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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 83

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The Tampa Tribunei
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Tampa, Florida
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83
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 9-H, TAMPA MORNING TRIBUNE, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1925 TAR 61-0 So ROLLINS AN- J.B.ILAT. is TORS Penn Trampled Under Green Devil Back Overhauled Captain Edgar Jones Strengthens Bids For Flying Feet of Red Score 24-2 All-Southern Position Gator Leade Ac Illinois Star Makes Three and Runyon Says He Is Dempsey, Ruth, Nurmi, Man War and Jolson All Rolled Into One Grid Star Canter Wins $10,000 Jockey Club Stakes By DAMON RUNYON counts for Four Touchdowns Dick Brown Totes Oval Over Twice; Williams and Goldstein Affront Rollins with Stonewall Defense I-OUISVILLE, Oct. 31. A.P.)-Cantor won the $10,000 add Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at Churchill Downs this afternoon, jassing the winning post one and jne-half length ahead of Fliqht of Time, in the mile race. The time was 1:41.

Rhinock finished third. Eight ran, scratched. The race was worth 123,315 net to the winner's rwner, J. dwin Griffith. UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA, GAINESVILLE, Oct.

31. (Tribune so common to footba was invented by Mr. Zuppke, the Illinois coach, so It Is said. Green, of Illinois, got a bust in the r.ose on the last Illinois play, and the game was delayed while he received medical attention. Then Illinois reformed its line of scrimmage practically in the center of the, field and Red Grange proceeded to show the east why he has all that fame.

Start of Great Run The ball was snapped back to him. and he tore right through the Penn-svlvania line. He went by way of left tackle and the great Charley Rod-gers, and the Penn- defense seemed to fairly fade before him. It seemed utterly dumfounded as the Orange helmet on Grange-; rose above the pumpkinlike objects around him, and came bearing down on them like a flaming helmet of Navarre. Only two Pennsylvanians seemed Special.

)--Marching at will, the Florida Gators, with their brilliant all-southern Edgar Jones parading spec KRANKLTN FIELD, Philadelphia, Oct. 31. Service.) This rnan Red Grange of Illinois is three or rour raen. and a horse rolled Jnto one lor football purposes. He is Jack Dempsey.

Babe Rutn. Al Jolson. Paavo Nurmi and Man o'War. Put them all together. They spell Grange.

At 2:03 o'clock this afternoon, bv me watch, this man Red Grange broke out against the University of Pennsylvania football eleven, and at he had men. women and little children sittinar positively dum-founded by his performances. They finally reached the conclusion that this man Red Grange is something more, or perhaps should less, than human, perhaps a throwback to some Saurian age when they played football in the ooze and slime. It was rumored In the east that ted Grange couldn't play in the mud. tut for two hours or more the flaming orange helmet of Illinois, pulled over his thatch of red hair, flared a the swampy surface of Franklin field like a ball of fire.

tacularly, raced, up and down Fleming penalized 15 yards. But Brown delivered back with a 16-yard'sprlnt. The great Jones-Brown combination again hoisted the score when Captain Ed heaved a 12-yard pass to Brown, who trampled everything that lay in his wake. Racing 48 yards to touchdown. Tom- Greene Intercepted a Rollins pass on his own 41-yard lin.

Brown tore down the side lines foi 8 yards; Burnett broke loose for 22: Field this afternoon to Trample Rol lins 61 to 0. An impenetrable stonewall, that re vealed the towering shoulders of the powerful "Cy" Williams, and another all-southern, "Golden" Goldstein, re Jones hurling through for 10 and touchdown. sped back a Rollins punt 25 yards in the final quarter, Chaplin bucking it over for seven to even make an effort to get him. What became of all the others no one knows. In about three stretches of after lhrig had added 6 on two smash I his amazing legs.

Grange was through the Penn bunch, and was tearing Red Scores Three Times I easterly down the muddy field. He ran with a long swinging stride, the very perfection of motion despite the The final score of the game was 24 to 2 In favor of Illinois, four touchdowns. Red made three. He is melody and symphony on the muddy field, his hips twstmg ive ran. the ball held tightly under his rear, while he was running behind interference.

