Show I SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 2 1930 THE OGDEN STANDARD - EXAMINER 13 fl i Gyms O — O— O o— Jones Plays Great Notre Dame Runs Rough Shod Over Indiana Football Game Champs Use Variety Of Plays Watkins And Clark Star At Snagging Passes In Fort Collins Game — By FRANK II FRAWLEY Associated Press Sports Writer FORT COLORADO FIELD NOV 1— (AP)— Colorado Aggies today suffered one of the worst beatings they have taken on a football field since Harry Hughes took charge here in 1911 as Utah university’s rampant Indians rolled up a M to 0 victory The pennant-boun- d invaders scored in every period and might have shelled the Farmers with an even heavier attack had not Coach Ike Armstrong chosen to use every player on his squad The Big Utes put over four touchdowns by the aerial route gained one by rushing and scored tne other when the Crimson forwards smothered one of ‘‘Wild Bill” Vaughan’s punts McDonald a tackle recovering behind the goal line The Utes’ smashing attack had the Aggie line demoralized in the early part of the contest with Frank Christensen and Captain Ray Price shooting inside and outside the for gains of from three to guards 15 yards t This bruising method was too slow for the Rocky mountain conference champions however and it was not long before they opened up a brilliant passing game that Aggies never really solved Five minutes after the opening kick-o- ff Utah rushed across the Farmer goal A long pass Tedesco to Watkins had placed the ball on line On the next play the Theron Davis skirted around his own right end and ran down the side line several Aggie tacklers fail ing to hold him Aggies had their only scoring op portunity if such it may be called in the first period Bus Day tried a Utah’s line glaeement from reeled off to one side The Farmers had Just on their one concentrated drive put the taking ball from their own eight-yar- d line — Special Correspondent of The er (Copyright 1930 Consolidated Press Association) NEW YORK Nov 1—It is highly probable that when the official major league batting averages for 1930 are released shortly for consumption by the agitated fans they will show that Bill Terry first baseman of the New York Giants is the first left-habatsman to compile an average above 400 in the National league since the time of Willie Keeler Willie as any er will tell you did his socking 30 years or more ago That as the bat boy would say is a long time between left-ha’i socks AVERAGE IS HIGH Terry’s unofficial average Is 401 He is the first National league player to hit above 400 since Rogers Hornsby batted 403 in 1925 In the American league A1 Simmons of Philadelphia has an unofficial 1930 389 of championship average There hasn’t been a 400 batter in the American league since Harry IHeilmann amassed an average of 0-- nd 1924 The batting averages for 1930 and several years back don’t lend much weight to the argument that the “lively” ball is responsible for the heavy clouting In baseball today Here is some Interesting history: The day of the free swinger with the bat returned to the major The original "Four Horsemen of leagues about 1922 In that year Notre Dame” are pictured above left 1 HAVEN NEW Nov Conn the batting chain 40 rifkt Miller rd to Utah's marker The I Layden Crowley want to SSousath- I Hornsby Stuhldreher Below axe the champions opened up in full blast thflotofa - PiniS£ f I J?f 19A0 Carideo Schwartz lete 13 an easy one m?thaecSrthfeS5S’ Ty Cobb Jr in his batting1 swing7as other play- His is a great big “No” ers George Skier won the cham-p£J- 2s tobe in the American league in oufbt pionshlp y?u “I£people end inedrivesind the season with 420 That same afEC?2d explalns the I I of the former major was the highest percentage ever offspring Forsberg then shot a player whose name has been made in the America except