Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 20, 1916, Page 3

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“ INSURANCE i v "L DIl S\ foslor scheme Hisnic was S L 3 1 That fumble was enotigh to “With! s ONLY THREE CENTS A DAY et e ’ tance, Yaie made no mistake this time. the cost to N. F. A. Boys Score 10 Points in Last Quarter—Stanley and | Yais yas clawing awsy ot Princeton's J. L. LATHROP & SONS, Agents - > - s 28 ‘Shetucket Street. : Difficult Field Goal.. - ; quarter] ‘was kept out of the game at the ?g :’dm:: 1 nwu't‘hfitube will s against. Harvard, next Saturday. CORNELL EASILY DEFEATED : MASS. AGGIES. ithacans Roll Up 37 Points While Bay State Boys Were Unable to Score. ' Cornell easily "defeated Massachu- metts Agricultural College, 37 to 0, on Saturday at Ithaca on a mud-soaked field. Conditions made open play im- possible and botl teams resorted to Mne plunging. The Ithaca backfield gained almost at will. Speed making four of the touchdowns. In six at- tempts only one goal from touchdown i § SATURDAY’S. MARKET. There Was a Veritable Riot of Specu- goal line, now only three yards away. This was the line that no team had crossed before—the line that had held back the rushes of uth and ard. But, as some one has it is a long line that knows no turn- ing. Princeto; Yale n Moseley ... Higtley i o g 4 York, Nov. 18.—Deali New _York, - o Drief il { i . After withstanding the battering and hammering of the Academy backfield for three rs Bulkeley's de- fense collapsed with a cave in that was ultimate, resulting in the Academy scoring a touchdown and fleld goal at Plant fleld, New London Saturday. It was in the final quarter. that th Academy struck the crushing blow: cemaseiaiaia. .... Whitcomp Lelft Half Reddon Stanley . Donnelly Referes, Ebbs. Umpire Wholley. Timers Stanley, Ema. Head linesman, Linesmen, Earrington, Hertz. eepgies A blom afl-ln veritable riot spec pers, the principal issues of that group gaining 2 to £ points, and in-several jnstances considerably more. The ad- vance wus attended by circumstantial rumore -of impending mergers or con- solidations, none of which received confirmation in authoritative quarters, Ricketts Graham {33 22 Wy o (i3 guard sesessielinusses i Left | ZESEEE fiss Fees b Have you INSURANCE, GOOD IN- SURANCE and ENOUGH ' INSUR- ANCE? Better have US see to it NOW before the fire. We offer strong com- panies and expert service.. ISSAC 8. JONES, insurance and Real Estate Agent Richards’ Building 91 Main St. BURGLARY INSURANCE The Travelers Insurance Co. _B. P. LEARNED & CO. Agency Established May, 1846. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Brown & Perkins, Aiomeys-ai-law Uver Uncas Nat. Baak, Sbetucket St Entrance stairway near to Thames Nauonei Baunl. Telephone 38-3. DOWNFALL OF PRINCETON Complications Arise on Eastern Grid- iron—Yale Played Hard Game. New York, Nov. 19.—Eastern football teams cast form to the winds in sev- eral games Saturday with the result that the closing days of the season found the gridiron situation badly complicated. Princeton, with the best eleven that has represented the Orange and Blgck in several years, fell -a comparfively easy victim to Yale, partly because of her own errors of omission and commission. Harvard, with a second string combination op- posing Brown’s gridiron machine, was overwheimed by the Providence play ers. Dartmouth was held to a tie by West Virginia and the Army had diffi- culty in defeating Springfield. Keefe. = & . 3 Stanley, Graham and Ricketts, the he- Substitutes for Bulkeley, Glenn for was kicked. mml:z thvefitck, lcmg& 's| New high levels were ruc‘had‘ by m:..' c‘uc.,,,h., roes of the contest fore off repeated | Britton. O'Neil for Glenn. | Baldridge ................... e i o play. . /thelAsienonds, "Tth, . Keunsoott, Inepiraci” ;10 & ¥ “diial gains until Stanley rushed across the| Substitutes for N. ¥. A.: Ferguson os ol LR Sy ie Teunivi Chino, Greene Cananea, Miam!| "1 N ¥ Pock . coveted chalk line. From.then on the |for Sears, Lynch for Graham, Donnell | Comerford ................ P R e icly Comnells right]andi Nevada coppers..ag woll as Chile | 1 ¥ L peck . Bulkeley eleven lost heart and’to rub|for Senft. - 3 B sl e i reridwnlol ross more ‘thau € pointe with| I8 8 ¥ % 3 nd ma) e of e i T ce: 2l Nk it in a bit Stanley drop kicked a goal| The quarters were 15-10 minutes{Ta Roche ................ Raion | Ths'ine un: e o i ana] T Nova Seotls 8 from a very difficult angle. ‘The first three quarters the ball trav. elled up. and down the fleld neither team having outclassed the other. But at the opening of the last quarter things began to look different. The red and white came on the field with renewed fighting spirits and this spirit reigned supreme until the final whistle was blown. After the game the Academy stu- dents gave a demonstration in New London, parading the city over 100 including a large number of the fair sex. After parading the main streets of the city here they adjowned to the campus - where a large bonfire with speeches. attracted a large crowd. First Quarter. N. F. A. recived the kick-off. Stan- ley ran it back to his own 25-yard line, with good interference. The Bulkeley line held and Stanley was forced to,punt. Mallon fumbled the ball, but recovered it before Sears could_get it. Donnelly made the only gain for Bulkeley, plunging through guard for five-yard. Keefe got Bulke- ley’s punt ana ran it back flve yards. Bulkeley w#; penalized for off-side. Stanley made 8 yards around left end. He almost got away with a clear field | but Bradshaw cut in through from the rear and brought him down. Rick- etts plunged & yards through right guard. Stanley made 5 vards between left end and left tackle. Graham made the necessary 2 yards oy plunging 5 vards through right suard. Bulkeley substituted Glenn for Britton. Stan- ley made 6 yards through right guard and Keefe stole through the line for 5 yvards more. Stanley made 15 yards to the goal line, but was brought back to the three yard line for off-sirg. The Bulkeley line held like a rock and the Academy backfield couldn’t fine a hole. Bulkeley captured the ball on downs on their own 2 vard line and N. F. A. was penalized for off-side. The bhll was kicked after Bulkeley had made 10 vards once and had been penalized ten vards for holding. Keefe fumbled the ball before the punt and May got the ball and also a ten yard start. Keefe, Ricketts, and Stanley tore ! off after him, and stopped him on- his and 12-10 minutes. YALE’S ALERTNESS DEFEATED TIGERS Blue Eleven Took Advantage of Prince- ton’s Errors—Score 10 to 0. Yale won, 10 to 0, from Princeton, Saturday, and for this Yale deserves all the credit that belongs to a fight- ing, crippled team that gave tbe best it had te offer. But Princeton’s col- lapse was so amazing that even her most hectic supporters were soon plunged into a despair as deep as the well of doom. It was beyond all, understanding that a veteran machine, out to revenge a past reeking and dripping with dis- aster, should once more blow so wide apart, with fragments scattered up and down the field. The first quar- ter supplied the weirdest exhibition of football ever witnessed in a big November game. Both elevens flop- ped and floundered up and down the hard plain in a Punch and Judy exhi- bition that was all to the Judy and nothing to the Punch. But after this initial fiurry Yale settled down to the main business in hand, while Princeton e»ntinued pop- ping in vulnerable spots like the back- fire of a racing car. After the first quarter and a portion of the second Yale went {o the Punch, while Prince- ton gave Judy a spicy play clean across the so-called boards. Princeton, in her stratezy at vital spots, made every mistake that foot- ball knows, and then, with the true spirit of the adventurer, went forth and dug up new bones, unknown to the science and research of the game, And this was only a part of it. In addition to these mistakes of strategy Princeton went to battle with a slug- gish, rickety stride that had no phan- tom’s rt of a chafce against the Yale drive led by the indomiable Cu- pid Black, a Bersek and a Bulldog rolled into one massive frame that fre- quently expanded with such violence that complete nudeness was threat- ened in the presence of 82,000 startled eyes. Cupe’s white-banded brow, popping in and out and up and_ down all . L) ree—N. A. Tufts, Brown: um- ‘Williams, Pennsylvania; field. judge, David