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The Ithaca Journal from Ithaca, New York • Page 6

Location:
Ithaca, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

frm aha MONDAY WeTOTQ, OCTOBER 1921. 1 howllnir he was wonderful In the Realm of To him you'll hare to ghe It. With one great swlnar, he took the And knocked the house down with It. i 4 .1 He bought himself a hockey stick, He liked the frame that much, But on the Ice, he missed his slice, And used it for a crutch. By Briggs The Days of Real Sport CASCADILLA AND GENEVA PLAY 0-0 GAME Cornell Eleven Shows Improved Play Against Rochester; Win 55-0 one coming on a pretty running pass, Kaw to Pfann.

Rochester put up a stiffer defense in the second period holding the Cornellians to a single touchdown but in the third period Cornell added three more and in the fourth period another score was added. The summary: Cornell (53). Rochester (O). Cassidy Green Left end. Hansen Pummell Left tackle.

Brayman Oloeser Left guard. Brayton oppenheimer Center. Jones Rumrlll Right guard. Dodge McShea Right tackle. Munns Cahill Right end.

Pfann Weeks Quarterback. Kaw Wallace Left halfback. Ramsey Jack Sullivan Right halfback. Lechler Gleason Fullback. Score by Periods Cornell 21 7 20 755 Rochester 0 0 0 0 0 Touchdowns Pfann (3), Kaw namsev 2).

Munns. Goals from Showing an improved game oyer that of the previous Saturday Cornell defeated Rochester on Schoell-kopf Field Saturday, 55 to 0. The team appeared to get together better, especially on the simpler plays and when these failed to gain the Cornellians had something else to spring. The running forward pass, used twice, and leading both times to touchdowns, worked well and showed that Dobie coached eleven Is able to do something beside make off tackle plays. The open field running of Pfann and Kaw coupled with the hard line plunging of Lechler and Ramsey tore down the Rochester defense and the Red eleven reeled off gain after gain.

Kaw and Pfann both broke away repeatedly for long gains, Rochester apparently being unable to stop either of the two backs. The team, however, still shows some crudeness and lack of coordination but there is little doubt but that Coach Dobie will have a well polished, fast working team by the time of the Colgate game. Rochester failed to produce any thing like the game the Flower City team was reputed to be able to put up. Caught off their feet at the very start and put on the defense at once the visitors had little opportunity until the fourth period to display their wares when they, like St. Bona-venture demonstrated that the nellians needed a stouter defense against the aerial attack.

Rochester reeled off several long gains on overhead shoots and it was only by Inches that Cahill failed to grab off a pass from Wallace on the Cornell one-yard line. Cornell opened the game with a dash that was not to be denied and within seven minutes Pfann had crossed the goal line with the first Cornell touchdown. During the period Cornell made two more touchdowns, 5 I I The Cascadilla Preparatory School eleven opened it's 1921 season Sat. urday on Parsell Field with a 0-0 battle with Geneva High School. Tb field was soggy and offered little chance for either team to display any 1 .1 Kina oi gooa looioau.

Geneva played slightly better football than did the local team but th hill team uncorked a defense which prevented the Genevans from scoring several times when they threatened the Cascadilla goal. In the nerond period Trimbourne blocked an attempt at a drop kick from the Cas-cadilla 20-yard line and in the, same period and again in the third Mueller intercepted forward passes within Cascadilla territory. James showed well In the Cascadilla backfleld, being the most consistent ground gainer while in the line Parker and Burt both Bhowej well. The summary: Cjiscadilla (O) Geneva (0) Starke Bergman Left end. Burt Jones Left tackle.

Hudsoa Goodell Left guard. Trimbourne Votj Center. Parker Ellemwood Right guard. Knox Wilson Right tackle. Hunt Coolcy Right End.

Humphreys Patterson Quarterback. James Harding Left halfback. Mueller Srhevleard Right halfback. Boyce Kennedy Fullback. Score by Period Cascadilla 0 0 0 Geneva 0 0 0 Substitutions Cascadilla, for Hunt, Miller for Starke 00 0 0 Scales Sreno for Hudson.

Hunt for Scales, Starke for Miller, Lockerby for Knox, Scales for Hunt, Miller for Starke; Genpva Stolp for Kennedy. Referee, Hutch inson of Ithaca. Time of periods, 15 minutes. Joie Ray to Try For World's Record Toronto, Oct. 10.

Joie Ray of the Illinois Athletic Club. Chi cago, planned to try for a world's record for one mile today at the University of Toronto interfaculty track meet. Tho present record of 4:12 3-5 is held by Norman Tabor. RUNABOUT $472.12 DELIVERED Time Payments if Desired. Universal Sales Co.

