W'W ' 20 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEK PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1919 THE ONLY TITLE AT STAKE WHEN YALE MEETS HARVARD IS THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF CAMBRIDGE LITTLE CHANCE FOR WOBBLY DOPE TO GO MOVIE OF A MAN HOLDING A STRANGE KID JlGieS BM5Y UP wD JDOwM BA6Y BeC0M6i PLAYFUL, CHlLD TaKS Toes Tt THSiMfiN WRONG TOMORROW "M ?ffJl rie 4o I Tocsr 7 v-r- M' Yale and Harvard Meet jor Title of Cambridge, While Haver ford-Stcarthmore and Lehigh-Lafayette Struggles Are Fifty-Fifty Affairs ISy ROIIKKT V. MAXWKI.I. Sport Illtor turning l'uhllr I.rilrrr (Copirtol't. 1010, bu Public hrtlaer Co.) , YJT7TTII the playing of tomorrow'!) games tlio 11)1!) football season by far the most successful in the history of the sport will prepare for the high dive and crawl into oblivion. (Inly two more days of football remain, Thanks giving, hcn the college season will be officially closed and the following Saturday when the Army nnd Xavy stage their strenuous and highly Inter esting tilt on the Polo Grounds. Tomorrow, however, is another big day on the gridiron, but unlike other Saturdays the dgpe does not figure strongly. Victories nnd defeats will 1)6 received with perfect nonchalance, or words to t'tat effect, because the con tending teams figure nbout even-Stephen. The reason for this optimistic view is that only one guiiie of national im portance is on the billboard. Of course there arc others, but the real, big act will be staged up in Cambridge, Mass., when Yale and Harvard play for the championship of Cambridge. That's the only thing left to play for, but a champion is a champion even if if does come from Cambridge. Therefore, may the best team win which Is usually the case. While this terribly exciting struggle is going oil other teams will be tear ing up their fuvorite gridirons with reckless abandon. Lehigh and Lafayette have a private grudge to settle in South ltethlehem, l'a., Swarthmore plays ih) big game with Haverford at Swarthmore, Georgetown clashes with Wash ington and Lee at Washington, Pittsburgh will practice with Carnegie Tech, W. and J. has a date with West Virginia Wesleynn and Wes. Virginia tackles Ohio Wesleynn. There will be plenty of excitement in the Middle West when Ohio State plays Illinois in Columbus for the conference title, Chicago takes on Wisconsin and Michigan will take a chance with Minnesota. Syracuse, fresh from her victory ovdr Colgate last week, is scheduled to perform in Tiloomington, Jnd., against the University of Indiana. 0 VTSIDE of that, there's nothing doing in football on Xoicmbcr 22. Nevertheless, it is an attractive card, because the sectional cham pionships icill be very interesting, in the home towns. Large crowds Kill attend and things like that, but nt icas said before, the eyes of the notion are on the llarrard-Yalc fracas. Experts Favor Harvard, So Watch Yale ITUUS is the .first time the tenras hnc met since 101(5, when the Blue put over an unexpected 0-to-3 victory nnd converted the classic elms on the campus to n llock of weeping willows. Harvard did not like that w.alloplug tits least bit and will endeavor to avenge that smear on the record. For four years before that the Crimson walloped the daylights out of Yale in lopsided games, the scores ranging from 15 to G to 41 to 0. Therefore, the sudden reversal in form was not easy to take in 1!UC. A Tka Anna nn hia tinttln I ntnnlntr lllil null .nmp nf ih dmnrte nt i rim nninion that Harvard will slide under the wire with a victory. Perhans this dope is correct, but it is pot strong enough to make one hock the family jewels or mortgage the old homestead. Harvard has gone through the sea son without a defeat and Yale has been socked twice, but that docs not presage another socking. Harvard breezed through a Vassar schedule, winning tough games from Bates, Colby, Virginia, Springfield, Tufts and other high-class teams, while Yale tried the same thing without so much bucccss. Harvard tied Princeton because of a Princeton mistake and Princeton beat Yale wnen Ynlc erred. According to Hoyle the Tigers should have