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S SPORTS. N - THE - EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, . 1922. oo -t SPORTS. * Daly May Quit as West Point Coach : Remarkable Games Played on Saturday 1 i ARMY WILL LOSE GREAT MENTOR IF HE RETIRES, Mas Installed Complete and Effective System for | All Sports—Midshipmen and Yale Forced To Swallow Bitter Pills. - BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, November 27.—There is talk among service men today ! that Maj. Charles Daly may retire from West Point as foot ball coach and turn to other duties in the Army. If this is true he will Ieave the acadamy not only with the reputation of having made the most his material—win or lose—every year he has served at the Army in- stitution, but with the credit of hating devised and furthered, perhaps, . the most complete and effective system of sport for all that exists in any seat of learning in this country. So far as iutercollegiate foot ball is con- cerned, he has the faculty of teaching the game, inspiring his men and surrounding himse'f with precisely the proper assistants. The feat of the Army coaches is the | cater when one pauses to consider ! at victory on Saturday was ob- tained against an eleven better equip- ped in the matter of personnel for victory. The writer, knowing what | the Navy had in the way of a run- | ning and an overhead attack, stated | in this column that the Navy had the | better chance to win. The facts upon ' which this prediction was based still | stand. Smythe Updets Navy. Charts of the game made by the' riter show with what proficiency the Navy advanced the ball in a varieiy ways. They also show how ail this advantage was set at naught by the flery genius of one Army mon— Smythe. A game such as Smythe d is something that no one can 4dream or i ine in advance. So it fn all the activities o life where | idividual is suddenly touched ! sith the divine spark and soars to | the stars. i w Take the first period. The Nayy.| putting the ball In play upon her 20- yard line, advanced it by a forward | y. Dass and a series of rushes 50 vards o the Army’s 30-yard line before she i was held. “Later in this period she made another sequential 50-yard ad- vance between her own 20 and the Army’s 3d-yvard mark. And still later the Navy advanced 35 yards in_three | plays from her own 30-yard line to| iMe Army’s 35-yard mark. Here the Tertod ended. As soon as the second ! quarter storted the Navy resumed her | narch and made a touchdown. So Dere was an uninterrupted advance of %0 yards for a score. Penalty Hurts Army. The end of this quarter saw the one straight advance over any distance that the Army was able to make from | scrimmage throughout the g:me. Put- ting the ball in play in milfield the Army by forward passes and rushes! carried the ball 40 yards to the Navy's 10-yard line, where a penalty for Lolding set the ball back to Navy's -yard mark and the half ended. | In the fourth period which opened | with the Navy in possession of thel ball on the Army’s 40-yard mark, line pl. ¥s, sweeps and two forward pisses | took the ball over the Cadots' goal | lice. With a lead of 14 to 10 thus, established, it remained for the Navy | with a high wind at her back to play safe, and thus hold the advantage. | 1t was Smythe who turned the tide ¢ catching upon his own 32- sard mark ored b w ~ a touchdown ¥ for rd p ss after adets had lost 15 ¥ rds in trying to .dvance the ball by line play. } Yale Hasx Bitter Dose. for the Navy to s bitter a do-¢ vard, Cadets had the Crimson had Owen wen whom the Eli's stopped :hrough | the line, and yet let him run 57 yards to Yale's 4 yard lne. throuzh the: whole Blue team, -fter picking up a| rolling punt. which. h-d it bren prop-, erly covered would have had Harvard | in_trouble. On the other hand, between the 20| yard line. Yale outrushed Harvard materfally and played the overhed! gamec better. Why is it that in th past two years a better Yale team— from a manual standpoint—has heen | defeated by Harvard? The I would seem to need a dose of Dr. Coue’s medicine. SWEDES INVITE YANKEES T0 COMPETE N GAMES iy the Associated Press. l STOCKHOLM. Sweden, November 27. * The Swedish Amateur Athletic Associa- tion has invited the American Unlon 1o participate In the summer games at Sothenburg next July, the occasion be- ing Gothenburg's tercentenary celebra- on. ' “'The Americans. who are reported to :ave accepted, will be guests of the Swedish association, which also offers ‘o pay the expenses of the journey m New Yorx. A fine, larg: stadlum has been built tor the games, and as many nations iave been invited, 1t is anticipated the neet wiil be one of the most important n Europe. _— DISTRICT QUINTS LISTED BY LYNCHBURG COLLEGE LYNCHBURG. Ya., November 27.