Evening Star Newspaper, November 8, 1925, Page 73

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CThe Sunday Stad | sPorts Part 4—4 l;ages WASHINGTON, . UNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 8, 1925 - Georgetown Overcomes Lehigh by 40 to 0 : Northwestern Jolts Michigan Eleven MUDRUNNEI_{S OF HILLTOP BRILLIANT BACKFIELD WORK WAS DONE BY G. U. BALL CARRIERS DESPITE MUD. WOLVERiN]T:S? 3?])}3FE AVI‘ DAZE BROWN AND WHITE [EEERFoms T et IS MIDWEST’S BIG UPSET . Blue and Gray Scores in All Periods Except Se(‘nm].‘ : ; : gk ! X ‘ 5 P ’ A Winners Are Aided by Elgments in Placing Fir:( While Opposition Is Held to One First . W R A > - " 3 x »' 5 AR i o\ G « Black Mark Against Yost’s Eleven—Game Down in Homeeoming Day Game. ; Lt R : B . i : L Y Is Played Under Miserable Conditions. BY JOHN B. KELLER. . e ) : e R ’ ; it R e beeber 7 e sk steewed FORGETOWN UNIVERSITY'S foét hall team knew just what was TR el A " o % ” F s ¢ 5 ‘ ¥ irom sullen < s kne<s that <hrouded the swimming cxpected of it vesterdoy by the o'd grads here for the home- gridiron and a cruel wind t tossed punts back almost in . com:ing day celchbration of the Bilue and Gray and it left nothing face of the kicker were fhe agencies of nature t to he desired hy even its most ardent supporters. lumping into action in Northwestern's 3-t0-2 defcat of Michigan at Grand Park Stadium toda at high speed, it <Jashed its way to a 40-t0-0 victory over Lehigh on the It was Michigan's first defear 1 r time this vear. the muddy gridiron in Clark Griffith Stadium to make the alumni reunion a complete success in every way : E i 5 . season in the Middle We Eeom the open whistle until the final horn blast. the Hilltoppers \ 4 ' 8 > 1 Truly, it was a weird garn ia v ts: a ball <0 mud Wolverines have heen scored upe ' e cansed no spectator to doubt as to which was the befter team. They e § soaked that on two occasions L rom center to the outclassed 1 White in every department of the game . . 4 ~ i 3 punter; punts that twice 0 e line St did o most dly. Des the rain and the miry ficld, Hagerty, g v i 3 § 1 tumbles that were so tent t ve 1 Plansky. Metzzer. Thompson and O'Neil. given splended starts by the ;. 3 g 3 Py o s % b . 4 determining which tear } 5 valiant eflorts of the forward wal', recled off so many sparkling runs that | | s el 8 % 2 i ST R 7 " 2 o ered adi o : the visitors were dizzy most of the time. K i 3 » ; g - : ming toward objectives 1 A parr of touchdowns was registered in the initial period and after | = Sl : T 4 . 1 , A sardonic nature worked the 1 1 scoring lay n sccond quarter. the Hilltop juggernaut rofled over | - B . * . S 3 i b i strings and the plavers were th , cad: bt the almost he s+ Lehigh eleven to Hocks of points. oy ? 2 £ e - g V e A puppets. o 2 o3 ;. i B s ;. ot ; o First there was the gale—a Noit sld when Georgetown fo 1 itsel v b s ) 3 i s % western back in the first period 1 -vard line. Five plays netted 17 - » G c . and carried it 33 vards to Michigan arde ‘then Planske heached ne me UPON LEHIGH’S REQUEST | . |3:vard tine. Nuture tauzhed ogain visitin ckle to sprint the re- Metzger of Hilltoppers starting one when the ball. slippery from o vencer T 1 ot s A formal ceremony in memory | of several long runs he made against The hiz fullback drop-kicked the ex- : e R 2 5 % % - of mud. slid from Iried of Charley Pri Lehigh foot ball Lehizh vesterday. tra poim. A few minutes Liter. Waite e A 5 as he took the punt. A N estern D who died recently of in- | — ; - 4 - playerfell o G Tehieh ase ana | duries ‘received in a gridiron con- ; 5 s % ¥ Northwestern . Michizan