defeated Harvard whilo the game with the Blue should hae resulted in a tie. However, that hort of stuff makes football interesting and, anyway, whnt's the use of dragging in the what-would-have-happened dope? According to our viewpoint Harvard has been extended only once this year and a ninth-inning rally averted a trimming. It was like a pitcher closing his eyes in the last innLg, tnking n wild swing nnd knocking the ball out of the lot with three men on base. TAIiE, on the other hand, has discovered on two mimorablc occasions that it is possible to otr a football game and will not forget that pair of lessons. The team will not be overconfident tomorrow. N Casey the Punch in Harvard Attack TOW let's do a little figuring on this game. ale was panned last week be cause her attack was not strong enough to score n touchdown against Princeton aud some of the spectators insisted the plays were too old to be of value In 1919. Perhaps those' in the stands imagined such to be the case, but out on the field tremendous power could be seen in every move. What probably happened was this: Doctor Sharpe had n system of offense t,o be used only against Princeton and something else to spring against Harvard. It's a cinch bet he has a swell aerial attack on tap and this will be mixed with the line-plunging game used against the Tiger. At that the line plunges would have been successful if u few forward passes had been Used, to keep the secondary defense off the line of scrimmage. This will be (lone tomorrow . Those who have seen both teams piny say there is little to choose be tween the rush lines; in fact, Yale seems a trille stronger in that depart ment. The Blue backfield is bteady and capable of playing a consistent game, but there are no Eddie Caseys on it. This Casey person is the big punch in the Harvard attack. He is the greatest fighting back the Crimson has had since the days of Dan Hurley, nnd that is saying an armful. His fighting spirit alone kept his team together in the Princeton game. ' Eddie's strength, however, is in his all-around ability. When he Is be hind the line the opponents do not know what to expect. He can run, throw the forward pass and also is one of the niftiest receivers of passes wo have in the game. In other words, he is almost tho whole team and Yale will have to watch him closely. If Eddie were out of tho game Harvard would he weakened CO per cent. rllll Crimson attack will be powerful, as Percy Haughton has been on the job for two weeks and arianged it after studying Yale's defense. The Yale attack also has been doped out to baffle Harvard's defense, to there you are. The team receiving the well-known "breaks" tcill come out victorious. Lehigh and Lafayette in Closing Struggle T 'EIIIGH and Lafayette will play n very hard game, and this, too, is a ''-''fifty-fifty affair. At the start of tho season Lehigh looked like a sure win- ttr, but Lafayette lias improved 'wonderfully and evened things up. For tfcu first time in years tho Eastonlans will go into the game on even terms V.'ith Ready's men. Swarthmore and Haverford will stage a tough battle with neither the fjiVorlte i the early doping, Pittsburgh should hav an easy tjrae with Car negie Tech, r Ohio State, with Chick Ilarley runuing on all twelve cylinders, should &. Illinois and cop the' conference championship. t 'iptyiVJt our only prediction and tee are taking a chance because It it tW'WPI w ye ' "' Pft KJi, Sees To B Particularly Fond of, Th(S; NrN. OF child That IT'6 QUITd ALL Right FOrsiD op SA8BiS eTC.6TC, A Ttr - BUT 3HOUUS MILLtrsSrvJESS R6Ur4Q.LMSfcJ CHILD To ifS" PARENT, CLOTHING NOBODY HOI BAD Fi OR GERMAKTOWN Camden Again Defeats Subur banites and Increases East ern League Lead FIVE STRAIGHT SUCCESSES LIGHT LEHIGH CREW A WAITS LAFA YETTE Ready's Hopefuls Expect to Offset Eastonians' JVeight With Speed When Teams Clash in Annual Grid iron Classic at South Bethlehem Tomorrow EASTERN1 I.KAOUE STANDINO W. I, I'.C- TV I, 1' P. Camden... fi i) 1 (Ida n JJwl. . . 2 3 400 (Jprmant'n 4 2 .007 Itenrllnit. . , 1 4 2lo N" PhfU.. 3 2 .COO Trenton. . . 