After Mt. Pleasant kicked off, the ball remained in State's, territory un til Hauser again booted one between the bars from State's 25 yard line making the score 18 to 5 which proved to be final. After this the ball remained in the center of the field most of the time until a kicking duel was resorted to between Mc- Cleary and Mt. Pleasant The for ward pass was used by both sides to good advantage and the game ended with the ball in possession of the Indians on State's 25 yard line. The line-up : STATE 5 Burns (Capt), Ayers .1c Ritchey Kunkle Weaver, Grey Cyphers Smith INDIANS IS . Gardner . Wasenka .Ig . Afraid of a Bear c . Boy rg...... .rt (Cant) Lubo.Exendine Maxwell..... . re .Exendine, Bower Vorhis, Haverstick .. .qb . .Mt Pleasant Hirshman, Coulson lh . . .Payne McCleary. rh. .. Winnie, Hendricks Zink, Hirshman fb.... . .. . .Hauser Touchdowns— McCleary. Exendme. Goals from touchdowns—Mt. Pleasant. Goals from place ment -Hauser, 3.Referee--Dr. Dunbar. Philadel phia Dental college. Umpire—Dr. Stauffer,Penn. Head linesman—Godcharles, Lafayette. Li nes men—Mcilyeen and Lubo. Notes of the Game. The Indians used the forward pass successfully 6 times out of 10 for a net gain of 143 yards. , Twice they fumbled, were penalized once. and once lost ..: yards. State was penalized once for offside and once for holding, while the Indians were penalized twice for holding. State was probably robbed of a touchdown in the first half when the officials would not give them a first on a fumble recovered by Smith on the Indian's 9 yard line. The dis tance lacking was about two inches. Our undergraduates are to be congratulated on the fine cheering during the second half as well as on the spirit shown after the game. They certainly were the largest and most manly crowd that has yet at tended a game. Many old students and alumni were seen n othe bleachers and side lines during the game. Ritchey showed up well at tackle. McCleary's 70 yard run brought down the house. THE STATE COLLEGIAN The papers which stated that State outweighed the Indians 10 pounds to the man were very much in error. The Indians were by far the heavier. The remarks about Coach War ner's ungentlemanly actions along the side lines were not limited to State's backers. Football Gossip. Oberlin surprised Cornell by crossing the line in the first half, but lost by the score of 22 to 5. Cor nell was hard pressed to win. In the second half :ong runs and open plays were marked on both sides. At Annapolis, the Midshipmen played a good game of football for so early in the season and easily de feated Dickinson by 15 to 0 The Navy scored without difficulty: A safety spoiled a clean score in the Bucknell—Penn. game, U. of P. winning 29 to 2. Bucknell put up a good fight, but the superior weignt of the Penn. team told. Penn's new quarterback, Reagan, played in great style. Penn fum bled considerably and was frequent ly penalized. Western University of Pennsyl vania defeated Marietta College by the small score of 6 to 0. Bellefonte 4—lndiana 0. The first preparatory school game for this season on Beaver Field oc curred on Monday afternoon, when the Bellefonte Academy team de feated the Indiana Normal boys by a close margin. Both teams had played games on Saturday and as a result were not in condition to do their best. Indiana worked the forward pass to good advantage, while Lyon's line work and Pantall's kicking were the features of the Bellefonte boys' work. The offi cials were : umpire, Maxwell ; referee, Burns ; linesmen, Haver stick and R. Vorhis. Time of halves, 25 and 20 minutes. The Junior—Senior Electrical Feed. On Thursday evening of last week the senior electricals accepted the invitation of the juniors in the same course to help in the disposal of a quantity of "eatables" at the Nittany Inn. ApproxiMately one hundred men sat down to the tables at the appointed hour, there being forty two seniors, fifty-two juniors, and five members of the instruction force of the departme it. The speech-making proved to be not the least interesting feature of the evening. C. N. Fleming, 'O9, acted as toastmaster. The follow ing toasts were responded : Tne Senior Electrical The Junior Electrical W. E. Hoffman My Bunch Prof. J. P. Jackson Why am I an Electrical W. C. Weaver Our Profs R R. Dry The E. E.-Society...C. L. Kinsloe Dr. Myers, Mr. Munroe, and Mr. A dams, all of the electrical depart ment, talked interestingly . Other imp-omptus were given and it was late when the gathering finally broke up. Although humor predominated, a vein of seriousness ran through all of the talrcs which fortells good work in the electrical department for this year. Saturday's Games. Penn. State vs. Grove City College, at State College. Indians vs. Syracuse, at Buffalo. Princeton vs. Bucknell, at Prince ton. Dickinson vs. W. & J., at Wash- ington Cornell vs. Colgate, at Ithaca. Penn vs. Swarthmore, at Phila- delphia. Lafayette vs. Hamilton, at Easton E. C. Silvius, ex-'O9, is assistant supervisor for the W. J. and S. R. R., with headquarters in Millville, New Jersey H. M. Braucher