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The Ithaca Journal from Ithaca, New York • Page 8

Location:
Ithaca, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 ITHACA 30URNAL-NEWS, MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 5, Wrestling-Soccr PROFESSIONAL Cross Country Tootball Boxing PORT AMATEUR Bowling iiMB- i i i Only Two Cornell Yale-Penn Football Over 3,000 Witness ITHACA HIGH Great Cornell Gridiron Team Rides Roughshod Over Dartmouth 32 to 7 Contests Planned Philadelphia, NoV. .5. Vale and Pennsylvania will meet on the gridiron next fall, according to well authenticated reports here. Tentative arrangements for tho contest have been completed. It is.

said, and details will bo officially announced in a few days. The tentative agreement ts reported to provide for games in 1924 and 1925, one to be played in the Yale bowl and the other at Franklin Field, on the first Saturday in November. Tad Jones, head coach at Yale, and Coach Lou Young of Pennsylvania, who are close friends, are said to have taken a leading part iu the effort to re-establish football relations between the two universities. The Ells and Quakers have not met on the football field for 30 years. In thelr last game in 1893, Yale defeated Pennsylvania 12 to 4 in a thrilling battle TAILORHD AT Humbling the Green nell three yard line.

Pfann punted to Dooley on the 33 yard line. Pfann intecepted a Dartmouth pass on the 23-yard line. Tully, playing for Bjurkman threw the green back and it was 12 yards to go on tourth down. Cornell took the ball on downs and Pfann plunged through tackle for 27 yards to mid-field. Ramsey gained 10 yards In three rushes.

Patterson passed to Pfann on the 22-yard line. Pfann tackled three times, was not stopped and fell, lolling over the goal line. Sund-storm kicked the goal and the score favored Cornell 29 to 7. Dexter Recovers Fumble. Sundstrom kicked to the 24-yard line.

Hall fumbled and Dexter playing for Henderson, recovered. Cornell hammered forward yards to the 10-yard lino and Sundstrom dropped back and kicked a goal from placement. Aschenberg kicked to Cassidy on the 2S-yard line, Pfann punted to the green on the 36-yard line. Dartmouth tried unsuccessfully to gain on forward passes and was forced to punt. Pfann punted back again.

Two more Green passes were incomplete. Dartmouth reeled off .30 yards but was called back. if BAXTER'S "The Quality Shop" Good Overcoats That Are More Than Just Good Teams Successfu In Saturday Const The only other Cornell addition to the varsity footballean, successful on Saturday was the esh. man cross country harriers, vhfa. feated Syracuse yearlings at m.

cuse by a score of 25 to 34. The freshman soccer team played a fjre. less tie with Rochester East and the fieshman eleven lost to hq freshmen at Philadelphia ty a ore of 39 to 0. The varsity soccer team lo t0 Harvard here by a 2 to 1 srorethe varsity ctors country team wale. feated by Dartmouth by a sco of 36 to 69, and the polo team lo to Squadron A of New York, 12 to Oilier Sport News Pag 9 TASHIO TARJC $40 s45 Ourselves BUf VC VJ si Cornell (32.) Dartmouth (7).

Henderson Ilagenbuckle Right end Sundstrom Hatch Right tackle Berean Aschenbach Right guard Affeld Ellis Center Morris Champion i Left guard Kearney Rocpy Left tackle Kneen Falcon Left end Pfann Dooley Quarterback Ramsey Bolles Right half Patterson Hall Left half Cassidy Jlurphy Fullback Score by periods: Cornell 6 0 7 1032 Dartmouth 0 7 0 0 7 Touchdowns Pfann (2), Ramsey (2), Aschenbash. Goals from touchdown Haws, Sundstrom (2). Goals from field Sundstrom (2). Substitutions Cornell, Dexter for Henderson, Raymoud for Kneen, Whetstone for Cassidy; Dartmouth, Tully for Falcon, Bjorkman for Tully, Oberlander for Roepl, Cub-bins 'for Champion, Diehl for Cub-bins, Parker for Hatch, Watkins for Ilagenbuckle, Kelley for Hall, Haws for Bolles, Leavitt for Murphy. Referee E.

