Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1950 — Page 14

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i ———— : . ‘

Ratterman Denies Quitting _

NE - By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor SOME SPORTS stories aren't always 100 per gent true Att i C even if they do make interesting reading. . . . Occasionally, dC : sold they're not true at all as writers go in over their heads to ; : turn out an attractive “feature” that will command an eye- Filipski Supplies appealing headline. "2d Half Punch + For example, George Ratterman, the ‘New York pro- ‘For West Point

fessional Yankees’ r quar-| : S80 star q other Triple-A leagues, . .. How-| By RUSS GREEN

berause the coach wouldn't play AA and IL — . him ahead of Johnny Lujack.

New World-Tel d Sun Skipper of the Chicago. White NEXT OPPONENTS IRE Eon ad B Sox, helped ruin the Chicago | New Mexico at SRMY NT

Tina td +» As Detroit catcher, he day and popped the question. ’ “I can De a eait doing batted .in four runs in the that!” George said, “The only “¢venth and title game... It | time I told Leahy anything was "2% 8 9-to-3 Tiger triumph, | when I advised him I was leaving ‘school! to -get married and

26. games.

That was after Hatterman was hail suspended for forgetting to ob- ball

F layer to hit the j 3 po serve Notre Dame's campus cur- pa) majoras in Sprints,

Goodman is ® backs, added that, “the ILeahy- greatest of the lot.” Jia PL Lujack story is absurd. and the first base. outfield, secon base

, E r is cis coach would have been crazier shortstop, it's all thio same tu far off his customary pace,

“Leahy is a good friend of mine.

Notre Dame for.law school, he ,D#ker: Bresnahan was the ver- missed in a knockdown and puts me on the coaching staff. _”satlle king . .. He starred in out battle. _ *I have yet to ‘tell him off’ three positions, catch, infield A. fast charging Army about anything.” i ati >,

writers neglect to check the facts, han was so fast and alert as a tween the teams. which A

nk... [There's always somebody used him as leadoff in the New supply.

"departed in the spring of 1947.'ball weekly, came up with this four short of Lynn Dorsett + + « He now weighs 185. . . . squelcher: Gabby Street, the Ol'|tercollegiate record. Don Shi the few Sarge, who hasbeen assisting in intercepted another. or: ettermen in Ss story. broadcasting the St. Louis Cardi-| Completes Only 3 nal games for several years, told |

Frank Tripucka at first, and then

i behind Lujack, when that ace re- | tumed from service. any Cardinal ball club I ever

® x {knew.” . . | Gabby started his re-!

| ks by saying that he “nev When Indianapoli sofi- | ar y saying never : i ad po 8 Slab a \second-guessed a manager, but.” mastery in the third period. Danny O'Connell, the Pitts- °° Street rated the 1931 Cardinal

Penn's second touchdown. With the score 7-8 at the

passed his Army draft “physical” they were sort of upset. / as + +. With O'Connell gon. If SPOTts editor of the St. Louis WeAVer pass. . means that Pittsburgh wil | POSt-Dispatch, to observe, “Gabby | Bagnell Scores

‘the Bues probably ‘will have to [OF sixth place.” score. 3 ; hang on to Rojek, ne |. Penn's second touchdown

Army 46. The Quakers, their offense. ‘bottled, rolled on

grapevine,. Al Lopez the ‘Indianapolis Indians’ pilot, fsn’t en-

| Trib@sters and Pirates still are on] MANCHESTER, Nov. 4 (UP)— left side for his 63-yard run. friendly business terms and with Wilmington's Quakers scored an| ere a player working agreement still, easy” 30 to 8 victory over Man-

the .. Lopez-to-Pittsburgh story: . MANCHESTER at North Central. + 40 Omission of Pirate Manager Bill chester today, for the Spartans’ Frankfin, 7

the ‘explanation that it was an in the second } J ¥ : : period and 30 yards TR ps ~~ oversight. + + However, it was in the third by Paul Breuleux and’ HANOVER at Wabash T° reported it had been approved by Dan McCoy. and. a’ two-yard TD|. Aeron .at FRANKLIN.

| fore it was used. . that'Meyer won't be around next pass from Dick Supinger to Dick from the opening “kickoff

~ wagén.

points. :

