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gARM —_-.— i Gapacity Crowd Expected to Attend Big Football Event sat New Haven To-Morrow. t hy By William Abtott. ITH new nf nents, t Army eleven will invade the Yale Bowl to-morrow with almost an even chance of conquerin the Bulldog. Garbisch, former Wash- ington and Jefferson Captain; Jones, a new quarterback, and additional re- peer + regulars against this dangerous In- vading opponent ‘To-morrow's game will be the first time the future generals ever played the Bowl It will be a big event. * aEhe entire West Point corps, post GPRena ana the vid mute will be present “to-encourage the cadets. West Point authorities received word from New Haven that a capacity crowd—17,000 —would see the soldiers and Yale in action. Sixty-nine (housand seats had been sold up to last evening. In the vast assemblage there will be many representatives from the army im rank from major generals down to buck private. The Army rooters show et plenty of opportunity to cheer their favorites. pp First of all, any game with the cadets 1s no light exercise. The sol- diers play hard, aggressive football, especially when opposed by an oppo- nent with the reputation and prestige of Eli Yale. The contest in the Bow! will be the first strenuous test for West Point as well as the Blue. The Army's record to date hasn't been very impressive, with a loss of one game in the open- ing double-header of the season, @ defeat which came when the Arm) team was composed almost entirely of substitutes, Major Charles Daly and a large staff of assistant coaches have given the cadets some intensive drilling this week, with the result the eleven has shown surprising improvement. Many of the regulars are veterans. New reer are of a particularly high standard bisch, Jones, Wood and Y_HAS * Blue Sure to Lose Game “It They Use Any “Subs’’ | * Against West Pointers } A oruits in the backfield have put un expected power into the cadet team. | 5 The soldier combination is one of © great rucged strength and equipped § with capable kickers in Freneb and © Garbisch. The Bulldog will be made © a captive if the Yale coaches mak ; the mistake of not playing all thelr | THIS ARMY ELEVEN WILL BATTLE YALE. | \Player. Position. Weight. Height {White ......L.E. 9 160 59 [Davidson .L. T 180 5.14 Garb 2 180 6.0 Greene 185 6.0 Greidster .R.G. 200 5.102 Mulligan R.T. 203 6.1 | Storck RE 175 511 Wilhide ....Q.8 165 58 claren L.H.B. 180 5.9 Smythe ..R. H. B. 175 5.9 |French .....F.B. 155 58 ignal drili was preceded by a lon forward passing. The two stiff scrim mages hieid on Tuesday and Wedne day were deemed by the Columbia |mentor to be sufficient work of tt Jnature for the week, and he did not care to risk a chance of injury by holding qnother on the slippery turt yesterday ( The Columbia squad of twenty-five and the usual assortment es and trainers, left last nigit H., where they ar- for Claremont, N rived early thls morning. Heaquar- | ters will b de in Claremont unttl | Just before the game to-morrow, when the men will motor to He i The Columbia team which faces th Green to-morrow afternoon will lin up as follows: Rrodil, R. E.; Moda- relll, R. T.; Calloway, R. G.; Scovil (Capt), C.;. Walder, L. G.; Meyer, Le T.; W. B. Johnson, L. Anderson, QR: Burtt, L. H. B.; Koppisch, R. Ai. B.; Moszczenski, Hl petinast Fordham in Final Workout for Lafayette. | Phe Ferdham foothall team will ts last workout to-day in prepara for the game against Lafayette at the Polo Grounds to-morrow. ‘The lordham team spent the week !n perfecting plays to offset the ohes used | by Lafayette in the Pitt game. The team {s now thoroughly versed ‘n the plays that were used in the Pitt-Latay ette game. Hope Is\expressed by the coaches that Larkin, Capt. Fitzpatrick and Brickley will be in trim to play to-morrow. <hey | are men on which a great deal of tne | auccexs of the team depends. They w Il be a big loss to the team If they don’t get in the game. Men that will probably are W: are ends. Ho: get into the Ine-up odward and Seitz, who an and Fallon should be seen in the line-up also on the tne Walbridge and Moran will probaoly start as guard and Bolan as centre. In the hack fleld Meyers will without several others all came to West Point + with football veputations and needed very little preparation to land on the first team. In fact, the cadets (his