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Richmond Times-Dispatch from Richmond, Virginia • 15

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Richmond, Virginia
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15
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Section II Section II mm- Sports Sports Richmond Virginia Sunday November 12 1933 WinnSweepsFeature AsSallBeats Hannon For Dirt Track Title Downs Va 6-0 on Saivyers 5 85 -Yard Dash Spiders Find Hampden-Sydney Stubborn Win 13-0 Kegley Leads Wasps to 25-6 Victory Over Indians Tech dipped 27-6 Fails To Get 1st Down Alabama Keeps Attack Past Midfield Finds Ball in Own Territory But Once DuringGame A1 Casey Returns Kickoff 48 Yards Triumphs Over Field Cavaliers' Stout Wort Goes for Naught as Sprinting Back Runs Back Johnson's Punt Staff Photo to South Bill Daughtrey (Mo 20) of Suffolk end Jerk Humphries (Wo 12) of Culpeper Hampden-Sydney lathing back trhm pettered the Spidert yesterday no end off on one of the fleshing runt trhich hoteeter got them nothing tangible The Spidert won 13-0 Other picture! on page three Spiders Beat Fighting Tigers 13-0 With First Half Drives Hampden-Sydney Assault on Reserves Brings First Team Back Roy Marshall's Passes Effective as Eleven Annexes 8th Victory to Keep Slate Clean 152-Pound Center Stars on Defense Defeat Worst 1 in Five Seasons for 31 Fumbles Help Winners EMORY VA Nov fAV-The Emory and Henry Wasp kept their season record unsullied tonight by handing William and Mary its worst defeat In five years 25-8 Aided by William and Mary fumbles and poor punting the Wasps romped freely through a poor defense to score their eighth consecutive victory for the season The Indians while they were the first to cross the Emory goal for this season were not In the running after the first period The Wasps socred thirteen points In the opening quarter and thereafter had everything their own way Marshall Passes Well Passing by Roy Marshall half-pint halfback who heaves the tall up to 50 yards with accuracy and the running of Mark Kegley Virginia high scorer marked the Wasps offense while the defensive work of Wiley Weaver 152-pound center Duane Sands tackle who rose from a sickbed to play and Bus Mackey powerful guard wu outstanding The Waspe effectively stopped Billy Palese Indian threat and the passes of Choiko brought the Indians their tone touchdown Waspe Seen Early Emory and Henry Wasps scored four minutes after the game opened Captain Noftslnser recovered a fumble on William and Mary 24-yard line and and Mark Kegley Plunged into the line for short gains to make a first down on the Indians' 11-yard stripe Kegley then streaked around right end for a touchdown Eller place-kicked the extra point Before the period ended the Wups cored again Kegley ran a punt tack to the Indiana' 31 and Marshall shot a pass to Proppe over the goal line for a touchdown The kick for the goal was wide Another pass Marshall to Miller foe twenty yards put tha tall on the Indiana II the period ended Dyer on the first play of the second quarter crashed right guard for a touchdown Bima failed to convert Tha Indiana taking the next kick- Conttnued on Page 8 Column 6 2 Field Goals Give Stanford 13 to 7 Win Over California L08 ANGELES Nov Stanford's fighting football team outplayed and out-scored Southern California before a crowd of 90000 persons today to win 13 to 7 and administer the first defeat the Trojan have suffered in twenty-eight games Not since September 1831 when 8L Mary's won uy the same score that of today had Southern California suffered a reverse although the record wu spotted to one scoreless tie with Oregon State this season The Mg Red team from Palo Alto cashed In on two field goals from sure-footed Bill Corbus in the last four minutes of play to climax a drive by the Indians starting Just after the home guard took a first period lead through the medium of a 43-yard touchdown gallop by "Cotton" War-burton Corbus not only used Ms right foot to good advantage but did a world of damage with Ms bands playing a sensational defensive game against the hard charging Trojans There wu little doubt in the minds of the great Armlstire Day crowd to the result when Corbus kicked Ms first field goal after he had missed two There wu then only four minutes left to play When he kicked the second there wu Just ore-minute left far the Trojans to do something about thrlr record and they could not do It Stanford wu tha better team the last three periods Leading Drivers Fail in 15-Mile Race But Decide Victory in Early Five-Mile Dash Fair Grounds Fans See Minor Spills