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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 17

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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17
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Part Two ffcwst Markets Sports. THE WORLD'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER 1 November ig, 1919. -f; r- EE BY YALE 11 WHISTLE BLOWS THE DAYS OF REAL SPORT FflDTBALLSCGiiES Copjrieht: 1919: Kew York Tribune. Inc. PURPLE UPSETS INDIANA, 3 TO 2, IN FINAL PERIOD INS 13-6 GAME FOR PRINCETON WITHIOWASNLY 8 IN.

FROM GOAL fceerer Scores Marker After Each Drop Kicks Twice. Citizens Turn Out to See Final Home Game of N. U. Eleven. Combat Ends with Enemy Set for Final Charge on Stagg's Line.

WEST. Chicago, Iowa, 6. Northwestern, 3 Indiana, 2. Ohio, Wisconsin, 0. Illim, 29; Michigan, 7.

Purdue, 24; De Psnw', O. Notre Dame, 13; Mich. 0. Nebraska, 19; Kansas, 7. Iowa.

State, 46; Kansas Aggies, 0. Missouri, Washington, 0. Marquette, North Dakota, O. Wabash, 68; Franklin, O. Moorningside, 27 Valparaiso, 0.

Millikin, 35; We.Ieyan, 7. Rip on, 20; Lawrence, 7. Hemline, Cslrleton, Oberlin, 67; Case, 7. Nevada, St. Mary's, 0.

Oregon, 9 Oregon Aggies, 0. So. Calif orrii, 28; Utah, 7. Washington, 13; Wash. State, 7.

Tennessee, 33; Cincinnati, 12. Colorado, 38; Denver, 0. Carroll, 17; Beloit, 13. South Dakota, Drake, 3. EAST.

Princeton, 13; Yale, 6. Harvard, 23; Tufts, 0. Brown, Dartmouth, 6. Penn, Pittsburgh, 3. Penn State, 20; Cornell, 0.

West Virginia, 30; Rutgers, 7, Navy, 121; Colby, 0. BY HENRY CROSS. Haven, Nov. 15. Spe- Big 10 Standing I-After eight long years of patient as.

Princeton's cup of joy was i to overflowing this afternoon in I Tale bowl, for the alert Tigers 4 on a loose ball in the final W. I Pc. Ohio State. 3 l.oon Illinois ....6 1 .833 Chicago ....4 1 .800 Iowa ......2 2 .500 Wisconsin 9 JiOO u. ret.

Minnesftta .2 2 Michigsn ..1 3 JS.IO Northw'n 1 4 JJOO Indiana, 0 3 Purdu 3 xl nd went over the Yale line 3 tie unexpected touchdown which it the deadlock and gave Princeton fldous 13 to 6 victory. to the list of gridiron heroes of Nassau along with the Poes and White and De Witt the name of Scheerer. It was Joe who won pime for the Tigers when he re-red the bal after Joe Nevill's Ut- BY WALTER ECKERSALL. Showing a better fighting spirit than it has displayed at any time this season. Northwestern Cimo from behind aud defeated Indiana yesterday on Northwestern field, 3 to 2, in the Purple's only victory over a conference eleven.

The game ended just as dusk was settling over the gridiron. There Was scarcely two minutes left to play when the Purple obtained possession of the oval in midfield. Stellar end running and off tackle driving by Lane, the Pr.rple half back, -combined with Capt. Pjehler's line plunging, placed the val on the Hoosiers' twenty yard line. Daley Makes Place Kick.

Quarter Back Brightmire then decided to take a long chance. Left Tackle Daley was called back for a place kick, and Lane, the half back, took his place in the line. Brightmire held the oval on the Indiana twenty-nine yard mark and Daley booted It between the posts from a difficult angle for the points which spelled a Purple victory. As the game grew older, it looked as if the two points scored by Indiana early in the first period would decide the issue. The Indiana score was the result of a safety, a gift whicl! the Pur pass to Kempton went wild.

rer plunged his way through the i scramble of Yale players, picked th truant pigskin, and dashed sty-two yards for a touchdown. 1 First Victory in Yale Cowl. jczg has Princeton waited for this I. In snatching the game from the Capt. Curtis McGraw's Orange and ck eleven lived up to Princeton i Way back in 1911 Sam I ite scooped up a fumbled ball and iced down the field to a glorious vic- and that was the last game that first Army, 62 Villa Nova, 0.