geason are unusually well supplied with high class reserves, a great in a hard-fought game when frequent chenges must be made, The Cadets have two backfields, ono almost as good as the other, Wilhide, a veteran, will undoubtedly start as quarterback, but will likely give way for Jones, a new comer of fine prom- will se. French, an old campalgr do the punting for the soldiers and should outkick any booter Yale will use. While @ little ight, French is a Yangerous open fleld runner and throws forward pasess with consid- able skill. Smythe and McLaren i be the halfback ace ding to present plans, McLaren's specialty 1s line cracking. Wood, formerly cap. tain at Johns Hopkins, will surely get @ cuance to show his strong all-round ability before the game is ove For close order defense West Point lines a generally th equal of any in the East. It is very difficult to gain consistently through plays inside tackles. This year’s set of forwards appear to be well up with the standard. Greene, at centre, is a veteran, a dependable passer, and the roving type who on defense makes plays ali over the gridiron. are strong and aggressive, Garbisch was captain at Washington and Jef- ferson before entering the Academy Much is expected from him. He 1s not only a valuable guard, but is lever kicking field goals. Yale had better not leave the soldiers advance too near their goal line, as Garbisch will be a deadly menace with his tow shooting. Breidster is a veteran and @ giant In stature, Mulligan. y the big game last year, but hus flashed improved form his season. i 1 New York and is gest man ou t team, v pounds. Davidson, the other » won his position from seve ther candidates. He ts strong on defense and very fast down field under kicks White and Don Storck, the ends, are both hard tacklers and speedy, cov- ering French's long punts. Both also ean catch forward passes. The Cadets cannot boast any star with the prilliancy of “Mal” Aldrich n, who can run, kick es with notable skill brs may not have in their lineup any star of the re of Charlie O'Hara, who is heralded as the best Blue quarterback in many years, but the average of the We int team compares quite favorably with the Bulldog There will be but Ittle difference in both the Cadets and Elis have about the same number of veterans. In fighting ability and the spirit to win there certainly tsn't any differ enve jn the two teams, In the matte of physical condition the Army may 1 advant but balar rything the rival teams see enly matched ide th ts the bre ner of w hardest fought g: ks most | shauld ea of > Co'umbia Eleven Picked for Dartmouth Game. Columbia's football squad was given @ well earned rest yesterday after Boon, In that the coaches eased up the reparations for the Dartmouth game morrow and allowed a long signal drill to be the main feature of the afternoon's work. N na attempjed and Coach Buck O'Ne utilized the practice period in smooth- off the rough edges on a wide variety of plays. ‘The rain aided rather than hindered f om South Field and the them on} Garbisch and Breldster, the guards, | a douvt start as fullback, Gately oid hlickmeyer as halfbucks are prot le ctions and Caniff as quarterback Kelly, a new n, is showing up wel ‘av as a halfback on ‘the serubs, and t would not be a surprise to see him pray ing against the Hastonians. Hts most valuable asset it his kicking abilities, He can outkick any man on the varsity > | Harvard Goes Into Penn State Game Well Rested. CAMBRIDG Mass, Oct. 21.—So hard were the Cambridge football varsity players worked on Tuesday and Wednesday that yesterday was a day off from serimmaging, «and as to-day will be devoted —mainiy to signal driit and kicking, the coaches feel that their men will ente the Penn State game to-morrow 1 excellent condition. Bob Fisher had planned to make the Penn State game a true t the team as he had planned ft at Princeton on Nov Is no chance for this now, 1 of the men counted on for regula places are on the injured list. ¢ big disappointment has been the f ure of last year's freshman leader Holder, to stand up for the work n essary to shift him from tac pluce where be could be centre rush on the varsit Holder had great” pr showed unusval In to pla but there so many | offensive work and f hosia on defense. However, hurt his ankle several time coach of the centre men ha |given up hope of having h for the