Photo by Carl T. A Terrier brought down Ross, Devil quarterback, from the arm. and his orange helmet Dent Tb.on.er, Tribune staff photographer. slightly forward. Twists Into Open Where Were the Penn tacklers? Two pulsed every weapon the Tars attempted in their assault attack, while tho Gators on offense uncovered Jones and Dick Brown, among half a dozen other race horses, all contributing in the nine touchdowns the line splitting Gators chalked up today.

Captain Jones returned the opening kickoff 35 yards. Two bucks failed so quarterback Scott ventured a pass which Wilson intercepted for Rollins. They Jumbled however and Davis recovered for the Gatovs near inid-field. After circling end for 10 yards Captain Jones broke through for 40 yards and a touchdown, a beautiful run. Jones missed his try for an extra point here, but made five other attempts good.

Jones Intercepts Pass Jones Intercepted a Rollins pass on his 32-yard line, dashing 30 yards off tackle on the next play. Dick Brown drove his way over the remaining 22 yards for the second touchdown. 'An Washington and Lee Pair of Tennessee Star I Michigan Tidal men barred Grange's path lor just an instant, but he easily twisted past them never slacking his speed, and went on across the Penn goal ilne. a distance of 55 yards from where he started, and the most astounding run. Wave Submerges es ana waitcer passed to lhrig, for a 72-yard gain.

Rollins scored two first downs, the Gators governing twenty for the day. Little but straight football was resorted to, as Rollins was not a powcr-tul enough machine to offer Florida much resistance. Though their opponents were none too strong, Hi Gators gave their attacking partv plenty of good interference, blocked well and performed nicely. Stars of Gator Line Williams and Goldstein, at tackles, playing their last on Fleming seld, Procter at Center, Davis at Guard, and Green at End, were cogs in the line who gave Rollins worlds of trouble. The entire squad saw action and came through in creditable shape.

Livingston smashed a rib and had to be taken from the game just at a time when the speed merchant was traveling at a mlle-a-minute clip. It was Florida's final game this season-on their campus. Only a small crowd enjoyed the track meet but there were lots of great plays and unbeatable football weather favored the athletes. i Line up and summary: Florida (61) Pos. Rollins (0) Green Lark in I.

E. Willams Eafroos (c) L. T. Falls Before Drive Of West Virginia Prove Arsenic to Backs lootnau field. He Is crashing- sound.

He is He is brute force. He la the doggondest football player that the east has seen In many years, and ou can say that again, too. It was the general Impression In the east that Pennsylvania, even without the Michigan motor bus, Al Krues In the backfield. would lick Illinois an around the muddy field this afternoon. The east magnanimously' allowed something- for Red Grange's ability say.

forty percent of his advance billing but it had an Idea that the Illinois team In general was none too strong. But in additlcn to Red Grange. under the circumstances, that the football east has ever seen. Middies, 54-0 As Grange ran the south btanc sat silent, too dazed for utterance. But over on the north side of field.

Georgia as Vols Triumph CHARLFESTON, W. Oct. 31. (A.P.) West" Virginia proved its pow the crowd was standing, a roiling er to push Washington and Lee back at will on a muddy gridiron today and flame of color, and the voices lifting shrilling. It was one of the wildest.

other march from the 40-yard marker Great Holes Torn in Navy fense by Wolverine Backs and most spontaneous outbursts I have ever heard on afoothall field. gave Florida her next score. Jones intercepted his second pass, and ran once for ten yards, but Bishop and Brown did the heavy hitting toward goal, Bishop smashing over for that sent the ball rapidly Into Tennes-, see territory with eight, ten, 15 and 20 yard gains. A spiral pass from within the 20-yard line far toward the sidelines was plucked from the air by a Bulldog who fell over the goal line for the only Bulldog counter. By use of similar tactics Georgia aerial led, the point of goal after touchdown.

Lineun: ANN ARBOR. Oct. 31. (As As Grange turned from the touchdown, there were still many yards of muddy territory between him and the nearest Penn and the nearest Illinois player, too. for that matter.

He bad outfooted his own piled up a 21 to 0 victory. Forward parses were few and netted only small gains while consistent pounding of tackles and guards by mountaineer backs brought steady advances -which preceded each, of the three West Virginia's first score was a safety in the first period followed by a touchdown in each c.f the last thiee periods. Barnum added the point after the final one, after having failed on two previous attempts. tour on the last drive. The Gators fourth touchdown of the opening quarter was another product from the flashy Jones -from interference.

