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The Decatur Daily from Decatur, Alabama • 9

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The Decatur Dailyi
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Decatur, Alabama
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9
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PAGE NINE Qeorgia Routs Mississippi 4813 In Sinkwich' Birthday Party I if fULANE BOUNDS BACK WITHCONVINCING VICTORY OVER VlCE INSTITUTE BEFORE THRONG OF 25,000 THE DECATUR DAILY, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 11, 1942 FAVORED NAVY BOWS TO PRINCETOX, 10-0 GATORS HAND Grid Results THOMAS STAR FOR GREENIES BULLDOGS GO AT TOP SPEED NAVAL FLIERS BATTER DUKE rrf I 4 4 I a LrVy AUBURN UPSET GAINESVILLE, Oct. W-UP) The Florida Gators unset heavily favored Auburn 6 to 0, before a crowd of 10,000 in an exciting Southeastern conference football game here tonight. After turning back two determin ed Auburn thrusts shortly after the second half opened, the Gators inarched 64 yards on a nice assort ment of running plays and quick passes to score their touchdown and win their first conference en-gagment of the season. Fullback Bill Corry punched across from the half yard line on fourth down. The Gators had plenty of trouble bottling up Auburn's Monk Gafford, who flashed some nice runs in mid-field but never was able to break into the clear.

The 'Gators had a break in the first quarter when End Broughton Williams recovered a fumble by Fullback Jim Reynolds of Auburn on the visitors' 29-yard line. Half backs Fondren Mitchell and Junior Horsey carried down to the Auburn 10 where the 'Gators lost the ball on downs. For the remaiader of the period the teams felt each other out with neither offering a serious threat. The quarter ended Auburn 0, Florida 0. Auburn drove to Florida's 23-vard.

MEMPHIS, Oct lftWr-The University of Georgia football-team gave a birthday party for fireball Frankle Sinkwich In Crump itadium today, and a fine time was had by all except Miss-Ualppi's Rebels, who were mauled 48-13 as the principal merit. IH was almost a track meet for ttifljrange bowl champions, playing for the first time this year at top speed, and they cut down Mississippi blue-clad players like a power-driven harvester; gaining 24 first downs to the Rebels' 5, and piling up 654 yards on rushing and passing against 78 for hapless Miss- isslppl. The defeat was the worst suffered by Harry Mehre, University of Mississippi coach, since Tennessee whipped his team 47-0 in 1938, his first year at Oxford. Sinkwich, Georgia's All-America, celebrated his 22nd birthday by punching over three touchdowns, but hi understudy, Sophomore Charley Trlppi, stole the spotlight with running and passing every bit as brilliant as his captain. He gained 133 yards in 13 slashing trips through Mississippi's line better than 10 yards a try and completed five of eight passes for 125 more, a total of 258 yards and one touchdown.

Sinkwich carried the ball 13 times for 88 yards and completed i seven of 15 passes for another 88. or a total of 174. Chunkin' Charley Conerly. Mississippi's sophomore tailback, was the losing star, harassing Georgia whenever Mississippi gained possession of the ball, but his efforts could not overcome the Bulldogs NEW YORK, Oct. 10 The Princeton Tigers, tamed last week by Williams, broke their bonds quickly today and tore into a iavorea wavy eleven tor a iv wj triumph that proved once and for ail that the Middies have their minds on fighting and not football.

Bob Perlna. the triple threat star of the Tigers, thrilled a crowd of 20.000 at Yankee stadium and be- M. naval nffirvr wildered the future naval officers by the simple stratagem of holding the ball aloft, faking pass after pass and then running around his ends. i He set up txo scoring oppor tunities for the Tigers and Fullback George Franke capitalized on one of them by crashing througn center one yard for a touchdown on the first play of the second period and Bob Sandbach made the other good with a 15-yard placement field goal in the last two minutes of the game. GREAT LAKES LOWERS PITT CLEVELAND.

Oct. 10- iJP) -Coxswain Bob Nelson dropped back from center and calmly place-kicked the big point that gave the Great Lakes Bluejackets a 7-to-6 triumph over the surprisingly ferocious Pitt Panthers before a slim crowd of 12.315 in Cleveland stadium today. The Illinois sailors spotted Pitt a second period touchdown by tricky Bill Dutton and crashed through to victory only in the last period. The stubborn Pitt line had just rolled back an attack which carried to its seven when Great Lakes, a two-touchdown favorite, launched its payoff drive from the Panther 38. Alabama's Billy Harrell replaced all-America Bruce Smith, whose passes zipped over their mark all DURHAM.

