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1 14 4 THE SUN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25 1919. Fighting Spirit jof Columbia Earn? It a Tie; Quakers Score Easy Victory Against Their Rivals From Ithaca If, if?; I.' IK X HOLDS BROW TO 7-7 TIE Blno nnd Whi,to Dazzles Brn nonians With Brilliant Play in First Quarter. STNAI BESULT IN DOUBT Jangford Awards Visitors Two Points on Safety and later Reverses Himself. Br FnEDEIUCIC G. HEII. Beaten and bruised,, actually the foot Uall of the gridiron screen -which every body took delight In buffeting around, the Columbia eleven came Into Its own on Ohio Field yesterday. Playing a brand of football far above anything It has .shown this fall the Blue and White closed the 1919 season In a blaze of glory by holding Brown, conqueror of the mighty Dartmouth team, to a 7 to 1 tie. The game developed the greatest amount of football excitement that has-f- been noted at Columbia since the pig skin game was restored at tho Morn lngslde Heights Institution. In many ways the game resembled the Wilson Hughes election of 1916. No one knew how the game had ended until sev eral hours after Referee Bill Langford Ijlew hla final whistler- When play ended the scoreboard showed tho two colleges tied at 7 and 7, and ninety-nine out of every hundred football fans there believed that was jthe score. Then word was passed through the crowd that Brown had , scored 2 points on a safety by Colum bia. No one remembered the safety. The crowd stormed the press tables and wanted to know what the score was. No one knew exactly, except that In the third quarter Referee Langford came "over to the press tables and asked: Why hasn't Brown been credited with that safety?" The score then was 7 to 0. Reporters pursued Langford after tho game, and he then said thov score was 9 to 7 In favor of Brown. The Columbia men were Incensed. Old graduates swore and everybody tried to. recall Just what the rules had to say about safe ties and touchbacks. The Brown rooters, who had been sitting in the west stand, suddenly be gan to let out whoops of Joy. Instead of having seen Brown tied by what was regarded to bo a far Inferior team they discovered that the Rhode Islanders had scrapejl out a, close victory. A Brown partisan took a piece of chalk and rubbed out Brown's 7 on tho score board and made It read 9. Not to be outdone, soma Columbia partisans rubbed out the 9 to 7 score and made It read 7 to 0 in favor of Co lumbia. Columbia Insisted all along that Brown's touchdown In tho fourth quar ter was scored on an illegal forward pass. It was a merry Thanksgiving afternoon. , j Coach Dawson In a. noire. Dawson, Columbia Football Coach, Resigns. COMING as a bolt from a clear sky, the announcement that Fred Dawson, coach of the Columbia football, baseball and basketball team, .had tendered his resignation to the, university cdm mlttee on athletlcsto tako Immedl ato effect, startled Columbia fans yesterday afternoon. Ill health was given as, the causo forhls withdrawal from Blue and White athletics, and his absence from Mornlngslde Heights will bo keenly felt by all: The official announcement follows: "Coach 'Fred Dawson to-day handed his resignation to the Co lumbia University coirimlttee on ath letics. Ill health Is given as the reason for his retirement at this time. For some time past Dawson has not been In good health and he has found It necessary to give up coaching work, at least for tho pres ent, and Is leaving shortly for the West, where he hopes to recover his health. "Dawson's leaving necessitates Co-, lumbla's obtaining a basketball coach, as ho was engaged for that spor(s, aajyoll as football and base ball. No action has been taken by the athletic committee. At a meeting In the very near future that matter will be taken up." SYRACUSE SUFFERS ONCE MORE IN WEST Nebraska Trims Off What In diana loft of Onco Great Team Scoro, 8 to 0. Special Deipatch to Tni Sow. Lincoln, Neb., Nov. 27. Across a wind and snow swept gridiron and In a temperature that hovered at from 10 to 12 degrees above zero, the football elevens representing Syracuse and Ne braska fought a mighty battlo this after noon. The Westerners scored a 8 to 0 victory over tho Invaders. Dobson, fight ing leader of the victors, booted a drep kick from the 30 yard line In the second period. Buck O'Neill said that the playing of the Orange eleven was on even sadder disappointment to-day than In the In diana fiasco at Bloomlngton. O'Neill, oidlnarily averse, to comment In any PENN STATE TRAILS COLORS OF PANTHER Bezdek's Eleven Obtains First Victory Over Pittsburg Sinco 1912 Score, 20 to 0. ' Special Despatch to Tni Scsr. PlTTSnuno, pa., Nov. 27. For tho first time Blnce 1912 the Pitt Panther was forced to bow to the prowess of the Bluo and White of Penn State, coached by Hugo Bezdek, who to-day showed that he knew Just as much about offensive and defensive football as tho groat Glenn Warner. To-day's score was 20 to 0, and the victory of the Center county boys was doclslve, clean cut and left not the slightest chanco of an alibi by tho followers of tho University of Pittsburg. True, the Panthers were without tho services of Jim Morrow and Capt. Jimmy Penn Beats Cornell, 24-0; -Losers Make Fine Fight Ithacan Twice, Hold Quakers for Downs Insido Ono Yard line. By DANIEL. Philadelphia, Nov. 27. With a heavo tnd a toss, and a smash thrown In, tho Pennsylvania football team toro Its way to triumph over the Cornell elevon In their twenty-sixth meeting on Franklin Field this afternoon before 26,000 on lookers. Versatility, power, rhythm and polish were developed to a high degree In the play of tho bluo Jorseyed host aa it stamped across the soggy, withered turf for three touchdowns, and with tho help of a field goal, piled up a score Everybody was running to and fro. trailing coaches and officials to their dressing rooms. Fred Dawson, the re tiring Columbia coach, was exceedingly bitter. "They scored on a touchdown that never should have been allowed' and then they pull a mysterious safety on us." ' "' Ed Robinson, the Brown coach, man fully said: "I don't know what Lang ford called It. but I think the score . fchould be 7 to 7." And then the upshottf the whole matter was that after every one had teen reconciled to the 9 to 7 score and had been convinced that Langford prop erly had Interpreted the rules on Brown's