Tis Army Precision Tops Penn, 28 To 13 Fable Debunked (iets Stoy Butler Set For Homecoming TiltFfumbles Mark

nein Bagnall fir | 0 Iowa Victory | 2 1)

~terback, laughs over the POP- ever, according to major. league United Press Sports Writer ular fable that he “told off” scouts: the league-wide caliber of| PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 4—PolCoach Frank Leahy at Notre ball on the coast does not meas- ished Army, held to a one point Dame and left the Irish campus Ure up to the standard in the lead. in the first half, rolled with. . 's a z Crisp precision and artistry to! Sports Writer Joe King of the PAUL RICHARDS, the new three second-half touchdowns: to-

huddle with Ratterman the other Cubs in the 1945 World Series. (day to defeat Pennsylvania 28-13, and run its unbeaten string tor J

Ge { Lightning fast Gene FiMfiski, a « «. Paul's four runs were lightly regarded sophgwi6re from | enough. Sacramento, Cal, ~upplied the!

0 2 8 = second half pungh for the Cadets join the pros. < BILLY GOODMAN is being by skipping i#frough Penn's big

ed as about the best utility line for 29 ahd 73 yard touchdown

eZering along because record-bust-ing Francis (Reds) Bagnell was

a” 8 8 8 stopped -on Penn's 22 for the only Every year when I go back to INBASEBALL'S old days, scoring opportunity the Cadets

ag and outfield, finally winding up which held Penn to 156 yards on “Pebunk” is a coined word Aas one of the greatest catchers the ground and 44 through the but it's useful at times when of all time... Fact is, Bresna- air, measured the difference 'be-

before = shooti the breeze in base runner, that John McGraw galazy of power backs could not

" at Notre Dame, and 160 when he SPORTING NEWS, the base- tain's un-intercepted streak at 88, Bob Clodfelte, a fullback and the Bears’ ’s In-] = - ; =

Army hegan demonstrating its

Cadets scored the first two times

| This prompted J. Roy Stockton, SeYen-vard Bobby Blaik to’ John oy; homeceming crowd of 38,000, Pled. Indiana Central recovered. armor. for its Knights of the grid-

Te | : 3 » 3 : * = @ - » set up by Lou Roberts’ recovery and with Nagle pitching three Indiana. Central's chance to sal- stay i its firet wictory in six . af y . i : : : . : 1 ‘ § § " ATE . stay, although. the. ambit sits. first xictory. X81 FS. 408s ACCORDING to baseball's Wilmington Tops “<ot-Gi-Stephenson's-fumble-on the touchdown’ strikes. the. Huskers—yyps He CANE WAS gone With ter ulcome means. as. much to the. 3 nbitious-its first wictory in si

_ tract with the Indians, but the *- found the same hole in the Penn to run from t

in effect. . .. Here's what revived NEXT OPPONENTS Hanover Clubs >

yer’ Ea Greyhounds, Burleson showing ry: and-Ind} o ! Eo ochurecuthmimg oy Duce pe on [1 SN gumen this ses. FRANKLIN. Now. d-an-[ Reymoids Hus 08 pointe [UO BUSS wing canteriury and Indians Conta MERITS -8° 500. ’ ers came back to sc : a > * . OFS DO - er's P xploded for six - ) Score seversl . : 3 g ticket plans for 1951 was-met with) Touchdown sprints of 58 yards touch ihe ay again on a sneak by Phil Klein > *¢V®"®l line smashes and a courage on the field. Here was y :

touchdowns today. to pummel

President John Galbreath ~and plunge by Charles Jones gave the Franklin, 40 to 7, in a Hoosier Missouri's touchdowns with John General Manager Roy Hamey be- visitors a 20 to 0-lead before the college conference football game. Gloriosco and Klein adding o

ne - . «+ « Indicating-home club scored on a 15-yard: ~The Panthers marched 75 yards each. Gloriosco kicked four extra Scoring Record to ] for! points, -

meas, : + « 80 the rumor factory Bauer in the end zone. But Bauer their. first tally, a 35-yard run by = Reynolds scored three. touch- oe opped back on the Lopez. band- fumbled but Jack Farling fell on Todd Ketley. Five other Han- downs for the Huskers. one on a! ‘DES MOINES 1a. Nev—4 (UP) . . E the ball and_was credited with overians shared the scoring, and 35-vard pass from Nagle and -—Drake Halfback Johnnv Bright » » se we : Inv Ps oct ] ; INDIANA is on- Ohlo State's the score. Guy Andress booted four extra