N. Oct. 10-iPi Georgia's Navy pre-flight school handed once powerful Duke its second consecutive defeat today 26-12, before a crowd of 7,500. Frank Filchock, formerly of Indiana university and- the Washington Redskins, engineered the victory march over the Blue Devils who only a week ago were dropped by Wake Forest. Duke's line, however, snapped from the doldrums of last week and held the Skycrackers time and again once with the Navy men on the four with a first down.

Filchock passed to Orban Sanders, from Texas university, for eight yards and a touchdown in the first quarter. Bob Foxx, former Tennessee back, converted. The Skycrackers scored twice in the third, once on a 12-yard pass from Filchock to Hershel Ramsey, formerly of Texas Tech and the Philadelphia Eagles, and again whea Don Hightower, from the College of Marsha 11. Texas, returned a punt 92 yards. Foxx converted after the second touchdown but missed later attempts.

The Navy men scored their final touchdown in the fourth on Filchock's seven-yard pass over the goal to Foxx. Tom Davis, hefty back, made both Duke touchdowns, the first in the opening period on a three-yard hurst after Benny Cittandino inter cepted a Navy pass, and again in the last quarter on a four and a half yard plunge. Bob Gantt failed io both efforts at conversion. GENERALS CRUSHED ORLANDO, Oct. 10-(P-Rollins College, led by Grady Kay who personally accounted for four touchdowns and passed to a teammate for another, crushed Washington and Lee's Generals here tonight, 46-0.

before a crowd of more than 10,000. Fight with the finest-for the Navy today! -volunteer r- line early in the second quarter ITS COLONEL BEAZLEY NOW! Johnny Beazley fright), pitching but Fullback Bill Corry broke it iro for the St. Louis Cardinals in the recent World S3ries, sits in Gov. up by intercepting Clarence Har- Prentice Cooper chair in the capitol at and receives a kins' pass and returning to Flor- Ida's 41. The visitors got just in- 1 commission from Cooper (left) as a colonel on the governor staff.

The side Florida territory again about ceremony toak place just after Johnny's return to his home in Nash-midway of the period but were un- vijle able to muster the punch for a sustained drive. Florida got a Minnesota Defeat Tops Nation's Grid Features By ELLIOTT CHAZE NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 10 UF-Tow-topped Lou Thomas hit his ends with long passes and kicked 35-yard field goal here todav to (shatter Rice Institute's budding football reputation 18-7 before a crcwd of 25.000. The Tulane line that had seem 4 .1 I ed bewildered against Auburn a week ago splashed steadily into the Rice secondary, crowding Wcks and passes, intercepting two short passes and giving Thomas and his mates a strong screen for an offensive that scored twice through the air.

again on Thomas' long goal kick and finally on a safety. Tulane gained 110 yards passing to Rice's 97 and 164 on ground plays to Rice's 42. Rice Pos. Tulane Lloyd Porter L. E.

Brannon Tessier L. T. Newlin Maginnis L. G. Blackburn Stolen Humble Malmberg Scruggs Suttis Dickson Holm R.

G. Bent Comer R. T. R. E.

McDonald q. b. Thomas Jacob EJy R. H. F.

B. Dwelle Pracko Rice Tulane 07. 318. afternoon, and in two plays the Bluejacket tied the score. Harrell pitched a short one to Fullback Steve Belichick, who bulled his way to the Pitt 23.

Billy threw again, this time to Howard (Red) Hickey on the Panthers' five. Hickey went over and Nelson placekicked the extra point. Oncc" overwhelming superiority. It was Conerly and Mississippi's great senior guard, Honey Britt, i who kept the Rebels from Ignominy Xjf a complete shut-out. With six oilnutes to go In the fourth quar- ter, Britt intercepted a forward pass by little Ryals Lee, third string Georgia' tailback, and raced 80 yards for a touchdown.