Bucknell, 17; Gettysburg, 0. Wesleyan, 27; Columbus, over, 19; Exeter, 0. Lafayette, 35; Trinity, 0. wart more, 17; Delaware, 0 Ursinis, 7 F. and 0.

Lehfgh, 33; Muhlenberg, 7. Coe, Cornell college, 0. Williams, 30; Amheri 0. Boston ColU Holy Crose, f. Stevens, 24; New York, J.

Wash, and 21; Bethany. 0. Harvard Freshmen, 10; Hamilton, 6 Union, 0. SOUTH. Vanderbilt, 10; Virginia, 6.

Georgia Tech, 27; Georgetown 0. Arkansas, 7 Oklahoma, 6. Georgia, '7; Tulane, '7. action won In New Haven until iiy. twas the first time that the Timers ever won game in the bowl.

lis. tie orange glow of the gather- ple has been senerous with all season. Indiana won the toss and chose to defend the south goal with a strong wind it is favor. How siafety Was Made. The Hoosier offense worked well, but dusk Princeton's mass of under- BY ALBON HOLDEN.

In a delirious battle such as has not been seen 1 on Stagg flr-ld In several years, Chicago yesterday nosed out the fighting Hawkeyes from Iowa City, 9 to 6. For thrills, wild excitement, brilliant play, and for a superb fighting defense put up by the Maroons in the last trench with Field Judge Thurber counting off the seconds as a referee in the boxing ring, the wild affair will go down In history of Midway footbay as one of the most frenzied of all. Wrhen the final whistle lifted the ex. treme tension Iowa had the ball on tho Chicago eight inch line and was gathering for a last attempt to dent the Maroon wall. The Maroons had the game apparently sewed up with a three point lead with less than two minutes to play.

Coach tagg s2nt Paul Hinkle in at left tnd to replace the fast tiring HaJliday, and the big end was so keyed up that he could not control himself. Mistake Nearly "Come an boys, shouted Hinkle, according Co the officials who were just a few feet from the play, and immediately Umpire White pounced on Hink for speaking to his mates be. fore a play was pulled off, which is against the 1919 playing code. Fifteen yards the ball was carried by Referee Means to the Chicago sixteen yard mark, and Iowa was given a first down. The stunned Maroons seemed paralyzed and for an instant it looked though the fighting Hawkeyes would queeze through.

Capt. Lohman banged away for five yards through the demoralized Chicago front, and Aubrey-Devi tore through for a ten yard adva.e, squirming to within six feet of a touchdown before he was brought down. Hawkeyes Hit a Wall. ust when the Midway fans were breathless from the sudden change in fortune the Chicago line braced under the exhortations of Capt. Higgins am! the back field.

The Hawkeyes were told that there was less than a minute of play left and gathered for the drive to victory. Aubrey Devine hurled him states, together writh the host of. pids, forgot the defeats and dis- in the exchange of punts Indiana had a decided advantage because of the or tne past as they snake madly around the Elis sunken ieuia. BARLEY'S GOAL TRIMS BADGERS IN 3-0 BATTLE wind. The Purple- were gradually ILLINI GATAPULT HUMBLES YOSTS IN 29-7 COMBAT THE SYBARITE Early Game Featureless.

