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ARMY HAS MUCH BETTER * RECORD THAN NAVY TEAN Comparisun of Accomplishments This Season Indi- cate Soldiers Are Stronger Than Sailors in Attack as Well as in Defense. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, November 28—Th N ment schools at West Point e Army will be favorite for the an- nual foot ball game tomorrow at Baltimore between the Govern- and Annapolis. The resu!ts of the games that have been played all of the season point to a stronger Army than Navy eleven in both vital essent The points scored by both eleve The total of the Army to date has scored 91. The teams that have bee alike in power or skill. The Army to The first trial that the Navy got| was against Marquette, an eleven that had been playing plenty of good foot ball out in Wisconsin, which had been overlooked. Both teams went slong to the last perlod without scoring, and then Marquette won the game, 21 to 3. That did not look | &ood one cent's worth. Right on top | of that the Navy went to Princeton | and after leading the Tiger by a| capital showing, 14 to 0, suddenly wilted In the latter part of the game and lost, 17 to 14. West Virginla Wesleyan defeated the Navy next, as the Middies could not get out of their slump. Navy Shows Improvement. . | The following game was with Penn | State, and the Navy appeared a lot | better. They failed to win, but held | Penn State to 6 points. The Navy| showed real speed when they defea ed Vermont, 53 to 0, and then lost to Bucknell, a powerful eleven, which has been recruited within the last year, by 6 to 0. The Navy in all of | games has shown power, but in the first part of the season it did manifest an unaccountable disposi- tion to lose its steam when it was| under way. The series played by the Army has been one of a severer type. Detroit is not as good this year as it been and the Army began by w loping that team, 20 to 0. Then came the annual game with Notre Dame, in New York, In which the Army made & better showing than it did in 19 Notre Dame won, 13 to 7, but knew that it had been playing men who were a little above the Army aver- ®ge they had faced in other seasons #0 early in the year. A victory over Boston University was won easily by the Army second-string players and then a real test of the Cadets made its appearance. They went to Haven and played the Yales, e tapital showing In view of the 3i-10] fictory of Yale in 1923. | . Beat Florida 14 to 7. i Playing Florida, the Army won 14 fo 7, and this game was in many re- $pects = Dbetter indication of the| feam's strength than the game with | Yale, because Florida was very good | and the Army had to come from be- Bind to win. On top of that the| $adets were able to tie Columbia, 14- 14. Columbia holds that to be a big feat for them, while the Army, con- idering all things, is glad that it Was able to get away without defeat, 88 Columbia played better foot ball than had been expected. 1 The Ariny has been defeated only @nce this year and that by Notre Pame. The Navy has lost to Mar- quette, Bucknell, Princeton, West Yirginla Wesleyan and Penn State. ‘That does not look as if the Navy is| ;'itrong scoring machine, and it is : The strength | of the Army is in its line. The trio at center, Farwick, za:rblsch and Ellinger, are as good as y in the East, and very likely as| good as any in the United States| When all of them are at their best. ‘The tackles play up to the center Well and the ends have improved steadily. i Navy's Full Strength Out. The Navy will have out a team of ils best players. Some of them have been idle part of the season because of scholastic trouble, but all will be igible for the game ag Epint, and the fact that all of them Wil get into the game here has wor- rfed the Army men, who fear that the Navy, at the last moment, will epring a foot ball eleven that will be far superior to any that has played £¢r Annapolis this season. Shapley 11 be back for the Navy, and that 1feans a back who is perhaps as good of better than any who will start to- FORMER GRID STARS AT FRANKLIN FIELD BY the Associated Press. ' PHILADELPHIA, November 28.