pass to Christensen who made a league Ascribed In capital letters in base- - in 1911 when Ty Cobbleague hit for the II Crowley Miller Lasden and on the goal line Late balls hall of fame leaping catch s And that same rating Stuhldreher were graduated years in the second period Price stole an When Sisler batted 420 baseball and years ago? They took coaching ‘Aggie pass and returned it to the ed rd J nofa anr 1 ne- theje' 'VTan fleYd It 1 eSbtlLf Utter ol'cSSSS1! ShffmeTout home celebration day Aggies Left end Johnson hS SUShfSJS Instead he put down McDonald Frisbie Left tackle Lybbert Ken- Left guard Jones Croft’ Wilson Center Watkins Tedesco Price Fullback Score by pexlods: it f-f- - Orme Madsen Day Rector Quarterback Christensen Left halfback Davis Right halfback -- Kasel Right guard Right tackle Right end Walling - jor football tennis and hockey swimming squash rackets They say he is a clever tennis player Yale crowded with the sons of noted fathers will know more about Ty Cobb Jr when a year has pass- ed and he has had his chance to plug his way to the top COUGARS AMAZE FOES BY FRISKY STYLE OF PLA Y BATTING CHAMPION Ty Cobb was batting champion In the American league year after year His lowest percentage was 350 and his highest 420 In the season that he hit 350 all the batters of his league must have been tapping the ball because 350 Is by no means hard to beat Larry Doyle won the National league batting! championship in 1915 with 320 The fact that Doyle won by such a low average was not charged to a dead ball Far from it The boys simply couldn’t- - hit In the decade that ended in 1919 &nd Pounced on the ball on the It was customary to play the sacri- - I the ball off proceeded down the field fice game far more than teams do four-yar- d mark and it was Cou now In one season the Giants won I eara ynu a pennant because they almost be third play after Hoover variably put the first man on base) and then sent him along to second had carried the ball to the two- jby a sacrifice hit For a long time yard line Thorne plowed over cen- 1 White Vaughan Tearm Wage Bitter Game ejSuce‘ J" place kick was“ wide This attempted was called the That kind of gameT" John J McGraw touchdown raised the Y” total to "old army 0—0 Aggies was one of the- - first managers to 20 points Touchdowns — Watkins Christenbreak away from it One season he j sen (2) Price McDonald (Utah sub) THIRD PERIOD devoted his team to hitting behind j EDWARD NEIL Goal from touchdown (placement) By J' the third early ataS®8 the runner and after that began to) Associated Press Sports Writer Price 3 I Hoover I fumbled an Aggie PHILADELPHIA Pa Nov 1— gamble to score runs in blocks period Nelson recovered for the (AP)—Pennsylvania’s rugged but er- - I Other managers followed his exam- - I Pnt and on rd Farmers the B Y U ratic eleven rose today to fulfill Pie e On the next play Ivan Smith the promise of power it has shown Gambling for a block of runs isall season and beat back with where the long hit comes in to ad- snagged a beautiful pass out of the He raced better splashes of brilliance the beef and vantage It may clear up the bases- a from Childson the doesn’t add to the batting Pergallop shook drive of the Jay Hawkers of Kan- sas eentage of any player Hence ai- - off three Young tacklers and count- for V® J® Penn pulled out the struggle by a though Babe Ruth cannot win the nl°pc?dofn s placement sailed final count of 21 to 6 but the batting championship of his league pespie uprights and was good for score gave little indication of the he can easily win the total bases GRID I P°mt closeness of the bitter duel that championship and as baseball Is “ost sparkling plays thrilled 62000 In the big horseshoe Played by the managers these days I SLJS5? re?orded hen of Franklin field Itwas a battle total bases swell scores took a lateal