Earas to: THEITANR Mo, Ty test. planned by as a SU H Z . line adamant = ught 10 en rl.,u‘mw'lm orto Farasa prelude to vesterday's engagement IOWA 's RPRISED e 4 % 2555 list nature’s zid fell back sind Plansky's hoot intended 1o bolster the At Clark Grifith Stadium. was can- S " # % place-kicked. the Lall <ailing with the s ¢ celed at the request of Dr. Reiter, BY WISCONS'N, 6-0 o L s i il | wind squarely hetween the gozl post . iieal Pontatdips member of the Lehigh faculty, who / S ; #nd the hereiofore inviolate Micbizan accompanied the team here. = ot Ao ! s had been scored on iy I the tiledineriod SGogmiles While Dr. Reiter appreciated the | 5 1. «.comaged Prece S 6 b N Ethvatern: Aive Afichisan ncke .ehigh punt and recovered ient that prompted George- e ball on ihe Sosition’s dovara FRmleile & TIOWA CITY, lowa, November S ¢ z - o 2 ep 3 * l ot ) ze the tribute, he Srdr aonbahit phe il < . stood behind his o line, ar ine. he first Mne-up there- | feared if would have a depres 1‘_)\: |\\K| & V‘\‘YV\VVl.‘!-J}» ‘|‘4{||:‘:1I’3u1 ’”r": i ; , % 4 ¢ seeinx 1he AMichizan o r plunged to tonch- affeet upon the personnel of the iy > 2 Plansky’s kick nother - Brown and White squad. em:in: The game was but a few minutes lizzard and dealt a severe blow 1o 24 ’ 1 : 7 - throuzh the slough 1o point was short. About midway of the Hawkeves Riz Ten championship 3 s & E L ol e < & b ¥ a4 blocked klck, a he period Plansky picked un a Le- hopes, winning. § to 0. > : : and a Michi ffigh fumble and ran ana slid nearly [unfavorable weather and field condi-| The lowly Wisconsin eleven. which % And " thus the efore he was forced across [tions, fumbling was frequent on the | had heen beaten hy Michigan and tied g : deadly earnest, ended the sideline when within 3 vards of [part of both teams. Usually, though, | DY, Minnesota and was generally con- ; A & fans,” with more 1 oal play wis enough for Meiz- |the fumbling team was able to yecover | Sidered one of the weaker teams in . than for their own score and this t the ball. Georzetown once lost the | the conference, had the hetter of 2] s > R = —— made zood with h pigskin by 2 fumble when it was well | PUNting duel. which was decided | | 4 ¢ v Second string backs did the scoring | within Lehigh territory apd going | 1argely by the visito eater suc o 28 ; % [ 7 2 In the fourth quarter. Starting from Strong, but once it gathered in a|CeSS in recov fumbles. o e L-‘\ Lehigh’s 35-vard line, only th Brown and White fumble to put itself | The game was played on a field Fn = - Js e e In iy aootini! vosiBor! covered with three or four inche& of 3 ; : E 3 o 8 el e R s S ] .. BT - vpocts SUCCESS AS BROWN WINS went around the other flank need any breaks to overcome Lehigh, | that benumbed the 10000 spectators. Lk W Rt i 8 b 3 3 O / ik ik The remaining 4 vards to soal were | They were a better lot of foot bull | Hundreds of them left before the game 1 Z . 3 2 e ? \ Cabe to get. O'Neil's |plaers and plaved a far better game | Was half over because of the intense z s TR e Rlinded by the hard driven snow Capt. Hagerty of the Blue and Gray did not get so very far on the play shown here, but it was one of the By ihe Associated Prese and handicapped by the slippery ball | few times that he was checked before making great headwa, ROVIDENCE. R. 1 cmber he extra point was a than their opponents and fully de wrzetown got the seore | Served the Lirge score they achieved §h it ‘,m’ biehtn o Line-up and Summary. and unsafe footing. teams apparently had about an even chance ir their game oi foot e ot A | S | e et Sl ot SYRACUSETIED, 3-3, | " v v v o L e R it B pooe e s a2 FOOT BALL RESULTS BY OHIO WESLEYAN e e " with v Rix Hltt A Etr ofizqal apd e Rz 3 game. 18 of them being chargenble PBrown and White forwards to the Quarterhck ‘v‘l»’\«‘nw "‘,"" _.v‘w. ‘4 lv" & o ; r‘n: ‘ i and Boston University gave 1 svetem PnaT ooy ansard (o the | Qe B s o recpret em sy e LOCAL. el svizact o ovember, T officials, coaches and spectators, the experiment surprised Lehigh by takinz a poor m F ack OCatlazhan | Phe Jone score came early in the| (eorgetown, 40; Lehigh. 