Missouri Blizzard Gets Break as Leader Quits With Faltering Motor (Picture! on Fege Fire) By Meriwrther-Sinith Billy Winn the blond blizzard Iran Missouri again swept the half-mile dirt -track at the State Fair Grounds yesterday afternoon In his roaring Murray-Selnost Special while 2500 shivering automobile race fans voiced their approval in no uncertain fashion But lady Luck smiled on Billy In the feature 15-mlle contest when Bob Sail leading by a halt-lap at the 15th circuit was forced from the speedfest with motor trouble And there were plenty of spine-tingling thrills for the gathering Prank Moore Don's little brother took a couple of nasty spins kissing the rails In both Instances but with little damage "Speed" Smith also took a nice header through the railings on the treacherous south curve and after doing a circle over the bumpy Infield returned to the wars la capturing the 15-mile feature snd hie qualifying 5-mile heat Winn was awarded the beautiful 1000 Quinlan Trophy emblematic of the Hanklnson Speedway championship Bob Sail of Pa tenon though forced from the feature event still won enough points In his l-mile heat victory to take the Eastern AAA championship Young Johnny Hannon of Cochohocken Pa lost his Jight chance for tha Eastern crown hen he finished third to Winn and en Fowler In tha feature I Thrilling Opening Heat Tha first 5-mile best gave the fans 4 Intimation of just what sort of jaling automobile racing the boys ere going to serve up during the eft-moon Winn captured the contest tut only after a thrilling extremely ast event In which Hannon the for-per University of Southern California iialtbnck made valiant attempts to boot his bright orange Miller past the Heeling Kansas City lad's Murray fhe fans liked this race and the Jirilllng sliding In the south curve there the track was made dangerous vy a loose surface kept tha customers lonstanllyon their feet Malcolm Pox who eas In the louble crash at Indianapolis on Me-aortal Day that cost Lester Spangler ind his mechanic their "vea won the jecond brat after Doc MacKensie another Indianapolis entry had gone jut with ott trouble ScKenue had i quarter of a lap lead on the field vhen his Miller began smoking badly -nd the A A A officials waved him -om tha track Hie fane protested Us ruling in no uncertain style boo-g lustily far several minutes Sail Drives Daring Heat Bobby Ball went Into the lead on a first curve of the third flre-mlle sat and was never in danger iroughout the race Bobby was orowlng dirt over the wire fence In his race riding dangerously near the aner railings and swinging wide as lit red charger sluthered Into the iralghtswaya The first three heat events of ten-Ules each were won by Billy Winn lalcolm Pm of Westfield and Sail Each victory was scored 1th rase though Pm romped tat after 000" MacKensie had been forced ut while leading MacKensie returned to capture the -n-mile consolation easily with rank Moan second Barney Overton nd Smith put on a nice contest for ilnC with the former winning MacKensie wss popular driver lib the spectators and his fine drive rew much applause MacKensie Is he lad who rode In the money at indlanapolts until four laps from the inish when his Inevitable Jinx forced Um out Lady Luck also frowned on he Phllly are In the feature fifteen-i nller Ten fast machines faced the start-r's flag for the fifteen-mile feature vltb the crowd tense expecting a ter-rifle struggle between Winn Hannon Mid Sail and their expectations wen fulfilled At the drop of the flag San flashed Into the lead with Winn Inches behind end Hannon right on top of Winn Hie trio entered the curve in dangerously close quarters arltb the crowd now on its feet cheer-ng wildly Sail settled down in the lead and Continued on Page 5 Column 3 76-Yd Sprint Lead Tulanc Triumph HEW ORLEANS Nov ll-tfV "Little Roberta Tulane right halfback who last week led his team to a 1-0 victory over Colgate In New York with a 78-yard sprint for a touchdown showed the hometown fane exactly how It was done today by duplicating the stunt to start the ban rolling in a 33-0 win over Mississippi State Until Roberts got away ti the third quarter to provide the winning Inspiration far his teammates It might have been anybody's baU game but after Roberts' performance everybody on the Green irs tried to do something spectacular and several of them succeeded Roberta put on Ms demonstration (tartly after the third quarter opened taking In one of Haley's long punts on his own 34-yard line to start the sprint that started Mississippi State's downfall He outdistanced the last Mississippi tackten on State's 