The evening world. Newspaper, November 1, 1922, Page 19

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+ THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1922, AND HOW TO WATCH IT By_PERCY D. HAUGHTON \ NINE YEARS COACH AT HARVARD Famous Football Authority Explains Play of the Third Period of a Hypothetical Game Between Two Teams of About Even Strength. GoRMAN FINALLY DOWNED ON §O §° \yvarp_t PRINCETONS DARING, FORWARD PASS THAT OUT WITTED CHICAGO THIRD PERIOD. We left the fleld with the score 10 to 8 against us. During the intermission, which lasts fifteen minutes, the wind died down appreciably so that when our team, which ts again playing against It, kicks Off, it 1s able to send the ball almost to the enemy's goal, On the first pl our opponents quite correctly kick, but unfortunately their punter twists Bis ankle and is forced to leave the fleld, His substitute is an inferior Kicker? and perceptibly slower in the execution of his kicks, As a result, the enemy finds that? instead of being able to punt theirymarked by excellent play, especally way out of danger on the exchange] Ur offensive march of forty-seven of Kicks, they are fighting deop in] ** he uns {n a failure to score by thetr own territory; and to make|” qo be gure, that fumble of our was things worse the next kick Is short,}a bad blemish, but the long run di- the ball going to us at midfeld. rectly after, which almost scored Then ensues the second of those| Compensated greatly by taking us out well-directed marches which a team peta eee aanaaeee ie is sometimes ablo to make by super’ Treen comploted we should have tat human efforts when the score Is against it. Intermingling change of | (CovPrieht, 1922, by Marshall Jones @ Co.) Girection plays and strong line —. YALE IS ANXIOUS plays, with one forward pass, which}, The first period was printed last FOR ANOTHER GAME started like a rush, our quarter-|Saturday; the second on Monday. Tha s EoRwar PASS. TONS GOAL LINE back drives his team to a first down| final guaran will be printed on these WITH IOWA ELEVEN on the 9-yard line, ond down on] Pages next pcorcey the 6-yard line, third down on the — NEW HAVEN, Conn,, Nov. 1-— 4-yard line, fourth down with only CORRY AND GA GAFFNEY Following an interpretation of the dhree yards to the goal line and only Yale, dhtee yards to the goal line and only LEAD IN BICYCLE RACE| *3"eement betwoen Yale, Harvard SUaaET BNOPE and Princeton, which puts the 2 critical situation ‘ t would you do Corry] ban on long trips and not on in- rterback’s shoes? |4nd Lawrence Gaffney took the lead| tereectional games at home, an Back BEHIND PRINCETONS GOAL LINE ~ PRETENDING To PUNT It is inde Once again, were you in the ¢ CHICAGO, Noy. 1.—Frank Kick, run or pass in the six-day bleyele race last night| invitation ham been issued by the ~ In making your choice please re-latter an hourta Vale Ainlatis Aussiatlon Member the sc: as well other af printing, deposin | H ciation to lowa factors. Our quarterback orders Alt Goulett and Ernest Kockle for another football game next kick formation and so places tl the latter of Chicaio, The leaders had] S289": Prof. Clarence W. Mendell, Chairman of the Yale Board of Athletic Control, said: of his backfield that the best 1 tion Is obtained for a drop kick The defense e determine block the kick and as 870 miles at “We are very anxious to meet snapped thetr line converg 10 o'clock, the forty-eighth he kicker's foot. the He makes every pretense of klcl ing but at the last moment wl eredit while th “ © Most Daring Piece of Strategy Edgren Has Ever Seen qiGEps BRUSH UP ot| lowa next year, and are hoping on Any Gridiron. ON THEIR PUNTING piled up 1 that they will be able to accept the invitation. PRINCE “There have been reports that By Robert Edgren: aoa car ake race which will end next day night. Wourteen of th Noy. 1—Bill passes the tall diagonally forward to} teams that started last s ight] the Western Conference