0. Ligadinds (R).——The hiz toe of brilliant Blickle | cess pass and rushinz to the extia point fourth period after Capt. Griffin and Georze Washington, 0; Temple, 0. gained Ohio Wesleyvan. champion of the last of the zame 13 Il s fotwara wall had held! the. Badger | Xale. 43: Maryisnd, 4. 15 B 4 : the Ohin Conference. & 3103 tie with Lehigh Gets One First Down. = e Walte backficld on the 1.vard line in fow: Bucknell, > GAIERGASERO 5 Carleton, 19; Hamli BNrachie Merenoay i oo strong w Geor 0 1 5 . Al attempts at the goal. Kruez _Quantico Marines, Ohio Northern, 6; Case, 6. 2 5 oS L 89 i 4utes. s s€orzelown's de- . Jaren, > over for the touchdown and zinia Wesleyan, 0 Goe, 3 Koo Blickle seored a field zoal from the SR S g fense that Lehigh gained but 39 ey by ibehigh el c1. § Bain | OPSE (ORI SHe toughdown and wicter Naval Acsdeiiy Blaboss x, 8. 2 % 23 line after he and Harley A fumble by Cross on the first plas fin said he play svstem yards arith 'its runping: atinckiand | siophice): by Geomtalomniflil il o oo e ona S L B o bt3e. | Iand Froatimen; s Monmouth, 0; Corneli College; 0. Pearce had alternated in carryving the Of the game. picked up by Murphy. | definite and eliminates any suspicion was credited with only one first doen. | - Sabetalionss e L Gileen Kutech, was in uniform on the side- Iz e Penison, 12: Muskingum, 0. ball from the Westerners' 48-vard | Who ran with it to the 1-vard line be- | of jugzling of the time. 1t also elin That was made near the end of the | GIFRTe Maromes for St poonf Hieh g ail it ente: {thastaavibe. EAST. s line to the Orange 1S-yard mark. fore he was downed by Mishel, gave | nates stalling. It is partieul first period when the Brown and|ier e oial o Matenr fletiie SOl S R v Princeton; 36 Harvard; 0 B b Syracuse halfback., scored : | Boston University its only opportunity | valuable in a final period, when a los White, with three plays, advanced the Waite” Brennan for Golwen. " Feather: State g 3 s Peiin State, 6: Nofre Dame, 0, Lonisvillo, 38; Hose Foly, 9- eld’ zoal from placement from the | {0 score. During the remainder of the | ing team is likely to resort to o series Ball trom: ‘its’ 8-vacd ne o ita s wish, Flyan for Murtaugh, Clark Line-up and Summary. Syracuse, 3: Ohio Wesleyan, 3. Pt bl “,p\",r'l"""x;#r" 6 20-vard line in the second period. game it was on the defensive, de-|of forward passes when all oth vard line. Then Lehigh rushed it 6 | Stephens for Hases. Cheel for Thum. Raieiz Towa (0) Positions. Wisconsin (6. | Army. 14; Davis-Elkins, 6. T B e, 0. With two brilliant backs in Pearce | Spite the fact that few first-string men | tempts to gain have failed. 1 nder more yards before electing to punt, | {of, Hese, Martin for, Cannop Littel for]Hice Lot end. Polwki | - Navy. 27. Weatern Maryiand, 0. alawinWalaas, 105 rarletta, % |ana Blickle, a pair of giant ends in | Were representing Brown. the present system every time there Tk 17-yard advance wa wter | Lewin: Weiner for Littel. Simea Left d von' Breme Cornell. 