— <iames with Galiaudet and Georgel “Vashinzton basket ball teams have listed by Ly¥nchburg College. sth will be played in Washington. snchburg's schedule is as follow January 10—Brideewater College. Jamiary 12—Washington and Eee. at Lex- T mary 13—Virginie Military Institate, at Les . .Yx’:‘.nmfl 17—Virginia. at Oharlottesville. January $0—T.vnchburg Elks. Jeauary 31—University of Richmond. Frbruary 1—North Carolina. . February 3—Hampden-Sidney, at Hampden- Fobruary 8—South Carolin. S Rand at Ashland. b e Tehete e Gat Bichimont: Fiirussy 1o—Usiversity of Rickmond, at - erwasy 16—Gallaudet Collego, at Washing. | L Fowre w Univensity, Fedruary 24— Hampden Sldney. ! [} VIRGINIA BOOKS MATMEN. ! CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. Novem- ter 27.—DMatches between Virginia's! srestllng team and the matmen of virginta Poly, Virginia Military In- titute, Lehigh and Davidson have 'cen arranged by O. A. Klrkma'l.l nanager of the squad. It is probable -hat matches also will be staged wi‘h 1ennsylvanta, Washington and Lee. Richmond "'niversi‘y and Trinity. —— RUN FOR TITLE TODAY. the greatest country battles in cent years is expected this afternoon cver “he six-mile Van Cortlandt Pnrkl re-! ourse, when eighteen leading east- +rn ecoll*zes race for the annual in- arcollegiate championship. The var- event will be preceded by a sirce-mile freshman race, in which teer. colleges are entered. ! - i Miss Helen Wil :ar, iz a student a ¢ California. Track Coackh Jimmy Curran has rted his thirteenth year at Jer- srsburg Academy. New York boxing commissi ot licenss contestants over thirty- Zht years of age. Youthful tennis the University | ginia’s trainer, at an {NEW ENGLAND COLLEGES | tetics, was organized at a mceting of | jconferer.ce. —Austin McHenry, outfielder of the NEW YORK November 27.—One of|at Mount Oreb, near here, thls morn- ling. - operation in a Cincinnati hospital for WOULD HAVE VIRGNIA DEFEAT HIS OLD TEAM: CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. Novem- ber 27.—Thomas J. Campbell, head coach of the Virginia varsity, faces 2 pecullar situation in the Thanksgiv- ing game, for he is training hiy men ! to defeat North Carol na, the tewm he coached in 1916 and 1919. Assisted by Earl Abel. line coach, | e has developed an eleven which | will make a strong fight to win from | H the Tarneels on Thursday. S { | thus.astic are Virginia's H over the way they i team that 1.200 b ntributed | - ! toward the purch £ “o'tens of ap- | preciation which will be given these | Dy the Associated Press men and to “Pop” Lannigan. Vir-' A7 ANTA. Ga. Tieeting o be hold Wednesd s miehe | dlvidual brilliancy marked Saturday's Thursday. the twen xtii game | foot b1l gomes and the day's play betveen Virkinia and North Carolina; marked Georgla's first defeat by Ala- will be played before one of the larg- | 1. . est crowds ever assembled in the,Dbama since 1919 and saw an unusual situation develop In South Carolina, state. Of the twenty-five contests played since 1892 Virginia has wonlyhere Furman downed Clemson, 20| to 6. It was not only the first time sevenieen Carolina has taken seven,; and one has ben tied, Although Virginia has won from'this seazon a South Carolina eleven, Washington and Lee nad held Prince- had crossed Clemson's goal line, but! nts the season has been it came after Clemson had dereated ups and down. V. M. L|South Carolina and the latter Lad v with a 14-to-0 victory,| hested Furman. i and in the last game West Virginia Quarterback Bartlett proved uv-i won 13 to 2 {much for Atlanta, for he crashed Carolina. un the other hand. has had | through for a touchdown. booted