If he had any when ha Davis i Fralick L. G. Proctor Abbot C. Pos. ueorgia L.K Our ran Ij.T.

Luckia started. was mud from head to foot, but his flaming helmet still shone brightly above his blackened sbr.xilders. The Illinois! band, squatted In the hay on the. sidelines, boomed its tom Leffler L.G. KNOXVILLE, Oct.

31. Associated Press.) Failure of Georgia linesmen to stem the rushes of Dick Dodson and Jimmy Elmore, fleet back-field stars of the Tennessee eleven ancl. inability of the Bulldog back to find opening through the volunteer defense except via aerial route cost the invaders a 12 to defeat on Shields Watkins field here this afternoon. Behind a concerted drive and with the front wall opening up gaping holes in the Georgia line the Tennesseans smashed their way to a touchdown just before the second period of play ended. In the third the same tactics were employed, orange and white warriors maneuvering the bajlinto position whereby directly ajj'jf the fourth quarter opened, ElmcjLr and Dodson cracked the Bulldog Wie and the latter flung himself over the goal with yards to spare.

Georgia's only touchdown came about midway of the fourth period with the field general of the visitors unleashing a daring overhead attack Winderweedie Daniels Elchstadt Petronls R. G. Goldstein R. T. Whittaker R.

33. toms of triumph as Grange swung Forces Hand Rogers Van Geisen Moore McTigue Granpe dove for the goal line, as if he were plunging- into a tank of water. He landed Tenn. (12) Lowe McArthur Barn hill Butcher Burdotte Elliott Brown Harkness Young Rice Dodson Score: Term Georgia C. R.G.

R.T. R.K. Q.B. Ij.II. R.H.

F.B. trength. notably in Britton. It was Britton. In fact, who did a lot of the staging necessary for the brilliant success of Grange's performance.

Britton Opened Way Britton would open the' way for the fiaming helmet behind Kim, time and acaio punching holes in the Pennsylvania, offence which let Grange pour through. Perhaps It is only fair to say that without Britton. Grange might not have been quite as spectacular. However. I am Inclined to -think that Grange out there all alone would be something of an act.

When Grange finally left the game not long before the finish, and walked to the side lines, wiping the mud from his eyes, even the most loyal Pennsvlvanian scarcely resist aoplaudine him. They had pone out to Franklin Field rsther expecting to see him held tight restraint by the gridiron mud horses of old Penn. Instead they had een Mm romp red-handed, as you might say, and certainly red-headed, iround the stalwarts of the greatest team that Penn has mustered In many a year. Tribute Demanded on hia breast and slid ten feet across the line, clutching- the baU. It was a most Fneetacular play, and the Illinois Scott.

Seeds Q. B. Jones (c) Warner L. If. around from his astounding journey.

The Pennsylvania stands still sat completely dazed. Illinois missed the point from touchdown, then Penn kicked off again. Another Great Dash Nelson Monday sociated Press.) The United States navy's proud gridiron dreadnaught, buffetted, and broken by a great Michigan tidal wave, limped into port tonight on the leeward side of a 54 to 0 score. Great holes were torn in her sides; holes through 1 which the Wolverines poured line smashes, long passes and brilliant runs. It was a versatile attack and stubborn defense that conquered the Navy.

The passing game Was there, but it was varied with line smashing, trick formations and end runs, and was dotted with examples of individual brilliancy. A play unique in football history accounted fftr one of Michigan's eight touch downs. The ball was on Navy's four-yard line in tho first period and Shapley, Navy fullback stood back of his goal line to punt out of danger. As the ball dropped to meet the Shapley. i ehoe, Flom, Michigan right end, cut in, snatched it and fell on it for a touch down.

Michigan's star quarterback, Friedman, was at his best. His uncanny accuracy in passing figured in four touch-downs and he kicked five goals after touch-down out of seven and again. Illinois stand boomed i jsaiii missed a third attempt at goal from 6 012 Brown R. II. Bishop Zeibler Wilson touchdown.

"Pony Express" Goes In The Florida bee line "Pony Express" went in to count the second period touchdown. Burnett passed to Livingston for 20 yards, Ihrig on five successive bucks, broken only by Burnett's 3-yard gain, traveled 17 yards to touchdown. Burnett kicked goal. Another Gator score was narrowly missed in the second quarter, Burnett's pass over the goal line that he should not have tossed, giving Rollins the ball. Livingston had fleet footed his fasttraveling marked up two runs of 14 yards each, and Ihrig had bucked fivo.

