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Daily News from New York, New York • 181

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
181
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY NEWS, NOVEMBER 1, 1925 ILLINOIS SWAMPS PENN, 24 TO 2 60 Red Harold Grange Runsjl iceman! YALE SMASHES ARMY'S LINE FOR 287 VICTORY Boola-Boola! Bulldog Plays With Mule In i Final Periods. Post Tale litll Wild Against Quakers Bt WILL MIRI'HY. Philadelphia. Oct. 31.

"There he goes!" Earnest, tentive listeners at Franklin field heard the above plaintive call ever so many times this afternoon. The ''he" referred to was one Harold Grange, quarterback on the University of Illinois football team, and how he did go! Grange just Grange licked the University of PennsylvaniaTootball team, vaunted as the best in the east. The it or not, Ju Cavl.) Suirhahu Army tCuut. Kdu S-hm(t Daley Seeaia.il SjMitnlrrt lirnrt By MARSHALL HUNT. Haven, Oct.

31. Army's eleven today was shoved back by Eli Yale into the The Ser- Burt "ethianlsl Benton T. Potla RE. KlinneU yeoman was 24 to 2. Three touchdowns did Hev.

Red! touchdowns did Master accomplish. ik vr 1 By a mighty run he placed his tnales in position to score another. Illiiti. Kit-well arnner Shirely IV-lts-a MttU-rwalnr Browa Smspr L.B... Wilson Ptfce Rotmioli Btiller ft (..

R.T... SWECT It LA. I-' II ZN Red Harold Grange i QuMcSft Thayer Squires Ijeitn ....4 11 Gransp Doug! I. Bntiunf Roarers tinyn I I Iag B. Daugoerty STre by penuda LADY LUCK HELPS DARTMOUTH BEAT BROWN ELEVEN Mil lllimn 1-1 0 24 2 2 I Tou-'bdowns 3.

Britton t. 1 I ia.etlf Knllm nhitit.itbM.a Pwin I Thirty-six times did Masfer Grange 1 "jw'iiis for sier. iu Hake! i Harry Vilson Phil Bunnell Army hero and oc whose team won victory. vice of Supplies. Army supplied' everything that Yale needed to win the annual football game between those two schools so steeped in tradition.

Army today was a feeble, blundering football team, out-rushed, out-passed, out-thought and out- L. t. 1 1 1 i nl c.n 1. th KaH and rsmr if oQinst Iul --s. ruon lor Providence.

R. L. Oct. 31. Hernia for FSrown miirht havp hplri DslrTnmnrh ine ieeoie aeiense oi oia renn.

for inni snyts-r bi- Hake tl WiL-oo. Thompson for i Three hundred and sixtv vards is rdon for Pike. Thorns aueniwii, uul me the total yardage credited to inh. iiiino l-'Mt atJ for li r- Gain Brunonians rait for tireathou Dituarherty couldn't cope with the lady ter Grange his thirty-six attempts. i Some Man! tiranse lor tvaliivan.

Dauherty for Greal-Uouae. Green for l.eonard. tT.tlftran for Ijnmmni for I uIt- for Brilftm Hall for Iiir-i Wi.htnt for nuuutcu. at isibtiu known as luck, ation with the Yale a hall- -araoer. 'oolee for hively.

Fisher for H1(U I til B'lell Kluio RB Alleu Wilson Tou-'hdowm: "Vale Noble. Allen. Rih- xnh). Fotte. Army Wlleion.

Pomtn atUT tru-tiilown Yal Allen 44 1. Army Reetier. Subtiiution: Tale FooKs for Kline. Allen for Foote. Wolfe for Gill.

Bradley for Potts. Fishri-k for Bunnell. Failing for Noble. Foote for Kline. Worlham for Richar-ls.

Harney for Burl. Wadsworih for Allen. for Stur-hahn. Scott for Wolfe. Root for Jn Limlley for Failina-.

Army Trapnell for Siheiffler. Harbolu for Yoemans. Daviit-nn for Hrboli. Hewitt for Buell. B-irn for Davidson.

Reeder for Hewitt. Toemum for Reeder. Buell for Wilson. for Yoemans. l-aniimi for Daly.

Gilbrelti for Buell. Elias for Saunders. Zimmerouan for S--beiffler, Allen for Trapnell. Referee W. Swathnifire.

Vmtire Ed Thorpe. De LmSatle. field judare A. G. Tyler.

rrin-eton. ijBesmtu H. R. Heneae. Dartmouth.

only touchdown was yet to come. Harry Wilson intercepted a forward pass from Noble's arm intended for Potts. Wilson ran more than yards for the Army's only touchdown, drawing farther and farther away from his pursuers as he neared the goaL Reeder, "brought into the game only for the purpose of kicking, did his stuff and tho score was tied. Now, indeed, that gray block of Cadets! the midst of 76,000 lunged themselves as few cheering? sections have lunged themselves before." But tragedy for the Army was impending. Army was in a perilous predicament as soon as the final period opened.