Passfrom ANNAPOLIS Md Nov 1 — (AP) of Individual brilliance in the - I M —A reborn Navy team smothered pinches Magelby and raced 43 yards before against sustained power West Virginia Wesleyan under a ithat finally being forced out of bounds on the got to Rollins and the Pan-Europe- an line After the Farm- Aggie half dozen touchdowns this after pinch-hitte- rs of Penn bolstered by ers held the noon four full Middle teams tak- a line that rose staunchly Cougars on two line In the they were penalized 15 yarns ing part in the route of the Metho- crisis staggered down the stretch to Sppn a unnecessary roughness and the dists 37 to 14 kjccuifor the victory advanced to the Logan 15- Cougars While little Lou Kirn the smash Seven times in the second half line sees KOBE little After working the ball (UP)— yard Belgium or? th!°bSc5dconrvtag ' hta alSht-yar- d Pan-- 1 line Hoover hat the P-iha ASe powers the'flmtfpSFods'is Perasmoth- - I chance I Magelby posed for a place kick for the Ohio State game next week j ered their highly publicized half European Federation advocated bv I and but Hoover heaved apass to Thorne another diminutive halfback took back ace Jarring Jim Bausch the French Foreign Minister Brland over the goal line Thorne fumbled will succeed in the near future the leading role Joe Tschirgi run- - Kansans had score to opportunities I the recovered it and fell to the Emile pass leader of Vandervelde the two score to wild Midof the touchdowns ning die touchdowns and placing the J Out of those ‘ seven chances the Belgian Socialist party told news- - turf for the score Magelbys here before leaving tor version was wide b rfi position for another Kansans salvaged one score and Indo-Chi( The third period ended with the I bore Battles the brunt of the were halted by the final whistle The Belgian people heartily ap- - Cougars leading 26 to 7 Wesleyan attack Besides doing the I with the ball on Pennsylvania’s LAST PERIOD prove the plan Vandervelde said portion of ball carrying yard line Yet in those same two but the in feel will realizaof part of the final ean-tio- n early it bedifi-upassing and the punting he played final periods the Quakers had but 1° Childs kicked to Probe rt on the because l complicated a stellar defensive lone chance to score and they state line Probert fumbled of affairs Britain some of same the European Showing power promptly turned It into a touch ball the and Nelson recovered On the statesman Belgian that gave them victory over Prince- - down thought may the next a from Childs one play pass chief of the prove ton last week the Middies made stumbling E Bausch declared ineligible in blocks to Thompson was good for 17 yards 24 first downs to seven for the the Big Six conference because of At this point in the game the Couhis bond activities and the gars were penalized five for The way to the first Wesleyan I center of aselling storm rthat has eliminat Jayhawkers’ one-ya- rd line and an- - excessive time outs Aggiesyards took the b I twoball on the12-yar- d EdmSrfn blocked completely overshadowed by the in- - J other for 41 that carried to the line On the period mark next play Gillespie took a lateral yard covand I lagberg’s Trd skill of Walt Masters Bill —Kansas made 11 first downs most pass from Remund and ered for Wesleyan on the Navy 25- - (dividual Gentle ami CarlPe- - of themin the second half to 10 for yards for the final Aggie score Gil- G£aupnerlhck Penn backfield aces While II Penn in one harassing I the extra P°“ witha yaJ Bausch plaSement the Itae with Uttle drive that travelSl 47 yard3 In P1?ntY?thSPAfsed(i0 ply the third quarter third quarter belore bogging down ?ratBahSt touchdown BaW?? °S bach- Midget Vaeher “half-pin- t” unheralded Kansas backs on Penn’s seven-yar- d line but he j field star of the Cougars pulled the Utah 7 20 0 0 6 0 I 6 — 39 1 