62; Dartmouth, 13. Xaviers 19: Alron’ 0. * % Campbell and Lamme and a hard Under the system agreed to by the |is an uncompleted forward pass 23 Ly 10 vards than any other series of <mith for Cheel Ford for . v West Virginia, 11; Boston College, 0. sinnati, 6; Wittenberg, 2 charging tackle in Lavton, the Ohio | coaches of the two elevens the first |seconds are lost. Under the play sys- gains made by the visitors E Svans for Marun. Delaphane | T SRR | it 2 oA RUtrea 8 P aenberE: 2 eleven time and again stopped the | 1WO periods consisted of 40 plays, the | tem every forward pass. whether or A prominent factor in the Geors R 3 (Prineeton) . Um 1 Burrus | pigtshurgh, 6; Washington and Jef- Rt powerful charges of the Orange backs | 1ast two 335. The elapsed time for|not it is completed, counts as a plav. town defense was Waite, whe started | > 3 won vt Jegieraon. | Sehirme & rotoot | 0, chers. 14 Normal Uni. |and unleashed an aerial offensive that | the four perfods was 27, 28, 213; and | In every respect it is & faster game. RO N oy m -+ Risht haithack’ . K . e i onion: Mnlvessite 81 b 1438 was both spectacular and threatening. | 2614 minutes, respectively. The actual | more satisfactory to officials, piayers the right flank after w plavs had Fullhack : Columbia, 6; New York Univer vk, 31: Northwestern, 0. | Syrucuse made 16 first - | plaving time, by quarters, was 14:20,|and coaches. and particularly the broke up nu- h . o 0o sity, 6. laire. Normal, 28; Stout Insti-| ! ishing for o total of e, | 14:21, 1350 and 13:45. e D OfSila oL ihe gams ox merous plays directed toward his side isey Qg o Pro oliexe, 7, while Weslevan all told sz rey Coffin, Harvard, '94. co-| pressed their satisfaction with the e e i et s e e ARMY FINDS REAL FOE s e DG R |'vn||~\h’lmi'.rlifi- l‘;:'\:r:x:rl-'l. 0 Johw's, 0. | Yards b rushinz and made six first | organizer with K. W. P. Brown.|sysiem and voiced the opinion that its ind to the other side to Referee - Mr. Macidesohn ¢ Michi e 16 . > A "7 | downs by rushing and passing. rown strategist, of the system which | adoption generally is eventual elling ot Sorimma IN DAVIS AND ELKINS .. e g aines (Vale)| Field judze Auhemr 0 SumETE A De LAy 7 Valoasili A Blickle's superior ki 1| they seek 10 have incorporated in the Erom the spectators’ viewpoint the cialed remarkable hility s WEST POINT, N. V.. November | M. Lincki (Chicazo). Time of periode o Carnegie Tech; 45: Drexel, 0. FAR WES Pearce’s great runbacks offs official foot ball rules, expressed en-| opinion was unanimous that o ;‘ vunner in zetting down the field | 3 (#).—The Army foot ball team | minutes each under punts ‘ grneralls 1o nail the ve- | defeated Davis and Elkins College ards of zoal apd Thomp- Under the official sar the foot h r nmtt I was an unqualfied sne- Brown was the victor, 42 to 6, and at no <ta % e iR any question af the superiority of home el Shithe Lites was for the greater part of the game composed a't ntirely of subst the sys e b Gy : Washington State, 0. what Syracuse’s advantage otherwise. | tire satisfaction with the experiment. | tam was a hiz improvement. as at il New York College, 13; Manhattan, 0. * California, 28; Santa S ST — | times it was known just how much catches cday, o E Sl wive: iaits e A, 9 ) L o g 2 latitude the team with the hall had e e T ey g e ey vy WD STATE EKES OUT 1 i © e, wes, ILLINOIS BEATS CHICAGO /i i b Ereat gaps ent of the game. Johns Hopkins, 20; Randelph-Ma- he opposing barrier and ihe T Wilson scored for the Army in | COLUMRUS, Ohio. November 7| con i Utah, 23; Denver Uintversi(y BY 13 AF_[‘ER TRAILIN S nL Gy bl vanners (s were | the second period and Trapnell | (@) Ohio Staie defeated Indins to | AWoreester Poly, 151 Lowell Tox. Nlinols College, 2: Milliken, | - s ‘y DRAKE BEATS NEBRASKA ities 1o o went over in the final quarter after dzy. 7 1o 0. The game was plaved on <hington. 