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e ) BATTLES BLUE WARRIORS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 19 MANY BIG BATTLES ON GRIDS OF EAST g' _JHarvard and Yale Meet in Final|General Interest Centers on Cam- COontest of Their Respective Schedules. DOPE GIVES ELIS SMALL SHOW CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 10.-With their banners of crimson and blue flung uubbn.-nmm-olddmwm] they battle for the champlonship of the | #ridiron, the foot ball teams of Harvard | and Yale meet here today in the final | contest of thelr respective schedules. Al ‘ though shorn of much of their former #lory there is not the slightest abatement | in goneral interest in the annual clash | of the rival elevens and the greatest of all eastern foot ball classios will be wit- | tessed by a throng of thousands which bridge Game, but Several Others of Importance Slated. THREE STRONG TEAMS OUT NEW YORK, Nov. 19.~Wh'le the Har- vard-Yale contest overshadows all other foot ball games to be played on eastern gridirons tomorrow, there are several cther struggles which will have an im- portant bearing on the final alignment of | the elevens for the season of 1915 General Interest will be focused upon the outcome of the annual meeting of the | Blue and Crimson, but the Dartmouth- Syracuse, Colgate-Georgetown, Trinity- Wesleyan contests and thowe in which the Army and Navy teams compete will all be will test the capacity of the Harvard |followed with more than usual keenness. stadium as in the years when the winner | was acclalmed the premier team of the season. While there is no possibility of new attendance or ‘gate recelpt records this fact 1s due to inability to accommodate more than 47,000 persons In the stadium of Soldfers fleld. If the great Harvard smphftheater had the seating capacity of the Yale bowl it is not unilkely that the gridiron struggle of the morrow There will be missing from the weekly |Mneup, however, several of the larger Institutions, for: Princeton has completed its scheduls, while Cornell and Pennsyl- vania are resting for thelr Thanksgiving day game, which will close the season for both tearns. Harvard a Favorite, Based upon the theoty and sclence of modern foot ball, Harvard should be and s favored (o defeat Yale, but that the would attract a gathering as large as |game will follow these lines is not at that which was present at the dedication of the Bli' arena last antumn, when Har- | vard won from Yald 3 to 0. The demand | for tickets, which ia far in excess of the | supply, has gemonstrated that lure of the | ®ame is not dependent upon the elevens of the famous universities entering the final contest of the year with unblem- whed banners. Yale Outlook Not Bright. It such were the case there would be nany empty tlers in the stadium today, ‘or wot in many years has Yale come to Jambridge with sucl a dismal record as ‘hat made by the team of 1815. Eliminat- g all consideration of the Princeton game the fact remains that the Biue loat four of the first seven games of its schedule, being defeated by Virginia, Brown, Colgate and Washington and Jofterson. A desperate effort to raily the xl‘u-fl forces of the Blue was made in ¢losing weeks of the season, but with partial success. A ney corps of coaches was called In after Colgate's triumph and agsinst Brown and Princeton the El sleven showed marked improvement. Compared with Harvard's record of vic- tory over all teams faced this fall, except Corniell, the outlook for the Blue to de- feat the Crimson is not particularly bright. Ther are reasons, however, why Yale has not entirely given up hope of being @ble to save a most disastrous season from rout by winning or tying with the Cambridge combination in the closing contest of the year. The Eli foot ball materfal is not without its merits and while it is admitted that Yale made a arisg to the occasion today and surprise the optimistic Harvard contingent. Cop- nelll proved that the Crimson was not ble while Penn State and Princes | although defeated several times, s : g it I Sh :;!;;ggifiig i i : E T i 4 il &5 | teaspoonful of Himestone phosphate in it all certain, since gridiron form has re- celved far more than the usual number of Jolts ana upsets this fall. Foot ball is a team game, where the perfect co-opera- tion of eleven players on offense and de- fense should outweigh the efforts of an equal number of athletes who fail to work with the rame harmony and cohe- slon. It sometimes happens, - however, that the strength and individual ability of men forming such a combination is so |great that it will conquer a perfect ma- chine moulded from medlocer material, | especially If the breaks in the game favor |the stronger but cruder playing