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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 29

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
29
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

GEORGIA TECH 28 MERCER 0 DUKE 34 DAVIDSON 6 NAVY 32 THE CITADEL 0 PENN 28 MARYLAND 21 ARMY ......21 CLEMSON 6 mover ai pitt on NFRRASVA 14 VI1UILU I fcw I iiw-ifiwiii COIGyirE 7 I WTSrVKGrYM I MINNESOTA bo a ska (Up RfHImm 24 to Mel O'ER. THE Greater Miami's Schedule Of Events TOI)A GOJ.f: Annual Dade eonnly tournament, Miami Reach Country Hub. BASEBALL; Dade County league, Hlaleab vi. Wild Cats, two games, Miami field, 2:45 p. m.

MONDAI UULF: Anneal Made eoanty tournament, third round, Miami Beaa Country club. BOXIG: Armory arena. 845 p. m. TCESUAf i GOLF: Greater Miami Women's Gold association, Miami Cnnntry clii.

a. County amateur, Miami Jiearh Country elUD. HKhMXl.M,: 'rustle arena, 8:45 p. m. HEDM.SDAT GOLF: Dade County Amateur, Miami Beach Country club.

Armory arena. p. m. MIAMI, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1937 Football Results Huskers Score Down Go The Gophers When Mighty Huskers Refuse To Play Dead EAST Louisville MncpL West Virginia Lincoln (Pa.) Great Victory Hobart 0 Shippensburg Thrs. 6 For Biff Jone tlTE'RE beginning to wonder, down here in the sports VV department, how anybody got into the stadium Friday night when the Hurricanes whipped those embyro Teachers from South Georgia.

Everybody we've met so far tells strange stories of having been forced to run three times around the stadium before being permitted to poke a nose through a gate. Great numbers of fans, we hear, became exhausted as they did this unexpected marathon and lay in gasping windrows outside the arena walls, getting such information as they could from criers who stood on the ramparts and shouted down to them. Indeed, what had been planned as a stadium to end confusion and jams, so far has baffled some of the oldest and most persistent football patrons in these parts. There she sits, majestic in her simple splendor; smooth, and graceful yet solid in her streamline architectural design; brilliantly illuminated as only the combined efforts of Bob Ingals, the Florida Power and Light, and the Westinghouse company once they all got together could light her. But did you run the gauntlet of the faithful outside the walls Friday night? Were you left waiting at the gate while your wife was permitted to go in and you were told to go "three gates down and see what Did you, with trusting naivet, believe the man when he sold you a ducat and said: "Just present it at gate five; it's so simple this In the first place, dear readers, you know, if you were out there, that it was no simple task even to find gate five.

Then, when finally you had been assured, after arguments with various and sundry gatemen and ushers, that you were at gate five, it developed you had a ticket which was good only at gate six. THEN ensued an argument among the ticket sellers, takers and just plain hangers-on as to what constituted gate six. Some said 'twas to the right, others were sure 'twas to the left; still others thought it might have been abandoned, or was moved under the opposite stand. Stuart Patten, graduate manager of athletics, told your corre (By I'nlted Press) LINCOLN, Oct 2i-The University of Nebraska CormSiuck-ers took advantage of two scoring opportunities and stopped! the University of Minnesota's powierful W. Virginia State 40 Pittsburgh 20 Virginia Union 15 Union 9 Kutztown Thrs 12 Princetoa 26 Texas A.

M. 14 Johnson Thrs 12 Drexel 21 Cornell 40 C. C. N. T.

24 Albright 20 Army 21 Boston College 21 Dickinson 13 Trinity 25 Juniata 6 Arnold 12 American 13 Bethany 22 Catholic 14 E. Stroudsburg 13 Union College 21 Georptetown 38 Hamline 12 Howard 31 Muhlenberg IX Wesleyan 17 Muskingum 7 Vilianova 42 Ursinus 11 Holy Cross 7 Yale 28 Fordhara 66 Rutgers 20 N. Y. U. 18 Brown 13 Dartmouth 31 Middlebury 25 Harvard 54 Lafayette 3 Bloomsburg Teh.