0 fi .000 SCHEDULE FOll TONIGHT North Philadelphia at Trenton. SCHEDULE TOR SATUIIDAT NIOIJT Trenton at De Neri. Cnmden at Ileadlni. Germantown traveled over to Camden last evening to tumble the Skeeters from first place, but as nobody on the sub urban team was nt home iJuritiR the official forty minutes of play, it is sad to record the fact that Armv ritKer ald's Ranpt suffered its second defeat of the season, the first aNo having been inflicted by Hill Kennedy's new buddies. The suburbanites all had an olT night altogether, nnd not n man on the team even got a fifty-fifty break against his opponent. I'ven Harry Frnnckic, who has been scintillating with a brilliant that leminded one of the time he first showed here with the famous Utica ciowd, was decidedly off color. Tahn Lead at Start The largest crowd of the season greeted the eouibntauts as they started the fray, and after Simiudincer opened the proceedings with a foul goal, Dave lverr proceeded to switch the advantage with a two-pointer. Then it was that Ocrmnntown flashed its best form of the veiling. lasting one full minute, during which Itlack nnd Franckle made field goals and put their tenm ahead nt fi-2. Near the end of the period the visi tors scnied again, the goal going to Lawrence. All the Skeeters did was to add eight more, or nine for the entire half, which ended 1!)-S. Camden only made one foul goal in the first twenty minutes, and that by Campbell, simul taneously with the bell. Second Half Toor Both sides were off in the second half nnd only 21 points were made, 10 by Camden and 0 by Germantown. After playing nbout teii minutes, Carney re lieved Hilly Illack. . The scoring ran even during the period, first one side getting a point or two aud then the other. Of the- goals scored, however, many of the Camden shots were really good ones. All told, the Skeeters registered 13 field goals against 7 for. Germantown, They went to : Kerr, 4 ; Steele, 3 ; Campbell 3; Dolin. 2; Dieglinn, 1; Black, 2; Powell, 2; Franckle, 1 ; Law tence, 1, and Sirnindlnger, 1. The lat ter played Steele, and Hoy secured all his baskets in the first half. The last time Cy played Hoy the latter was blanked. The game also marked the re appearance of Campbell, who has been out of action with injuries. 200 Harrier Schoolboys Entered New York. Nov. 21. About 200 school boy harrlera from New York city. Nw Jereey, Pennsylvania and ui-stats will to the mark tomorrow afternoon at Van Cort landt r.irk in the annual lnterscholastlc cross-country championship, under the aus pices of Columh.a University I5y SANDY MrXIRLTCK LEHIGH'S light and highly polished grid machine is set and pointed for Lafayette nnd the c!al-';ic of the Le high Valley tomorrow. A whale of a smoker will be held to night for the student body mid the rabid fans of the town. Coaches, alumni and a couple of the players will harangue the japping throngs, lletting, on the eve of the classic, is even-Stephen, Lehigh has one of the lightest teams In the country, among those with a proud record, but to offset this it has speed speed that rolled up an imprcs sue total without u score by the op" ponents np to the Pitt game. Davies, of Pitt, .ruined the record by getting away .for 'a long run in the dying mo ments of the last period and then grab bing a forward pass of Lehigh's for an other nnd two touchdown', Pcnli State followed with n crusher also, but those two games have done anything but take the heart out of the Piown and White. The team is looking to tomorrow. Nothing else back there on the muddy trail matters if Lafayette is handed a licking. Since the State gnme the team has been climbing 'steadily to the hoped-for ciest of the season's form. The team is scheduled for the lightest of work only this afternoon. Woik consisted of kicking and a sig nal drill yesterday. The coaches con centrated their efforts in perfecting the varsity in their new formations. The men ran through the signals with a smoothness and snap which was the best seen since the men have been given the new plays. Harry Itote appeared on the field to day, none the worp for the hard bump received in yesterday's scrimmage. UN appearance has relieved Coach Kcadv