Neville Bail Across Lme for Score Which Beats...

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Neville Carries Bail Across Lme for Score Which Beats Haughton's SystemNOTABLES SEESERVICE TEAMSIN ANNUAL GAME

Distinguished Officials of

State .ind Nation Occtipypoio (iround Boxes

t af tha year

U .v-.-i.v-Na*.*.rday, la *pit. ef thi

i th, y,aw Haven. r<

i P.rufh Stadium wa*Irofls tha I

r h-. y eervtcenf,Tnl pro:*

-om New YorlBo* 1'rr. af tl

¦o l, . e Praaidito att<

ber of hii* Secretary

.¦ tarj I v\ aie Navy 'aniels,

.

h* Governor

nd many rGerard and

B the

.. _ani .: bad.'"* ¦"'*

1iad Mi

Ls»T.I

v i. Sanndera,lera.

u th Strrrtarv Bakerof War

iat* i ho\John

- r-.d Mr- harles-* R. II. Bishop, Mr

Mn

er-in-law of

, 4f th t-.¦.-.

Mi

|uCCU-

pitd i. grand tiar on theof the ' In

-... rernor

and Lleu-j.r.d Mrs. Jo8fr"h-

"- Hugh L.their dai..Formai Seere*

v M.- Woleott Henry.

Mr*. Thomas R..* and Mra. How-

Mr. and' Priiceton,

beeler.Thompsoaa on Nary Side

*.omp-arith them in a

M .-quiseJacan; Rear Adm.rul and

r, Hear Admiral..r Ad-ight

n Geo re Bar-n. Rear Admiral and

Ber.don.Admiral and Mr*. \\ ilham

| J V.i. Hugh Rose, of

v. Com-Vork.

H ll Benson.!. -f-raham, Asi

<i Mra. Ingrahaaat the Hotel Bilt-

GiMBia of the Mayor

a lower box or... *¦ .. rg, Mr.

Kousara

\\ Seeretarytl and

of the 1'nivrr

Mrs. Aupust B'lmont'*thi upper t.rr boxes,

Arimiral and Mr* I.e*..nMra. R. II. Robinson,

Mr **,. lack and ( apt-aini R Tiball.

rat Harriman

aman.A*n-

ba«i. .ire-j W. Gerard,'. i

and Mra, I aonardMr*.

Arnuel Milbar.k and

I af tr a arena

m r. rhar bOX

»ree and Henri Hat

BowaW Brokavr and1 a box on the,

' **

ra the Ai iv slda.. reas Milburn

* IcViekar...*.< re K B. t.ordon,

ai, George I\oni and 1"

Saar Admiral andMra. Jamea R.

nel and Mi« Gt

hoftald andiret Fahneatack. .

tOff|Russell,

.and.'*' od

tt ... Naval Re-Bj and

P. dio Flashes Hesult'.. v H Nt***. '.'football game

rsi plant <¦

. Naval Tra ning Station. Vork ¦sUtions.

'."** l mi v *s aVTOM©»ll I.. .na how to a'

V.r(i 11 ln !¦' ft¦-.obi l* owr.a

-'..cllon «l.ar

BT gl >OI

}<>« W«*i 1.7th Bt

'AV VB VILI.ANOVA. 1 M.*** *'¦'. »cidhan» n«14. Adm Tit.' '1

Scenes at Stadium During Gridiron Battle Between Service TeamsTiie West Point eleven kicking ont of danger earh in Ihe contest, and cit the right) the Army standard bearers.

CROSS-COUNTRYHONORS WON BYCORNELL AGAIN

lOverton, of Yale, However. lsIndividual Slar of

Chase

New Haren, Nov. 25. While the har¬

riers of Cornell I'niversity weri

latamplng themaelvei u* Intercol'crors-courtry ttam champions here to*day, individ wera retalned bjrYale, John W. Ovarton coming home

annual title run.