21 Navy 32 N. York Aggies Pennsylvania 28 Vermont 7 running attack today to gairi an upset 14-to-9 victory. Some 36,500 fans saw the (Ne braska line stiffen at crucial vmo- ments to break up the Minnes ota offense, which had run roughshod over the nation's best for tlreo years. Virginia Manhattan Cullowhee Thrs. Susquehanna Colgate Brooklyn College Geneva Clemson Kansas Stats Moravian Hamilton Washington CoL Lowell Textile Brtdgewater Westminster Loyola South Panzer Evansville Shenandoah Mankato Thrs.

Cheyney Thrs. St. Lawrence Connecticut State Washington Jef. P. M.

C. Delaware Providence Maine Franklin Mar. Hampden Sidney Carnegie Tech Rhode Island Amherst Hartwick Springfield Upsala Millersville The Citadel New Britain Maryland Renssalaer Williams Lehigh Worcester Mass. Stats Massanuteen A. Clarion Allegheny Miner Mt.

St. Mary Bates American Rochester Gettysburg 81ippery Rock Mansfield St. Paul St. John's Colby Maysvllle Bottineau Nebraska was helped by lhe spondent in the press box just before Eddie Dunn's last touchdown un, that the "boys became a bit confused during the rush just before game." Stuart, I'll have you know, never will win any Hi weather. Temperatures soared the 80s and Coach Bernie Bier man's Gophers wilted after ttia first quarter.

Bierman and Bltf Jones both substituted freely, but the Huskers were more accustomed to the heat. medals for overemphasis. As a matter of fact, Stu's boys and Columbia 40 Boston University 3 Coast Guard Acad. 7 For the first five minutes of the game it seemed that it would be a lopsided Minnesota victory. With Gmitro and Uram carrying Bowdoin 12 Navy Plebes 0 Grove City 7 Buffalo .13 Morgan .20 St.

Joseph .10 New Hampshire 21 Northeastern 13 Oberlin 2 Penn State .32 Waynesburg 21 St. Thomas .28 Shaw 33 Randolph Macon 26 Tufts 20 Jamestown 21 Dickinson .13 tne ball, the Gophers marched down to Nebraska's six-yard line. There the Nebraska line stood firm. Gmitro was thrown for a nine-yard loss. Halfback Andy Uram dropped back a few yards and passed to Vic Spadaccini, who was waiting In the end zone.

girls had a hell of a time, winding up so confused and discouraged that several were found between halves trying to hand themselves to the girders under the stands. At least, that's a good thought at the moment. You see at least, if you were there you did the gates aren't marked at the stadium. For instance, I went out to the stadium just before the game to get two tickets for some friends. "Come to gate five," Christy told me, sweetly, over the phone.

Well, sir, I've not found gate five yet. After walking twice around the stadium I happened to see an open window and heard the sound of voices. I sneaked up, peeped in and there were Christy, Stu Patten, Jim Beusse and a few more. "Is this gate five?" I asked. "Yep; go around to the corner and walk in," they said.

I went around the corner. All gates were closed and there wasn't a "gate five" marker in sight or am I blind? Finally, Jim let me in. So there was a feeling all might be awry later in the evening. Let me give you a sample several of them. A man and his wife were forced to separate and sit on opposite sides of the field.

A man with a general admission ticket was chased clear around the stadium and finally admitted at a gate whose keeper had refused to honor his ducat on his first trip. Another man with a general admission ticket tried to get into the south stands, and was forced to go outside the stadium and over to the north stand. Another, who went in the north stand, could not get out to go over to the south stand, where his friends were seated. A man and his wife, with reserved season tickets, wandered from gate to gate pathetically seeking admission until finally Dad Hughes, who recognized them the fifth time they passed his gate, took them by the hand and gently led them into the arena where they dropped onto seats and quickly slept the sleep of deep exhaustion while the Hurricanes swept Teachers onto the cinder paths. And what about the man who came, dazed, into the stands for the Edison-Miami Beach game yesterday afternoon and cried, "at last, I got here; which team is the Hurricanes?" MIDWEST Mount Pleasant ..21 Ferris 7 Cornell (Iowa) 20 Lawrence Iowa Wesleyan 6 McComb Kansas 14 Bethany Nebraska 14 Minnesota 9 Luther 12 Western Union 0 Miami (Ohio) .75 Marietta 6 St.