Colleges RAILING 18 to 7, with only ten minutes remaining, and the ball on| #oper hasn't yet put his regular team his ehd, who is specding toward the| were still In the grind, altho hree| pave barred intersectional games, their own one yard line, Princeton seemed hopelessly beaten by | “t ie together since, the Chicego side lines. An enemy halfback has|of them were a lap behind the flela,| PUt inasmuch as we have not re- Chicago, At this moment, however, came the play that completely | £2, No kerimmage was held yesterday sensed the play and just as the ball is caught, by our end he tackles t but the coaches drilled a portion of the ceived any confirmation of this we for the Tigers’ victory, It was|line and backfleld for about an hour, Freddie Hill and Morenee Decterck,| are again inviting lowa to meet ue changed the situation and prepared the w theBelgiany wore dh a Bad aenenig ost daring plece of atrategy I ever saw . running them through signal dril! and manner ee ccnr ilar ‘ ‘ioe : a3 teeta Mere, \ wien ee m scien De ce of fs Br I oo w on any gridiron, givin: then: apecisloinetedchlonw: ta / prints cing knocker n answer from lowa, whic! very one tn the great erewd at @———————————— J eradicate the faults made evident in ‘ .Junconscious. After a rest they were ‘1 mic A ‘BREAK’ OF THE WORST SORT. | unconsciou fer a rest they were/ beat Yale this season, is expected | Stagg Field certainly expected Princs- unt) he aaw the little quarterback, the Chicago game. Even now the enemy are not ‘out}#ble to continue in a day or two, i 1 of the woods,” because should we - : ton: to ‘Kick with; then: goal: line-iniwas rendytovrecelve it under his wing for some time, giving block their kick we would probably such danger. The Chicago team evi-] This play so surprised Chicago that| him punting Instructions, ‘Three others satly flcured no other move coulda | S"™an sprinted to mid-fleld and al-| were punting with Cleaves, who was MOF. sate mubatitute kicker tnin uene| A CFU Rallied and Beat Navy Tear |i: 022 22 (8 2282 248 | most iad clear path for a touch: | uveraging around ttty yard Warey possibly be made, The Maroon men] gown when the las . and Dinsmore were catching the kicks Sante wall, Our ba Bete y wn when the Iast man in the Mi 5 nsmore were ¢ ng the ree Saeyan! line ant wa to cun| When Heisman Threatened EONEQTELE | es can the ices ones ta Fan Beirne tives iia wa hires gees eee Be centre, in, but when fic tackled he drops block the expected kick aD ES Crum Baker, Gray, Snively, Buwer the ball and an adversary recovers it his play made the Tigers fighting | and Gorman have not yet swung into This gives our opponents a first down nad. Three minutes later Gray con-| real action again. ‘They were on the on their 30-yard linc verted Chicago fumble into a touch- |Aeld but did not do much work. Gor- constitutes ten yeards behind his] down and Crum followed soon after| man's injury was not an serious as tt Keene Fitzpatrick had Jack Cleaves Princeton's ing tc standing full leven lined up in kick with Quakers Made Their Sensa-|t ‘ 4 "Boys, we are quitters, yel- the mistake oe 1 wi" Miller shouted to his start f the worst) tional Comeback After Be- | teammates. “We are tak matic 25-yard line so that in two plays they ing Called Quitters, +80 this minute, He Wwill quit if| the rival lines met ina mishty crash. | Of the most thrilling battles In foot-| was priming the serub team for slaugh- in 75 yards. Wardninic ‘ ' wattle: -! ‘ Siar eae, 7 ae as thos on this last play, in making his WE Penn's cleven'h\ wer ye uae moe Seen hat are |The Chicago ends rushed in to block tackle one of their ends is badly T ; mantle joing to do about 7 tne | the kick. From the tower shaken up but insists upon resuming > a xpectec etory ened & bd cond Han ce the game Btand it Jooked| us thous play, Still somewhat dazed, he is un- Iie Hensvole var able on the next play to hold off the] tion of the lin] sone crazy. Tt interference which is directed against] ,, ball history. ter, Phil Brasher, a member of the clase Returning home on the Princeton|o¢ 1906 and an end on the yaralty dur Jal, Bill Roper told me that the]ing all four of his undergraduate years, from behind the 1 line was|was helping to coach the On e1tes, included in Princeton's Ist of | Perfecting plays which the scrub will s, and that Gorman and Cleaves | (3° pees Loe Eamo to prepare 1 pped It out In t the N at the dedica- cted a3 if they had} Would never get the ball away y were a crashing, | To my aston stadium at Fra ment the Princeton]; e emergency. 