The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, November 28, 1915, SECTION TWO, Image 21

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    SECTION TWO
Pages 1 to 14
VOL xxxiV. rORTLAXD, PRECOX, SUNDAY 3IOKXTXG, yOYE3IDER 23, 1915. y- 48'
----- 1 . mf T"T If
SYRACUSE ELEVEN
ARRIVES FOR GAME
Great Football Machine Has
Practice on Multnomah
i Field for Contest.
WESTERN PLAY RESPECTED
flrat-y Trim TrlU of Sarpri) at
)Ioum aaj t.'ipm Hani lUt
II Ullh Q. A- C. dUf.
Twraij--eai An l Party.
"a f la sr't retl maekla
f t .atrj '" laieeraity
TtMUJ. !. T 'i4 I el B Calea
Xpi i :ii r jtfir aad
!.-.) Ua-t work'!'. MaltBmk
f.-j meet IB O"!'
Ai. ei )! I IS tii--t
tt -ei.ft,: g.-r f ta yr
-.. w el I keae el Weeter
fe;. . to. re?l ef La -i Bel
ltr.: Ill MI fc W
rmf.4 t'oawk ! f IB
liuau, wfcea) ak4 far lemeal
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t..-::y B. tm e4 w sir.
aaa- Tu ri.;4 fcec U i greet c.
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tut a ii lo A Cofiun ! ?po-lrom
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will -I thair iU toi lo a a I
kil km kr '- & 4JrXl -ir4ar
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ta;al il a IK Bi4 u coin,
km aBi k catl'l anl B ram
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It imBa4lB4t Ik cltr ! k
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ti-fi ko-B4T TB eo(faf ir.e'lBC
k fci4 a TkarH 4 'r4ar.
a i It tBraataa lo b ajiila II Im
artaal rat. kaa IB.r I m
4ttatia Bfc-l for i for-aanoa f a
a. ct ecafar-. WaaB'.actsa
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I ;, (M-f'''aa r-j; aa4 tafor4
I 4 iBa-i tf re'aat4 at Is
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Ca Aa BBi Ca.ifaria arl.l
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T . at ka -r4 Ik.ra t-lajr.
ALUS
CORV
; -
"-re-
Tklo rwia
i-aaaata
Maf a
ktat aa4 SiaBfor4 will ltkr kaa le
u la H6B or iau r "
Ukitnai as! MaAa a :o Bal4 to
ka oppo4 la IB aw leclalalloa.
Brnaug.! lot . '.'. " --
t.u-a i:i k 4ra.'t4 ky tk co'.;C
tele-! WBll Br. nunm." -
k4 a coaf.y ar l.irlrikT to -
tBBel abab.nc. and II la ! on rjoo4
- 4r 411
a .M - - w i-.a.t on aa
Itial kaaia muS Ik cthr coofrn
co;:ca. TaoBCr tltnii ib a :"-"
jroaac faw. tat roI'.o4 ti
traita- of Wk V..I THti. ao4 It
dtata't nk. tokl Ima!!""! b 45ol4
ka:i an4 e)omlat tk altr ronfar
ra. and a. a raa:t k k-n. rlll-
dla:ta4 a l ormr tn -mnawfti
1 aaoapap-rr lik la maka It Bppar
:nal IB oa'r kick aaalna( th cllc
.inHi wiiiiacioa attiiud am-aitat
from Portland, kot IBl ka not tro.
iiMuin a ad la numoiio- -n-lb-maB.r-
pellrr fc kn 4-tJ-
4:t anpopular all tJirotichout IB
;! ef WahlBt". aa ldnc4 By
lr4 to pka an4 Tacoina Ba-
papr.
TB fBlraltjr of rahlBtoti la too
biC ae4 hro-a4 aa Inattlullnn lo b
1.4 Into aa of error aad uopopuiar-
l'y ky th itnHernnaaa of on man.
ind. aoar that Coack t-oM ka rlir4
iadr tb aim of crltlrUin. VaaklB4t
on 4uht: artll adopt a mora ttk-
ral potiry. , ... .