Princeton game, 4 ent, Tierney. last yea ‘stitute centre, is playing tcl: the coaches want to keep hin although Kunhardt, anothe back, who has been shifted to has been showing promise 1 h pr sition, Itts has been hurt again, so there Ix a hold-up his. try end, and. to-morrow, it is [ts probably “Harvard's most reliable wing at the present tine, ean play Jat ail. Grewm, who has been slow- ng the fa first claws and Very aggressive guard, has beon out all week with a bad evid, so that t match with Pean State will not Harvard presenting the front { sina to get the benefit of the perience in a good stiff gam WHAT WILL THEY DO TO-MORROW? The following is a list of im portant football grmes scheduled to be played to-morrow. The score of jast year’s contests is printed opposite the elevens: Eleven Chicago Princeton Army No Yale bene we eeee Gam Colgate .. NEOs) Cornell 42 Penn State No Harvard Game Columbia No Da: tmouth Game Virginia Mf. 27 Pennsylvania Spring Y. M Brown os Lafayette Fordham Syracuse Pittsburgh Transylvania .. Center Michigan Ohio State Rutgers Ga, Tech, Georgetown Holy Cross Score No Game c NEARLY EVEN CHANCE COME WEST POINT STARS - - - - - ng Co, (The New Yor Evening World.) THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1921. ° “OF BEATING YALE TEAM- right, 1921, by the Press Publish! FM.GREENE. CAPTAIN AND CENTER OF ARMY Butler Finally Wins Purse At His Own Ruce Track GW. SMYTHE, , BAEC? 5 him from back in the middle of the Finnegan’s Band Gets Op-|pineh to get into. a contending poal- RS HU) | portunity to Play “The | ton at the head of the stretch. Fron. le there home he ran over everything. McAteo and Sande each rode two w nners yesterday. Clarence Turner, Wearin’ of the Green.” AND CEGIL LENiCh By Vincent Treanor. who rode four, straight | winners 1 vednesday, had four mounts, but th Y ip N Sling and Picnlo came| tet he could do was to finish second galloping tome first and] with Scottish Chief. day, Vinnegan’s Band had Its long} Willie Shields, the 3800-pound ex- awaited opportunity to render ‘The | Jockey, 1s enjoying quite some succe: PEAY w th the limited number of horses he is handling. Yesterday he {another winner in Smart Wearing of Irish the en,” the popular put ove n always signalizes a wet ove, | Foreign Star Reaches Belle- victory Butler horses at the| the second race from start to finish fai ht i youles Hubler horses at the) MeAtec, however, gave the gelding a{ Claire Titular Round by ‘ oe’ | great ride, nursing him along nice: ati even money that the song wouldn't) to stall off Scdttish Chet, which | Beating Glenna Collett. be played this year are now paying off. Throughout the long summer meet- came strong in the stretch, after over- | | stil coming bad luck at the start. suited oing business, When a little more than a week ago Tody had conditions made to orde-| Miss Ceci! Leitch, woman golf cham- ing at the hilltop track, previous to| for her, and accordingly won all the| pion of Great Bri eras acrived: And it comes with the classic echo, which fondly answers “Nix!” He fon iWaryand) sodord bat |p Britain, France and A 4 ne beginping at Saratoga, the band nthe race, Whenever! Canada, was ingloriously defeate : had been t for the Ini ntody | there Je nothing to run with this filly. | , sf Leider td Harvard wouldn't mind numbering the football machine, but it objects e Irish melody | ing she can go out and make her own| ‘he elghteen-year-old star, Misa} ting digits on tho trakes gears and carburetor on many an oceasion, The Butler] pace, she is a good thng. With so.ae | cue nna Collett, many people on this} °° Dasting disits beth tases horses started often, but not once} thing fast enough to argue the pace-| vide of the At : oc auan did they home in front, and the| making issue with her, she cracks. | the p ee peace Wena ate auestlon This ts the season cf the year when a guy with ® Charley Brickles id th home a on8| total Ae ahaa the British woman's ability to suc-| toe ig worth more to a college than a chap with an Aristotle bean. music v idly put away for tho| cessfully cope with the American eG fall meeting. On Tuesday last Leader ° ° stars, In the semi-final round of the If Babe Ruth is King of Clout, then Nick Altrock 1s the Prince of Finnegan dug it out again and dis-|( Ag gtic News Invitation tournament at Belleclaire| Pecans. tributed It among his players, Mr. | yesterday