2 ield Saturday was due to Cone ashing Berserker lot, that Penn : ACH: AL an sid as M wo y 0 Pe Ss ted him. Johnny Heisman's unusual “curtain |E2M& which had been tauntea with | fullback began any Two years ago Penn State defeated OMHEARN BACK IN YALE The runner, seeing the tackle ta|Johnn i unusual “curtain | Hane which had taking e Deak! | roon players swarmed In front of him. | Pittsburgh with a somewhat similar wall bored, cuts In, As he i» about | cuir” hetwren halves, “Heron | {he charke that It was taking a best-|toaag of klexin, Clewven, coo! txeept that the pass was | LINE-UP FOR WORKOUT me maccndary daciiwhet he sald ghting Ly ne Farce b vassed the ont wrt one to th of serimmage, to be tackled by the secondary 4d “Boys, if the team acts in the [Of the Penn attack knocked some cf | Ae passed i CAS iN dae if, Seri mA — cane fense another interferer comes to hs ae poring eae ihe Nano ian Hurchet onee|tWenty yard line Johnn m where the receiver 1” practi-| NEW HAVEN, Conn, Nov. 1L— rescue, He then dodces the third line} 7econe Hat as it abke ie i i uae ned up the wire Ho just hag | 8t00d waiting for the p At salle uly the entire distance of the field] Charie O'Hearn returned to the Yale MeTacthks And atte @ endendia. Fan am thr »s coach at Penn- Pe tee eine to ladt oft | directly over the centre of the lr ry @ touchdown that defeated the }ine-up at quarterback yesterday for the Of 85 yards iy force rounds to] Syivaniay” said Heiaman. | Teare jeocie and had heen downed with a.| THe Chicago team was caught entire-| Panthers first scrimmage following the Army the one remain player. faoee “Ir tat Aepen a wrintied | rorce which almost knocked him loose |'¥ off guard. When the lines ca tons! pass Seninat Chica | Ene cae general tor the Line. eleven ponents’ 40-yard line, We now change! Shq"clear out. My contract Tune | of He er and Penn, and | the right si Hed to his post- | the heads of both teams. have two days more of serimmaging thin our tactics and trs long forfard Fi } . tion, | Cle t go the 1 Copyrlent, 1022, by Robort deren.) | week, which will get the Yale backtleld through 1923, but | will not stay. passes, each of which ts incomy I d iy u ut ad to t ¢ co in # pe, with Neale at ft halfdack, On the fourth Ce ohm a. My temple) getting T epbro® nnother: tein mbna tol Scott or Mallory at fullback and Cap. Kicking diagonally across the aiheating: Thee may comete any tel ph for !/LAMENESS OF HARVARD |PRESIDENT MAY ATTEND tain Jordan at right halfback, Mallory Heisman the opponents’ goal line, but the de go, with colors flying. That's all, fending back anticipates his move boys, | juet thought |! would tell intercepting the ball ruins to his 30 you this now.” yard line before he ts finally tack! Subtle Pay- MEN HOLDS UP “DRIVE” ARMY AND NAVY GAME|%%® [8ted again yesterday, and Scott took his place, = Jordan played through the early part CAMBRIDGE, Maas. N 1k WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—Prestdent]of the scrimmage and was replaced by : inding ts expected by Navy Depart-| Ed. Bench, who had his first scrimmage — Park for Kansas City. AS CITY, Noy, 1.