klckoft to start tho second half, Umpire Langford Issued a statement laBt night In which he reversed his de cision about the safety and officially called the game a 7 to 7 tie. "It will have to go as a bad bull on my part," Langford confessed last nlghL "I guess It was the worst one I ever pulled, and after seeing that I had been wrong there was nothing to do but to correct the error as promptly as possi ble." Disputed Play Starts Second Half. The disputed play started the second half, when Armstrong, kicking off for Brown, sent a long spiral hurtling across the field. Applebaum, the Columbia fullback, watched it bound along and then fell on it on the other side of the goal line for a touchback. One of the Brown men said: "That was a safety, wasn't It, Mr. Langford?" Longford re plied It was. "During the excitement of play I got in my mina that the situation was the same In that famous safety In the 1913 Harvard-Tale game. O'Brien of Har vard took a tyckoff In fair ground and then ran behind the line, where he was downed, giving Tale two points on a safety. I made that decision, and noting Applebaum's failure to pick up the ball I believed the two plays were similar. It was a bono on my part, a mental aberration. "I can't say for certain whether Ap pelbaum touched the ball before it bounded over the line, but If he did It would not have changed the situation. The Impetus came from the kick, and it was a touchback." But like some stories which hnv . rlble climaxes only to turn Into happy endings so was It with Columbia's Thanksgiving game. After everybody got all het up Blue and White cohorts settled back last night to celebrate and give ihanks for the tie score, which was a strong moral victory for the New Yorkers. The most rabid roomer In the Mornlngslde Heights section would have been content yesterday morning if Co lumbia could have held the Brunonlans to three touchdown Only One Punt by Brorrn. In many wnys It "was a most singular game. Brown perhaps made a col legiate record by punting only once dur ing the afternoon, and this despite the fact hat Armstrong, Brown's kicker, was expected to make Eccles look bad Jn kick exchanges. Columbia punted only three times, twice in the first half and once In the second. Eocles's kick ing, what little he did, was a vast Im provement over his play of last Satur day against N. T. U. The mechanical skill In the game was well nigh perfect Sevoral forward passes were Intercepted, but there was po fumbling on either side. The only muffs recorded were on occasional for ward passing. It was an overhead game, both teams using the forward pass as Its best ground '"". uoia teams were able to move the ball steadily onco they got possession of It That Is one reason why there were so few punts. Thero seldom was occasion to give up the ball once either team got hold of It However, Columbia deserved tho vic tory. The Blue and White made elgh- "tf om sorimma& asnlnst only eleven for Brown. Up to the last tmarter Columbia had the upper hand when the- Blue and White began to wtl a bit and Brown marched the length of tne item to its touchdown, nut the Providence boys only scored on a touch down that was Just "within tho law" after Columbia har. held three times within their 4 yard line on the third play, actually hurling back the Brown back for a four yard loss. Eccles Shows Skill. Columbla:s so-called "cheese" back field carried off much of the glory. The maligned Eccles played a game that a Stevenson need not have been ashamed of. His generalship was splendid, and his throwing of forward passes was one of tho pretty features of the tiff. Especially did he show up well from fane Kick formations. Tommy Farrell, the basketball star, also played a crack game, both on the of fence and defence. Though baldly bruised he remained In the game for the best part of tho two halves and made some dashing gains. He downed Allbrlght on Columbia's one yard line at tho end of the first quarter, after the Brown end had broken away from Eccles on a long forward pass. Both Moszozenskl and Applebaum showed up strong In bucking the line. Big Klennlngcr, the centre, and For sythe, the guard, did splendid work on the defence, while Welnsteln, the end. worked well on forward passes. A good drop kicker might have brought victory to the New Tork in stitution at the start of the fourth quarter. Columbia had the ball on Brown s 32 yard line on the fourth down. Welnsteln dropped back to the 40 yard line for a try at a field goal, but the kick lacked distance, and Brown got the ball on its own 8 yard line. It never lost possession of tho ball until It crossed Columbia's goal line. Fox Stars for Brown. For Brown Fox, the second Bru r.onlan quarterback, was most successful In advancing the ball. Fox, Armstrong and the Providence ends put over some beautiful forward passes. Williams, the negro ana, also maae several spectacu lar end runs when he was given the ball. Allbrlght Browns original left end. was put out of the game near the end of the first half for rough work. It was one of the few penalties of the gamo, Outside of this penalty there were only two others, five yard penalties for offside In the second half. Each team offended once. Columbia not only dazzled but amazed Its followers by Its offence In tho first quarter, when It scored a touchdown on way on hla teams, issued for publication , o HM; n mi ?bbi,,fKJ' Mfo a statement In which he declared that the Syracuse team, but a short time ago hailed as "champion of the East" Played during Its Western trip In the poorest form of any Orange combination he ever had coached, and that after the Colgate gamo the Orange fell Into the biggest slump that ho ever had witnessed. He said that he could not say one word In defence of his players, and that waa ft wnola ,eam , hlmaelf t0day, say that hover was the Pitt machine so completely befuddled as by the zigzag runs of the little right .halfback, Way, who dodged In and ou. 