Irving Thlbault, fresh fullback, place kicked the extra point. Less than a minute later, Conerly took a Georgia punt on his own 20 and raced 80 yards behind spectacular blocking for Mississippi's second touchdown. This time Thibault's kick went wide. The game ended on a speculative note just after an eighth Georgia touchdown, a pass, from Jim Todd to Lafayette King, was called back when Brooke Pierce and Britt were ejected for fighting. Georgia Mississippi Foe.

i Poschner Thorsey E. Ellenson Bernacchl L. T. Kuniansky Myers L. G.

jrtjodwln Wood Ruark Britt R. G. Williams Whltaker R. T. V.

Davis R. Poole R. E. i Keuper J. Jones Q.

B. Sinkwich Conerly L. H. L. Davis Miller R.

H. McPhee Woodward F. B. Georgia 0 14 27 748. Mississippi 0 0 0 1313.

By The Associated Press EAST Amherst 25, Bowdoln 0. Western Maryland 7, Boston U. 0. Boston College 14, Clemson 7. Wesleyan 20, Connecticut 7.

Brown 28, Columbia 21. Cast 24, Carnegie Tech 6. Colgate 27, Dartmouth 19. Forth am 0, North Carolina 0 (tie). Harvard 7, William and Mary 1 (tie).

Perm State 19, Lehigh 3. Lafayette 7. Ft. Monmouth 3. Rochester 14, Rensselaer 0.

Princeton 10, Navy 0. West Virginia 13, South Carolina 0. Vermont 13, Mass. State 6. Perm 35, Yale 6.

Panzer 7, Brooklyn College 0. Holy Cross 60, Fort Totten 0. Norwich 44, Worcester 6. New Hampshire 20, Maine 7. Army 28, Cornell 8.

MIDDLE WEST Illinois 20, Minnesota 13. Ohio State 28, Southern California 12. Purdue 7, Northwestern 6. Wisconsin 17, Mississippi 9. Great Lakes 6.

Iowa Cadets 26, Michigan 14. Michigan State 46. Wayne 6. Ohio University 6. Butler 0.

SOUTH Vanderbilt 7, Kentucky 6. Georgia Pre-Flight 26, Duke 12, Maryland 27, Rutgers 13. V. M. I.

38, Virginia 18. EAST Washington and Jefferson, 13. Buffalo 7. Lock Haven Teachers 19, SUP' pery Rock Teachers 0. Coast Guard 14, Colby 12.

SOUTH Tennessee 34, Dayton 6. Florida Auburn 0. Virginia Tech 16, Davidson 0. Tulane 18, Rice 7. Georgia 48 Mississippi 13.

Alabama 27, Pensacola Fliers 0. Georgia Tech 30, Chattanooga 13. South Carolina State 7, More house 6. Tennessee Tech 0, Morris Harvey 0 (tie). The Citadel 14, George Washing ton 2.

OUTHWEST Baylor 20, Arkansas 7. Texas 7, Oklahoma 0. Texas Christian 41, Kansas 6. Corpus Chrlstl 18, Texas A. and M.

7. MIDDLE WEST Iowa 33, Camp Grant 18, Notre Dame 27, Stanford 0. Indiana 12, Nebraska 0. Marquette 34, Iowa State 13. ROCKY MOUNTAIN Brigham Young 12, Utah 7.

Wyoming 33. Greeley State 0. FAR WEST Santa Clara 7, California 6. Oregon. State 7, UCLA 30.

Washington 15, Oregon 7. Montana 16, Washington State 68. PREP RESULTS Phillips 19; Decatur 12. Deshler 43; Moulton 6. Athens 13; Hartselle 0.

Florence 25; Falkvllle 0. Huntsville 22; Lawrenceburg 0. Woodlawn 40; Ensley 0. Gadsden 46; Cherokee County 0, Bessemer 19; Holt 0. GOPHERS BOW TO ILLINOIS By DAVE HOFF CHAMPAIGN, 111., Oct.

lO-W Minnesota's two year supremacy over its rivals in the Western conference came to a stunning end today when a lowly-regarded Illinois team forced a 20 to 13 decision before a riotous homecoming throng of 24,276 spectators in Memorial stadium. The alert, viciously-charging Illini scored in the second period on a 35 yard run by Guard Alex Agase with a ball stolen from the hands of the Gophers' star, Bill Daley. They used a Minnesota concoctiona double lateral to go ahead 13 to 7 in the third period. And after Minnesota tied it in the final quarter, Illinois won the game when Agase plunged onto a loose ball in the end zone for his second touchdown. The loss was Minnesota's second straight the Gophers bowed to the Iowa seahawks a week ago, 7 to 8.

