Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 22, 1914, SPORTS SECTION, Image 42

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    THK OMAHA SUNDAY BKK: NOVKM1.KK 2 lfU.
SOME COLLEGESFOR NUMBERS
Other Biff School Elereni Not Sure
About Marking Their Flayer.
Kelts out tee spectators
Wken Gridiron Mm Are XinWrrt
It Gives KTfrri a tkasree
ee Vlii nolmt Vmr
tlrnlar etonf.
Jeff Would Make a Fine Mop Salesman
Drawn for The Bee by "Bud" Fisher
NEW TORK, Nov. It.CoDoae elevens
are now divided Into three classes on the
duration of numbering their players. One
division t perfectly snttsflcl to wrt mira
bers regardless of the attitude of the op
posing tram, another' will use numbers
only on condition that opponents do like
wise, while the third refuse to adopt
the plan, which has been popularly received,-
wherever trpd, as the best move
made In the gridiron game In years. That
It wlll ultimately be made compulsory
seems fercgone conclnalon. In the
meantime the colleges w'tfch have taken
the leal In the movement d-nervp all
kinds of credit or their progressive atti
tude. Dartmouth was the first of the
I) If eastern elevens to adopt the number
system, and now 1'rlnteton Is In the fight
to stick regardless of what Ideas Its op
ponents mny follow. . Fuch teams as these
have a. great influence In th foot ball
world.
The new stadium and standa which
are sprlnclmc "i throughout the country
will play Mr part in hurrying film
a rule for humherliit? players. The rpee
t a tors In the higher rows of seats at the
new Yale bowl, the Palmer stadium or
the Cumliri lft stadium would find., It Im
possible' to dlstlmrtiteh the players from
auch a. distance even If . they knew the
players personally. It is only natural
that spectator at any game like t know
na much as possible about "who Is who,"
and foot ball Is the only sport In Which
the public's wish Is totally disregarded.
)ecaus the name has grown' In pop.
ulartty ' while spectators have been "In
Ihe dark" Is no antnmont that It could
not be made more attractive. This polt
seems to have been forgotten,
, Came for Yule Meat.
A Yah captain of - recent memory has
been quoted as declaring that Yale foot
ball la for Yafe' men and not for the
newspapers or public. 'The erection of
the huge bowl leads to ths belief that
few of .the dear public also take Interest
la the sport Public Bales are the rule
for all college foot ball games, barring
three or four contests at the close of the
season, when some restrictions are made
owing to the demand for seats. And these
early games are well supported.. Whether
those In the stands are alumni or out
siders, they are Interested enough In the
games to elre to follow them Intelli
gently, and some day lliose Institutions
which Insist on cloi.InK their esra to the
demands of the men who pay ths bills
will learn their lesson. Foot ball Is
played by amateurs sometime and in
soma colleges but it Is Jut as much a
commercial enterprise as lire bull. The
"gate" la of more Importance than the
goal line, as the money taken In for foot
ball pays the' bills for numerous sports
bealdes Itself. Tho Institution gets the
advertising and the publle pays the b 11.
without getting mu.-h consideration in
some Instances.
Hard ta Fallow.
Tryinw to follow- a number'. (,ntt
after looking at a contest like lh recipt
Come 1-fcroWn gifno nt th Tol .ni'id
U like walking out of char unt g:.t.lito
a tunnol. At the Ya'e-Bron pm) t row i
substitutes came, on tho flo!d quite often,
but no enc teemed, to know who they
were, even In the press stand. Guessing
became the favcr.to pi-.stlme and credit
for good pttiy'ng went where It was not 1
due. In thin city recently Urown was
sat!s!i:d to wear, numlmrs, brcquao Cor
nell wore thcin. A, croud twii! the aire
of the lo rrojiirtn sfMcmlitaga received
io consideration' rloturdny, perhaps I
cauae Yule has net eu fit to adopt the
plan. It would ree; that the yfllcgrs
would be: qurto as unx!ou to ace the
praJae or blurtie for work on the gridiron
go where It Is de?v!vcL but many of
them show no qiepoalt on to do their part
for the benefit tof utl corieernoJ-epectti-tors.
writers and plover.
