Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 147, Hammond, Lake County, 28 November 1913 — Page 7

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Friday, Not. 28, 1913. THE TIMES. (PAGE SEVEN

S F O E T S' 1

CORNELL LACES PEflM TWICE IN 21 MS' PLAY Speedy Ithacans Upset the Dope and Crush Quakers, 21 to 0.

Philadelphia, Ta., Nov. 2S. Cornell snatched a page from the 1913 football year book ot, Harvord. and on Franklin field defeated Pennsylvania. 21 to 0, in the twenty-first annual gridiron battle. , It was the second victory of the lads from Ithaca in the history of football competition with the sons of Pennsylvania. Three touchdowns aid the incident goals tell the story of the Cornell victory, won by hard, straight football. Pennsylvania did not expect it, and was unable to stop it. Twice in the first half Cornell invaded the Pennsylvania goal line, the first time by a magnificent march of fifty-four yards and the second time as a result of a stupid play by the Quakers. The third touchdown came in the final quarter with the game almost over and Cornell a victor. Pennsylvania crushed and unable to stop the advance of the Ithacan foe. , Cornell started after Pennsylvania In the first quarter with straight football, and before the dazed Pennsylvania players had recovered from the momentary shock had crossed the goal line twice, and the leather had sailed over the cross bar ef the goals. The first touchdown came after a fumbled punt by Minds. Collyer had kicked high. and Marshall and Minds collided In attempting to make : the catch. , Lahr advanced the ball on two plays, his colleagues assisting in others until the ball reached the one-yard line, when Frits slipped over with the first points. Then came the goal. The next score came after Lahr bad

tried a drop kick with Cornell having four yards to gain. He was hurried in the kick and Minds touched the ball, which rolled over the goal line.. Frits, like the famed Sam White of Princeton, fell on the ball for a touchdown, and Barrett kicked the goal, making the score 14 to Or " ' ' " "

FOOTBALL SCORES. WEST. Western Reserve, 17; Case. 6. Pittsburg, 7; Penn State, 6. Syracuse, 75; St. Louis, 0. Miami, J3; Cincinnati, 7. St. Thomas, 13; Marquette. 0. Wittenberg, 18; Antioch, 0. South Dakota, 17; Creighton, 0. Illinois AVesieyan, 7; State Normal, 7. Monmouth, 13; Knox, 13. St. Mary's College. 7; Doane. 7. California, 3; Southern California, 3. EAST, Cornell, 21; Penn. 0. Lafayett, 7; Dickinson, 0. Carlisle, 13; Brown, 0. W. and J., 62; Bucknell, 0. F. and M., 40; Gettysburg. 7. Georgia Tech., 34; Clemson, 0. Commerce. 86; De Witt Clinton, 3. Virginia, 26; North Carolina, 7. John Hopkins, 14; St. John's, 0. SOITH. Vanderbilt, 63; Sewanee, 13. Mississippi A. and M., 7; Alabama, 0. Georgia Tech, 34; Clemson, 0. Georgetown (Ky.), 6; U. of Chattanooga, 6. " Tennessee, 13: Kentucky State, 6. Sonth Carolina. 42; Citadel, 13. Notrs Dame, 29: Texas, 7. Texas and M., 7; Louisiana State, 7. North Carolina A and M 6; Washington and Lt, 0. V. M. I.. 6; V. P. I., . Florida, 24; Mercef. 0. Oklahoma. 14; Colorado, 0. Louisiana Industrial, 7; Centenary College, 0. Transylvania, 6; Kentucky Central, 0. Missouri Mines, 14; Oklahoma A. and M.. 0. Mississippi, 0; Ouachita, 0.

RIVERS GIVES CROSS LACIWG 1M 20 ROUNDS Mexican Is Given Decision After Sensational Fight in Which He Always Led; Leach Takes the Floo r Twice.