J. O'Brien, Tufts. Umpire F. W. Murphy, Brown.

Field judge A. W. Merriman, Geneva. Head linesman. A.

D. -Macins, Lehigh. Time 15 minute periods. Strom's kick hit the goal post. Score Cornell 12; Dartmouth 7.

Pfann's kick went out on the green 43-yard line. Dartmouth failed to gain and Kelley punted to the 27-yard line. Cornell's famous tackle play worked and Pfann went 3 5 yards down the field to Dartmouth's 25-yard line. Four more rushes gained 10 yards. Pfann hurled a forward pass to Ramsey who wa downed on the green six-yard line.

Cornell then lost five yards on a poor pass. Sundstrom dropped back to the 19-yard line and booted a kick from placement. Score: Cornell 15; Dartmouth 7. One pass, Dooley to Haws, failed, and another was completed just as the half ended with Dartmouth on its own 28-yard line. Ramsey Scores Again.

A Dartmouth forward pass was broken up, Kearney was down on Dartmouth's 12-yard line and Cor nell ripped a hole through tackle. Ramsey dodged through for a touchdown, Sundstrom kicked the goal. Score: Cornell 22; Dartmouth 7. Sundstrom kicked oft' to Dooley who was thrown on the 32-yard line. A Dartmouth forward pasg and a rush gained twelve yards.

Ramsey intercepted a pass on Cornell 38-yard line. Pfann punted to the Green 25-yard line. A series of Dartmouth forward passes and a short rush placed the ball on Cornell's 22-yard line for first down. Cassidy Intercepted Another pass gained 7 yards but Cassidy intercepted the next one and ran the ball back to Red 44-yard stripe. Patterson fumbled and Watkins recovered for Dartmouth on the 44 yard line.

Kneen and Henderson pushed back Dartmouth for losses for ten yards. Patterson blocked another pass and Hall punted out on Cornell's three yard Une. Pfann punted and Dooley carried on Cornell's 30 yard line. Pfann's End third period; Cornell 22; Dartmouth 7. At the opening of the fourth pei--iod Dartmouth lost the ball on downs on Cornell's 3 Oyard line.

Pfann's punt was run back 15 yards to mid-field by Dooley. Watkins on the receiving, end of Bolls' pass suffered interference and Cornell was penalized 15 yards. A pass, Hall to Watkins, was intercepted by Patterson on the Cor MERELY selling good warm overcoats isn't enough for us. Good values are important, so is helpful service correct fit lasting style, too. Big men, little men, everybody we please you all.

Unusual values at LOSES TO BY 150 SCORE The husky football team of Union-Endicott defeated Ithaca High School Saturday afternoon on the High School Field, 15 to 0. Tho lighttr local boys put up a game fight. The first score of the game came when Ithaca kicked off and Union ran the ball to the 30-yard line. From there on down to the four-yard line the Union-Endicott boys carried the ball by the off-tackle play. Ithaca putting up a tight defense, it took the shoe town boys four down to put the ball over the line.

A. Bovard broke them and blocked the try for the point after touchdown. The second score came in the third quarter when Endicott punted to High School's five-yard line. Boles dropped back for a punt, but Murphy, visiting guard, blocked the pnt and Boles fell on it behind hi3 own lino for a safety. In tho fourth quarter Endicott scored another touchdown as the result of a long pass and a few short line bucks.

Bodle made the try for The heavy Endicott team made 16 first downs, while Ithaca High made nine. For Ithaca. Boies was the outstanding star of the backfield. while Gosh, Pickering and T. Bovard played well.

T. Bovard put up a nice defensive game, tackling hard and sure. On the line, Payne, Smiley and A. Bovard put up the best scrap for the local boys. Alderman and Gibbs starred fu backfield for the Endicott team.

Gibbs' long end runs were tho features of the game, while Alderman's steady line plunging was responsible for both touchdowns. Several hundred loyal rooters accompanied the Endicott team to Ithaca by automobiles. Ithaca High will meet Coming North High next week on the High School Field. Line-up: Ithaca (O). Endicott (15).