5 ewer's bit of wideawake football forth the one great thrill of jama which for three periods had forced back into its own territory until Scott was forced to punt while standing on his ten yard line. McCaw, the Indiana right tackle, broke through and blocked the attempt. The oval rolled back of the Purple goal line and Scott dropped on it for a safety, two points for Indiana. a avoid of any of the spectacular lares of the modern open game. The farmer sits in his rocking chair if his jeet in the oven door; A bottle of homemade wine is there Beside hhn on the' floor.

is cellar is full of pork and beef And crowded his bin and rick; Of all the world he's exempt from grief And he used to be called a hick. AGGIES BATTLE BUT FALL, 1 3-0, AT NOTRE DAME ir three periods the Yale and Prince- elevens had played a dull con- BY IRVING VAUGHAN. botn teams, the Purple play being Madison, Nov. 15. Spe-ial.

'particularly poor in the first half. In line pounded monotonously jst line, as two teams battled on mm, each trying to outlast the in their traditional tactics of safe. Wisconsin battled the highly touted, un- the first two periods Indiana had all beaten Ohio State machine to a stand-, the best of the going and in the second still today and conceded nothing ex-'period had the ball on the Purple one pto the time that Scheerer's nerve cept in the kicking department. That yard line. With a foot to gain on the concession was sufficient, the depart- fourth down for a touchdown, Williams I Urbana, 111., Nov.

15. Special. Illinois outclassing the Wolverines, who were humbled as no Wolverine team has been humbled for years, went brilliantlx into the finals of the conference championship by defeating Yost's men, 29 to 7. Michigan's invasion of the state arena after an absence of fifteen years not only resulted in the most crushing reverse that the Wolverines have sustained this season, but their historians were frank to say that not in ment in which the Badgers were lack- jost his footing and was thrown for a i'ing play woke the 60,000 chilled! Gators from their wearying so- "a in the tiers of cold seats which ffded the gridiron, four field goals i brought brief sparks of excite- it to the slow, uneventful 5. rrl ing proving enough to bring about their two yard loss.

Fullback Kyle had been own downfall by 3 to 0. The sole points making ground easily through the mid- Composite Thought. Twenty million gallons of boeze stored in Chicago. If all the men in town were turned into one man and all that 20,000,000 gallons poured into him, what an awful Jag it would make. A report comes from California that the women golfers are planning to play in bloomers.

So far the proposed change has not been discussed in local circles. Its adoption would be largely a matter of form, but women no doubt would appear in something more natty than the riding knickers worn by many mere men. A prominent conference coach was ruled out of his last game of football. He begged the official not to enforce the penalty, but when refused told the official he "would have kicked the man's head off if he knew the official saw him anyway. The aunts and antis all profess A vice is drinking to excess.

So may it be but I am thinking A virtue is access to drinking. Q. A. R. Something to Keep Warm.

A well dressed man shimmied shiv-eringly into Mike Maloney's coffee house, formerly Stillson's bar, and pleaded with George Plant, manager, for a glass of whisky. He knew George had no whisky for him, and so did George. So they compromised on Java. As they were talking it over a man represent a bit of endeavor by the high- dle of the line and it appeared ly educated toe of "Chick" Hariey, the certain he could have made a foot' If Buckeye prize. i he had been given the ball.

The Badgers should not have lost: visitors Check Advance, neither should they have won. It was! t. xtu A team had twice sent the ball over SMi posts and were tied at 6 to 6. Tigers First to Score. Princeton was the.

first, to take ad- just one of those rip-snorting, slam-' years, if, ever, had there been such a rout tor the Maize and Blue. The deb- The farmr shoM KorrV if mines are acle was so bad that the score, top-1 closed, nr. tt ontireiv faiia tn snpii th i He toasts his toes with wood: self at the center of Chicago's wall, bui Reber and McGuire set him back a yard. Again he tried, this time square eighteen yard line, where-the oval was of the north wind which tszed through the south goal posts. i Notre Dame, Nov.

15. Special. Notre Dame struck a tartar In the Michigan Aggies today and was forced to extend itself to the limit to defeat the East Lansing aggregation by a margin of two touchdowns. The score was 13 to 0.. Never did a Wolverine eleven fight harder' than did th Aggies today.

