The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 08, 1929, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 9
ALUMNI TEAM TO
SIT ON BENCH
(Continued From Page 1)
The other team, ten years younger,
made a name in the state in 1912.
Alfred H. Von Kolnitz of Charleston
was its captain, and Burnett Stoney
played left guard on the varsity. The
lineup: Luke W. Hill, left end; John
Mills, left tackle; A. Burnett Stoncy,
left guard; Edward H. Girardeau, center;
Jerry C. Porter, right guard; Daniel
M. Avinger, right tackle; G Waldeck
Sligh, right end; William H. Harter,
quarter back; Alfred H. Von Kolnitz,
left half; Daniel Heyward, right
half; and Edward P. Passailaigue, full
back. L. L. Langston, Marcus Boulware,
Hazel Bristow, and others were
substitutes.
It was this team that ran over Clemson
in 1912 and sent the Tiger reeling
back to his mountains with tlje
minor count of a 22 to 7 score. VoilKolnitz,
considered one of the best
backs ever to play on a Carolina team,
took the ball across for two of his
team's touchdowns.
The 1902 team under Mr. McCutchcon
won their game by a 12 to 6 score
under the tutelage of two Virginians,
C. R. Williams, head coach; and Christie
Benet, assistant. The contest took
place on the old Elmwood fair
grounds, and was followed by the
celebrated student riots in which
Carolina students lined their historic
walls in the face of armed Clemson assaulters.
v.a.o.
BAND SHOWS TO
GOOD ADVANTAGE
(Continued from Page 1)
"A college or university band can
and should be the greatest asset from
an advertising standpoint of its institution.
Our band has set out to
achieve this goal this year and with
our unqualified support can develop
into one of the outstanding college
bands of the South."
The personnel of the University
Band is as follows:
Director, Dean Olsen.
Drum Major, Claude Dunbar.
Clarinets: Leseman, Ritch, Dcwitt,
Hamilton, Calder, Meeks, Brunson,
Wingard.
Trumpets: Lambert, Young, Wood,
Gaddy, Sweatman, Turner.
Mellophone: Rogers, Moon, Horton.
Euphonium: Richardson.
Trombone: Walter, Mance, Bauknight.
Sousaphone: Browne, Powell.
Saxophone: Krawcheck.
Field Drum: Black, Spann, Chase,
Brubaker.
Bass Drum: Madden.
PALMETTO ELEVENS
(Continued from Page 6)
against Virginia's Cavaliers on Melton
Field, but their defense was woefully
weak and the eleven from the Old
Dominion broke a two year winning
streak of the Birds to win, 6 to 0.
Crip Rhame and Eddie Zobel were
the big guns in a Carolina offensive
that netted something like fifteen first
downs while Bryant and Thomas, were
the 'backfield luminaries for Virginia.
BRITTLE LINES
Both teams exhibited brittle forward
walls for the edification of local
pigskin followers with Carolina's line,
perhaps, being a little the more brittle.
Furman'8 Purple Hurricane, sometimes
good, sometimes bad, and doped
to hold Georgia to a close score, was
no match for the Bulldog eleven and
lost by the one sided count of 27 to
0 in the first game played in the new
Georgia stadium.
Citadel's Cadets continued her show
of power by easily turning back Oglethorpe,
conqucrers of Georgia the
previous week end, at Charleston, 18
to 0.
POWERFUL BACKS
Gray, Mcintosh, Chapman, and
Brasington formed a backfield of
PICKING THEM OUT
This department picks the following
winners for the games
this week. We only missed three
last week.
Wake Forest over Elon
Army over Davidson
Ga. Tech over North Carolina
Clemson over N. C. State
High Point over Newberry
Carolina over Maryland
Furman over Presbyterian
V. M. I. over Citadel
Erskine over Wofford
Alabama over Chattanooga
Yale over Georgia
Florida over Auburn
Tennessee over Mississippi
Minnesota oVer Vanderbilt
Virginia over Swarthmore
Pennsylvania over V. P. I.
