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Show VICTORY GOES TO PRINCETON Crowd Amazed By Savage But Tricky Attacks Upon Harvard BY ;. IB .7. AI.SH (International Vows s.,.rV(o CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Nov. 11. Almost Al-most 1 1 years ajro to the day. Princeton Prince-ton university was pleased to claim as Its own a young gentleman who WSJ to become famous as Sam White. he man who could smell a loose ball os a blood-hound scents Its Quarry Today Princeton was a team of Sam VTiites, who r.prang up from everywhere to recover Harvard fumble i by half dozen lots and thus deft at the Crimson in their annual gridiron classic, score ten to three. It was a fighting Princeton team, not unlike its Tiger namesake of the jungle trail, a snarling, ferocious beast on,- moment, and a cunning, sly trickster the next. And Its points were furnished through the medium of n'touehdown by Crum in the second period and a field goal by Baker from the 33-yard line in the third, but before, after and between those events, Princeton amazed the Vast colorful throng of 5LO0O persons with Its deft subtle and seemingly unlimited resourcefulness resourceful-ness Double passes, triple passes, delayed de-layed line plunges, behind masked deceptive formations and straight running run-ning plays tumbled one upon another In a bewildering maze and Harvard was at its v.lts end to frustrate tho attack. CAPTAIN FORCED OUT. Early in tho second period, Captain Buell, of Harvard, was forced to seek the ride line., hobbling on an injured leg Harvard was like a rudderless shlp without him. It was leading at Jthls Juncture by a score of 3 to 0. I but thenceforth It proved to bo a futile, uncertain machine, strong enouch In Its indKldual parts but lacking the cunning and the brain I I that ordinarily guides Its movements Spauldlng, the man who replaced Buell, was directly responsible for the , last Princeton score. He fumbled one of Cleave'S towering spirals on the si- ,ird line and a 122 undergraduate undergradu-ate of the same White school of f umble-snatchl ng. leaped on the ball on the 31-yard line, a moment later tho ponderous Mr. Baker strode back to the 33-yard line and drop-kicked I the ball over th cross bar for tho I points that served lo make Princeton's I victory secure. MISSES TOl OHDOWN. ! Baker was also something of a central cen-tral figure in the scoring of the Tiger touchdown, although the principal characters were Oherke. of Harvard, land Gray, of Princeton. Gherke it, I was who stood on his own 25-yardl ine and allowed the ball to waft beyond be-yond hln frantic grasp when tackled by Gray Tho ball bounded toward the Harvard goal with no less than I four Princeton men in a pursuit sol frenzied that they got in each other's way. Baker finally got up to tho , hall anl would have' been free to ; romp over tho goal for a touchown but he became so flurried he fell on tho ball on the 13-yard line with not a Harvard man within yards of him ' tne of the Princeton men had been d.te.ted kicking the ball carefully toward the; Harvard goal during the excitement and the Tigers drew a five-yard five-yard penalty. On the next lineup. Crum fought his way through ths lino for a touch-I touch-I down. SCORED BY 1 i Mr.i,r, I Princeton was albo guilty of having ia palsied fingered individual in its back line In the first period and to him goes tho credit, or the discredit as the case may be. for Harvard's lonely field goal He was Wlngate by name, and erratic by tendency and attc mpted the impossible running back of one of Gchrke's passes without with-out having tho ball. The ball rolled! on back of tho goal line after ho had helped It with the entire Crimson team In full crj'. The Tigers managed to retrieve the' error In piirt by snatching up the ball behind the goal and rushing It' out to the three-yard line But the faux pas left Princeton In a precarious precari-ous condition from which it could not escape the almost inevitable pen-i pen-i ally. LAST MINUTE RALLY. Jn th" dylnj,' moments of the game. Harvard called out Roscoe Fittz. the man who did so much to tlo Princeton last year, and proceeded to open up the strategy bag. One pass from Owen . to Fittz, deep in Harvard territory, was good for 32 yards, and another Owen to Churchill, netted six more on the following play, but Princeton i was able to break up all other at-I at-I tempts and whn the whistle blew the Tigers had possession of the ball at mid-field. Lineup: Princeton. Harvard Gray Jenkins Left end Treat Eastman Left tackle. Dickinson Grew Left guard. Alford Clark Center. Howard Hubbard Right guard. Eaker Dunker Right tackle Smith Holder Right ond Wlngate Bueii Quarterback frum Gehrke ICft halfback Cleaves Owen Right halfback. Caldwell Chapln Fullback. Score by periods. Princeton 0 7 I f 10 Harvard 0 3 0 0 S Final: Prlnco'on 10, Harvard S. Touchdown Crum. Field goal Baker. Owen. Substitutes Princeton. Snlvely for Howard; Howard for Snlvely; Thompson Thomp-son for Howard; Stout for Smith: Smith for Stout; Plnsmoro for Win-er;te. Win-er;te. Harvard- Cordon for Jenkins; Kunhardt for Grew; Kernan for Clark, Qreenough for Dunker; Hark for Kernan. Referoc Schwartz (Brown). Empire Murphy (Brown). 1 Inesmen Bankhart (Dartmouth). Field Judge Glllender (Pennsylvania.) (Pennsyl-vania.) Time of periods 15 minutes |