L. Fultz, Brown head linesman, B. S. Land, Annapolis. Time of periods, 15 minutes each. HARVARD UNABLE TO HOLD POLLARD Brown Gives Crimson a Sound Beat- ing—Star Providence Backfield Star Runs Wild. The Brown football team furnished a substantial setting Saturday, at Cambridge, for a gridiron star, ‘Fred Pollard, its negro halfback, whose brilliant attack defeated Harvard. Brown, undéfeated through the seasom, prevented a Crmison score and main- tained its record of having held its goal line clear in every game. - Although Pollard was the special object of Harvard’'s defense, which at times was so forceful as to draw offi- cial warnings, and, in one Instance, a pepalty for unnecessary roughness, he was effective in every department of play. He rushed from close forma tions, ran wide or dodged his way through broken fields for gains of from four to 40 vards. He received forward passes cleanly, not only those of his own team, but also Harvard passes which he intercepted. Defen- sively he was a sure tackler who often downed the runner. . The Harvard team as it faced Brown today was largely one of sec- ondary strength, regulars being saved for the game with Yale next Satur- day. FExcept in flashes it was without consistent powers of attack, although the call of time in the second period stopped a Crimson advance which was still unchecked 12 yards from Brown’s goal. Bond was the factor of greatest force in the Crimson backfleld. Three times Brown stormed the Cornell 27 Ryerson Mass Aggies 0. Grayson ‘The session was the 6 per cent. bonds 6 points. noteworthy also for new maximurns registered by Bethle- Gillles Blanchard hem Stee! at 700 and U. S. Steel at 126 3-8, Among the less important special- Miller .. Spaulding ties American Writing Paper preferred achieved similar distinction, with sub- Roberts stantial improvement in the shares. of other paper companies, as well as the better known - independent steel and equipment concerns. Bonds were strong in keeping with stocks, but much of the trading in that division was confined to convertible is- sues. Tctal sales, par value, aggre- gated $3,450,000. MICHIGAN VANQUISHED. Penn Wins Out in Close Battle—Score 10 to 7. Pennsylvania University's football eleven by taking sharp advantage of opportunities and holding firm at criti- cal moments defeated Michigan, 10 to 1, at Ann Arbor, Saturday. The Wol- verines had half a dozen chances to put over the winning touchdown, but their efforts lacked the finishing punch. Howard Berry scored the points which brought victory to the Quakers. In the first period, when Sparks punt- ed poorly, Berry caught the ball on Michigan’s 40-yard line and ran 30 yards before he was tackled. Derr and Berry advanced the ball to the 1-yard line and the latter went over. Derr kicked the goal. The third period was scoreless, al- though Michigan twice had the ball within a shadow of Pennsylvania’s goal. Failure to execute forward pass plays on these occasions stopped the Yost men. Shortly before the periodi ended, however, Pennsylvania wa: penalized half the distance to her goal because of rough work by Wray. This put the ball on Pennsylvania’s 20- yard line. It was on the Easterne’s one-foot line when the period ended. Batoptiss Min Beth Steel Brookiyn R T United States bonds were unchanged on call during the week. 'sTOCKS. i 38833 4 g § i E:;?E i i ¥ T i gei §iw . §uf spene LT g T 4400 Va Iron C & C New York. Nov. 18.—Mercantile paper 3 1-2, sterling 60 day bills 4.71, commercial 60 day bills on banks 4.70 3-4, commercial 60 day bills 1.70 Brown Shoe pr 1 : Vorwich | through the fracas, was Yale's Na- e i 60 Bums B 3 85% |1-2, demand 4.75 5-8, cables 4.76 7-16. fact’ that other teams won declisvely |little excursion toward the Norwich|throush the fracas, was V. Crimson line in the opening period, | “"Si £ Ovar S touohd 160 Rums Bros % | 1-2, .75 5-8. . 