— Floot ball heroes of bygone days and many outstanding figures in the mod- ern game were prominent in the @athering that witnessed the Cornell- Pennsylvania battle yesterday at Franklin Fleld. Close to 30 “old-timers” men who gained fame while wearing the Red eid Blue, were given a rousing re- oeption as they paraded on the field behind the university band prior to the game. Their ranks included 16 of the 19 members of the famous unde- feated team of 1904, among them such stars as Bill Hollenbach, Vin- cent Stevenson and Bob Folwell, now coach at the Naval Academy. Others in the line were T. Truxton Hare, all-American guard when mass play was the vogue; “Buck” Whar- ton, another all-American guard; Jack Minds, former captain, and Andy Smith, coach of the California University eleven, which Pennsylva- nla will play at Berkeley, Caiif., New Fear day. Smith, who also was a star on the 1904 team here, was cheered as the student band played “California, Here I Come,” for his benefit. A. A. Stagg and Bob Zuppke, coaches of the Chicago and Illinois teams, respectively, which play here against Pennsylvania next season, were in the stands, together with such other prominent tacticians as BIll Roper of Princeton, Knute Rock- ne of Notre Dame, Tad Jones of Yale, Capt. Magewan of West Point, Clem Thistlewaite of Northwestern and Spaulding of Minnesota. R 340,000 GRIDIRON ‘FANS SEE MICHIGAN’S GAMES ANN ARBOR, Mich., November 28.— The University of Michigan foot ball eleven played before 340,000 specta- tors this season, possibly a 1924 at- tendance record equaled by only Yale, and that with stands limited to about 485,000 seats. Recently the regents of Michigan adopted a resolution against a large stadium because Ann Arbor was not | nounced, inst West | O ials of foot ball—attack and defense. ns have been quite alike in number. been 99 points, while the Navy has n faced by the rivals have not been ok on more hardtack than the Nav ARMY-NAVY ELEVENS NOW EVEN IN SERIES Tomorrow’s Army-Navy game fin Waltimore will be the twenty-neventh In the serles hetween the two na- onnl acndemiex. Of the 26 games already played the Navy hi 2, the Army The remaining two Eamex were tien, The meries started in 1890, but was discontinued after the 1803 game by vernment order. In 1809, when the Univeraity of Pennsyl at the suggestion of the late Dr. J. Willia; White, offered the use of Framkl Field for the game, its revival was | samctioned. The game hax been played every year nince then, with three excep- tions. In 190D it wasx canceled be- | enune of the death of one of the Army players. In 1917 and 1918 the game wan not played on account of the war, Following nare the results of the series to date: 1890—Army, 1801—Arm: 1802—Army, 4 IND3—Army, 43 1884—No game. 1895—No game. 1806—No game. 1807—No game. 1898—No game. 1898—Army, 17; Navy, & 1900—Army, 7: Navy, 11. 1901—Army, 11; Navy, 1002—Army, X 1903—Army, 1904—Army, 1905—Army, 1906—Army, 1907T—Army, 1908—Army, 1909—No game. 1916—Army. 03 1911—Army, 0. 1912—Army, 1913—Army, 1914—Army, h 1915—Army, 14; Navy, 1916—Army, 15; Navy, 7. 1917 and 1915—No game, while Army and Navy combined to throw the Ho- henzollern Blues of Berlin (Big Bill of the Mustache, conching), back for a total loas 16,000 touchdowns. 1010—Army, 0; Navy, 6. 1920—Army, 0; 7. 1921—Army, 7. 1922—Army, 14. 1923—Army, YALE NINE TO PLAY THREE LOCAL TEAMS NEW HAVE: ale's base 03 32; N o n., November 28. ball schedule, just an- includes games with Georgetown, Maryland and Catholic University, which part of the Southern trip. Twenty-eight games, five less than last season, are on the list, which follow April—4, Fordham: 6- Club: 9, aven Rase Rall Washington; 10, ; 11, Catholic Unt: ‘at Washington; 13, Willlam _and mond: 14, University of Rich- chmond; 13, Columbia, at New {18, New York University: ¥ i 25 Peunslvania; 28, West Virginla; 29 Amherst. ay—2, Fenn, at Philadelp! 