30-yard line and erosaed the goal line stand-iW up- Ha added the extra point and tha Tulane aweep was on BiUr Wlmm Georgia Beats Yale 7-0 Wins Fourth in Row Homer Key Leads March for Early Score Then Bulldogs Go Defensive By Alan Gould HEW HAVEN CONN Nov fast-stepping Bulldogs led by Homer Key romped through Yale for first period touchdown today clung to this margin tenaciously as the Elis rallied and kept their place among the nation's undefeated football teams with a sparkling 7-0 triumph over thrlr Intersections! rivals It was Georgia's fourth consecutive victory over Yale A feat accomplished otherwise only by Harvard In the Blue's long gridiron history and Southern rooters celebrated by uprooting the goal pasta before the horns boys had a chance to rally their defense folk Wla at Goals Incipient fist fighting broke out however as the efforts to carry oft the splintered uprights were resisted with the result that police finally took command and cleared the field A crowd of 35000 half filling the Yale Bowl saw the Georgians rush Yale off Ha feet In the first period end register the only score of a game that otherwise was featured by the bulldog defensive work of both teams The second of two long dashes by the shifty Homer Key 143-pound halfback led to the touchdown Alter Key romped 38 yards to Tale's 38-yard line big George chapman Georgia fullback took charge of the proceedings and negotiated nearly all of the remaining distance In three plays climaxed by a two-yard plunge off tackle across the goal line Grant Gets Extra Point Cy Grant high scoring back booted the extra point but the expectation that Georgia would run wild quickly was dissipated Key the ground-gaining star of the day picked up a total of 125 yards on his slippery crow-hopping Jaunts In the first two periods but the Ella stopped all subsequent Georgia maneuvers effectively The Southerners did not cross the Blue's 25-yard line for the rest of the game The EU defense led by big Jack KilcuUca at tackle the game's outstanding lineman was so aggressive that Key Grant Brown and Chapman the Georgia backs seldom had a chance even to get started throughout the final half Brown registered the only gtlns when he followed up 40-yard runback of a punt with a 24-yard romp around end Yale put on a third period offensive of Its own featuring Fullback Keesling that carried the tall three times deep Into Georgia territory and twice Inside the 20-yard line The Ella rolled up total gains of Continued on Page 4 Column I Oglethorpe Is Crushed By Auburn Plainsmen AUBURN ALA Nov Crashing through between Oglethorpe's tackles Auburn smashed its wa yto a 27-to-8 win over the Petrels hero today in a home-coming game before a crowd of 5000 Klmbrcll and Phipps twin speed-trrs of the Plainsmen shared scoring honors each scoring twice and rounded out thrlr field day by kicking three extra points Klmbnell booting two from placement and Phipps drop-kicking tha third Pht Peerels offense that had failed to make first down throughout the first half started clicking late in the game Leslie broke away on a well-screened spinner to the 1-yard line where Hildreth went over Auburn scored nineteen first downs to seven far the Petrels and gained 358 yards to 184 University Starts Slowly Gets Tough General Ace in Final Game on Home Field Gains 158-Yard Total By the Associated Press LEXINGTON Nov An 85 yard run by Joe Sawyers speed merchant de luxe who wax playing his last home game for Washington and Lee today gave the Genera: i a 6-0 victory over the University of Virginia in the annual classic Washington and Lee started strong and almost scored before Virginia rallied to make it a teal football game and provide thrills aplenty for the packed grand stand the climax coming with Sawyers' brilliant run for a touchdown in the final period Tommy Johnson Virginia 190-pound quarterback booted a punt to Sawyers on Washington and Lee 15-yard line as the final period started Sawyers juggled it for a moment and then tucked it under his arm and behind beautiful Interference raced through the entire Virginia team to plant it behind the goal posts Sam Mattox who hadn't missed a goal this year wu short with his place-kick for the extra point It was the home-coming for Washington and Lee and when the game started it looked aa if the Generate would live up to the prediction that they would walk away with the game From the opening kickoff they marched to Virginia 11 -yard line with a bewildering and varied attack which Virginia appeared unable' to solve But Virginia rallied there and stopped them When Mattox on fourth down tried