2 a TTe , the em of no - mith went over for a touchdown| 14, Brunswick % 8 3% | -2, £ does not remove the puzzling features | £oal line befors he O e rae T s e aa after Purdy and Pollard had rushed | on the first play in the last period and | sim poe Ssw = 3% | Francs, demand 5.24 1-2. cables 5.531-2. of the week-end play. * The outcome of the Yale-Princeton was in Bulkeley’s possession on the Academy’s 30 yard line. It was Black who fell upon Prince- ton’s fumble in the final quarter on the ball inside the 10 yard line. Twice the ball was carried over but an offi- cial ruling that it went outside on one Maulbetsch kicked goal. The strug- gle ended with Pennsylvania holding Petroleum Marks, demand 69 5-16 cables 69 3-8. Krone®, demand 11 7-8, cables 12 1-8. Guilders, demand 40 3-8, cables 41. vas typicai of c tie , : 5 'e D4y et i e e Rl itk & et the imisers 20-yard line'and gave the | play‘ cost Brown e touchdown. . Polof o e chigans S4-yard Line. - | e Cuse I o Lires, demand .71, cables 6.70. Rubles, B Second Quarter. brilliant e Gore his chance to Carry |jara made the firat Score on a wean e line-u; Orvanart| 0 Gt gaine o s e e g i et e 1ato tiaiggecond year wewe rowted oy an |, OF 1be speniug of the second quart- |2 forward pass deep info the touch-|which followed two runs in which, he|[Dunne X 1200 Ches & Ohio @, ' 'GX|71 58 Mexican doliars 5. Govern- e s Blav: i 4 er Donnelly ploughed 3 yards throug! Zon, . €| had gained 60 yards. 160 Chic Gt Weat 4 14% 14% |ment bonds steady. Aailro: nds e R Al ! | right guard. MeMillian hroke through |Smash off-tackle that blotted Prince- | "°A Senalty = for holding “interfereq|Wellmann . - Matthows | ° me Ciic G W pr 85 S8 llswons e Jamentals of Tad Jones' coaching |the line and threw Mallon wor a 5| ton’s Waing dnpam from sight under { with Brown's offensive in the secon Henning| 30 C R I & P 5 13 3% = methods. Without detracting from the | Yard loss. The N. F. A. line took a|a smear of Blue. period and gave Harvard the oppor- |DONT -ceceeie-poro--oe 90300 Chile Copper my % 3 COTTON. efforts of the Blue it can be said that | Prace and held Bulkeley to downs. The “YW-‘B, *flgo ack who led the charge | tunity which only the time signal W. Wray | 130 Cling Con Cop T1% 18 New York, Nov. 15—Cottor futures Princeton was as much responsible for | Academy lost the. pigsskin.on:downsof ‘Yale's forwards in an assault that|checked. Pollard ran 46 yards after A TS T : T L e Sgk 3% 1% |opened firm.’ December 20.15. January its own defeat as wh ‘Sits successful|DY & narrow margin. Bylkeley fumbled [S00n- battered back Princeton’s vet-|an exchange of punts for his second Ertresvaag | 000 Col Gas & Blees? 5y 445 20.21, March 20.41, May 20.87, July Tival s and Stanley recovered the ball. May[eran fine. [Few ¥ale lcaptains, bat-|touchdown in the third period, using e resvang| Camcon cE e P v s 20.70. o = _ | broke through the line and threw e & I 0 the straight arm, a baffling change of 200 Consol Gas . 136% New York, Nov. 18.—Cotton futures e e T o e root s | Koefo for a loss. Gallup' threw Stan- Beater day A, the husky, deep-|stride and extreme speed to slip e e o= Titte | e i et T closed firm. December 20.52, January bellieodities cne lonia i fon s lev for' aloss Staniey punted to Chisied feader of the winning team. |through the field of Crimson defend- Miller| 89 Com Products 233, 223 | 20.57, March 20.74, May 20.01, July Sy = allon who fumbled put recovered. g = - | ers. 2 2300 Com Prod pr 103% 105t 20.858. Abiiity 1o tale advaniage of ny opear | Bulkeley was forced to kick. . The|leEy—the Story, of Princeton’s many | Tn the last period, Harvard threat- o 1600 Crucible Sucel 24 o Spot quiet: middling 20.50. ing. The failure of Princeton to cover | AcAdemy ran the ball back to Rulke‘; e derat ot o ;amlvn';m;"j: i ened l”»i' an dassau]t which ‘started on | Sparks . .c......-..oooo-- s Jro e e i I o ki 4 = ley’s 40 yard line by line plunging an 2 - - ) : 2 eir 24-yard line and was carried 36 = the kickoff at opening of the second | S¥'s 4 VArC Hne by ine b attempted | Vital statistics unfold a peculiar yarn.|yards in nine rushes, only to be stope .... Light LIVE STOSK_ MAKET. half gave the Blue a chance to regain a drop-kick, but his attempt Yale, to begin with, went to war with ped when Pollard intercepted a Crim- the ball and score a field goal which, WAS| her star quarter, Travers Smith, sick . TMEEIE e T L BEIEH: - - <o e AT 7 b Berry —RBeeves, receipts as it developed, would have been suf- | fruitless. . in a New York hospital, stricken the | tne Harvara line for imacif against Fullback 23 cars on sale. Steers ficient to win. The Tigers made sure Third Quarter. day before the game. 3 gains with Purdy end Jemail aselet. [ Score by-periods: in lignt supply and steady; bulls, thin their defeat, however, by later fumbl- | Sullivan got the kick-off but was| Yale went in then banking heavily | fvg Syrenn, Purdy and Jemail assist-j, Score by 00 7—7 Cows and tat stock & mrm,;. 