The Ithaea rnam rs gained their hon-nre of 38 polr.t..,Irdj I. <'. Dw ei

Tom C McDerraott, a

V Windnagle, ninth, and FrankBg the

i* comb:* I M WBImanlfeat when v.

th Syracuee third, Harvard' and Maine, the victor last year,

th place.It m .ther for the hill-and-

dale I] I'* »snty.nine lt to combat a Itifl wind

,. Weel Rock course of a

lix miles, eomaoaed of bot.«.ral itei bnl only a few sufferedfrom

iiver'i.*. d BOl appear to be much.n hia hard race. After he

: utes rorod near¬

lyop, than the trail ha*d before, his mother

ad u fur coat around him.er u little breakfast 1*1] be roady

ln therd* to

ad him.anoii. <>f tha Uniaareity

r. ran une wall ln>ma H-o

a uar Led third;

Edward J. Derapaey, atar,fourth, and I. <At the eleventh hour both Call

lege and the Maeaachasotti tr ititate ot. to withdraw thr r

, r ». whieh lent twehra teami to the... Sevsral hundred ipaeta*

tor« were gathered Ji. Ol themen were started on

their jour*iKerton held a lead I t some fifty

. .,,¦¦ paaaad oat af i1aa atmile point, whila the ra-

d.tw4 wai wall ng ta see the

wrrr

game

Jurinj* ths laat mile.K the

.-. r and moring away ta

llowa:. '..l"f«.

l H '

.

*

V 1 \ w

ii r i i ?-",?.?IS.O. I

>7 JI J-1

...

I

iVa'.lar. Yi.

rufimoutii I:M-

.113

. .

MORIARITY APPOINTEDAMER. LEAGUE UMPIRE

... George aforiarlty,eago, baa been aicnad ai an um

.. B. BJthni eeei hia appointmentto-dav :»hed last see-

!ub of1 eafuc. after i e

season a» a candidate for an inAald pa*¦Itian on the ("hirago Amercan team

lha Americai, I e;»,*..r itafl af umpiresfor lflT already eontaini the uiual

l.ot whethei Moriarity win b*uaed aa a nlnth and extra arblter. or

er one of the veterana Is to badropped Johnion refused to aay.

Greatest Gridiron CrowdSees Eli Beat Crimson

*.

Pushed Too Close, theBulldog Turns on John

Harvard's Men

fontlnaerl from page I. Tart I

per.ed since 1907 quite a numher. But

amonjr them was BB Yale fcatKHarrard.

From the Crimson mass the o'.d ery

<f "!!o!d 'em, Harvard- hold 'em'" an-

Yale's eall for a Bulldog .cor-

h l| the form of habit that, eren

Harrard had r.ot thought of nryanecesafol Yale assanlt apoa a *****

nd been imprei*nable for .

Uut when Le Gore and Neville ham-thelr way atill further on for

eight -¦ard* in two aavage assaalts, Har*Impressive contidence in ber de¬

fence b'-jran to wane..,.___

A moment later Neville made IIdawn for Yaie on Harvard's -*H*jr»rdline; and here, with four a.saults lettto rarrv the hail across. the Yale atandswent into one of those frenzies that

fi -.'bail fun knowa.fhe wild and woo'.ly uproar, atarting

in the Blue wing, soon rolled aroundthe field when the Crimson section be-

Kan to gather in the full ralor nf theHarrard defence. For, arith their feethraced upon their own goal Una, Har*vr.rd's forwards here put up a battfethat should be forever memoruble laIlarvard play.

Le (iore. the Panther

Oa tha Rral plny La Qore, the pan*thev. eama amaahlag In, anly ta crum-

d baekla up a* he struck the

wtu ltij| ... tha way. l-athen ihiftod and called upon

I to carry the bail.But Neville. too. was battered bar*

htni down, without gaining the span ol,I* shoe.Ones more La Roche shifted back to