Kingsbury Ginime Left end. Smiley Tymerson Left tackle. Payne Murphy Left guard. A. Bovard Tarker Center.

Hart Andrews Right guard. Cobb Brigham Right tackle. Tatasciore (capt.) Gilmore Right end. T. Bovard Gibbs Quarterback.

Pickering Bodle Left halfback. Gosh Cahill Right halfback. Boles Alderman Fullback. Score by period: 6 0 2 7 15 Ithaca 0 0 0 0 0 Officials Ortner of Cornell, referee: Hutchinson, head linesman; timekeeper, Bredbenner. Football Results Yale.

31; Army. 10. Harvard. 16; Tufts. 0.

Columbia. Middlebury, C. Penn. Pittsburgh. 0.

Navy, Colgate. 0 Princeton, 35; Swarthmore, 6. Lafayette, Washingtn and Jefferson, 6. Syracuse. 10; Penn State.

0. Gettysburg, 14; Dickinson, 0, Boston 17; Colby, 7. Union, Hobart, 3. Bucknell. 14; Muhlenberg, 0.

Brown, 19; St. Bonaventure, 0. Boston College, 21; Georgetown, 0. Holy Cross. 16: Vermont, 0.

Williams, 25; Massachusetts Aggies, 0. Amherst, 12; Wesleyan, 10. Johns Hopkine, 17; Western Maryland, 0. Lehigh, 13; Carnegie Tech, 6. Illinois, Chicago.

0. Michigan, Iowa, 3. Ohio State, 42; Denison, 0. Minnesota, 34; Northwestern, 14. Notre Dame, 34 Purdue, 7.

Indiana. 3S; Hanover, 0. Marquette. 13; U. of Detroit, 6 Centre, 16; U.

of Kentucky, Georgia Alabama, 0. Georgia, Auburn. 0. rfT Grid-Graph Returns Of Dartmouth Game A crowd which overflowed the special seats installed ip the Drill Hall and draped itself over gun carriages, tables and rafters, saw a realistic reproduction of the Dartmouth-Cornell football game on Saturday when the plays made by the opposing teams were shown on a grid-gfaph placed in the center of the building and were read off by Prof. L.

Durham as they were made at Hanover. Over 3,000 fans who could not go to Hanover watched the gridigraph, which displaced the old blackboard and chalk method of describing the progress of games, and came away not only satisfied with the results of the game, but with the operation of the graph. Progress of the ball up and down the gridiron was accurately shown as the game went on and added to- the thrills received when Professor Durham's announcements were read. At intervals between the receipt of the returns the band played Cornell songs, while the audience joined in singing, getting the correct wording of each song from placards stifcng across the hall above the graph. Added attractions during the afternoon were furnished by W.

A. J. Ewald and Hayward Headden. who gave popular selections; C. M.

Mc-Williams and V. E. Simrell, who staged a wrestling bout, and P. B. Guevarra and N.

R. Hamilton, who sparred three rounds. High Scores Mark Bowling League Games On Y.M.C.A. Alleys In last week's City Bowling League games on the Y.M.C.A. alleys the Elks No.

..1 team defeated the K. of P. three straight; No. 7's won three from the M. E.

team; the University team won two out of three from Treman, King No. Elks No. 2 took two out of three from the Eagles and the Treman, King Co. team No. 2 took a like amount from Stovers; High score of 209 was made by Houghton of Stovers while others with 200 or better were: Brown, K.

of 204; Wilcox, No. 7's. 201 and Collier, Elks No. 1, 200. The summaries: University.