eleven. | This was demonstrated in the victory of Yale over Princeton. ‘The Harvard eleven of 1915 Is not of the same caliber as Princeton, however, for the Crimson is bullt of better material (and by a coaching system which is thor- |oughly ostabli<hed and working with per- |fect smoothness. The Cambridge team |has been carefully trained and brought |forward especially for the Yale game, | whereas Princeton appeared to reach its |best form at least two weeks before the Blue was met. How Crimson Beat Tigers. Ellminating all consideration of the games that preceded the triangular con- test botween Yale, Princeton and Har verd it will be found that Harvard de- |feated Princeton as the result of a per- |tectly engineered team touchdown and | one fleld goal by Mahan, against two by | Tibbott, Yale also conquered the Tiger an | the result of two field goals by Guernsey |and & touchdown made after Way had picked up & fumbled ball and crossed the line through an absolutely clear field. In this game Yale was not strong enough to prevent Princeton from making a team touchdown and barely escaped at least one other, It seems unlikely that Harvard will dls- play the weak spots in generalship and that Princeton was gulity of at critical points in last Saturday's game, or that Yale will find the breaks of the play falling #o staadily in its favor. Under such circumstances the Elis will have to depend 'wdon either powerful individ- ual etforts or strong team play to over- come the Crimson machine. Yale Makes Strides. Yale, since ita ng of defeats at the hands’ of Washington and Jefferson, Col- gate and Brown, has made remarkable strides under the coaching of Tom S| lin and others. It was the development of a powerful fighting spirit and unusual keenness in following the ball rather than any advancement in team work, either on attack or defense, that got the Blue vio- tory over Princeton. That the same methods applied to Harvard will result in another win appears unlikely, although it is conceded that the battle will be far closer than was thought a few weeks ago, for the Elis now belleve, and rightly so, that they have a chance of defeatin Crimson. The lines from tackle to o are about equal, while the Crimson has the advantage at the ends. At quarter- back Watson has shown himself to be a better general than Van Nostrand, but the Yale quarter plays a stronger indl- vidual game. Both teams have powerful backfields. Harvard with Mahan, King and Boles has a great trio of plungers and end runners. For Yale, Captain Wii- son, Bingham and Guernsey, with Beovil as alternate, are almost, if not quite, as Kood. In the kicking department of the game Captain Mahan punts the ball fur- ther and with better direction than Guernsey, but after the latter's drop- kicking feats against Princeton it would be a hardy prophet who would predict that Mahan will outpoint Guernsey in Says Body is a Poison Factory ‘Urzu everyone to drink glass of hot water before breakfast. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves be- hind & certaln amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken day after day leaves in the allmentary canal a certaln amount of indigestible material, which if not completely eltminated from the system each day, becomes food for the millions of bacterla which infest the bowels From this mass of left-over waste, toxing and ptomaine-like polsons are formed and sucked into the blood. Men and women who can't get feeling {right must begin to take Inside baths. Before eating breakfast each morning drink & glass of real hot water with a to wash out of the thirty feet of bowels ons and toxins and to keep the entire alimentary canal clean, pure and fresh. Those who are subject to sick headache, colds, biliousness, constipation, others who wake up with bad taste, foul breath, backache, rheumatic stiffness, or have T this reapect, despite the fame and record of Mahan us a field goal kicker May Hinge on Stars' Work, It is not uniikely that the final outcome 9‘ Coach Zappke expects to have his star | SCOTTE BLUFF, Neb., Nov o (:'r 'm'""'"" SES Spen, e - lLLINl BEAT DOPE- L co— | backs at the start of the game, and his | efal Telegram.)—Gothenb spective work of these two stars on their v CHICAGO, Nov. 19.—With the lineup 8ot | ;. 'y }00e members have been free from | foot ball team defeated Scott's punting and drop-kicking duels. Ea definitely settleq upon, Coach Btagg will | | - s Y } i . " ial | serfous hurts, will be Intanet. High school, 13 to In other games of tomorrow, Dartmouth | §ome Think Chicago and Wisconsin| send his Maroons against the Tlini tomor- e % | today. and Byracuse are certain to have® a battle | 5 row on a fleld which is likely to be slow, | o TR, | > » S royal, with the odds favoring the Orange, Have Chance of Defeating to the detriment of both teams, Rain | B B B b | PNot Ball In the Seutht which has defeated decisively every Foes. | and soft enow seeped through the straw | CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Nov, 10—Yale de.