With first down and goal to go, Burnette swept out around end, but threw over the line as he was being shoved bad, Jones and Brown, tearing -over yardage in terms of first downs opened the third quarter with a touchdown. The two Gator stars were ploughing furiously on off tackle smashes and revealed the prettiest form they have shown this fall. Brown once tore through for 27 yards, hut tho play was called back and Florida r.nnn rnt ih lv-iH on the kiefcoff. tak 0 77 Boland. ing it on his own 25-yard line, tucked the Sullivan replaced Granpe, and.

as Red trotted in to the side line the north stand Dodson Touchdowns: miwlrlv ra-u-hirin under his arm. and opened after toualidown: Boland on Points pass. on the Penna line with another wild blast ol speed that arain swept the Penn defense rside. It is almost impossible to say just how he got through that muddy Hinirminr mass, but suddenly the oranse rose to him in an astonishing: the pist of the cries seeming- to be, "Oh, you Red!" Red Scores Another In the third quarter a puzzling triple' pass completely fooled the Quakers. With Grange on the receiving and a.

Score by periods: Florida 26 7 14 14 CI Rollins 0 0 0' 0 0 1 i Florida 'scoring: Touchdowns, Jones' (4); Brown (2), Bishop, lhrig, Chap-, lin. Points from try after touchdown, Jones (5) place kick; Burnett (place kick); Chaplin (place kick). Referee, Parmele, Umpire, Captain Whitehead; Headlinesman, Major Tipton, (Army). i helmet showed in the clear, with Penn- 'sylvanians floundering all around mm. Football Results mi fiown ttiR lipid went trainee axuiii.

consequently, on the scoring end, a touchdown was scored from the 24 knocking the men who tried to tackle him nvr some strange soecies of football They were not happy, but they that the Pennsylvanians certainly could not fathom. He wound up this time on Penns' linn where some desnairinsr pair yard line. Once more the try goal was missed by Britton, and the score was brought to it final standing of 24 to 2. St. Johns 33; Gal- At Annapolis, Tulane 13; Auburn 0, at Mont noc neip paying respectrul trib-ute to a mightv foe.

The north stand gomery. i of Penn hands', finally caueht him by the mudt'v iersey and tucced him into a filled with Illinois rooters, stood tin Tennessee 12; Georgia 0, at Knox- Shortly after, the Illinois varsity laudet i. St. Johns Villa Nova Chicago Purdue 0. At Bethlehem, Lehigh nd whooped for Granee.

who merelv ville. puddle. Britton carried the ball on over left tne eame the second and third Pennsylvania goal for nother uhw" teams holding the battered Quakers in hook himself, the mud flying from Muhlen- Notre Dame 13: Georgia Tech, at followirsr this run. after a succession At Los Angeles: University of California 27; Pomontgo 0. check the remainder ot the game Atlanta.

line BHiasnes ram Mii'ib cuu i uujkb n-hixh Cnn arrip(l thl rta'l time ailllT Alabama 6: Mississippi A. M. 0, Pos. Penn. (2) Illinois (24) Kassel at Tuscaloosa, Ala.

The New Nestle-Lanoil Permanent Marcel Wave A perfect marcel wave, in perfect com-- Singer his rooioaij cear like spray off a pup that has 1nst crawled out of the water. Perhaps he grinned. Tou wouldn't tell. His features were cov-! with mud. The echoes of the football fame of Tim Thorpe and Ted Coy, and Kddie Maham and Tom Shelvln.

nnii an thu Vanderbllt 7: Mississippi 0, at Nash le ville. Wilson Marriner At Los Angeles: Ofidental College 13; Whittier College 0. At Berkley: St. Marys 28; University of California, Southern Branch, At Seattle; Washington 23; Washington State College 0. At Reno: Santa Clara 7, Nevada 7 (tie), It Florida" 61; Rollins 0, at Gainesville.

Kentucky 16; Centre 0, at Danville. V. P. South Carolina 0, at Richmond. ather mighty gridiron men of the ea must have been listening intently at that moment, disturbed bv the din again.