of a lot of anxiety. Coach Kcady shifted Siniindinger back into the nrsity backfield yesterday in place of lleutzelmau. It looks a-, if this is the last chnngo and that Keadv has definitely decided to use Sirnindlnger in one of the halfback positions at the start of the game. The rest of the backfield remained unchanged, with Herrington nt quarterback, "NVysocki at fullback aud Savaria halfback. Light Team The whole method of play employed by the Lehigh team this season is care fully calculated to get the most effective results out of the rather light team, which averages only nbout 101 pounds The guards and tackles are a husk; quartet, but the remainder of the squad tip the scales at weights that look like those of an ordinary high school team, Arthur Herrington has been holding down the quarterback berth since his re turn from the service. He directed the team play In 1017 and is a capable quarter despite his scant 130 pounds. Rote, the former Gettysburg star, has been giving Herrington a battle for the qunrterback post, hut will probably be shifted to halfback. In weight he has little on Herrington, for he barely lifts the beam to 135 pounds. The other member of the regular backfield is Savaria, the ex-Woonsoeket High player, whose 5 feet 0 inches and IfiO pounds arc accompanied by the How Lehigh-Lafayette Have Spent the Season LEHIGH 47 Vlllunmn . . 0 l:s llrslniis (I 10 KulcerH . . 0 fil N. Y. Aeirlrs 0 10 I'lirnecleTech 0 o ritt ... .it 7 re-nn hta( 20 33 Miililcnhcre . 7 IM Total 41 I4AFAYKTTK 1.1 Miihlenlirre. , A 0 Princeton .. O 41 Haverford.. . 0 0 Tenn 23 21 Pornell .... 2 4S Dhkliwon .. 0 35 Trinity .... 0 101 Total 40 ability to pick openings in the line, skirt the ends, form interference or back up the line in great style. AVysoeki at fullback is a real star. This will be his last jear with the team. He first came into gridiron prominence with the A'-bury Park High team. He is over (I feet tall and weighs 170 pounds, being of the rangy, fast type of big man. Around him much of the Lehigh of fense Is built. He is versatile, can buck the line, circle the ends, throw tho for wards und do anything necessary for a back. The varsity line averages about 170 pounds. The ends are a light pair. Laikin on the left wing weighs 100 pounds and hails from the Worcester Academy. On the other wing is Mike Wil-on, who gained fame with North east before he went to Muhlenberg, where he plajed one year before enlist ing in the marine corps. Wilson weighs only 153 pounds, but rates with the best ends in the country and has no peers as a snarer of forward passes. Strong Tackles Lehigh is strong in tackles. Joe RraRna's three years of brilliant per formances with the Brown and White were preceded by some preliminary seasoning at Williston Seminary, Mass. Spngua is a great lineman, weighing 100 pounds, nnd being possessed of un usual speed for a heavy player. His running mate is Edwin Booth, who cur- vlnc 1 V0 i,Atin,la Intn ntinn wttli li! t, n. i.- r,-i i..i ii!..i' i HnlA of lifted cara jjumii ii.im ii uiuuimue illgu A vr. vnriniiR orices team, in addition to being n star loot- I mar,tee Mi-vlce; caeh payment, one. iiuuer, lie iioius ine j. i.i-pounii inter- .Third of purchase price; conegiaie wiesuing ciininpionsnip. xuis i monthly payments, is the third year for both Booth and TjCXinfrton Motor Co. of Penna. Spagnn in the varsity. lAAuihwi'"1""' tj. 'Lehigh is without the services of WM. A. KUSER, Vice Prjldent I.exiinton Bulldlnir, 1151 N. Broad St. George McDonald, captain of the team aud left guard. McDonald ripped the tendons in one of his legs early in the season. McDonald has been a regular for three years since he came from the Boston Latin School. There is just a chance he may get in tomorrow. On the other side of the center is It. T. McCarthy at right guard, a 175 pounder from Easton High School, who is putting in his second season as a regular. Lehigh has a diminutive center in Ilvinnn Goldman, another Easton High lad, who has weathered the gales of thvee seasons as a varsity player in spite of his mere 145 pounds. This is the team with which Lehigh is confident of whipping Lafayette to morrow. YALE AND HARVARD REST Take It Easy Today on Golf Courses for Relaxation Boston, Nov. 21. Brief practice and then relaxation until the battle to morrow were the orders today for the Harvard and Yale football teams. The straw blanket which will cover ti, fnntTTnll field in the stadium until shortly before the game was lifted tern- poraruy so mat tue have a workout. Yale team might LEXINGTON 60-day le- baJanca 10 r u fl i r$A Wy 'V";,'iirpg f. The Biggest Selling Scheme Yet SUITS k OVERCOATS Direct From the Maker to You Real $30, 535, $40 Values 1 T.SO 0 0.50 Now JL a 5 &?.. . 