for a field goal Gene Wager Virginia tattling center broke through and blocked the ef fort And Then the Game From then on It was a football game with the odds on the final outcome fairly even until Sawyers made his great run in the final quarter In a desperate effort to tie or win the cavaliers took to the air after the touchdown Several aerials wera completed but an alert General defense kept them from threatening seriously Near the final whistle a 15-yard penalty put the Generals tack on their own fifteen but Sawyers provided the final hero act of the day by punting far down the field from his own goal line After gaining its six-print lead tha Blue and Whits team deliberately played conservatively to protect tha advantage No chances were taken and three plays were usually made before kicking It was evident that Coach Tllson men would be satisfied with the alx-point margin Sawyers Gets 151 Yards Sawyers was the individual ground-gaining itar of the game accounting far 159 yards gained on return of punts line plays and end runs Billy Seaton Washington and Lee quarterback came second with 114 yards while nyterger Crater back accounted for 109 Twenty-eight farmer Washington and Lee football captains or team members were among the 6000 spectators who witnessed the game They Sat on a tench at tha Washington and Lee sideline as luests of honor mast of them having been present for the pep rally last night Washington and Lee kept Its elate of State games clear by the victory today with victories over William and Mary Roanoke and Virginia and A 1-1 tie with Virginia Tech The teams were tied with first eight apiece Virginia had the the edge In yardage from rushing with 120 to 95 by the Generals Bailey Defensive Star Jack Bailey fullback waa a defensive star for Washington and Lee making twentv-four of 111 Washington and Lee tackles Twelve tacklee were made by George Glynn General center and eleven by Amoe Bolen captain Coles ad Captain Berger shared defensive honors for tha Cavaliers Virginia won the toss and Johnson kicked off to Seaton who came tak twenty yards before he waa pulled down The Genera unleashed a terrific attack which camel to Virginia 15-vard line where Sam Mattox fumbled and then recovered Virginia took heart and halted the running attack and Wager blocked Mattox field goal effort Washington and Lee marched goal- continued on Page 4 Column 1 Sewanee Holds Vandy For Half But Losm NASHVILLE TENN Noe Purple-clad Sewanee eleven fighting tenaciously to the last ditch was swept aside by a punishing last haf offensive as Vanderbilt Commodores triumphed 21 to 14 here Aa a homecoming day crowd of more than 8000 looked on foe Fir from Sewanee acored held the Orid and Rise a count for the first but was unable to gather In the last half and Poage were the spam Rewanee's offensive through for Innumersria The Tiger line fought game? heavier Commodore forward withered in the Anal mta-utea the Gold and Black attaef clicking Vanderbilt was aided stellar kicking of Rand Dlrota nphomore quarterbwk wb-ne pmta tYtragfd ibm Cub Regulars Split Up Task With Second Stringers as Scores Come Easily TUSCALOOSA ALA Nov (T) Alabama's Red Elephants crushed a Virginia Tech eleven today that was unable to mark up a first down thrilling 10000 home-coming day spectators with a 27-0 win In two plays Casey and Mills crashed tackle for four yards and went into Alabama terrltoiy for the only time on the Crimson 40 the closest they ever came to the Red Elephant goal line Campbell stopped the thrust Intercepting Mill's pass on Alabama's 40 and running It tack to his own 45 The Red Elephants started shock troops and had the Gobblers shoved tack hi thrlr own territory through the first period scoring once and had the tall deep in Virginia Tech area when the period ended Vanity to Two Periods The varsity wu left In for two periods punching over three touchdowns and blocking a punt that Virginia Tech converted into a safety by alertness Both teams fenced for a few minutes after tbs opening kickoff then the speedy reserve tactile Id turned loose Its attack as Charley Stepp 158-pound speedster reeled oil 10 yards to make the first down Hut touched off a 82-jaid drive with Stepp and McDaniel alternating off tackles and around ends for five first downs In eight plays Riley Smith fullback sliced off tackle for the 8 yards to score but Jim kick tarn placement sss wide Casey Races 48 Yards Virgnla Tech's most nwctacular bid for a score came on the kickoff after the touchdown A1 Casey a bundle of dynamite took Uu kick-off near the goal line and sprinted for the sideline sidestepping