The fault lira with no slntle college,
but with many of them. The only argu-n-ent
an1nt the number system In that
the opposing tem would be sble In fol
low tta trick -play better. 'The formation
Itself Is Caster to revognltc ad remember
than any series of numbera. and. farther
more, no teairl ran sen the numbers of
the opposing players. Yet this Is the only
argument that crt be offered by those op
posing tha plan. - '. .' '
MUTT. IJOST LeNtet
Af fceur r O08 rS r
PfVrefHY rLooft-rAoPs
IT'i rM30UT TlA6
You Took rXTufOLe
To VbORteLP NND
, TRieO To t0 COfeTf1 (HQ
w isw ----naasMoaBwaHnaBaB,aBaaap
T ?
AMt WeM I HtT TH6 CX-0 TowtV,
uPTmsj MrSIN STsHpfeT To
UTTtG neLue'i house
ASO P THIS PrU)POST'ON
tvrns oot to ee Hrvv-f as
GOOO Ai I THIHK T VuH-U
out alu over. re iNitoe
Me TRfNfi6C(
7
Trten T'sa comma. out of
HelLST ON tkb rttsT trnh "r
TMeVr LITTLG. OUO KOtAC TOtAK
OOT VUGSTa TH5' M-rrt
OOT TMGTte I l-krT eHlfAU
WHO'4 WeXITlKw OR KG &T.
I'eA fiOtH RlHT VJP TO
HtR r'RXJrHT' tO0R., WVTH
HAT CfH fAY HAMO
R.VNG TKS &SU.,ANO WKeN NELQ
To TM6 DOOR - UHfN
LlTTtS MgLLte COCA6 TO
TH6 DOOR.
T
r
veuu, what
AR.e You 6dWf
SKT?
I jM s, Ark,
1 - .n.f. t m
" ""
I'M CONNN s-
'Net.1., 1d You
u;T to OvjV
Instead of reducing. This is an advan
tage he shares with Ulhhons, who Is also
well wl(tiln the class limit.
Ames Tramples
Upon Drake Team
IKS MOINES, la., Nov. 11. (Special
Te'egram.) Ames had .a walk away In
foot ball with Drake before a good
crowd on, fast grounl. At the outset
tiak held ths ("yclonss down and It
looked for a time Ilk a close game, but
rcott, ths winners got on to tha situa
tion and were welkin directly through
the Drake line whenever they deetred.
The work of Kvans for Ames at fullback
was sufficient to win the day. fte-
poatedly he carried the ball either around
the end or through the center and demon
strated the Drake defense was very weak.
Mors sluo made many gains for Ames.
J erne n did some effective punting for
Drake as d d imlth, who went ill when
Ulaekburn was Injured.
The llneu;;
DKAKK. ' AMES.
McViv UK.IR.K Jone
Warner LT.IIt.T Keevex
r eager I-.O.IR.O werrK
lUwltt IMG John
.mu.K O.I I.tl McKlniey
....11 T.IU.T Mattlaoii
ltT.lUE Packer
VI.H.IQ H Mo
L H i It It Wllaoi
H II.IUH MeDonal'
fcv u iV H Evun
a St 14 H-4il
ioi(iiff"of ''chiciujo. Umpire:
Hrl'teetou. Head linesman;
CRIMSON IS VICTOR
BY38 TO 0 SCORE
(Continued from Page One.)
on Yale's twenty-yard mark. Yale lost
flvs for off-side and Mahan and Francke
plowed through to the five-yard mark.
Francke was stopped, but Mahan turned
the end, going to the line, where he de
liberately downed the ball. Francke then
made the touchdown and Harwlek kicked
goal. Score: Harvard, 29; Yale, 0,
Harvard was given the' kick-off and
IahanJi'ii-.U.fic-uf)ffr.-t.l'i.
NEBRASKA'S CANDIDATE FOR THE ALL-AMERICAN
Chamberlain, ths big Cornhusker halfback, who
has been a terror to all opposing teams, ,
Dills
Kulfcorn
Keen .....
Warren ..
.lriiean .
Hhenrer ..
Ulaekburn
A mew
Jjrake ....
Hrferee;
Htralt of
Umbargnr of Yale.
Amateur Billiard
Experts to Compete
NEW-YORK. Nov. SO.-Amateitr bil
liard players will begin the season i f na
tional ebampionwlitp tournaments', under
the dlroetlon of the National Association
cf Amateur Billiard flayers, with the
claae C IS.t bnlkllne meet ins. which, will
begin Monday, ttewniker 7, n this elly.