1 ViU fer worthwhile zain<. The Leo receiving a pass from Harding a field, of mud. Ohio State made eon : doin. 1. L T | IN AN ERRATIC CONTEST T brofi Powell scored the visitors' touch- | sfétent gains by an aerial atiack New Hampshire, 13 Conneetient | _(olorado Aggies, i 2 DES MOINES. November 7 (#).— ome Lehish | down, running 25 yards after re. iy ngreement the Tasi two periods| Apkies, 3. ers' College, 13. Br the Assaciated Pr Deared i : uld | | : g 29; W E b O i " 4 In a game featured by fumbling and Tngeriipeared 1o have in his grasp, ceiving a forward pass. | were cut to 1212 minutes Pennsyivania Military College, 3 PriEham Youne, 20; Western State, HAMPAIGN. I'l. November 7—Out of the mire and mud of 1llinois | kicking, Drake defeated Nehraska 14 oF Soe other of the ehosiee G ? ST LR " Montana, 20; Tdaho, 14, 2000.000 Memorial Stadium, Tllinois arose today to defeat Chicago, e T hree tackles were. matsset reton tos| 1)) AR I MOU IH ANNIHILATES Rachoster, 13 Allred, 0. e DT O Lol 13 to 6. while Z0.000 spectators sat through a driving rain. drenched | covering gronnd Jhree kles were missed before the / £ 2 Swarthmore, 13; Ursinus, 0. SRS aas | acking playver was hurled into the to the skin. to pay tribute to Red Grange, in one of the most remarkable | The feature play was by Spears, ' SOUTHL. = — edasttitions iver sia R L A who recoversd a fumble and ran 49 G. U. Rushes Ball 189 Yards, CORNELL IEAM 62 TO ]_3 31; Kentucky, 0 LAST-MINUTE SCORE - |, The spectators waited and waited in vain_for the annihilator of | ** ; ";44~-;[nl'uv\u '.,:uv;-'] 189 vards Auburn, 0. Pennsylvania’s championship dreams to cut loose just once on the slippery, 1shi greatest gain’ was AR A T T e lori Cemsanc 0. GIVES PITT TR'UMPHi'n;)‘;)d'd;\;'f‘fz.‘(i’:‘"u""ag‘-‘d ce across the chalk lines ta give them the thrill | FQRDHAM SMQTHERS i : r 2 1 Georgin Tech, he galloping ghost of the Illinois cleven, however, e e e D i isiana S i : | was o break away even once, because he was simply unable to rds 1 the second pe| Y 5 Louisiana State, 6; Rice Institute, 0. was unable to break away 5 ply e S osmcdlthes i } I\xO\ ER, N. H., November 7—-With the giant “Swede” Oberlander | Virg Polytechnic Institute, 0; | keep his feet whenever he started. HOI.Y CROSS, 17 TO 0 ng. Fre ishi contenting themselves with starring in a spectacular air attack that swept all before it, Dart- | 5‘:.’" l"".‘""‘l. State, "‘ in i | 27 o \mociatod Rrses | The famous red-head carried the ball |among_the bewildered Maroons and | punting often. At that, play gener- oith tciabiell Cornelisstaot Balkieree tath il b ise oSt A Aot Eatplins, rginia M| PITTSBURGH, November A | from scrimmage 17 times for gains of |gave Illinois her victory. Brittor | 4 Iv was in 1 territory during motth ol Sotiel s oot bauiorce D = ay by tary Institute, 11. cornered Pitt Panther bided his time |13 yards and was thrown for a total | passed to Kassel for the point after| NEW YORK, November T (#)—- that quarier. Twelve first downs | the annihilating margin of 62 to 13. ’_lr‘ul-nmf; l';'“('_:'a;'r*: g to spring on \Washington and Jeffer-|loss of 26 yards. Grange's interfer |touchdown. MecCarty scored the first | Fordham's powerful foot ball eles were made by Georgeto e I oR TS : - f (Aians ennessee, 12 Centre, 0. son today and when the opportunity |ence today was a mess, because |touchdown of the game in the secon. e i + Many of the Geovzetown gains were Beforea crowd of 15,000 Jess Hawley's big Green forwardipassed the | washingtoniand Lee, 12, Virginia. .