and stiff-arming a swarm of tacklem that closed in Up the sideline he sped for 4S yards before TUdrn Campbell safety man brought Mm down Later Howell ran a punt tack to the Tech 35 The power was turned on with Howell Angrlich and Demyanovich punching tackles and ends for two first downs- on the Gobbler 1 Demyanovich crashed center for the touchdown Moseley's kick from placement was wide An exchange of punts after the kickoff set the stage for another touchdown with Alabama starting from her own 47 and Angrlich and Howell making quirk off tackle stabs that carried to the Gobbler one Howell after a 35-yard arplot being pulled down at that point Howell vms smothered for a nine-yam km then Angrlich sliced off tackle far ten yards and a touchdown place-kick was low Blocked Pent Safely Nine plays after the kick-off in the third period Alstom scored again Howell slicing off tackle far sixteen to score Moseley set the stage running tack an Intercepted pan twenty-four yards to the Gobbler 31 Moseley converted from pla--ement A blocked punt which Mills recovered In the end none accounted for two points on a safety The reserves went tack In the fourth period and while threatening lacked the power for the last yard through the fighting Gobbler line which held once on its own 1-foot line Reserves Ge 88 Yards The game opened with the Crimson reserves feeling their way before cutting loose with a vicious assault which carried 68 yards for a touch- Continued on Hage Column 7 OrogonTakos Loop Lead By Heating Oregon State PORTLAND ORE Nov AV-Oregon State's famous "Iron Men" football machine was melted to scrap today by a fiery University of Oregon team which swept to a II to I victory to take an unchallenged position at the head of the Pacific Coast Conference The "Iron Immortals" of Corvallis who had previously played through three tattles with only two substitutions and who had held the mighty TTOJans to a scoreless tie with only 11 men wilted under the' relentless onslaught of the WeMooters and all were replaced In the fourth quarter The defeat of the previously undefeated Southern California team today by Stanford placed the unbeaten Oregonians at the top of the conference standing Reaneke Beals Wilson High PORTSMOUTH Nov vF1 A spirited eleven from Jefferson High Roanoke crushed the Virginia conference championship hopes of Wood-row Wilson High School with a 7-8 victory before a record-breaking crowd of 4500 persons today did any Notre Dame team take such a pounding Duane Purvis framed with Jim Carter Paul Pardonner frits petal and an Iron Um to heap misery on the once-powerful forces of Notre Dame aa the Purdue 'coach Nobel Klsrr hailed In newspaper headlines every where as the next football coach at Notre Dane locked on happily Frbrl an alert right guard stopped Irish drive In the second period Nick Lukats attempted a flat tone pats his own 15 but rebel slipped Boots Goal to Win Boosts Coach's Pay BLUEFQXD VA Nor HP) field goal booted by Young gave Biurfield Va a 3-0 victory over Salem Va High today and brought a 120-a-month salary Increase for Ted Fix Blue field eoach Immediately after the youngsters marked up their sixth successive victory over Virginia teams the town council met and ordered the Increase for Coach Fix John Marshall Crushed 39-7 Lateral Passes Bewilder Local Invaders By Dick Ferguson PETERSBURG Nov Petersburg Crimson Wave Is still riding high Today at Cameron Field the big red team washed over John Marshall for a 39-1 score before a holiday crowd of 3500 Howard Smith proved to be "the Mg tad wolf as he thrice took the baU for a Journey over John Marshall goal line Tipton ran a close second for honors by scoring two touchdowns and making two extra points Motley broke into the scoring column by making a touchdown and an extra print while Zeto who entered the game In the second half made the remaining touchdown John Marshall lone tally was registered by Woodson who caught Miller's pass Buhramn made the extra point from placement Jariice Outplayed From start to finish and In every phrase of the game John Marshall was outplayed Petersburg lateral pass which was usually tossed by Motley to Smith or Tipton wu the thorn In MarshaUlte flesh Twice in the opening quarter and once In tha third quarter Motley tosses to Smith reg istered a touchdown Petersburg first tcuibdown came as the result of Usher fumble in the opening few minutes of play Petersburg recovered the ball on John Marshall 25-yard line and before the Justices could compose themselves Smith had received a lateral from Motley and ran twenty flve yards to score Pritchard kick from