.-..- ... ..J 4. a rofilrftil fool-
kail e-vh. kl It I on tMnT to bull-
loi a kuork of roi.af iooim.i P' --
mttA .ti l anolhar Id tell aa Bllr
c8traco wh.r to kal In.
llOQtlAM LLKT.X MAY TR.WKL
Crark Tram Ukrlj to Go to Callfor-
mi tor rcMl-Sraarta iane.
itcxariAif. wuiu No-. Fpa-
t!L Tk 1 loo a tarn Iff Srbool foot-
tail la tear so to Callfor-Bla bbq
Plar lo pol-aoa rana 4arlB t
Ckrtatmaa fatlon for Inlar-aaxt KnI
koBor. NotialloBa lo tnat '
oar la procroaa. with Indication ttat
tkr a HI cr4.
tb BoBoluktioas wra k4ron aom
aka B4TO. kal wer b!4 up antll after
ISO k-ara oa TbBkaltnB- day who
Akr4a. oa account of tko pomidii-
II y tkat Akrda aroBlJ w;a froo. l.o
quiaaa aad tbrky laka tb atat
ckampionaMps. kat Bar ka rJt4Bi4
ia taat an ad4 la a ti. At t
'riKa a4 tko xottalloes aro
la th kaU of a number ef tk Olympic-.
CUB.
L'nder tb ptaao aotr propo4. tb
p-xlalloa aro Ibat l lioqaiam
leasa will ptay oa ef tk stroac'.
team ef IB slat la Call 'oral oa
Ckrutmao day. aa4 Ba otbr -
aitr tka od Warn arou4 k
pti4 ea t rmr
Work of Matrr PamiMTO n-cli-3.
nir.U VUH. tVaakV. Not. ?. po
riat. r Taty-IBr yra aco 8.tr
twtnrB. Bo 4i-t re-reotly. and
e titer stater of IS t-otntnlraa ordrr.
afier coadrk! .'fort. procured tb
erection .M p-loc la CbebauU of
Ik Academy of Iko Mel Koeary. Sis
ter tBvcno ataa saporlor at IB lo
,l scBool for a a am be r of rea.-s and
for one year after IB t. Ilel.a a lloe
pital fcad ka ba'.U la Ibis city aa la
cSarf IB era.
tlravro MX "iaajclpy.
IlcrrOV. No. XT. - te Cnasvrhar.
aa oatfleWar of tk klaroo tOa.) team,
kas keea aiBe4 by Ib Holoa Na
tloeBla. tlutiaea Mnacr llaro4 an
aoane4 l4y. TarrhT 14 tb
toot k Al?nate learue baternea lolPI.
MOUNT AN GEL COLLEGE IS VICTOR IN THREE GAMES, WIT II
HO DEFEATS.
. ". . w -
! - n
left I Kick I. lo lb To Pi-BW. Ari Mrlehlor. Statroerl. Krefco.
keelew. k tea -a, -ko4 rt. ilkn rtasck Kesrkli BaltBBi Raw
. . . -i .-k i BMhk ii'aaialBl. taaflaka.
naa.lae. Kraaken, taklaaw aekler.
I raariere-nivB. Baaai vawe.
MOCXT ANCrt. COLXKOn. Or, Nov. ST. SpciaL Meant Angal
Collec woa tbr. defealtnc Lebanon lllcb 43-. Albany College 20
ta Jre-on City -Kede .-. Ita only defeat was at lha bands of
Taeifio t'olveraity. wBen tk coll-ciani mad the trip to Korat Urov
rnwIaretiMt, axaarar.
wita ta oi in r-iviar t
Tk small sckedul Is to b eplln4 by th tardiness with which
II wa cottea toether. t .Harnett t nlvrlty and t bemawa not. co
in M lo find open date, while came with Cal'ra lllcb aad I'a
cific Cr. wr caacil4 by leoe rpcttv lastitations.
BETBESENTATITES V.HO MEET SYRACUSE FOOTBALL PLAYERS IS
Syr f
" Iv'j
.1- r
w
In,rC-Uii4 f-kui.-TVl. VAC.k. Aco
END OF PLAY IS HEAR
Second Intersectional Battle
Promises to Be Hot.
TIE BY MONTANA MOURNED
irigh rujrra of Btifn Will Ke
Lost by Graduation Tbla Year
and KUcbl-a Aro Not Ef
pectr-d aa PooiVGradaatco.
OREOOK AORtCCLTVTLALCOIXEGK.