'of the Panthers at will. He generally took tho Hastings punts and ran back twenty-five or thirty yards. The best that Hastings or Davles could do on ro'.urn of kicks was eight and Un yards. Hess rarely failed to gain through contro and tacklo, and ho a seventy yard advance in fourteen Columbia kicked off and soon recov ered the ball when Applebaum Inter cepted a forward pass by Coulter on Columbia's 80 yard line. After Eccles was thrown for a loss, a triple bass. Eccles to Farrell to Moszczenskl, made twenty yards and placed tho ball In mldfleld. Applebaum smashed through leit tacKie for ten yards, and a lateral pass Farrell to Eccles, mado another nrst flown on Brown's 30 yard line. Moszczenskl and Atmlebaum ach ma An two yards, and a forward pais, Eccles to Kennedy, was good for a first down on the 16 yard line. Applebaum and Moszczenskl each kept batterlnar awav at the tackles and made It first down on Brown's 6 yard line. Farrell gained three yards and then Moszczenskl was pushed over for the touchdown. Wolnsteln kicked the goal. Brown Has Dall on 1-Yard Line. At the end of this quarter Brown had the ballon Columbia's one yard line as a result of an intercepted forward pass, a seventeen yard end run by Will lams and a forward pass from Arm strong to Allbrlght which was good for forty-one yards. 1 Tho quarter ended with Brown maklng'no gain on a smash through the line. When the second quarter started Co lumbia gave a grand Imitation of a stone wall. The Blue and White took the hull irom lirown on downs. The Urnnn. nlans were unable to make four feet lrf lour tries. Brown scored Its touchdown in the fourth quarter on Its only real dlsnlav of the power expected of It After weinatein's unsuccessful effort to kick a neia goal to start the quarter Brown marched the length of the field. Sev. eraP spectacular forward v. enteen yard end run by Williams andl Armstrong's line plunging carried the ball from Brown's seven yard line to woiumwa-s rour yard line, where Arm strong made a first down. Again Columbia braced. Twice the line held and the third time Forsythe broke through and threw Brooks for a five yard loss. Brown then scored on a forward pass. Fox to MoSweeney. McSweeney was standing far behind the goal line when he took the pass. He almost had hla back to the fence surrounding the field, and: Columbia nr- gued that he stood outside the ten yard zone oenina me goal line. However, the officials ruled that he had his tt Just within the ten yard zone, though he had to bend back to make the catch. Armstrong kicked the goal which gave Brown a tie. The lineup: he wished to give both Indiana and Nebraska "full credit for hard earned victories." "We have no excuses' said O'Neill. "Our team played In both games about as poorly as a team could play, and though the pitiful showing is a source of the keenest disappointment, we are ready to bear the consequences.1 The fall of Syracuse to-day was even more inexcusable than In the struggl with Indiana. While 15,000 persons sat shivering In the blast of a biting north' wester they saw the Orange fall miser ably In a half dozen openings that ordl narlly would have paved the way to glorious triumph. To at least four cer tain to be Syracuse touchdowns which woro lost through fjimbllng and through icose nananng or tne Dan can oe at trlbuted directly the overthrow of the Easterners, Ackley attempted one field goal In the nrst period, and It went wide by but few Inches. After that the Orange gen eral when within striking distance of Nebraska's goal line resorted to at tempts for touchdowns, but at each sue cesslve critical point the old bugaboo of fumbling and more fumbling stalked behind the Orange line. Throughout every period the ball, for tho most part seesawed up and down the field, one team and then the other gaining a temporary advantage. Ne braska registered a touchdown In the third period which was not allowed be cause of holding In the Westerners' line. The line was crossed by Swanson, who received a pass from Newman. Tho lineup: Nebraska (1). Brraeuia (0). Swnnson...- Left and Brown Lyman Left tackle Serai W Munn Lett guard. Alexand'r, capf Day...., uentre iiooertaon M. Munn. night turd . ...Thompidn Wilder nisht tackle Hoopla Dana night end Sehwarior Newman Quarterback Ackley scneiienDerg. .Lrfirt nairuacK Abbott Dobion. caDt.RIsht halfback Fallo Dale Fullback Erwlg Goal from field Dob.on. Subitltutet Nebrailfi Hubka for Dale, Wright for llubka, Kellogg for Dann, Fucllek for w. Munn. Syracuse Hlatt for Tbompion, uarana, ror Kauon, uartin ror Abbott, Hteele for Sawyer. Banha for Steele Steele for Daraha. Heferee Burch. Earths. Umpire Davis, Frlnceton. Head linesman Held, Michigan. Time of periods IS minutes, ROBERTSON LEADS SYRACUSE. Ilrotber of Dart month Captain Gets Honor From Orarie. Special Deipatch to Tns Son. Lincoik, Neb., Nov. 27. Harry J. Robertson, brilliant centre of tho Byra- cuse varsity eleven, whose playing this season has placed him In line for All America honors, was unanimously elec ed captain of tho 1920 Syracuse team at an election held here immediately after to-day s game. Ilobertson's home Is In West Somervllle, Mass., a suburb of Boston. Ho prepared for Syracuse fat Worcester Academy nnd played his second year with "varsity this season. Robertson is a brother of Jim Robert son, famous Dartmouth halfback, who", colncldentally, has been elected to lead the Hanoverian eleven during the soa son of 1920. LAFAYETTE OUBS LOSE. Beaten by Wyoming Seminary Eleven, 13 to O. Special Deipatch to Tns Son. Wilkss-Barre, Pa., Nov. 27. Wyo mine Seminary closed the season by defeating the Lafayette Freshmen 13 to 0 to-day. Four of Wyoming's regulars were out of the game because of In Juries. The line-up: Wromlnr (13). Lafayette (0). Jeffrey nirht end Itemvlck iirnr Leu tacxie 1'orter noblnaon Left guard Connor Tee Centre Woldrldge Lewis night guard Dolpa Iloyle night tackle cawthera Shepard night end Lougalsre Miller quarterback Olgnllllat naming jugnt naiioacK uazella Harrison Left halfback Grim Kearney Fullback .Dunnlni Touchdowns Harrison, Boyle. Ooal from touchdown Kearney. Substitutions Handall for Lewis, W. Allen for Randall, fiudnlck for Jeffrey. Yarnall for Harrison. It Allen for Yarnall. Referee Mr. Kline. i ftiunienDurg. umpire air. urace, unernn. iii eaa linesman iir. uooiey, Harvard, Time of quarters II minutes. Brown f7) Brisk Sinclair 13 race Horlng Bf ARMY & NAVY Columbia (7) Kennedy Laft nrt .... Modarelll Left tackle , Forsyth Left guard , Klennlnger Centra L... lunch night guard Nichols Scott nicht tackla ..n. Jnl,n.fnn. Welnsteln night end Allbrlght Eccles... Quarterback Coulter rrrir. ieic naiioacK Brooks Mosscsenskl. night halfback ...... Jemall Applebaum Fullback Armstrong Pcore bT carlodai Columbia 7 0S I Brown 0 0 8 77 Touchdowns