a | an e ént record through the en-!kick from placement for the extra tire In a game in Richmond {point and added a place kick from the Tarheels downed_the same c@det!the 27-yard line to clinch the 10-to-t eleven from Lexingtoh that beat the|victor: Orange and Blue. Halfback Records of the games between lhclscnnpvd up a ‘umbled punt and raced Fletcher of Georgia OWEN OF HARVARD PICKING UP BALL TO MAKE RUN THAT BEAT YALE Crimson halfback, who scooped up sphere on a punt by the Blue, dashed 57 yards to Old Eli's i-vard mark, from where ball was carried over for only touchdown of the game, which ended 10 to 3. Owen scored on the third pl; DIXIE GAMES MARKED !MO‘E&\WK MERCURY GAME Ti{ TEANS UNBEATEN y following his long sprint. LL ATTRACT THRONG U sandlot oot bzil. games played by these elevens, who of-mouth gridiron contests since the start of the present season. ‘champion Mohawks looked anything but impressive in their scoreless tie with the Knickerbockers of Georgtow: NION PARK will be jammed to capacity next Sunday when Mo- | hawks and Mercurics mect to determine who's who in Washington | That was\assured yesterday by the results ol have taken part in four or five word- The , while the Mercuries, without ex- tending themselves, ran roughshod over a bolstered Quincy Athletic Club team and won, 27 to 0. WASHINGTON AND LEE PRIVIES FOR HOPKINS “LEXINGTON, Va. November 27.— Of course, the city champions may have been holding back a bit. but their play did not indicate such tac- tics. They drove hard enough to score In the first period. but lost the ball through a tumble deep In the , Kulcks' territory. Again in the sec- {ond period the Mohawks crossed the | midfield 1line, but the Knicks hecld !and & try for fleld goal fell saort. There- tafier the champicns were continuaily jon the defensive and three times | were called upon to check determined | Knickerbocker rushes. two un.versities follow: 6 vards for Georgia's only score. Waghington and Lee's foot ball team | The Mercuries were pitted against 1892—V rginia, £0; North Carolina, 18. Sweeping end runs by Lagerstadt of | is determined to end the season with 2 fighting team. but the Quacs lack- 1893—Virginia, 0 26, Trinity_had much to do with that|victory Thursday against Johns Hop- | ed the drive and the foot ball knowl- 189"—Virzinia, o. -to-12 victory over the Ran-!kins in Baltimore. !edge of their opponents. Mercury 1094 Virginia, % Macon eleven. Coach De Hart will send his charges did not uncover many plays in over- Fae_vimnie. & North Carolina State’s victory over through hard practice today and Whelming its opponent, being con- aor—vires o Wake Forest was marked rather by | Tuesday in preparation for the game. i tent to smash into the line and oc- 1803 Vi-tin & consisient work by the entire State| It has been declded that Frew will | cagionally skirt ende. This it afd in 1800 reinia. o. eleven, but Individual brilllancy was|not enter the game and take chances | €ach period for a touchdown. Mo- i el 3 shown in the triumph of the heavy of ruining him for another year. |hawk scouts reported present at the Hre &= Florida eleven over Oglethorpe by, Capt. Mattox continues to improve |contest saw little to give their 1904—Vireinis. . Mauerra, who proved to be the only and will no doubt enter the fray at icoavh»s that might safeguard the in- frotom At g L man who could make headway|one time or another. | terests of the champlons next Sun- s 3. through the Gators. \V.’lgnlt;r;! \;.;ho plays regular g{llal;:l,\d‘y~ 3 was called home on account of the i = o. s his moth, [ i Seaman Gunmerd were vanquished, $ | ARMY ELECTS MULLIGAN. |V"8? { fun "'l eohdmued fme 20 00 6 by Virsinte Adhieic Cluw n, 0. WEST POINT, N. Y., Nov — | provement probably will permit him s andria. Two touch- Nocth 5-."'.1:.: 32 lc nef&éxfl?f Muu‘:{nrxf(:neg!:;r %rk to _return !n time for the contest. | downs were made in the second pertod North Carclina 7. !city has been elected capiain of the| Washington and Lee's team and,‘:n'? ““DA"'-"!;') more in the third with g fou:40; {He has played tackle on the Arm: 2 on. arriving in Balti- | = NerthiCuolinn. T, | eleven for “hteo avasons. He 16a mems | more: Thursday morning. Headquar- | oot SicPRen's Juniors defeated the ber of the class of 1924 FORM SPORT CONFERENCE BOSTON, November 27.