The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1922, Page 8

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| | _ ss THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER Act nib SOSA NARI Nd iM i aa 25, 1922. EW HAVEN AND PHILADELPHIA SCENES OF BIG GRID GAMES HARVARD-YALE BRAWL A VERY SOCIAL AFFAIR, DECLARES NEAL O’HARA ———— “This Is Day of Year When Cost of Living Rises 600 Per Cent.— Only Cost. of Starving Remains the Same.” By Neal O'Hara. 1982 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov, 24.~- A ITER profitable season of two defeats and no deficits, Harvard Copyright, crashes Yale to-day in annual massacre. It looks like a wonderful game for the ticket scalpers. By the time Referee pipes overture on whistle, there will be $25,000 worth of music lovers jammed in cement saucer. Bow! will be filled up complete. If parachute jumper should drop im by mistake, 2,000 customers would spill over upper rim. Of $225,000 Jerked in at the box office, Harvard gets $112,600, Yale gets $112,500 end players get eight-inch letters of credit embroidered on woolen sweaters. ‘This Harvard-Yale brawl! is a very@ foclal affair. Guys who eat meals IN THE LIMELIGHT TO-DAY - . i Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening W orld), tt “Wier STROLLING DowN THE STREET ONE DAY Twas in THE HERRY MONTH OF MAY~ with chamois gloves on and peer at life through monocles dashing into New Haven in silver plated }1- mousines. Hotcls are fuller than a bride's kitchen sink. Only miliionatre alumni and highly paid news experts ean afford army cots in De Luxe hotels, ‘This is day of year when cost of living rises six hundred per cent. Only cost of starving remains the same. Club sandwich costs like club was studded with kohinoops. Potato chips are worth ten, twenty-five and fifty cents each. It is even impos- sible to grab toadstools or poisoned olives without large outlay of ex- pense. Bullworths is only spot in are New Haven selling anything for nickel or dime, That is ve: ugh om visiting bourgeoisie. The 5,000 elm trees they have in this town ‘would look prettier with food proft- teers strung to each. Gamo is Inst chance of season for experts to go wrong. Tiluminated pickers for metropolitan sheets give Yale double edge like safety razo blade. When Eli outfit lines up to jump on Harvard, it will look like fteam shovel alongside teaspoon. Yale is huskier than Unele Tom's voice in last act. Harvard has guys in neatly tailored moleskins, but shoulder pads und false hips fool those experts. Statistics prove Yale squad is jam- med with bollermakers. But Harvard outweighs Yale above the neck. Those Crimson babies tote hig brains. Harvard troup may not be strong enough to push toothpaste out of tube, But Yale team hasn't sense enough to put on rubber boots in flood. That's official, direct from ex- perts’ greased typewriters. Mental dinoxaurs on Crimson perch have spent fust week sorting pearls from oysters, chasing needles in huge hay- stacks and translating LaFollette’s stuff into common rense, They are at xenith of autumnal emartnes: Yale m hasn't shaved since Wednesday, hut false whiskers or real ones can't outwit Harvard. Yale will have to win with its feet. Those Harvards are cagier than guys that grab living from dealing three-card monte, That's all gridiron dope that is apparent to dante, except Yale team spent tast ight in college infirmary, They claim that is where Harvard guys will spend to-night. ————— —_ Fezmron Frew —-—_oo: by Press Publishing Company \ \ J Se WHAT THE SHOOTIN'S Auk ABOUT BUT ACCIDENTAL GOT & TICKET FRon A Bien WHO COULDNT GO- OF HERS WENT TO WEST POINT FOR. Two - ai MARRY. ON WET. DAXS So 1F \Ws.ageRe ARMY. PLANING THE SAME @iR@uIT— THE SAME Day, By Thornton Fisher|\ (} JIX(N LEADS HOTEL MEN IN GOLF TOURNEY AT RYE Returns Low Net ow Net of 73; ley Green, 77—Wind Plays Pranks. Stan- More than « hundred golfers from (he Hotel Men's Association held thelr an- nual fail golf tournament at the West chester-Biitmore