placement wu wide About the middle of the ume period MUler fumbled on John Marshall 40-yard stripe and Petersburg recovered Smith hit the line for a first down the next play wu the ume lateral from Motley to Smith Smith raced the distance to score Tipton crashed through the line for the extra print Late In the first quarter Miller tried to punt for John Marshall and tha tall hit Dick Ames on the tack and Petersburg recovered on John Marshall 10-ysrd marker Motley again tossed to Smith and the score stood 20-9 in favor of the Wave After running wild In the first quarter to make seven first downs Petersburg wu held to two tn tha sec Continued on Page 4 Column 1 By Charles Houston It wu Armistice Day yesterday That la it wu Armistice Day for everybody except a little band of fighting Tiger Cube from Hampden-Sydney who would have no part of It The Tigers wen beaten 13-0 by a University of Richmond football team that hu come along and from not to far back like nobody business but the Tigen lost It fighting And when Richmond made a gesture of mag-namlnlty offering an armistice by pushing in a bunch of reserves these Tigers merely snarled far sterner foe-men And they got them pronto don mind being their actions seemed to uy when the reserves of Richmond suited the second half "but we want to be beaten by the test you've got" Just then Hal White of Chau City broke through with a 20-yard smash far Hampden-Sydney only earned first down that served an exclamation point to round out the remark and In came the regulars to relieve the and the worrying Richmond supporten Richmond Work Smooth That the kind' of game It was Richmond attack wu smooth except for the fumbUtla which may be attributed In part to the effect of the chill hi the wind that made blanket so comfortable among the near-5000 customers and guests mostly the In the Richmond Stadium Richmond put on two drives that were not marred by fumbles and they soared twice Other incipient threats came to naught through Interceptions and and rigorous play on the part of the boys from Death Valley Hampden-Sydney never really threatened They drove once as far Richmond 27-yard line having started from the 33-yard line when Richmond made one of Its half dozen fumbles But they couldn't go for and they didn't go often It wu a punty sort of game there Continued on Page 3 Column 3 Bucknell Ends Furman's Unbeaten String 120 LEWISBURO PA Nov Bucknell trampled Furman two-year winning football streak Into the ground of Lew is burg Stadium today and charged over for two touchdowns and a 13-to-0 victory With freezing temperatures and a tnontorm nuking play difficult tor the Southerners the Bison turned tack a Furman threat In the first period and were never again in dan tec The second period was only a few minutes old when Bucknell opened a stubborn down-field drive with Peters and Joe Reznichak dividing the ball -carrying assignment to the 1-yard line from where Peters charged over with the first score Reznichak again was the main offer si ve cog in the Bucknell machine second scoring trive gaining most of the ground to the 10-vard line from where Eddie Myers ace Bison tall carrier circled left end for the score That wqp in the third period and marked the close of scoring for the cor tart Cadets Beaten By Kercheval Kentucky Star Leads Cats to 21-6 Triumph LEXINGTON KY Nov AV-Today same between the University of Kentucky Wildcat and the Virginia Military Institute Cadet wu a personal triumph for Ralph Kercheval the Wildcat great fullback who 1 rounding out his third year a Kentucky star Kentucky wan 21 to 8 Kercheval scored 15 points including two touchdowns and three prints after His first touchdown wu made in the first erter when he sprinted thirty-two yards to the goal line His second wu made In the fourth quarter on a ten-yard run around left end after Pug Bach Kentucky halfback had put the tall within scoring distance with a 40-yaid return of a punt Bach scored the Wildcats third touchdown In the fourth quarter circling right end and sprinting down the sidelines to the goal' In addition to place-kicking the point after each of Ms own touchdowns Kercheml also connected for the extra print after had scored He hu not missed a point after touchdown since the middle of the 1932 season Cadet March Tallin I tone touchdown came In the second quarter After Kercheval had punted sixty yards started a march from Its own 31-yard line that finally sent Smith over right tackle for the score on a 2-yard dash During this march the Cadet completed time forward and forward-lateral passes that were good for a total of fifty yards