4 mediym ing the bali while it wash in their | pulled down by Ferguson and McMil-fon Le Gore, and vet Le Gore in the | ingy sen \PTOKe through all defence | Michigan 3 0 0—10 grades steady; the yards were clear- possession on the 20-yard line and|Han before he could get a good start. X - pethingtwo, Captain Black made possible a touch- down by falling upon the rolling spheroid. ° Given the hall by their opponents twice on the twenty yard line , Yale quickly converted ~the errors into BulkKeley made 7 vards by using Don- nelly as a ram for line plunging. Al- though several times Bulkeley. only got its distance by a margin of a few inches, the Academy didn’t seem to be able to stop them. Bulkeley attempt- éntire span of the game rushed the ball but thirty yards, which came on one lone dash. Gore’s eleven additional attempts he netted the Bulldog cause but four yards all told, or something under two feet to the rush. twenty-six of In Le vards of Harvard’s line. On the next rush he failed to score by inches and Purdy succeeded a moment later. All three goals from touchdown were kicked by Devitalis who has booted 31 such goals this season with- out a miss. Dartmouth and West Virginia Tied. Dartmouth closed its football season at Hanover Saturday b: ving a 7 to tie with West Virginia. Dart- mouth’s score came in the third per- iod on a long forward pass from Can- Gulf § Steel 1 pr ed. Common to fairly prime steers sold at $8.75@10 per 100 pounds; oxen and stags at $6.75@8; bulls at $4.60@ 7.25; cows at $3.40@6.50; one cow at $7.00. Dresed beef steady at 11@ 15 1-2¢ for city dressed native sides. Calyes—Recelp! 463 head: 228 on t 3 The lineup and su ; 3 scores, but at no other time could it [ed to drop kick on the last down from | This only begins the upset. There 5 : : S 0 G $ States s sale. Market active and_firm. Common seriously threaten the Princeton goal [ the 25 yard line was a miserable fail- |arc three main ways of ~gaining | " aiocvard Bt e oI Lo | s Tinoks Centenl to prime veals sold at $10.00@14.50 per line. As_has been the case all sea- |ure. ground—by rushing the ball, by for- | panieard ) e el e e s i e L Fans 100 pounds: culls at $8.00@3.50; gTass- son, the ‘Tigers showed an excellemt defense but were woefully weak in of- fensive play. Aside from a brilliant serfes of suc- Stanley made two 8 yard runs in succession but the Academy was fore- ed to punt. Reddon was afraid to touch the ball for fear he would fum- ward passing and by returning punts. In these three departments Princeton picked up 244 yards to 172 for Yale. As Yale suffered seventy yards in Lovell DeVita Duncan ... . Farnum ries of rushes by Hite and Rodgers. Rodgers carried the ball over the line and Chenoweth kicked the goal. The game was played on a field two interboro Con Inter €on pr Int Mar Cor pr Int M M etfs nt M S cts pro. ers at $6.00@7.00: fed calves at $8.00 @9.00; western calves at $10.00. City firm at 18Z23c; country 6@20c; dressed grassers dressed veal dressed at cessful passes uncovered far too late |ble it, and waited until Mallon fell|Penalties to Princeton’s twenty-five, inches deep 4n mud as a result of a| 900 Int Paper and fed valves at' 13@16c. in the game, the Nassiu players had|on it for him. Bulkeiey was unable|We find that in the net total Prince- | mayior ...... . Sprague | snow storm, but there were remark-| sion tar e’ Hogs—Receipts 2,400 head: 1 1-2 nothing new or effective with which [ to gain and lost the ball on downs. ton put away 210 yards te Yale's 102.