Never did a visiting team show more courage in the face of odds. But all the courage and fight that the Michigan clan could develop was not sufficient to stop equally courageous and more powerful eleven which carried the colors of Notre Dame. Forced to Use Regulars. Coach Rockne started a complete second string lineup against the Invaders. It was not long, however, until he saw the futility of attempting to down the scrappy Aggies with this combination and he rushed his regular back field and ends into the fray at the opening of the second quarter.

Amid the murk of defeat the East Lansing men, who journeyed here 300 strong, find one bright beacon light in the brilliant stand of their eleven when the locals ran the ball to the five yard line in the second quarter only to meet an impregnable defense. bang battles, devoid of thrills, in which the contenders were so evenly balanced on the whole that a tieless score would have done both justice. For the great- UTrsxvjr iv i completeness of the undoing of the The mills may idle if so disposed. lost on downs. The Purple secured possession of the ball on its forty yard line and clever end running by Lane ly at McGuire, but the fighting Maroon guard, with his face smeared with blood, hurled himself into the opening He's fixed, though they shut for good.

Yost eleven. A.QV. V. flat period, set the Princeton hosts ffJrig with delight by booting a field Crowd of 11,000 at Game. Upwards of 11,000 persons, mostly and choked the attempt.

over from the twenty-eight yard The grocer can gouge and the dairy jip The rest of us as they may, He raises his otfrn, so let 'er rip And he used to be called a jay. dinal completely eclipsed the Scarlet and forward passes, Koehler and Lane and Gray. The fact that the eclipse tne ens- netted good gains. As the wasn't total can be attributed only to Purple advanced, the Indiana second-th lark of eont who could hoot Vm 'ary defense Was drawn up and on a The third smash was intrusted to Capt. Lohman, for Field Judge Thur fx Iliini adherents, were present.

The. Chicago Rotary club in white toques were prominent in the delegation of I ber had told the Hawkeyes they had fourth down, with six yards to gain, a fifteen seconds left for victory, Onct- mbre the charge came straight at the far and high. Badgers Need a Kicker. With a real kicker to, do the business for Wisconsin, Ohio never would have enjoyed a chance to score aside from forward pass, Lane to Chester was incompfcte, and the ball went to Indiana. The Purple was unable to fathom the HoOsiers' attack in the first half of middle of the Chicago line, but Reber and his guards, Stegeman and McGuire, were under the play and thn 500 Rotarians from all over Illinois Thg farmer peddt3 is grain that is, to greet their international president government does it for him; Bsrt Adams of Atlanta.

Ga. Ralph Fletcher, the sterling Illinois back, motors he and children whu, was injured. Just how badly isn't de- No traction troubles bore htm. terminod, but the Iliini were worried. Lockouts n.ay come, and strikes may ball was laid to rest just eight inchea 3se second period found the teams aimlessly against each other i ao chance for a score looming up ny time.

Yale came back with encouraging rally in the third pe-i and the true trusty foot of Jim first touched the mtch to a conflagration of excitement by the score with a pretty field goal the thirty yard line. iile the Yale cohorts were over-t coming up on even terms with "fisers, they found ample excuse into realms of habpiness when the first penoa, -when Hariey attempt-1 tne game and was continually on the ed a place kick from twenty-nve yard gefenflive. When the Purple got pos Jack Crangle, the 195 pound full go. mark. The fact that the scoring oppor session of the ball it was helpless and was forced topunt on the; garbed as a worker came in, ordered a cup of coffee.

As he sipped he kept muttering: I won't pay it. I won't pay it. Three and a half is too much." The well dressed man turned and asked: back, played a whale of a game. His favorite stunt was a feint when he made as if to pass the ball to a fellow back, but instead twisted back and shot at the Wolverine wall which generally crumbled. Once Crangle made two first downs, one after another on this rlay.

He was a first class, imitation of a human battering ram. No Score in First Period. whii ZunDke's fighters did not score 3 same period Braden sent the 4(9Ut in front by kicking another 3 soal from the thirty -five yard line, Brushes Off Tacklers. But neither makes him a boob; He's sailing safe in a sea of And he used to be called a rubel GUY F.LEE. Dry humor may be entitled to due respect, but think how much drier it would be if it were wet.

