. THE CHARLOTTE NEWS NOVEMBEK , SIXTEEN a! i ! r ; : i J ! . t 1 ' ! I I i c ! t 1 : , E 4 r c p I U I F 1 x I , I i 1 t f STATE DEFEATED ( football scores j WILD CAT ELEVEN Davidson Was Outclassed by Heavier Opponents, Who Won 36 to 6. were no STATE GAMES. N. C. State 36; Davidson 6. V. M. I. 29; Carolina 7. V. P. I. 40; Wake Forest 9. Iloanoke 18; Guilford 7. 0. rvii-tnn Wildcats match for r.ill Kotzer's Farmers Satur day and North Carolina State won a der'siv victory over Davidson at YVearn field by the score of ot to b. State's initial touchdown came in the first eicrht minutes of play, and they ored In every quarter, .the Presbyte rian a defense crumbling before tne mlehtv ondauchts of the Tech backs, while "the Red and Wack attempts to - i,n TWh line nroved futile. To Captain OurleV. States star half-. l ack, poos the mucesi siwre ui in the win. In addition to scoring two mnf'mvns. .ind two coals from touch- .ir.n this michty warrior added an-' othor three points in the first quarter with a beautiful place kick from the 43 yard line that sent the ball sailing -quarelv between the uprights and over the bar with "lonty of room to spare. TtoidV brim; State's best ground gain er, he put up a wonderfully strong de fensive game and managed to get in almost every play. Sharing honors with C.urlev for btate was Faucette. who pulled off the most sensational play of the game when he received a kiekoff in the second quar ter and. evading tackier after tackier, rin vnrds for a touchdown. It was a beautiful piece of broken field run- j ring. Homewooti nux u u ki. fensive game at left end, and smeared up several of Davidson's plays before thov started. For Davidson. Johnston showed, up lest both on offense and defense, and paved his team from a shut-out when be received a forward pass in the last five minutes of play and ran 16 yards for a touchdown. m Black, the Presbyte r-tans star back, entered the game wun .-"i injured hand and had to retire in tho first quarter. Davidson found State's line impreg nable at all times and practically all of their gains were made by the over head route. The fast and heavy State lacks, on the other hand, smashed through their much lighter opponents' line for telling gains almost at will, their attack often carrying them to the line of secondary defense before they were downed. Tech's offense was con fined chiefly to straight football off tackle plays and short end runs, though toward the latter stages of the game thy. attempted a few forward passes, most of which failed, but on one occa sion executed a double pass that net ted them a big gain. Nearly 3.K0O people witnessed the came, the only college game scheduled for Charlotte this season. Four compa nies of the n. O. T. C. from Davidson were present in a body, occupying the bleachers and. assisted by the band, retributed some mighty rooting to the afternoon's program. A large repre sentation of Queens College students was also in evidence with colors, songs and yells. Stile Clfil rosition, Davidson (6) ITomewood I... E Douglas Weathers L. T. ...... Hammett Floyd L. G Romefelt Vhitaker C Brady Young F. G La Far nipple Ti. T McMaster Klrkpatrick R. E Davis Faucette Q. 13 Spann (C.) Hurley (C.) L. II. B Black Plcrson R. H. B Johnston Murray F. B McFadden Scoring State: Touchdowns, Gurley (J), Faucette, Murray, Homewood. Goal from placement, Gurley. Goals from touchdown. Gurley (2), Parks. David son: Touchdown, Johnston. Substitutions: State, Parks for Fau- SOLTIIERN GAMES. Washington and Lee 3; Georgia Tech Sewanee 21; Oglethorpe 0. La. State U. 24; Miss. College 0. Auburn 28; Spring Hill 0. . The Citadel 4J; Newberry 0. Vanderbilt 16; Alabama 12 . Haverford 7; Johns Hopkins 0. Richmond College 17; Wm. and Mary Center College 14; West Virginia 6. Tennessee 6; South