—A New England state college conference, pat- .erned afte- thc western ronferencei and designed to formulate uniform gibllity rules in intercollegiate ath- representatives colleges and un New England state ersities 1ere. An_eligibility cod- barring partici- pation of ‘freshiicn on competing| Q. What is tackling? I can find no: eams and ng a one-veari . N " o sl Tesidence: wule Eued to pravent | Gebnition of it in the foo: ball rules.| the appearance on teams of athletesiThe sole references are to filegal transferred from other colleges was| aekling. adepted i e L Y Representatives were present from| A. We don’t fntend to get into any New Hampshire tate College, Uni- dincussion as to what is tackling. ty_of Main i University of Ver-ipgyle 21, Section S (a and b) clearly | v mont, State College of Rhode Island, Connecticut Agricultural College and jdefine what is conaidered illegal tac- | the Massachusetts Agricultural Col-|klinz. Al that we care to say is that lege. }'neklln‘ ix atoppiny & man carrying Q. If a player makes a.fair catch and the referes blows his whistle, ‘(elm making the catch what he cares | 27.—!to do. After the Iatter has made his | —_— the ball In nome way other tha may that player place the ball on the eded he referce blows his whistle prohibited by these sections of the 1ground without losing right to it and lN MISSHURI VA“.EY * Fhe execution of the piay nis team se- | 1 lects ‘ A. Yen. After a fair eatch the ref- £ - rules. eree must ‘ask the captain of the] EANSAS CITY, Mo. November 27— 1o do Universi y of Nebraska is conceded to be the leader of the Missouri val-, Rotifying both teams that play Is ley conference in foot ball as the re- | Ahout to commence. After that ' sult of its triumph over Iowa State | ball e College of Ames at Lincoln Saturday. | it Is 54 to 6. i Drake, Which had shared leadership with the Cornhuskers, had defeated the Towans, 14 to 7. Nebraska and Ames played the only conference to try for goal from placeme: ever. play would start in the case of | acrimmage when the ball was put n play. Ru'e 9, Section 3. Q. A forward pass struck the um- | A. and|plre and was grounded. Opponent: picked up bail and ran with it, claim- / ing that if ball strikes official play is me. Drake defeated Mississipp! M. at Starkville. Mies., 48 to 6. Other S an- e ?fi’ffi[\i’;fifi,;:t:g;,’l& | to continue as though nothing had OF the two conference games sched- | happened. 1Ts this cortect ™ = ulad for Thursday neither will have|{ A. A forward pass tha .- 3 (e any efiect on the leadership of the&round is considered as incomplel '|- Do will between Mis.j The fact that it struck an official i ouri and Kansas at Columbia, T | Wenns that xo far s the forward pans other will be played by Oklahoma and in concerned that play is to cont nue ; Washington at St. Lou ax though nothing had uke-kp ce. | Nebraska will engage Notre Dame|The moment the el sirack <he at Lincoln, Neb., and the Kansas ag_| Sreund (thecame snineompleicd PO | gies will play Texas Christian at)pemalty for incomp! Manhattan ule 17, section 4. 5 Q. One of the provistons for a touchback is that a ball kicked from BRITISH EMBASSY BEATS |fcrimmase crosses opponents goal- {line before being touched by a player HARLEM A. C. AT SOCCER gt gither side. 'Suppose such a ball is e Ue i first touched by a player v;hokv‘vnks on- British embassy players nosed out E,g;_g:f‘ li;ew::o';:h?dt:u:hdocw:r—l; the Harlem Athletic (lub eleven. 20 he recovers ball behind a goal line? match in Potomac Park. The E: Lo ided that he touched the ball on the bassy was tied afier getting an early g lead but forged ahead when Williams e ety b atere M kaked a goal from side and main- % tained its advantage by the good de. ', < Team we g:{e:"f‘::‘:: Jithmen fensive play of Gen. Bethel and Ham- bacifield, - They” have both fest”on =3 ine of scrimmage. ey do s in Banning, Gordon and Thompson also orger to more easily get into inter- played well for the winners. Maunder Groen and Owen Burton were best of Ljenss OB Tune to ather side. "Is this the Harlems. i A If the texm has meven menm ou. —_— McHENRY, OUTFIELDER !