Country Club yeste: dey. The honor of the day went to W. O. Dixon of New Hampshire, who did ross of $3 with a 20 handicap, which him a low ne* of 78. He will have 6 & reward his name engraved on the John Mck. Bowmen Trophy, which 1s contested for by thin organization once a year. The wind howled flereely all day and this feature made many peffectly good alible possible, The low grose was made by Raymond Stevens of Lak Ph who played from scratch. H. hada queer talo to tall about the action of the wind on the grat hole. Stevens made # putt that was much too atrone and just as he was regretting having hit the ball so hard the wind took hold of it when it was more than two feet past the hole and blew it back into the cup. hia) Lonccngy sl Macs] Bitz aZet o< 50 na Ss5se2 Rutgers and Bucknell Elevens Will Clash on Neilson Field Big. Crowd Expected at New Brunswick Game—Ford- ham Plays Muhlenburg. By Burris Jenkins Jr. HB big contest among local col- 7 leges to-day is Rutgers’ final game of the season with Buck- Rell on Nejlson Field, New Bruns- Whek, N. J. With what promises to bo a close but Successful sally’ against Muhlenberg at Allentown, Pa. Columbia is sched- wed for a Jong practice, beginning at o'clock, with plenty of scrimmage on er Field, in preparation for the anksgiving Day game with Colgute *The odds on paper point to a Buck- Nell victory. Lehigh beat Rutgers 18-7 and Bucknell defeated Lehigh 44-0. Bucknell also held the Navy to a 14-7 score. Rutgers showed such improvement in the last week's defeat N. Y. U., 37-0, however, that the w Brunswick players have hopes of Tt ts old grad week at Rutgers and ® big crowd ts expected. em the football squad will got thelr Just chance in the battle. Noble Fordham ends ‘ts year i All seniors | i gave the eleven a scrimmage yester- day, The team was drilled in the aerial plays of the visitors. The hard week of scrimmage has left the Red athletes somewhat shaken up, but the rogular line-up fa etill intact. .Benkert has recovered from his leg Injury and will start. The probable line-up ¢ollows: RUTOHRS. Post, BUCKNELL, Dickenson . B. i Smith Brennan Moore |.... Fordham head a “acai short signal drill yesterday and left this morning for Allentown. The only indication that Muhlenberg is to be feared is from the Pennsylvanians, last week's 17 to 14 victory over the strong Swarthmore team. Outside of that Muhlenberg had done little this year, The probable line-up FORDHAN, Fo MUHLENBERG, 1 therefore has been shifted from end] noutot te place in the backfield. Contrary to custom, Coach Sanford Fistic News It looks now as if Tut Jackson the col- ared heavyweight of Washington Court House, O., ts a poor specimen of a flehter, Marry Wille knocked him out in a few rounds months ago, and Carl Morris, the Okishoma heavywolght, also put him away with « punch to the Jaw in the ninth round of thelr twelve round bout at Dayton, O., on Wednesday night. Jackson did not land « Boed Biow on Morris Phil Bernstein, manager of Frankie Genaro, the crack flywelght and Charley Beecher the enst cide featherweight nas fust taker, another fighter under hi . Ho te Harry London the ¥ aren Bernstein bought London's contract from the latter's former manager, Leu Cohen. He already hes several bouts tm view for London. ih, Another fighter who bas changed hands fe Mallen Jose Gans, the midéieweight of » In Re, tutare ‘Brosudyn erste withe Brooklyn sporting mon. ually” nes eigned an to. fight a for tickets for yy ace feature bout between Jack ohh ¢ se arive sognd, fo oman oF rata Sporsine «cia be ight thar tt, te om up Whe preeswny be sold out. " iy hook wp with Neerty Bum jew York. will mere 0! will be 4 show Club of Har Douts of twelve rounds, ot the regular paring bor ight. Dar Ui Bann: ih wat “ole "Joe Nelson, of Piiliadelphi le fire Rppeatarce inv bout Four good Canadian fighters will meet a ter ats, OReTE, ts congunetion boute 0 4 oh fine: amateur box Aihistie Cidb tornientee The clases, thietic Clel aor ape fine outs will be 116 in