110 West Green Street. 7:30 and 9 3, 7:30, 9 Only Knew" Giants Beat Yanks, 4-2 and Even Up Series; "Bambino" Gets Homer I. H. S. Has Easy Time Defeating Starkey Seminary Eleven, 69-0 grew better as the game drew toward a close.

Nationals. AB PO A Burns, cf 4 0 2 0 0 0 Bancroft, ss. 4 0 0 4 1 1 Frisch, 3b 4 0 0 1 3 0 Young, rf 4 0 1 1 0 0 Kelly, lb 4 1 1 9 0 0 E. Meusel, if. 4 1 2 0 0 0 Rawlings, 2b.

4 1 2 1 4 0 Snyder, 4 1 110 2 0 Douglas, 2 0 0 1 2 0 touchdowns Hansen (6), Sundrum. Substitutions, Cornell Sundstrum for Hanson, Davidson for Dodge, Kay fnr Tones. Rucklev for Cassidy, Oluey for Lechler, Post for Kaw, Gold for Post. Wahl for Pfann. Rochester Harbison for Weeks, McNally for Green, Roth for McNally, Captain Sullivan for Jack Sullivan.

Referee C. J. Eccles, Washington and Jefferson. Umpire E. W.

Ris-ley, Colgate. Linesman E. J. Ryan, Michigan. Time of periods 12 minutes.

brought the ball to Starkey's five yard line, Bell scoring the touchdown this time. Tatasciore kicked both the goals. Ithaca also obtained two points in this quarter on a safety by Inman, the Starkey fullback, who in an attempt to punt out of danger, was forced to down the ball behind his own goal line because of a poor pass from center. The score at the end of the first half stood, Ithaca High School 37, Starkey 0. The second.

half saw the regular line-up back in the game at the start. Burns received the kick from Star-key and ran the ball back to mid-field from where it was taken to Starkey's goal which Button crossed on a line smash. Here Tatasciore missed his first goal of the season. The locals soon added another touchdown to their already long list when Boles ploughed through center for his fourth touchdown, bringing the total at the end of the third period up to 50. At this point, almost an entire second team was substituted, Captain Tatasciore and Boles being the only regulars left in.

Ithaca High School, however, continued to score, Boles breaking up the aerial attack of Starkey by intercepting two forward passes and racing to a touchdown both times. Tatasciore completed the scoring for Ithaca on a forward pass over the (goal line from Miller. Burns, Rogers and Emerson starred for Ithaca on as long as he is needed. The presence of the Babe in the game means as much to the Yankees in a psychological sense as it does in any other way. He is in there with his head and his reputation even when his arms are weak.

Varsity Soccer Team Defeats Colgate in Opening Game 8-0 The Cornell varsity soccer team opened the 1921 season on lower alumni field by defeating Colgate 8 to 0. Coach "Nick" Bawlf's team had the upper hand from the start and registered the first goal a few minutes after the game started. Colgate was outplayed at every stage of the game and offered little in the way of tsam nlay. The Cornel team appeared to speed up as the game progressed and kept the ball almost continually in Colgate territory. In the second half five goals were made in rapid succession.

CHICHESTER PILLS UV! THE DIA440N1 CHAN I. A. vtars neon lift, Safest. Alwy Rel1l SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Tonight at Tuesday "If Women Chl.cbw.ter IMamond Brnd I'llU In Krd ni Hold mrullicXV l.oiei, nlri with Blue KILhon. Take other.

Buy Tor rnrrt't. 1IIAHOM ltltM riLl.H. (or 8 On a wet and soggy field, Ithaca High School scored an easy victory sver Starkey Seminary Saturday morning by a score of 69 to 0, in a game marked by clean, hard playing tn both sides. Captain Tatasciore won the toss and elected to kick to Btarkey at the west goal. Starkey teas held for two downs, when the ball was recovered for Ithaca by Dhapman on a fumble by Starkey.

From this point on Ithaca had little Jifficulty in gaining through Star-key's line and around end. Boles look the ball over for the first score on a line plunge. Tatasciore kicked the goal, making his sixth straight goal this season. In the same quarter, after Starkey had been aeld for downs, Brashear took the jail over the goal line on an end Tatasciore kicked this goal, naklng the score at the end of the irst quarter, Ithaca High School 14, Starkey 0. Shortly after the opening of the second period, Boles carried the ball jver the line for his second touch-lown.

Tatasciore kicked the goal. Alter the kick-iff, Coach Brown put Ave substitutes, Boles of the reg-alars alone remaining in the back-leld. The ball was then rushed lown the field by a series of line plays and cross bucks to the eight ard line, where Boles went oves for lis third touchdown. In. the same manner, Ithaca High School again the line, breaking through time after time to down a Starkey back for a loss, while Boles, with his six touchdowns, did the best work on the at-tack.