The class B IKi balkllne division will
compete In the tourtisment nt the Ama
teur Billiard eluh of New York. This
toumsihent will begin TuesdayJanuary
12. and It will bo the first time It has
ver been held at a etub. Tho dates for
tba pocket billiard rhamrlonehla and the
class A balkline nieell'.ig ate. respec
tively. Monday, February 1, and Tuesday.
February I.
CORNELL WINS CROSS
COUNTRY RUN AT NEW HAVEN
NBVY IIAVKN, t-oan., Nov. Jl.-Cornell
won lb Intercollegiate cross-country
run today, with Harvard second and Yale
l third. Harvard beat Yale at soccer, three
goals tp one, and Harvard won tha In
tercollegiate Gun club shoot.
Cornell scored ti points to 77 for Har
vard. . which was second. The other
score were: Yale, tl; Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, 113; Pennsyl
vsnla, Princeton. i: Colby, IM
Dartmouth. 171; Prown. 1: Columbia
lit; College of City of New York. 211.
(Continued from Pane One.
GOPHERS DEFEAT MAROONS
forward paxres. fcliowm Imx t a punt.
Kusni'll ma ik tht touchdown und I
tirhaeter kicked roI,
Rrala Deadly Work
The Uophera' liuemua then bexan their ' I
deadly work. Id by Townley ot r'ght I ki thruVu ltiU oiV"
tackle they ripped t'.ie Maroon line to : mark, where Harvard took the ball on
HeversJ Important runiM In tli ruin I shrelM. the Mlnneaota backa repeatedly , downs. Watson reiilaced Logan and
were dlseueeed by the amateur WMIard ' B,,,,n flv ' len ,,Tll plunge. Whltlngton replaced Weston,
officials Theie li be properly drafted ' Lu''k leJ ,,,tc"s0 ll staving off Ue- j That put the bull on Yale's thlrlyone-
and offered for the conilU' ration of the ,r"1 ,,",u '" ,ln,w" """ "j mr.r. ....iu uwuu ..a...
mmhfrl mt I . . ) r..A.tr. u..:SOia Piaoe
H. . .. ' - , I ..I.' V . ' i VI ,v
asaoclat:or, whjh will be beld Monday,
January 11. l,o most atgnlflcant la a
rule proposed hlch will causa minors,
competitors under 21 . years of av. to
be Ineligible aa conteatanta la t'ae A and
In an International rhaniplonshlp tourna
ment. The association has received noti
fication that
vrra! fir.'iiTitMlntf i.mu(,rt eoull
of class A qualification have appeared In m j.rawe'.;"!!.'.'
I
t
a second touchdown und UrtcKley went m and dropped back as tr
kicked goal. Tho gimo ended with the ) for drop kick. It waa a fake and
La. I within f ve ynrU of the Chicago 1 Mahan went to tli five-yard mark.
line. A forty-five-yard run by Kuaseli
from a caught punt through a broken
field, was a feature of the game. Tho
lli.eup:
IHIOAOa : I MINSC8UTA
H'jmlii
UK IK ..
U l itt T..
UOIMI).
westerm cities who wish to
skill against the 'vetersni.
KT L.T..
R E li. B.
MIDDLEWEIGHT TITLE UP
TO CLABCY AND GIBBONS
NEW- YOHK. Nov. 2).-lf Mike Cilbbons.
can be Induced to tackle Jimmy dabby .
with a referee's decision at stake there
should be no difficulty in deciding to
whom tha middle eight title rightfully
belongs. These two middleweight! stand
out from all the ethers now that (Tabby
has disposed of C.eorge Chip.
Here 'n the cast C'labby is something
f a stranger. Wham be appeared bece
last he eas simjity a very clever boxer,
)'jt g shade too heavy for tho welter
weight clea. Blnce thea he has de
veloped into a genuine nnldivweight bis
enough to rope with any of the v
pounders, but without having to weaken
himself in making a weight In fact
CUbliy ! aln's to build biruaclf up
test their. ...
I J. Kaoa
! Mmrii
u.il fc.uUylU ...ubiud ...
hflW -..UK iR M .,
n.i.t k H U iUH.ll..
rlu4 K k if B.....