a

(Over Gophers

Straight Loss

By ED STEEVES United Press Sverts Writer MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 4—Jowa . won a fumble-marred 13 to 0 foot-

n————

§ rs a hal : | NEXT OPPONENTS 4 | Illinois at TOWA. LF » } MINNESOTA at Michigan State.” —

imate, Minnesota, today before 161,217 homecoming fans.” The unimpressive victory was ithe Hawkeye's second ‘conference triumph this season, and it left the Golden Gophers winless in six games. This. is Minnesota's |worst season since 1920 when it lost six games and won one. It was Towa's ball game in all departments, but either team could have run up sizeable scores ‘if it had been able to hold on to the seemingly greased pigskin at

ages. . . . ‘As Manager Stev "lpskils 29-y } H few. O'Neill put it, “I oF are oy. . Fiigski's 29-yard canter gave the right times. Fach team fums George, who 18 one of the pro i... put n years of ApfMy a. two-touchdown working hled four times J rs dian : : B baseball I have seen quite a fewsfhar yin over a Penn eleve t ay league's ace pass pitching quarter- utility men gf Tharp n stag- Faske Scores

With three minutes and 22 secs onds remaining in the first period Jerry Faske rammed through

to listen to, it than I would have Goodman's life. .. Me kept right Line Tells Tale ! genter for lowa's first touchdown been to tell it. on hitting and pped the 1950 ‘His second came five minutes from the one-foot line, The play “Rujack was older than 1 was, season by wi ng the American before the end to put the clincher was set up by Don Roédel’s wobhs= and much more™ experienced. League batting championship. on the game after Army had been bly punt which Iowa -fook on

Minnesota's 33. The Hawks passed “ito the 11 and there Faske broke

drag- through ‘for a first and goal on | the *one-foot line. . I Bil xeichar / line, Big Bill Reichardt, who was

the victor'’s offensive mainstay all day; missed the kick. { Jowa's second score came fn [the last seconds of the third period after Dave Drahn had tossed a spectacular pass to end Dick

rmy’s

pe : § 7 ~ ’ : a ’ . “ ; Meyers, good for 40 yards to | argund wpd'll spot untruths, York Giants batting order . . . Herb Johnson was the kingpin : : AT ret an I E = ra a ee : A catcher hitting first was in-an Army plot against Bagnell,| he faclbal, warriors hens will be a action next Saturday in the Butler Bowl when the Bulldogs entertain Washington ‘of St. Louis lind; EE aoiays later, R LRMAN weighed only really something special. He . collared two of Bagnell's in their annual homecoming. That's Butler's Substitute Quarterback Ronald Hallam on the left heaving the leather. On the ri 1 ares v 17 v : # pounds when he matriculated . a passes to bleak the Penn Q 9 . e right, carry-. | around right end for 17 yards into

cap- ing the mail, is the Bulldogs’ halfback Flavian Weidekamp. In the top inset is John Stein, Washington's left guard; on the left is the end zone. This time leading ground gainer; and at the bottom is their left tackle George Clyde. Reichardt's kick was good. - - . os : in - - Fumble Three Threats

|" The Gophers had the ball on

> Oklahoma To S 'Towa's 32 in the first period, on | its 20 in the second and on its

"Nebraska Edges Knights Edge IC, 7-6.

The carrot top, who had lifted

--football, basketball, baseball and'g Joplin Hot Stove Lea : 16 : K p R d 1 : 19 In the Jourtr Each ume. the gue gath- 4 ¥ Cc Yonhers jos f tennis. lering recently that “Eddie a Penn to ranking. contention = Missouri 40-34 ee eco ; ean Colorado 27-18 Gophers lost the ball on fumbles, : ’