Norbert J8 Milwaukee Teh. 7 Carroll .14 North Central 0 Nortre Dame 21 Drake 0 Kenyon .20 Otterbeln 0 S. Dakota State 20 Omaha 0 St. Joseph (Ind.) 6 Manchester 0 Carleton 7 Ripon 0 Richmond 28 Franklin 6 Stevens Point 7 Stout 0 Charleston Ten. 20 Terre Haub 13 Valparaiso .47 Danville 0 Washington(Mo.) 45 William Jewell.

0 Upper Iowa 9 William Penn 0 Ball 33 Oakland City 0 ,4 XY 'J AJM LINCOLN, Neb, Oct 2 kf 7 it hilarious tonight! For havent the Nebraska Cornhuskers I I C4 humbled the mighty Gophers of 1 Minnesota; whupped them 14 to 1 N- 4 .1 This remarkable Wirephoto 4 JT4 i shows a Gopher up there where Jlan he's due for a hard fall, when I rJhi Jf JL 1 1 1 topples on over the sturdy I I of Callihan, giant I 4 JL V- Nebraska fullbark, who has hit 'S his man as the Gopher reached 1 4 lMs a Pass- 1116 Huskers VS trailed 6-0, scored to lead 7-6, tf -v I I I 2 H- 4V A let Minm-iota take the lead I js kg touchdown to win as a great i ti.f I I -1 $pY A4 team should. 1 A ki fr 1 till $tt r'8mmK ryyAl kV'fe rU i V3 ft i i I i4tlf 11 MSst DePauw Emporia McKendree Hiram Knox .20 Rose Poly 0 .20 St. Benedict 20 J4 Eureka 0 7 Mount Union 7 .20 The Principia 0 20 Mission House 0 7 Carthage 0 .12 Normal 9 Northwest 6 St. Olaf .12 St. John's (Minn.) 6 Then there were the battles to get the tickets which led to the battles to get in after they' had been purchased.

Long lipes gath ered at the booths, wherein fumbled inexperienced and flustered Monmouth Platteville MaeAlester River Falls Whitewater Olivet Heidelberg Alma Case Lockhaven Ten, Hanover Ypsilantl Coe Kalamazoo Wisconsin West. Reserve Michigan State Ohio State Wayne Michigan Mines Parsons Elmhurst 14 Wneaton 26 St. Mary's 1.1 Kent State 17 Adrian 20 Capital 26 Indiana Ten. 14 Wabash 44 Marquette Teh. 20 Central 7 Wittenberg 12 Marquette 58 Hillsdale 19 Michigan 13 Purdue 19 Akron 19 Northland 6 PeKalb 7 Illinois College 9 Georgetown Col.

SOUTH 19 Oglethorpe 6 Fayetteville 28 Mercer 6 Xavier Toledo Uram's place kick was wild. Nebraska went into the lead early in the second period after Bill Matheny, Minnesota safety man, fumbled a punt on his 24-yard line. The Cornhuskers passed and plunged their way to a touchdown and Lowell English, a guard, converted the extra point with a place-kick after John Howell plunged over from the one-foot line. Late in the third period a for-" ward pass, Uram to Capt. Ray King, took the ball to the Nebraska 23-yard stripe.

Three line plays gained eight yards for the Gophers. On the first play of the fourth period Horace Bell, negro guard for Minnesota, booted a place-kick from the 25-yard line, placing his team in the lead. 9 to 7. A fumbled punt shortly afterward was the break that enabled Nebraska to score its second touchdown and win the ball game. The victim was Harcld Van Every, who juggled the ball on his 40-yard line, where it was recovered by John Richardson, Nebraska end.

From that point the Cornhuskers headed straight for the goal and refused to be stopped. Harris Andrews shot a forward pass to Elmer Dohrmann that was good for 20 yards. A few plays later he threw another to Bill Callihan. Husker substitute fullback, who took it on the four-yard stripe and raced across the goal unmolested. The play gained 19 yards.

English added an unneeded point with a place-kick. Statistically, Minnesota had a decided edge ov'er Nebraska. The Gophers made nine first downs and netted 137 yards from rushing plays against two first downs and 18 yards net for the Cornhuskers. Nebraska, however, played a more cautious game, often punting on the first or second down. The line-ups: NEB.