DOAKE WALK OYER BELLEYUE
K rail lee gained four yards and Mahau
two feet With twelve inches to go Har
vard waa penalised fifteen yards fur
lioldlntC. Again Brtckley dropped back.
a but it was a forward pass, Mahan to
... Qoiat Cuolldge. who went' ten yards. Watson
rooia . then threw another forward pass to
Hardwlck for a touchdown. rJrtckley
kicked goal. 8 ore: Han-ard, ; Yale, 0.
In all these playa Drlckley stayed far
back of the line and Harvard used flnly
J ten men to score. Brlckley went out,
, wildly . cheered by Harvard rooters, and
' McKlnloek Iwok the. vacant place,
i The announced line-up for the big game
. ii ai titllnwa:
YAIJC 1 HARVARU.
SlMlullil
. WlncUlr
.... ktar
. . . barton
. Dlrilricll
HaaitUua
. Hlrtu
kolas
:.' -
,.. . . . . " . . . , i. . ; ,' . -t
-.. . v.. : . ,1 : ,
,...'... t ,-.v- :. m
" ' . '
. "V" 1 - V V v
a - J v.: . v. v. . -, s
""
VIC HALUGAN'S TOE
SAYESCORNHUSKERS
(Continued from Page One.)
(Continued from Page One.)
players ws displayed by
most of tbv
iKtaae.
. XJneupt
IH)AN E.
Whll. horn ..
Wtahart ...
Miuikcr ....
Johnson .
Conrad ..
I luat ....
KnD .
Iavl ...
Mareeh
Kteter .
Medlar .
Hal ore:
RKULEVl'F.
RRIIJl Petets
K.T.I U.
H.O.! UT..
C. c
UT I R..
I..U.IH.T..
L.K.I1I.F1 Weak
Q B ig B , Munneil
R.H.I I..H Uilmore
1..H I KM hartley
K.M.I K B Ulunan
liralle Manni Iincola. Urn-
pirn: Husaell ex-Nebiaska. Headllnea
miu: Will Luke, Lincoln
grass I. Rl Harwlek
T.lbuU UT.IK.T...... l'raatbull
-onrujr .. UO K O rmaara
Wblia " O Wallaue
Wtloae H.U :I.U WcMue
UtW KT 1UT Parauoa
Mitlliaas HI1LB Cvalul.a
Wllwa g. B.IO B Loa
liuk LHU'HHB Bradlaa
ljUhtenvaler k..k HHllLHI Mahaa
H urllunnat . jtv r a Ik s Fraata
Berkhermerl Kefere: N. A. Tufts, Urown. I m
fiuaiafanK1 D. I Kuits. Bro n. Held Judge
urii Williams. IVnnsylvania. Head litiesmaa:
r. w. Murpny, nrowa. lime; rour lu-teea-oiiuute
periods.
moirju.
Oatwa Wlu.
ONAWA. la. Nov. ISpeclal Tele-esraru-l
Keeaialin e aJemy of Prairie
much forward pasr.ug. unawa dateaUsd
Logan. U to f.
NINTH ANNUAL GROWL
HELD BY DOANE TIGERS
CRKTK. Neb.. Nov. .-(Special ) Tha
ninth annual foot ball banquet of the
Doane Tigers was held tonight In the
Crete Congregational Church parlors. The
event was unique In that It took tha form
of the ninth annual growl la tha Tigers'
den. ' r
The Tigers snd Tigresses assembled la
the church parlors at f p. m. and then
were led Into the Innermost recesses of
the Tiger den. Here the remnants of tho
Tigers- prey were brought to view. The
den was decorated wntn root nail iropmes
and trimmed with orange and black. In
the center waa a pile of aide and a mm-
ter of skulls that bore tho twice told taJa
of former victories. At on auia a large
tiger appeared to bo overcoming a young
coyote.
A delicious banquet waa followed by tba
annual eouacil of the Tigers, with Daaa
3. N. Bennett as "chief growler." Char
aeterlatlo growls were also given by Cap
tain Johnston, former Halfback Dickin
son. Lady Booster Hoaford, former Quar
terback Krebs, captain-elect. and Coach
T. T. McConnell.
No applauae waa allowed, but each
growl was followed by a council growl
of all the Tigers present.
The Right Honorable High Orowler
Alloa spoke on "The Taming of ths Tiger"
and presented the D.'s for tho seaaoa to
tho following men: Kaman. Whltnhora,
Bluet, Wtshart. Medlar. Koester. Maresh.
Johnston. Conrad and Munkrea.
aWaiorwft Wlat frame Lyeaa.