Miss Leitch defeated Mies Pie Siler ‘yaicih ene oeaeiet Butler*had Beach Star in a thrue- d G ip liceilere ny Nomcarate ets Railroad strike maz call off int«rsectional games, but {t won’ v | y up and 1 to “wi ” orse and ali signs indicated a an OSS olay, Aisa Leltch will meet afre,| the football exports from doping “What Might Bare Benpente victory for him, The horse was By John Pollock |Thomas Hucknajl of Forest Hills in Princeton might have licked the Navy if it had more first-string men. played off the boards, and all that) *he final round to-day. ‘And all the Spaniards needed to teat Dewey at Manila was twenty or | mained was throwing the hats in| Lew ‘Tendler, the erack Philadel-| The match was a bitter affair from| stimy additional Arst-cluse battlestps. the Beach Star ran third. He} phia Hehtweight, will make his first fi yaar 0D Bion ey an ap had everything In his favor. He got! .), a if | DEOROA LO OCR) GREW Or 82, atlea Coll ce be- |teo at the ninth. This left her 2 down. « aced tar oo aut.in font unl ee ee Saale 68 a SepoRUpS te 86 The) latter: Gavin drove the take, {ne Mere topos- It should have been three at, the eee tien venavcurled ap at the|Tiant: He will movamninst, Rookoy|lsually’ a: (ong) driver.) toll upon) rll ee |tenth ‘but Miss Leitch misued a ridieu: Squaw 3 anc ed up at the| ways with her tee at ' p uninsy ously short putt, but Miss Colle ad of the stretch, He didn’t de-| Kansas, the rugged Buffalo fighter, in) 4) was ict ent To gecla Sete Te ste i aeitgerner ness oles where chinae: wath a similar at the (asd | f ‘0 de c re | Both holes were halved, as were the serve the tune. |the feature bout of fifteen rounds at| Ir the other semi-final, Mra, ‘Thomas | 8Me,,topped, her drive and took three | firtcenth and fourteenth, ‘The fAtteenth Yesterday was another day. Mr.|the regular weekly boxing show to|fcknali of Forest Hil furnished] where the Briton strong armed her ap- Sound Trend aae leat t ta 6 Lh Butler, not taking chances, this time | something of a surprise by turning back | proach, lost the third by trapping Dir) ai) over at the seventeenth, whero th ater, aking ces, | be staged by Tex Rickard at Madison) vrs, W ; Proach, [owt onthe ftth with a finely {all over at the seventeenth, whero the Kadb cuoloolbe, peaerania ihe Rie y | Mrs. A. Guvin of the home club, by] layed 3. At the eighth and ninth. | American was inside “iss Leitch with | a two colon eaves ime duly hat,| Square Garden, Champion Benny)! up. Tey were all square coming to| however, little Glenna ran into difficul: her second. However, Glenna was short race, Sling E | tae ahort etphteenthy eat teeing, fo] however, litte Girth her approach ai | With her third and Cecl! pitched dead. but he fad engaged the two most} Leonard will be present at the scraP| Hucknall drove the’ gre n ere Mra | ies. Onmer and out of bounds from the| Which was quite enough. fase ing ee ide ant Balak | and may be induced to meet the win- | = H _—_ listed the aid of Starter Cassidy, too. | in a fifteen-round bout next It seemed foolhardy to bet agaist; month, ‘Tendler is the favorite in |the combination, but hundreds, in-| the betting over Kansas, his follow-| cluding so astute a layer and player] oes offering odds of 2 to 1 that he Tom Shaw, did so ‘They backed | ¢ ajanus on the strength of several| Will get the Judges’ decision. cf trials 1 | . the hard-bitting light hearyweigh' hen the barr'er went up Trajanus | aa aa donk hie men 5 : Traine, nesClSmVepRun EAIG Nt 1a] idan ee, pane teas a8 Take the pick of Vir- | reservolr and the £ palr were off [ihe clever heavy of Newark, in the main | ond ‘ winging. If the start had been mad¢ tom of fitten rounds st Madison Square ginia tobacco; smoke to order for them it couldn't have }den on the oiht of Nov. 4 y Rickard | A ° been better. As Fator on Plente 4 eee er cast ties taieie tame’ ome it straight and Man, Sande on Sling were tear good battlens together, He signed them up lengthen front’ of ever you’re smoking the Siwy Dances, ie promiaing fighter of Port: | world’s best cigarette fOr, who was brought East by Ja . Hevaetaracran wa been amet uy by Karna to. Be tobacco—you’re a nie ace hone Grey of VY wh ln ® ten-round bout, : 2 fhe eendition of the melody Guusio, si te Uaerebery a, 0, of | smoking Piedmonts. heean wasn't tk ne i ffalo on next Monday night had seen Beach Stir barley