Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 09, 1912, EXTRA, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Harvard’s Overconfidence May Give Vandy an Opportunity for Great Showing in Big Battle Statistics of Men in Today’s Big Struggle Harva rd. wt - Ht - Age. Vandy. Wt. Ht. Age. ; ., e r . 16v 5.11 20 E. Brown, r. el6O 5.0 S2l '~,ek r. tlßl 5.08 21 T. Brown, r. tISO 6.00 22 1 i. g. 170 601 19 Swafford, r. gISO 6.00 22 t'p’i . .e174 5.09 22 Morgan, c 215 6.04 20 .. i; l’. g 188 5 - 09 20 Oaves, 1. g 170 F 1.09 20 ? >' t 177 5.09 20 Shipp. I. t2lO 6.04 19 1 181 5.01 28 Milholland, 1. e175 5.11 19 I b-150 5.08 21 Curlin. q. b 155 5.10 22 ' , v ' ;• h 166 5.08 20 Collins, r. h 162 5.10 23 LXick 1. h 174 5.11 20 Hardage, l. h 162 5.10 23 " enuMl, f. b 174 5.06 22 Sikes, f. b 164 5.11 20 Cambridge, mass., Nov. 9. ■fl, i« is the afternoon of \7 nderblit’s Big Test. For -■ time in all football history ; More eleven plays Har , ~r . It is the first time in the ry of football men here hen the Crimson has ever sched- 1 football game with a team <ioni the South. a game in which age, experience, prestige, train ing. ..aching and everything else a.ward Harvard —or seem to. 1 nib ne advantage aije folks here rt / willing to concede to the men fruii Tennessee —and that’s mental attitude. Ttie difference in the mental at ritu. ■ of the two teams is going t ,i p’ay a big part in that contest, is a fact few football fol lowets realize. Harvard is over i.i. ..nt; Vanderbilt isn't. And, t irt more, in all the Commo real big games they always v way above their form as a re mit of ’lie wonderful pre-game t/: - that Coach McGugin always 11 ■ his 1 layers. Harvard Expects Cinch. II:, mini is expecting in Vander light team, which, they will , is fast and "may know some fmitiriil.” yet they consider the ■ ,iouores a much easier eleven 1.1 ’m> big Brown team. For this 1 mon it is now the idea of Coach p. r. y Haughton to use a team ...p. almost entirely of substi • . s. Tin Vanderbilt game is fol -1 wed by a tough scrap with Dart outh, and t’ e Green Mountain boys are more than likely to give H .rvard far more trouble than they did the Princeton Tigers. Aft er that comes the clash with Yale. Houghton Is not going to take any chances on having any such stars as Wendell and Brickley crippled before these two hard games, and it has even been hinted that the wonderful toe of Charlie Brickley may not flash but for half of the struggle with the Commodores. Should all this really’ be the case. Vanderbilt is likely to get such a jump on Harvard that even if the regulars are rushed in to stall off defeat the change may come too late. Before every game of conse- ’i. e Dan McGugin gets his play ers around him and what he says to 'hem keys them up to a concert pitch. Right here is shown the ge nius of the man. It is not the ords, but the magnetism of the man that works the marvel. He 'ms the remarkable faculty of touching the fighting strings, and i does it, too. Furthermore, Mc- Gugiu feels all that he says. He not an actor. < the contrary. !i. is so highly strung during the mtrd battles that his whole being plunged into the minutest detail of the play. ' m more than one occasion be tween the halves of some big game ’■very player on the team has re turned to the game with tears -Teaming down his cheeks. What Dan McGugin has said has stuck, ■'nd the result? Well, when a “•an faints after the first half from .".-r pain and is not able to stand “P until time for the beginning of second half, then goes In and ’“'Vs ball like a demon, the result BLOOD POISON CU ,^D an fo ß, S C T t l , Y%*S’ R T6. By a true specialist who Possesses the ex- LiiWf I perience of years—the 'SAw --a right kind of experi- “*F \ ence—doing the same tV thing the right way ■ *>“ndreds and perhaps D *1 thousands of times ( A wi th unfailing, perma- ffV ''Jr !I “ nt results. No cut- l in S or detention from ' business. Don’t you err «„■ i tl >lnk it's about time S 0« h,; ?JjE h VT eatnient7 1 GIVE for ml i i*? German prepara ‘ -ills m d Po,son an< ’ guarantee ■ -ike ~?T ~J rnn - ’ W >ll cure you ' <wi m,? llarße a,id 1 ’nake mv ... vt.thlu your reach. I cure. Varl- Pro«n?H ro .'' e K| dney. Bladder ■ ->tu?o in troubeK ' Rupture. a it Nervous De- irges rf a ,* acuta , ar >d chronic dis , shorfl.t e !‘t and women cured in st t mH ‘ me possible. If y ( , u examimwl te .. ree consultation ' “ys% toT S> Ba ' 7 DR. J. D. HUGHES. Specialist, 16i/ Pr tM» , .