And it was the third triumph lor the Illini who apparently have started a gridiron renaissance under a new head coach, Ray Eliot. VOLS IN EASY 34-6 VICTORY KNOXVILLE, Tenn Oct 10 Tennessee unleashed a running attack to score in every period today for an easy victory over Dayton's Flyers, 34 to 6, before 8,000 fans. The Ohioans' tally came in the last quarter to climax a 70-yard march. Back Jim Fenton snagging Don Pinclotti's 15-yard bullet and dragging Tennessee's long five yards across for the losers only touchdown. Tennessee punched its first marker through early in the first quarter.

West Virginia's Jim Gaffney racing down the sidelines, unmolested, for 40 yards. Cashing In on a fumble soon thereafter by Dayton's aerial performer Bill Kaisley, Gaffney ran the second score across for 16 yards. From then on out the Volunteers prepped for their engagement next Saturday with Alabama, HITLER'S WAR CHEST was filled with the spoils TAKEN from his own people, and from the people of the many countries he has devoured. In it, too, must be the horrible memories of the millions he has murdered, maimed, starved, left homeless and chained in slavery. ALABAMA'S WAR CHEST will contain the dollars which we as fret Americans will so freely GIVE.

Dollars for the United Service Organizations which serve our forces here in America, and the families they leave at home when they go to fight in foreign lands. Dollars for aid to our fighters imprisoned in enemy hands. Dollars for the relief of starving millions in the devastated countries of our Allies. GIVE At Least ONE DAY'S PAY to Decatur's Combined United Charities and War Chest Campaign TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20 break near the end of the half I when Guard Walter McRae recovered a fumble by Auburn's Monk Gafford on the Auburn 35 and some neat passing took Florida to the Auburn 19, but an Auburn interception staved off the threat and the half ended Auburn 0, Florida 0. Gafford, Fullback Jim Reynolds and Halfback Charles Finney of Auburn began ripping the Florida line to pieces in the third quarter, particularly the left side, to go from the Auburn 24 to the Florida 38.

There Auburn gambled on- a pass by Gafford and George Sutherland of Florida intercepted it and ran it out to his own 35. The 'Gators then began their first sus tained offensive and marched 65 thrusts and quick yards on line passes to score. Fullback Bill Corry nnnrhinir over on fourth down from the half -yard "line. Suther- land's attempt for extra point from placement was wide and it was Florida 6, Auburn 0 as the period ended. ALSAB BEATS WHIRLY AGAIN By SID FEDER NEW YORK.

lOW Alsab beat Whlrlaway the hard way todaycoming 'around the lightning stretch runner in the stretch to take the "rubber" match of their turf world series, Whirly tried to confuse the folks by running right to the front in the long New York Handicap instead of trailing by a city block, as usual, but he succeeded in confusing himself most of all. For, he not only lost to Alsab, but was also beaten to the wire by J. G. Douglas, Obash, an overlooked four-year-old, who ran in claiming company as recently as mid-September. The sensation of Belmont's closing program, however, was neither Alsab In victory nor Whirly in defeat.

This role went to Count Fleet, from Mrs. John D. Hertz's barn, who fairly flew to victory in the Champagne Stakes to set a world one-mile record for a two-year-old in 1:34 4-5. In galloping home by six lengths to establish himself as a ranking contender for next year's Kentucky Derby, the son of Reigh Count lopped three-fifths of a second off the Juvenile mile mark Alsab posted in the same race a year ago, and came within two-fifth of a second of the world record the great Equipoise set ten years back. Picking up a $9,375 pay-check for his jaunt, he was six lengths in front of Allen Simmons' Blue Swords at the end and another eight lengths on top of Elmer Dale Shaffer's Attendant, while W.

E. Boeing's well-regarded Slide Rule faded to fifth Favorite in the field of eight, the Count returned $410 for each 12 ticket. In the New York Handicap, the big surprise to the 26,456 getaway-day customers was the way Whirly ran and, most of all, his failure to stave off both Alsab and Obash in the closing drive to the wire. He carried 130 pounds, and Jockey Jackie Westrop, who replaced Oeorgie Woolf in his saddle today, said it was this that whipped -the world's money-winning champion in the end, for Alsab carried only 121 and Obash had a mere feather of 106 on his back. A 810.50 for $2 shot, Alsab was clocked in 2:47 1-5 for the grind, just one-fifth of a second off the North American mark posted by Fenelon in this same stake a year ago.