MIDDIES TAKE pass Crowley could not even Barry Wood Maybe Benny Friedman was almost as good But lust as sure as you’re born Crowley was out there passing the other day I saw him run back and dodge and survey the field calmly as he did in the old days and gst let ’er fly And Chuck Collins caught it 35 yards away throwMarchmount Schwartz is ing those passes now? Who the devil is Marchmount Schwartz? You’re not kidding - me now are you man? j Maybe you think I was only seeing things But wait until I tell I know you about Elmer Layden I can’t be wrong about this He went around left end galloping at full tilt Three guys hit him He Nobody in 1924 Hornsby won the batting have been gone for years and years? title In the National league with Why they were out there just 424 That is not the record for the the other day I watched them kick because and pass and run and for a while league or for baseball Hugh Duffy’s mark of 438 in 1894- forgot that I was sitting in a xnagni- i still supreme It is the best bat- I ficent new stadium Thought I there on old Cartier field ting percentage that had been I wasalloutseemed very real too You made by any player Willie Keeler It came close to It when he hit 432 could hear their hoofs thudding on the sod if the ft brtteratth2 Adam Walsh and you could-njj-r staccato comnck to the forearm swing which may be his sharebacks T saw him kick the seems waiting to as necessity lengthened Remember his hicks? Justball as records should be demand there as those of old But there are lout of bounds on the enemy s flvecar lone and that leads to the belief or It there ball threw fled the that batting has had less to do with the outcome of games in recent me wstem5 employed ° nsn SAYOLDI Frank Carideo Is playing quarterback for Notre Dame? Is ire short and stocky? Does he look like Stuhldreher? Surely there’s some mistake Jimmy Crowley was out there in that backfield the day I saw them could like I I a I The lineup: Utah a Gris’S WttTeSTu'MS of 4 guess tbat the “Georgia had something to tio with determination to play Ufe’s nated at ouart7teclfthrall their gameSOIs in his own way The old out- fielder is a wise father as well as JoSs UtahSSt a " bau player‘ Ifoun’diiil SlaT A CTowdof 12 all wsSSedtSS Baseball isn’t one of young Ty’s ehgfblTrecelveriust across the°ltaer Teach Fofsberand SS les coming i I for the yearling football - candidate Whether he will make the tea? 2rade remains to be seen ?hies afc Publicity The less andMcDoaihadonlv6 tafanmi ?aid about his efforts on the grid- ft for thernre1 Uke lt- - Then be!tterJ1? £°?ith? iti the tSS SntaSvSS stnie U? C°bb comes through Junior the anAeHe fiures it will be In spite of his line Christensen smacked 1 yards I he name as father’s tackle and Forsberg then not because of it an athlete and through I passed to him for the final score “You see” he says 'I don’t want Utah’s’ he? thtvttfSked a riod came rnuVrt nvJr spun like a kid’s toy top whirled and dashed for 18 yards off right two men along with him The guards and tackles 1 ISIaiefJuLwAfa““?Sea I pass to Hoover and the “Y” back line before he ran to the one-ya- rd was halted by Vranes On the first play Thorne ran out of bounds and on the second attempt to score Hoover took it off tackle for the touchdown Thome’s place kick was good OPEN FIELD RUNS a reserve replaced Biddulph Hoover late in the game thrilled with colorful open field runs one being for 23 yards Vacher Thorne and Biddulph alternated at taking the ball to the one-yastripe and a center on Vacher from this point touchdown sneak tallied the last rd CONTEST I j gies ” I f ' 3 Fullback Center 82 Louisville 0 Akron 7 Oberlin 0 Williams 14 Union 0 Susquehanna 7 Hamilton 7 (tie) Western Virginia Wesleyan 14 Navy 37 Bethany 6 Waynesburg 37 Princeton 0 Chicago 0 (tie) Nebraska 0 Pittsburg 0 (tie) Score by quarters — 0 14 12 13—39 B Y U 0 0 7 7—14 U S A C ‘Scoring: Aggies— Touchdowns— I Smith Gillespie Goals after touchdowns — Gilelspie (2) place kicks B Y U — Touchdowns — Vacher (1) Hoover (3) Thorne (2) Goals after touchdowns— Thorne (3) place kicks Substitutions: Utah State —Pet erson for Kincaid Young for Gillespie Shields for Sparks Magnum for Ward Forgeon for Thompson Cliff for Barker Gillespie for Young Thompson for Forgeon Sparks for Shields Budge for Childs E Smith for Nelson B Y U — Magelby for -- en nd “Re-vis- rd I I I I -4- j I I 16-ya- 40-ya- rd Coast f I 1 - 1 $2000000 1 “came1 eiS?iU the IsreP as toe 13 0 0 Wesleyan Trinity The lineup and summary: 21 Kansas 6 Pennsylvania B Y U Utah State 0 Ursinus 13 Gettysburg I Smith North Johnson 6 Army 33 Dakota Right end Ohio university 48 Cincinnati 0‘ Griffiths Sparkst Ohio Wesleyan 41 Western Reserve 14 Right tackle Ward Shields Wooster 14 Case 6 24 Lehigh 0 Right guard Muhlenberg Vranes New Hampshire 8 Tufts 10 Wangsgaard Center Colby 6 Maine 14 Barker Rhode Dastrup Island 14 Boston univer Left guard 0 sity Kincaid Richardson Penn State 7 Bucknell 19 Left tackle Cross 32 Rutgers 20 Holy Nelso Cooper Oklahoma City 13 Davis £s Elkins Left end 2 Childs Vacher Georgia Tech 6 North Carolina Quarterback 6 (tie) v Hoover Thompson 0 Notre Dame 27 Indiana Halfback Delaware 13 Swarthmore 12 Thorne — Gillespie Purdue 25 Illinois 0 Halfback VyW A 7 University of Detroit Remund Skousen 1 SS? 6 Connecticut Aggies better than the score would indi- - QUard Guard academy cate 13 1 m rd one-sid- i Richardson Host I six-ma- jor Sn ’ 1 na 39-ya- rd 4 ' M-omin- all-arou- 39-ya- - “ con-paperm- -- turned into just another route at the hands of the Ramblers “Jumping Joe” Savolch the big hod lugger from Three Oaks Mich was the first to break the Hoosier spell Tucking the ball under his arms on the Indiana line he smashed his way for four yards and then came back with a gallop of 35 yards and the long awaited Carideo long expected touchdown kicked goal for the extra point and the pentup fury of Notre Dame’s attack broke loose with such devastation that within the next 20 minutes of play three more touchdowns had cracked the Hoosier defense into bits Today’s victory was the fourteenth straight triumph in two years for the “Fighting Irish” their fifth straight of the 1930 campaign and their eighth straight over Indiana in their traditional rivalry The lineup: Indiana Notre Dame f 1 aI (AP)— Notre Dame routed Indiana’s fighting Hooslers as predicted today by a lopsided score of 27 to 0 but was forced to employ its first string men on an overtime schedule to accomplish the trick and During the first two ten more minutes of theperiods third the Hooslers surprised the Rockne forces and the' 20000 spectators by holding the “Fighting Irish” even with their first string in the field for some time to a scoreless tie But the task ivas too hard for the Hooslers and they folded up thereafter before the furious rushes of Notre Dame’s new “Four Horsemen” crew and the brave stand I 30-ya- rd 1 dame stadium south Ind Nov 1— Notre ck I auuu By PAUL M1CKELSON Associated Press Sports Writer Left End Rascher Hoffman AThe toS guys hitranm0ver Left Tackle Waraska Harris off He jabbd that quterbaS PSLgpt$nd Left Guard ' Mankowskl right’ out of there Rogers attempts to pass But Jumping Joe Savoldi is Center total of 133 Zeller £or Rockne’s chief line bucker this Terlaak wbile Maroons attempt- year? There’s something funny- ed Guard Right 83 'sYere successful for about that Did he play Satin:pales’ Donoghue The Maroons made nine Jasper day? And alter that touchdown Jar2s Right Tackle was It Carideo who kicked go61? ir®t downs to six for Princeton Dickey Mahoney 89 yards from scrim-th- e It lookedto like Layden who kicked an( gained Right End Image to 48 for the Tigers me It