The Aye Have It. Local foofball Instructors never say xo." Look at tiie affirmatives: Aye. Aye Stagg. Oui. Oui McGilL Si, Si Bachman.

after a few seconds which during the first period, the play plain-; ly demonstrated the helplessness ofj nours long there dasnea maaiy the meiee of players an orange I feck jersey. Two or three Yale The visitors fought stubbornly for four downs and the ball went over when Bahan failed to make the required distance on the fourth down. Hammes punted from behind his own goal posts to the middle of the field. Forward Passes Win Game. A dazzling overhead attack in which Gipp and Kirk were the main cogs bewildered the Aggies at the close of the quarter and the locals advanced the ball to the three yard line, where Stackford promptly cut a patch through center for the first touchCown.

The other touchdown came in the fourth quarter. The period opened with the ball in Notre Dame's possession on its own twenty yard line. A long pass, Gipp to Kirk, netted ten yards, Bahn drove off tackle for three more. Another pass, Gipp to Coughlin, placed the ball squarely behind the goal posts. Bahn kicked goal.

The lineup: the Wolverines ana tne impenuing doom, for Bads had break up a pass on his twenty-two yard line. Early er blocked his path, but he them aside. This Princeton iike one possessed, waged his 'I trough the malestrom of players. Joe Soheprpr. At.

the time no from a touchdown. Timekeeper to Rescue. As the frantic Hawkeyes rose ncc more for a dying thrust Field Judge Thurber started swinging his right arm, tolling off the ticking seconds. Five times he waved and then blew his whistle and the air was filled with maroon colored head guards. It was the most brilliant finish that has wound up any game on StagK field in modern times and the students tore onto the field to cart the Maroon athletes to their dressing rooms.

Two men of the Maroon team wrote their names in indelible ink in Coach" Stagg's record book Charles McGuire and Percy Graham. McGuire. who has been on the sidelines with a water on the knee injury for nearly six weeks and had been allowed to scrimmage only twice since the Great Lakes game on Oct. 11, was a fighting fool in the Chicago line. Pitted against "Duke Slater, the towering dusky tackle from Iowa, he put Ui an exhibition of gameness that will long be remembered by every Chicago fan.

Battered Bu: Fighting. With his nose pushed over on hi face pointing southeast, and the blnol smeared all over his countenance, McGuire fought through the whole second half when it looked as if eacii play was his last. fourth down. Some of the kicks were stnt away by eyelash margins, as the forwards drove through relentlessly. Battle in Enemy's Territory.

By use of the triple pass back of the line, which usually wound up with Brightmire carrying the oval and Lane's clever running, the Purple took the commanding hand in the final period and forced Indiana to fight in its own territory. During most of the final period the ball was either in the Hoosier territory or in midfield. Capt. Koehler played a consistent game in his final appearance in a Purple uniform at home. Although stopped in the first half without making considerable headway, he drove through the Hoosier line and off the tackles for snappy gains in the third and fourth periods.

Lane also played well ad Brightmire handled the team well from the quarter back position. Half Back Bowser was the outstanding star of the Indiana team. He was seldom stopped in his ground gaining attempts. Williams and Kyle also played well, as did McCaw, Donovan, and Mathias. Lineup: "Where can you get It?" "Over on Randolph, but I won't pay $3.50." The Beverly club held its annual no i 'j in the second period tne nuge cran 111 sstuuinx wv gle hit his stride, and after he had beefsteak and onion stag last night.

tuA rlara forl. a sfrrin? wake, this is tunity dawned can be blamed on Gould. He made a miserably short kick just after Davey had fumbled, but recovered Harley's punt on he eighteen yard mark. That jugg rt the pigskin meant at least te' ya.us in Ohio's favor. The toe of Hariey horned into the fray with effectiveness shortly after the fourth period had gotten tinder way.