I.e (iore -and this time, for a chance,t the Yale star on a dush BOUlde

of tackie.For or.e flash there waa an openinjt

but, as Le Gore came through.'f?e, tbe tine Hanard end, col-

lared hl* man with lach force that once

more the Yale assault wa- driven back.Coolidge struck Le Gore with such'erce tha* the hard-running bark wa:-

litarally driven into the ground.Hanard Still Happy

Small wonder at this point that ther volume of cheering came from

Harvard's side. After all. tradition is.,n, and habit is habit. 'They

shall not pa*s" had been written too

manv times against tha Yale attaek.Bat Yale anil had one chance left

This time La Uoehe decided to switchome more to Neviile. He called the*i!av through Gatei, the man who hadtirst given Yaie her chance; and Gate.*and Neville made good togethei.

hoic uhich the Yaie tackiewas not impre**lvelv wide, bu*w.de enough for Ne*ilU- to flght

,.v safelv across for the toflch-down that Yale was beginnlr.g to be-iievc had long *'.nee become extmet.Comerford fr»ii«.d at | that

-is a minor detail Yale hud come

from behind; Yale had scored a tooehown; Yale was now leading, and there.-*. af lt was !e»a thai. BBt] |

(.reateat Win of AllYala. vietory to'.a-

impressive vietory, nyaiit,Y.ile team e\ r ¦.

i te the sad of a eam*| ibla, i. ainpaign

lar s naa system ar.d facmgbardasl ' tha

While Harvard l.ad restod ar;dr . l'.'ihl game. Yaie had

ictd to face Colgate, BrOWB andrrithaut rest.

Yat sack **a* ihe spint and sound-play Instllled by Tad Jones. ar.d

.he rflcieney u** TrainerMack. that tha lopposedl) bate

Yals eleven not oniy outplayed..la of

I .. ihed *¦. '. f one

tutien, ai d Blshad flgbtiaa a

more Bggreeeive battle thanoaing quarter.

I'umblea Were CaatljIl wai a freak of late ar.d a queer

brtak of the battle that ihe scores madebv Harvard ano Yale both came, indire, '.-.! Yala fumblea If this isn't« WOrld'l record, H ought to be.

Harvaru's chance to r-eore arrived in

the Rral quarter, **h*n La Reehe fum-hlad Borwaoa'a long punt on Yale's 27-ya'.l llaa, '

aaey, on a fake paas. got.ix yards. and Robinson lh«n droppedback to dropkick from the 29 yard lmefor three pointa and *lr»t blood.

Yale's chance to seore resolted, as

related ah< kla. owd fumbleon a ruahing piay.

But, leaving all this out ln the cold,Yale ondoubtedly played the better,hat der game and deeenred te wm.

Yale doaonred her victory becaubeshe utterly eruahed and conquered theHarvard attack, ihe old deception in

Haaghtea- pluy* failed to deceiva.Harvard ihifta and fukes wera met by

ehargoa, dlracted with a drivingumash to tho nght spot.The oid strategy of luring the blind

Bnlldi '" °ne side and thenfailed to work Har-

rard had iad bor d*> of bewildenngand bafliag Tala Thlt time Vale wus

ti the ron bat two greatoade. Mooeley aid Caaaorfard, left otf,the line, with Cates, Biack and others,wai there with an unbroken front.

Harvard Tried' EverythingHarvard trifd all she had.Caiey ruihed ar.d Horween bueked..

Rablaaon plunged aad Thacher imashed.But, save for a few ttttilt gains, Har-

ittach was all droaaod up withno placa to £** bot di wa.The -tr:-. nf Talo'i defenea is this

Harvard BBada btit three tint dowm al!dav, and out of eleven forward passeionly oaa ajalnod graaad. Ine othora

larod df.wn or intercepted bybaohflold.

Re led buck and rtpalaed, Harvardnevertheleaa fought on te the end.Harvard. !¦ fa ". f-ught a notable fight;for she was faeinf a rhargmg, aggres-