stroutd ‘be ail bitterly: contested. Jack Hanlon whe intends to stage enother nt doxing show at the Arona A. C., = Philadelphia, on Dey a ait to ‘Bat 40 reat Fs Pancho ing) the fiywel i 2 3 — at 118 pount Soo Se rE BY JOHN POLLOCK Herlem, will ‘Coluinbui wil « Dempeey in the other twelve Manning +. and Gossip and Rocky Kansas, the crack Bouffelo fighter. Oharley Murray, matchmaker of the Queensberry A. ©., of Buffalo has book lags tor & ten roend contest up t the afternoon of mill be Ka o mn ving Day. ha firat Hent in Reré Spencer, the Brooklyn lightweight, and Johnny Murphy will clash in the ster bout of twelve rounds At the regular weekly f the Ridgewood Grove Sport- to-night. In the sem!- Willie Alten, takes on Frankie Ourley for ten de. There will bee ti © four-round bout else fought, he Glover New York mi¢- the Broad Street Hospital where reolng ‘reat tor bin arm. SPRINGFIELD, 0©., Nov. wobbling on the ropes. chin and dropped bim, ee | Bll defore Ratner Tights BY KNOCKOUT ROUTE .—Joe Lynch, world's bantamweight champion, knocked out Benny Bchwarts, a tocal Doy, here last night after five of the festest and mort furtous rounds eyor witnessed in this section, Both boys started off punching to the head, and for three rounds {t looked ike Lynch might lose his title, as Schwarts threw al) caution away and once had Lyneh The knockout Punch was landed after two minutes of exchanging punches toe to tor. Lynch back and let go ® one-two punch that caught the local boy Mush on the ARMY ELEVEN IS PICKED TO BEAT OLD NAVY RIVAL GAMES PLAYED BY ARMY AND NAVY ELEVENS ‘The Army team of West Point Is un+ beaten In nine mes this year, but played a 7 to 7 tle with Yale and a0 to0d tle with Netre Dame. The Navy team (Continued) resumed, and the Navy won in 191%, 1920 and 1921, . Always working in co-ordination and conjunction with one another a3 forces on land and sea, the two units of Annapolls has played only elx games and suffered one} Mecome hostile to each other to-day defeat, at the hands of Pennsylvania. | Nd fight cach other on the white- The records foltow: lined gridiron with such weepons as ARMY. ue mittel in air attacks and Springfield . O] straight football offense. As bitter Lebanen Valley. Of as the enemity will be when it is O} the men will foin each other tn che 6] social event, the dunce, that follows N. Hamp. State. 0 the game Yale 7 HL . St. Bonaventure. of When “Navy players arrived here Notre Dame.,... o| Yesterday they lacked the confidence Bates 0] of the Army men, Bob Folwell, couch =~ ~|of Annapolis, said: ‘We will be the 13} under dog. The Army has it on us NAVY, in welght and experience, most of Western Reserve Oj} their men having played against 1 Bucknell + 7} last year : Georgia Tech.... 0} ‘Tho Army's record, with tie Penn . + 13] games against Notre Dame and Yale, ey State-s--+ Ol gives them the edge against us, But p i this !s a year in which the underdog 171 20 | has consistenly won, The Army-Navy ame is always the hardest fought cami ==] of the football season, and our team, which is in fine fettle, to win. will be there COMMERCE AND CLINTON ELEVENS CLASH TO-DAY.] ‘The centre of our line is heavy and compares favorably The outstanding rivals of Manhattan] With the Army. In the rest of the schools, the High Schoo! of Commerce| Positions they have it on us in weight, and De Witt Clinton, wil meet in thetr| SSPECially in the backfield, where we nineteenth annual game this afternoon] ™\,.e!% |)! fast ; on Bouth Field. The two schools played incen ‘onroy, the ashy quar- 3 Played) terback und Captain of the Navy thelr firat game in 1904 with the ecore being tied at 6 (0 6. Since that year Clinton has won nine games and Com- merce seven games, the remaining games going to a tie. Commerce has not been able to de- feat (ts rival for the last seven years, Cook, tle present director of freshman athletics at Columbia, de- veloped a atrong system at the 69th Street School, and the nearest approach that Commerce has come to « victory s last year when a fumble in the eleven, is determined to score a vic- tory. “They may have it on us in weight and experience,” lie declared, “but we will play in this game as we've not played before. The men arg just beginning to find themselves."