Carolina 6. Miss. Aggies 36: Mississippi 0. Tulane 14; Florida 2. EDWARD L CASEY IS HARVARD GOD He Outjungled the Tiger in Fading Moments and Gained a Tie. GL00MPERVADED THE TECH CAMP Washington and Lee Sprung a Big Surprise in 3-to-0 Win. EASTERN AND WESTERN GAMES. Princeton 10; Harvard 10. Yale 14; Brown 0. Dartmouth 20: Penn. 19. Stevens 13; Columbia 0. Pittsburg 7: Wash, and Jeff. 6. Georgetown 6: Navy 0. -Cornell 20; Carnegie Tech. 0. N. Y. TJ. 17; Union 6. Amherst 9; Wesleyan 7. Colgate 21; Rochester 0. Fafavette 4S; Dickinson 0. Rutgers 13; Boston College 7. Syracuse 9; Bucknell 0. Williams 19; Middlebury 0. Maryland 27; St. Johns 0. Colorado Aggies 27; Utah Aggies 7. Kansas 0: Oklahoma 0. Rice 21: Southwestern Methodist 14, Perin. State 20 ;Lehigh 7. Westminster 6; U. of Buffalo 0. Chicago 13; Michigan 0. Ohio 20; Purdue 0. Illinois 10; Minnesota 6. St. Louis 0; Marquette 0. Nebraska 12; Missouri 5. Iowa 14; Northwestern 7. . Tufts 7; Detroit 3. Michigan Aggies 13; South Dakota 0 Swarthmore 20; Franklin ana Mar shall 0. Susquehanna 61: Drexel 0. Penn. Military College 9; Ursinus 6. Holy Cross 41; Colby 0. NEWBERRY INDIANS HAVEN'T SCORED YET Charleston. S. C. Nov. 8.A11 of the Citadel's substitutes were given a chance today in the annual game with Newberry College when the cadets f'cv.-ned the Indians 41 to 0. Newberry has not scored this season. Moore and Simmons were the shining stars. : HEALTH OFFICER MATTER IS DELAYED The board of county commissioners, who had agreed on last Monday to meet' Saturday and hear arguments by representatives of civic and wel fare organizations of various kinds as to the need of a whole-time health of ficer for the county, assembled ac cording to schedule but the delega tion that was expected to present the argument did not show up, owing to a misunderstanding, it is said, as to the meeting hour. As a consequence, it was agreed by the board to hear the delegation at its next regular meet ing, the first Monday in December. cette. Faucette for Parks, Hill for Mur ray, McNeal for Gurley, Everheart for Weathers. Davidson: McAlister for Black, Murray for McFadden, Cassell for Murray. Referee, Major (Auburn); umpire, Williams (Virginia); headlinesman, Long (North Carolina). Time of quarters, 15 minutes each. Attendance, 3,500. Once Upon A Time When Charlotte was only a "burg," even our busiest business men had to "carry a lunch" or spend an hour and a half home to dinner. But hasn't tinve made a difference? The man who used to drive his clay bank mare a couple of miles for his midday mel, now has a son who, (owing to its convenience of location) steps right into BROWN'S and in a jiffy is served one of our Noonday Luncheonettes By .HENRY L. FARRELL.' (United Press Staff Correspondent.) Palmer Stadium, Princeton, N. J., Nov. 8. Edward L. Casey is Harvard s god. The fleet,' elusive halfback, star of numerous Harvard victories and a team in himself, saved the Cambridge -eleven from disaster this afternoon. He scored a touchdown that pried .he Princeton Tiger off the Crimson back and saved te day with a ten-to-ten tie. The Harvard stands, huddled to 'their ears in coats, had resigned themselves to the season's crudest stroke of fate when the third period ended with Prince ton leading, 7 to 3. Apparently the death blow to their last, hopes came when Frank Murrey kicked a field goal, running the Tiger pile to ten points. Then, enter Mr. Casey. He ran a for ward pass for forty yards. Then he circled end for seven yards and the Crimson side of the stadium rose to its feet. Again Casey hit the line and wrig gled and squirmed through for live yards. Then he dashed behind the yoal line and opened his arms into a bucket like shape in which dropped a forward pass from Felton. He danced arou-id, sidestepped and otherwise evaded