i ih rr witn greater phyiieal******9 »a,«i

ige wai wortnt.yned againi tha I _rde»t

Iimjust after

tad ba Haiaaid

(asrv'a (.reat RunOl tka t'irif play Casey. tak;ng the

ftall rung out ai aon Tale'a le". end.de iinei, eat quickly

| off four \a\ttacklen who taemt to have him lur-

e ards acrofi* Ir-' rl«y has ever

graced a S.lf llnrv.r-l battle. Allast Miu* tachler s i

ratat tha o;*en, another oldfashiorrd r IB»P« e**med tobe fhe ordoi at tl ia: ,

\\ Harvard wai bora poaallaa. for'lesrenty-flTe yarda

,n,j . a the Cr.mion loit fif-Hararaaa had to punt,

w« 10-yard Ih-uorai effect of thia terrlnc up«et

indcionl ta break thenoral* el BHJ but u goad, gamii bunc'r*

r thit jpectscular *ffort.to lead 'he morau of

Harrard boi, taa ol tka maaet *-.'<-iplays ef fhe day dcrelopad.

After Horween had punted l.e Cor*rotumod tne k'ck with a long, twntingpunt dawn tka ftald. Aa the ball bound-ed along tt fllppod awav from Robin¬son, and »*' tail anybody'e hall ai it

rollld and flopped along the groundwithin eight yards of Harvard's line.

Horween Saved ItThere were two men left for the

ekaaa Oaa arai a Yale end; th* othorwai Horwooa. In the dash for the hallln)»h dived at almost the same moment,bai the -'ocky Crimson fullback beat

. ral te the spot by an oyi.- another touchdown.

Foreed r" kick herr, Horween puntedto I.a Roche, who called for a fair catchnn Harvard's ..-yard line.With th, wiad ftt his back Comer-

ford tried fai a goal from placementThe hall Fte.rted low, gathered momen-tum and, drifting on with the wind.was on its way t\vo feet across the barwhen ;t. itracb ot.e of thi upnghts andbounded back info the field.These points are outlined to show

there was a fairly even break in theinei of war; and that, at tki end,

the team that played the better, harderfootball finished out in front.

(i*ld Brrezes BlewAs the game started, a cold, whip-

ptng wind hegan to drive xti late N'.i-vemher rhill into the great crowd. Thelatter lnok-d tl be packed too closely,however, to -uffer from txpostirc.

It was only a few minute.-, after Har¬vard had won the tell aad Comerfordhud kieked oif that the iaaminaa crowd

rrly began fo sense a decidedchange in Yale affairs. Yale was onthe aggressive from the s'.art, withi aptain Hlack again leading his menon; and thne aggresiive Yale tacticsfoon had Harvard in trouble.On one of the first few plays Hor-

Waa forced to kick from back ofgoal line. To show his courage, the

Crimson fullback drove the ball ***.itfy yardi doam tha fieid for the long-Mt punt of the day. Horween's kickingwai consi^tentlv good, but here. in thetime of impending troubl*. when a slipwaald have meant disaster, he guve thebest hl had snd about ten yarda more

If this ian't kicking ln a pinch, JobaayBvora never invented the s>

\ Yale Fll*.verK.. agaifieeal punt a

Yale ?_ c Harvard nel Hfllchance. Standing ofl bi 1 ford line,I.a Cure p inted bai thirtl yardsagainal .. gi-ring Harvard theha'.i oa her rival'i It-rard liaa. Buton tha flrst pia} a Harvard penaltywreeked the chance for a score, put-ttng her back fifteen yards furtherdown the fieid.

These first two Harvard ponaltiei,the one just named and the one calledacainst Casey, were damaging beyondrepair. They cost the Crimion sevenlure points, und posiibly ten. Theyupset the entire game from a Harvard\icwpolnt, turning a uafe margin ofv irtory into a defeat.

But penaltiei happen to be thewages of transgresslon; and Harvardmust have known, with a number ofoth*r«. fhat the way of the tranigreis-or isn't soft.

Harvard Through EarlyWhen I.a Roche fumbled and Robin¬

son kickrd a field goal Harvard's seor¬

ing maehine had completed its day'swork. The redoubtable system had atlast erashed into a snag.from that point on it was Yale's

game and Yale's day. And ai thegame drew out and Haughton lent biflri»l. reierve lidei to* the field Yale'i

reteraaa, battered ai they were from,o rv.ny hard gamei ln a row, m»t each

with a harder drive and a ksenerpur.rh.

ln the final quarter Yale gained al-moit two yards to Harvard's ons, show¬ing the amaatng itaaaiaa snd condi¬tion of tho B.'j. marhtn*. In this lai'

the Crimion attack, with itirushing game, cut to pieeis and bat¬tered fo a pulp, fell back on the lastdeaporatl hope of the beaten tho for-wardEight tlaaaa iiere Hirvard tried the

passing gai..**, only to have seven ofi.er s'.tempts broken up or intercepted.!i tha otie ..ccesr. cann rear revtri

ir.g the icore.

