Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 1, 11 November 1912 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD STO-TELEGRA3I, 5IOXDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1912.
QUAKERS LOSE BY SINGLE TOUCHDOWN Little Giants Unable to Penetrate Earlham Line Score Is 7 to 0.
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., Nov. 11. Surprised by the defensive work of the Earlham eleven, the Wabash football team was barely able to nose out a victory Saturday afternoon. The final score was 7 to 0 in favor of the Scarlet. Several narrow escapes kept the Wabash men on edege in the last quarter, and it appeared that the final score would be a tie. In the last quarter Earlham worked the ball to within one foot of the Wabash goal. With four downs to make this short distance, Wabash held for two downs and on the third down "Skeet" Lambera dived across the heads of the Earlham quarter to fumble. Cracens, center for the Wabash, recovered the ball and jambert punted out of danger. Again the the last quarter Johnson intercepted a forward pass and ran eighty-five yards for what was apparently a touchdown. The ball was celled back to the fifty-yard line, however, where he had stepped out of bounds to avoid a Wabash tackier. Wabash scored its only touchdown In the first quarter by a formard pass and a long run. Behkley gained fifteen yards on the first pass carrying the ball to Earlham's right and for the remaining distance to the goal line and Hurd kicked an easy 'oal. Earlham's defense was a surprice to the Scarlet. The work of the Quakers' line was especially Btrong. Thistlethwaite and Murray on the right side of the line proved strong. The entire line charged hard and many times broke through and spoiled the Wabash plays. In the back field Bogue and Brownell got away for a number of sensational runs around the Wabash ends. Lambert Is Star. The work of Lambert, quarter back for the Scarlet, probably saved the game for the Wabash team. His dive over the line which stopped the advance of the victors for what seemed an almost certain touchdown was only one of many instances in which he Spoiled excellent chances of an Earlham score. In the first scrimmage Earlham was penalized fifteen yards for holding. Bogue punted, the ball going out of bounds at the fifty-yard line. Lambert made a forward pass to Hull, who gained eighteen yards. Wabash could not gain, but Earlham, after gaining possession of the ball was compelled to punt. Lambert received the kick from Bogue and returned twenty yards. Wabash suffered a penalty of fifteen yards for holding. Nichols gained fifteen yards on a forward pass from Lambert. Wabash lost the ball on downs. Bogue, Stanley and Geyer were sent through the Wabash line for first down. After a gain of six yards made around left end by Johnson, Wabash held. Bogue punted to Lambert. Berkey made fifteen yards on a pass from Lambert. Hull was called around right end and ran thirty-five yards for a touchdown. Hurd kicked goal. Score: Wabash, 7; Earlham, 0. Earlham kicked off at the oupening of the third quarter. Hurd returned five yards, placing the ball on the
Wabash forty-yard line. A penalty and a two-yard loss by Hull caused Wabash to punt on thirty-fice-yard line. Wabash Holds Earlham. Wabash could not gain and Lambert threw a forward pass out of bounds, the ball going across the side line at Earlham's five-yard line Brownell punted and Lambert carried the ball back to Earlham's twenty-five yard line. Brownell punted at the beginning of the fourth quarter. Two forward passes and a line plunge failed and Lambert punted. Brownell made thirty yards around left end. Lancaster received a forward pass and gained twenty-five yards. Earlham worked the ball almost to the Wabash goal. With four downs to make one and one-half feet, the Scarlet held until Earlham fumbled. Lambert punted out. Lambert attempted a forward pass, which was intercepted by Johnson, who ran almost the length of the field for a touchdown. The Scarlet rooters thought the score was tied, but the ball was brought back to the fifty-yard line, where Johnson had stepped out of bounds while dodging a Wabash tackier. Time was called with Earlham in possession of the ball. The lineup and summary: Wabash(7) Earlham (0) Berken, Hines, Howard, Nicar J. Stanley Left End Hurd C. Stanley
Left Tackle Ebert Lamb j J. Cravens Jones I Center , Foster, C. Cravens,
Bair Murray, Semler Right Guard Elliott Thistlethwaite
i Right Tackle ; Neusbaum, Rowe Lancaster ' Right End Hull Bogue Williams, Brownell,
Nicholas Vickery Right Half. Lambert, Watt Johnson, Wright Quarter Showalter Geyer Full Touchdowns Hull. Goal Hurd. Re-
; feree Emsley of Purdue. Umpire
Jameson of Purdue. Head linesman McGaughey of Indiana. Time of quarters 15 minutes.
CALENDAR OF SPORTS
Prof. Russell, 7:30 tonight. Subject: "The Great Question." SHOP-MEN and others who are employed so that
they can't find time of their own, only after supper, will find us open until 8 p. m. for their accommodation. Come look over the splendid array of fine and attractive woolens, shipments of all the new creations coming in dally as quickly as they come out. We fit. We suit and please all custom tailored to your individual measure, $15.00 Suit or Overcoat no more, I no less. Douglas Tailoring Co., AI. Rost, Manager, Westcott Hotel Cor., 10th and Main. We sell woolens by the yard.