In preparation for the first hard contest of the season on next Satur day, when the team meets Bingham-ton at Binghamton, the Ithaca High School squad will probably hold a practice workout with the Cornell Frosh on Alumni Field Tuesday afternoon. "Jhe summary: I. II. S. (09).

Starkey (0). Tatasciore (Capt) r.e Graham Burns r.t. Dunn Rogers r.g Muliman Bovard Waters Emerson l.g Potter Chapman l.t Clark McMahon l.e Bailey Brashear q.b Button r.h.b. Dunn Jewell l.h.b. Beckwith (Capt) Boles f.b Inman Score by periods: H.

14-23-13-19 69 Starkey 0-0-0- 0 0 Referee Prof. R. G. Wiggins. Umpire T.

Miller. Touchdowns Ithaca, Boles (6), Brashear, Button, Bell, Tatasciore. Goals from touchdowns Tatasciore (7). Safety Inman. Substitutions Starkey, Hook for Waters.

Ithaca, Stewart for Chap man, Bell for Jewell, Miller for Brashear, Craycroft for Button, Driscoll for McMahon, Dean for Bovard. Gaeta for Boles, Jewell for Bell, Brashear for Miller, Button for Craycroft, McMahon for Driscoll, Bovard for Dean, Boles for Gaeta, Bell for Jewell, Miller for Brashear, Dean for Bovard, Craycroft for Bell, Bell for Button, Gaeta for Craycroft, Nichols for Burns, Sanford for Rogers, Rocker for Emerson, Taber for Stewart, Rice for McMahon. Football Results Local Cornell 55, Rochester 0. Ithaca High. 69, Starkey Sem- inary 0.

Cascadilla School 0, Geneva High 0. General Harvard 19, Indiana 0. "Yale 3 4, North Carolina 0. Princeton 19, Colgate 0. Pittsburgh 21, West Virginia 13, Syracuse 42, Maryland 0.

Pennsylvania 7, Gettysburg 0. Dartmouth 24, New Hampshire 0. Lafayette 27, Dickinson 0. Columbia 14, Wesleyan 3. Lehigh 7, Rutgers 0.

Springfield 13, Colby 6. Brown 13, N. Y. U. 0.

Johns Hopkins 27, Delaware 0. Navy 53. Western Reserve 0. Boston University 52, Worcester Tech 0. Georgetown 48, Ursinus 6.

Holy Cross 44, Canisius 0. Penn State 35, North Carolina State 0. W. and J. 54, W.

Va. Wesleyan 0. Army 19, Middlebury 0. (First game). Army 33, Lebanon Valley 0.

(Second game). Amherst 0, Tufts 0. Swarthmore 28, Albright 0. Boston College 25, Providence 0. Williams 0, Bowdoin 0-Georgetown 48, Urisnus 6.

Chicago 9, Purdue 0. Michigan 64, Case 0. Iowa 10, Notre Dame 7. Illinois 52, South Dakota 0. Oberlin 7, Ohio State 0.

Wisconsin 24, So. Dakota Aggies 3. Centre 14. Virginia Poly o. BEG IX PRACTICE New York, Oct.

10. Columbia's varsity and freshman rowing crews began daily practice on the Harlem River today. While the varsity rowing outlook is said to be fair the freshmen have not turned out in any great numberB. It is Impossible to purchase ice cream and candy in England after 8 o'clock at night. New York, Oct.

10 Babe Ruth made a home run at the Polo Grounds yesterday afternoon, but his wallop, a tremendous blow into the right field bleachers, came in the ninth inning with nobody on base and failed to save the Yankees from defeat in the fourth game of the World Series. The Giants won by the score of 4 to 2, evening the count for the series, which now stands at two victories each. The game, a well played contest, was witnessed by more than 36,000 persons, a few hundreds less than the record crowd of last Friday. For seven innings it looked like a repetition of last Wednesday's battle between Mays and Douglas, the two twirlers again being pitted against each other. Then in the eighth the Giants broke through Mays' guard and scored three runs, enough to win, by a pretty exhibition of consecutive batting.

In the ninth the Giants added another, which turned out unnecessary. The Yankees were able to hit Douglas only in the sixth, when they scored once, their other tally being accounted for by Ruth with his ninth inning blow into the bleachers. That the Babe appeared in the game at all was a big surprise to the It had been feared his injured arm would keep him out of the play for the remainder of the series, and even Manager Huggins of the Yankees did not expect up to an hour. before game time that Ruth would be in the lineup, when he announced that "Chick" Fewster would take his place in left field. The real honors of the game, de spite the spectacular feat of Ruth in making the first World Series' home run which, by the way, was the first homer of the 1921 tilt went to the lanky man who occupied the mound for the National Leaguers.