A Uorthy KffortV, th tha ball tn Harvard terrv.ory.

Murrav pa.sed to Casev. who ran tothe left. whtrled and, with a louthpawpeg, sho* *.he ball far down the fieldto Co.

'!:.* fleet Hui-vard end raught th*bs.l i>:i Ya.r's 'i-" yard Haa Me had anopen f.4:d beyond, bat just sa he got

headway l.e <>or*. with a greatdtving tackle, brought Coolidge toearth, savir.g an almost sure touch-oown.

id b* ranked wtth th*baal u' the dsy. F-ven then Harvarcwas tn itrtklr.g distaitre for a goal.but an intercepted forward pais ktliedher final chanc*.

The Yil* *-rrpe_tlneAi the gam* ended over -.000 Yale

mei. t_«.h*d up- the field for thi firilBaaka dance [fl many Critr.ion raoonsA* hats ar.d coata wire thrown acrossboth rrosi-bari a flaih of red fir* aaistarted from each poit for Yale hadwa ted too long not to celehrate withall the had

In the midit ef this jub.lee anothercrowd ruibed for Tad Jones and Cupid

Black, who had jjiven io much to bringYale baek upon the football map.The showing made bv Jones ui the

development. meatal and physical, otthis Yale eleven lifts him hifh tor,ia,'ht among the great coaches of th-..'nme. No man ever deserved succea*mora thun Jones deserve.s the acclaim

| that both Yale and Harvard men an

giving him around this bedlammed cita-del right now.

Gatew the Hero

For Yale to-day the first feature wasthe wonderful work of Ty Gates, theYale tackie, and the brilliant showingof Moseley and (omerford, her twoends. These three were the stars of:h» afternoon. with Gates leading themall.

This man was all omt the lot. Hewaa n hall r'a; ing centipede, with a

doieii arms and two dozen eyes; and itia no great wonder that Yale thinkias much af her Ty us Georgia doesof bara.

In addition to theae three, the brill-iant rushing of Le Gore, the steadyplungir.g of Neville and tiie good workof Captain Black belon*,' But for that'matter Yale, with only one change inher original line-up, finds it hard toriek out any one or two above theerowd.They all looked 100 per cent effl-

cient to Eli at 4:50 o'clock.Caaey Alao .Starred

Harvard's leading feature wn thegood ru-hmg of Caaey, the (inc puntingof Horween and the effective work ofCoelidga and Harte, who jcave Yale'agroat pair an even fight.The end olav stands out as one ol

the most distinct features of the game,for it held consistency mixed withbrilliancy that haa leldom been

ad m any one game.Yale won because she had the greater

drive. the greater physical power. andm B way the greater determination toget there first.

Yale *»on because »he had made noher mind not to be beetan. ar.d becausefor the first time in p. long while nn-

had a defence alert enough to breaaup Harvard's shiftlng, deceptive at¬taek.

Bttt 'he flnel answer to her vietorycomes in the fact that she brought TajJones to New Haven to bring Yale backto old-fathioned way*-and Tad madigooi.

Ihe answer here. whh a hard toe'taam, Is this: Yale 10, Princeton C.Yale (>, Harvard 3.Th«re may be nothing much ta th¬

an Ifl the name of "Tad Jones,'lut to Ya.e lt lookn good enough t«cat.