CorraKla. Noy. 27. (SpcUL) FtnU
will bo written aftr the record of tb
Oregon ATlculturl Collas football
lra foUoainc th a-Bm with Syracuie
In I'ortlaad idnadav. and tb AfteTl
alblolee. after tb bealst sefcodul
r played by a Northweat football
team, will lay away the paraphernalia
ef the itrldlron same for another nin
tnontba
Tb ond lntrctlonal ttama for
th Oranc and Hlark prornlars to b a
bot Btruscl from th opening whlaUe
to tb liuior ama.
Th clos cam played ealnt th
New Tork Utaters by th TniyerBlty of
Montana on Thanket-lTln day Is doped
lo put the arvat Kastern machine on
cuard atralnat the typ of trani played
i. i h. -r Weal, and It Is expected
that erythln4T lh lnadtn BitreiCB-
llon poase will b exniDiied on
klultnoraak Kleld wbon it faces the
AfH".
I kllara Averas SOO Pooada.
ti nmki.rn-i'iil luat what th men
directed by l- J. Stewart will do before
m. .iLrLi r a learn welsbtBB ItO
pounds to the man In the line, with a
prospective All-American guard namea
Wbite wi4Tbinc :?2 pounda. with the
other cuard tlpplnc the seal beam at
It, and a faal backflclj weishinc 1(0
pounda fo the man.
Two combinations h been tested
by Doo ftewart aad the stronccr will
fare the taaternere. t or tb first bat
llefront. Tat' Anderson baa bean
placed in bl old position at center,
with Ktnyth moved from tackle to th
caax4 position vacated by Anderson,
aad Uocy. th fraabman fullback, flll
Insr In for rimyth at tackle.
A rcption will bo cln th mem
ber of tbe two team by th I'ort
i.4 .lumnl or lh Ctretton Asruultural
Coil's, which will b in th natur of
an Informal danr at klurlark Hall on
IB eveolntt of th bic battle.
i-ihi af ibb 11 men romDOsinjr tbe
Oreson Acrlcullurnl I'olle-c criillron
machln which faced th l"ntrlly f
Oroo al t-uceoe laal ba turd ay. will
ko Imlna op acatnst tb lemon-yJiow
ri-i time While llofer La th
only on who baa plajrd th confer-
nc tiwt limit of four yaar. it la im
probable that any of them will return
for post-cradual work next year.
Akrakaaa AaaaK Tb to Lo.
It. ..liflrtn la llofer. Caolatn liilll.
. . .-. leaiha. Tracer Andarsan.
Smyth and tM baater. are th men who
wilt lay the inolsskln away this year
and forsake the gridiron for varied
pursuit.
In tb paaalntr or ibis an-iar t--
a
1 - - -
v' V-
t ...v
- , - ;.l - 4 tka Partr . tk. Trf,,
tlncent of Ftswart'a warriors. North
weat football lose an array of talent
which baa been amonc the beadllners
for tbe past two or three seasons, and
they will leave places In the Intercol
legiate world which will bo hard to
fill.
Allworth will take a decree in June,
as will "Dad" Klnc. the veteran aecond
strlng cuard who mula his letter this
year after six season of faithful serv
ice, llofer will graduate It sericulture.
Captain Uillle, of Astoria. Is playing
bla third year on tbe team.
Abraham Is graduating In three years,
followlrur bis entrance from the Al
bany llixb JSchooL. which has furnished
o many star football players to the
Northwest. Laythe baa been In college
five years, but Is this year finishing bis
third season as a varsity performer,
and probably will be selected for the
second time on the All-Northwest team.
Teager entered from Centralis, Wash,
and played last year In the backfleld.
being the lightest man In the rear
quartet. "Pete" Anderson, also from
Albany. Is a post-graduate student,
having taken a degree In forestry last
June.
Hungry" Smythe. who rides the
range In Harney County when not In
college, made the team for the first time
last year, rapidly becoming a mainstay
at tackle thia year. Stevo .Schuster,
the only Corvallla man on the team,
broke In aa a backfleld candidate, but
finished bis Brat varsity season last
year at end.
Allworth has been a candidate for the
team three years, but has always been
pursued by Injuries which kept him
from a varsity berth. "PRd" King has
been one of the dependable second-
string guards for three seasons, and
this year won his orange "O" by play
log the full count In the Whitman
gam a.
titlf: tiki, Aberdeen" iioxds
Name lo no Pnt on Ivlng Cup
Alons With That of llcxiulam. .