Total Frquhart 130 155 124 410 Scofield 165 169 131 4t53 Moon 141 167 181 1S' 436 492 435 13tM Total 161 463 12S 397 132 it; Co. Virhos Ryerson Francis Id.) 144 148 171 125 147 423 443 411 1309 r. e. Hickok Huff Squiers Mandevillc Total 292 133 139 132 140 143 195 111 113 161 253 502 411 434 Brooks 146 172 Boles 14S 1S9 Wilcox 162 174 415 132) Total 164 42 12! 4 201 537 456 535 491 14S5 Klk. Total Collier 16S 200 169 537 Hutchinson 147 153 176 4T6 McKinney 159 110 158 427 471 463 116 137 137 109 166 174 503 1440 Total 163 418 IIS 36; 204 511 K.

of P. Lush Scott Brown 419 420 487 1326 Eflffles. Total McCracken 12S 168 152 448 Hagin 123 185 141 449 Daball 129 137 175 441 3S0 490 468 Flks Xo. 2. Total Walter Bnrns 138 12S 160 426 Wililam 123 127 178 423 Clynes 127- 137 1J3 417 3S8 392 491 1271 Xo.

2. Total Smith i 163 171 151 487 Courtney 138 112 134 384 Woods 160 190 167 517 463 473 452 13S8 Slorrrs. Total Rice llfl 421 Houghton 134 146 209 509 Lovell 114 isi 169 464 433 462 497 1394 For. mot no kics rr if $24- s35 Between pfann is Outstanding Star of Cornell At tackGreen Holds Brief Lead Early in Contest. Cornell rose to a commanding position in the Eastern football world Saturday whefn the Red and White gridiron machine rode roughshod over an Undefeated Darthnioutn team, piling up a score of 32 to 7.

The Ithacans were quick to take every advantage of numerous Dartmouth misplays; uncorked an offense which the New Engenders were powerless to stop and presented a stonewall defense When the Cornell goal line was threatened. -Captain George Pfann stood out as the individual star of the game but other Red and White players were not far behind their leader in gaining honors, "notably Sundstrom, Ramsey, Cassidy, Kheen and Kearney. one touchdown of the game came as the result of a blocked punt early in the game when Ashen-bach broke through the line and after blocking Pfann's kick, snatched up 'the ball and crossed the goal line. Haws kicked the goal. This gave Dartmouth the lead, 7 to 6, Pfann having previously scored with Sundstrom missing the goal.

The Green lead was short lived, Jiowever, as Ramsey scored for Cot-Bell in the second half and again Sundstrom missed the try for point. This second touchdown came as the result of a bad Dartmouth pass within the Green 25-yard line, Patterson recovering for Cornell within the 10-yard line. Three smashes by Ramsey carried the ball over. Later in the period a pass by Affeld cost Cornell live yards. Ignoring the running attack Sundstrom tried a place kick from the 10-yard line, the attempt being successful.

In the third period Cornell scored again as the result of a hard drive down the field and this time Sund-strom's attempt for a goal was successful. In the final period another Cornell touchdown, a point by Sundstrom and a field goal by the same player gave the Red and White 10 points. The Cornellians played a remarkable game, Captain Pfann, in particular, living up to the reputation which he has built up this year by his work as a triple threat man and a hard running, ground gaining back. Many eastern football critics witnessed the game, including Walter Camp, Ray McCarthy and others. Percv Haughton.

coach of the Columbia team, and Dr. Taul Withington, his assistant, were also spectators. The play by play story of the game follows: Pnrnoll wnn tho tnas find kicked off. Dartmouth chose ihe south goal. Sundstrom kicked to Kelley on the Dartmouth five-yard line who ran me ball back 20 yards.

There was an exchange of punts by Pfann and Kelley in which Dartmouth gained 40 yards. Haws and Kelley were tackled when they signalled for fair catch. Cornell was penalized again for offside and Haws carried the ball to the 50-yard line. Fumble Falal. Haws fumbled when tackled by Kneen and Ramsey.

Cornell recovered on Dartmouth's 23-yard line. Cornell rushed the' ball to the 15-yard line but was penalized 15 yards for holding. Two forward passes. Pfann to Patterson and Pfann to Ramsey carried the ball to Dartmouth's 10-yard line. Pfann faked a pass and went through right tackle for a touchdown.