was his styleball Brubaker Jaskwhich 'Quarterback I saw Don Miller make an edd Ross Koken run Certainly it was in the new FOOTBALL FINALS Left Halfback stadium Stuhldreher Crowley and Saluski o Connor Layden went right with him I saw Halfback 18 West Virginia 2 Fordham Right these three men block and I know Bowdoin 0 Bates 13 Opasik Mullins what I’m talking about The end Marquette The score by periods: and the defensive halfbacks went Florida 0 6 Boston 0college 0 o 0 0 0—0 Indiana Georgia down like ten pins Somebody grab Notre Dame 0 0 14 13 27 1 VJllanova 6 Duke bed Miller around the waist and he Notre Dame 0 Yale 0 Dartmouth scoring: Brill (sub whirled and threw the tackier nine for two: Savoldi (sub O’Connor) William 13 13 and Harvard Mary feet I saw Don’s legs churning It (tie) for one Mullins) Schwartz (sub looked like he had forty or fifty legs one Points after New 20 Carnegie for Koken) Yok university so were fast they moving touchdown: Carideo (sub for Jask7 Marty Brill is on the backfield Ohio State 0 Wisconsin 0 (tie) which) three this year? On Notre Dame’s first Mississippi 0 Colgate 34 team? Well how can that be? Columbia 10 Cornell 7 all There’s something funny about Cornell Falls In Amherst 22 Massachusetts a f this 1tihr0Sa11 Northwestern 72 Minnesota 6 The attempted placement byThorne Virginia 6 Maryland 14 was blocked ( Rochester 24 Buffalo 7 Before the final whistle sounded Washington & Lee 0 V I P 0 Furman 6 Oglethorpe 12 the pinch hitter of the Cougars Vacher thrilled with dashes of 35 Alabama 19 Kentucky 0 15 and U of Miss 0 Vanderbilt 24 respectively yards yards A pass from Budge to Forgeon Missouri 13 Kansas Aggies 20 was completed just as the gun Colorado Teachers college 6 Uni- sounded to close the battle t (tie) TO‘y The Cougar line played marvelous Sty? Vaclfe? 'tar ’iSSS? §ddS£ 14' Colorado unlvcrslty esfootball and was a big factor in Fort F- tablishing the biggest B Y U score &tacl°7crr- - Johnson Syc“H£ L Wangsgaard against the Aggies Staples for Thorne Western State college 0 Colorado former Weber college center and Wangsgaard Officials— Warner Utah ref Mlrfcs were the eree 13 captain Dastrup Cougar Kump Montana State umJohnson of Southern California big guns on the line University W linesman Cahoon head 33 Denver 13 played a whale of a game at end pire Romney Utan field judge for the Provoans College of Puget Sound 0 Unicuci M Ott Romney’s backfield worked versity of Washington 60 with precision and fineness and Washington State 14 Oregon Vacher 7 showed plenty of color State in Hoover Thorne California 46 Montana 0 Magelby and Development Skousen all functioned with the Weber college 13 Albion 21 Brazil ease and grace of Major league grid-de- rs B Y U 39 Utah Aggies 14 Utah 39 Colorado Aggies 0 They were “hot” Saturday OUTSTANDING COUGAR BELEM Brazil (UP)—Two million Chattanooga7 13 Howard 9 Thome’s Miss Teachers 6 play stamped Springhlll him as perhaps the outstanding dollars has been spent so fax by Miss Aggies 0 Tulane 53 Arkansas 12 Louisiana State 27 Couger Magelby flashed brilliantly the Ford interests in their develthe entire game while Hoov- opment of t Fordlandia installing Manhattan 6 City College of N during er gave another demonstration of 6 building roads hospi- ta Y Butler 14 Wabash 7 smart football Hoover's kicking was equipment etc to tals the according sensational Coe 0 Cornell college (of Iowa) ’Americana" The Aggies are badly in need of The magazine reported that' 0 (tie) 25 a field general At least that was Fordlandia S M U 7 Texas now has several hos- the attitude of the experts who pitals warehouses garages roads college 2 N C Presbyterian watched the scoring orgy Now it is State 0 water and electricity Sewanee 0 Rice Institute 12 Gillespie and Remund were the planned to start construction of Iowa Penn college 0 Iowa