George is a product of Cincin-| qian’ sheer ability, completed only three of They also had a scoring chance natf's Xavier High School. didn mage the Car, of 11 passes. He carried 27 times| 57-Yard Pass Play and Syrek’s in he Sil winutes of he gave On the N.D. gridiron, Ratter-| wo for a net of 63 yards, but never-| . - v when Gary Johnson and Kerm man worked behind Quarterback, ore qord, SEAN continued, “The |1C, 1¢. 70, 78 of the final 20 Lead Changes Hands Kick Spell Defeat for Greyhounds Westerns Give Kiefsaas carried to Iowa's 25

hustle. They just didn't look like Y2TdS. including the score in Five Times in Game (Continued From Page 13) statue of liberty: Halfback Tom Sooners a Scare Biter Dia Wheaton intercepted

tee Fn : r Central's forwards were charging Barnes then Jost 14 yards on a Drahn’s pass. But Iowa held on LINCOLN, Neb, 7.4 JP) b 7 “ os ' 5 LI JLN, Neb., Nov. 4 (UP) hard and bottling up the Canter- reverse and Canterbury took over BOULDER, Solas Nov. i 4 BP Sows, : seed Sh aye ‘bury backs. The hard work of to end the threat. <lahoma carved the 27th no 1e Hawks missed one scoring spurred by sparkling sophomo ; in i : rac r » chance i ; p The Bobby Roo tre po the Central linemen paid off. Swayne took .to the air, but IN IS urheaten ror ord here today chance 10: the rst period snd f Fro a a _. Courtney, a much-markeéd man, found nothing in it but a colq Put hustling Colorado made the three in the second, but fumbles of Fran Nagle, overcame .a‘' 14

half, 'he Nebraska Cornhuskers,

art Ney as i vert . ~ ‘fighting Sooners work for a 27 to and interceptions cost them poss ; ; they got the ball. One was on , oo 0° Missouri, W253 hit-hard on his 12-yard line wind. Canterbury had melted [8 - o * p burgh Pirates’ shortstop, had team as the best he éver saw and | i point deficit to trim. Missour], \ Gy. ald a 18 Big Seveén victory sible. touchdowns in all but on y ' 41-yard march climaxed by a 4, They played before a seil- In" the second quarter and fum--Swayne’s pass key into defensive 18 Big § etory.. § IWR e the 1938 Browns as the worst, 11° 40-34. They played before a sell 1 P : A homecoming crowd of 29,500, instance. :

The Greyhounds had it on the 10 iron. Indiana Central was stopped. {Ne biggest ever to witness a foot- Iowa had only a 14 to 13 edge

; hw v > ball game in Colorado's Folsum in first downs, but its net yardage in two line plays. Then Quarter- Three-hundred people shivered. 8 P Q | peop glasses, Stadium, watched ‘spellbound as was 254 to 122 on the ground and

The lead changed hands five jtimes as the two teams rolled up

E b 0) and Eddie Dyer might get to- Less than three minutes later, 1054 yards, with Nebraska getting "ACK Ray Swayne took to the air, wiped breath-laden io as 57 5 4 i : oe anotod Jutiel dor |gether sometime and Es he Gil Reich returned -a punt 17 t0 552 of the total. >a BEING heaving a 10-yarder to End Walt huddled under Army blankets fhe, unseidos Bafaoes unleashed 57 to 45 in the air, Ms we Hoosier Judiase it happened that .the great 1931 Penn's 43. Filipski ran 8. Then ne. The Tigers, flashing surprising Stahlhut for the touchdown. just to watch a small college aw ene Be ie st bend Pittsh h Dov on landing Stan Rojek, whom !°am suddenly fell apart in 1932, sliced off tackle, ducked three offensive power, roared to two Got Cold Feet game. But it's really not much y Fisourg owns

n . ADA; ent ; hcnz Wo different from the big stadium lead. iresin Connell replaced. , ,.. Now. fnishing in a tie with the Giants Penn tacklers .and went 29 "to early touchdowns. . But midway End .Joe-Hurrle must. have got crowds. The boys ‘as much ~~ But -the- Sooners roared pack. W._Virginia, 21 to. 7

in the ‘second period, Nebraska's cold feet. His attempt to tie the

Ss powerf z fense ig ith i x was powerful ground offense ignited game with a place kick fell short. cheers with as much gusto’ The quarter that put them ahead:to The University of Pitsburgh won

when they're hurt. The crowd With two tallies in the second PITTSBURGH, Nov. 4 (UP)— : players. neophytes of the Big Seven never day beating West Virgina 21-7 be= wind that carried the oblate ' g, don't tell -coaches’ like Joe SaVe-up. Oklahoma's 27 victories fore 6125 fans in Pitt stadium spheroid short of its destiny. Bartkietwicz it doesn’t matter. Joe ‘5 NOW a modern record. Sparked by Fullback Jos Capp

a went ahead 33-27 at the start of the the fourth périod.