| AqpANTA ‘ov. 19.—Aslde trom eleven faced this fall except Princeton, | —_— | blanket at Stagg field today, but 'n|r'h.5-’,v - :’MI! ‘:"";M ‘,;Bhn O:W:""' o Rnnm".(‘\\“a‘;lyuv gton and even the Tigers had to be satisfied | CHANCE TO UNKNOT THE TIE| weather ia promised for the final game. | siipped about on a muddy fleid. Accurate | (0N and =South with a single fleld goal against Syracuse. | The Marcons' handicaps in the matter | shooting by Yale overcame weaknesses | S0Uthern foot ball o the 4 X | of injuries may be offset to a certain |In the team's defense, which placea the | [iiiant, (RN O Suwanee Colgate will meet a strong southern | CHICAGO, Nov. 19.-Only the happen|© . Y ? back 3 by \Dall in Yale territory ‘most of the game. | pintoS JICECNE g and Geo eleven at Georgetown, but should win|y o o tne unexpected tomorrow can un-| eXtent by the extra sets o VM""";:\ Al e Bes e Tech., will rest in preparation for from the Washington team unless Still | 4 ot the tie between Iilinois and Min- the experience they all have . Flood Use The Bee's “Swapper column, ! Thankegiving day contests | crippled from the terrific struggle with Byracuse a week ago. Both the Army and Navy are called upon to play teams of moderate strength and both should emerge victorious. Springfield Young Men's Christian as- soclation tralning school, which meets the cadets has a fast, but rather light kleven and while well equipped with overhead plays is hardly strong enough to hold the rushing soldlers in check. The Middies will find Ursinus stronger In line plunging and end running plays and with a fair repertoire of passes. Bince these contests will be the final game for both Army and Navy before they meet in their annual ihter-service battle, the results will be awaited with interest by all followers of the two academy el .. List of Chief Games, The most Important games in the east tomorrow with the scores of last seas- »on's ntests where the same institutions ¢ as. follows: Yal Dartmouth st Syracuse. 0 to 0 CAN HAROONS AND | nesota for the confercnee champlonship On form, Minnesota should down the | Baagers ana Illinois should defeat the Maroons, leaving unsolved the puzsle, |as it was when Gophers and Iilini fin- | 1shea their battle to a 6 to 6 draw, Octo- ber . But in & year of upsets prophets are | wary of predictions based on past per- ‘lt-rmnncen, and declare they would not | be surprised to see Chicago beat Zup- | pke's team, despite the superiority for 1llinols which comparative scores show, | and even are inclined to give Wisconsin an outside chance of beating Minnesota. Bhould both Chicago and Wisconsin | win, the situation would be clouded than ever, but a victory for the Maroons and one for the Gophers would leave the latter the best claim while the Ilini could establish a falr title to 1915 honors | by defeating Chicago while the Badgers down ‘Minnesota. | | The card for tomorrow which practi- | |eally closes the season in the central states includes combats of historie In- | Slow Field is Likely For 8tagg Field Game|tw ws ines | probably will be In the game, but Gor- don, Sparks, Dobson, McConhell nmlI Larson are pretty certain to remain on e o e p——rPPTYTTTTrAR GOTHEIFVIBIIRG HIGH TAKES MEASURE OF SCOTT'S BLUFF High school at Scott's Bluff een George tomorrow s e is without im Grand Prize, Panama-Pacific Exposition REG. U, 8. PAT. OFF, terest as well as of championship im- | portance, as follows! | At Chicago—Tilinols agalnst Chicago. At Madison—Minnesota against Wis- constn. At Lincoln—Towa against Nebraska. Columbia at New York university, did | At Evanston--Ohio Staté aguinst North- not play. western. Rutgers at Stevens, £ to 0, At Bloomington—Purdue Haverford at Swarthmore, 3 to 2. Buffalo at Rochester, did not piay. ;l"r:nll‘y at Wesleyan, 0 to 8. Jolgate at Georgetown, did not meet. Bprinefield at Army, 6 to 18, Ursinus at Navy, 2 to 23. Lafayette at Lehigh, 7 to 17, Carlisle at Fordham, did not play, against In- dians. Indianapqlis—Wabash against Repauw. You'll Like Polly Prim Polish Do not confuse Polly Prim with ordinary polish. Polly Prim Polish is a scientific compound, made after the world famous formula of Dubeck-Monhardt of Germany. You can sit in a chair that has been polished with Polly Prim and your clothing will not be stained or soiled. It will not roughen, fade, stain or soil carpets. Used in a Polly Prim Mop it will not streak or smear. 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