The day's work was worth 821,450 to the Sab, boosting his earnings for -two years of racing to 8331,825, while Whirly, picking up $2,500 third, place money, lifted his record bankroll to $513,986. It was the second time the Sab has knocked off Whirlaway in their red-hot series this fall. Three weeks ago, Alsab came home by half a nose in their match at Narragan-sett; last Saturday, Whirly whipped the Chicago champ by three quart- MEMPHIS, Oct. 10-W-Georgia-Mississippl football statistics: Georgia Miss. First down 24 5 Yards gained rushing (net) 378 Forward passes attempted 28 Forward passes completed 15 Yards by forward 42 11 4 ly touneed Duke, 26-12.

Alabama ana Tennessee won easily over comparatively minor opposition. Citadel and Virginia Tech won Southern conference victories as Virginia Military, led by Joe Muha. trounced Virginia, 33-18. Utah's reign in the Big Seven came to an end as Brigham Young earned a 12-7 decision. The big surprise in the Far West was furnished by U.

C. L. A. which handed Oregon State, Rose Bowl champion, its first defeat. Washington maintained its winning ways, beating Oregon, 15-7, and Washington State ran up a 68-16 count on Montana.

Santa Clara nosed out California, 7-6, and St. Mary's pre-flight stopped Alameda Coast Guard, 40-0. BLUES SUFFER INITIAL LOSS Falkville's Blues weren't exactly singing the blues yesterday, but they weren't as happy as they have been since the start of the present football season. The reason: Falkville Florence 25. That was the final score of the game at Florence Friday night where the Blue Devils suffered their first loss after winning three straight.

Coach Spurgeon Long's charges, who were busy picking cotton last week instead of practicing football, put up a stubborn battle, but they lacked the speed and fire that had marked their previous games. L. Clark's passes were hittinp their marks, Teague on the receiving end most of the time, but the receivers generally were downed in their tracks by an alert secondary The victors displayed a smooth-working machine one that clicked when the chips were down and the victory was well deserved. Falkville will attempt to bounce back into the win column this weekend, entertaining Risen High ot Huntsville Friday afternoon. Rison will bring a strong team, however, one that surprised Athens with a 13-0 loss.

VANDY VICTOR BY ONE POINT LEXINGTON, Oct. 10-(JP-Jack Jenkins toe gave Vanderbilt University a 7-6 football victory over the University of Kentucky today and sent the Commodores ot'i to a good start in the Southeastern conference race. It was the second conference los for Kentucky this season by failurt to score that Important point aftei a touchdown. Earlier Georgia nosed out the Wildcats 7-6. Walter Simmons, sophomore scat-back, tallied Vandy's touchdown on a beautiful 47-yard dash in the second quarter after the Commodores had been stopped earlier in the period on the goal line.

Jenkins booted the. ball squarely between the7 uprights. Kentucky matched the touchdown a fe wminutes later when Bill Griffin, substitute Kentuck tackle, recovered Simmons' fumb! of a punt "on Vandy's 17. Ph Cutchin passed to Carl Althau: who was tackled on the one an on the next play. Fullback Bob Herbert crashed over.

Phil Kuhn's conversion attempt was blocked and thft proved to be the ball game. Fifty different jobs waiting men who join the Navy nowl tor By HERB BARKER NEW YORK. Oct. 10 (IP) An other stunning series of upsets left the nation's football fans limp but happy today and the experts merely limp. Topping the list by all odds was the defeat of Minnesota's Gophers, supreme in the Big Ten for two vears, by a vastly underrated II- "nota outfit, operating under a new neaa coacn, nay ivn uu- hitely no chance agalnsj the big men from the North, the Illini, pac- ed by the trflliant play of Guard Alex Agass, fought their way to a sensational 20-13 victory that turned the Big Ten conference race upside down.