tirely out. of the - Pittsburgh (ground to the 20. Bagnell ran for) Minutes later, Reynolds added Tt ] . L shut “7 2 § later, ie) ; 1e game settled down to good, 4, rd ; sier C Oklah 3 rz Cli Ar- who-raced 57 yards "OUg 8 managerial picture. . , . It's true Manchester 20-6 |7T and 4, and finally for 5 to score. the clincher and the game's great- hard Sams sof football 8 fights as hard in the Hoosier Con- oma, led by Claude Ar- wh ed 57 yards through a sea the Senor is signed to a 1951 con- y { That was all untll Filipski est play. Trap

: d Il the rest yaronce as he ever did in the Big nold and Billy Vessels, ran the of mud for one score and plunged ns when he tried of the half. Canterbury was In 19 at Indiana. Ard brother Walt, SCOTe to 20-6 in the third period over from the three-yard line for Hh aoa h TL 33 Ba possession-on-its-23-when the sec- the head man —worries as much-2nd-added another touchdown in another, Pitt kept comand-of.the "low: head reversed his f : ear-old ond period ended. about the injured Tackle Renaldo the final quarter to ice the game. game until” the closing minutes | and Was tore ; 8 is ield twice) The teams battled on ‘even terms gavenelli as he did about Purdue Colorado also scored touchdowns when West Virginia's attack bes 35 Fos Orsec back to his-ewn through the third quarter. An IC when he and Joe were playing In each bf the last two quarters. gan to click too late. . ~aced by a half dozen tack-iqrive carried to the Capterbury together. i : a

lers, he ‘slithered through and» y ; ne . scored standing up. 20-—-as the quarter ended” *Thén The crowds are small when

courage galore in Canterbury 7,

el opin with less than two minutes left . y p o y a : but Nebraska rode out its lead. Jngiana, Ce ntral g . = . i Ed Stephens scored three of Ends Roberta: Stahinay. Hots. Hurrle : YOUR 1 les — i M : J ; =

Tackles rtinez, Kincaide, Sai, Gi. Schroeder, Spilly =R. Schroeder, Robinson, StrachMartix

“oe on, | HEADQUARTERS

4 rown Barnes, Preston,

ity - FOR HUNTERS!

Acton; Shaw ger, Cox. Gerth C r, Brummett,

four éxtra points. Ron charged and threw to within 17 tew added: one 15-vard jaunt vards of the all-time total offense _

Score by periods; E-the next Manchester .....

« +5 Purdue plays the Bucks in | BOSTON, Nov. 4 (UP) : : a h a . Ny 4 .4.(L A bull- op . 52,58 and '54. . , , In 1952, dozing 75-vard gallop by Sopho- Garibaldi Billed

Indlana and Purdue meet Ohio ‘mare Fullback Bam Pinc : ’ " “AF h § ino and a : Stile on _succeksive Saturdays. field goal by specials: runs FOr Match Here Bept. 27-and Oct. 4; both thts Plomaritus in the last period Rave amar Sass : In Columbus, : ; Boston University a 18 (on 14 °- *° =Pecial supporting bout:

owned by major clubs. , , . The tailback, passed and ran UCLA Program.

= four ears, . ' os d . 0 0 0 6— 4 Franklin's lone TD was a daz- and Fnd Frank Simon and Dick record today as Drake trounced —®: ELE bs Tr. fi Matar ar ot xi year, the Witmington co TIS 020 Zig Tun by Haiback Don Gines Regeier each—=peared a Nagle Bradley, 42. to "14, Delors. TH00 Svrek : : 2 -R et a : es Np 4 play at OSU en—Oet. . = who returned The Kickoff open- pass for the other markers: Rey- happy homecoming. fans Lon, Brwsanel The hunti k i$ 20.5. « In 1952, opening game, . : ng the second half 90 yard ids i fof 22 of the B EN {Jo INDIANA CENTRAL + "0 50. 08 » unfing season is-upon there; same in 1953 and 1954. | Boston VU. Wins, 16- 14 ns . eeoh : an! Jar 5 noias: accounted for 22 of the Bright piled up 436 yards while ¢ ANTERBURY © ? TO

clubs. . . . Four of the eight In- 10S ANGELES Nov. 4 (UP)— for one fall'with a.36G:minute time lege. terpational' League teams are Tiny Ted Narleski, 162-pound limit and completes a two-match = A glu gather