BANCROFT. Neb.. Nov. II. (Spatial )
Bancroft High school foot ball team de
feated Lyons High school team here yea
terday, to . Two weeks ago Lyons de
feated Bancroft. 14. to 7. . A third gsme
wtll be played in Lyons Thankaglvlng day.
The winner will claim the championship
of northeast Nebraska.
Be Want Ads Are ramous as Result
Getter a
line, and each was made from an angle.
Iowa's touchdown was the real" sensa
tional play of the day. In the fourth
quarter, after It appeared all waa hope
lessly lost, a forward pass from Parsons
to Carberry opened the way for a score
from the thlrty-flve-yard line. Just a
minute before the same play was tried
tho pass executed perfectly,, but'. Potter
tackled Carberry behind the goal so
hard that the Hawkeye end dropped the
ball. .
Nebraska surpassed Iowa in hut two
departments, forward pausing and Halll
gan'a kicking.
Little ttaarte Stars.
Gross, Oarrettson, - Parsons and Car
berry were much better ground gainers
than the Nebraskans. Gross especially
was strong. Ho wiggled his, way for many
yards, and It generally took two men to
down him.
Nebraska suffered severely from penal
ties. The officials chalked 110 yards
against tho Cornhuskers, as compared to
forty-five against Iowa.
Carberry, tha Hawkeye kicker, out
punted Howard, his kicks averaging over
forty yards.
Nebraska missed a golden opportunity
to upset the Hawkeyea at the very open
In of tho game. The ball was Nebraska's
on tho two-yard, but It could not bo
pushed over. If that score had been made
considerable of the Hawkeyes' fight
would hsve disappeared and conaiderable
of the Nebraska fight would have come
Into Its own.
Goal Kirk Falls.
Bruckner kicked off to Rutherford, who
returned the hall to Nebraska's forty
yard line. First downs were made and
then Halligan attempted bis field goal.
It failed and the ball was Iowa's on her
twenty-yard line. On a fake punt forma
tion the ball was swiftly pasaed to Urosa.
The Iowa quarter fumbled the ball and
Vic Halligan was Instantly on top of It
on the five-yard line. Rutherford slipped
and was thrown back four yards, where
upon Halligan plunged through for seven
yards, pulling; tho bail on the two-yard
line. Iowa held and kicked out of dan
ger, and a beautiful opportunity was lost.
Csrberry kicked out forty-five yards
and Potter returned five. A forward pass.
Potter to Howard, netted twenty yards,
and Rutherford and Chamberlain together
manipulated eleven more.
First Potmt Scored.
From the twenty-five-yard line Halli
gan scored the first points of the game
by a neat place kick directly through the
posts. The ball sig-iagged back and forth
during the remainder of the period and
the quarter ended with the ball In Ne
braska's posaeaslon on Ita own twenty-
five-yard line.
In the second quarter Halligan added
another three points through his kicking.
Howard punted to open the quarter,
and the kick went outside, ten yards from
the kick, on Nebraska's thirty-five-yard
line. Nebraaka bold and Parsons tried a
place kick, which flsxled.
Nejsraaka Raakea.
An 'interchange of punts followed, and
Parsons ' attempted another place kick,
only to fall as before. Nebraska followed
by rushing the ball from Ita own twenty
yard line to Iowa's sixteen-yard line, only
to lose the ball on downs. Carberry
punted forty yards to Nebraska's forty
yard line. A penalty gave Nebraska five
yards. A forward pass from Rutherford
to Halllg-an netted fifteen yards, and a
second one from Potter to Howard eight
een yard.
Delamatre plunged four yards, and Hal
ligan booted the goal from tha thirty
yard line Just before the half ended.
Halligan kicked off to Donnelly In the
second half and the Hawkeyes started a
rush toward ths Husker goal line. With
Garrett son bearing the brunt of the at
tack the ball was pushed to within strik
ing distance of the Husker s- goal. But
Rutherford Intercepted a forward paas on
Nebraska's fifteen-yard lino and the
danger was over.
The baU was kicked out and the Hawk
eyea started down tha field again only to
have Doyle Intercept a forward pass on
tba twenty -eight-yard Una. Then the
Husker maroh began, ending eventually In
a touchdown. Tho Huskers at this junc
ture played wonderful foot ball and, the
Hawkeyes could not stop them.