& FOR CARDINALS, DIES"J PORTSMOUTH, Ohio, November 27. the line of scrimmage, it is perfectly age, or one foot and the eppo- wite hand up to or within one foot of :l‘e Ite of scrimmage. Rule 9, Sec~ lon ‘Team has on its 30-yard line, . third down. 10 yards to gain, feurth St. Louis Natienals, died at his home, He recently had undergone an tumor of the brain. Facts About Foot Ball; The Best Play to Use —BY SOL METZGER. (Copyright. 1022.) ers will be at the Eme: n Hotel. first named teams lead by a few points and punted before fourth down in like siiuations on the fleld. Both punts. practically the last plays of the game, were run back fi e winning touch- downs. s when in the lead near the close of the game. LITTLE LESSONS FOR THE GOLFER By George O'Neil——. One of the most useful clubs the golfer can carry Is the spoon. I consider it very valunble. It is used for shots that are a little shorter than you woud take off a brassie, an1 yet the spoon fs a Ht- tle longer than the midiron, It in & §ood club—one of the best —with which to put the second shot on the greem, as spoon lofts the ball better than’a brassie. The spoon is a trifie shorter than | the brassie and therefore the play- er should watch that he = a bit closer to the ball, or ke -will persistently slice with the spoon. h the spoon takes the full fol ow-through, exactly as with the driver or brassie. player must overcome the tendency to let the fact that the ball is doewn {Unless there Is an unexpected shift started against Penn will face Pitts- burgh on Thanksgiving day. In that lineup are five players who took part| but not before. ion will ! | McHenry was stricken while play- ing ball in Cincinnati. He was twenty- seven years old and leaves a widow and two children. BEZDEX TO STAND PAT. State College, Pa., November 27.- ' i el in the Penn State lincup during the next two days, the same team that the Pitt battle a year ago and 0 who plaved against the Panthers in 1920 E I not score, except by errors on quarter, and is a touchdown -I(ll‘i Your object here is to gain that first down and keep the ball. As long as ou have the ball the other team fan- part, and no general should consider them in his attack. An end run from a kick formation is the play, as the defense is looking for a punt. Do not pass under such conditions_because of the chance the opposition has of catching it. Keep the ball as long as you can. If you fail to gain the first down, then punt, In two big games, one & Colgate- West Point battle, and the other a Michigan-Pennsylvania match, the posed by H: Trovinger, open champion of | Camada in T921. finatrates the proper form with the spoon. | (Copyright Johu F. Dille Co.) If — PERRY FIVE WOULD PLAY. Perry Athletic Club’s 110-pound bas- ket ball team, which is to play the Wilson Normal Juniors Friday night at Wilson Normal gymnasium, wants .more games. Telephone challenges to Manager Hank Slanker., Columbis 5685-W.. | Christ Child Junfors, 13 t0 0 ;ners fompletel,\' outclassed ponents in team play, but Redden, a Christ Child gridder, was the best in- dividual performer in the game. | _Quentin Athletic Club scored a 7-to- |6 victory over Waverley Athletic {Club when Simonds added a point by | drop-kick after L. McCathran had made a touchdown In the first period. S. Colliere scored a Waverly toucl down In the second perfod, but F. Col- | liere missed the goal. Sherwood gridmen’held the heavy Seat Pleasant team to a scoreless t in the game at Seat Pleasant, M iBoth teams were strong defens:: ! Roamer Jumiors overcame the Az {riculture Juniors, 13 to . The w iners made twenty-two first downs, { while the Aggies were held to one. Havoc Athletic Club surprised the Mount Rainier Emblems by trimming them, 28 to 1. Enright, Jones and | Ryan did the scoring for the winners. | 3 pkecinnd Lexington Athletic Club handed the Knickerbocker Juniors a 28-to-0 | trouncing in the match on Reservoir Field. The Lexingtons started scoring before the game was two minutes old, and played rings around the Knicks thereafter. Arab Athletic Club ran roughshod over the Riggs team in_a 38-to-0 game. Elgin, Alman and Jennings starred for the victors. Yosemite Athletic Club took the measure of ithe Na:ajo Athle i Cuw {in a 12-to-0 encounter. Forward { passes brought both touchdowns in | the first hale. : Mount Rainier Emblem Midgets de- | feated the Sherwood Midgets, 28 to 0. 