| - TTUTUUUUgesctcoccs : 8Bly few fumbles E L cars on sale. Market lower. Light to_attack the Yale line. PosthiOuarter. Princeton, therefore, gained more than Tae) b he ARt potlodsBioduera) siade | iz Kems Ot o medium weights $9.50@9.90; pigs $5.75 With the material avallable, the poor | oy o, ~owt BWETEn - |two yards to Yale's one despite the W0 Tushes of 25 and, 52 yards, respec. | =2 Kelly & Tie . @960; roughs $5.75. Country dressed judgment displayed both in the of- fense and in the selection of the plays was surprising. Princeton gained more than one hundred yards in the final quarter of the game by a perfect manipulation of the forward pass after Yale had scored her ten points and only a miracle could have turned § yard run through tackle. Stanley made 8 yards around left end and 8 vards between end and tackle. The Academy used a box formation for an end run and line plunge with some success. A forward pass to Ricketts netted 20 vards. Stanley made 7 yards through the line, and almost broke fact that Yale had a slight margin in the rushing game, a margin that was wiped away by the Tiger's for- ‘ward passing prowess. When these two elevens meet, ground gained and such other detalts have nothing to do with tne score. Princeton Jost no chance to 'make her Sweetser Wijliams Phinney cees Weeks Purdy Pollard Murray tively. Later Hite made a 32 yards run. Cannell contributed the longest gain, covering 15 yards before he slip- ped and fell. The lineup and sum- mary: Dartmouth Dussosoit .. t Virginia Hutchinson Colgate’s first score came in the period when DuMoe of Syracuse recovered a fumble behind his own goal line.; = Saturday’s Football Results. hogs steady at 12@14 pigs at 15@16c. Chicago, Nov. 17.—There strong demand for cattle vanced the price slightly. sheep were firm. Cattle—Receipts 5.000 head. choice steers $10@12 1-2¢; roasting was - which ad- gs and Good to : yearlings, good defeat itno victory for the Tigers. mistakes at critical moments. And i ry to choice, $9.25(711.%5; stockers and With ordinary gridiron gensralshin the | through Bulkeley's secondary defense.|Yale, after a bad start, made fio mis: R ence oo CurTy | yaje 10, Princeton 0. fecders $6.50G 7.40; g00d to choice home eleven might have gone inty the | Ricketts made 8 vards around right | takes that counted. Lt Henrie | | Brown 21, Harvard 6. heifers $7@3.7%; fair to good cows $5.50 lead early in the game, had proper|end. Stanley made the first touch-| A mere glance at the elements and Fullback Harvard Frechmen, 21, Yale Frech-|@T. canners $3@4.65; good to prime plays heen used preparatory to calling | 40Wn by tearing off the necessary $|incidents leading up to both Yale| score by pemons Bailey | €n 6 e . calves $10@12.25. ibbott for an attempted fleld goal. | Vards around the other ~end. He|scores is quite enough. Through thel prarcarg Colgate 15, Syracuse 0. Hogs—Receipts 35,000 head. Prime While the Princeton story of the |kicked the goal with perfect accuracy.|first quarter and part of the second, | Bemwe oy Brannon| Chicago 20, Tilinois 37. light butchers $9.60@9.80; fair to fancy game was one of wasted opoprtunitios | Score was 7-0 fn favor of the Acad- | both teams wore the game slick by | Qmniaic. R Lo PR Tufts 25, Bodwoin 0. Jight $9.35@9.70; heavy mixed packing the reverse was true of Yale's play.|emy. hauding 1t Dackand forth inm valiiquiniey. Dmplre, G. W, 'Haulhart, of .... Webster | Wesleyan 46, Columbia 0. y, packing $9@ Led by a substitute quarterback who | Bulkeley received the kick-off but|effort to blow. Drop lkicks were | pomio: UmPIte, G. W. Bankhart, of Right tackle e Sesluloed & b was. flung into the contest at the eley- | dldn't run the kick back 2 yards, for|thumped into the line one after an-[wrorfce, University of Pennsylvania,|Emery -...... ... .. Hager| XNavy 28 Villa Nova 0. enthi hour, the Rlue played desperately | both Ferguson and Lynch got down|other. Fumbles resulted, and freak | Tione or poreas 13 minutee moy 2 5 Riant lend Exeter 6, Andover 0. and showed that it had the ability to | under the kick in good style, and both | tactics ruled the day. But after the s Camnell Chenoiveth | Cornell 37, Mass. Aggies 0. ambs $10.25@11.75; native lambs $10@ turn its oponents’ error to advaniage |tackled the runmer together. Donnel- |first two quarters Yale decided to play | No UPSETS 1N Pennsylvania 10, Michigan 7. 