—The Kan- vard yesterday began {ts work for | Hf i i 1 City Clut t officials. to be on the alde tines] in several weeks. Haas took Scott's 7 Rone’ tale Be Bohrer Weaiilapecn th ahaa Princeton game slowly, the dri | shot 2» Naval| place. Wight went In for Neale and late Time is now called, and in the one] po imy ; tke ale eS » the football teama of the Navall ‘ CEE Or reat WHICH follows dt ; : ve OACHs tO) olation.wdllopen tite ng with a soft scrimmage betweer my and West Point meet on Nov,|[in the practice Kelly took O'iHearn's minu' r which ows efthe squad. n-}son in a new park, according to an] ooo oq and third varelty ten ut Philsdelphia tn thelr annual game. | place. teams change goals. sternation writ on announcement by George Muehlebach f : be eoratary Denby #atd yesterday he ha of the club, The new park |™0#t of the player 1 the President to attend the game 0,000, he suid the Dartmouth game watching proceed-| and that the Presldent looked with favor — |ings trom the sidelines the proposal, final dectaton being de- . dent on the condition of Mrs, Har- Munce Will Box Best Pitiahur he STECHER MEETS Ba Tarts eek Dood’ tor aay or tats | tet clon have, ween mete Ue atA! It was g | \ CHARLEY CUTLER _ Jout co many of the players have be ‘iclala to get the President to attend Heavyweights at A. A. U. Show| 1s WRESTLING BOUT] 8"), tee er base on see Terattonsas Ceutus’ Park oe "Stuttgarter SUMMARY —In contrast to the pre-| hie, too n ceding period, the third au Presiden 4 Were’ will cost jan t the Executive was said to be disin- fi ; ~ The. iret: whes how of the sea-| Dartmouth encounters that Dr. Richer’ | lined to deviate from his policy of when, the Snyder, Dunn, Bienfeld and] stem 4. ¢., and Pa. Hahn of the Pas-| son will he held. thie ovening at tho | held up the “drive,” and there pr jovianding no public functions of any ¥ ill Be See me A are among the sta neer A. C., in F 24th Street. | will be none, 8 Sine v o i ores Harris Also Will Be Seen | ners who wilt partictpate in the junior | Three Anish matches, two falls out-of | ee tien, eno were rs Z i . cross country champtonships of the | three, are schedul one world’s by ne =e in Action at Garden. AOA) Oat Var Comtande Pare. und the four leading con-| against Dartmouth Saturday only threy | DICK PADDEN. BALLPLAYER, OT were around urday, About a hundred harriers will “strang Lewis’ avy-| Kunhardt, Holder and Fitis, were p MARTINS FERRY, 0., Nov. 1.—Dick reet bs t In action. ‘The | ing ion, aged fifty-four years, veteran By Joseph Gordon. 1p 1 . e Stecher 1 league baseball player, died ye . leg ial opening ¢ irive f 4 Charley Cut ndleton vs. During the pi se F t ‘y, @ victim of apoplexy, Padden ORDON MUNCE, Metropolitan} q ney gymnasium by J Peter Jarvis, visited the fleld, taking tr ne hie career on the diamond played T. heavyweight boxing champion, | Amorican Gymnastic Associat n va, Ed.|talia. He will he out often du na: beater the: Pittaburah Pirates [DERE are 2 few a beat Pittat take p day and will clos ranking of the 1 f Ff was Meld captain for the St. Louls products that the younger gen- Be fees the. Heat, Hitt Sere \ prevail en i wn, eration buys from the bil heavyweight tn a special bout du the t enth ft gives every u faeces AS i — partment stores uptown, W ich the intercity boxing tournament of | #4nlzstion pombe erpment pieces uptown, NaN the Amateur Athletic Union at the Jow ick, featherweight c meeting, Garden on Now. 80. Sam ‘Diente, fof the Unitad Staton Navlonal Cara [for cuter has heen ercor tht meen! Another Football Referee whten these ores mete at 14th Clark House A, H., and Jack Sny-| will meet Billy Brown der, Trinity Club, will represent this | roun nteat at th body scissors * squeezed a dectaton orse Hi ec ion : 3 ppresc ‘ound conte ne cut of him six ye Cutler at the R p s D ducts is city in the flyweight class, and Matty | Armory to-night time held the Ar amplonship, eve es wn Ope .of sheers jobsbolentert Dunn of the Paulist A. C. and Andy! witilam Sullivan, a : the same dependable under- Harris have accepted the invitation of necond in the junior mile cham. | KD RASH KNOCKS OUT MOTITO, Another football referee hae reversed hie own ruling. J. 7. Clinton wear at the lowest price con- the Metropolitan Association to meet a nh pionship this year, will be among the|, Kid Rash, of ¢ th Regiment followed in the footsteps 3 /erae Morice who rever.