Indian outfit, 27-0, last night at Municipal Stadium.

The Gleason team scored seven points in the first, seven more in the third and 13 in the final. The Indians could make but 54 yards on the rushing and 64 yards through the air. connecting for four in nine attempts. Gleason tried five aerials, completing one for eight yards. Highly touted Tommy Powell, who has been on the sidelines for several weeks with an injured ankle, was held in check against the smart Gleason team, and the Indians did not penetrate inside the Gleason 30.

It was the fourth loss for the T. D. Reynolds coached clan in that many starts. Gleason dominated play from the word scoring 14 first downs as against four for 'the young and inexperienced Indians. Despite the greeniness of both teams, however, neither team fumbled once throughout the entire game.

The Indians drew 35 yards in penalties as against 40 for the winners. Mississippi State Upsets 'Frisco SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 11.) Aggressive Mississippi State, scoring touchdowns in the lat three periods and playing heads-up football all the way, turned in a 21 to 14 upset win over hitherto undefeated University of San Francisco today. A sunny weather crowd of saw the Maroons from the Old South run the bulkier Dons dizzy with a devastating ground attack.

It was the fourth straight victory for Mississippi State over San Francisco since they started their series. Two fleet, hard-running halfbacks. Shorty McWilliams and Harper Davis, paced the Maroons. They rolled up long gairis, tackled fiercely and McWilliams' punting was a big factor. It's Not The Color Bulls become just as enraged before a white object as a red one.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1936-2024