& Codst loop has a longer playing to a 20 to 13 victory over a stub-' The headliner will be an Aus- Field and wat¢hed the home team ) season (200 games in 1950) than born Oregon State football team tralian tag-teami match, with go down to its sixth consecutive the "AA and IL (both 154). . . . before a slim crowd of 15,323 tans Ray Eckert, St. Louis, and “Wild defeat after an opening game tie

Huskers'-points. making his totai figuring in all six Bulldog—touch- : vis Countrey. Stanihui_points | - us again-and your Merit Shoe .

. for the year 103. : downs, bulling for three and pass- > Umpire ES . ing for three mare. Smock. : fr Kenny Stores are ready to serve Teel : His 196 vards rushing and 240 . an + ; : Penn State Adds Woe g eer sieeeri } YOU. again, with-_ First 3

; Sessions - ya. PATE DOOR tet his year xtotat-Birsi—dewss vit- TO Boston College; 20-13 1 3171 jauds, just 18 sarda shy Loss

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3 ; i: : : En Ll STON N : the. all-time! £1187 oe erage rg = victory over William and Mary (P8 Ralph--Garibaidl—8t-Louls! BOSTON, Nov. 4 (UPj—Sephe-0f the a -Limet“niark of 1187 8 88. 97 SEVEN of the eight PACIRC Today bheéTare 3606 fans at Ss WER VYWalght, —ARAThst Whitey more Paul ARIere seorsq two yards Fet-by-Framiie-Sinkowieh, fas ihm tief Only, Coast Leagué teams are inde- Fenway Park. Whittler, - ‘Springfield, Ill,” has touchdowns in three minutes for Georgia, in 11 games during 1942. : g Fengently owned. , , . Seven of : tt been added to Tuesday night's Penn State today and turned im- Bright has played eight games ‘ ng va rie 353 268 : ® eight American Association : Armory wrestling card : pending defeat ‘into a 20 to, i3 With one.to go. . Yards: penali oh 5 é LE | E 4 { restlin ¢ 1 ( eat I a 2 ( £ ’ Yards penalized 65 45 teams are owned by big league UCLA Wins, 20-13 The Garibaldi-Whittler clash is victory over wi pe - - EA a

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ering of only §503 sat in a chill drizzle at ‘Braves

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stumbled t} Michigan tc The III Raklovits, v headed the late in the fore a blo

ground gain

Illinois mo the field on

~~ featuring the

. NEXT TLLINOIS at To Indiana at MIC

vits, to the where Quarte tossed a bask Tony Klimek ning score. That just a game. A 25 gained momer half and slow walk. The all-impc¢ gs the game t| decide the Big representative, kicking duel. The bone-ct weather that 0,000 shiveri gan’'s passing : fensive weapor With usually Orfmann’s ae grounded by “Michigan was efforts to ‘ever The Wolveri further than tl! tried desperatel Once behind, the strategy o get the Illini against the goa a fumble break But the Wo] the break they Illinois was jus fumbling away lead with som pole vault cha With its gro cold, Michigan kicking policy | 11 passes. But complete a s slippery pigskin numb fingers o ® Raklovits to way: for Illini ras, the gallopi sidelined with The slightly bi counted “for 122 Illinois relled u Michigan's ol 60 minutes of & in the opening Burly Wolve Johnson recove the Illini: 35; more than toc Wolverine fulll

“fumbled after—t

with center Joe So crippled wa end of the ga forced to play right halfback lad who didn't program: The victory only a 7 to-6 def marring its rec tories,

Ashland Ds Huntington,

WABASH, Inq Huntington dre: Ashland, O., tt NEXT Of _ HUNTINGTON at | seven touchdow Foresters, 45 to football game t Huntington sc dnd play of the Buzzard went ov ¥ard: line. The set up bv a 61 irom Buzzard -t« Jerry Fackler tallied . three Buckeyes.

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