It was simply uncanny tho way he manaeed to wriitsle through and around the supposedly brick -wall of the Penn defense, which had held bo stoutly acainst Yale and Chicago. Britton's attempt at goal from touchdown failed. Illinois Menaced The first time Illinois was seriously meuaeetr was late in the first half, when Fena rushed the ball for two first downs, then kicked to Illinois three-yard line. Britton fell on the ball behind his own goal for a safety after Leonard of Illinois, in a nice, bright dry uniform, replaced Lateron, backed up against their own goal line, the Pennsylvanians fouirht desperately. They shook off two smashes led by the Oregon Yale 2S; Army 7, at New Haven.

Illinois 24: Pennsylvania 2, at Phila At Stamford: Stamford 14. Pike Robinson Butler- Sieracki Thayer delphia. berg 9. At Greenville, S. C.

Furman 27; Presbyterian College At St. Peter, Gustavus Adol-phus St. Olaf 6. At Grand Forks, N. North Dakota 10: North Dakota Aggies 19.

At Moorehead, Moorehead Stats Teachers Wahpeton (ND.) Science 0. At Galesburg, Cornell College Knox i. At Chicago, Depere, Academy Depaul 0. At Oshkosh, Kalamazoo Oshkosh 0. At Kansas City, Morningside, 19; Des Moines 7.

At Dubuque, Columbia, Valparaiso 0. At Davenport, St. Ambrose, 35; Wisconsin 10. At Greenbay, St. Norborts 10; St.

Paul 7. At St. Paul, Carlton Macester 0. At St. Paul, Ham line Lawrence 13; A fort.

No borax, pads, pastes or tubes, No tying or jerking of the head. Only few minutes heating. Leaves every bit of natural life and lust.er in the hair. (Approved Marinallo Shop) Bertha Geiger Beauty Shop 715 Grand Central Ave. Phone 81-66 At Helena, Mont: St.

Charles Intermountam 0. Cornell 17? Columbia 14. Princeton 19; Swarthmore 7. Dartmouth 14; Brown 0, at Provi Shtvely Reitsch Hitterwalncr Brown Squires Grange Daugherty Bri.ton rt re ver the prowess of this new giant 5f the game. As the 65.000 men, women and little children were filing a bit ouietlv out Df the big yard, you heard Just on mentioned In their gossip.

That aamo was Grange. What a foolish player! Say it again. dence, At Tuscon, Ariz; Arizona 33; New Mexico Agios o. At Emporia: College of Emporia Baker 0. At Waco: Baylor Texas 3.

Leith Michigan 54; Navy 0, at Ann Arbor; Svracuse Penn State 0. Ohio States 17; Wooster 0. Holy Cross 23; Bucknell 7, at Wor qb" "lhb" rh'b" Douglas Rogers Long cester, Mass. Georgetown 37; King college at Washington. west Virginia, zi: wasnington ana By Periods: Lee 0.

15. Pittsburgh 81; Johns Hopkins 0, at At Jacksonville. Ill, Monmouth Col Phone Us Your Orders Pittsburgh, We Deliver Promptly I lege 33; Illinois College 0. fordharrt 26i New YorK university mighty trrange. The ball was on their two-yard line, down in one corner of.

the playinr territory, and they set themselves there firmly as Britton came lifetinf up out -of the muddy mass of Illinois men in a last desperate drive. Britton Poshed Bark He mounted hith on the slippery wall of humanity, then shthered down attain without havintr been able to fret one over. Pennsylvania, cot the ball on downs and kicked out from behind its own. groal line. Illinois asain taking- the ball on Perm's forty-yard line.

Granee made a short train and Daurhcrty made first down on the next smash, on Penn's thirty-yard line. Illinois put over a forward pas. Britton dropping- the ball as it came to him, but recovering it quickly and flipping it on to Kassell. Now the ball was Riven to Grange and the marvelous man from Illinois wheeled and tore for the Penn eoal line fifteen All Looked for Red When the Illinois squad trotted out 5n the field, a formidable looking bodv Tt young men In orange helmets, with Srieit orane-e numerals on their black backs. If there were 60.000 persons present, then 120.000' eyes immediately wept the Illinois souad seklnr the 'amou youth with th number 77 on his Jersey, the redoubtable Red 3rnge.