"Zepplin Phil Douglas' pitching was a pretty thing to watch. He held the heavy hitting Yankees, with the exception of Ruth and Schang, almost complete-ly helpless when hits means runs, and WORTH MORE THAN FORTUNE TO HIM Albany Man Says He Feels Like a Boy Again Since Taking Tanlac "Tanlac has convinced me it is as different from other medicines as day is from night," said Adgra Van Buren, a well-known carpenter residing at 416 Madison Albany, N. Y. "For a number of years I suffered at times with touches of indigestion, but is was only during the past year my condition became alarming. began to go down in weight and lost strength from day to day.

I got to having a tired, lazy, all-gone feeling that made me feel unfit to work. "I had little appetite and what I ate gave me a lot of misery afterwards from gas. Sometimes it cut off my breath and I would gasp so I actually was afraid my time had come. Medicines I tried didn't help me but when I heard so many people discussing Tanlac I decided to try it next and the results were far beyond my expectations. The way that medicine took hold of me and gave me new life and vigor was simply wonderful.

It gave me a whale of an appetite and nothing I eat bothers me now. I have gained ten pounds in weight and feel as strong as an ox. Tanlac not only brought me health but it has made me feel like a boy again." Tanlac is sold in Ithaca by White Burdlck, in Groton by Atwater Pharmacy and in Newfleld by Mrs. Perry L. Cronkrttn! in Rrnnktnn hv ffharlea I M.

Mulks. Advertisement. aged in the wood (2 years) pipe tobacco Totals 34 4 Americans. AB 9 27 12 PO 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Miller, cf 4 Peckinpaugh, 4 Ruth, If 4 R. Meusel, rf.

4 Pipp, lb 4 Ward, 2b 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 2 2 1 17 1 i 0 McNally, 3b. Schang, c. Mays, p. Totals 2 7 27 19 1 Score by innings: Nationsl 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 4 Americans ..0 0001000 1 2 Two-base hits Burns, Kelly. Three-base hits Schang, E.

Meusel. Home run Ruth. Sacrifice hits Ward, Douglas. Double plays Ward to Peckinpaugh to Pipp. Left on bases Nationals, Americans, 3.

Struck out By Douglas, by Mays, 1. Umpires At plate, Chill; first base, Rigler; second base, Mori-arity; third base, Quikley. Time of game One hour and 38 minutes. SERIES EVEN; BOTH TEAMS HOPE TO WIN New York, Oct. 10.

On even terms again, Yankees and Giants meet today in the fifth world series game and both have elected to try for the edge with the hurlers they used in the second contest Waite Hoyt for the Americans and Artie Nehf for the Nationals. The Giants rallied to a hitting bee against underhanded Carl Mays yesterday while Shufflin' Phil Douglas tossed his freakiest curves and won their second game 4 to 2. Hoyt, the Brooklyn youth, who shut out the Giants in the second meeting of the allowing but two mits, one a scratch, appears to be Huggins only hope to put the Yanks in front again. Giant partisans declare he cannot possibly maintain the hurling pace he set on last Thursday, while the Giants themselves vow they will pummel the shoots of any pitcher Huggins sends to the rubber. There has been a lot of talk about the Giants' lost and found batting eyes now the Yankees are having their say.

The Yanks made runs out of flukey hits and great base running in the flrBt two games but they were helpless in the hands of Jess Barnes on Friday and Phil Douglas yester-v day. Now they re sore, and assert they will pound Nehf or any other moundsman McGraw sends against them. "My team hasn't batted anywhere close to form," declared Miller Huggins. "It is improbable they will go through the entire series without having several batting rampages. You may look for one at any time now." Ruth's injured arm did not keep him from playing and making his first home run of the series yester i.

I Hi ill i FTP t0m--0Pi Ml Is. 'vnW' Mild and Mellow and.MAPLlHk CLARE "IT "OMtK ONLY KNEV cjarettes nothing Maurice Travers (Robert Gordon) returns home after having rescued college mate from a Are in the fraternity hall. His mother (Blanche Davenport) is telling her son how proud she is of him. In the background, eye filled with love and admiration, is Madeline Marshall (Madeline (1are. a strong influence for good in the life of Maurice.

One of the stirring scenei in "If Women Only Knew," which shown at the Lyceum theater on October 9, 10 and 11. Admission 25c Plus Tax Iiccett Myers Tobacco Co. day and be is almost certain to play.

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About The Ithaca Journal Archive

Pages Available:
784,350
Years Available:
1914-2024