Wes-in- g big guns in the Aggie backfield schools a hotel a church a float-- 1 reserve player was in the Young a dock thiee miles of railroad lcyan 0 ' contest only a short time but and homes for the workmen and! Momingsida 13 South Dakota State 0 sparkled with some nice open field technicians Oklahoma 19 Iowa State 13 running Vranes at center was most consistCentenary 6 Texas A & M 7 ent player in the Aggie lineup He GEEEN WAVE IS HEAVY Tennessee 27 Clemson 0 was all over the field L Smith at Tulane university 1923 champions Thiel 0 Washington and Jeffer- end Sparks Ward and Barker were of the Southern conference boasts son 20 other bright lights for Dick Rom- one of the heaviest lines in Dixie 44-Wave forward wall av- The Green ney’s Newman charges Michigan quar- Harry x T bu ilLUl “ '“ w UU U18 I1T5& OCCa- contest eiiu was 195 pounds per man and all j terback is called the greatest at the ill erages Saturday's replete tcssed a Penn’s line But Bausch sion to score their fifth touchdown with thrills and while the score ap- but two are veterans of at least one position the school has had since pass that wound up on the 'fumbled Penn recovered Thorne again passed a lateral pears the game was much season of play 'the days of Benny Friedman 33-ya- FREE SCORING By CHARLES W BINKLEY Associated Press Sports Writer STAGG FIELD Chicago Nov 1 (AP) —A courageous band of Chicago’s football warriors who haven’t won a game or even scored a point In their last three contests refused to allow Princeton once a gridiron terror of the east to beat them tocoach day with their Amos Alonzo Stagg inspiring them and his son Paul in the thick of the battle as quarterback the Maroons fought Princeton to a 0 tie in their intersectional game before 33000 spectators balking three attempts of the Tigers to score The Maroons who defeated Princeton 15 to 7 a year ago carried on today without the services of Erret Van Nice their captain who almost single-hande- d scored the 1929 triumph over the Tigers This young man who registered both touchdowns 80 yards for the first one sprinting and 35 yards for the last watched today's game from the sidelines with & splintered knee in a cast Young Stagg son of the Maroon’s famous coach handled the passing in Van Nice’s absence and twice missed scoring touchdowns by an eyelash In the third period with two Maroon receivers standing back' of Princeton’s goal Stagg tossed a long pass to Kanne but the ball bounced out of his hands and into the outstretched arms of Stackler a Maroon substitute who dropped it when a touchdown seemed cer- tain Then in the fourth neriod stagg standing on Princeton’s yard line heaved another pass over the goal line but the ball bounced I out of the hands of the receiver I and 9 out into the atmosphere missed three opportuni-aurterbaBreton to score- - twice by forward once by a oal froip old old-tim- 20-ya- 9 old nd so-call- - i By GEORGE CHADWICK in ON HOME FIELD f Tigers Miss Scoring Chances Joe Savoldi Twinkles For Three Times In Big Winners Shock Troops 'Matinee Get Action Gain Socking Fame In 20 Years 403 EASY TRIUMPH1 UNIQUE EVENT Terry First Southpaw To Standard-Examin- ROCKNEMEN IN PRINCETON IN HIGH RECORD rd 40-ya- N CHICAGO TIES D BATTER HAS Ty Cobb Junior Bids For Post On Gridiron - 24-ya- LEFT-llflNDE- ed 1 s Game With Rivals NEW YORK Novf 1— (AP)— Ralph Hewitt Columbia’s backfield ace led his team to a thrilling ten to seven triumph over Cornell before 25000 fans at Baker Field today fop the Lions first major triumph since 1927 and the second over Cornell since 1905 Hewitt who was hurt in the fourth period on his way to another touchdown won the game by two spectacular plays In the second period he kicked a field goal from the line and in the next period received Cornell's opening kickoff and ran 90 yards for a touchdown 43-ya- rd -- |