. Springhillian Oct 1919 - July 1920 New Series Vol. XII No. 1 - 4 . L^Li</ NOV. 8: SPRING HILL 0, AUBURN 19. Playing on a field that was a veritable sea of mud dotted here and there by minia-ture lakes with a steady rain falling throughout, the Spring Hill College eleven heldthe heavy Auburn Plainsmen to a 19-0 score. The score does not, however, tell thestory of the resistance put up by the fiery Hill eleven. From the time that RefereeMoriartys whistle sounded the commencement of hostilities to the end the Hilliansfought and fought gamely to stem the onrush of the Tigers. And after the ga


. Springhillian Oct 1919 - July 1920 New Series Vol. XII No. 1 - 4 . L^Li</ NOV. 8: SPRING HILL 0, AUBURN 19. Playing on a field that was a veritable sea of mud dotted here and there by minia-ture lakes with a steady rain falling throughout, the Spring Hill College eleven heldthe heavy Auburn Plainsmen to a 19-0 score. The score does not, however, tell thestory of the resistance put up by the fiery Hill eleven. From the time that RefereeMoriartys whistle sounded the commencement of hostilities to the end the Hilliansfought and fought gamely to stem the onrush of the Tigers. And after the gamethere was no one found to doubt that Spring Hill in holding the Tigers to three touch-downs had scored a moral if not a technical victory. At no time were the Auburnbacks able to gain consistently through the Purple line. Moulton and Captain Waletconsistently spilled the interference and Harold Winling invariably nailed the runneron every buck and end run. For the Plainsmen Ollinger, tackle on the 1916 SpringHill team, played the best game. In addition to scorin


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