Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 334, 10 November 1919 — Page 11

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, NOV. 10, 1919.

PAGE ELEVEN

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DOUGHTY QUAKERS, BLOOD IN EYES, ARE

READY FOR BUTLER Preparations for the home-comjns game of the season with Butler, next

Saturday, will be gtarted - by the ! Quakers, Monday afternoon. Earlhaui !

Enouia Be an easy winner, but Coach Mowe will take no chances, and will drive the sqnad hard. " John Thurber. coach of the departed Franklin invaders, and the Indiana football critics, are trying to figure out Just how unanimously picked Franklin team should have lost here N Saturday. The answer can be summed up in these word3: "Earlham had the better team." ' From the opening kickoff, the Quakers had the jump on the Baptists and played better football throughout the game. Although they were not able to cross the Franklin goal, a few more minutes of play should have seen 7 more points added, to the winner's total, for the ball was on Franklin's 10 yard line when the game ended end Earlham was only on the second down. The light weight Quaker line held

the much heavier Franklin forwards !

at all stages of the game and the boasted line plunging of Bowen and Lowery was minus. Thurber Likes Earlham. Coach Thurber, says Earlham should play Wabash for the championship of the I. C. A. L. Earlham looked considerably better to him than did DePauw, he eald, for on a dry field Franklin could have defeated DePauw while against Earlham, and with his team in the best condition of the year, a 6 to 2 defeat resulted. The first points were scored by Earlham on a place kick by Raiford. The ball went inside by about 12 inches. The second Quaker score, on another place kick by Raiford, was directly in the center of the goal. No particular credit can be given to any one Earlham player. The entire eleven played in sensational style. Bookout, the speedy little Earlham end, deserves credit for the great game he put up against the huge Bowen. Only 3 substitutions were made by Mowe during the game and for this reason Monday afternoon's practice will be light. The players need the rest after battering their way to" victory In Saturday's game. Line-Up. Franklin Earlham

Strohl It. R Bowen R. T. Jones R. G. Ross C. . Browning Ij. O. Lowery L. T. Pruitt L. E..

Kingsolver O Raiford

Campbell R. H Hlnshaw Justus L. H Collins Hays F. B Pitts Summary. Earlham 0 3 0 I! Franklin 0 0 2 0 Scoring Earlham, place kick; Franklin, safety. Substitutes Earlham, Pennington for Hall, Harris for Pennington, Davis for Pitts. Referee Ralps Davis (Princeton). Umpire Ed Davis, (Indiana). Head linesman Maloney (Notre Dame). Time of c'larters 15 minutes.

Stivers scoring Touchdowns, C. Ulln 6, Young , Battels 5, F. Sillin 3; goals from touchdowns, C. Sillin, 19 out of 20. Substitutions Stivers, Lange for Swanlger, Luckey for Zapp. V. Schwab for Altick, Swanlger for Lange, Snyder for Harvey Schwab, Swanlger for Lange, Rutand for Swanlger; Richmond, Evans for Vogelsong, Robinson for Lohman, Nusbaum for Robinson. Referee McClelland of

Great Lakes. Umpire Storck of Stivers. Time of quarters 15, 15, 10 and 4 minutes.

POLO LEAGUE MAY

BE FORMED HERE

An attempt will be made to organ'

ize a city polo league, at a meeting to be held in George Brehm's store.

Monday evening. There is an abund

ance of high class polo material in town and managers of 4 prospective teams will be at this meeting. Harry O'Metz, Carl Reid, "Tax" Bradfield, and a representative of the Greek Candy company, are the managers. All other polo enthusiasts, or players interested, are urged to attend.

. . .L. Nicholson (Capt) Gordon ....R. Johnson . . .R. Nicholson Kellum Hall ....... Bookout.

RESERVES BEATEN AT EATON, 19-6 The Richmond Reserves were forced to take the short end of a 19 to 6 score from the Eaton Independent football team at that town Sunday. The absence of Locke and Asbinger in the backfield and Smith in the line were greatly felt but the locals as a whole showed a big improvement over the playing at Portland. The game was more closely contested than the score shows as Richmond really played the Ohio lads close at every stage. In the second quarter Eaton launched an aerial attack that netted 2 touchdowns, and a fluke fumble gave them the chance at the other. The Reserves came back strong !n the last half and their open style of play had Eaton completely baffled. All

the playing was done in Eaton territory. On a fake kick formation O'Neal received a long pass and raced 35 yards to the line. The march to th" Ohio line was resumed but the final whistle kept the locals from scoring again. The work of Richmond's line in the pinches was the out-standins feature, while Tittle at full and O'Neal at quarter played in stellar form. Eaton displayed some classy team work and excelled the locals in the air. The Reserves will play at Anderson Nov. 1C, and arrangements are under way for a return game with Eaton here on Nov. 2.1. Practice will be held

at South Tenth Street park Tuesday and Friday nights of this week.