The Badgers started the quarter with an enforced kick, Gould footing to Ohio's thirty yard mark. Hariey returned the punt on the first down, and on this Davey dribbled the oval all over Badger territory before he finally snared It on his eighteen yard mark. Gould immediately kicked, but the pill had all height and no distance, rolling dead on Wisconsin's thirty yard line. A gain of twelve yards on a boot isn't much. Then the fireworks started.

Pass Not Allowed. Hariey went off tackle for a short gain and Ohio then uncorked a triple pass for the first time during the combat. When the Badgers finally figured out what was happeMng, Bliss had the oval on his opponents" thirteen yard mark, Ohio failed to advance in tsj-o downs and on the next play Hariey started to cut across the field, after which he hurled the pigskin over the goal to Stinchcomb. Wisconsin's rooters went dead with the play, but bi-oko forth with renewed energy in a mo Why." said the w. d.

I've paid this. Everybody was so up- 4 "wo spectators and players, that D3ttereu iua naj tmuiia twenty yards the Iliini were able to jan appropriate column in which to their way goalward without re- make the announcement, course to the air. Walquist went over I and Ralph Fletcher kicked the goal. Cut Heart from League. Head- $8 a quart and glad to get it." Say, wotta you talking about? asked the worker.

Why, booze." "Booze, hell!" responded the work Walquist passed thirty-three yaras er. I'm talking about a flannel shirt." An Article X-Cision. tr. rarncv. Knode broke up anotner meant nothing.

He wiggled Wed along, finally was free, lashed over tjle Yale goal line. Sbie kicked the goal and the score 4 13 to 6 in Princeton's favor, Murray Scores Dropkick. into the fourth Deriod it looked Notre Dame 1131. R. Hayes pass, but Ralph Fletcher place-kicked a goal.

Crangle plowed back twenty-five yards from the kickoff and the Iliini were going strong when the period ended. R. Degre Lovejoy, who was understudying Bobbie Fletcher, went over. Reichle M. A.C.

101. Ramwy L. E. T. Miller L.

G. C. G. FORWARD PASSES OF PENN STATE 4 the safe tactics of the EUs were R. Dooley Tralton L.

Connors missed the poaL r29i. Michigan m. Forward Pass Bring9 Score. ror.u Comrhlin Fransoo. T.

Smith; Uunne E. L. KilejjBoss Norihwestfrn 131. Indiana 21 R. E.

DEFEAT CORNELL Dutch Sternaman returned to the dander, joexi "Dutch" Sternaman returned to tne i petty. Bernard. Donovan E. R. E.

Q. Pearcon; Springer. Q. game for the third period and his IApp sprint took the ball midfield from the cJPler, WUson Daley Risley Pierce R. T-.

R. i. PenfiHld. R. H.

B.Barry. Baban Basset H. B. L. H.

Mohardt Snider R. H. B. F. B.Miller.

StockfordJ Hammes V. B. X.T. .11. G.

Ixvhrie Mumby twenty-five yard line and Walquist Lynch Lanpetistein. Weklerquift Lassiter to bring them victory, but early third period the Tigers again down within striking distance Stiie i-oal line. J'rank Murray ia accomplished toe were called the side lines, and standing on yar(1 mark he kicked 4 Roal. aided by the north wind 11 brought 'the Tigers up on even sain. .1 tying field goal acted like elixir Tiger team.

After this fiell Carrity kicked oft and Campbell sht the ball back to Yale's thlrty- yam ane. Qn the first nneup Jos Is dronned back and took a long ment when the referee called the b-J! back on the claim that Hariey had McCaw B.T. Pojws R. E. Q.

B. Wiiuama L. H. B. moved to within five yards of the line rijaJ2 of scrimmage before he sent the ball Ilf Lane Carney.

Slocum Johnson R. T. ob Flft. ber. Peach.

McGrath.R. E. Q- Sparks a. B. Walquist.