ABERDEEN. Wash-. Nor. 27. (Special-)
On the ground that Aberdeen
tied Hoqulam for the state champion
ship In playing that team to a score
lex ti Thursday. Aberdeen business
RI I.KS OF TIIK GAME OF GOLF.
Ceaeral and Tkmik tk Greem.
Mode of play The game of
golf Is played by two sides, each
playing Ita own ball, with clubs
made in conformity with direc
tions laid down.
The gam consists In each al6e
playing a ball from a terinc
ground Into a hole by successive
strokes. The game Is won by the
aide which holes Us ball In fewer
strokes than th opposing Sides,
except aa otherwise provided for
in the rules.
The bole Is halved If both sides
hoi out In the same number of
strokes.
Conditions of roati:h A match
consists of one round of the
course onlexs It la otherwtaa
agreed. A match la woa by the
side which Is leading by a num
ber of boles greater than the
number of boles remaining to be
played.
A match Is halved If each side
wins the same number of holes.
men will allow tbe names of th prea-
ent high school football team to bo
engraved upon a 1:00 silver loving cup.
presented two years ago to the school,
with the understanding that each
championship team was to be allowed
to place their names there.
Although Hoqulam defeated Aberdeen
by a 10-to-7 score early In the season,
a mutual written contract said this was
not to count for anything, under any
conditions. Aberdeen considers the
Thanksgiving game virtually an Aber
deen victory. Inasmuch as Aberdeen
kept the ball continually In Hoqulam'a
territory after the first quarter.
VOIXEY BALL TLAY PLANNED
no sine Men at Multnomah Club to
Have Other Sports In Class.
J. Leo Thompson, physical director
of the Multnomah Amateur Athletic
Club, has organized a house volley ball
tournament among the member of th
Business Men's Class of the club. Play
begin In the Winged "M" gymnasium
next Wednesday night and '..earns will
b selected tomorrow night.
Already mora than a score of name
have been added to the list, and be
cause of the Interest that -ha been
shown In the tourney Mr. Thompson la
thinking of holding an indoor baseball
league among four teams- Plana are
being mad for an indoor track, and
field meat
Following ar those who have signed
up: IL B. Clark. W. B. Robertson. H.
D. Klngnler. R. B. Dorr.ey. C a Good
win. F. L. Evmon. J. G. Arnold. P. H.
Hathaway. M. B. Marcellus, I. J. Chip
man. J. It. Velly. W. C. Rlrenltx. O. H.
Young. K. Slensberg. F. O'Berg. G. S.
Taylor. K. I Lundgren. V. A. Behar
raU. J. C. lvarr. a H, Ingram, W, &
PORTLAND NEXT WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.
S--' T .
At A
- k-.l.r. C-p-l- BllUa. H.fer.
Klrkpatrick. C. H. Labbe. H. B. Beck
ett. J. Kelly. C. M. Bristol. F. H. Strong
and H. Kirk.
NOTRE DAME WINS IN TEXAS
Rice Institute Beaten 55 to 2, bat In
Second Quarter lias Advantage.
HOUSTON. Tex.. Nov. 27. Notre
Dame, of Indiana, wound up Its foot
ball season today by trampling over
the lighter Rice Institute team 55 to 2.
For one period, the second. Rice out
played the Catholics in all departments
and the only score of the quarter was
a safety scored against Notre Dame
when Clark tackled Cofall behind his
own goal line after he had recovered
a bad pass from a center.
Monmouth Fives Win Games.
MONMOUTH. Or.. Nov. 27. (Spe
cial.) Two fast and exciting games of
basketball were played here Friday
night in the Monmouth High School
gymnasium. In the game between
Dallas High School second team and
Monmouth High School second team the
home boys were victors over the
visitors by a score of 12 to 15. In the
second game between Buena Vista High
School first team and Monmouth High
School first team the home boys showed
the value of team work and long
practice by defeating the visitors 35
to 6. "
Braves to Be Curbed.