He was Immediately surrounded" bv squad of thotogrp nhers so large that v't la a good thine Red was not called l-pon to try to run the ball through. At a rtiftance he looked no different fWtn. 1 rt. 6, at New York. At Peoria, uraaiey 24; Augustana t.

At Normal, Illinois State Normal Lafayette zu; St. at Pennsylvania, 0-3-0-0 2 Illinois. 12-6-6-024. Summary: Illinois scoring touchdowns Grange Britton. Pennsylvania scoring safely by Britton.

Referee Walter Eckersali, Chicago Umpire Thomas Thorp, Columbia. Linesman Charles Eckles, Washington and Jefferson. Field judge, Milton Ghoe, Dartmouth. Time periods 15 minutes. Charleston 0.

Eaton, Pa. At Rolla Miners, 14; St. Louis, University 7. Let At Grinnell as: Oklahoma Aggies u. At Springfield, Boston 0: Belief ica Drug' Store western Keservo iteiaeioerg 7.

Detroit 14:, John Caroll 6. Mount Union 32; Case 0. Baldwin Wallace Akron 0. Denison Miami, 0. -Hiram 12; Otterbin 12.

Tie. Ohio Wesleyan 2S; Wittenberg 12. Springfield 20. At vviinnmstown, Williams, Union 6. (Tie).

IMPORTERS Catawba Rutherford, College 0, at Salisbury. lards away, slashing through left tackie. A Penn man stood ripht in his path DARTMOUTH BEATS BROWN PROVIDENCE, R. Oct. 31.

(A.P.) Dartmouth playing pdwerful football in face of an eleven weakened by injuries defeated Brown here today, 14 to 0. The bears' great halfback, Keefer, was injured and carried from tho field. and seemed sure to get him. but Grange dietly turned a mere step, passing inside iifferent Oh. so different.

5Ir. Tom Thorpe, the umpire, came -ut bareheaded. TTe wore the white that suffered such indigni- here last week, all tvished up. The referee was Walter 'Eckerall. of Chlongo.

who was a coupl of Granges' At jev Orleans, Jjoyola Oglethorpe. 13. At Washington, Catholiic University Quantioo 13. At Collegeville. Urslnus.

0: ine man. anu oownng mm over -with an almost inperceptible push of his hand. BUY HERE SAVE MONEY Then, front a distance of fully five yards. Gettysburg 27; At Memphis, St. Andrews 14; Tennessee Doctors 0.

At Memphis, Southwestern Mill-saps 0. At Shreveport, Arkansas 12; Louisiana 0. At Lexington, V. M. I.

33; Lynchburg 0. At Northfield Vermont Norwich 0. At Washington College Howard 6. At Providence, Dartmouth 14; Brown 0. At Lowell Institution of Tech Lowell Textile 0.

At Mtddletown Trinity At lowa city, towa waoasn v. At Dayton. University of Dayton 23: Cincinnati 0. Pronounced LA BE-NEF-I-CA STOPPED IN HIS TRACKS 5 PHONE 51-217 Wesleyan 0. At Columbus.

Ft, Benning Infantry 27; Notre Dame Reserves 6, Kenyon. St. Xavlers C. Ohio Northern Ohio University 0. Lombard 13: Loyola (Chicago) 7.

Marquette 28; Creighton 0. 20; Northwestern College 0. 'Northland Manjuette 0. At Durham, Duke University 10; University of Richmond 0. At Chattanooga, Sewannee 2S; Chattanooga 0, At Gainesville, University of Florida 61; Rollins 0.

Davidson N. C. State 0. At-Augusta, Citadel' 16; Mercer 0. At Durham, N.

New Hampshire Tufts 0. Next to Postof fice 1429 Seventh Avenue At Houston, Rice 19; South Western o. At Greenville, Geneva. 12; Thiel 0. At Indianapolis, Butler 38; i Rose Poly o.

AX Greencastle. Franklin 14; Denatiw- 10. HIGH SCHOOL RESULTS At Tampa, St. Petersburg SO; Hillsboro 3. At Fort Meade Clearwater 0.

The Cut Rate Drug Store With, Delivery Service 1 Into one In his While the photographing- of Grange went on in midficld. the crowd kept nming In. shaking and thiverlnt'. and 'he Penn cheering section Indulged itself in noises, led by a platoon cf white garbed and bareheaded leaders. Grange Takes Kick-off The, folks were still coming In when Penn kicked off to Grange, which was Just the play the crowd was hoplnsr for.