EARLHAM GIVEN CHANCE AT TITLE BY STATE CRITICS

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 10. A perfectly good Indiana secondary college football title will go begging this season. Had Wabash or DePauw been able to squeeze out a victory in Saturday's terrific struggle, such would not be the case. Now, there la a bare possibility that Franklin and Earlham may be able to horn in for a share of tho honor. This will come to pass if the Thurhjsrites throw a bomb into the Wabash camp next Saturday and win

that contest. In that event DePauw will have the clearest claim to the title, but if Wabash wins, as the dopa points, then Wabash and DePauw will have an equal claim. Wabash still has a chance to cop off one title, and that will be by defeating Franklin. The Little Giants have humiliated Butler, Earlham and Rose

foiy. ii remains tor tnem to aown the Baptists to claim the title. This seems probable in view of the Earlham victory over the Baptists, Saturday, which was the one big upset in football circles. The Baptists were heavy favorites in the contest with the Quakers, but the superior fighting ability and determination against great odds appears to have surprised the downstarters so that they were unable to come back and lost in a hardfought game before a scrappy eleven. Irish Beat West Point. The big intersectional game of the season between the West and East was staged and the battling Irish, who met West Point's Army aggregation in the aforesaid scrap, came out with colros flying and the West holding a neat claim on that luscious gridiron territory known a3 the East. At the same time the dope was being mixed in the Big Ten into a dizzy whirl. Minnesota losing to Illinois by a 10 to 6 count Chicago sent Yost and his Wolverines back to Ann Arbor

holding the small end of a 13-to O count Ohio State journeyed on iiu path toward the triumphal gate with its second straight Conference win, de. featlng Purdue, 20-tc0, in a well played contest at Columbus. Iowa

managed to run true to form and. nose out a win over Northwestern by the

score of 14 to 7. ' j The only other attractive intersectlonal contests of the day's play last' week gave Center and the South a I

victory over the husky West Virginia eleven, the conquerors of Princeton recently, by a 25-to-0 score. -

Farm, the home of Peter the Great, 2:07, the world's greatest sire. Cox will bring some of the stars of his string, now at Dover, along with him to Laurel Hall, the sensational 4-

year-old trotter, McGregor the Great (4) 2:03; E. Colorado 2:11, which be purchased for his patron, Barton Pardee, during the Lexington meeting and the 4-year-old pacer. Col. Bldwell

(4) 2 : 03, being numbered among those which he will bring on from his New England training camp.

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STOUGHTON FLETCHER ENGAGES COX, FAMOUS REINSMAN

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 10.The most sensational bit of news which has come to light in the harness horse world of late was sprung yesterday when Stoughton A. Fletcher announced that he had closed a contract with the weir known Grand Circuit driver, Walter R. Cox of Dover, N. H., to take charge of training operations at Laurel

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HIGH SCHOOL Will PLAY WARSAW; STEELE GAME IS CANCELLED After a brief vacation J. Pluvius is back on the job. However if Exhibit tion Park or the playgrounds are not entirely covered by water, Coacii Rock will have the battered and worn Richmond high school grid squad out

Monday for a lesson in football. The game with Steele high, of Dayton, has been cancelled by Manager Vernon and the originally scheduled Warsaw eleven will be brought here. Richmond would have absolutely no chance against Steele, as this school defeated Stivers by a large score and Stivers practiced the 100 yard dash against Richmond Saturday, running up a score of 139 to 0. . Inability to stop or complete the forward pass proved disastrous to the hopes of Richmond for over one half of the Stiver scores were made as a result of the pass. The nearest Richmond came to a touchdown was when the Stivers center was penalized 7 straight times and the ball was taken to the 3 yard line. Richmond tried bucking the line, but was held for clowns and then Stivers completed another forward pass and scored a touchdown. The score might have been larger only for the fact that the last half was cut short, the third quarter lasting 10 minutes and the final quarter. The lineup and summary: Richmond (0) Pos. Stivers (139) Clark L. K Altick Voselson L. T Zappo Davis L. G.. Harvey Schwab Russell -C Timmerman Lohman R. OS Swaniger Hoerner It. T Stevens Zuttermeister. . .R. E... Harry Schwab Etnslie (c.) Q. B.... (c.) C. Sillin Loehr L. H F. Sillin Motley R. H Young Dollins F. B Bartels Score by periods: Stivers 41 42 42 14139 Richmond 0 0 0 0 0

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What if it does rain! What's that to you? The motion picture theatre is open.

ALL the difference between the sullen drip from the eaves and the flutter of leaves in a sunny patio beyond Seville. All the difference between the monotony of a dull book and the lively creak of saddle-leather between your knees. All the difference between seven o'clock this bleak evening and a hot noon ten years ago, when palm fronds rustled in the soft trade-wind. All the difference between Number 7 Maple Street

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