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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1926)
T HE BATTALION AGGIES WIN OVER SOUTHWESTERN 35-0 (Continued from Page 8) also showed great headwork when he saved himself a 15-yard loss by throw ing a long forward pass from his own 5-yard line that was out of everybody’s reach, after a wild pass faom center. The Farmer’s registered a safety when Blackburn fumbled a poor pass from center and was smothered be hind his own goal line by the major ity of the Aggie forwardline. After this Southwestern fought stubborn ly and it was not until the beginning of the second quarter that the Aggies were able to make a touchdown. Hunt started the way by returning a punt 38 yards to the Southwestern 32-yard line where Burgess and Woodman carried it over for a touchdown. Hunt missed goal. The Aggies scored again when Young kicked out of bounds on his own 27-yard line. A pass, Hunt to Sikes gained 14 yards and Colgin and Woodman smashed over for another touchdown, Woodman carrying the ball over for the second time. Wood man kicked goal. A block kick which Red Petty re covered on Southwestern’s 7-yard line paved the way for the third and final Aggie touchdown of the quarter. Hunt and Woodman carried the ball to the 3-yard line where Colgin carried it over. Woodman again kicked goal. Southwestern fought hard all the way but they could not penetrate the Ag gie defense or hold them back. Early in the third quarter the Ag gies carried the ball to the Southwes tern 2-yard line but fumbled and the Pirates recovered. The halt was only momentarily, however, as Southwest ern punted out of danger and the Farmer’s started another drive that ended successfully when Burgess dove over for a touchdown. Hunt added the extra point. The final score came in the fourth quarter when Hunt carried the ball around Southwestern’s right end for a touchdown, after a series of dashes by the Aggie backfield that placed the ball in scoring distance. A high pass from center made it impossible to try for goal. A pleasant forprise for the Aggies was the offensive play of “Spike” Arnold and the defensive play of “Jelly Woodman.” Arnold reeled off gain after gain in a spectacular man ner, while Woodman smeared every pass that came anywhere near him. His offensive play was well up to his standard. Blackburn and Hallmark, the Pirate safety men, signaled for many fair catches during the game and used the wind to good advantage by kicking out of danger, only most of the time Hunt and Colgin would return them almost as far as they had been kick ed. Burgess, in the third quarter, made the only fair catch that an Aggie has made for a long time on Kyle Field. Summary: Line-up: A. and M. Position Southwestern Sikes Balleew L. E . Deiterich Duncan L. T. Wylie Hodges L. G. Watts •. Johns C. Rektoriclc Reynolds R G ^ Pro tt Hawkins 'luminating engineer measures light and aistriDvnon. i nose laboratory findings are practically applied to improve our everyday illumination. With the hemispherical integrator the Hit intensities and distribution. These la When the sun goes down The General Electric Company is the world’s largest manufacturer of incandescent lamps. And behind the G-E MAZDA lamps are vast research laboratories dedicated to cheaper and better electric illumination, and to the conservation of eyesight. A series of G-E adver tisements showing what electricity is doing in many fields will be sent on request. Ask for booklet GEK-1. GENERAL ELECTRIC More than 350,000,000 incandescent lamps, with a combined light of nine billion candlepower, make city streets, stores, and homes brighter than ever before. In bungalow or mansion, workshop or factory, dormitory or auditorium, there is no excuse for poor illumination. We have cheaper and better lighting in the electric lamp than ever before; for the dollar that bought 1,115 candlepower-hours of light with the carbon-filament lamps of 1886, now buys 16,200 candlepower-hours of light with the Mazda lamps. Not only more light, but correctly applied light, is the order of the day. The electric lamp, with its flameless yet highly concentrated light source, lends itself ideally to reflectors, shades, and screens. It is controlled light—safe light. And illumina tion becomes an exact science. During college days and in after life, correct light ing must ever be of paramount importance to the college man and woman. Good lighting is the worthy handmaiden of culture and progress. 44-S1DH ELECTRIC COMPANY SCHENE C T A I> Y NEW Y O R K 3-8-26 Deffebach Lebrnberg R. E. Hunt Blackburn Q. B. Colgin Young L. H. B. Burgess Brannen R. H. B. Woodman Weeks F. B. Substitutions: A. and M.: Simmons for Burgess, Wren for Sprott, Petty for Deffebach, Lister for Wylie, Bartlett for Deiterich, Holmes for Colgin, Price for Sikes, Criswell for Watts, Davis for Hunt, Willis for Simmons, Arnold for Colgin, Simmons for Woodman, Morriss for Sprott, Holmes for Arnold, Lister for Deit erich, Robbins for Watts. Southewstern: Allen for Brannen, Terry for Reynolds, Hallmark for Blackburn, Frajnklin for Lehmberg for Johns, Mercer for Duncan, Keith for Leisner, Curry for Young, Frank lin for Newman. Score by quarters 1 2 3 4 Tot. A. and M 2 20 7 6 35 Southwestern 0 0 0 0 0 Officials: Kinney, (Miss. A. & M.) Referee; Anderson (Nebraska) Um pire; Bluestein (Texas) Head Lines- Professor A. L. Darnell, coach of the Dairy Cattle Judging team sent word that he entered the Texas team in the preliminary dairy cattle con gress contest held at Waterloo, Iowa, September 27th. The A. and M. team placed first in judging Brown Swiss, fourth in Guernseys, seventh in Holsteins, eleventh in Ayrshires and thirteenth In Jerseys. The team will contir practice judging at Waterloo t' week and then enter the National c( test at Detroit, Michigan, on Octol 6th. -*£♦ -*$♦ -*$*- ♦J*- ■»$«- ❖ LAST WEEK’S CONFERENCE SCORES A. and M. 35, Southwestern 0. S. M. U. 48, Trinity 0. Texas 3, Kansas Aggies 13. Baylor 10, Loyola 13. Rice 20, Sam Houston Normal 0. T. C. U., 24, Centenary 14. Arkansas 21, Mississippi 0. ^ ^ 4* 4* 4* r k i R. T.