The Free lance. (State College, Pa.) 1887-1904, November 01, 1903, Image 30

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    Tit Bohemian cheerily loans you his last nickel to prove his
incndship : moreover. he considers you treat him shabbily sf yogs go
thxtngry while he has the price of your dinner. Herein lies ttbe
'iESerenre between plutocrat and pauper. —The IdeahsL
The foot hall learn met its first defeat on Franklin Field. Sat
urday, October toth. The score. 39-0. merely indicates what
Stare's Team could do against Penn's heavier one osa a very
muddy held. Again, with Whitworth out of the game susd sev
eral others not m the best of condition, the score is expttainaibfe.
The papers called us ''fanners," but Penn was very ionmmaae in
securing for herself iwo of those "fanners." One of them. Smith,
was the soul of the game for the Red and Blue. He was their
ground gainer. He rushed one kick-oIY back 00 yards. 3n dbe
various accounts 01 the game his name was in neariv everr Erie.
It was ex-Stale against State, and ex-State and Isas supporters
won out.
Contrary to newspapers and the score the team dad nca .allow
the I’mversity to simply walk up and down (ho head. It made
a ve.it plucky fight against odds. I Vim w’tts held for downs in the
second half. State made hut <lllO lirst down, however, and Beam
gained in Hie punting duels, Korkum twiee tailed m attempts to
lock held goals: once o n ihe 35 yard lino, and again on the 45
yard line The game ended with the hall in Penn's possessor!
The line-up:
Is she went or are she gone?
Have she left I all alone?
Will her ne’er come back to me?
Or us ever go to she?
It cannot was!
ATHLETICS
W. E. HOKE,
State, o —U. of P„ 39.
—Hr.