six Tiger tacklers and planted the ball di rectly back of the posts. Church kick ed an easy goal and Harvard's record was spared itsjfirst defeat. Harvard learned a few things abount Tiger fighting. So did 35,000 heavily garmented spectators who sat through the chilly afternoon thrilled by the fero cious attack of the arounsed Nassau jungle feline. Harvard learned that, once sunk in, the claws of the Tiger have a grip of a python. At the first whistle, the Tiger bounded from its lair and hopped on the Crimson back. The ugly wounds inflicted by Colgate and West Virginia hampered not the grip of the gridiron beast and it rode Harvard for three periods. The Crimson sue ceeded in breaking the death hold only in the dying moments of a fast-fading ame. Princeton opened with a terrific at tack. Garrity and Trimble, hit the left side of the line and ran the ends for gains at will. Then, just to show what it could do. Jack Strubing, the Tiger pilot, launched his machine into the air and Harvard was baffled by pass after pass. It wras a Princeton parade down the field.' The Tiger stands went wild and broke into a bedlam of noise when Trimble ran around left end for fifteen yards and crossed Harvard's goal line .1 t- a; iur uie nisi, lime mis sea.suii. . Casey alone seemed able to evade the desperate tacklers of Princeton, who shattered the Crimson line and broke up plays . before they were started. Casey couldn't do it all. Harvard lost a beautiful chance to score in the first quarter. The ball was on Princeton's 15-yard line and Ralph Horween was five-yard line and the Nassau crew held goal. He fumbled and a trio of Tigers fell on the ball. Again, in the second period, Harvard wrorked to the Tiger's five-yard line and the Nasau crew hold them for downs. In the third oeriol, the Crinrsori seemed to come to life. Garrity, who had been playing a bril liant game for Princeton, fumbled the ball in midfield. Humphrey grabbed -Vie bounding ball from the ground and ran 30 yards through a broken field. Casey then carried the ball in a series of plays to the 27-yard line.-The Tiger line held like concrete and Ralph Horween Irop ped back for a field goal. He booted tlv. ball squarely between the posts. In the fourth period, Princeton ad ded three more points. Captain McGraw hurled himself through the line and blocked Church's punt, recovering it on Harvard's 7-yard line. Princeton worked the ball over directly in front of the posts. Frank Murrey was hurried out from the Tiger bench and he kick ed :roal. The Princeton stands settled back in undisguised glee and remained in su preme ecstacy until Eddie Casey took his cue and started his "lines" as the star performer. Princeton didn't win but Princeton is celebrating it as a victory. The halls of Old Nassap resounded with dire threats for Yale next Saturday. Thei Tiger will fig-ht for this afternoon show ed one of the biggest .form reversals of the year. The line-up: Harvard, 10 ..Position.. Princeton,, 10 Desmond .. . . . .R. E Williams Sedgwick R. T Parisette Woods .. R. G McGraw Havemeyer. C Callahan Clark .. .... . L. G. . . ..Dickinson Kane L. T : . .Biglerl .foteeie .. . .v L. E. . . . . ..Davis Murray . . .. . . .. Q. B... ..Strubing Humphrey. . . . R. H. B Wittmer Casey Li H. B Trimble Eurnham F. B Garrity Substitutes Princeton McNamara for Williams; Thomas for Callahan; j Eaker for Dickinson; Dickinson for Baker: Lynch for Bigler; Lawrie for j Strubing: Scheerer for Wittmer; Murrey j for Trimble. Harvard A. Horween for j Havemeyer; Felton for Murray; R. ' Horween for Burnham; Gratwick for! R. Horween: Nelson for Gratwick. ' Officials: referee, Langford, Trinity; ' umpire. Williams, Pennsylvania; Head linesman, Thcrne. Columbia; Field judge, O'Brien, Tufts. VIRGINIA POLY BEAT BAPTISTS Wake Forest No Match for V. P. I., the Techs Win ning 40 to 0. Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 8. Gloom per vaded the imp of Georgia Tech to night following the explosion of a bomb of large calibre in thek midst of the tor nado by Washington and Lee. : 'Not satisfied with holding the Tech ites throughout the game, the Virgin ians let loose the bomb in the last few minutes of play. When the smoke cleared away it was' found that they had slipped over a field goal. The final score was 3 to 0 with Washington and Lee on the long end. Defeat by Washington-and Lee prac tically killed Tech's hopes for the southern .championship. Washington and Lee, as a result of today's victory, loom up as a strong contender for the Southern honors. Georgia Tech, however, still has a chance for the Southern intere.ollee-iata tithletic association championship, hav ing ueieaiea everything in the associ ation coming their way this season. - Today's game was the most bitterly contested ever seen on Grant Field The Virginia generals outplayed Tech in all her branches of the game, but the Tornado grimlv fouerht back. Bethel, who was in the line for the visitors, was a "holv terror." In th fourth quarter with the ball on Tech's -i? yara line, Jimmie Mattox for tbe generals dropped back to the 20 yard line and with a nerfett dron kick sent the Golden Tornado staggering from me new, aeieated by a Southern team for the first time in five years. Tech was unable to make a first down in the last period. Blacksburg, Va., , Nov. 8. Virginia Poly defeated Wake Forast here today 40 tn o. The Tech team showed a com plete reversal of form' over last Satur day's game with Washington and Lee and scored on the Carolinians at will. The game was decidedly rough and six of the down homers had to be carried from, the field injured. The last to go was Captain Rabenhorst, all South At lan tic halfback, of last year. He play ed stellar ball for his team and did most of their ground gaining. Crisp, Lancaster, Graham, Kornegay, Brooks and Redd ran wild today and their offensive work was the best seen here in years. , Captain Hardwick and McCann, the two forwards, were "at their best and made the wing positions impregnable to the Wake Forest at tack. Hall. H. . Hardwick and Shaner featured the Tech defense. Boyland, Fulton and Rabenhorst were the prin cipal gainers for the Carolinians. Wake Forest gained fifty-seven yards on aerial play but was unable to secure more than two first downs on running attack. Referee, Sampson, St. Albans; um pire, Davis, Hampden-Sydney; head--linesman, Bresnahan, Yale. Time of quarters, fifteen minutes Substitutes: Forj Tech, Kirnegay, Brooks, . Tilson, Parrish, Farmer; for Wake Forest, Benton, Taylor, Moore, Floyd, PruAtt, Bundy. Touchdowns, Redd, 2; Graham, 2; Crisp and H. Hardwick. Goals from touchdown. Crisp, 4. r The line-ups: Va. Poly. Position Wake Forest : Hardwick (C) w . Johnstone Left Field. Hall i Pierce Left Tackled Armstrong Moss . Left. Guard. . H. Hardwick - Wall Center. Shaner Pierce McCann Crisp Graham i Right Guard. Right Tackle. Right End. Quarterback. Feezor Olive Hackman Jenette Bayland Left Halfback. Lancaster Fulton Right Halfback. RITCH WILL BE IN CONG. RACE Marvin L. Ritch announce e T day night that he had made ro decision to enter the cor-J. 6 race. Mr. Ritch says that he will n-n ject to the Ninth district . ... ... . '-'Aiaarr ana inereiore win not participa the county primary which has L?3 announced to select a Mcklenb11 man. Air. Kitch states that from Mecklenburg, he Proposes make the race as a candiQite the district-at-large, without preju to other Mecklenburg candidates. X DEFEATED GUILFORD. Roanoke, Va., Nov. 8. Roanok- Ctf lege defeated Guilford colieqo'j, this afternoon by score of is to 7 ' DRUGGISTS WILL RAISE PRICE ON EARLE'S HYP0-C0D