16, Cornell, nt Ithaca: 20, Dartmouth: 22, Cornell; 25, Syracuse; 26, Colgate; 30, Prince ton. June—4, Princeton? 16, I bridge; 20, Harvard (in e ton (in case of tie) and mo tie with 23, Princeton (in case of tie with both Har- vard and Princeton). at Crescent A. TORONTO RUNNER WIKS. DETROIT, November 23.—Art Scholes, wearlng the colors of the Gladstone Athletic Club of Toronto, led the run- ners over the 10-mile course from Fern- dale, a suburb, to the Moore Temple here in the annual marathon run sponsored by the Irish-American Athletic Club. He covered the distance in 55 minutes and 55 seconds LOCAL TEAMS. ington, 14; Cxtholle George Wi University, 0. Maryland, 0; Johns Hopkins, 0. Manchester (N. H.) High, 13; West- ern High, 0. Central High, 33; Winchester (Va.) 31; Howard, 0. Georgetown Preps, 133 Preps, 6. © SOUTH ATLANTIC. Virginia, 7; North Carol 0. Virginia M. L, 0; Virginia Poly, 0. Washington and Lee, 34; North Carolina State, 0. Western Maryland, 3; Fordham Mount St. 6. South Carolina, 73 Wake Forest, 0. v . '21; Trinity, 13. Trinity Freshmen, 15; Newport News rman, 3; Clemson, 0. Newberry, 16; Wofford, 7. Lynchburg College, 37; Guilford, 6. EAST. Pennsylvania, 20; Cornell, 0. ; Penn State, 3. 40; Washington and Jefterson, 7. Syracuse, 9; Columbia, 6. Brown, 20; Colgate, 6. Dickinson, 11; Bucknell, 7. Penn Military, 28; St. Jo! Mukienberg, 41; Villanova, 0. Grove City, 13; Thiel, 0. Hobart, 42; Rochester, 17. Mount Unlon, 0; Wooster, 0. Bellefonte Academy, 13; College, 0. Thomas SOUTH. big enough to feed larger crowds nor to park automobiles. e COLUMBIA, S. C, November 28.— South Carolina will play Centre College at foot ball at Columbia next Thanks- giving day. Although the contract calls for the ane game next year, it Was stated that it sy be extended. Baltimore City College, 13; Haver- | gom, Rill (Mass.) High, 6 Georgia Tech, 7; Auburm, 0. Sewanee, 16; Vanderbilt, 0. Florida, 10; Drake, 0. Alabama, 33; Georgia, 0, Marshall, 18; Louisyille, 6. Stetson, 31; Cumberiand, 14, Kentucky, 27; Tennesses, 6, | Marine tally. will be played as| | colors Army HAT the Mercury gridmen mu to figure in the sandlot unlimi | l evidenced yesterday when th | Reserves in a 20-to-7 engagement. a much better brand of foot ball against the Devil Dogs. | penetrate their foes’ defense aiter t {and a crumbling defense caused the ED GABRISCH, Center. MARINE SECONDS EASILY . DEFEAT THE MERCURYS st take a decided brace if they hope ited class foot ball title running was hey bowed to the Quantico Marine Their rivals, the Mohawks, displayed Inability to ey led 7 to 0 at the end of the half Mercury's downfall. In the last half { the doughty Marines launched drives that netted them three touchdown | Now many of the form sharks are inclined to believe Mercury will have | With Cronin, Levyy and Edwards | pointing the way, the winged-foot combination drew first blood in the {initlal period. The first-mentioned | player lunged through left guard for {a touchdown. No one expected the Marines to “come back.” However, Dunham, Payne, Lutske and Bakin of the Marines figured prominently in ‘rlhe scoring. One of the Mersury |Arives was checked by the Devildo {in the last stages when Duncan inter- cepted & forward pass and raced yards to the local eleven's 9-yard mark. Brower then accounted for a In the waning minutes Lev sprinted from his j-yard line | to-midfield in one of the best exhi- bitions of broken field running seen at Unfon Park this season. Winton Athletic Club took the measure of the Brookland eleven in a 110 to 0 match. some neat gains through the Brock- land line. Stanton Athletic Clwi, that won the 135-pound title last year, blanked the Lotus eleven, 13 to 