with Smith touring and Law on the receiving end of the longest attempt thirty-one yards Smith place-kick try for the point after touchdown wu smothered Kercheva -ained 103 yards from scrimmage In seventeen attempts for an average of aix yards a try threw three pastes to Kentucky ends that were good for sixty-two yards and received two passes irorn Ayers Kentucky halfback for twenty-two yards' gain For the Cadets Smith did most of Continued on Page 5 Column I Many Beaten 6 to NORFOLK VA Nov tAV-The Maury High School Commodores 1933 State conference champions fumbled sway thrlr chances of capturing the 1933 title today they dropped a 8 to 0 gam to Glass High School of Lynchburg Eatt Georgia 7 Vale Army 37 Harvard Duke 3 Maryland Baltimore 32 Bridgewater Brown IS Mrw But-knelt 13 eurman Columbia 44 Navy I'nrdhim S4 Ohio state ze Penn Pitt 7 Puquene Princeton 1 Hart mouth B'et Chester Aihrutit Trinity 7 Amheret Ruslan College a tlllaneva Detroit to I at nolle rroridentc Bote Colby ii a Colgate 72 Olds' Northern Gettysburg Id Dickinson 7 preset 7 nu-quenannu 8 A Moravian imam 55 Hart irk Itavertord 14 Hamilton 7 Buffalo a Hooart lebanoa 37 Jamals 7 Cut gen su Laiayete 413 B' Maryland 54 loyoia (Bat) Maine I MnwdMn Hidr Cron 21 -Manhattan Mtdrilehury Norwich la mile 1 Mt at Mary a Springfield a New Hamp Arnold 13 NorHieatern 11 Penn Male 4U Johns Hnpkin Rhode lland 20 Conn Slate 1 PL Anslem 7 Slate Pt Joseph 7 Hash College Clarkson 7 Pt lawrence 7 Thomas 13 Geneva Pt- John (Annili Pwarthmore Tuft IS Boston I 1 Hum -13 Rochester Pt NHrhaels 13 Vermont Rensselaer Hrmikly Millennia Muhlenberg tatrmnunt Ohki Baltimore lalrmnnt Ohio tnl Morcrtier I owell 11 PMpprnsbnrg I (sinus i Hettinnv a Marshall 31 Bridgewater a Heihany Marshall I Trra a a a a Football Scores Local I Richmond Hsmp-Sjdney Stale Wash dr Lee ttrstnla Langley lid ('Milord 7 I'mory A Hrnry 25 A Mary Tar Seaman 13 King Shenandoah 1 Armstrong 8 PREP SCHOOLS reieohurg to John Maranall 7 Uittan torse Irvington 11 Mnr tl'hv) 11 Hampton 12 Greenbrier XX hartottesville lyiM-hbnrg Manry Konnotui 7 lrimoiilh Mannton 31 t'Mihiirne Danville 7 Hopewell Bluet leld 3 Salem 9 FRESHMEN i I A Loufeburg South Alabama 37 Virginia Poly Kentucky St 1 Hofford II Clem-on Anburn 57 Oglrthurpe Georgia Tech IS Florida Tennessee 35 Millppt Tulane Mate North Carolina to Bake Forrri kiraih Carolina II Plate Vanderbilt -7 Sennnee Davidson 54 The Citadel Merrrr 7 Chatlammca pa a Southwestern I nlnn Col 10 Trab Hants (lurk in a Terh Murray a Iran Terh Iloaard Kprlnghlll Miami (Fla) 35 laml-vllle Met-nn 73 southern Kentucky a Morehead Centre Hlrm-South H1 Kentucky II Grnrartunn CoL Anhurn 97 Oglethorpe a 1 nlnn (Ky) fit Tranaylvanls 0 Centenary 47 nlnn (lennl- In Normal '13 MM Trh a La to I a CM a Cumberland 13 Mid Tenn Teh 6 Boilermakers Crush Luckless Notre Dame 19 to 0 Gigolo Strectt Up Is Victorious In Feature of Middlehurg llaccs Gigolo shewing the gameness that la noteworthy In the line of stayers' and then founded by the great Fair Play broke on top led over the first fence and withstood in gallant fashion the challenge of Mamator during the last mile Gigolo won with daylight between him and the pounding Minister turning the three and a half miles In 1A7 2-5 The Homeland two and a half miles over brush In which a field of five faced the flag wu won by a brat by Sun Wrack owned by Stephen pie Tigers and then eleven to two periods momentum plugs of breaking gains against a but aa began by the SOUTH BEND IND Nov (Tt Darnels football fortunes rose to new hopes today and then crashed to the lowest depths in five years as Purdue horde of Boilermakers won a 18-to-0 triumph over the luckless Rambler before 35000 spectators Fighting the tattle of their Uvea the forces of Coach "Hunk" Anderson absorbed their worst licking since 1928 ss the Bollermakrrs barks converted an Irish aerial thrust Into one score and then laid down a barrage of passes to turn the game into a rout Not since the Sktbos from Carnegie Tech defeated the Ramblers 37 to 0 MIDDLEBrRG Nor Gigolo the brown eon of Mad Hatter wu the winner In the tight three-horse race for the Frnn Smith Jr Challenge the feature of the card In tha Middleburg Fall Hunt tiere today Owned by Mrs Vadim Makaroff of Ovster Bay Long Island and with William Strectt up Gigolo came home ahead of Robert Young Maws tor owner up second and Ran- dolph Llpan Lad third Only three horses accepted the issue from a field of ten which had been nominated Continued on Page I Column Continued on Page 5 Column 1 Continued on Page 3 Column I.

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