1 Smith made three touchdowns and y Bauman one. Park Views and Circles battled to a scoreless draw at Catholic University. + The Park Views outrushed their op- | ponents, but could not gain within the 10-yard line. Seminole Athletic Club was beaten, to 0, by the Gallaudet freshme he losers were outweighed greatl. i Argyle Preps arc to practice to {night at_Argyle Field. All player |areito renortiat 7 oelocte. Down the Alleys There should be lots of fun and also good bowling tonight when the Royals and Terminal Ice clash. The “Icemen” have been feeling somewhat chagrined over their recent defeats, and will try to stage a big come back. The Royals are a classy lot and will make their opponents go some. 5 Harry Krause has beem thinking seriously of sending out search war- irants for “Skinny” Carroll and Johnny Baum. Neither of these bowl- ers has shown up this season and have been missed. ‘War Department of the Washington Ladies” League, grabbed all three from Rigistry, its_ scores 417 and 429. Elfriede game, 100, and high eet, 2 The Registry team is made up of budding bowlers who show improve- ment in every match, Anacostia quint, of the Athletic League trimmed .h- Argonnes, 1.5.% .0 1,378. which probably is a record for the organization. “Bus” Provost led with a 361 set, while Mandley had high game of 145. Captains of the different leagues bowling at the Recreation have been congratulating Manager Vaeth upon the splendid condition of his alleys this season. There is not one drive among the thirty that is. off color. Radiators and Fenders SR g A 10 DIYYERENT MAKES BADIATORS. WITTSTATT’S R. and F. WORKS 819 13th . P 6410. 1485 P. M. TMI, \ IREAL HERO IS PRODUCED "IN EACH OF BIG BATTLES Smythe of West Point and Owen of Harvard Make Brilliant Runs That Are Deciding Factors In Their Team’s Triumphs. BY WALTER CAMP. ] | i i ‘ EW YORK, November 27.—Dissection of the cold facts of some o1 i Saturday’s foot ball games aiter the excitement and heat of con- i test was over showed that some remarkable contests were played | and a number of standings finaily settled. ' It was not until today that the Army and Navy cohorts succeeded | steadying down to a full realization of what had happened on Frankl | Field. So rapid were the changes in i and so replete was the co: j test in exirzordinary happenings that it go down as one of the mo: : remarkable games in foot ball history. - . Navy ran the Army all over the field in the next period, but fafled to score. :In the second the Middies earned ; touchdown, Then, however, the Arm centgr. Garbisch, kicked u most re- markable fleld geal from a bad anglo wind, standing o1 I i HONORS ARE DVIDED IN“BIG TEN" CIRCLES By the Associated Press. i CHICAGO, November Z7.—Jowa and Michigan were left the outstanding! . This encouraged the West Po.nters, and they pur across a touchdown and goal in the third period, went into the lead anc apparently had the game well hand, Navy was far from licked, howe: claimants of the foot ball title fn the @04 &cored 2 recond touchdown western conference by the closing B3l 10 prove it. All the Annapoll in Supporters and most of the We: games of the season Saturday, which Chjcago, the only other con-| ltender. was held to @ scorelezs tie by Pointers believed then that the Navy had the gaume won, i4 to 10. Juss when affa.rs looked blackest for tho dets, Smythe, the Army quarter. Ce one of the Wisconsin. Jowa ended her season with a up to a score which again place:- 1 i i { ! to 3 victory over Northwestern, While I BN 'I'HE PA[;“:I[; EflAsI')Itchlgalx i defeating Minnesota. 115 to 7. In the other games of tic s h ag i lday Ind‘ana and Purdus tied for last| West Point in the lead, 17 to 14, & place by playing each other to a 7 to | Wou the gae. L sl I iy T tle, and Ohio defeated Hifnots, & T Marvaract i ame s bt < o tie A ; AR e | remetition of Yele's former contests SAN FRANCISCO, November 27.