Agase first stole the ball from Minnesota's Bill Daley and ran 35 yards to one touchdown and then, after Minnesota had tied the score at 13-13, the same player recovered a loose ball in the end zone for another touchdown. Purdue and Princeton accounted for two more big surprises. Princeton, itself the victim of an upset at the hands of Williams a week ago, uncovered unexpected strength in a 10-0 rout of Navy at New York. Purdue, beaten by Fordbam and trounced by Vanderbilt, pulled itself together and nipped Ncrthwestern's Wildcats, conquerors of Texas, 7-6. Much of the day's most spectacular action was concentrated in the Middle West where Notre Dame and Ohio State successfully repelled far western invasions.

Notre Dame, with Angelo Bertelli in rare passing form, crushed Stanford, 27-0. Ohio State, a powerful team on the basis of results thus far, handed Southern California a 23-12 beating. Michigan's Wolverines grabbed a 14-0 lead in the first 20 minutes against Bernie Bierman's Iowa pre-flight outfit but could not fight off the Cadets' superior reserves and bowed, 26-14. It was Michigan's first defeat and Iowa pre-flight's fourth successive triumph including a 7-6 decision over Minnesota. Wisconsin, with Elroy Hirsch In the starring role, whipped Missouri's Big Six champions handily, 17-9.

Pitt's Panthers put up a fine stand against Great Lakes naval station but went down 7-6. Iowa trounced camp Grant, 33-16. and Marquette ran up a 34-12 count on Iowa State. In the Southwest. Texas A.

and obviously only a shadow of its former potent self, fell before Corpus 18-7. as Texas barely made the grade against Oklahoma, 7-0; Baylor stopped Arkansas, 20-7, and Texas Christian routed Kansas, 41-6. In the East, Boston College chalked up a hard fought intersections! victory over Ciemson, 14-7 as Fordham and North Carolina played a scoreless tie; Harvard battled William Mary on even terms, 7-7, and West Virginia scored over South Carolina 13-0. Penn trounced Yale, 35-6, an Ivy league fray; Brown, led by Hank Margarita, halted Columbia. 28-21; Army, with Hank Mazur in the leading role, easily handled Cornell, 28-8, and Colgate, taking advantage of pass interceptions, whipped Dartmouth, 27-19, Georgia, with Frankie Sinkwich operating in high gear, buried Mississippi- under a 48-13 count whije Vanderbilt eked out a 7-8 verclict over Kentucky, the second such one-point loss the Wildcats have suffered In Southeastern conference play.

Tulane easily defeated Rice of the Southwest conference, 18-7. and Georgia's pre-flight squad, thus far unbeaten, ers of a length in the Jockey Club Gold Cup. They may meet again this fall in the Pimlico Special. 4l passing 276 36 Fordward passes intercepted by 2 Yards gained run-back of intercepted 28' 60 Punting average (from acrimmage) 40.4 38.8 Total yards, all kicks returned 4 180 Opponent fumbles recovered 2 1 Yards lost by penalties 27 for All All at A $22,196.00 BUDGET FOR SIX LOCAL HUMAN SERVICE AGENCIES AIDING CRIPPLED CHILDREN. UNDERPRIVILEGED CHILDREN, M'RSEKV SCHOOLS, BOt SCOUTS.

COMMUNITY HOUSE AND WELFARE DEPARTMENT; ALSO DECATUR'S SHARE OF ALABAMA'S WAR CHEST. IRISH SWAMP STANFORD FOE SOUTH BEND, Oct. 10 UP) Notre Dame plucked its first victory of the season out of the air today on the amazing accuracy of Angelo Bertelli's fourth touchdown passes left Stanford bewildered and defeated 27 to 0. Bertelli definitely "found himself" before 25.000 screaming spectators today after a comparatively poor, showing in the Irish's tie with Wisconsin and defeat by Georgia Teen. He also found his receivers with leadly consistency, Bertelli speared Ends Bob Dove and Joe Limont.

a second stringer, with his aerials for two touchdowns In the second quarter. He, hit Captain George Murphy and Sophomore Bob for two more to the Pe si'0 three er'rt point. Only one of his aerials was intercepted. This first meeting between" the two schools since the Irish's Four Horsemen rode over Stanford in the 1925 Rose bowl, was Marchie Schwarts' third straight" licking of the season as Indian head coach. Be Glad You GET a Day's Pay to GIVE! This Appeal Published In Behalf of Humanity By A 51 CN OF QUALITY'A PROM I i OP AT I FACTION 5 1 NCR 1 9 OS.

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About The Decatur Daily Archive

Pages Available:
151,599
Years Available:
1912-1963