JJosieienskl. McSweeney. Ooals from touchdown Welnsteln, Ann strong. Substitutions Columbia) John atony for Farrell, Farrell for Johnstone, Wesley for Farrell, Scott for Wesley, Towers for Modarelll. Brown! Williams for Brisk, Shurtleff for Sinclair, Lathron for Brace, Brace for Hortag, Oullan for O. Johnstone, McSweeney for Allbrlght, To for Coulter, Murphy for Broeta. Shu pert for Jemall, Murphy for Brooks, Bor ing for Brace, Jemall for Shubert Brooks for Murphy. neftreeW. S. Langford, Trinity, umpire H. It Heneage. Dart mouth. Linesman F, a Bergln. Prine. ton. Field Judge-A.' FT NeblArnh.r.t Time of periods It mlnntsa With Way carrying the ball the inter ference of the wholo Blue and White line was Inspiring to every student of foot ball, and It was seen In the first period that Penn State was a sure winner. margins la Hero, The first spectacular play was pulled off by Hlgglns, tho sterling right end. This boy was playing his last game and he gave the best exhibition In nis line ever seen here. Ho was an All America end, was In the A. E. F. and came to Penn State four years ago from the Peddle School at Hoboken. When Pitt kicked oft In the first period Way ran back twenty-five yards, and line smash lng carried the ball to tho Pitt goal posts, where a penalty saved tho local temporarily from being scored upon. The Panthers obtained tho ball their own fifteen ynrd line. On a for ward pass from Hess to Hlgglns the latter ran through the wholo Pitt team for eighty yaids and a touchdown. After getting: riant the first of the l'ltt tacklers he never was In danger of being caught, and the Panthers gave up tho chase, Cubbage kicked goal, and although both sides fought hard there was no further scoring In .the opening period. In the second quarter Pitt did not register one nrst down, while Penn State had eight to Its credit This shows the relative strength of the teams. Hess. Snell and Robb began to smash the Panther line, making one first down af' ter another, sometimes on only two tries. The ball rested finally on Pitt's twenty yard line, where. Hess laid back for kick, as tho Blue and Gold thought But It was a fake, and a. forward pass to Hess made twelve yards nnd sent the ball to Pitt's eight yard lino. There two tries sent Hess over for the second touchdown. Cubbage failed nt goal and the score was 13 to 0. Just before the perioa enaea tne renn siato team acaln carried the ball to the locals goal line, but the Panthers braced and hold their opponents for downs (in tho two yard tine as tho whistle blow. Penn State kicked oft in tne tnira period. McCracken running the ball back ten yards. After three tries for no gal: the home team was forced to kick, and the Blue and White worked the ball back to the centre of the field. In a scrim mage 'Way suddenly emerged from the mass of players nnd ran through the op posing line. Helped by splendid Inter ference by his end and tackle the little State player went over after a forty- seven yard run. Cubbage kicked goal and the score was 20 to 0. Panthers Brace, The Pitt players braced here and were aided by several penalties Inflicted on Penn State. The Panthers finally had the ball on the State 6 yard lino, but all the efforts of Davles, Hastings and Laughran availed nothing. The ball went back to State In the shadow of Its goal posts. Avhen the period ended the State men had the ball on their own 40 yard line. They began hammering at the Pitt line again, Hess, Snell, Robb and Way doing the bulk of the work. Hastings and Davles seemed to bo making some headway for the first time In the came, and succeeded In making three first downs. When they resorted to the forward pass, however, Jt was al ways blocked by a State player. Warner was desperate, and made many substl tutlons. This did not help, however, ex cept to keep the visitors from piling up a higher score. They did come near scoring another touchdown, and had the ball on Put's yard line when a 15 yard penalty sent them back and encouraged Pitt to brace in the line. The Panthers took the ball on .downs nd tried a forward pass one minute be ore time was up. Way Intercepted it, however, and ran to Pitts 23 yard line as the game ended. The lineup LEON ARD'TO START SIX DAY BIKE RACE Three More Teams Picked for Annual Indoor Grind. Benny Leonard, lightweight champion. will fire the shot that will send the riders away on their long Journey In the six day race at Madison Square Garden midnight Sunday. The last three teams were selected for the race yesterday, and were picked from sixteen riders .anxious to enter. They were Bello and Thomas. Keller and Weber and Carman and A. Spencer. Track Manager Fogler Insisted that only first class men be entered, and the field will be made up of the strongest and fastest collection of stars to enter a six day race. The favorite American teams aro uoullet and Madden. Eaton and Kaiser, Eagln and McNamara, Hill and Drobach and Hanlay and Lawrence. Egg and Dupuy and Splesiens and Buysse ore the first choices of the foreign cracks. Ray Eaton will defend his sprint tltln (or the first' time since he won from Frank Kramer In the 11,000 match race to-morrow night at the sprint meet He will compete against his rivals, Alfred Qoullet and A. Spencer, Tho first rider to win two heats will be awarded the prize. Clarence Carman, motor paced champion, wlll'Sjet George Chapman, Oscar Egg and Maurice Brocco In a five mile titled match behind pace. HASKELL INDIANS TVIN. Cincinnati, Nov, S7. The Haskell In dians defeated St Xarler College at football, 7 to 0, at Redland Field to-day. Pitt (0). Eckert..... Herman..., Meamor. ,,, flteln McLean.... Bond Ewlng McCracken., Davles Laughran.. Hastings... Penn State (20). Lett end Brown ...Xett tackle... Cubbage ....Left guard Itauch .... Centre Conover ..night guard Osborn ...Bight tackle Henry ....Bight end Hlgglns . . quarterbacK uobb ..Lett halfback 6nell .night halfback Way ... Fullback Hess Soore by periods: Pht .0 0 Penn State 7 t 0 0 0 20 Touchdowns Hlgglns. Hess. Way. Ooals from touchdowns Cubbsge 2. Mined goal from touchdown cubbage. substitutions Pitt! Thomas for Bond. ECkert for Brown, Xfitrkowlts for Thomas. Aschman for Mc- Craoken, Kratiert for McLean, Oourley for Barman. Bremen tor Hastings. renn State: Beck for nauch. Officials Evans Will ami. referee: uennetr or 1'ennsyi vanla, umpired; Eckels of Washington and jenerson. neaa iinesman.y