11.50. and power to score when within strik- |1y was thrown for a 5 yard loss when | some football, while Princeton per- COrrinh. V. o S ils s oo ... King| Fordham 40, Holy Cross 0. —_— ing distance of the goal line, The|Lvnch brought him down behind .his|sisted in her first and only system of BIG NINE GRIDIRONS Ohio State 28, Chase 0, : CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. cleverness with which the substitute |line. On the fourth-down Bulkeley at-|Playing ballyel. —_— Theischer Hite | Maryland State 10; N. Y. University « quarterback La Roche switched from |tempted a fake punt but was thrown| The elements referred to are as fol- | All the Elevens Played True to Form. kA one line of aftack to another -at crit- | for a 10 yard loss. Lynch was off-side | lows: Opening the third quarter Yale Bavwaids Rodgers| Dartmouth 7, West Virginia 7. ical moments was a big factor in the|and N. F. A. was penalized 5 yards,|kicked off. On a Kkick-off the only| Chicago, Nov. 19—Football elevens Fullback - Minnesota 54, Wisconsin 0. - Ay Bulkeley kicked to the Academy’s 25 |Deople not onside are the coaches, the [of the “big nine” came through Sat- New Britain H. S. 7. New Haven H. Yale's plays, however, proved that much remains to be accomplished in the coming week if it is to repeat with a victory over Harvard. Princeton did not play nearly so successfully or con- fidently against the Elis as it did against the Crimson a week ago, and unless the Blue can develop a better defense adn a more even and consistent attack, Harvard, on the form display- ed against the Tigers will be a logical favorite when the teams meet in the Yale Bowl next Saturday. So far as it has any hearing on the coming contest with Yale, the defeat of Harvard by Brown must be cast aside, since only two of the players who faced Princeton opposed the con- test against the Providence eleven. That the Crimson’s varsity might have been defeated by the splendid Brown machine is possible, but certainly the score would have been far less one- sided. Brown defeated Yale 21 to 6 and Harvard’s substitute team 21 to 0, which certain Crimson enthusiasts contend appears t oprove that Yale is no stronger than the Cambridge sec- ond string combination, but next Sat- s contest will undoubtedly up- 0D+ yonen of more than ordinary ability. Willims did the same with Amherst. Wes:cyan ran away from Columbia and +In other respects the day’s play wai *7out special tnl:un. i Dartmouth struck an unexpected ¢ gna= in West Virginia, the southerners . \holding the Hanover eleven to E re. tle | Keefe .. yard line. A forward pass to Keefe netted 25 vards. Keefe ran far out to his right end. The ball was snapped, and thrown obliquely down the field to Keefe. The play was so simple that Bulkeley thought that the Academy was trying to draw its backfield over to the right. A forward pass to Lynch netted 15 yards. Stanley droppea a drop-kick squarely between the goal posts, from the 42 yard line. It was the prettiest kick that Stanley has made this sea- son. Men were leaking through the line and he had to get ot away ‘quickly It is safe to say that Stanley kicked the prettiest fleld goal that has ever been seen in an Academy-Bulkeley game. The score was 10-0 in favor of the Academy. v Bulkeley was forced to punt, and Stanley ran the kick back 15 ~yards. The whistle for time out blew just as the' Academy was settling into its stride. ‘The_line-up was as follows: N . Bulkeley ‘Bradshaw Bearmf oo, ..o i o tan Senft Eastwould Parker Fafato substitutes and the spectators. It was anybody’s ball upon the field, yet Princeton permitted the kick to bound lazily along until Moseley, dashing forward, covered the ball for Yale on the Tigers’ 20-yard line. That play was the beginning of a sombre end for Princeton, the begin- ning of the end of a most imperfect day. It was another evidence of Princeton’s mental and physical slug- gishness that doesn’t show in the full box score. That play put Braden in the way for his field goal, which fol- lowed tidily about two minutes later on. It was Princeton’s wandering afar into the poppy fields of areamland, plus Yale’s alertness, that brought in the first score. e Kkick-off . was a poor one. and bt for Princeton's dumbness the Tiger could easily have forced Yale, with a kick, deep into her own territory upon defensive play. ‘That one slip was more than enough to