—| The auestion as to whether Chicafo [qpe pii's gatned more than double will be allowed to share the title | %i*h Towa and Michigan is one that probably will not be decided untd jjnes put were aquite without se- conference authorities have an op- : e s = Sortamits” to meet amd Giscuts the;5ource when within striking distance question. Owen as the writer of this pre- Some observers argue that EInce! gicted. was a terribly daneerous man | Chicago did not lose a game the Ma- | o100 T ot started in the open. and |three victorles and no defeats on. its! 700N still have a 1,600 per cent aver- it was his 57-yard run that brought irecord sheet. The Oregonians play|28¢ In spite of Saturday's tle, while the Lall up to scoring distance for Washington at Seattle Thanksgiving Others say that by being held score- | yjarvarg da The other remalning game is;less by Wisconsiu. a twice defeated| Hijstory repeated itself most strik- ;between Southern California and|team. Chicago falled to show the|jnply n the way this play came | Washington State at Pasadena, also | Streneth dispi~ved by Michigan and :jout Years and years ugc, in the lon Thursday. thereby was eliminated from the race. | early eightics in # Princeton | The defeat of Washington State by ' game, a punt by Walkinson. the Yalo ithe Oregon Aggies Saturday was the | Luek. struck Toler. a Vrinceton back- With but two games remaining on the Pacific coast conference foot balll | schedule, California. champion for, iwo years, and Oregon remain tied at! the top of the percentage column, each with 1.000. Cualifornia has won four games and lost none, while the Eugene team has the distance earned by their oppo- nents between the 2 and 20 yard first conference win for the latter and ! j field man. gianced off '&° body and the fourth game dropped by the! MILWAUKEE, Wis. — i was picked up Ly Lamar, his maute | Staters. The Milwaukec American Association |in the buckfeld. Lamar ren two- |~ California closed its season by de-| base ball team will train at Troy, Ala., ' thirds the length of the field, comi- , feating its ancient foeman from Stan- | next spring, according to Louis Nahin, | plet.ng & play that beat Yale then. ford. 28 to 0, and elght Bear veterans | secretary of the club, who has just re- | just as Owen's run did in Saturday’s played their last college game. turned from the south. contest. EWHAT’S THE MATTER WITH FOOT BALL? ] ! Knute Rockne, foot ball {Coach at Notre Dame Assails Lack of|| cosxb at the University ot Uniformity in Eligibility Code. || icster in e devciopment of Favors Eastern Conference. the “open game.” His belief in the forward pass is evi- denced by the skill of his pupils in this department. Rockne is considered especial- ly apt in the rapid develop-_ ment of hitherto inexperi- enced players. stoop to any dirty playing and who would rather lose than take an un- fair advantage of thelr opponente. This is the iype of men that is be- ing turned out by colleges all over the country today. In justice to them, particulariy, the fight for clean inter- collegiate sport is not going to stod until all undesirable clements have been cleaned out. And from the pres- outlook thc fight will e a s i cessful one. | ccorsrint, Xprts Amerlean Newepar.s ! NOTRE DAME COACH. O F course, I know that there are some old-timers who love to talk i the days of the “flying wedge.” To \some there never can be| anything quite so fine as the old teams. And these men cannot be blamed | old days always remain in the hearts of the old graduates. The first and greatest thing that can be said for the new game. how- years gone by. The old idea ol'. “bags on the mill” (ri]ing up) when a player ‘was down is impossible in the face of the rule prohibiting and Secondly, there is less chance for' unfair and unsportsmanlike tactics. men o kick and punch one ano her when the referee was not looking great majority of players always played the game cleanly, but the old to get in their speciaities than the, present playing code allows. Modern foot ball is much more pop- lutar from the spectator's standpoint impossible for any one sitting 200 feet away to see just what was going man was an old player or had been a close follower of the game it was apt fine points of the play. Now, however, it is possible for peo- actual play to see what Is going on | and to undersiand the high spots in: elevens. The proof of this assertion is jfound in the fact that very large the modern game had come into fts own. colleges the modern game, of course, | is especially welcome. In the old, i | | BY KNUTE ROCKNE, about “the good old days” when the tackles played back, and of | for so thinking. College spirit, class spirit and the love for the good} ever, is that players are no longer injured as frequently as they were in punishing “unnecessary roughness.” | The chances that used to be offered {have been taken away. Of course. the rules gave the rowdies more chence Modern Game Popular. 