Yeomans was compelled to kick behind the Army goal line. A weak, anemic sort of kick which was knocked down by Joss," Yale captain, snatched cp eargely by Dan Allen on the ten yard lino and another easy Yale touchdown. Disaster. A fumble by Cadet Harding on Army's 20 yard line. Richards, alert, snatched it and almost walked over for a touclfdown.

Again the toe of Mr. Allen and it was, Yale 21, Army 7. Men. we present to you J-unning back, Master tb-tv h. Hnapp for Mtttrwuuoer.

rOIU W.I,. K. 1. Walter team, which has gone through, a vast metamorphosis in two since it was defeated by Pennsylvania a new, live, ambitious Grange. Match him if you can! raw T'im Thorpe.

4'oluaibta. Sovoral mtH.llo -orestorrt team man Charles W. ami J. Fi-ld the big Green team. Two blocked kicks gave the Hanover team its two touchdowns.

4 il ua Ghee. D-rtntouCh. i Yale team. iad recently smeared the efforts of this same young man. One doubted that he would be able to kttain any great heights in this, has first eastern invasion.

But hat astounding footballers they must have in the midwest when they can quell this marvelous Grange! No observer who witnessed this after Brown had fought the visitors to a standstill and stopped the vaunted at that clean-limbed young athletes are given to. "We will stop this iceman, this Grange, was their high resolve. Master Grange received the following kickotf on( his own 15-yard line. "There he goes!" When brought to earth. Master Grange wa resting hannilv on the Capt.

Oberlander Ihe score: Yale 28, Army 7. Stopped! Why, it was not until the third quarter in the gigantic Yale Bowl this afternoon that Army, uncon-quered until it met this Eli eleven, made its second first down of the game! Why, according to my notes. Army made only three first downs during the entire game! There was no semblance of attack by the Army throughout the altercation! It was not a great football game, tack which crushed Harvard last week. The score was 14 to 0. Brown, outplaying an apparently overconfident Dartmouth eleven afternoon's doings in the I i i if 1 A Pa Micrvy 5-yard j-lime of Franklin Field can doubt 4 AUnrJ rn w.

tnat Master Orange is one of the ball followers will instantly sus- (throughout most of the game, saw 5." rwr pM vhee. what a runner! ia touchdown on its own behalf ect. Vhee, what a runner! "Bang-Bang-Bang. same rep- snatched away by the same brand -r Uan.Br., fullback, but the line plunges, i of luck, an official calling back a jvruez couiq not nave avanea i- a i so tar as ortnoaox loot Dan was against the Grange. -There he goes!" jafter Stiff.er had Uken a pass from concerned.

Old Philip Fluke him- Sosey Field. Same representing a 12 yard end Mishel and raced across the Green f'f ofn. intruded himself, by blaster Orange. Bang, a 1 line 1 ruiM uas uusira unu- The field, one suspected at first self on gridirons in this land since sight, was in no condition for oy waugnerxy. nam.

Reefer was attempting to punt especially busy to- ter Grange to do himself justice anotht'r smash through center by from behind his goal line in the wa covering of straw Karl and there you had second period, and Phillips sifted Pnranir away a greasv black another Illinois touchdown. through, blocked the kick and fell one mf" 1896. He was Army into the game assuring Yale of i When the night' ights was cleared I slime was revealed. Sizable falt -i on the ball for a touchdown In; iii, rennsy puni irom tne toe oi the fourth period Tally aid tne i. i 1 Charley Rogers stopped just two same trick.

way. to the Yale bowl. Far! i "'S. snow un toe yards from the Illinois goal. A bland sun, promising at Britton's attempt to kick out of in the first Quarter.

The Green danger was blocked by a Penn line- showed a strong running attack man Seiracki, say some of the and aerial game, and at one time keener observers and Britton had nearly scored a touchdown, but to fail on the ball behind his own Oberlander's' pass was grounded safety and two i behind the goal line goal line for a Dartmouth scored early in the points for Penn. second period when Phillips blocked a punt and fell on it behind noon a comfortable warmth for the folks in the gigantic amphitheater. The game started fifteen minutes late because the cadets of West Point, making their journey here in motor buses, had been delayed. Larry Noble, Dan Allen, Richards and Foote were the youths who made the Yale touchdowns and it was this same Dan Allen who four times kicked for extra points with a toe whieh knew no failing, an accurate, seemingly intelligent -toe. Noble Does Well.

In.su It to Injury. Crowning indignity for the Red Brown's goal line. Tully kicked the Al Kruea AI Leith ian Blue; not a point can Pennsy's Ptnn captain jimd Quaker pilot men score for themselves, but must mhos ptaym failed to gain. take two as a gift from the in-fles besprinkled the playing field, vader. goal.