Doyle plunged six yards and Potter
squirmed two. A penalty gave Nebraska
five yards and. Potter clipped off fifteen
on an end run. Chamberlain hit tho line
tor six yards and Doyle for four and first
down. forward pass. Potter to How-,
ard. netted eighteen yard a Rutherford
hit tho Une for six; then four- and then
four again, and Chamberlain went a yard
and a half, putting' ths ball on the Hawk
eye six-Inch Una. Potter took tha ball,
and, on a quarterback through center
play, fell over the lino for Nebraska's only
touchdown. Halligan kicked goal, making
the score 13 to 0, Nebraska, -
Tho quarter ended shortly after.
Iowa Fla-fcts Gamely.
The Hawkeyes came back With a grim
determination In the last period and they
made their touchdown then.
Howard purposely, threw a forward pass
out of bounds on a fourth down. The
j ball went out at the thlrty-flve-yard line.
A forward pass. Kirk to Kerwlck, netted
thirty yards and Wills plunged six and
seven, and Gross ran five yard a A pass.
Parsons to Carberry, allowed Carberry to
cross Nebraska's goal, but Potter's ter
rible tackle compelled the Iowa and to
fumble tha ball after ho had scored.
Not undaunted, tha Hawkeyes tried
again after Parsons nipped a forward
pass of Nebraska's on Iowa's forty-yard
line. Kirk made ten yards and Kerwlck
five. Wills hit the line for eight and then
Parson, made the ' long thlrty-flve-yard
pass to Carberry on a spread formation
and tho touchdown was counted, although
Potter again tried to tackle Carberry so
hard as to make him drop the ball. Par
sons kicked the goal. ' '
Ratkerford Makea Gala.
Iowa tried a fake klckoff and Halligan
got the ball on the forty-yard Uae. Ne
braska was penalized fifteen yards by
the sealous officials, but nothing daunted.
Rutherford made ten yards, and a for
ward pass from Halligan to Howard
netted twenty-five yards. Potter rambled
six and Halligan booted his last p'acu
kick from the thirty-elght-yard line.
Final score: Nebraska, W; Iowa, 7.
If Nebraska had played the kind of
ball against Iowa that the team did
against Kanaas or the Michigan Aggies,
the score would have exceeded either of
these games, but for some reason tho
boys flunked and did not possess thnt
same old life and ginger.
Walter Bckersall. who re f creed the
gsme today, has seen Illinois. Chh-aco,
Notre Dame and other western college
In action Mils year. He declares that tho
Nebraska team is tho equal of any !n
the west.
"I realise," declared Eckle. "that Rutlt
erford waa sick when he entered th
game, that Chamberlain and Potter or'
still suffering from Injuries and they
were sorely handicapped. They .could
give any western team a run for their
money." Lineup:
NBBRABKA.
Howare
Ualllgaa ....
ghlehia
draaros
Abbott
Corey
Bait
Potter
hutberford .
Chamberlala
Dal abu ue ..
...LI.
....UT.
....LO
c.
....R.O
....R T.
....RE.
... Q B.
,LHB
.R.H B
AC...
R.T....
R.O....
C
L.O...-.
UT....
M...
Q B ...
R.H. B.
U!I B.
.r.air-.u..
IOWA.
Crtrr
Kirk
Br-k uor
Houghton
Wilton
Barron
..... Gundcraon
GroA
........ 1'ara.ir.
Donnellv
CamttAun
gloBK Ckasspioas ef Iowa.
8IOITX CITY. la.. Nov. a. (tjpecinl
Telegram.) Sioux City scored two touch
downa in the Uut six mint tea of play and
defeated Des Moines. 17 to , for the
clianu lonshlp of Iowa today. r
Colorado' Mlaera wli.
DKNVER, Colo.. Nov. a Klghling un
til! the last blow of the whistle, the Colo
rado Agricultural college and the Fehool
of Mines foot ball teams battled here
today with tho score favoring the M nei.
It to 0. The contest waa full of spirit.
Ctoox Falls la Wliatr.
8IOtX FAI,U. H. D, Nov 21. tSpv
rlal Telegram.) Uioux Kails High svhtx.l
defeated Mitchell. 3U to 0. Siuux Kulla
used subntitules players In order to save
regular p'ayera for the big game In Hituia
Falls TtiankaKivtiur day with a Into
school team from Chicago.