Grange ran the l.n Tl Lack to Illinois' 23-yard line, gallop, inr through the mud with a high l-r-se ction. reminiscent of Kddie Mahan. nd dodziag and twisting nicely before be was pulled down in the mud. Walter Eckersall apparently hurt tfc'js ankle on Illinois' second play, and Mr. Thorpe solemnly viewed the member.

The game proceeded and Drltton kicked the bail far Jnto Penn tAirltory. Penn took a couple of ejnarhes at the Illinois line. Then Hhariev Rogers kicked the ball baric lito midfield, evidently it was to be that kind of game. The ball wa muddy and slippery ftr the first play, and It is consid-Tr-d strategy under these circum-tanccr to kick, hoping for a fumMe tn- other fellowx. Illinois got the l.al' in midfield and went into a 'tuddl conference.

This huddle, now At East Lansing, Colgate 14; Michi gan state u. At Lawrence, Drake 7 Kansas 0. At Evanston, Northwestern 17; In tiiV Pi -c i -S 'V- sr diana 14. At Amherst, Amherst 27; Massachusetts Agies 0. Final at Danville, Kentucky 16; Centre 0.

At Lancaster, Frank Marshall 7: Haverford 6. At North Carolina 16; Maryland 0. At Cambridge, Harvard 14; "William At Jacksonville, Duval 28; Miami 7. At Orlando 45; Leesburg C. At Fort Lauderdale 35; Lemon City 7.

At West Palm Beach Florida Military Academy 0. At Tallahassee, Leon High 14; Val-dosta (Ga.) High 7. At Molvjle: Stetson University Springhill 5. At Clinton: Miss College Howard 10. At New York: Hamilton 12; C.

C. of New York 0. At Ogden Utah: Utah Aggies Colorado Agsies 13. At Mooihead, St. Johns College Concordia 14.

At Corvallls. Oregon Aggies 27; Montana 7. At Oshkosh: Kalamazoo Normal Oshkosh 6. At Denver: Colorado College 38; University of Denver 7. At Denver: Keais College 2G; South Dakota School of Minos 0.

aim Alarry 7. Princeton 13; Swarthmore 7. At Meadville, Alleghany Waynesboro 0. At Carlyle, Dickinson Al bright 0. A Wonderful Bit of Acreage At LAKE WALES, Folk County, lying between -the property of the Mountain Lake Club and four beautiful little lakes with a bout two miles of lake frontage.

This tract contains 400 acres and can be bought for $1,000 per acre on very reasonable terms. It can be developed into a high class residential parlor is suitable for an estate development. This is the choicest bit of acreage in this section at anything like this price. Will, co-operate vulh other brokers. At Potsdam, N.

Clarkson R. Sarasota Golfer Makes Hole in 0 i. o. Minnesota 12; Wisconsin -12. (Tie) At New Wilmington, Westminister Grove City 13.

At New Brunswick, Rutgers 12; 7 -yt x-enn. quinary as. At Worcester, Worcester Tech 26; Rhode Island State 18. At Boston. Boston Coliese 51: Prov! E.

BALLARD SARASOTA. Oct. 31. (Tribune News Service.) Harry Walsh. subdivision expert, has founded a Hoie-in-none club.

Recently he was playina round of with a salesman from his firm, ths Ki. jay Realty Company, who gave him a stroke--bol handicap. On the eighth hole. Mr. Walsh put a xero on his score card when he shot from the tee and landed In the ole.

deuce 0. At Storrs, Connecticut Aggies 19; Manhattan 0. At Wheeling, W. Washington and Jefferson 20; Bethany 0. At Columbia, Missouri 23; Ames 8.

At Ann Arbor, -Michigan C4; -Navy 0. At Miiddlcbury St. Stephens 6. At Huntington, Juniata Susquehanna 0. I Cohen was snapped by Carl Thoner, Tribune photographer, as he stODDed Kirschner.

Kirschner. In a lone end run. struck a. tips! rf Telephone 4742 102 Eat Lafayette Street I Terrier tacklers. Torres, (with hands open) Whitehurst and Bond! Is a prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever.

It kills the germs Tampa, Fla. were also his path. The smiling youth is one of the Green Devil Interierers..

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