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The Emerson shoe will give you more per dollar than you can get elsewhere. yJr Zs0W van txx. j Genuine Shell Cordovan Brogue Open Evenings 34 North 13th Street SeUmmbtrt '. j i SCHEDULE FRAMERS TO EXERCISE MORE CARE NEXT SEASON Committees That Arrange 1920 Football Prograhis Are Almost Certain to Be More Careful TJian the Ones Who Arranged 1919 Games IN THE gPOItTLiailT BY GUANTLAND RICK Copyrls-ht, 1010. All rights reserved. Over the Last Trail Pretty near Thanksgiving Dqy again; Pretty near Thanksgiving Day, and I . Find myself so far away, Far from where old faces drifted hy; Through the street old echoes rise and call, . ' Where the city's millions drift and roam; 1 As I sit and look beyond it all Dreaming of Thanksgiving Day and home, J Time has got a way of drifting fast 4 " Through the glint and gleam of summer'e light; Time has got a knack of rushing past In the stress and tumuli of the fight; But somehoto the days have lost their sweep In the gray of old November's gleam, When a fellote's sitting, half asleep, fjreaming of Thanksgiving Day atii home. ' Who can ever say how long ago You and I got off the beaten wayt Called from all the dreams we'used to know That are now but wraiths of yesterday! Far and near the tumults rise and falli Where these walled in millions drift and ream, But I sit and look beyond it all, Dreaming of Thanksgiving Dayand home. . CIIAItliES MOHAN coached Center College and Pat Moran manaeed th Cincinnati Itcds. When in doubt you know what name to send for. Concerning Legs ' NO, THIS has nothing to do with a description of some chorus. It ia merely some interesting testimony, from a keen football observer who has been following the game for more than thirty years. "I'll tell you who the greatest of all llpemca. was," he writes. "Hcficlfinger. "I'll tell you where Ilcff had it on the others, nig legs yes, his legs Ever see those legs? They were both charter members of the original pile- drivers' union. And each one was just as good as the other. "Heff had many battles with men as good as he was in other ways, but those legs of his drove him through or over. What a treat it used to be to' see him get out to end after the hall was put in play, take care of tackle or end nnd pull a halfback around the corner. Oh, boy! I've never seen a guard since that equaled him. " tlMA.RE, De Will, Glass, Bill Edwards eh, there .have been a lot " of corkers. But only one Heffclflnger. Only one." Haven't You? PUNCH reports tho sad case of a golfer who mistook n mushroom for his ball and unfortunately played live strokes. before he discovered his mistake. Quite possible. We hnve played eighty 01 ninety strokes where we could have sworn not that the mushroom was a goll ball but that tho golf ball was a mushroom. 'THERE are days when it is almost impossible to telt the difference. Stepping Into Fast Ones Tlllb is going to be an unusually nervous winter for makers laying out the 1020 program. For example, Princeton this fall took on West Virginia for a Saturday between Colgate and Harvard. West Virginia took on Center College to obtnin a breathing spell after the Princeton game. The schedule maker can never tell these days at just what moment h will step into n fast one', about neck high. "" DtfT there icill be more careful thought than usual expended lefore the 1920 program is completed. football sche3ul restful JHBh I QimMn vfiWssssHiwJiAA'-alBPqBKftlwXx ". 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