'nlu. Under the old conditions it was lon, And not only that, but unlees 2| to be hard for him to understand the ple seated in stands very far from the ithe attack and defense of both | s ands were not necessary uniil af.er | From the standpoint of the smaller v it was the usual thing for a da: Small college to travel to Princeton, Yale, Michigan, Chicago or some {other big'foot ball cen.er, expecting 1o | Zet a beating and wondering only how i Email the score might be kept. Once in | L e while onc of the smalier 105t | 1.ge colleges s all wrong. It teaches stions did score a victory Over on¢’the men to take an unfair adventage of the big_elevens. When tbis hab-io¢® ficir ‘Opponents, something that pened it was considered un UDSEL cnoulq be fought ugainst from the Howover, at the present time the, i rt of the men's careers in colle small co'eg is able o um oWl faSt| oot ball should first of all be playe icima 4nd give the biE fellows harder | Foot ball should st of sl be playec battles, winning about as ofted S%ipeiter to have a team composed of | they lose. This naturally has bettertoRhavelstitear foompogat for| the’interest in foot ball much sreater. | cligible players losing overy game Favors Eastern Conference. players who may be able to play The development of the college con-| winning foot ball, but who are unde- foronce has also been a great help.|sirable in other ways. —Place your order mow and have the Suit or Overcoat reads for the holiday festivities and made as you want it. SUIT OVERCOAT KNUTE ROCKNE. 10f course, this form of orsfl-fllutlon, But, of course, it iS not nacessary Slways has had its strength in theleo cater to tramp plavers to A lddle wast and in the south. How-|have winning teams, There are To Ord ever, at the present time there is &!enough clean, straightforward high- great deal of talk about forming & |minded athletes to go around. The conference in the east, and from mY |colleges are fllled with men of the personal observations I think that it! rjoht stamp Men that are foo fine to Not that I have any personal com- November 18th to 30th laint on eastern foot ball, for I have. Rone. In all my dealings with eastern f SPECIAL TRAINS leave White Houwe station at 11140, colleges 1 have had nothing but the 11355, 12110 and 12120 p.m. dmissi ) You have choice of 2 magnifi- best of treatment and {t.always has, | :ent stock of high-grade fabrics. A on to been a pleasure to come east and play $1.65 such teams as W romt. Ru.scrs Including Government Tax Wes iand Georsia Tech, First Race 1:15 P.M. ference In the east such guestions and disputes could be settled very easily. Uniform Rules Needed. One of the great needs of the east 15 & wet of uniform ellgibility rules, | while other colleges in the samel {athletic circies have the strictest kind { of rules. The first named set of insti- tudons have an unfair ad.an age “over the others. It is no easy thing to compete with & college -that allows 2.most.any one to p.ay on ihe eam. :xperts and fully guaranteed. Other Suits and Overcoats tc But I know that T »rder up to $30. | there are certain points of disputej that arise and If therc were a con- j Match Your Odd Coats With Our Soecial ‘oaches that have had to do this will ou the same thing. e Y or, Thre “main question s mot { that of competing with these teams on a winning basis. The outlook of on a winning basls e o i CHAS. B. 513 4th mnLek. jxc TROUSERS 4.5 Save the price of an estire mew suit. All colors, sises, pat- ! | j Ivery germent made by our own ! i i $45.00 Up | Mertz & Mertz Co., Inc. 906 F Strest .