:;OSTON. Nov. 27. The Boston Na
tionals, whose "kicking" tactics on the
baseball field during the past season
were criticized in some quarters, will
improve their conduct next year, if
President James E. Gaffney has bis
way. In a letter mailed tonight to
every one of the Braves under con
tract, the club executive announces his
"determination that th conduct of the
team shall be above criticism."
Striking Millhands In Fatal Riot.
GREENVILLE. S. C. Nov. 27. In
rioting which occurred at th opening
. .... luil.nn mttnn mill, idle
iwaf w . " "
several weeks because of a strike. David
Freese. a striking operative, was umny
stabbed and two other men severely In
jured. Several arrests were made.
4 aVax ?
PRESIDENT AND FIANCEE
, SIT IN RAIN AT GAME
Mr. Gait Scorna Shelter for First Half While She Watches Play From
Nary Stands, Moving Later to Cover With Army Rooters.
NEW YORK. Nov. 27. President
Woodrow Wilson, his fiancee.
Mrs. Norman Gait; Secretary of
War Llndley M. Garrison; Secretary of
the Navy Daniels, and scores of men
prominent in official, military and
naval life, were among the more than
40.000 persons who watched, through a
drizzle and fog that partly obscured the
players at times, the football game be
tween the Military and Naval acad
emics here today.
a
A light rain fell almost continuously
during the first half of the game, but
lh President and Mrs. Gait scorned the
shelter of the crowded grandstand and
occupied an open box directly In front
of the Navy cheering section.
At the end of the first half. President
Wilson and his party left the box.
while the 600 midshipmen saluted and
stood at attention as the President and
his party walked across the gridiron
to the Army side.
Mrs. Gait appeared to be highly en-
.u..-4-..i.. . V. .nt.pMl lha Armv
. , . r, .1 nnlwIIViBtanriinfiT tha hour Or
moro that she had sat in tbe rain. She
wore a dark blue velvet aress ana a
large white fur neckpiece. At her
waist was a large bunch of orchids.
e
While the two elevens were lining
up for the first klckofT. the Navy goat,
with shiny black horns and a bright
blue and gold blanket, was paraded
STATISTICS ON SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD.
WHICH MEETS OREGON AGGIES ON WEDNESDAY.
Name.
Walter a Rose
Harold A. White
Joseph E. Trigg
T. R. Johnson
L. M. Davis
Charles O. Slater
Charles Kanka. .......
Walter Glass
Christopher Schlachter.
William J. Rafter
Bernard M. Burns
M. Brown
Joseph Brainey
Alfred R. Cobb
Eugene W. Gllmore....
Harold Huycke
John McDonough......
John F. Meehan..... ...
Claude Newbury
K. W. VanDevender. . . .
Marcus Wilkinson
Prep. School.
, .Tonawanda H. S. . . . . .
.DeWltt Clinton
, JI. S. H. S.. Wash., D. C
.Sioux Falls H. S., S. D.
. Ossinlng H. S
. .Cornwall-on-Hudson.
, J3. Syracuse H. S
. Central H. S.. Duluth. .
. .Bushwick H. S
.Troy.N. Y-H.S.
.Jamestown H. S
, JDuluth Central H. S.. .
. Dean Academy
.Waltham H.S.
. DeWltt Clinton".
.Oberlin
. Dean Academy
.Dean Academy
.Neptune H. S
. Tech. H. S.. Syracuse. .
.Ashland, Wis.. H. S
r
fc.
1 1
4
4
Tko-p.oa ..4 lSir.
0.JLC. NAMES DELEGATE
DROF(''I3'a OF IDAHO AND WHIT-
BIAJI NOT FAVORED BY COUNCIL.
Opposition Voiced to Flaring ef Freah
men. Although Own Team Will
Be Among Those Hit.
OREGON' AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE,
Corvallis. Nov. 27. (Special.) After
votinar in favor of the rule barrin
freshmen from competing in conference
nnwi and to onDose any effort to re
move the Washington State College
from the Northwest conference, the
athletic council at the Oregon Agri
cultural College named A. B. Cordley
dean of the school of agriculture, dele
gate to the conference meeting to be
hld In Portland next week.