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Los Angeles, Nov. 28. "Viva La Rivera!" shouted the hatless Mexicans in the bleachier tiers. And from the gallery rail to ring pit the white men took up this call and tried to imitate it. Brown Joe "came back" with 11,000 spectators packed inside the big pine pavilion to hiss, shriek, and cheer at him; "came back" with a brilliant display, of the panther-like aggressiveness that made 'of him at one time the most feared of all the lightweights; "came back" with as clean cut a victory as ever rewarded a boxer. Rivers "whipped Leach Cross in 'twenty rounds; beat, and humbled the New York boy until he could only sit in his chair and sob, trying in vain to find an explanation for his utter rout. They began boxing in the soft sunlight of the late afternoon, and finished under the "spit of the four great arcs over the Vernon ring, a finish that found Cross backed weakly against the ropes, everything gone but

his fighting instinct, while darting about him on two sides was the yellow skinned Californian trying to send one last punch through the beaten boy's guard, a punch that would bave brought the "K, O." honor. Vanished are all doubts as to the question of supremacy between the old rivals. To those of us who predicted an evenly balanced match, the result was disappointing. In seventeen of the twenty rounds Rivers ao far outclassed Cross that the Broadway star looked like a beginner." One round was even. Cross bad two rounds on points. Twice. Cross was floored, clean knockdown punches that kept Leach on the canvas for the full count of nine. A short left chop on the chin dropped him in the fourth. In the twelfth it was a right and left on thej Jaw, delivered but the fraction of m second apart, that sent Cross sprawling and brought his brother, Sam Wallach, up out of the corner with a face as white as the towel he caried.

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mats with beautiful wives, homely American girls with long purses and handsome titled husbands, admirals and would-be admirals, generals and would-be generals, "colonels" sufficient to people the whole of Kentucky, and then some, and still more to come. The question Is where are they to be accommodated? Of course you know for what they "have came." The Army and Navy pulls off its historic game at the Polo grounds In New York tomorrow and very other sporting event will have to take a back geat. It needs only the presence of President Wilson to make the thing complete, and we are promised that and more the presence of his daughter who recently became the bride of Francis B. Sayre, and her husband. Oh, it will be some game, for a social, political and sporting standpoint. GOLF as a cure for insanity is the latest prescription of the doctors. The NJerejr state hospital for the insane at Morris Plains, N. J., has decided to establish a nine-hole course for the benefit of its patients. Lesa than a year ago four holes were built, and golf became ao popular that arrangements have been completed for a links of nine holes. Koine of the players show all the symptoms of being good golfers, one of them having a score of 36 for twice around the four holes, plus one more, making nine in all. Dave Honeyman. the Forest Hill professional, holds the record for nine boles, 34. IF ANY bloke is qualified by training, experience and environment to produce a winning ball team. the monicker attached to said bloke is Wilbert Robinson. Robby has in the depths of hla vast, outlying system enough baseball knowledge to stock three or four clubs. If he can only impart 37 per cent of what he knows the dislocated Dodgers should upset the Athletics. As to whether Robby will hoist the Dodgers out of the second division is something else again. But he has a number of things in his favor. He was a member of the same Baltimore Oriole flock" which produced McGraw and Jennings. McGraw and Jennings in the last ten years have won eight pennants between them. That old bunch knew something and Robinson knew his share of it.

CHARLIE WHITE LOSES BY SHADE TOJ. DUNDEE New Orleans, La., Nov. 28. Johnny Dundee outclassed Charlie White by a big margin in their ten-round go last night. Just after White had been knocked down by -Dundee, shortly after the fight started, the lights In the arena went out and the place was plunged into darkness and confusion, which lifted more than thirty minutes. The battle was resumed after tte delay- '' This evens the score. White having beaten Dundee in New York a year ago. TUB TIMES IS. TRYING RARD.TO MERIT THE SUCCESS IT MAS ACHIRVED.

ENGLEWOOD FIVE ' DEFEATS HOBART. Hobart, Ind, Nov. " 28. Englewood high school's lightweight basket ball team yesterday defeated the , local quintet, 32 to 20, in a well, played game. At half time the visitors led. 20 to 10. Brown and Woodrow starred for Englewood, getting twenty-eight points between them. Lineup: Hobart (20) Woodrow, ' right forward; Brown, left forward; Bronstedt, center; Spahr, right guard; Denlin, Rachford, left guard. Englewood (32) Carson, right forward; Carlson, left forward; Traeger, center; Waldeck, right guard; Thompson, left guard. Baskets Woodrow, 4; Brown, S; Bronstedt, Spahr, Carson, 2; Carlson, 2. Free throws Carson, 10; Woodrow, 5; Brown, 2.