Sad- eston. Knode, ler. Howard' Froemke Sternaman. R. rufe Weston.

K. H. Kopp' Stuart B. To'u. bdowna woiauust.

Sternaman LoTejoy. Vict. Goal from field R. Fletcher GaUsburg Boy Fractures Neck in Football Game UE Gordon I Bowser R. H.

B. V. Koehler fC.JKyle. in ton C1F. B.

Safety S-titt. Goal from field Daley. Rf tetw Chisago. tJmpire oai-ms. West Point.

Fild judge Hedges. Iowa. Head lineman Reid. Michigan. shot a clever pass to Sternaman.

who dodged through the Wolverines for twenty yards to the goal. The Iliini messed up their puntout. Charlie Carney received a twenty-five yard pass from Walquist and the veteran Sternaman picked a nice hole and ran twenty yards for his second touchdown. The fourth period found the IlunI nearly an all' sub affair and here it was that How.rd fumbled to Vick, who made the Wolverine score. Sparks kicked the goal.

The Champaign boy hurling into the scoring zone. Having failed to rcore as planned, the Ohioans switched to the next best means of assault, so Hariey dropped back a bit on the next play and calmly booted his drop kick over the bars Ithaca, N. Nov. 15. Penn State defeated Cornell, 20 to 0, through long forward passes and superior work by the back field.

Cornell at intervals put up a Etiff defense and succeeded three times in holding for downs on the one yard line. The first period was scoreless. In the second, Robb circled Cornell's right end for a touchdown. A few minutes later Penn State worked three spectacular passes, taking the ball to the two yard Ire, from which He3s plunged over for another score. There Was no scoring in the third period, and in the final period a long forward pass, Robb to Higgins, placed the bali on Cornell's one yard mark.

Robb bucked over. No man in the west can make th-s big dark boy from Iowa look bad, but McGuire held him even every step, and when the Hawkeyes three time. tried to drive through him in the hecti finish McGuire etood his ground. Red Graham, stung by the criticisr. of his work at Illinois, when a lot folks thought he was playing too carefully and avoiding every possiblj bump, went out and put up the bos: exhibition of his career.

Red smashe 1 away at the line fiercely, diving Toward when tackled, and at tso tim could the Hawkeyes feel sure that they had him stopped Graham made the. Chicago touchdown on a drive- tackle, he kicked the drop kick that won the game, and he made the long- Touchdowns Stackford, Coughlin. Goal from touchdown Bahan. Referee Gardner, Cornell. Umpire Kennedy.

Chicago. Great Lakes Wins from Battleship Team, 42 to 7 The Great Lakes football team defeated the second battleship squadron of the Philadelphia navy yard eleven, 42 to 7. at Great Lakes yesterday. The game was a loose contest. Great Lakes making touchdowns at will.

The teams were battling on a muddy field that made the going hard. The Great Lakes eleven scored most of Its touchdowns on line plunges, only two of the counters being by the aerial route. He ran across the field for some CHI. LATIN BOYS BEATEN. Lake Forest Boys' club defeated while his mates were holding back the frantic Badgers.

It was an easy boot, i -v ua ivempton naa scooieu ,0 One kMa nf n'in? whM'6 he Chicago Latin school at Lake Forest Galesburg, Nov. 15. Harry Wil-TiaYine end on the local hir directly in line with the goal posts. Badger Keep Vp Fight. yesterday, 12 to 0.

George Moffett, son of Capt. W. A. Moffett, starred fn himself by a twenty school football team had his neck bro soon a game with Peoria Manua the ball to the iivv a eame with Peoria Manna 1 After that reverse the Badgers didn't for the boy's club, while Watson Ar- fe from the Princeton players. Tackles Break Through.

tli Tiger tackles lata we to bring him down, he attempt- jtlaaed ea pse S. colama 6.) that took High here today. He is in the hospital I mour Jr. was a tower ox strength lor vard line. Sadler (Continued on pas 2, eolumm Chicago I tin.

to the In yar-d Sne, Jrlou. condition..

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