| cors setsad It ia score & 6.XoBvictory bnsther wiition ot Dansherty: slip- | period after Grange had fumbled and |(rampled Holy Cross at the Pol offset by penalization. Four times the Red-clad eleven into the worst defeat it has suffered in the five-year | Hampden-Sidney, 6; Davidson, 6. |and eliminate the losing team from |ping and sliding in the mud, cnuldlnhimgu had recovered on Illinois’ |Grounds here today 17 to 0. lillioppers were thrown back for 15-| reign of “Gloomy Gil” Dobie. Simultancously. Dartmouth, by its astonish- pflfi;_ugg;g- ?“AD,",';:}&'“, Wes, | the Bastern gridiron champlonship | get started. 18-yard line. | Fordham scored its first touchdown it Josses Iy the officials and once ing triumph over the foc that came here with an unbeaten record, lifted | | Emors Henry, 14 » s s s e Grange Is Checked. Ohlosse sl Toe. in the second period after a steady b was penalized but twice. eaen |it3¢lf to the peak of the Eastern championship heap. v | ‘Mercer, 17; Furman, 0, 2 biocked punt in the closing minutes | Granses outstanding achievement | S5 EC L Jadvance into purple territory. With me to the exten 5 yards i The victory not only kept Dart-|half the length of the gridiron.| Mississippi Aggies, 46; Mississippi |of play. Wissinger. Pitt guard. scooped | 908Y WAS & foard wun on veturiiill o 0% oia "NieCarty tore through the | the ball on the Holy Cross 5.vard With the hall ind greasy | mouth's record of no defeat intact, Tully taking (rnnrl'\;lnni_ heaves ('(;l'lofilv.l 0. it up nn|()m n‘ = line and ran ARpCS X k S left side of the Illinois line for a |stripe the Worcester eleven was pen with.mud, littie ward passinz was| but hroke the tie that existed up to|twice in succession in the third quar- zlethorpe, uniolesied to the goal. S et J {ouchHimn: Cuules’s Daas ot 1hs ey 3 £ & LS sattempied. Georgetown tried the teday in the series with Cornell and | ter and gong over for touchdowns.| Roanoke. The game was plaved In a downpour | Teday's £ame was plaved under the |00 It was grounded. L A ton s oside pley erial attack seven times. Four of ved accounts for the humiliating | while on three other occasions passes | Sewanee, 16; Mississippi. 3. of rain and the crowd which wasex-| 1 " gold, covered with straw for a| [Illinois evened.up the count in the |t the sotee Cranaact Llarough its pasees were grounded, while. the at e tmacans panded the | from round the 25ard” iine re | vk, 0: Sonthern Methodlst, 0. | Decied (0 breaic ‘all recora= in benn:| The, feld: govered with sraw for'a | Jnols Senc up the count, In e | for the’ ecore. ‘G oihers were zood for zains of 13, 1s Green in 1921. The Hanoverians now | eulted in scores. y : : S sylvania foot ball history reached |, "in the event of snow. was a quog- |hles in succession by Kernwein. on [PORUG SRR EOC o nd 5 vards. Lehigh tried fonr passes. | hold five victories to fonr for Cornell | Cornell was bewildered and almost | “oncord, 0. { only 30.000. mire of mud. with pools of water the second fumble Kernwein lost 10| peautiful 4s.yard drokkick between (ne vas intercepted with disastrous | in the series that started 25 vears ago. | defenscless against ihis daziling ‘die:| Lennir Rhyme, 28; High Point Col- | Washington and Jefferson can at | g0yl 2 it and so slippery that daring | vards, and Iilinoistook the Ball on | fccoactn sas for bt e Saa ooy yesnlts tn the passing team, another 5 play. lege, 1. tribute the greater part of its defeat T e suber vl downs fo Chicago's 10-vard Tne. Chi. | Wit o aoie (e ory