0. Joe Gooch grabbed a Lotus pass and sprinted 40 yards for one of the Stanton touchdowns. The victors registered 12 first downs to 6 for thelr rivals. Northern Athletic Club displayed a well drilled team when it lowered the of the Rambler players, 14 to 0. H. Gass and Tebbs played | creditably for the Northerns, while Shields was best for the losers. | Tm ome of the ‘most keenly con- |testea games of the season the { Apaches and the Anacostia Eagles |battled to a scoreless tic. It was the | first game having an {mportant bear- ing on the 150-pound class title and marked the third season that the clubs figured in tie games. Each team had scoring opportunities, but neither had the necessary drive to push the ball over. Rice of the Oglethorpe, 20; Chattancogn, 2 King College, 27; Carson-Newman, .. Centenary, 28;. St. Louis Univer- aity, 14. Mercer, 7 Mississipp! College, 7. Tulane, 13; L. S. U, 0. Austin College, 7; Hendrix, 9. Citidel, 13; Presbyterian College, 0. Tusculum, 23; State Normal, 6. Ouchita, 12; Henderson Brown, 0. Tennessee Meds, 40; Lombard Col- lege, 7. Augusta M. A, 153 Valley Academy, 0. Fiskburne M. S, 17; Staunton M. A., 0. Bethany va. Allegheny; mo game, account death of president Allegheny Colleg: Baylor, 17 Rice, 0. Southern Methodist, 13; Oklakoma Agsies, 13. Mississippi, 73 Millsaps, O. U. S. Naval Air Traiaing, 14; In- fantry School, 13. Lenoir Rhyne, 13; Erskine, 10. MIDWEST AND WEST. Western Reserves, 31; Tufts Col- lege, 0. John Carroll, 28; North Dakots, 0. Akron, 17; Kenyonm, 7. Freeport (Iil.) High School, 33; An- nia High School, 0. Oklakoma, 7; Kansas Agsies, 0. Missourl, 14; Kansas, 0. Detrolt, 30; Toromto University, 18. Colorado College, 14; Colorado WMines, 0. Arkansas Aggies, 24; Tulsa, 7. Des Moines, 14; Nebraska Wesley- a, 0. Haxkell Indians, 473 St. Xavier, €. Cincinnati, 8; Miami, 7. ‘Wittenberg, 16; Ohio Northern, O. Notre Dame Reserves, 35; Depaaw, 0. Leyola, 7; St. Viator, 7. Colorado State, 19; Denver, 0. Washington State, 6; Gomsags, 0. Arkansas, 20; Texas Christian, 0. Multnomak Athletic Club, 6; Ore- Shenandeah o. Utak, 7; Utah Agsies, 7. South Dakota State, 10; Creighton, Arizsons, 13; California Aggies, 6. Osarks, 13; Little Bock College, 7. St. Mary’s College, 28; Santa Clars, Marguette, 613 Yermont, % 1. Bo Hancock tore off | ] | to step lively to point the way to the Mohawks on December 7. Apaches was one of the outstanding players. Geoknick gridmen, victors over the Mohawks, should win handily over Waverly Athletic Club Sunday at Union Park. Waverly will be sent through a drill tonight, starting at 7:30 o'clock on its home field. Geok- nicks are to report tonight at the Trinity Hall | Rowedale Athletic Club proved no match for the Hess players, the lat- ter winning, 20 to 0. Reflly Sim- | mons, Smith Davis displayed | their wares to good effect Kenllworth apilled the dope yes- { terday by holding the heavier Ten- |leytown Athletic Club to a scoreless | tie. The former held Tenleytown for ! downs on its 1-yard line in the third | period. Bloomingdale Athletic Club is seek- ing an opponent tomorrow, according to Manager Terry, who may be tele- phoned at North G164, The team averages 105 pounds. Clarend Lyonms first.string grid- men beat the reserves, 6 to-0. The team was due to tackls the Alex- andria Tigers, who falled to appear on the field. Southern Preps scored an impres- sive 7-to-6 victory over the Langdon Mardfeldts. Snow registered the ex- tra point after touchdown to put the game on ice. The Preps had not been scored upon this season until yesterday. lenge to the Trinity Athletic Club. Manager Arthur Goldberg may Le telephoned at Main 1480. In preparation for the Chevy Chase Athletic Club game that will be met Sunday, the Palace team will prac- tice tonight and Saturday night at 7 o'clock on its home gridiron. A 20-yard sprint by De Binder of the Northern Junlors gave his team a 7-to-0 victory over Linworth Ath- letic Club. Both teams produced strong defenses. Neither the Argyles nor the St. Stephen’s were able to score in their game yesterday. —_— NORTH CAROLINA STATE WILL PLAY NINE GAMES RALEIGH, N. C, November 28.