-d hie deol- sistent with quality. the invading light heavyweights. large fleld to compete In the 1,000- eked out Joe OF the LON sion Inthe GolumiblacN, ¥. | aking a touchdown away from Form fitting union suits end shirts A special meeting of the Registra-| yard Metropolitan Special at to- ine Mile A aan ee Muhlenberg in last Saturday's e with Lehigh. However, the re ‘aad even cation, coon ond tion Committee of the Metropolitan] night's gam f the Metropolitan }end came in the 1 $0 “nnan| vVereal does not deprive a victory; it merely makes the wool and 100% guaranteed pure Association of the A. A. U. has been} Lite Insurance A, A. and the 186th | wotghed 117% { Mallto tipped | eeere in Lehigh's favor of 26 to 7 wool =~ at the best retailers called for Thursday eventng to inven- a ™% Y pei gh'e fav i Rogiment A, A. joint moet in the lat- | the acales at %. In othor boute Terry According 40 she: story of Bethlehem, Refores Clinton, tigate the nors that a numbor of | ter's armory. Two girls’ relay teama| Martin knock: 1 Iie Clarkston, | who ie a Yale man, voluntarily acy his error on a play in the fourth registered athletes of this district Gomi int 5 and Kid 4 i " ron dgeport to com- period, Soon after Lehigh had « her last touchdown Muhlenberg RH. LOEB & CO,, Inc. agreed to participate In @ long ih thaveunnle ton stom en aieep, 20 @ plonannt evening w Pp z dt ¢ tance race at the end of this month » - u got a first down on ob en ‘ ard line. A forward pase wae Max Kuhn, Pres Be ene ee ee teenth | Pralimtnarien of the necond amateur _ _ ground siney fos yarde. A third pase aleo failed, 456-460 FOURTH AVE i xing tourname..* of the season un- . e nd on th rth dow hf at itt fu na runs ‘New York Chey be offered instead of cups or trophies. | der the sunpicen of the New York| \ORMPNUNAR Wve WITH Cum, | And on the fourth downy wie it, without, however malcing the * Bome of the beat long dimanco run-| Athietic Cui will be held Nov, ®, and|,, RAP Greonteat, world’s pocket hi] 7iBe Pay. Out fora Qt , — 4 peer ell Heise 2 a held 2 4) Mard champlon, defoaied Major M, Ww letanos necessary for.a firet dow por in the metropolitan district are| the finals on the 11th, Five claases| white, 195 to 67, | inal niece ee Despite thia, Referee Clint ne sticks shead and gave Muhl- faid to be involved. will compete: the 108, 118, 126, 185} their B00 point mat . Amba enberg a first dow he vieitiny *t2™, Continuing ite offensive, ultl- dy Gustave Sandquist, Finnish-Ameri-|and 1.45, Special prizes’ will be Billiard : ' es T t rul ope ea oT Peale rae 0 iM ‘ rd Acadomy ulsht, ‘The mately ecored a touchdown . ect ruling, cf course, would have @n A. Cc. . ecore waa 600 te i463. given the ball te Lohigh on downs ) ~ cect TI 0 erm er me 2 a ‘BLUE. ANXIOUS TO MEET CONQUEROR FROM WEST NEXT SEASON: = |NOTABLE FOOTBALL PLAYS OF THIS SEASON PRINCETON’S PASS FROM BEHIND GOAL LINE THAT LED TO VICTORY OVER CHICAGO ss ocasstssni inal aa . VOTE FOR ONE TIME HAS COME TO PUT ONE CROSS ON BAL- LOT FOR YOUR CONGRESSMAN IN RETURN FOR DOUBLE-CROSS HE IS SURE TO SLIP YOU. By Neal O’Hara. Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World), by Press Publishing Company. Now is season of your discontent. Just when Yale-Harvard tickets commence to get scares, Congress candidates uncurl tails and drop to ground like horse chestnuts on village landscape. Candidates are twlos as thick as Congressmen themselves, Figure that out on your phre- nology chart, As clection season writhes into final convulson you have cholee of good, bad and indifierent men, And last two brands are always elected, Old conundrum has it that you can’t keep good man down. Statis- tien prove that merit will tell, But best man never gets elected to Con- gress any more than best man