Although the Aggio football team
with eight of the regular lineup due
to srraduate will be hard hit by the pro
posed freshman rule, it has long been
tha consensus of opinion in the coun
cil that the move would be a forward
step In Northwest intercollegiate ath
With the existing one-year residence
rule for students transferring rrom
other colleges and the freshman rule,
as proposed, the plane of intercollegiate
athletics in the Northwest will be ap
preciably raised, according to opinions
prevalent upon the local campus.
if ia emBnlcif that the formation of
a new Coast conference, to include the
University of California, Stanford Uni
unri nerhnnn the University of
Southern California, w;ill come up for
discussion at the meeting.
TV,a Innal rftlinri 1 fftVOTS the TrO-
posed confernece. but does not favor
ousting Washington state college, pre
ferring that college over the Univer
?lifrrniA because of
the long trips necessitated by contests
with the southern institution, iseiiner
does the council favor the dropping of
Idaho and Whitman unless the ma
jority of delegates deem the change
advisable.
around the side lines. The Cadets
called for their mule, but had to be
contented with the sight or &u Homing
pigeons, each with a yellow tissue
paper streamer on one of its legs,
circle over the field and head toward
West roint-
Just before the game started the
Cadet cheering section sang a song
which predicted dire catastrophes for
the Navy and concluded witn a oozen
Array buglers' derisively sounding taps,
The Navy section rose and howled its
answer back, while the midshipmen
buglers sounded "charge.
Immediately after the game, the
Cadets swarmed onto the field, cheered
their victorious team, congregated in
front of ihe Navy section, which was
making more noise than at any other
time during the afternoon and then
the Jubilant West Pointers followed
their band in a snake dance about the
field and between the goal posts.
Bugles sounded and the gray-clad
cadets lined up around the entire field,
while four cheer leaders cavorted
about.
e e e
A great flag with the army colors,
black, yellow and gray, was placed
in the center of the field and the vic
tory was celebrated by the time-hon
ored custom of rallying around the
flag. Thie developed into a terntic
rush. In which apparently every cadet
tried to be the first to reach the flag.
Tear.
.Senior.
. .Senior
..Senior
. .Senior
.Senior
.Senior
. Senior
, .Senior
.Junior
.Junior
.Junior
. Sophomore..
. Sophomore..
, Junior
, .Sophomore..
. Sophomore..
. Sophomore..
. Sophomore..
.Sophomore..
.Sophomore..
Junior
Age
t
1
veisrht, I
27 166 I
22 272
22 185 t
21 1S9 J
23 159 !
23 165 I
21 135 I
21 161
21 240 t
20 147 J
21 155 I
22 163 I
22 168 f
22 205
23 178 I
23 148 I
21 172
20 145 I
20 198 4
20 215 j
21 1S1 J
a
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
SPORTING AND MARKET
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.inuMvi: u i nimi'u
mmtii u nui numm
SINKS NAVY CRAFT
Oliphant Crashes Through
Middies, Who Try Bravely
but Vainly to Stem Tide.
BATTERING-RAM TOO HEAVY
President and Distinguished Offi
cers See Cadets Score 14-to-0
Victory, In Which Work of
Halfback Is Prominent.
NEW TORK, Nov. 2". The Army
football eleven, showing a better state
of preparedness than the Navy team,
triumphed over their Annapolis rivals
here today by a score of 14 to 0. Twice
during the 60-minute battle between
the competing academies, the soldiers
hurled a 42-ecntimeter shell in tho per
son of Elmer Q. Oliphant through the
protective armor of the sailors' battle
ship and in tlio gray dusk of a drizzling
afternoon the midshipmen's craft sank
with every gun working desperately
but futilely against the superior equip
ment of the Army.
Although the middie team fought
with unflinching courage from the
opening shot until the Naval Academy
pennant sank from sight, the struggle
availed it nothing against the over
whelming power of the cadets' attack.
The irresistible charges of the former
Purdue University star could not be
stopped by the sailors, and the West
Pointers time and again pierced the
first and second lines of defense until
the Navy was bent and exhausted by
its efforts to avert defeat.
Oliphant Team in Himself.
Had Oliphant been injured in the
opening minutes of the conflict, the
midshipmen might have had a chance,
but the Middle Western football bat
teringram refusedto heed tho savage
tackling that scarcely halted his mad
rushes. Through the line and around
the ends he crashed or sprinted, hurl
ing off tackier after tackier until the
middies found that it required the en
tire eleven to stop him at times. Since
it was not always possible to concen
trate the whole squad in his flying
path his gains constituted about 78 per
cent of the distance covered by the
Army charges.
