The evening world. Newspaper, December 1, 1922, Page 29

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ET ee ee ee rr rr : Shoe "Tae ee RE ee Pe ee ae THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1022. ae ee OOTBALL SEASON CLOSES WITH CORNELL BEATING PENN ITHACANS DEFEAT [IT’S ALL OVER NOW - - - ~ By Bud Counihan Copyright, 1922 (New York Evenint World) by Press Publishing Company. FQUAKERSBY USING | [S<S§ | SG KAW AS ADECOY! aya") “2 ee \ 1 PERSHING SEES y} NERRASEL SEAT Columbia Swamped by Colgate NOTRE DAME TEAM As O’ Neill Bids Eleven Farew ee LINCOLN, Neb., Dec. 1,—Nebraska University yesterday demonstrated af8 Touchdowns Scored Against} §< tt vd sist halt and Mason at fue superior quality of football in a secs ; ‘yi of the day, both in the punti tlenal con with Notro Dame ‘Unt- the Blue and White— the more deft Job of booting nad geal versity, winning by a 14 to 6 5 ni x and points after touchdown. than 16,000 spectators watched Score Is 59 to 6, SCORE BY PERIODS. raska team plough great holes —_—_—- Colgate 3 3 1 “ALE ----O hiro F F i . Conambia c l through the tine of the South Bend OLUMBIA tn its last footbat|“Touchdowns-For Colgate: Mundie “Ge : | y/ . ARMY -----7 bet mae lo. Buea not game of the season yesterday | T70R, (2), Morean, Welch. Siagon. Foe Gos i . y / WALE, «os jacking in making gains nile the ak: Cais %o For Colgate: Morgan (2), Weich (3), Field | __Up-State Eleven Tricks Peren , erin! game of Notre Dame was not 8 awamped by Colgate, the} Gous-for Colgate: Welsh (2): employed to the advantage that was| ‘re being 59 to 6. The defeat of the expected, it served at times to make| ue and White was not exactly a ground and the only touchdown scored | "Hlarious one for Buck" O'Neill, who by the South Benders. Miller's great | retires as coach for Columbia. run down the side line after a fair Colgate did everything to Columbia 's forward pass in the] With the possible single excep- ding feature] tion of scoring a touchdown by hav- Ing the centre deceitfully throw a for- ward pass to himself on the Colgate pane Sater PITT ELEVEN DEFEATS NITTANY LIONS, 14.0 PITTSBURGH, Dec. 1. — Sweeping the Penn State opposition and luunching a terrific offensive in the second half, the University of Pittsburgh football ae -Nial Rival Into Thinking Its . Famous Captain Is to Take q Ball, and Then It is Handed to Either Ramsay, Pfann or Cassidy. cateh of Leyd third period, w of the game. Hi. Dewitz paralleled this in the fourth an outst oS . 4 onnede he warriors triumphed at Forbes Field yea- f PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 1 Mey Hitt «OAR. ee CORED LAUGH “THAT perlod, except for the touchdown, when| °°? Ht line to rum 99 yards for alo, SING Eddie Kaw, playing his < if] “Bra ime Cone . 2 g he plunged through tho left aide of[{ouchdown. Etzht touchdowns were] "To" nica period saw the Panthers s last game for Cornell, as a de- B ae AR Notre Dame's Ine for 40 yards, bring-| 10 canta jen 8 Rid on nba uncorking a whirlwind offensive, Hewitt, y e . oy, the Ithacans yesterday at H} vA Ing the ball to the opponent's 16-yard) 644 bar and 5 points after touchdown | Anderson and Flanagan rushed the ball Franklin Field, before 54,000, de- feated Pennsylvania by the score of 9 to 0, by 16 first downs to 2, by 5 offensive marches to 0, and « few other things. Except for the highest kind of fighting spirit and a rugged defense which was never broken down, Penn ‘would have been beaten by a much : Stuhldreher saved betel rel Anh ali °" “1 were made. Outside of that slight activ- touchdown. Gen. John J. Pershing occupied a| {ty the Colgate men didn't do a thing special box and Nebraska's guest of }beyond making substantial gains honor, He appeared at the game in| through the turxey lines after the gamo olvillan clothes and was accompanied | was over. punt and ran 44 yards to the State by a small purty of friends. ‘As the massacre progressed the neu-| Yard line. Hewitt added five yards 0 14 "0 14] tral spectator couldn't help feeling ter-] through centre and then Flanagan ° & © 8) vinly sorry for Capt. Koppisch and the| plunged over, Willams tallied the fleet Roderick, two fast and willing men| Point from placement. 