cops the bride at wedding. It is guy that's there with the ring that weds the girlle, And it is guy that stands with the ring that goes to Congress We got 110,000,000 people in this here iand, not including Ellie barrel taster, windbag and spread [siand. Four hundred and thirty- eagle preacher {s Congresser's five of these are Congressmen— idea of serving Nation, then toad- reat are electorate and electorate’s odin! are food and) pine: atare children. But if each Congresser ples, is representative of 250,000 con astits back home then Kipling and Kaiser were both correct. We are Nation of dumb-bells, medi- cine balls and Indian chrba. You mark one kiss on Austra- Han ballot that gives you Con- gresemen for next two years. In return for smack on voting sta- tlonery, you get package of seeds, One package equals 120 mixed bushels of beets, tomatoes, let- tuce, parsnips, cucumbers and radishes, provided you follow Re- publican directions on envelope and have three acres to spare. You and your Congressman are now square, Any Congresser's head proves that. Your Rep. may be big gun at home, but !n Washington he |s pea shooter. No guy with black string tle and stentorian talking al & works oan make ‘em alt up and This is the home of *Solo listen there. Black string tles are ni daily sartorial dish of 80 per cent socks! . of Washington's official yokelry Our own quality, trade It is leading article of Congress- marked for our mutual pro- man's wardrobe, next to high . silk hat he talka through, And | tection, speech braying |8 80 prolific in Sold solely by us! D. C. that clothing dummies rate : above Congressmen, socially and Among others, spiffy sille often mentally. *Solos in plain blue, gray, Guys that have served two tems for every expanct oni their |e) brown, black -moder vests are lumberjicks that take |ately priced $1.25. part in the log rolling, Log roll- Cotton soles and tops with double ing is neat Congressional’ trick of heels and toes for long wear, spending cord of Government . money for silver of national good Shirts ! And only vets of House routine Domestic percales for aa know combination to the pork little as $2. barrel. Imported English Madras, $8. Children serving ndergarten ving kind Derbies! terms In Congress are busy frank- 5 9 ing laundry back home and at- $5 starts ’em same as ft does our felts. tending committee manoeuvre In morning, Committee on Ac in All fast color, the Hole meets Committee on Winter onwfords! Nine-Spots Back to Back. In aft- 4 : ernoon, Committee on Ways and Doesn’t $8 sound mighty Means meets Committee on Golf [low for good, low shoes? a Bridge And avening Good line of then, too. summer sessions only) Commit- £ , tee on Rivers and Harbors mects The variety of our wine Committee on Sailbonts and ter suits at $45, $48 and $50 Canoes. z pe ‘Only bunch that does work [iS aS surprising as the values. with a conscience is Committee on All our own make. Waits and Measures. They give *Heplatered Trademarh, us long waits and foolish meas- ures good and plenty, For Con- Rocers Peet Company * gress is only living outfit: that Br i oadway| Herald Sp Produces more hills than the | ge oadway(” “Four at 35th St, Elks. And all Initiates grab 20 Chovenuct cents a mile for travelling, which | Broaqway Corners” Fifth Ave is reason why Congressmen leave home But tf being seed distributor, log roller, Inundry franker, pork at Warren ( at 41st St, They Stand the Gaff Boys can be boys to their hearts’ con- tent in our Norfolks and other manly models —wear-defiance is built right into them, Tweeds, cheviots and serges, grays, browns, and fancy mixtures; sizes from eight to eighteen...........$14 to $28 Overcoats, hats, caps, shoes everything to complete the boy's winter outfit BROKAW BROTHERS BRroapway AT Forty SECOND STREET ———————T FOUNDED 1856 | eaten ene Ae nN ae AS NR Ne CCC OP en owners i eee oe mee tL ab anette wae oe

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