* Major Daly, coach of the cadets, had nothing to say before the game, Ho expected victory with his present eleven after drinking the dregs of defent these last three years. ALL STARS WILL START THE GAME Dilly Maseott, by A romising iigorole iret jod accounted for th wo snore f sitter neat | pret period accounted for the only score) gach, coach asnerted he would start rite, § Sa] The other ech: games follow;| the gamo with his stars all in line-up Manual Training vs. New Utrecht, Com-| Barchet, the dy Annapolis back, uraday afternoon, rt ercia! Field; Boys’ vs. Broo! 7 who re out of the a Sonny Maen, the Pendae hy) penal asia rroeklyn Tech, | who has been ou the game Larlated of of the five clate ound contests at ti ‘All Hallows, Central F the most part of ihe season will be o Jamaica, Dexter Park. back fn the line-up. Wt ts not ex- —> a pected, however, thot le will finish the full game *icalont of CANAPARY OF COLUMBIA [iio stinieis covering the Army Town Hall at W SAID TO BE INELIGIBLE | mule and tho Navy goat, their mas Sarre, Fe on the aight of ‘De cots, are wagered on the result ° Frank Canopary, ater Columbia right} the game hie mule has t JOE LYNCH IS WINNER halfback, it is reported, has beon de-| Prived of # blanket these three years but seeks vengance t clared ineligible by the Cormmittee on Athletics to represent the Blue and orga at White in athletic competition, Innzmuch | Set#blish & new ance of the Army and Navy game he has violated Rule Ul. of the| ™ ate erode The seating capacity of the new stad According to the report Graduate) Mm Is 52,000 It ts expected that close to 68,000 will witness the game, There is a move on foot to have the Army and Navy game played here ain neat year. They both prefer the hospitality of Philadelphia to that corded them the last three years In ‘ew York Manager Robert W. Watt has been In- formed that Canapary took part in an athletic content an ® representative of another organization without having re- ceived permission to do so. —_- KID WILLIAMS WINS " Many tt that the game will be OVER O'DOWD IN 9TH gorised hy itho muperior Wicking. tn PROVIDENCE, Nov. 9.—Kia wi-| Which the Army excels, Wood hav- fame, former bantam champion of the ine much more abtiity os a punter than Cullen, w for the Navy world, won over Eddie O'Dowd in ti ninth round here last night. ho will do the kicking KAPLAN AND THOMAS WINNERS OF DECISIONS IN BOUTS AT THE GARDEN Meriden Lad Starts Off Like a Whirlwind, but He Tires at Finish With Kid, While Joe Welling Drops Promising Prospect in = Second, but Takes Beating After That. Oe ee eae ctecnn ons groomed to chew up the Crimson op- ponent and win a glorious ending for & disappointing season, While predicting victory, Blue root- ers @re mindful of the record between (Continued) By Ed Van Every. K's KAPLAN and Andy Thomas were awarded the decisions in the air of twelver the two old rivals, a record that » twelye-round feature bouts at Madison Square Garden last ghows GAY (cna Blue touchdown night. For a time it looked as though a fistic wonder had appeared| scored against Harvard in fifteen upon the leather pushing horizon, and also that a promising prospect had | years. been overmatched. Kaplan started after Kid Sulllyan like a hurricane,| Jt Was .Joe Neville, halfback on but moderated to about an early Apri . unig e ince gL teatn St Amorams y pril breeze, Andy Thomas took one on Plished this rare feat in 1916. Hack the chin in the second round from Joe Welling and went to his knees for|in 1909 powerful Coy could not a nine count—he looked Ike a beaten man, but he finished strong. cross the Cambridge goal line IL was quite a punchtul evening: though the great star did boot two at the well known arena, Mr. Kaplan] field goals which won for Yale that of Meriden, Conn., certainly looked OLUMBIA MAKES OFFER | yeas. To COLGATE'S COACH GENEVA, N. Y, Ney. 25.