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INDIANS BEAT BROWN, 13 TOO Providence, R. I., Nov. 25. The' Carlisle Indians defeated Brown University here yesterday, 13 to 0. in. the season's last football contest. The Browns put up a good fight, considering their weakened condition, four regulars being out of the lineup on account of injuries sustained in thee

Harvard game ten days ago. The Indians' famous criss-cross play that worked havoc with Dartmouth, was stopped seven times In succession by

the Browns.

Clabby Stops Logan sin "Fourteenth Hound

Soldier's Claim of Foul Ignored by the Referee, Who Awards Decision to Clabby.

LABRY KNOCKS

OUT JACK WYNN Bvansvllle, Ind.. Nov. 29. Kid Labry of this city, claimant to the . welterweight cHampionshlp of Indiana, defended his title this afternoon at Jasper, Ind., when be met Jack Wynn of Indianapolis in what was to bave been a ten-round bout. Labry knocked out Wynn In the second round. He showed superior fighting qualities. Labry has accepted a challenge to meet Kid Fortner of Indianapolis at Shelby vllle, Ind., on December 2.

San Francisco, Cal., Nov. 28. Jimmy Clabby gave Soldier Logan a thorough trouncing in fourteen rounds, but did not escape injury himself by any means. Whea, the end came Logan, on a hint from his corner, was trying to make it appear that a Btrong left body punch he had received had landed foully. Referee Griffin Ignored the claim of foul, but seeing that Logan waa In bad shape stopped the fight and gave the decision to Clabby. As a matter -of fact. Spider Kelly, Logan's principal second, did not want to send his man out for the fourteenth round. Kelly told Referee Griffin that Logan was in bad shape, but on the referee questioning Logan the latter

DILLON WHIPS SAILOR PETROSKEY

Butte, Mont., Nov. 28. Jack Dillon of Indianapolis won a decision this evening from Sailor Ed Petroskey o San Francisco at the close of twelve rounds of the fastest and hardest milling Butte fight fans have seen in years. Petroskey demonstrated a gultton's capacity for punishment, but waa not in Dillon's class. Dillon knocked the sailor down in the eighth for the count of nine, and In the rounds following rocked him repeatedly.

DIAMOND WHIPS YOUNG TOGO, JAP Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 28. At the National A. C. yesterday afternoon Harry Diamond of this city defeated Toung Togo, the Jap featherweight. In six rounds. At the Olympla A. C. Young Tommy Loughrey won from Toung McCartney. Frank Loughrey lost to Tommy Howell. Toung D'ggins defeated Chick Hayes. Willie Houck won from Johnny Krause.

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DENIES REDUCTION A market rumor that the Inland Steel company, owing to suspension of current orders and a falling off of new orders, had laid oft between 800 and 1,000 men at its East Chicago mills last ' night was denied by Vice President Blak. "That's Wall street for you," he said. "But, after all, we're really too far off for It to do us "much harm. We have made no perceptible reduction of our forces, nor will we, I think, through the holiday season. No furnaces have been laid up, nor has there been any recession of business to warrant such aetion." It'a an old market trick, that's all."

said that he wanted to fight on. All kinds of milling were' crowded into the fourteen rounds. For five periods it waa a lesson for Logan. In the sixth the soldier began to score, and Clabby put aside his cleverness and fought bis opponent the way the latter wanted. Logan continued to improve, and Clabby, after taking a hard smash on the mouth in the seventh round, tossed bis false. teeth to the men in his corner. Then Jimmy laid back his ears and tbey went at it. For three rounds it was nip and tuck, with both men well marked about the" face, and Clabby just a little bit in the lead. In the tenth Clabby refrained from mixing It so freely, and began to swing punishing lefts into Logan's midriff. These punches turned the tide in Clabby'a favor.'- After delivering each of them he closed in on Logan, who, with a look of distress and rolling eyes, held on and. allowed his face to become a mark for Clabby's free lef and rlrhts. . Logan's seconds complained fre- ' quently that their man was being fouled, but there did not ' appear to be cause for It. Logan, was knocked down with a stomach punr-h in the thirteenth, and a similar blow in the fourteenth raised . the cry of foul again. Logan then tried to make it appear that he had been fouled, but the referee saw through the ruse and

gave the fight to Clabby.

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