President Wilson and some 44.000
other spectators watched the battle be
tween the rival arms of the service,
forgetting in their enthusiasm the
clammy gray mist and the occasional
drizle of rain which marred an other
wise perfect gridiron classic fought out
in a Betting never surpassed in the his
tory of the Army-Navy football series.
The improvised gridiron was sur
rounded by permanent and temporary
stands, which housed for a few hours
a distinguished host of Government,
Army and Navy officers, as well as
prominent social leaders from most
every city in the Union. In the midst
of the gaily-colored throngs two spots
of unusually brilliant hues stood out
where the two battalions from the
academies were quartered in sideline
stands. From these points of vantage
the cadets and the middies hurled songs
and cheers across the field, led by the
blare of the rival institutions' bands.
The vocal uproar was terrific and
sustained. There was no a moment of
waiting on the part of either of the
soldiers or the sailors. From the min
ute the two elevens went into action
tho sound waves rolled to midfield.
where they crashed over the heads of
the steaming, struggling players, who
fought on apparently oblivious to the
hurricane of sound.
Break Comes Early.
The break in the game came almost
immediately after the kickot'f. and It
was the West Point team that profited.
After the opening play there was an
exchange cl punts interspersed with a
few drives ot the line, but neither team
appeared to have a marked advantage
until Craig muffed a high, twisting
kick from the toe of the Army fun
back, Coffin. Right End Neyland was
following the ball, and when Craig
dropped the pigskin ho dived through
the mud and clutched the spheroid on
the Navy's 10-yard line. Coffin an.l
Ford both hurled themselves into the
middies' line, only to be repulsed with
out gain.
Then Quarterback Gerliardt uncov
ered his masked battery and fired Oli
phant into the sailors' left side of tho
scrimmage line. The player from
Purdue ripped everything out of his
course and slid across the goal lino
with three middies clinging to his lei,.-.
To complete the "task, he kicked the
goal and the Navy football craft began
to founder.
Oliphant Again Turned Loose.
The sailors stuck to their gun
throughout the remainder of the am
and second perioas n .uu
damage, but with the beginning of the
third quarter Oliphant was again
turned Ioopo or. the Navy, and foi t the
second time found a vulnerable po.nl
in the Annapolis dctense. As in. thu
nitial score, the touchdown came
quickly and unexpectedly. ine .
diera kicked off and Craig the middies
quarterback, ran the bull well ba.k
before he was uow .,. ,,,
On the second lineup no O...IC...K"
a forward pass. i"- " -
of the Army, reached up to the tul
extent of his six feet two inches and
speared the ball in midair. He imme
diately sprinted for the ivavy Soi
passed the 2a-yara une utiUi
pulled down. inhr.l.
Here tne Dan vio e... .
and, slipping tnrougn a i.u. ... .....
center of the line, he dodged and
ducked his way for tho Army's second
touchdown, from which he kicked goal,
completing the scoring for the day.
Although Oliphant was the star or
the game, his best play was made pos
sible by the excellent support accorded
him by the other members of the cadet
eleven.
The lineup:
Army (14)
Navy f.
Von Helmhcrg
Ward
KerchT
.... Goo.Islf.in
imltli
Oilman
Johnson
i.'raig
Dain
. ... Westphal
Redfleid
..LE
Jones
O' H are
L.T
'." ." ." ." ." ." . .'r 6 . '.
r r
R E
Q B
L. II
R H
FB
periods Army. 7. 0,
MoEwan
Meachain
Weyand
Neyland ......
Rerhardt
Ford
Olirliant
Coffin
. . Martin
7. 0: 14.
Score by
Kavy, 0, 0.
V. V U. A mm u t
eriodtf.
minutes.
Ar-mv arorlne
Touchdowns, Oli-
phai't Goals from touchdowns Olipliant
2. Substitutions Army. Britton for Red-
field. KnIEht lor Jones, woonun .u. -:.--
Evan. liolnien for Jleacnam, rariter mi
Wevand. Tullv lor Neyland. Miicnen mi
Ford. Hogo for Coffin: Navy. BlodRett for
Von Flcinibprc, Jackson for Johnon. Mile
tor Davis, urr lor uuea-