—Columbia University ja making efforte to obtain the services of Vincent S. (Deak) Welch, coach of the Hobart College football team, (o take charge of the gridiron activities at the New York institution, like the socking goods in the first half dozen rounds, He was fast on his feet and fast with his hands and just when you'd think he was hitting on about all sixes he would suddenly put on an extra burstof the speed stuff and then the fists certainly did fly about as swiftly as anything seen around these YALE SUPPORTERS CAREFUL IN PREDICTING RESULT. Byen last season Yale lost to Har- vard atter the Elis were 2 to 1 favur- ftes. Knowing low disaster popped up in former years Yale supporters are careful when predicting the result of this atternuon’s game. Yet there's parts in some time. Tt looked bad for : Sullivan along cbout the third, and|{t was learned yesterday. Ae) etek ae Hie seneral pono fourth, and fifth, to say nothing of a] Welch was approached last year with | ‘9 the abliity cf the big Blue team t: come through successfully. On the way to the grand climax Yale and Harvard encountered com- mon opponents in Princeton and Brown, Yale defeated Brown by touchdowns, while the strong Pro dence eleven turned around and won from Harvard last Saturday by 3 to 0, Princeton defeated both Yale and Harvard, Bill Roper, head coach of the victorious Tigers, was an early arrival and promptly predicted Yale to down the Crimson. Roper simply foliowed the veasoning of Ed Robin- son, Brown coach, who said e time ago that Yale had too much power for the Crimson. Yale and Harvard began the season with many veterans and unlimited numbers of backfield stars. On pa- per the Crimson looked the stronger with such notable performers as Buell, Owen, Chapin, Fitts, Gehrke, Churchill and Eastman, The Crimscn couple of other rounds. Yes, Kid Kaplan was fast. The only| Buck" O'Neill, trofble was that the Meriden boy| Was rejected. With the resignation of moved always in the same direction| O'Nelll, {t was eald that Columbia had and always busy doing the same|™sie an offer to Weleh to take com- thing in the same way. He'd dash| te cherse. right to his man and generally beat him to the punch. Many of these punches staggered Sullivan, and then, when @ little intelligence would have aided him in finishing the Brooklyn boy--the intelligence wasn't there. Instead of stepping back and meas- uring his man when he had stung hi: Kaplan would pile in close and start whaling away with both fists but with little real offect. Sullivan managed to smother most of these blows as they mauled each other at close quarters and more than held his own in many of these mixups from the sixth round on. In the semi-final Thomag and Wel- ling treated the spectators to many a thrill in their dozen rounds of work Welling boxed as well as we have ever scen him perform. He was not at all afraid of Thomas's vaunted punching ability, and at the start it boded il! for the east sido Itallan youth. Welling used his left hand to per- an offer from Columbia to aseist but the proposition y Neale Seeks to Coach Colamb! PITTSBURGH, Nov, 25.—"Greal Neale, the coach of the Washington and Jefferson football team, has made an application for the position of coach at Columbla College. Neale has been dis- satisfied with conditions at Washington and Jefferson this fall, and {t is claimed that he resented interference on the part of the athletic committee in the coaching of the team. Knute Rockne, coach ef Notre Dame, {a being sought by W. and J. and he held a conference yesterday with a rep- Tenentative of the Presidents. He was offered a contract of $8,000 9 year. G Cross Country Stars Compete To-Day for National Title fection and haf no trouble nailing|o aia a Thomas on the jaw as he came tn,|oeason of A. A. U. Will Close, St" stands ® good chance of winning it ‘ h In his vietory In the national § He was hitting