WISCONSIN HOLDSILLINOIS TO A TIE

Madison, Win., No*-* tt. ta a field o.'mud the Cniversitv of W.«cor.sin's feetbail team waa able to-day to hold thel.'nlve.itv tit I'l'ro's team to a 0 to 0tie. W.seonsin had a crance in thef.rst of the last period. but Kreutse.¦»¦.'. Maeomber sa epaortonity io puniBOt "f dar.fer. lUrrriered by mud, Kfa*tomber faili Baigoal. Tw.ce he trii p aaa , aha andonce a drop. b'.t arithaat ».:wm.

M0NTCL.4IR CRUSHESKINGSLEY BY 35 TO 0

Ifoatalalr AettV Mf closed its secondMaaafl -.- ting a defaait. bybeating th* Kingeley School at KsseiFella, N. I yesterday afternoon by theirore of '.ih to 0. Montclair prov.*(i too

- for Kir.gsley in all depar.Icr the game and rolled up the largeit¦cr.re since the two teams have beenepposin.. earh other. Hatel, Sylvan,.^nencer and Buck itarred for Montclair.

Play by Play Storyof Yale's Triumph

( o_tl__e_ fr.f_ prnge t

Yale's ...yarr! Mne. It was a shortpun*, stopped by the wm_. Tki

aari on tne job, bowiear, and.he Harvard hsck wai sp.i'.ed tn histrackl A lme hw'f. BBd s llteril pa**

ta Ca ty, gained oaljyat'tj for Harvard. ar d Hot .**»'-. I.-, I.., K'.che on Yale'.- g] ys-d 'neCoalidgl snd Hsrte were or. fhe «pot.vnd ,;iere 'n« no run ba<*lr.

Neville got three yard- st fsrklear.d then l.e Oor» punted thirteen*,_r_s to Ysle's 'K-vard liaa. Horweencracked the ne for two yards. ardI'a-ey eeled aloftg for .ever_l yirds.only to have the hall called back ar.dhis team p*naiized f.fteen yarda frrholdiag. Harvard tried a forward nas«

Robinson to I ooiidge, but the ballground«d.Harvard had another chance to strike,

and th,* t.me the opportunity was notr.eglected. Horween kicked to I_r.Roche. who fumbled the ba!'. anilThacher recovered fnr Harvard onYale's 27 > ard liaa. Horween go*. a

yard at the Itne and Casey got six on

a fake forward pass. Robinson was

.hen called on to try a goal from thetield. Standiag on the 28 yard Itne. heMat tka bai! spinning acrois the bar

nnd between the posti, and Harvardtook the command,

Black roase4 biS men into act on and'omerford kicked off to Horwc. n, whofumbied, but Robinson was on the baillor Harvard and recovered it in theIT-yard line. Horween punted to l/ii.Roche on Ynle'i 36-yard lir.e. n clearri.rry of fifty yard*. Le GorS lustseven yards on a buck o:f kick forn-.a-tion and on the next play pun'ed toYale's 44-yard line. Harte rar. tha hallfor a two-yard galp just as the periodended. I

SKCOND PF.RIODIt was second down with eight >arda

to go and Harvard's bail BB Yaie's 41-vard lme. Neville intercerted a passfrom Itohinson on Yale's lo-yard lineand came bark up the *rctch.whiie the Yaie stands bowled. LeCor.- reeled off a five-yard gaill uroundCoolidge. Horween making the tnck.e.After anuther play failed to gain LaGore punted to Harvar-i's 10-yard line.'Eddie Caacv followed with tha most

spectacular play of the game; r, playthat was diseounted by holding ia theline. He broke away ar.d ran cightyyards through the whole Yale team.;alipping a tackler here, itiff armingtne there, until the goal line had beencrossed. Whiie he was running, how¬ever. Dave Fultrt tooted his horn andcalled the penaltv.

Harvard groaned. but Yale eheered-After two other plays failed to gammattrially, Horween punted and IaSRoche took the bail on Harvard's 41-ynrri line Two plays failed to gain forYale, and Nevilla tried a field goal,Which failed.