C. C.N. Y. DOWNED BY HAMILTON IN EASY STYLE, 12 count is written in the gathering indefatigable Rogers, and the shadows of an October night. march of the Illinois was on again.

The first period was one of the City college was greeted by over weirdest punting duels one ever' -so ne.a iv orange, said the A tew short gams then. crowd, and settled back to await: "There he another Penn victory. This crowd, yard end run goes!" An eighteen turned to its home grounds after! 'T" rVp rR 7 by Grange, then fif- an absence of three weeks, to West Point Both teams Later a pass, Failing to Fish-wick, took the ball to Army's 2 yard line. A Yale plunge. Another crash at Army's midriff.

Another assault and Foote had carried the ball over for Yale's third touchdown of the period. Mr. Allen daintily shoed the ball between the uprights. BOSTON U. SWIM Boston university's swimming team will engage in five meets next year, according to an announcement at Boston university recently.

They open their season on Jan. 9 against the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. PITT PANTHERS. MANGLE DOCTORS BY 31 0 SCORE Pittsburgh, Pa Oct. 31.

The University of Pittsburgh's fourth consecutive victory since Lafayette put it out of the running for eastern honors was recognized against Johns Hopkins on a muddy field today. The score was 31 to 0. Neither side made use of tho forward passing attack. Pitt's ability to dominate the situation was made clear early in the game, when Booth scored the first touchdown after he and McCutcheon carried the ball from their 44 yard line. A "costly slip of the wet ball from Taylor's hands resulted in De Moise scooping it up for Pitt's second score.

A 22 yard run by Schmitt made possible Pitt's third counter. Grindle, a substitute left half, made the feature play of the day when he got loose for a 57 yard run and a touchdown. Hoban, an- other substitute, made a spectacular 47 -yard run to the goal line on toy the way. must have numbered teen for a tout- hdown by the same defeated bv Hamilton 12 to 0. i tne wincr uoe.

nuw oruisea ana around bO.000. That was the seat- doughty performer, and Penn was The Lavender firidders took the battered that hall must have been! ing capacity of Franklin field to- scored on again. field with five of their regulars out ami he rn re nn vi KI Tn tKa i I hit jrfr tlSoeA wae I i (lit? liinruif uuc i. iiijuiicst vavu seats. i some punting before Illinois began Phildius, suffering from a shoulder Butthat crowd all SO.000 of traveling from midfield.

The injury, gave over the command of "them were not long in finding dis- hitherto obscure Daugherty found the eleven to Allie Drieband, In the second period, Yale not only threw a scare but seore'd a touchdown. With only one minute to play, a situation for any striving novelist, an arching pass, Noble to i Gill, netted 40 yards, taking the ball to Army's 14 yard line. A lliusiun. KtcKoii, an exenange oi a hole in the fenn line, romped tackle. punts, and Illinois had the ball on through it, and plugged forward.

The second quarter started with 1 1- A 1 i i j.uir i wtriiL y-uc dint: tiir a ruML on Lne partv ui me viaitors. plunge. A crash. Master Noble- aen array ine Mrnmrnage most amazing play of the game, two first downs being made in -ana ine oau is snappea to orange, and perhaps of any game. first four minutes.

After a series rThere he goes! Britton threw a forward pass to of forward passes the Blue brought "There He Goes!" i Lasalle. an end. who tossed the ball the ball down to Citv eolleire 6 down to City college 7 A yellow" headed meteor flashes hack and far toward the side line, yard line, where a forward pass again was performing xor aear old Eli. The end half a minute away. Noble broke through the Soldiers, scattering them hither and thither, and before he could be stopped he had crossed the goal.

Lighthouse Harry. Third period and more punting. Cadet Trapnell, within three strides of a was hipped by a Yale player and fumbled. A great Army chance for a touchdown muffed. But Army's chance for its fetween right tackle and lue receptive arms oi cer-: to Keepon scored tne nrst loucn-traight-arms a Penn halfback! tainly.

Red Grange. Another; down for Hamilton. In the final lJges another, tramples down theH touchdown, to be sure. Nothing i quarter a long forward to crosses white line happened after that, except ness gave the visitors their second white line, and suddenly II-J that Grange made a forty yard run touchdown, linois has a touchdown. jafter a while.

Illinois sent in an) Poor Pennsy gaped open- entire new team as the game drews ir. o. A. 1 DAY -nouthed! to end. and still poor Pennsy A speciaI p.

S. A. L. dav, on fcinu- orT. the vounsr men of i cola no1 a a wing.

which all kinds of sDorts will he the sturdy pictures on ge Si,) I contested, is being planned the first play of the last quarter. 3f- i.

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