— North Carolina State will play a nine- game foot ball schedule in 1925 in- stead of the usual 10 games, according to Athletic Director J. F. Miller, who has given out the tentative schedule for next year's wolfpack. The list: PR tember 26, open; October 3, Trinity, at Dot 16, tath Carollons 15 o North Carolina; 24, V. M. L. at Richmond: 31, Dayidson (place to ‘e decided) ; Norember V. P. I, at Blacksburg; 14, Wake Forest, gk Baleigh ! 21, Washlagton and Lee, at Lex- Wire and Disc Wheels Enamelfing, Trueing and Straight. ening—Service and Parts. W. S. KENWORTHY CO. PIOVELEIEII69006D TIRE TROUBLE! CALL MAIN 464 Lehman’s Tire Shop Retireing Washington Motor- ists Since 1910 C77777778 7771771111717/ 7777 7477777 “Gardner” “Ostperforms Amy Car In Its Class” LTI LI LEP LIS EL I LI L1127 T Warmnick Preps have issued a chal-| (fair week). | EDMUND B. (WHITEY) TAYLOR, Navy End. ALABAMA AND SEWANEE SPRING UPSETS IN DIXIE BY LAWRENCE PERRY. { IRMINGHAM, Ala,, November 28—When Vanderbiit went to Min- B nesota and defeated the Gophers by a resounding score she estab- lished an iconoclastic tendency as regards Dixie, which yesterday showed reactions on more than one Southern gridiron. This makes the country unanimous in the matter of gridiron upsets, with the exception of the Far West. Alabama, 33; Georgia, 0; Syracuse, 16; Vanderbilt, 0. These were | results calculated to make a iocot ball public, already more than a bit un- settled as to the significance of advance form, throw up its hands de- spairingly and consign the gridiron game to that category of chance-tak- ing diversions which includes roulette, pokcr and tight-rope walking by amateurs. Something of the nature of the sur- prise which Alabama furnished even her own warm admirers will be ap | preclated when it is stated that defeat against Centre the Tuscaloosu outfit looked as inept and Spiritless as Georgla looked yesterday agains Alabama. And by the same toker tho bewilderment in which the game| 5 left the thousands who came from| For the fourteenth year a foot ball Georgla to see their team take the|€leven of Lincoln University has surge out of the Crimson tide also|Pointed the way to Howard Univer- will be grasped. |2ity's gridmen for the colored col e { legiate champlonship title, the an- A8 8 Onangod Team: | nual clash between these fwo rivals The writer saw Georgia pl ending yesterday in a 31-to-0 count perb game against Yale early in Oc-|against the local team before some tober. It hardly seemed to be the| ;5000 fans in Griffith Stadium. same eleven which went down to de-| [t wag the thirtieth time that the feat on Thanksgiving day by a score|¢q.s have met and Howard has won | growing and growing while the sun, | sicven of these games, as five ended glowing full red and sinister in the e D in tie scores. Yesterday the local pall of emoke from the steel mills, R = sank behind the hills and blue mist| roron Was clearly outplayed, al L 5 though it should have scored just be- - e e an players were in possession of the "o‘ play e o Sven | ball on Lincoln’s 1-yard line, but a ey e taioe nis seasan, | 5-yard penalty spoiled their chances. d L | " Lincoln scored in every period ex- | notably sgainst Kentucky, she had|cept the'last. Jazz Byrd of the vis 5 inea | itors gave a brilliant exhibition of ! v 'Bama a a nn?:-:h:;fem;mfi:;: of Athens make | ball carrying and proved a source of I worry to the Howardites throughout. ! groand. "Ghiefly her success lay | to Score in the last period. A sen- - ¥ | sational 45-yard run by Byrd in this in the fact that the team as a whole got the jump on Georgia thromghout | QUarter was one of the bright spots the entire game, not only on attack, but on