*L T, h, rd National Bank 2? North Broad st., Atlanta, Q,. / martin MAY W/a PEACHTREE UPSTAIRS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL UNREDEEMED PLEDGES y FOR IfI LE A is easy to see. That happened in the game last Saturday with Am mie Sikes. Their Dander Will Be Up. "Os course. Vanderbilt will be at a disadvantage at Cambridge, be cause they are playing away from home." This is the argument put up by many football fans, all of which is the exact opposite of the real conditions. To be sure, Vanderbilt will be at a disadvantage because of the long trip, but as for the foreign field, the Commodores have never yet failed to play better surrounded by sympathizers of the enemy than at home among friends. The very fact that there are none or few friends in the stands seems to set as a stimulant. This will be the case today. Considering the game from a pychological viewpoint. Vandy has certain advantages. But unfortu nately for the Commodores the men have to meet much brawn, which, alas, may put the psycholo gy to the bad. Tile Harvard eleven is far heavier, more experienced, and in better shape than Vander bilt. In the kicking department. Har vard will have it all over the Com modores. if Brickley plays. Van derbilt will bend all energies to block hie attempts at field goals. This man has 6een performing marvels lately and is due an off day. In the first place, Brickley will take his time against Van derbilt. thinking that he has all day with his powerful line in front of him. Right there he will find he is mistaken. It’s dollars to the holes in doughnuts that he will be rushed harder when kicking in the Vanderbilt game than he was in the Princeton game. Vanderbilt has been working on a defense for his kicking as well as for the reg ular Harvard attack. Then there is this, too. Brickley may possibly’ be taken so by sur prise on his first attempts at kick ing that he is more liable to lose his cunning on account of nervousness. After a man has had his kicks blocked or nearly so once or twice, he will be in such a hurry to get the next one off that it will bo wilder than a March hare. , Vandy’s Punters Punk. As for the punting, that will be where the Commodores get in bad sure enough, if Felton is as good a man as he is cracked up to be. There is not even a fair punter on the Vanderbilt team. Curlin and Robins do well in practice some times; but not even when ■ they have all day do they get their boots off with anything like the regular ity that should be attained by the punter of the Vanderbilt team of 1912. Felton may gain consider able ground by his kicking and that very thing may be the factor to change the tide of battle. How ever, if Curlin stands up as he did against Virginia in the back field, assisted occasionally by Captain Lewie Hardage, Vanderbilt nay have the edge on Harvard in re turning punts, and thus make up for some of the lost distance in the actual punting. Finally’ there is this to say. That, though Harvard is mechanically far better than Vanderbilt, the Commo dores will give them one of the liveliest young scraps they have had, and when it is finished the chances are that the Crimson will not use Vanderbilt again to fill in for a rest game. I 1 ’ individual” BgßSjVr t fl 1 Wai I 1 11 I “A Quality Smoke” I II that brings more money I over the counter than 9 any other cigarette I I The Inexpensive package al- I I lows us to give more smokes. a (JOr. 20 I plain I package | 1 THIC ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 9. 1912. Chance, Davis, Rossman, Jones and Donahue Chased by Hard Luck FATE SURE LIKES TO FLIRT WITH FIRST SACKERS By Bill Bailey. \ NY time that a first baseman breaks into tlie limelight as a great big star and attracts the attention of the baseball world be had better hustle around and get a bit of accident, to say noth ing of burglar, insurance. The kind of injury that lie wants to provide against is not of the broken bone variety, "but he sure does want to guard against a sprain in his reputation. And while he is in no more danger of being robbed of his shekels than a second sack er, he surely is likely to be touched for his glory. Because it looks like the baseball fate that shoots the first baseman into the lime light always does so with the pur pose of boosting, just to sec how far the favorite can fall. Stahl a Real Champion. Jake Stahl, the manager of the world’s champions, is the latest first sacker who stands in danger of receiving one swift kick from the invisible power than makes or breaks the stars of the spangles. Now. no one is going to argue for a moment that Stahl occupied a back seat during the season just closed. Jake occupied a choice seat in the front row and any time that the fans talked about the great men of 1912 the name of the Boston man ager was mentioned. You know the story wen£ the rounds that the Red Sox finished up there because they got a first sacker when they need ed one. Stahl’s managerial abil ity had much to do with winning the pennant and the world’s cham pionship. But his playing was an other big factor. Heinle Wagner ami the other infielders just cut loose with that big mark to throw at. \r n" bO Tt v hi ? s lla,i any sympathy for Miller Huggins since he accepted a job us the Cardinals' manager. They say it was his own fault. ✓ • • • . l Th ?, < ', ubs are will ‘UK to trade Tinker to •r/ r. e< s first-class pla.sers rhe Reds are willing t.o give an experi enced hat boy for Tinker. The trading thus far hasn’t been very brisk, but the talking- wow! Let's lynch Fogel. » «> • Things have come to a wild pass when two managers of the ability of Chance, anil Bresnahan haven't any more jobs than a rabbit. » • • So after all there will be no new Cub park next year. There’s an excuse, of course. The city autorities will not give Murphy permission to build it. The brutes’. * 3 * Heine Zimmerman is anxious to play