lima oi penoas, minutes. CORNELL PLAYS SOCCER TIE. Falls to Scoro In Contest With Hnverford. Special Deipatch to Tax Set. Hayxrford, Pa., Nov. 27. In one of the most exclttn? soccer 7Ame.i nvr seen here Haverford and Cornell fought a scoreless tie. The game was thrill ing from start to finish, with Osier, the Red and Black's captain, the star of the contest nOCHESTEll IN A DRAW. RocHxsTzn, N. Y., Nov. 27. On a snow covered gridiron Hobart and Roch ester this afternoon fought to a scoreless tie. In the latter half of the game Har ris of Rochester made a run of fifty yards, being downed on Hobart's 5 yard line. Ogden of Rochester carried tho ball over the line, but lost It on a fumble. WASHINRTON CLAIMS TITLE. Seattle, Nov. .27. Washington ham mered through the California line to a 7 to 0 victory to-day In the closing foot ball game of the Poclfto Coast Confer ence championship race. As a result of the victory i Washington, It was an nounced to-night claimed the Coast title. Red team. With Pennsylvania's superiority In every department of the gamo develop lng at the start, and Cornell unable to become a scoring menaco for even ono fteotlng minute, the game very early re- solved Itself Into a duel betwocn the Quakers' attack and the Ithacans de fence. From tho opening minute of play It became apparent that It was a ques tion of onlyhow far tho Pennsylvania scoring machine would be permitted to carry its operations. That It was kept down to 24 points speaks volumes for the fighting spirit of the combination coached by "flpeedy" Rush. Cornoll has had many a more effec tive and powerful oleven than that which It Bent out on the field this afternoon. It has had many a flashier, many a more resourceful combination. But never was a Cornell team more stub born In Us determination to keep the enemy from Its goal line, or Imbued with a spirit of clean combatlveness which excelled that shown by its Btandard bearers this day. Cornell's Great Stands. Pennsylvania attained its hoped for glory to the full measure, but for Cor nell, oven with Its head bowed under tho weight twenty-four points, there was ltlory In defeat Twice the Ithacans held the Red and Bluo for downs Inside their 1 yard lino. Once on the 2 foot mark. In first period, and again orr the 1 foot mark, In tho second quarter, Penn cylvanla hurled Its full" strength at what had been called tho Thin Red Line. Twice the Quakers rolled right up to what appeared to be certain touch downs, but twice they were thrown back without being able to attain their ob-, Jectivcs. Again in tho third period Pennsylvania smashed Us way to tho 1 yard line. Again Cornell fought back with a spirit that has become tradition on the shores of Lake Cayuga and after three terrific drives Into tho Cornell midst Pennsylvania still was that one yard away from the goal line. On the fourth attempt Pennsylvania aeviatea from the tactics it had used In the as saults which wero stopped In the pre vious quarters and sent Light around left end for n touchdown. Thoso three stands on Us own goal line stamped tho Cornell eleven as an nerrpmtlon worthy of a better fate than a rout, and as tho game hastened toward Us finish oven Pennsylvania neara wero hoping that the fighters from Cayuga would salvage at least ono scoro oui ui the wreckage of'the day. No Score In First Period. Cornell managed to stavo off the In evitable In the opening period, wnicn closed without a score. But in the sec ond quarter t,he Penn machine oegan to get In Its effective licks and before tho period was many minutes old Hoppy caught a forward pass irom uoii uuu Results of Yesterday's College Football Games EAST. At South Field Columbia, 7: Brown, T. At Philadelphia Pennsylvania, Ml Cor nell, 0. At Pittsburg Penn State, 20: Tlttsburr, 0. ' At Morgantown West Virginia, 7j Wash ington and Jefferson, 0. At Rochester Rochester, 0 Hobart, 0. At Ebbets Field Vlllanova, 7; N. Y. Aggies, 0. r At Carlisle Bucknell. 0; Dickinson, 0. At Wllkesbarre Wyoming Seminary, IS; Lafayette freshmen, 0. . . . At Lmicniter Gettysburg,, 1; Franklin and Marshall, 0. 1 ' At Allentown Urslhus, 7: Muhlenberg, e. At Chester Penn Military college, it Delaware. 0. At Charleston. W. Va. West Virginia Wesleyan, 89; Cathollo University of Amor- ' " WEST. At Lincoln Nebraska, S: Syracuse, 0 At Sioux City Notre Dame, 11; Morn InffftMe. B. At Omaha Crelghton, 71 South Dakota, 0. At Colorado Springs Colorado College, II i Colorado Aggies, v. At Lawrence Missouri, 13; Kansas, 0. At Seattle Washington. 7: California. t at. ixmu wasmngton, r, oc uiuis, N.Y. AGGIES BOW TO 1LLAN0YA ELEVEN Scoro Is 7 to 0 in a Gamo Ro ploto With tho Most Start ling Strategic Play. At Dea Moines Ames, 14; Drake, 0. At East Lanslnc Michigan Aggies, 7 Wabash, 7. . At uincinnaii .Miami, i wincuinau, v At Detroit Detroit, II; Holy Cross, 7. At Cleveland -r Western neserve, It Case, S. At Los Angeles Southern California, IS Htflnforrt. 0. At JU1SSOU1& wumngion maio, , Montana, 14. At Oklahoma City University of Okla homa. SV Oklahoma A. and M.. 6. At Alliance Wooster, SS; Mount Union, 0. At Nashville Vanderbllt St: Sewanee, 51. At New Orleans Washington ana ie, 7; .Tulane, 0. At Aliania. Auourn, iij ueuisui At Baltimore Maryland. 14: Johns Hop- tins, 0. . ... At Chanel Hill North Carolina, ; Vir ginia, 0. At Houston nice, u; Antans&s, . At Birmingham Alabama. 14; Missis- alnnl A. and M.. 6. At ueorgevown, ivy. iamrD uoiiosa, 1 1 , Georgetown College, 7. At Lexington iieniucity, ii; see, 0. At Athens Georgia, 0; Clemson, 0. At Chattanooga Transylvania. 14; Chat )...., n At Columbia Citadel, 14; 8outh Caro lina. 7. At noanoke Virginia Military, is; vir At JacKson Mississippi, e, Mississippi College. 