defense. Alabama's forwards synchronized thelr Initial plunge with the snap- ping of the ball—whether she snap- ped it or Georgia did—as perfectly as could have been done. Alabama Plays Smoothly. The Alabama backs were taking out the Georgla ends and the 'Bama ends were sniping off the Athens'| tackles before the spectators were | aware that the play had started; or, | at least, it seemed so. Practical speaking, Georgia had no ends all| day and there was not a position on | the llne in which Alabama did not| excel her guests by a very appreciable | fi margin. Georgia seemed to have no compre- hensive idea what to do about the Alabama backfleld maneuvers, and when Georgla did show some diag- nostic skill, the tacklers wers en- gulfed or swept aside by blockers and interferers. The writer is always loath to add to the weight of gloom which & beaten team carries, and more often than not is inclined to discuss a game from the standpoint of the van- quished, but, quite frankly, there is nothing to be said of the game which the Bulldogs played against Ala- bama, aside, of course, from that un- dying quality of fight which the men of Athens displayed. : Georgla Tech won her annual clas- sic over Auburn and thus gave Atlanta and contiguous parts that admixture of pleasure and annoy which goes to make life the adven- ture it is. \ HOWARD IS SWAMPED BY LINCOLN ELEVEN a su-| | NOT Golf players in the United States now_total about 2,000,00 The Gift Your Boy Style E275 IVE him the Black Beauty Bicycle—the wheel with: a national reputation. Sold.on the Xmas Cflubsl’hn. G_}xx anteed for 5 years. kit free. LACK '5 Soclts 65¢ A special value in Silk or Silk - and - wool Socks in snappy colors and mix- tures. 3 Prs., $1.50 Men 522 10th St. N.W. Open Saturday Enenings 7774 g BOTH TEAMS ARE PRIMED FOR SERVICE GRID CLASH Flood of Visitors Begins Invasion of Baltimore for Battle at the Municipal Stadium, Where a Ca- pacity Crowd of 78,000 Is Expected. ALTIMORE, November 28—The annual clash between the riv elevens representing the United States Military and Naval Acade mies today claimed the almost undivided attention of Baltimorear and the hundreds of visitors already arriving in the city for the contest t« morrow in the Municipal Stadium, where a capacity crowd of 78,000 ¢ expected. The West Point gridiron squad, with a personnel of § coaches, trainers and attendants, reached the scene of acti and billeted last night at Johns Hopkins University, workout was held this morning. Another practice session, the last one before the gam schedu for the stadium this afternoon, to acquaint the players with field and a conditions. Both workouts will be held in secret, with guards posted ¢ exclude the curious and possible Navy scouts. e The Navs stadlum gr but will complete Annapolis. Declari in the pink o win on 4 well sa unn Y. The Middies, howeve acquainted wit fleld of battle, for the sar ne of their h wi ast vear. Saw Yesterday's Game i had 2, includn ! yesterda 1 whose field a sho PENN NOW IS LOOKING T0 CALIFORNIA GAME preparation & his team to ¢ condition 1ble 1 By the Amsociated Press, PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Novemnib 23 —Pennsylvania, boasting her first un- defeated eleven since 1908 as a ye- sult of closing her Eastern campaign yesterday by conquering Cornell, 20 to 0, for the first time in four years, ton erda Our 9tk St. and Pa. Ave. Stores Open Saturday Nights Worl(manship FTER gjl, most any shoe looks good. So you've got to rely a lot on the dealer’s “rep.” for past per- formances! That’s the whole story back of “TRI- WEAR?” Shoe popularity. For nearly half a century we've been building ‘em as if every one had to break all known long-distance records for comfortable, good-looking mileage! Classy Tri-Wear Oxford in Black or Tan Hickory Calf. now looks forward to hopes of inter- | sectional glory in a battle slated | with the unbeaten Universit Cal |fornia team at Berke | Year day. Andy Smith, gridiron star at Pe ! sylvania 20 years agu and now coack of the famous California Gold. Bears, was in the record crowd of 56,000 that saw the Quakers, witi & | spectacular aerial offensive, down Cornell with the most brilliant per- | | formance they have shown all sea: | Four plays, in all of which forw rdl | passes figured, were enough to duce three touchdowns for Pennsyl- | ¢ i 3 vania, which otherwise was played | \est Pointers, pumped the hand c to a standstill by the powerful Cor-| B0D” Folwell, and the two men ex nell line. The Quakers won by tak- | Shanged = rem ences of othe |ing swift advantage of the Ithacans | ATINY-Navy games | outstanding weakness—luck of aerial| Coaches and pl | defense—but it s doubtful whether |XPTessed thems |any forward passing attack this sea- | ‘U7 battlesround. |son has produced such startingly The flood of visito fective results as that engineered by | YeSterday by many e | Rea McGraw, the Red and Blue cap- | the number cont | tain. with the hotel committee ke McGraw and Jess Douglas, another|Making reservations asked for Quaker backfleld ace, each figured ih | mall and wire at the last hour. | three of the victorious plays. In the | Hotels All Are Filled. {second quarter MoGraw tossed two| Hotel rooms all have been ta | passes, the first to Douglass and the | it was sald, but so many priv second to George Thayer, brilllant|nhomes have been thrown open 4nd, who scored hte frst touchdown. to|sponse to requests by tho commi -y | 11 demand uarte: Shortly afterward, another Dass 10| being met prompily . o o® Douglass was converted into a touch- | Fina) touches have been given down when the fleet receiver dashed | plans for a luncheon to President a: {40 yards to Cormell's goal line. The |fra Coolldge preceding the gam fourth decisive play came in the third | The President, who s scheduled quarter when Douglass picked a Cor-| arrive about noon, also is expecte nell heave out of the air and sprinted to attend a dinner afterward at t: 60 yards for Pennsylvania’s final| Hotel Belvedere. touchdown. Cornell outrushed the Quakers con- |sistently but tossed away two scor-| FMBAGSY SOCCER TEAM DEFEATS BALTIMOREANS |ing chances by fumbling and lost a third opportunity when Pennsyl- /The 3-to-1 beating administered t | the Baltimore Rangers by the soccer vania's defense tightened. It was a somewhat costly victory, players of the British embass: resterday was the first trou however, for Pennsylvania, for Clark Craig, star end, was taken to a hospi- tal with a slight brain concussion, sustained in making a flying tackle | 5 he early in the game. Cralg, playing | Sio 8eason for th his last season, may be unable to take | OT(2le CItY combing’ eleven figured in the scoring. |son accounted for Baltimore's ‘The victors were much stronge- part in the California game. | tenstvely than their rivals. both the Nav guests at th Regardiess of w exist between the t vesterday, when not busy dodging a mirers, the players 1 the frier of foes. Men who tomorrow v , shook hands and and e Lieut, L. M line coach in charge of t ed ef-| | | 1 | | ean of the The result fulfilled the gloomy pre- i game prediction of Gil Dobte, Cor- nell coach, that Pennsylvania was a “10-to-1 shot to win" and marked the fourth defeat the Ithacans have sus- tained this season after three un- beaten campaigns. It probably was the most disastrous year any Dobie- coached eleven has experienced In the span in which the famous gridiron tutor has had the helm at Washing- Naval Academy and " RUNS 105 YARDS TO SCOR™ Casassa of Tech High's fr sprinted 105 yards to a touchd a game which his team wo: over the sophmores for the class championshi Shirkmanship! D R Lo R R Style-E-115 Dressy, wonderful wearing Tri-Wear Black or Tan Calf High Shoes. Cor. 7th & K Sts. ; 414 9th St. *“City Club Shop” 1914-16 Pa. Ave. 1318 G St. 233 Pa. Ave. SE. .