NOV. .15 Jobbers Unsuccessful in Ef fort to Accumulate Big Reserve Stock. SOME STORES HOPE TO HOLD OLD PRICE A real flutter was experienced in Drug Jobber circles the past week when notice of a material price advance on Earle's Hypo-Cod" sent jobbers hust ling to buy before the raise and retail druggists plunging to get all they could before it went up Some local druggists assert th hope to hold price down even after vember loth, but it certainly was a r. prise to everyone when Earle Chenu with all its huge resources fma"y ai mitted its efforts to stick to the e; price had failed. Hundreds had dieted its huge buying capacity v,-ouv enable it to hold the old price 5,i, Epl of world wide conditions. Now the lap one has fallen into line among oth preparations containing large air.oum of Cod Liver and Hypophosphit-?. For the protection of the drugget it should be noted that the Earle" s Hypo. Cod at new price still bears oM pric mark an& will continue to bear it un:;; a large stock of cartons already pnn ed are exhausted at the laboratory. Adv. I - 1 50c. n (Served from 12 to 3 P. M.) 3 'The Sensible Place to Eat" "LISTEN LESTER" VERY GOOD SHOW Plenty of Fun, Lilting Mu- sic, ixOoa-iooKing Jfeople and Other-Features. John Cort's presented the big musical comedy suc cess, "Listen Lester." at the Knicker- uuoiver meatre in Mew York for a year, presented that sprightly production to two audiences here yesterday, opening the theatrical season atthe city audi- "'caue. xsoin audiences were well pleased with the offering and seemed satisfied that it' was up to the great exnentatinna fhot v.r.i " uau Mvxi arounsed here. 1 As was to be expected, there Is noth ing serious about tl-i . iiuai limb to last. nothing In v.,, tuneful music. lots of fun and troth and dancUig and beautiful girls and frorcreous stacv setting t i w- - o it 10 ex actly the kind of show one would like u DCC n. Ilt3 was seeKing phyisical and mental relaxation and wished to for- bcl iu ins iruuDies. jjuii care could no Tnnrp tvraiof ir t-v-..u i" : yi essence OI tne show and its ingratiating humor and I milQlP tnOT O (JnAiirV.n11 1 ... I Tiii r ""Utt" wuia persist. In ' Manager Brown is to be congratulated cm the success . with which the sea- rB'Z "rf , wm deserve the thanks of the public as he provides this kind of show at the auditorium. ILLEGITIMATE CHILDRPV EdiLhurtrh Til oi f V . "fV ' Ktltiit Tlo T-n; 1"?. 1 con. -chl ui me total num. ber7Of births registered in UoUSi ITh To Prospect ive Automobile Buyers If you can't make up your mind about your choice of a car, ask yourself these . . four questions: Who Is Back of It? How Is It Built? How Does It Perform? How Does It Look? Many thousands of Briscoe cars have been sold on the way these questions were answered. And we're perfectly willing to have you decide on the same basis. A nno uncemen Briscci Sa race Co. 19 West Fourth Street Tel. 352-3759 Charlotte, N. C. RAYMOND C. GALLOWAY, President. WILLIARD E. KINZLE, Gen. Manager. . " HEMRY GOODWIN, Service Department Manger. We desire to announce to the public our taking over the Briscoe Car as local distributor; also maintaining a service and .parts department.' Our efforts are- to oflfei. Ihe best wo possibly can in service and in every line connected wit! lars. r We shall have on hand new cars for immediate delivery and can give demon- strations of the different models. We ask your, co-operation and would appreciate . " any suggestions in maintenance of First Class Service for your car. : - .''"''''. Temporarily weshall be located at 19 West Fourth street until other quarter can be secured. CO. 19 W, Fourth St. Local Dealers Phones 3523759 Charlotte, N. C. X H. HAM Factory Distributor North and South Carolina Phone 3759 323

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view