Fln*t IKian af GameHarvard proeeeded to make the inl-1

tial firat down of the game. Horweengained two yards on a buck off tackieand Casey p:rk"d up seven on a fakekick format.on play. BoTWeea slammedthrough the llne for two vards and a

first down, wh.le the north standboomed forth the long Hanard cneer.An exehanre of punts followed and LaRoche n.ade a fair catch on Harvard's44-yard llao. (omerford made ar, at-temrt at a laid goal.The silence hung so heavtly one

could feel it a. the V..ie man meas-

ured hi* diataaca aml .1 bail.*He sent the leather boominif a....-ig one low line. It had the diataaca, butthe wind carried it off to or.e aida andIt itruck tha right-hand goal po.t andeounted as a rouchbac'a. Tw.> r.p* atthe Blue iir.e failed ta gaift, ard Hor¬ween punted to I.a Roche, who was

pinned by < '.n.idge. Ihe Harvard llnecal.ed a Bsai - meeting o.\ La Goie'sneck end It ' i* a !u.-r*. Hor-WBOB thaa smeared a forward pass andI.e i.ore panted over the lir.e.Harvard could IO Horween

kie«*d to La Roche an Yale's 47-yardUne, and the Biu« too* up the matterof seoring a touchdo*:.. th'- ';rst inme dreary vears Le (iore and

Jaeque* gained eight yard* betweenthem, and Neville r the ltn*for a yard gaifl Neville d.d the nmetrick for a ftnt do-'- i, und the lo:.gYale eheer »». in order.

Le Gora fumbied on his dash into theBad, but Gates, who played a

marrellaai game. rero\ered the bailir.gol along. fairly wad*ng over

til v.e »as faf ad oj's.de atths l.-yard ssarh. ll u,i- a gaia of

twei ....

Harry Le Gore bit 1 BS for three¦ard* and Neville got three more. Ne-

.^rr'.ei the bail twice and pnt i*.ard Uae. Braden. tbebaak, praacod up and

i.'o'aii on the side I'.nes w»,Mng for acall that .-ever v>s* made lt waa rtrit

.. r 'i alo, sad tha Harvard teamwaa desperate. rn made a

gallaat, but an snavalliag fight.^ ale l.oe* ( r_t>

I_ (iore faled to budg* in his attack, and Neville wes spilled for eslight loss on the second charge Le(iore again tried and made a slightgain this time. Then came the pTay

that artO be wr'tten in Ysle's footballhistory. Kar.mrc off a ihift form*on, .'¦. lli cranhed through < aptain

Black, ani -.4.;h '< upid'' ;'orcn;g theopaaiag, seored tbi touchdown. The

was Yale, *>; Harrard, S. andunted Yale annt erasy. < ©merfordmissed the goa!. but r.o on<* rared much.

After Robinson ran back the »v»off Casey was stopped for a s!irht gaiisnd fhe half ended.

THIRD PERIODH-rween kicked off for Harrard to

start the >eccnd half, but he failed towait for the whistle. Biack caught thaball, which the officials at once calledback. U Corc got the n*xt kick-offand came back to Yale', 36-yard line.He punted on the flrst down, Robinsonmaking the cstch on Harvard'.. B-yaxdline. The Yale line held up under annssault, and Harvard kicked to LaRoche, who fumbled, but recovered theball on Yale'i 40-yard lireA punting duel followed, with Hor-

ween hoidtng his own againit I* Gorealthough th* latter had the wir.d at hishack. Finally Le Gore kicked out ofhoundi on Harvsrd's 20-yard liae.Punt followed punt in rapid succes-sion, and after several had been exchanged, Yale took the ball in midfleld.Le Cor* made a thnihng run aroundCoolidge for twenty two yardi. and putthe ball on Harvard's 30-yaid line.Neville was spilled for a ilight los* btSnow, and Le Gore gained two strldaithrough the lin*. Harvard was penal¬ized five yards for off-side plav, andthe ball was on her i.-l-vard lin*.Oatag caught a forward pass from LeGore, and was stopped on the ( nmaonseven-yard lme.