0. . At naleJgh North Carolina A. and M-, ill. Wake Forest, 7. At Gainesville Florida, 14; ogletnorpe, 7. At Greenville. S. C uaviason, ti;.jrur man 14 At Camp flKt ump rwo, 7;ryri ctin, m. At Oklahoma city UKianoma,ijj; uma- homa A. and M.. 6. which took Its time about coming to tho field, for tho biggest inrush of spec- tors came right before tile start of tne contest. Penn was helped to Its first touch-i down by a penalty of fifteen yards.l which was Inflicted on Cornell for In terfering with a free catch by Belt This put Penn on the Ithacans' 28 yard mark. Harvey made .three yards and Straus ten around left end. Straus made another ynrd nnd Brunner was stopped. Bell then threw n pass to Hop per and the score was made. Had nrcnk Against Losers. In the third period tfio one big break of the game helped Penn get Us second touchdown. Bell tried a drop kick .from tho 53 yard mark and the ball fell short' It rolled to the 10 yard line, wnero a Cornell man touched It. Several Penn players were right on top of It and It wus Peim'a ball on Cornell s & yard line. Light made two yards, Straus got two more, but Light was thrown for a loss. Hnd Foster Sanford or Fielding Tost or Dr. Williams or any other great ex ponent of football strategy been present at Ebbets Field yesterday afternoon he would havo seen a sight that would have stirred his football heart. He would have seen strategic formations more In tricate than Sanford's famous Rutgers playsi'shlfts more-varied than-any that Minnesota ever attempted, and an open gamo moro open than the most daring ever offered by the Michigan eleven In Its most radical days. Fred Walker's New York Agricultural College' eleven was plttod against tho Vlllanova team, and the Pennsylvania combination imally won by 7 to 0 after a pyrotechnlcal.dlsplay of football on the most slippery sort of field. Theso twp little elevens tried almost every variety of deception known to footboH elevens and showed the effects of crafty hand ling by well Informed mentors. The Aggies suffered more from tho miserable turf than did the Vlllanova men, wrlfewere heavier. And, too, the visiting players showed an Inexplicable margin In speed over their lighter oppo nents. Time and again some wiry little Aggie back, through some sort of well laid etartegy, would seem to bo free for a long dash, nnd maybe a touchdown. But no I The llghtor man would stam pede helplessly In the slippery mud and some hefty Vlllanova player -would speed across the field as If Inspired and un faltcrlngly would bear the unfortunate Aggie to the earth. It seems but tho Irony of fate that the lono touchdown of the game came on straight football after so much of tho desperately spectacular had been at tempted. The third period was begin nlng to wane when Vlllanova obtained the ball about forty yards out Several rushes carried It to tho Aggies' yard line. Hero McQeehan, the big Vll lanova fullback, grabbed the sphere and started a zigzag path around his own right end. He was stopped only after he had plunged through tho enure Aggie eleven nnd across the goal line. This game closed the season for both elevens. The Aggies will be guests of honor nt a dinner at Farmlngdale to night In recognition of their worthy deeds on tho gridiron this fall. Tho lineup : Vlllanova (7). N. T. Arzlea (0). Byrne .....Left end J.Clark Brennan Left tackle .Mom Pickett Left guard. Shay McCarthy Centre Ferguson Casey night guard Wilkinson Kern night tackle Saar conlln nicht end Borna Collum Quarterback O'Brien Duffy Left halfback Nichols .ticiiranv itlrnt halfback Para McGeehan Fullback Winchester Toucnuown McGeehan. Goal from touchdown McGeehan. Substitutions Vlllanova: lletiler for Conlln, Dougherty for Duffy, Duffy for Collum. Cronln for McGrady, Kenny for Pickett New York Aggies: i-aiKner ror Hnay, u Clark ror uogna. Powers for Face. Paire for L Clark. Sutford for Powers, neferee Mr. Hemp- Head linesman Mr.' O'Conneli. Columbia! iims ox penoas, 12 minutes eacn. GE0EGIA TECH LOSES. made a short dash over the line for the f it was fourth down and only a yard to first goal. touchdown. Brunner kicked the in the third period Light scored his touchdown after Cornell had held strong for three downs, nnd again Brunner kicked the goat Shortly afterward Brunner drop kicked a field goal from 29 yards and the Penn total mounted to 17. The third touchdown ramo In the early minutes of tho fourth quarter. Bell heaved a forward pass to HelrfB Miller, who ran nine yards and planteil the leather squarely behind the goal posts. Once more the unerring Brunner booted the goal and the score stood as It was at tho end of tho melee 21 to 0. That Pennsylvania would win had been taken for granted. Cornell's main hope lay In the forward pass and some possible break. The pass was used often enough, but It failed to accomplish anything really worth while. As for the breaks, they never came for Cornell. There was only one development which can be called ft break, and It went ngatnst Cornell and helped materially In giving Penn the touchdown, which was scored by Light Porrrard Passes Frequent. Pennsylvania's attack was varied to a high degree, and Cornell's was only a uttio less so. The Quakers mixed forward. double and delayed passes, line smashes and end runs and made judicious use ot tho kicking game, so that tho spectators wera treated to nn exhibition which far outdid anything seen In the recent Big Three series. The ball was handled quite cleanly by both sides, nnd there was a commendable snap and eagerness in, ineir piay. There were twenty-eight forward passes. Cornell tried tho pass sleteen times and completed It only thrlco, for a total gain of 28 yards. One pass wasJn torcepted. Pennsylvania used the for ward pass twelvo times, and cnmnlAtoi It six times for a total gain of 72 yards, which Included two touchdowns. Cor nell jntercepted three passes. i-enns line plays wero rather l. mentary ana Cornell's were. If nosslhlA even more so. Penn usually sent one or iu men aneaa or tne runner nnd de veiopca spienaid interference. r vil mo wemes to good effect and showed no preference for either sldn. ends always were superior to the Cornell Penn's forward nnisM ro.r . .1.. motNIiart. thrown straight over the line ,iuv uuu men a toss rur nut n tv,. side. Cornell tried to uso tho short pass .... ... s, "v, uuk 11a attempts were too hurried. Not onco could Shlverlck, who usually was on the throwing end, get the delay which Is so essential Tor the proper worklne of the mm non diagnosed the Cornell pass early In the game and usually had the receivers well covered. Cornell appeared to throw the ball to territory rather than to a man, and this system proved futile. 