50 yards on plunges. The break was against Pitt, for on the fourth down @ forward over the goal line, groundedy But a moment later Flanagan caught 4 HE GOT IT IN THE NECK" YESTERDAY. Nebras! Notre Dame HARRISBURG BEATS whose efforts were made futile by an al-| In the final period, State could not higher score. T HERESY N ‘ hold Colonna, who had replaced Hewitt, Ss most ¢ if f 0 o 4 Whe Cornell team was so much SWEAR - NEVER oso! rr Loowe STUYVESANT HIGH on a areas ‘Ge ukhee Bade brought the ball to the stronger in every respect that the de- To TAY To Pick Like TM CoNG HARRISBURG, Pay Dee.'1--Galning| {he Columbla Tne’ alewed, the Colantal suns cura tgiee hte Sha teean: Gane aa feat of Pennsylvania was in no sense ANOTHER WINNER Al vantage by scoring © touchdown | to coon Morne nel AAeiree Grecia, Carer (© te aneereer Mallee & chastisement, as was the case a i alll ecbinhenndieytet She ANiL) ‘9 down Koppisch and Roderick in thelr! goqi line. Williams added the point the game] tracks, When a running attack was ordered the two speedy Columbia backs in the first few minutes c yesterday, Harrisburg Tech High School were met by Colgate men before they shook the confidence of the Stuyvesant] could slip by the line of scrimmage. AER High School, of New York City, and ran{ yy and Leonard, at right guard up a 65 to 0 score on the team from theland right tackie for Colgate, came to metropolis. South Field with All-American reputa- Harrisburg seored three touchdowns] tions preceding them. Against Colurn- In the first quarter; two in the second: | hia {t in of course Impossible to judge from placemen year ago, The undergraduates who supported their team with fervor to the last play can take much comfort im the fact that the Quakers took the ball away from their hard charg- ry ing opponents three times on downs, splint ATTACK WINS FOR 4 GEORGIA TECH. ATLANTA, Ga., Dec. 1,—Georgia, factor here yestrday and the Yellow the Auburn Piainsmen two in the third and three In the final.|the true worth of their play, but both|in thelr annual Thanksgiving classic by when grievous danger threatened The winning combination used a large} were on top of every play and|a score of 14 to 6. Georgia Tech . vA of plays Including man; J le evidence of their stellar abtl- | work the pass to perfection and the and once prevented a touchdown by 7" r 1 majority of the latter be-|ity e for Colgate were Mor-|aerlal game brought the first touch« kan at quarterback, ‘Tyron and Suchy'down fn the second pert breaking up a forward pass play. * Kaw did his part. He does eve ry: thing in football well, but he was not ¢ the ripping, raging halfback of a year ago when he literally tore the Pennsylvania line to pieces. Kaw Served another purpose this after- h s moon. He was the threat, the decoy QUAKERS HAD BEEN COACHED TO WATCH KAW _ The Quakers had been cvached to watch Kaw. They had reason to be fearful of his football deeds, and so the Cornell captain was Assigned to] RESULTS OF FINAL _ some may call a minor role to] FOOTBALL GAMES lve more play to Pfann, Ramse: Tia tccsa Gees ty, y OF 1922 SEASON This strategy worked. In keeping alge their eyes on Kaw, the Quakers were not so ready to stop the others. Cornell scored a goal from place- ment by Leonard Hanson in the first | Waynesburg... period, to which the way was|hocewes no" opened by a crashing attack which : carried 62 yards, : TRAIN oN CROSSING a Fistic News raccxand Gossip || "* 32 Barron re OF DETROIT RACE ove Sporting Club to-morrow night. He foFOA HERE 4 5 It fight Frankie Pow New York in DETROIT, Dec, 1.