wapam Soore: zrounded and fwn zot § and 2 vard Passes Play Big Part. Just how brilliantly effective the Tepnessee Doctors, 7: Fort Ben. | o its inability to get away punts and insoaked spectators, huddled |cago rezained the ball on downs. and | Vo s miniie (o play Woerner, tak; gains Oherlander's bullet-like passes re. (Green’s aerial weapons were is shown | pins ©g, | frequent fumbles. .. ¢ 3 together in the huge double-deck | Kernwein, attempting a punt, fumbled | #or the next Maroon touchdown. Gra- There wns no consistency in the | gulted in rix of Dartmouth’s nne by the fact that 12 out of 19 passes) “exas Christian, I; Texas Aggies, 0. | Pitt was badly outplaved aside from | P5C /L0 ‘Gt ‘for nearly three hours|and dropped the ball and kicked it] som: rop kicked tie moal work of the punters of either team. | ouchdowns. Two others were ac.| Were completed for the amazing total outhern Methodist, 8; Atkansas |the break of which they made the |Stricture sat for nearly three hours) 4nd qropbed the be¥l ang tom goal ki Gormley and Plansky got off =ome | .qunted for personally by Oberlander, 8ain of 231 yards. while Cornell com- | ypjvers 'y | most to gain the victory 'nu‘-hl:;::a(.« ing wind, trying to protect them.|line, the ball going out of bounds on good Kicks for the [Hilltoppers. but | gne on a 48-vard dash through most | Pleted only 2 out of 10 heaves for " mexas University, 13: Baylor, 3. "‘1:’;;_‘;9 ‘;i"‘::"fm:\'_'n Kf"""‘:‘;;‘::: e | selves, wearing long strips of white | Chicago's 2-vard line. GEORGIA TECH VICTOR ‘oth. were guilty of some poor boots cam and another on | Bains of 44 vards. Two Dartmouth| & ) S e g 2 G e ek AP S i B LY O 1 Comel i and anether o FARR S8 SR e oo e o Wllam | day P 1%, Jou Ghaton vorning s, Wit ¥ it it Whravel g || riion ke chicigzie et guara | 0 LUy 1o c EE YARD RUN of the kicking for Lehigh. The former | fhe ninth and final tally was cavried | Cornell’s found their way into the | Wiy ang Mary, 23: Atbright, 0|, The first down count was Washing. | Middle through which their head pro | to te the count. Britton calmiy booted in good sivle, but an injury | g'er by a substitute back, Starret,|arms of Green-jerseved men. Lonchburs Colloa $4 (‘;“mmd'm'lkon and Jefferson 13 Pittshurgh, 2. hod forced him ont of action early in the | inteve =" e e = . T wch. | Amos, Washington an S - sheond Derind. O'Callsghan put his| PL2 Jutcteeiied o Coruell peds aad | o e o Centenary, 17; Oklahoma Teach- |,.) " was the individual star of the oflcloth around their hats. Before the Tech defeated Vanderbilt University, toe into- the oval for ectabls dis | Tactt 18 VEEIAGD e ST | coomeit (13). _ Positions. - Dartm'th (62). | “Niddtebury, 19; Tufts, 0. | game, advancing the ball 131 vards | jo.‘or the 26 special trains had rolled | Line-up and Summary. 7 to 0, here today, when Wright, sub. tances several times. but generally his; " \ypila Oberlander was the outstand- ' Foi "t < “Rignt tackie... (<) Parker | Fobart, 24; Union, 13, [ BC2L, Mitembin into town the entire supply of oil-| A e mee. L ;mfi",hh“"f'fkv f‘:{.cflm' dec"“' work was of low order and once aniing tower of strength in the Green on- ) Munins..".""" Kight sawd. ..., Rubin . Lawrence, 11; Hamilton, 0. The Line-up and Summary. cloth, slickers and rubbers had been | §a: broke through Vandy's iin¢ and rari outside kick by him was good for enly | slaught, turning in a performance | Bapuano. ... Center .- DA | Muhlenberg, 38; Franklin and “Mar- | pittshurgh (6). Positions. W. & J. (0).