(14) Pos. MINN. Richardson Reed Shirley It R. Johnson Mehring lc Bell Brock Kulnit.olti English re Tworicii Doyle rt Mirtler Dohrmann Ktne Howell Sradaceini Andrews Ih Uram Dndd Gmitro Mcllrnyy fb Buhler Score by periods: Nebraska 0 7 0 7 14 Minnesota ft 0 0 3 9 Touchdowns: Rpadacdnl. Howell.

Cnl-lihan; points after touchdown, English field goal. Bell. Referee, Fred Gardner fCnrnHn umpire. H. G.

HedEes (Dartmouth): field judge. Ira Carrithers (Illinois); linesman. Sec. Taylor (Wichita.) Princeton Tiger Humbles Virginia Centre N. Carolina Col.

Georgia Tech Kentucky V. M. I. 20 William Mary Washington Lee 6 Richmond Tennessee 27 V. P.

I. Duke 34 Davidson Baldwin Wallace 21 Bowling Green Catawba 20 Newberry 65 Sewanee Alabama Mars Hill .13 Boiling Springs Illinois Weslayan 2 Louisiana Tech 8 Howard Miss. State young ticket sellers slowly handed out the ducats and made mistakes in change. I should tell our readers, furthermore, of the negligence surrounding those special seats atop the north stand-center. Over there, as you know (or do you?) there's a big booth for the elite, over which there's supposed to be a roof.

This is the first of the clubby little igloos for the folks who dare not brave the rigors of Florida climate during football season. I have been asked by Mr. Patten to explain to these folk, whoever they may be, that 'twas through no oversight that the roof wasn't up Friday night to protect them from the night air. "Twas due to the fact that the roofing hasn't arrived. Rest assured every effort will be made to protect you all in the future.

Which brings us to what you might call the major premise, or moral; or should we skip it? that if we're going to run this stadium in major league fashion we'd better get it going smoothly right away, if not before. LET us get those gates numbered so fans will know where they're going. Let us get some trained ticket sellers who won't jam the lines every game. Let us get some gatemen who can keep patrons moving steadily and swiftly into the stadium, instead of the present student folk of the various schools who work slowly and apparently under the assumption that all men are liars and trying ttt crash the gates. And let us by all means persuade all these schools to tell the public, in their advertisements, where the stadium is located.

Not one advertisement to date has said anything about this little item. It's the "Roddey Burdine Memorial stadium," and find it if you can. Why, a covey of Fort Lauderdale restauranteers drove all over town Friday night looking for the place, finally winding up at our house when they saw the pilot light at the front door and felt the stadium might be concealed in the underbrush. AND now, a few football notes Jack Harding was in Gainesville yesterday scouting the Stetson Hatters, who play the Hurricanes here a week from Friday night Nash Higgins, Tampa coach, was over to scout the Hurricanes Friday night and remained to watch Edison and the Beach yesterday. He's going to the A.

A. U. meeting in Fort Pierce today Red Whittington, West Palm Beach coach, was down yesterday to look over Edison. Red was vurr sad because Fort T-anrlprrlaln ViM rvi. tn nn .23 Tennessee Tech Murray North Carolina 20 North Carolina S.

0 13 South Carolina Georgia Florida Transylvania Vanderbilt IS Stetson .19 Louisville 18 Chicago 0 Valley City Ellandale FAR WEST Stanford Oregon 7 Portland 36 Colorado 4 Colorado Mines 7 Western State 7 Utah State 6 Utah 14 Pacific Missouri Colorado State Colorado College Montana State Brigham Albany Alcorn S. California Daniel Baker Oregon State Idaho Occidental S. Oregon Normal 6 S. Louisiana ..25 Washington 7 San Francisco 21 California 24 Washington State 13 San Diego State 3 SOUTHWEST 7 S. Methodist 7 Arkansas 6 Rice .42 Edmond Centenary Texas Christian Oklahoma Tulsa V.

M. I. Defeats Indians, 20-9 Maryland 11 Bows To Penn Georgia Tech Trips Mercer vaw. i i jl' i may night but says his boys will improve if they see a dry field Fred Ifll tl 1 Hinf Tutinn Spartans Beat MichiganTeam (Bv I'nited Press) NORFOLK, Oct. 2.