—A freight AST. fered fight fans for the next show 10 gomi-final of ten rounds, to the welve:| 4 .iy pecking elowly across 600 je # Penneylvasia . " rind feature bout between Bates Q}be staged by Matchmaker Frank "ie Garber of New York. ond Boulevard and ‘blocking the hed Sailor Pacillo,] course over which the annual ten- }| Flournoy at Madison Square Gariep joe wagner ; on Monday eve the crack Utica ht, to box Danny r n Monday evening Deo, 11, They are a ueerenteat net running race of the Irish- r, 2 Rogers of Phila ‘ack Bernstein of Yonkers ys. Eddie] Thursday night in arene ‘ay and American Athletic Club was being sonegare % Johnny Green to box Bai s|‘‘Kid’" Wagner of Philadelphia, John-| same card. held, failed yesterday to halt rtin of Jersey City ys. Pee Wes] Harry Jordan, the local bantam whom Joo] Schou Christensen of the Illinois Wagner developed in a few months from a BY JOHN Fout ten-round bouts will be of- Mirasll-a0ored.e: touchdown in the ser of St. Louis, Harvey Bright of | gia! sito out tighter, has wisely ae: | Athletic Club. Climbing between > BB @ thira period, cassidy going over fon | Neorask Brooklyn vs. Sammy Mandell of| gndswit be soon ween tbs bout et wie | the care with three other contes- Wivatere; followtis a breek aesinnt Chicago ond Charely Beecher of New | Garden tants, Christensen continued the il WSS Pennsylvania which gave the men York ys. Vrankie Garcia of the South. “See af race and won in 1 hour, 1 minute, BESS x from Ithaca the ball on their oppo- nents’ 44-yard line. This march was completed in just twelve run- me boxing show ale Garden Genes [ECA SETS NIN. 10 seconds. The blocked course cut . ent at whior Gene Tunney stopredl RECORD FOR WALK about 1 minute from his time and in the fourth round, the threw him off his pace for the ning plays. The extra point Ein the apo AT 10 1-2 MILES] jemainder of the distance. missed by Hanson on a try at goal te got $566.05 und x ; ae Hie time was eight minutes from placement. 1 to see the scraps.| Willie Plant, America’s premier! jiower than the record set by R. wip fights Johnny shugruc | walker, though forced ‘to divide hon-} Ear] Johnson in 1921. James Del- abby Brown ‘of Kochester Joes With Mack Weiss, established al ow, James Norcroft and Art Al- of ten rounds at Rochester} new record for the ten and one-half Thus were the nine points com- > @& pitea, but they hardly measure the difference between the two eleven Pennsylvania never threatened the Cornell goal line unless the com- pleting of one forward pass for 33 Saiat fi yards, which a'mnost got Westgate] teva ‘ . 8 loose, could be called a threat, The| A)!?""* ‘AS metered: team was busy throughout the game| }\)0,A%"" : lison of Toronto, finished in that 27 shit | mile walk. Weiss won first place on} order, behind Christensen. ‘3** “tl an eighteen-minute handicap. . Willie Plant, the American cham pion, and the only scratch man to start, took the cup for the best actual Malbaniaeenienl Mone sturdy ‘New | walking time—1 hour 26 minutes and 2 seconds, “X” blazes the trail for smokers to United Cigar Stores all over town—to the Xcellent new HAVANA-AMERICAN cigar. There are X’s on the windows and the { Buffalo t Ay aftern w Years Day on CALS A i ' fighting Jesperately to keep the score | Trrnsywania -i. 1 ]) Conrestown Colleze.1 This clipped 9 minute and 29 see. : from climbing higher. In this it hag} 7°" Whyte co Ue eee tel is Seana ee tt counters—and an. Xtra supply of Havana- a full measure of reward. RESULTS OF GAMES,ON Willian) Holker: 1 Fignts oe American cigars inside.