? #
powerful runners that was entirely toi
much for the Georgia Petrels.
Erskine's strong band of Seceder
outplayed a heavier High Point elever
25 to 0, in a game that afforded Park
in son, Reid, Hambright, et cetera t
strut their stuff from one side of th
field to the other.
The Terriers of Wofford, after dc
fcating one Tarheel eleven the wee
end previous, reversed the order an
lost to another one Saturday, droppin;
a 7 to 0 count to Davidson.
Newberry's lowly Redskins, bal
tered from pillar to post since th
opening game of the season, displaye
a reversal of form to hold the Moun
tain Bears of Lenoir-Rhyne to a score
less tie at Newberry.
AILILM
CO.UV PAT.O".
WRATH tR?
Alligator is
ono ia /
snappy outergarment?and
you can 1
slosh around in it all \JI
day and novor get
wet. Turns rain*
wind, dust.
Models for :'ivS'':-v'v::-::V J
Men and Women ' 4 ;v:
$7.50 to $25
the alligator CO.
St. Louis
TheyVe I
New! ALL IG A1
Protect trouser legs??all
J $2 and $3.50 a pair
"keep dry from
||| :
Turn 1
If's just 1
makes Ol
No one cigarett
the heat-treatt
For heat-treati
It has been us
cigarette-make
tobacco
ButOLD GOLD
artificial treatr
Urally good tob
Better Tobaccos
On your Radio. OLD GOLD?PAUI
I ? i i
? BIDDIES READY
s
l? (Continued from Page 6)
0 and high school gridders scrapping
e for berths on the team, and that in
the private scrimmages held from
time to time between the rats and
k their elders the former have ably held
d their ground.
g MANY STARS
When the Biddies scamper on the
green turf of Melton field for the first
e time Saturday afternoon, there will be
d counted among their ranks such fori
nier celestial luminaries in the realm
i- of prep school football as Harry Freeman,
Joe Benton, Moon Musselwhite
jATTCOID
Popular- I yOt1 | ;
TOR STEPPERS
(Pat. App. For)
colors to match all coats.
Ask to see them
1 HEAD TO FOOT
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the light
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d Gold gentle to the
:e- maker has any monopoly on
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ng is neither new nor exclusive,
ed for years by practically all
rs to "set" and sterilize their
? S goodness does not depend on
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make them smoother and
L WIIITEMAN HOUR. Paul Whlteman, with hl?
and Herman Arcnson of Riverside
Military Academy, and Bailey Atwcll,
former Virginia prep star.
From the high schools of the Carolinas
and the neighboring states there
will be Martin of Asheville, DcVaga
of Charlotte, Fleming of Spartanburg,
C. W. Smith of Batesburg-Leesville,
F,tters, Gaskin, Woodruff, Gilmore,
and Fellers of Columbia, and Drafts
of Batesburg-Leesville.
With these men stepping out in
front of the P. C- attack and with the
forty-five other Biddies holding their
breath for a chance to strut their
class in the first game of the year,
little or no trouble should be felt in
battling the Presbyterians to a proverbial
"fare you well."
Jfif Recommended by the
b University of
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birds leave thursday
The Gamecock varsity squad
will entrain at 4:00 o'clock
Thursday afternoon for College
Park, Md., where they will meet
the University of Maryland
squad on Saturday afternoon.
Every loyal Carolina student
should he at the Seaboard station
to give the team a good
send off, and show them that
the students arc counting on
them to win.
Go to the station ready to
yell, sing, and in every way,
show your spirit. Fight Gamecocks,
and beat Maryland!
South Carolina
ITER'S
IGIATE
is W/A aKiH
use in
Deludes /ftXgji
phy and ^HN
ble paper. Wftr
rite for fJH
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Hi BF
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ch" by Mother
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,d gold's sales
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ough in a carload"
. M., Eastern Standard Time'