shorter and straighter With Race at Van Cort- Phillips showed remarkable form ond e je boy and ha than the east side boy and had am: won easily trom a good field of : yun- gin in the first round. Welling came up cool and contide nt in the second landt Park. pc ee re EET and soon had Andy fight 9 ary ek, fo! local schoolbo Sore the ena a sei ile champion and later of Princeton, will hook to the head that hurt, and tol. By Pen Gerdae sport the colors of the New York jowed with another that spilled hie HE cross country season of the| Athletic Club as an individual entry, opponent to the canvas, Thomas Amateur Athletic Union closes| "4 !# figured to finish anong the first hi If to his } five. Mike Devaney of the Miliroso ee auc ee this afternoon with the B&/ 4 4. (s another capable distance run- the full count ¢ nine A. 4 ate iat the noventh round om it was{ “08! championship, the feature of|ner entered, From Boston comes the year, which will be run over the reguietion A. A. U. course at Van Cortlandt Park, R. Barl Johnson of Pittsburgh, champion, is here to de- fend his title from Willie Ritole, his Jimmy Hennigan, who will represent the Dorchester, Mass., Club. practically Thomas ull the Pate Civic won over Kid Lewis in the four-round opener, In the first aix-round bout Joe Frisco wae an easy winner over Tibby Watson. Lew Pi was declared chiefly between Ritola and the cham- pion, A few weeks ago the Finnish- American atar defeated Johnaon luso the winner over Irving Janpoul—it looked like # draw. | most formidable rival, and John Phil-|the national ten-mils champlonstil) — lips of the Paulist Athletic Club, whojin impressive style. Out thet was VIGER SOPHOMORE WINS RUN, won the national ‘untor championship] when Johnson war suffering from stitches in his side und Incapable of doing his best. Since then he hes regained his form wel! enough to win the Allegheny Mountain Association cross ¢ountrs ohamplonship. PRINCETON, Noy, 25.—Glidert 3¢ Dickerman of the sophomore class won the annual novice country over u three-mile course yesterday, winning time was 19:6 ¢5 Oo Admirers. of Watliips will not con- cede that the race is between Ritola and Johnson, ‘ut olaim that on the form shown \y Phillips, the Paulist ero run The Interest in the contest will centre |» in} 80,000 FANS TO ATTEND RVARD-YALE BATTLE |RECORD OF GAMES PLAYED BY ELEVENS Yate and Harvard have each suffered two defeats this y Yale went down before towa and Princeton; Harvard was beaten by Princeton and Brown, THe re. ard of games played thie year fol- lov. a: x YALE. ates 8 ° Carnegie Tech. 0 North Carolina o lows 6 Witliama 0 7 Army 7 20 Brown oe 43 Maryland 3 0 Princeton 3 189 19 HARVARD Harvard. 20 Middlebury o Harvard... Holy Cross o Harvard. Bowdoin 0 Harvard 24 Centre 10 Harvard 12 Dartmouth 3 Harvard . 24 Florida oe Harvard 3 Princeton O Harvard 0 Brown 3 26 progressed nicely until meeting C tre late in October, and while win: the football world received, its fi inkling that Fisher's team wasn't so formidable after all. After being bud iy outplayed in the first period, Cen tre rallied finally succeeded in gaining first do: to Mav- vard's five ‘Then came a series of shifts in the Cambridg eleven ich continued up to this week when Kunhardt went ard instead of Grew, Who war ed in tie Brown game Yalo has the advantage that comes from performing on home grounds ax well as weight and spoed. In O'Hearn and Wight should outkick Harvard. The Crimson undoubtedly will have the advantage of witer discretion, especially if Buell stays in for any length of time. And also the recore of the past fifteen years givea the Crimson quite an edge when the men tal side ts balanced, LEADING “FOOTBALL GAMES TO-DAY the Blue me Svarthnore at Ha ‘ St. John's at Sonne Hon iin it Marylond at Penn, Militar WEST v. at Onis Whiversity. scaler Ohio State Northwestern Chicag: Indtany by it tenes Contr < Oglethorn Furma riiveralty sont Rorihit Caroline Oats at €). q &

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