Harvard Defence Kugg.-dIt wai then that Harvard proved itsdlfiaain power, and iU courage, too

for thi- Yale attack was checked ihortin lls tracks, and, ir.deed. lost twelvevards. Noailli got on* yard, and..dded two more ln another plunge, butHarte broke up a forward pasi play.and on the last down the Harvardline en mass* brokl thraagh andtacklad Le Gore for a 12 yard loeaIt was Harvard's ball oti her 1 yardline. ( asey got nine yards tu tworushes, but was hurt and left thegame, making way fur Minot A linePlunge gave Harrard Hi . down Thenlaie ln'uced, ar.d harvard panted toI.. Gora, who ran twenty live yardi toHarvard's 30-yard llai, Ihe hall wascalled b.ick, howev.i, and pat in pia/on Yale's 4G-yard liaa.Le Gore kicked to rtarvard's 1* yardline, where Gat*j« tackled Rohir.iaa.The teami exchai <ed punts, nnd lt wa

Harvard's hall on Harvard'i >-yerdline ai the period endedFOURTH PERIOD

As the teams gathered toge'her Nls little conference between the thirdand fourth penodi, one Yale man laldl"The Haughton aystem has Bfteaa m*n-utea ln which to reestablish Itaalf." A,the teams made ready tor 'he ImIminutes of pay ono might ha'ethought that the Yale Bulldog kaiflwh-*. wm going on. He iteaa ther-.head erect and tail wagging fiiriou-,. fas he barked defiauce to tha whol-world.Casey returned to the game and tried

fo f-dge past Gates. but lost twa yanlaon the effort. Horween punted to l.eiore, and Harte made the tackle. ltras not much of a tackle. ettheigiubbed the Yale back around the ner»and was carried along for about ainiyards. Two rushes failed to gain, an.lNevil.e booted to Harvard's l-yardGates spii'.ed Robinson in his tracks,Two rushes lost eight yards for Har¬vard, and Fiower, who replaced Hor¬ween, kicked from beh.r.d bil goal toYale's 36-yard line. It was a clearcarry of seventy yards.Ia Roche failed to gain or a fake

kick, but Neville got fourteen yard*off the same formation, ploughtngfc.ong with about five men elingtng tahim. Another assault was not prolif.eat.d Neville punted out of bound* onHarvsrd's 21-yard line. Another *vchange of kicks gave Harvard the ballon her own 30-yard lir.e. Murray. whoreplaced Robinson at nuarterbark.opened on aerial attack The pasanwere poorly thrown, and w.th no MBSOof dlroetton. They failed, aad 1kicked again.

tj*> (iore Savea Da>Yale ktcked. and Harvard *¦

bai on hor ---yard line. A trlple pa-«,latera! from Murray to Casey, and thenforward to Coolidg-*, gaiaed thirtyyarda for the Criituon, and only a greattackle by Le Gora prevented a tou'i-dow.i. Another pasi grounded. amlNoi 11* intercepted a third ot. Ysle'sIS-yard line. Three ultacki at thepave Yale a first dowa, w.th Le (iore.Neville and I__ Roche earrying th* ballln ordtr.Nine more yards were gained by I l

Gan ani Nevil e, and then !_«¦ Goretried a field goal from the 4.*>-yard line.It mn>ed and the ball rolled over th*goal line. (asey failed to gain, andthen Neville intercepted a forward passon Harvard's 30-yard !;ne The p'.ayws« r.ot allowed. however. Fiower punted to Le Gore, who ran back ten yardiYa'.e was offside, and the ball araibrought hselc.A lataral pass gained eight yari-

With Caaiy rarryim; th* ball. an<l lh<.uime player go* tv.e!\e vard* on an iadrun. Le (mre then tt.terrepted a for¬ward pait and ran ba--.. fo Yale'**. ||yard lme, dodgtng aloag for Iwiaty-tive raida. Two plunge.' wer* mad*and then the whidlle blew

Indian Wins 'CroM-CountryCarlisla. Penn . N'ov. tf, Routsus, of

Carliatl Blhool, was f.rst home m UMdual run with Dickinson Coll*g* h*-eto-day, OOteblUklaf a n*w record forthe course.

Hairart. Wini at SocoerN*w Haven Nov. 26 Harvard won

th* soccer game with Yale to-day, twogoals to none.