—They’re needed. xty-four men ihished out if sixty- 4 » . On the other hand, Cornell was ever threatening. Two opportunities were grasped; at least five others were \ Four times the men from within touchdown distance and only one. Three times the ents Eddie} nine starters. There was one disqual 4 Louis Gu-| fication when G, Nilson of the Fin These will be ten-|nish-American A. C. was caught run- ning by the judges. gilt Simei | TIC GRIDIRONS ithe f eee ¥ A rare, mild cigar with the finest Havana filler grown on the island of Cuba, the new Havana-American is a typical United Cigar Wil nas sik Jonny Duniee| WINS BERWICK ci Br High 7\Law i. Gat Quakers hurled them back, Then, too, ab s e pa 1 4 ar N three times the men from Ithaca were re MARATHON RUN which means that it is the best value and \ Sarge as ie man from ithaca were| INTERSCHOLASTIC RUN oy ant Fo ben coer ' scored only once, Hanson missed] TITLE CAPTURED BY COX BERWICK, Pa, Dee. ‘Min type. ‘ \ J @ Wee, following good attempts, how Ritola of New York yesterday won the . ; “X"" today! N a = ever, in both cases, and once as far HILADELPHIA, Dec, 1—Mercers-| 1g thirteenth annual Berwick marathon run! Until six this evening Look for a spot marked today! , back as tlre 40-yard line N n oe Pa. | wetgnt, wh of nine and a quarter miles, His time 2 : \ Tages, i008 of Cornell's ' th Amertean | HE gin 80 was 47 minutes, 662-5 seconds, Earl|We’re here to help you on 7 NY mepogen may be guined fr rschol cross country run in| feature Johnston of Pittsburgh was second andjwWith everything you need From 10c to 3 for 50c ‘ oo “pained. 27% een Shea nount scoring 41 points, | {0 be Brought of James Hennigan of Boston third, their| for to-night ! \ | plays,toa measly 27 for Pennsylvania ffutoninson Central High of Hugalo, ¥:| ane; timen being 48.82 and 48.5% respectively. De.” Clothes cut from \ and gained 15 first downs by thi was secon¢ ) 57 points. tea K Hae \ iatbal of adyaucing tho ball, to aone| ¥ reersburg, was the|exp f Pe eset the same sort of fabrics w N | for opponents. The compa i ett Lewls, But-| ing iirat lex Michaol Dw m Tork, 60. , often the identical fabrics N I$ almost ridiculous , and » Shaw anning, Berwic hour, 15 minutes ke : - aie: : (§ he Quakers dif gain two first mG bs \ oe the best custom tailors use € | , downs by forward passes. Thoy ron. oh Newark Wat tat 2°! SPEEDING MAY KEEP Smart, correct, moderately | \y yards, Both, however, v Dress overcoats, dress from deep in their own ‘ ANG saves Ue is ae ; Eh shirts, dress vests, silk came as last resort mei ; automobile race o! -# cia Pig were wide apart, ti es of the American Automo-|hats, genes: pean leath : le he ¥ . to be held yest ers, gloves, dancing ox CORNELL'S DEFENSE MORE IM-] ie sh flaws nds | ae te fords, allie «mufflers, silk For a box of 50, PRESSIVE THAN OFFENSE = [than Cox, whit im race will be run » & . 8 $5.00, A fair trial Pennsylvania had an offense | RULES 60s ee Phit Mes ofHolats. an socks. , could get nowhere against the hart tN1CHOLSON WINNER . ‘ Shire collars- linen that ; charging Cornell forwards, who con- “I a looks what it is—solid ele- er r% | stantly broke through and_ spoiled IN PINEHURST GOLF GS o* * bal ! plays before they even bad a chance "i ras pie Oa gance. s J ar: 5 ? the running attack in the first half,}in an invitation medy round on the Rocers PEET Company e , “aby 1 Dut in the second they nally lost| links of the Souther’ Pines Country Broadway * Herald Sq bia £8 24 yards in 18 rushing plays, as chu b yesterd Jon G. Nicholson, who er Lath St. a ‘Four ZS at 3itb Se. afd again the runners were tac had at dof 84, 1 * 1 r ‘onvenic : ‘ of Paning their own line of ; Pee caa ANE be gemonil : Harles Hee tt | Lewellen to Lead Nebraska Eleven, | Broadway Comers Fiftt Ave, ‘ 3 a Cornell's defense was even m bebe , i. Hed pene rt Hi GOT Mik. be woe at Warren at 41st St. 4 impressive than her offen th | Ms tage L nalts Reeak ry * @hp latter was much more spectacu- —“ ohiald Parson 1 h iia Was Ae Corn Husker wo r _ & gross score of 76 q Hout Captain of t o ' € 1 , te ‘ 4 4 x

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