11 was nara to pick out anv ono nr on the Tenn team. Joe Straus was the strongest line smasher, and ner tiaII was the most effective open field nnd ena runner. i runner did somo effective carrying of the ball, but shone with greater brilliancy In puntlne-. Th Penn line showed well at all positions. snivencK railed to do anvthlnir r. markable for Cornell. Bhuler, Carry and Sutton played first rate football. The Cornell Interference was a bit ragged and the carriers very often failed to cut in at the proper places. The day was cloudy and far too wnrm for first clas3 football. The field whs In far better condition than had been expected, though here and there it showed patches of sawdust About 23,- 000 were in the stands, but the seating facilities were not taxed. 'It was a n. resentatlv and enthusiastic gathering, go. Light was sent around iert ena, and the score was on the books. Toward the end of the same period Brunner was placed In a position favorable for n kick by a poor punt by ShlverlcTt nnd the Penn back booted the ball over from 29 yards. In tho fourth quarter, not long after the resumption of play, Shlverlck punted to Cornell's 49 yard mark, Brunner made nlno yards nnd Light got first down nt Cornell's 38 yard mark. A forward pass from Bell to Honper made cigm yams anu airaus maae it iirst down ngaln. McN'lchol got two yards nnd then re- peated. with tho ball seventeen yards from the goal line. Bell threw a pass to Heinle Miller, who dashed eight yards for a touchdown. In the opening period Penn marched fifty-nine yards before It was held for downs and In tho second period It went fifty-one yards, only to lose the ball on downs. Cornell lost forty-five yards on penalties and Penn lost E0. The lineup Pennsylvania (14). Cornell (0). Hopper Left end Hoff Tltiel Left tackle..,,.,.. Knauss Thomas Left guard U. Strauss L. Wray Centre Ilorrall N'ej-lon night guard...... P. Miller Little night tackle Sutton H. Miller night end Finn Hell Quarterback ....Shlverlck .T.Straus Lett halfback Carry Brunner night halfback Schiller Light Fullback "Mayer SCORE BT PERIODS. Pennsylvania 0 7 10 724 Cornell 0 0 0 00 Substitutions rennsylranla, Harvey for Light, Graves ror 11. Miner, ught for Har vey, II. Miller for Graves, Maynard for TItzel, A. Wray for Neylon. McNichol for Light Hex Wray for Bell. Braun for J. Straus, 11. Mllller for Hopper, O Gorman for Maynard, Ellis for Brunner, Peters for It. Miller. Cornell Thowbrldgo for Horrell, Hoag for Sutton. Mackenzie for Carry, Wil son for Hoff, Pendleton for II. Strauss, Dodge for Hoag, Craig tor Shuler, McLaln for P. Miller, Lechler for Mayer, Livingston for MacKenile. Touchdowns Hopper, Light H. Miller. Ooals from touchdown Brunner (3), Field goal Brunner. Ref eree Charles S, McCarty, Germantown Academy, Umpire Wllmer Crowell, Swarthmore. Field Judge Robert Max well. Swarthmore. Linesman Carl Mar shall, Harvard. Time of periods IS minutes. Anbnrn Eleven Sends Tornado to Low rtunn; In lince. Special Deipctch to Tni Sex. Atuinta, Ga., Nov. 27. The Golden Tornado of Georgia Tech went down In defeat lire to-day before Auburn. The score was U to 7. Twenty thousand per sons saw the game. The lineup : Auburn (14). Georgia Tech (7) Olllnger Left end Gulll P.Bonner,.... Left tackle Flncher nogers Left guard Labey Caton Centre Phillips Warren. night suard Dowling H. Bonner,... night tackle Hufflne Prultt -Right end Staton -rrapp ., (juarterbaaic ...McDonough Stubbs Left halfback Ferst Howard Right halfback .7... .Barron Shlrllng Fullback Harlan Substitutions Warren for Sloan, H. Bon ner for nogers, Shirley for Prultt, Prultt for Shirley, Scott for Stubhe, Snider for Sloan, Jvlrkwood for Scott, Georgia Tech Doyal for Hufflne, Scarboro for Ferst, Amiss xor I'liniips. ueDo lor uowiing, Brewster for Scarboro. Bowline for Webb. Referee Elcock. Dartmouth. Umpire David Fultz, Brown. Head linesman Hamilton, anderbllt Time of periods IS minutes ea.cn. CENTRE SWAMPS GEORGETOWN. Wins by 77 to 7 "Weaver Seta Season's Ilecord. Special Deipatch to Tns Son. Georgetown, Ky., Nov. 2 7 Centre College galloped over Georgtown this af ternoon, running up 77 points, while the Tigers put over one marker on a fluke. Their lone tally came In tho third period, when the Centre backs "m!sed a signal and the ball went wild. Moss ot George town scooped up the hall and raced sixty five yards for a touchdown well pro tected by Batael. McMillan got the ball 17 times and never failed to gain. He made fifty-five on one and our runs of thirty yar3 each. Weaver by kicking eleven goals to-dav set a worm s record, with forty-six con secutive goals from touchdown. To day's game gives Centre 4SS points to 23 for us opponents. FIELD GOAL DECIDES GAME. Folloira Intercepted Forward Pass Gettyabnrc "Wins, 3 to O. ' Special Deipatch to Tn Sex. Lancaster. Pa., Nov. 27. By Inter cepting a forward pass by Franklin and Marshall within a few seconds of the end of play, Gettysburg defeated the Blue nnd White to-day In a fine came hv a score of 3 to 0. Bream made a drop kick from the 30 yard line after ths pass was caught BEN DERR A PROFESSIONAL. Barred by Penn Faculty From Plnylne Against Cornell. Special Deipatch to Tin Sex. Philadelphia, Nov. 27. Ben Derr, Tenn's veteran left halfback, was barred from the Cornell gamo for professional ism. Tho action was taken after the Penn authorities learned that Derr, tho South Dakota lad, Jiad been out In Ohio t the most spectacular play when he In last Sunday playing with one of tho pro- terccpted a forward pass and ran slxtv. TAalnnRl tonma nf Alrrnn I a... . .... . . ..-w. . " , un yurus lor a toucnaown. jorneu uui not kmuw 01 mo cnargo anu Penn's action was voluntary. Pard Peace was also declared Ineligible for to-day's game, his trouble being studies. It was supposed to bo Derr's last game for Penn. VANDEItBlLT nEATS BBWAXEE. Nashville. Tonn.. Nov. 27. For fhn twontleth time In the thirty-one years of gridiron battles, Vanderbllt defeated Sewanee this o'fternoon in a sea of mud, 33 to 21. Vanderbllt opened a whirl wind attack nnd soon piled up twenty points. Berryhlll of Vanderbllt made NAVY PLEBBS BEATEN. Anhatolis, Md., Nov. 27. By the clever use. of the forward pass and other variations of the open game the eleven of Williamson School, near Philadelphia, won from the team of the Naval Acad emy fourth class by 21 to 0 this after noon. The midshipmen considerably out weighed their opponents and could gain steadily through the line but lacked the punch or lost tho ball at critical times. CELTICS WIX ON COUIIT. The Celtic basketball team defeated tWT Mornlngslde All Star quintet yester day In the Central Opera House. The score was 64 to 21. NOTIIB DAME TniUMPnS. Sioux Crrr, la., Nov. 27. N'otre Dame University defeated the Mornlngslde