The Kits. An American humorist once said thai "the only way to define a kiss is to take one." Oliver Wendell Holmes called a kiss the twenty-seventh letter of the alphabet "the love labial which it takes two to speak plainly."
Monday. World's championship tournament at 18.2 balkline billiards opens in New York. Annual meet of the National Foxhunters' association at Crab Orchard Springs, Ky. Opening of six days' race meeting at Arkansas State Fair, Hot Springs. Knockout Brown vs. Jack Dillon, 8 rounds, at Memphis. Kid Williams vs. Young Monahan, 15 rounds, at Baltimore. Packey McFarland vs. Jack Britton, 10 rounds, at New York. Knockout Brennan cs. Jack McCarron, 10 rounds, at Buffalo. Jack Denning vs. Willie Langford, 10 rounds, at Albany, N. Y. Harry Trendall vs. Young Saylor, 8 rounds, at St. Louis. Tuesday. Annual meeting of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, at Milwaukee. Meeting at Milwaukee to organize the new Central and Interstate baseball leagues. Wednesday. Opening of fall meeting of Jamestown Jockey club, at Norfolk, Va. Clarence Ferns vs. Tommy Howell, 10 rounds, at Indianapolis. Thursday. Bert Keyes vs. Harry Trendall, 8 rounds, at St. Louis. Friday. Jim Flynn vs. Al. Palzer, 6 rounds, at Philadelphia. Saturday. 6 Annual exhibition of National Horse Show association, opens in New York. Annual cross-country run of the New England Intercollegiate A. A. at Boston. Football. Harvard vs. Dartmouth, at Cambridge. Yale vs. Princeton, at Princeton. Pennsylvania vs. Carlisle, at Philadelphia. Brown vs. Lafayette, at Providence. Cornell vs. Michigan, at Ann Arbor. Army vs. Tufts, at West Point. Chicago vs. Illinois, at Champagne. Minnesota vs. Wisconsin, at Minneapolis. Iowa vs. Ames, at Ames. Kebraska vs. Kansas, at Lincoln. Missouri vs. Washington university, at Columbia. Ohio State vs.' Pennsylvania State, at Columbus. Vanderbilt vs. Central of Kentucky, at Nashville. Georgia vs. Georgia Tech, at Atlanta. Alabama vs. Sewanee, at Birmingham. Virginia vs. Georgetown, at Washington. Johns Hopkins vs. Western Maryland, at Baltimore. North Carolina vs. Washington and Lee, at Greensboro. South Carolina vs. Porter, at Columbia. Louisiana vs. Arkansas, at Little Rock. Tennessee vs. Kentucky, at Knox-ville.
An Enterprising Barrister. An English barrister was once engaged in a nautical case, in which it appeared that a vessel had been exposed to a very severe gale of wind and bad been thrown upon her beam ends. The barrister. Ignorant of nautical matters, asked a seaman who was in the witness box bow it was they did not lower the topmast, upon which the witness said, with a sneer. "If you knew as much of the sea as I do you would know that this is not a very easy matter." This Incident led the counsel to turn bis attention to the subject, and he invented an apparatus for lowering topmasts, for which he obtained a patent and realized thereby upward of $100,000 by his Invention.
Theodore Owens, L. F. Pubble, Ever-1 J. T. Tingler. Owen Vick. Clark Wilett Raxor, R. Renshaw. Wm. A. Smith, I son. John Wilson.
Firms Kwang Cheong & Co. E. M. HAASP. M.
BOWLING NOTES
King still leads the City Bowling league with high avera'ge although the high individual score is held by Dr. Markley with 235. The Giants lead the league with a 945 percentage. The standing of the players is appended: Games. Pet. King 12 .184 J. Martin 6 .174 Dr. Harold 9 .173 Hadley 12 .171 B. Martin 8 .169 Karl Meyers 12 .168
! Zeyen . 12 .167
Ed. Lichtenfels 12 .167 Hunt 9 .163 Dr. Markley 6 .164 Fred Mayer 12 .164 Rockhill , 12 .162 Miller 12 .162 Ray Lichtenfels 9 .162 Helmich 12 .159 Smith 6 .159 Beck 12 .158 Runge 9 .158 Steinkamp 12 .158 Dr. Fostok 12 .157 Youngflesh 12 .157 Jeffries 6 .157 Lahrman 12 .157 Eikenberry 9 .150 Shepman 9 .15G Mashmeyer 9 .155 Allen 6 .155 Dr. Bond 6 .154 Broderick 9 .154 Green 12 .153 Wiggins 9 .151 Hodge ... 9 .147 Porter 9 .146 Denny 12 .145 Hosier 12 .144 Parry 7 .136 Sprouse 9 .134 Ward 12 .131 Kirk 9 .130
NOTICE Positively no hunting or trespassing allowed on the BEELER FARM, 4 miles south of Richmond. 9&11
Labor. Labor rids ns of three great evils Irksomeness. vice and poverty. Voltaire.
LETTER LIST
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