Vir Navy Slaughters Stubborn Citadel (By United Press) ANNAPOLIS, Oct. 2. A stubborn Citadel Military college football team didn't have enongh man power to check Navy's powerhouse after a scoreless first quarter today, and the Middies paraded to a 32-to-0 football victory before a crowd of 15,500. ginia Military Institute won its first Southern Conference victory of the season today by walloping the William Mary Indians, 20-9, before 3,000 spectators. (By I'nHed Press) PHILADELPHIA, Oct.

a The University of Pennsylvania opened its 1937 football campaign with a 28-21 victory over a surprisingly (By United Press) ANN ARBOR, Oct. 2. A Paul Shu, the flashy Alexandria, (By I'nlted Press) PRINCETON, N. Oct. 2.

Jack White, veteran back, ham- halfback, was the spark of the V. M. I. offense. He scored "1UJU4 "'f'.

ummu juuiih; Ul x-uiice Slipped Up 10 WatCu Pahokee tie Fort Myers Friday. The Cavaliers play Pahokee Friday night Muddy Waters was up watching Lakeland play Mulberry. Then Coach Johnny Haynes of Lakeland came over here yesterday to watch Edison play. The teams clash in Lakeland Friday night Clyde Crabtree went to Savannah Friday to' watch that team play Boys' High of Atlanta. Savannah meets the Stingarees here Saturday afternoon.

Warren Kirkham, Robert E. Lee coach, knowing Miami couldn't pass much with that awfully wet ball Friday, tossed a seven-man line at the Stingarees, the first time Miami ever had seen the durned thing; after which Schemer's pass to Reid set up the touchdown that won The South Georgia State Teachers, on an educational tour of the state, were entertained by the Hurricanes at the stadium N. W. 14th ave. and Third street Friday night.

They leave today for Tampa, where they play Nash Higgins' Spartans Monday. Friday night they move to DeLand, where Brady Cowell and his Stetson Hatters will play with them. And next Monday they play with the Rollins College Tars in Orlando. How those Teachers do love to play! The Middies scored a touchdown one-man football team from -Mt. Clemens, Johnny Pingel of Michigan State, ran and passed two of the Cadet's touchdowns and passed to Halfback Kovar for the late in the first half, another in the third period and three more in a fourth-quarter assault which other.

the Spartans to their fourth con strong Maryland university eleven mered the line for two touchdown. before 30,000 persons in Franklin and threw a pass that was good field today. or a third as Princeton opened Maaryland scored a touchdown its 1937 football campaign today before three 'minutes had elaDsed in Palmer stadium with a 26-0 vie- After trailing the Indians. 6 to 9, found the Tars ripping off long secutive victory over the University of Michigan, 19-14. Not until the second half did gains on nearly every play.

Once the Sailors got going, there was no stopping them. The Tars at the end of the first half, V. M. I. came back and scored a touchdown in each of the third and fourth periods.

in the opening period when Meade gained over 500 yards in making Halfback Phillips plunged across either team reach its offensive stride. Then it was an 89-yard touchdown run by Gene Ciolek, Spartan halfback, that broke the scoreless deadlock. from the one-yard line in the sec 23 first downs. Citadel made only one first down, on a pass In the dying moments of play. ond period for the Indians' (By furled Press) ATLANTA, Oct.

calm, methodical Georgia Tech eleven scored four touchdowns in the first half here today to defeat a lighter Mercer team, 28 to 0. Speedy end and wide tackle runs enabled the Yellow Jackets to score two touchdowns in each of the first two periods. Mercer advanced into Tech territory for the first time late in the game and with about five minutes left to play, one advance had carried to Tech's 22. Here Owen's lateral pass was fumbled and Anderson recovered for Tech and broke through to Mercer's 27. A pass.

Brooks to Konemann to Crockett, put the ball on Mercer's one-yard line, but a 15-yard holding penalty stopped Tech's last bid. Appleby scored two of Tech's touchdowns. In the first period, he dived over center for the first "after a sustained drive with Konemann figuring on end runs. Appleby hit right tackle for the second. Gibson dived one yard over center for the third marker and Jones took a six-yard pass from Gibson for the fourth.