eleven to-day, 14 to 6. Tho game was piayea on a snow covered and slippery field, which made accurate work difficult. WEST VIRGINIA 18 TRIM W. & J. ELEYEB Mountaineers Iicgister lono Touchdown Against Team That Defeated Syracuse. Bpectal Deipatch to Tns Sex MOROANTOWN. W. VlL. Vnt. iV . Virginia won a signal victory" here to. I v w4 i? ttoimiKLuu una jeirrrnn l. conqueror of Syracuse. Tho score',! J to o, and tho crowd twice exceed! the largest numbers that ever a gridiron battlo In West Virginia It was a spectacular contest, in whM, CPtn,ln Itodgers, King. Hltc, ?iarr v and Bailey played tho leading roles ta, tho Mountaineers and Erickson, Kiel, and Shields for Washington and Jeffer son. " The big ovent which marked the cnlr scoring of tho contest came early ( tho first period, when a series of srr tacular passes sent Itlp King hurrylM across the goal lino with a pass he hd Just received from Captain Hodeen This decided tho Issue. Thrilling as was this big march of moro than fifty yards, to which should be added fifteen yards In a penalty re. ceived by the Mountaineers, It was tot the only thrill of the game. Waah Ington and Jefferson continually threat ened to scoro. Once West VIrglna took the ball only Inches from her goal Bodgers brought his total of nnix. scored up to 141 to-day and is the lead lng Individual scorer In tho country, Tho Mountaineor victory atoned cm. pletely .for tho defeats by Pitt and Centre College early In tho Benson. Without any dissenting voices the West Vir ginia season Is voted an unqualified suc cess. To-night students nnd thousand! of alumni havo possession of tho town. The lineup: Virginia (7). Wash, and Jeff. (0). Baser. night eml..Canoll (Capt.) Harrlck Itight tacklo stela Betron nisht, guard Oarb:h Bailey Centre Shields Ice Left guard striir Archer Left tackle Henry Mill lift end Lnucki Hlto Quarterback Illxler Lents Right halfback ...Erickson. King Left halfback Kl.'ljnn Rodgers (Capt). Fullback Smith Score by periods: Washington and Jefferson.. .0 0 0 n West Virginia 7 0 0 0-1 Substitutions West Virginia: McCuefor Ice. Washington and Jefferson! Mure for Blxler, Ilrenkler for Erickson. Touch down: King. Goal from touchdown Rod. gers. Time of quarters 15 mlnutei eeh. Officials: Refere Mr. O'Keson, Leh'th Umpire Mr. Moffatt. Princeton. Head linesman Mr. Sugden, Harvard. DETROIT OUTPLAYS HOLY CROSS TEAM Westerners Triumph by Score of 21 to 7. Special Deipatch to The Set. Detroit, Mich., Nov. 27. In a con- teat In which every conceivable trick and stylo of play known to football was uncorked Holy Cross went down to de feat here this afternoon before the strong University of Detroit eleven hy a score of 21 to 7. With tho possible exception of tho punting the locals out played O'Donnell'3 charges throughout The visitors' seven points wero the re sult of a fumbled pass which Casey picked up nnd raced thirty-five yards for a touchdown. A total of eighteen first downs gives an Idea of tho superiority of the Tlueri. Only one first down was scored by Holy Cross. The lineup: Detroit (JO. Holy Crosi (7. Clago Left end Duller Kills Left tackle Corror J.arkln Left guard Caie Kenney Centre Glides Voss....... ....night guard.. McCullo'jgh Bogan Bight tackle flood Kane Itlght end Tounf Brennan Quarterback.... J. Kennedy Moegle Left halfback Gannon Fitigertld. ..night halfback Conner! Lauer Fullback I'lyna Holy Cros 0 0 7 0 I U. of Detroit 7 7 0 7-!l Touchdowns Lauer (!), Fitzgerald, Fits. Patrick. Ooals from tou-hdonns !. (3). Daney. HUMtltutions uotroit, cunsra for Kan, Oormley for Vos.x, Vos for Hozan. Qulgley for Ilrcnnan. Srltz far Lauer. Loving for Fitzgerald, Hi n fir Moegle. Mccormick for Kcnno. Hi o" lor Larkln, Bowler for Brown, Mck nn n nr Ellis. Brennon for Clago; II- i C'roM, Nobeleskl for Case. McGrath for McCsl lough. Shea for Flynn, Fltzpatrlck for Conners. Lagnon for Daly, llrandon for ToUng, Young for Brandon, Haley for Glide, neferee Mr. Lane. Michigan Field udge Mr. Knight, Michigan. Lmpire Mr. Oesterheld, Colgate. Head linesman Lawton. aucnigan. iime oi quarwr II minutes. BJJCKNELL IN SCORELESS TIE. Unable to Score ou Dickinson Fost- ball Team, Special Deipitch t" Tn Set. Carlisle, Pa., Nov. 27. In one of the best games Dickinson has ever played she held Bucknell to a scoreless tie here this afternoon before an Immense crowd on Blddlo Field. The lineup: Bucknell (), Dent llamas Morratt Blnl Bowstef . I'eaia . McDerraotl Daynoa Dickinson fO). Smith Left end Marcys I,elt tackle Dougherty Left guard nich Centr .. Obermlller. ... night guard Healy r night tackle Goeltz Itlght end Wertacnlk Lt halfba- k Hendrur i cipi Davis lllgnt nouuac rL, . Pal Fullback E!n;r Substitutes Dickinson rritenari f' Smith. Morganthau for Oberml.ier. Wit"; fu for Tounr. I'lna for Davis, llu Knell Morgan for Peale. Hendron for M;U(.- mott. Heferee Taggart, fctevens nmi of periods 16 mlnu:es. ro.r. MISSOURI ELEVEN WINS, Take Valley Conference Title of Heating Kniiinn, 13 to 0. Lawrence. Kan.. No 27. The Uni versity of Missouri foothall el--.en to day won the Missouri A'alley Conference title by defeating tho University of Kan sas, 13 to 6. Kansas was outplayed throughout tho game by the more agifrw slve Missouri eleven. End runs by Teterson feature'i sourl'3 playing. Only In the U- " minutes of nlay 'was IC-pms score, when an attempted d-i ' Missouri was blocked aid a twr ard forward pass netted K.. touchdown. . -fire is Avr.vrons Ann defeated. Plain-field, N. J., Nov. 27. The Mltchel Aviation Field football eleven was defeated hero to-day, 12 to 7, by tho Holy Cross Independents. Earlier in the season tho Mltchela kalsomlned Holy Cross, 13 to 0, on the local field. KENTUCKY BEATS TENNESSEE. LrxiNOTOV, Ky., Nov. 27 Kentucky defeated Tennessee at football to-day, 13 to 0. In the first quarter Fuller, Ken tucky fullback, made touchdown on 25 yard and 95 yard runs. uuTHEuroitu limit's TITf.n. Speciat Deipatch to Tni S' n..... kt i 'nv 27. r' ' rs throng of nearly ten thousand lt i'f ford High School football players t"-dJ7 won tho Northern New Jersey inte scholastlo League champions 'v featlng Passaic 6 to 3 in a e ..sa'.a. game. MjADISON SQUARE GARDEN SAT. EVE., NOV. 29th, 8 P. M. International Sprint Champlon'h'P. 51000-MATCH RACE $1000 EATON, GOULETT, SPENCER. Motor Paco Races $500 International Deroy 6 DAY RACE Erg nox ornci: now orEX. rbotM HOC- Maalaon Square. Jtsrti Sot xef,