Sund-Btrom failed to kick the goal. Haws ran back the kick-off 13 yards to the 32-yard line. Kelley's punt gave Cornell the ball on its. own eight-yard line. Pfann punted and Affeld picked the ball up and raced "50 yards to the Dartmouth 10-yard line, but the ball was brought back and put in play on the Cornell 30-yard line.

Penalty was inflicted for Interference with a signal for a fair catch. Score end first period: Cornell, Dartmouth. 0. Dartmouth had tlfe ball on Cornell's IS-yard line as the second period opened. Croon Loses Ball.

A forward pass Kelley to Bjork-man, gained yards but Dartmouth lest the ball on downs. On an exchange of punts Cornell got the ball on her own 12-yard line. Dooley caught Pfann's kick pn the 32-yard line. In four rushes Dartmouth reached the 15-yard line. Watkins raced around left end Rnd it was first down for Dartmouth on Cornell's five-yard line.

Watkins was playing in place of Ilagenbuckle at end. Tlnrdev's nass to Watkins on fourth down, with Dartmouth on the three-yard line, failed. Aschenbach blocked Pfann's attempted punt, picked'' up the rolling ball and dashed 12 yards for a touch-flown. Haws kicked the goal after touch-flown. Score: Dartmouth Cornell 6.

Sundstrom's kickoff was run back to the 25-yard line by Haws. The llap back went over Haws' head. Kearney darted forward and recovered for Cornell in Dartmouth's steward line. Ramsey Scores. Three rushes carried Ramsey-Jfcross for a touchdown, Sund-, FOOTBALL TEAMS IRE UNDEFEATED New York, Nov.

5. Football followers found much for discussion in the battles of Saturday, in which Cornell, Yale and Syracuse vanquished powerful foes. The day, spectacular in many contests, came up to full expectations as a big football date. Yale was vindicated for paying her football coaches a year" when the Blue took Army's scalp, no mean achievement, by the count of 31 to 10. By this showing it is generally believed among yesterday's friends she should make a glorious comeback against her rivals.

Cornell made a great showing against the unbeaten Dartmouth team, ending with a 32 to 7 victory, and Syracuse took the measure of the unbeaten Penn State team. 10 to 0. The Cornell eleven established its right to look to high places in the final reckoning. Pennsylvania's victnrv nmr tho Pittsburgh Panthers marked another step forward -for the Red and Blue eleven and put them that much nearer a chance to curb Cornell's advance. Columbia showed marked improvement in 'Met eating the Middle-bury eleven which tied Harvard.

Harvard's defeat of Tufts eliminated another worthy contender for the high places. Princeton beat a none too strong Swarthmore team, but showed itself weak against the forward pass game. Other outstanding contests were Navy's 9 0 defeat of Colgate and Amherst's victory over Wesleyan, 12 to 10. Eddie Tryon of Colgate retained his place in the individual scores column in the east despite his team's defeat. He has a total of 78 points to his credit, amassed on 13 touchdowns.

Glennon of Holy Cross threatened his throne by scoring two touchdowns against Vermont, gaining second place in the total of points and moving to within two touchdowns of Tryon's mark. Smythe of Army, who scored on Yale, is third in the list with 60 points, while Durling of Boston College advanced to fourth place. Wilson of Penn State dropped back to fifth notch. Sundstrom of Cornell retained his lead in scoring points after touchdown, with Garbisch of Army hanging on his heels. Mc-Bride of Syracuse took the lead for field goal honors.

N- Y- U. and Fordham are reported evenly matched for their annual en-counter Tuesday at Yankee stadium. ViVY lAlfOOir-v Ann. tO) XNOVO THt V-OVO HOW is your supply of winter underwear? Ourcomplete selection inpludes both union suits- and separate garments in all grades of wool, part wool or cotton. Why not buy now what you will need later on? Union Suits $1.00 and up Shirts and Drawers 85c and up BAXTER.9 '4X01 THE QUALITY SHOP FASHION PARK CLOTHIERS 1 THE GUMPS HELP! HELP! 1 K(Y00fV5 AJu i 1 COST AVkrtD'tT II.

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Years Available:
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