California Converts Fumbles Into Scores Stark Ritchie, Fred Trosko and Hercules Renda, the dynamic Violet Violets Beat Carnegie In Last Minute (By Intted Press) tory over Virginia. A crowd of 20,000 saw White throw a pass to Givens for the opening touchdown in the first period. In the second, White drove off the tackles for a touchdown and he made another the same way in the final period. The last touchdown came in the final period when Sopphomore Dick Wells ran 64 yards to a score with two minutes left. In the opening period, Virginia, which never has scored on the Tigers, drove deep into "opposition territory but were hurled back.

Washington And Lee Wins From Richmond Centenary Wins On Extra Point set Pennsylvania back with a quick kick after taking Penn's kickoff. Maryland recovered Burke's fumble on the Quaker 11 and Widinger passed to Smith for the score, Mon-doroff kicking the extra point. Dougherty scored for Penn from the one-yard line to tie the count. The -isitors opened the second period by scoring on a pass from Weidinger to Bryant. Penn rallied in the third period, however, throwing four passes for three touchdowns.

Schuenemann scored twice on passes from Con-nell and Kirleski. Fielden took: midget from West Virginia, led the Wolverine attack. BERKELEY, Oct. 2. (UP) Making swift profits on their opponents fumbles, University of California scored a 24-6 victorv Michigan 0 0 7 7 14 Michigan State 0 0 13 619 (By Inited Press) LEXINGTON, Oct.

2. Chubby Howard, 200-pound back, punched over the Bill Blount's Injury Called Not Serious PITTSBURGH, Oct. 2. Carnegie Tech had victory in its grasp today, but a last-minute passing attack sent the Skibos down to humiliating defeat, 18 to 14, before the New York university gridders. touchdovn today as Washington and Lee defeated Richmond Uni versity, 6 to 0.

Bill Blount, Miami Beach end who was injured in yesterday's (By I'nlted Press) DALLAS, Texas, Oct. 2. Centenary's football team gained a 7-6 victory over Southern Methodist university here today, when Stid-ger's place-kick for the extra point went wide. The Centenary team scored first when Bynum, a sub, led a march from his own 36-yard line to S.M.U.'s seven. His hand was broken on the last play and Stone, who replaced him, scored.

Clark Howard, whose home is at Oroya, Tulane, Auburn Boys Can't Play In Water Kirkleski's pass in the end zone for the third score. Meade crossed the line for Maryland after two minutes of the last quarter to end the scoring. In the final moments while Tech igld a 14 to 12 lead, Bernard Bloom, quarterback for the Violets, faded Peru, scored from the three-yard line after pass interference was over Oregon State in a Pacific coast conference football game before 25,000 fans today. Every one of California's touchdowns followed an Oregon State misplay. The visitors had difficulty holding on to the ball, made slippery by the wet turf.

tackle, he took a pass from Jerry Matelan and raced to the N. Y. U. 3-yard line. Fullback Jack Lee plunged for the touchdown.

Eight plays later, after Lee intercepted a pass from Edward Boell. a New York halfback, at midfield, Tech tallied again. called against Richmond and the football game against Miami Edison, apparently was not seriously hurt. Dr. E.

J. Hall, who treated Blount and placed him under observation after the game, said that into his own territory and deep Generals got the ball at that point. sailed a towering pass. It found Richmond was on the defeis've converted. most of the game and showed little offensive power.

riowaru NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 2. (UP) A record rainfall today forced the postponement of the Tulane-Au-burn football game until Monday at 2:30 p. m. Water had covered the gridiron at Tulane stadium tr a depth of 2' feet at the original game time today.

ELON RALLIES TO WIN GREENSBORO. N. Oct. 2. (UP) A rousing fourth period rally gave the Elon college Christians the Beach youngster's condition did not appear "serious." Blount had a minor neck in Southern Methodist's touchdown ARKANSAS, T.

C. U. TIE FAYETTEVILLE, Oct. 2. (UP) University of Arkansas, defending Southwest conference champions, and Texas Christian university played to a 7-7 tie today before a crowd of 6,000.

a welcomer in Joey Sivak, 189-pound halfback, who outran Tech's secondary. Merlyn Condit, a sophomore halfback, took charge of the Tech offense. After gaining five yards at line-crashing runs kept the ball in came in the fourth period, when a 13-6 victory over the Senators of Jack Morrison passed to Chelsea Richmond territory most of the game. jury which Dr. Hall said should be all right in two or three days.

Davis-Elkins here tonight. i Crouch..

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