| cxhausted, and even the supply of | Shi it % _vards for ihe lone touchdown in 2 yards. Mullaney, who did the| . ceoms to clinch his claim to all- | Kearney (.. [Laft tackle. " Holleran | shall, 7. MoMillen. .. Teft" end Edwards | newspapers was_gone. D . the final perfod of the game. - e e M vement © aser | American fame. the big blond backfield | fenpell. - Eelt b o g JWN | Willliams Freshmen, 45; Wesleyan | 82t LOE | usiey backbeld that.ontonarsed T | Bramirssio. - Bent faaue: - oy e e thousand fans witnessed wvas quite an improvement over |, et TR MG e® screen for his e i Dbt | Kreshmen,, 0. | Stesle. Lett wua TG | nusicy backneld that outcharged T1H. | DAmbrosio: . Rifht end ety - Fonischan amazing passes that was perfection SRBORRR - S Wi Penn Siats Freshmen, 7 Bucknell | Wissmser: .. Kigh gunri ..iiewis | nois,” with “Five-vard” McCarty, the | Granke (capt.) "Quar 5 Gariey | the struggle. : . ate o 3 % “Berreheem Left halfback. .. Rouse i o ; Fullback - th *Ri S h B 2 i - ! 5 Plansky Misses Field Goal. itsell while Lane, a running mate, ds Freshmen, 7. ight tackle plunging fullback. hearing the brunt .U Right halfback.’ .. Marks gl are- Score by p P‘ ods S <. 2%, .. . s . > tack i . n = Pullback e iz Only one attempt to score from the and Tully .m:r e :"dl:m -'l;_xg:g Lorson 2 Ko ) St. John's, 27; Philada. Marines, 0. S ez odey ?;l:eh: z:"“:)r \'1'.',“”,;;.'.‘“:“;7,1:‘%‘,"::.’..2,,3 el PLAYER SCORES 37 POINTS. e e of U Second. beriod | hemaeiven unciring “ball Hatwital i1 ay iy it ot ] PETTDAM D KR | Siiventaon 111 s period. The Maroons had & decided | hicago ... 0—=%| NEW ORLEANS, November 7 (#) o ey Fotmd Hselt umable 1o This trie of Green Rashes. running | ton 1w for Westers | Ohio State, 3: Indiana, 0. oA Rdvantage because of the weight and | U008 oo 0 8 e | Tulane defeated Louisiana Poly. 37 e "headway with running at.|wild . through Cornell's — defense, | loichdoown—Can Isamient ) DACOY Winois, Chicago, 6. ! Pittsburah. 5 | power, but Illinois played the smarter | niinois . scoring: _ Touchdowns — Britton. | t0 0, here today in a game featured hy TS Ty e o hianie ab e | Micked the DAl out o the BIrIth | S ot {aE {1 XVSsen W& game Stier, I ForTars nees (Britton w0 | Lie, séoring of Fiournoy, the big back, Thge il el saai e o i e p frer "o Northwestern, 3: Michizan, 2. Pittsburgh scoring : Late in the third period, with the | Mier tochdown=_Forward pam (Briven to | (08 SO OF FORion, (e big back, e el R seoni. ML losl mi) Gonnts the field. At times ORI B SO (s salle). Umpire— | fowa State, 9: Grinnell. 8. e—Mf, O'Brien (Tufts). Umpife— | SCOre tied at 6 and-6. Rouse attemnted | Masker (Northwestern). Umpire—Mr. Fred | points, Flournoy scored four times, merk for a try At 4 broke clear to grab the oval and | E. W, Carson (Penn State). Head lin Drake, 14; Nebracka, 0. | Mr. Thor o Eleld judze—Mx. |to punt. Reitsch and Kassell blocked | Youns (Iilnols Weslevan) Head linesman— and added four points afer fouch var Jow and the ball rolled o L0 | e Rt the £oal tine unimpeded. . | pan—a; ¥ Risier Colraie). rield tudse™ | - Oldahom: K e ankart, (Dartmouth). ‘Head linesman—Mr. | it ' D'Ambroio, Miinois, fell on the | Mr- X, E. Kearns (De Bavh). Field judze—< | downs, missing one. He difa kickad & toehba k. 5 ke éXpected under such' Three times, these Dlayers vovered|rs ivi somroa - Time of O et S mintet eath + MM | ali back of the goal line a3 It bounded periods15 monutes. goal from the feld. s 7 a conclave of robed and hooded Klans- | before trying to place-kick for the ASHVILLE, Tenn., November 7 men. They even wrapped strips of |extra point, but failed. (#).—The Golden Tornado of Georgia

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