offset over 200 yards of Princeton’ attack. It more than overshadowed all ‘the long forward passes, the line plunges and the end runs that the Tiger made all day. For that one slip brought three points more than Princeton’s complete and combined "] offence. The next big Tiger detonatlon came at the beginning of the ,fourth per- iod. This time it was a double error, composed of mental and physical rts. Shortly after the period opened Gore drove a long punt which left Princeton the ball on her 20-yard line. Sullivffi [ In- place of kicking out of danger, the started ine Brown fum- ’fl’m Black ]m; the ball with bulkv frame. In the intermingled urday's games playing true to form with the exception of a single upset— the totally unexpectea defeat of Il- linois at the hands of Chicago. Northwestern disposed of Purdue, 38 to 6, and kept its slate clean .for the championship game with the un- defeated Ohio State eleven at Colum- bus next Saturday. Ohfo had al- ready finished its conference schedule, with the exception of the clash with Northwestern and had little trouble overwhelming Case, 28 to 0. Chicago, twice beaten in the confer- ence, sprang one of the biggest sur- prises of a surprising season by de- feating Illinols, 20 to 7. Tlinois, which two weeks ago caused an upet by trouncing the ' powerful Minnesota eleven, had been regarded by critics a: a certain winner. The victory of Minnesota over Wis- consin, 54 to 0, was the “worst drub- bing the Badgers have received-in twenty years. Outside the conference, Michigan bowed to the prowess of Pennsylva- nia for its second defeat of the year. De Paul Academy of Chicago has put in a claim for the natienal “prep” football changpionship as a result of its 20 to0 vistory over St, John’s Acad- emy of Danvers, Mass; here yester- day. The easterners had not lost a game and were claimants of the east- ern title. Yale, Recuperating. - New Haven, Conn., Nov. Yale football team is recuperating from the hard game at At- lantic City and ia ot pack.to Score by periods: Dartmouth 3 West Virginia Referee—J. O'Brien, Tufts.. Umpire —W. H. Burke, Worcester. Head lines- man, George Brown, Boston. Time of periods—I15 minutes each. 3 W. & J. Won. Washington and Lee could not solve ‘Washington and Jefferson’s aerial at- tack at Richmond Saturday and the Pennsylvanians won a hard fought and spectacular football game 10 to 6. Washington and Jefferson was successful with sixteen forward passes !whne the Generals negotiated but our. Fullback McCreight was the individ- ual star of the game, kicking a fleld goal from the 25 yard line in the sec- ond period and making a touchdown and kicking the goal in the final per- iod. Quarterback ley scored Washington and Lee’s touchdown, but Captain Young’s terrific line smashing was the outstanding feature of the Virginians' play. Colgate 15, Syracuse 0. Colgate’s powerful backfield was too much for the heavy Syracuse lne and the Maroon took the 19th annual bat- tle between the two teams by a 15 to 0 score at Syracuse Saturday after- noon. The only touchdown came in the fourth period when the Colgate ma- chine, using off-tackle marched down the field, Hubbell taking the ball over the line on a mass play forma~- tion. i of the e first The outstan o e Georgetown 61, N. C. Aggins 6. Vanderbilt 20, Auburn 0. St. Bonaveture 0, Hobart 0. Stevens 19, Renseclaer 0. Lehigh 27, F. and M. 7. N. Hampshire 12, Rhode Island 0. Northwestern 38, Purdue 6. Swarthmore 20, Mubhlenberg 16, ‘Washington and ington_and Lee . Ursinus 36, Penn Millitary College " 'Willlams 26, Amherst 0. Dickinson 20. Haverford 14, Johns Hopkins 7. Catholic University " Washington and Iee 6, Alleghany Jefferson 10, Wash- Alleghany 7, Rochester 0. Union 28, Hamilton 0. Gettysburg-17, Bucknell 0. Georgla_Tech.. 21, Georgia 0. Boston College 49, Worcester Poly 0. De Paul 21, St. John’s 0. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage provesit. 25¢ NG AND BILLL at all druggists. o Mu«% bast Pho; Thanksgiving Order a svecial Pin-Cask (5 DBass Ale for family use on draught at home, from any dealer or job- ber, "Twill Add a Keen Zest to the Feast Diss & Co, Importers, 90 Warren 8t New York

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