Doewerick bas completed bis card of lay u hed br ws for b next boxing show at the Pionee’ Pator and Sande we C, op Bast S4th Street on Tuesday night royal for the lead, and 1 reenwich Village meta Wol had succeeded in passin | Larsen nain go of ten rounds, Jimmy Sling ten yards from manulo vw. Joey Leon for twelve rounde au let ‘er KO ni me Kagle ‘Jimmy Peer of iy M 1b azo for anda, s whole fa on Tuts Inte of the Pacitio Coast, an ise poreh and beamed w la 1¢ Brooklyn boy who also we u | y beating ‘Tommy Richards for) Mt i} ttle in fitic cireies wat of the | ning to-day for their fiftoey fo Clermont Mink, Brooklyn, to: phe > | | DEMPSEY TO MEET WILLARD | . “Tnres. straignt | IN JERSEY BOUT JULY 4.) with Ae the 1 4 watcher | } he latte b in front in the | CHICAGO, Oct. 21-—Jack Dempsey Rainbow takes they won: | world's champion heavyweight, and tered Mf Burlow bad Gryed aie aos | sous Willan) will fight lo the Sal the same Ls has his ustrious|ia Jersey City next July 4, according tablemate eason to Tex Rickard, promoter here to-day. | Rickaré said the first steps have | War F n wh. time was|been taken to amend the New rsey | aly ® ded nthe Ros. law to allow a referee's deci- | Stable 1 K entered 1 that ‘t Neves decision | ne race at Y ye 1 be allowed by the time th A only after running a ‘race which’ em-| Kearns, leaves Slinnoa pola’ ton | } nasized h's superiority over the kint' night, where the heavyweight has a | Licorrr & Myzxs Tosacco Co, meeting, Sande had to bring vaudeville engagement Sunday. , By Thornton Fisher JE. MCLARENA LIVE WIRES BY NEAL R. O°HARA Louisville beat Baltimore five games out of eight, which makes Louls- ville the world’s ch mpiors of Louisville and Baltimore. | eo oe | We don’t know what Landis will do to the Babe. But we do know that the Jedge fined the Standard Oil Company $29,000,000 ana the 8, O. Co. 139 The annual classic, “Wil! Harvard Number Football Players?” has 2,00 SHOOLBDN WN SUNDAY WORLD NET TOMORROM Final Indoor Games Will Be Held in the 22d Regi- ment Armory. The big day of the year for school« boy athletes arrives to-morrow, when over 2,000 embryo champions compete in the final indoor geet of The Sun- day World field day. The meet will be conducted under the rules of the Public schoole Athi¢ic League at the 22d Regiment Armow. Arrangements haw been made for accommodating 10,00 spectators, ine cluding a body of honorary guests and many distinguimed officials and private citizens. These final gams mark the size teenth consecutive year that The Sunday World. it an effort to further the cause @ physical trains ing of our growinsyouth, has pro« vided the school trahies and individ~ ual medals for botjfield day events und the championtip finals. This year more than 170 thools held meets and more than 75,0(boye entered the class and interclas contests. It is from the leaders inhese tryouts that the entrants for Saturday's big event have been dryn, Gen. George W. Wingate, the d-young Presi- dent of the P. S. AL. will preside over the grand aletic gathering. With him will be DA, K. Aldinger, Secretary of the leme,and the sevs eral supervisors a) inspectors of school athletics. The MetropolitarLife Insurance band will provide timusic. With a membership of 100,%is musical or- ganization has made reputation for {tseif worthy of thinterest of its sponsors. You might tlk one or two overcoat ses would be enough for snl boys. No sir-ee! Not this Wint Besides the popular reefers and Rusns, we’ve also made up ne little fellows’ ulsters—tes 2 to 110 years. Just like Dad’s Sidepocke, belted backs, convertit collars! Jaunty as can | | Boys’ prices,ke our men’s, are based to-day’s replacement costs Down-to-data price and up-to-date style The best of rything boys wear. Sporting goodind of- ficial outfits for ] Scouts of America. RoGERS PEET CANY Broadway Broadway at 13th St. “Four it 34th St, Convenien' Broadway Corners” Fifth Ave, at Warren at 41st St, Empire Cily arse (YONKERS & MT. DN) Saturday’s Special ctions} THE $7,C00 PEL! BAY RAMAPO HAMP Mist The Pui Berk Purso Ro Purse FIMST RACE AT ¢ M, Spocial Race Trains Sam Grand Centra! Terminal. Harlesion, at 1.10 and 1.25 P.M. Fr trains 65 Ver ort ie fr to 2.40 P.M. ins ‘atop Bth Bt. Also reada Uexs Jerome Avway, oF tt “dve,, huvway, Jerome by from |]] Palmer Stadium, ton, san OSH; Bnd) 2.30 tt Seeciet Teun ines oe | Tlokete om sate at Spe