second bgse next year. If the players get a salary for the training seasons it will be soft indeed. Os course, they work hard through this sea son. but they get a swell Southern trip, free of cost. • < • The National league second basemen are ranked as follows by Bill Phelon: Evers, Sweeney, Doyle, Huggins, Knabe. Egan. McCarthy, Cutshaw. c> » « Hank O'Day has formally resigned as manager of the Reds—not that it was particularly necessary. It is as though Napoleon rose to concede his defeat at Waterloo. * 3 • A Chicago semi-pro team has two plaj ers named Caesar and Giezer Also in the Texas league there are two players named Carlo and Bruno. I This seems to be a swell year for ap | pointing shripip managers. Note Miller ; Huggins and Johnny Evers. ♦ If salary limits are enforced a lot of former big leaguers will have to retire or I play for a lot less money than usual which will he for the best interests of baseball. * < « Experts claim to detect signs of lift I YALE EXPECTS TROUBLE IN GAME WITH BROWN ; NEW HAVEN. C'>NN., Nov. 9.—The game with Brown here today was of particular interest because it showed the blue for the last time in the field before the championship game with Princeton next Saturday. Laie right fully looked for a stiff battle today be cause the Yale game has always been the real climax of the Brown season, and Brown has always played best at I this time. There was considerable ; doubt whether Carl Gallaeur would start in the game at his end position because of a muscle bruise which has been giving him pain. CLASS JUST OOZES OUT OF MICHIGAN-PENN GAME PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 9.—The an nual contest between Michigan and the I'niversity of Pennsylvania on Frank in field this afternoon lacked its ac customed interest because of the fact Syracuse, an Eastern eleven, and Pennsylvania has lost continually since the season began. However, re ports from Ann Arbor indicated that the Westerners have materially im proved since the Syracuse game, and <acb Andy Smith, of the. Pennsylva nia learn, was hopeful that his charges had gained by hard work they have received. WITH OLD MISS OUT OF WAY ALABAMA GETS BUSY Tl'S< 'AL< lOSA. ALA. Nov. 9 The Alabama football schedule is approach ing its climax or as near to a climax as it will ever get until a game with Auburn Is Included in the schedule. Yesterday's 10 to 9 defeat of Mississippi lias aroused the spirits of the team members and their followers as nothing else could. "CUPID” CHILDS DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS BALTIMORE, Nov. 9—Clarence ("t'upid”) t'hikls. an old-time hull player, died here today after a linger ing Illness. He was 45 years of age. t'hilds began his baseball career in tin North Carolina Slut, league In 1888. II join. 1 th.-<'lev,du. Nationa d-.« . t' um In 1889, and fol >. urs ranked a.- ■u • of tin ino.t. .nd- .nt batsmen and field.. - in tin 5,,. i i a, ftlmi in FODDER FOR FANS Well, it's by no means certain that Stahl will be able to play next year. He injured his ankle before the close of the season. He had to get hack on it before it had en tirely healed, and there is now the chance that he will be unable to go through a strenuous schedule, which would be tough sledding for the Red Sox. They wouldn’t lose the services of Stahl, of course. But they would lose his first base play. Stahl would sit on the bench and direct affairs. And Jake may entertain the notion that he would do his team Just as much good as if he were out there grab bing the wide throws. Which may and may not be true. Only time can tell. But Stahl has this in his favor: If he discovered that sit ting on the bencli wasn’t helping his men up there, he could jump out and play. If his ankle would permit, of course. Stahl’s predicament isn’t the first or last time that fate has stepped in and handed a first baseman a fine wallop. In fact, fate seems to have selected the first basemen for her enemies. There’s Frank L. Chance, P. L., Big Bear and pos sessor of half a dozen other titles. Looked like fate was working to sec just how high the boss of the Cubs could be boosted. . He won pen nants and world's' championsnips. He did about everything it was possible to do in baseball. Then he received one grand kick. Chance Has Reason to Grin. But Chance got one good laugh on his Nemesis all right. When he left Chicago for his California home he had a bunch of mighty good coupons in his grip or strong box and he was assured of several days work In clipping them. !'! tlle 1 l . ni ; e<l Sfates league, but a mirror’ Placed at the mouth of the late Columbian league showed no moisture. • • • Hush Jennings has offered Joe McGin nttj a position on the Detroit staff for next season. Ed Walsh got $1,500 as a bonus last ' tw>no n e a i nc P“ r P> Sallee was handed i SI,OOO for keeping in condition all the sea- • • * Washington has offered Dan Jloeller a bonus of S2OO if he does not smoke dur ing the playing season and will cut his salary S2OO if he does. • ♦ • Vic Savter says the Cubs will play just as hard for Evers as they ever did for Chance, in spite of Murphy.” « e e Jim McGuire has it that the reason pitchers don’t hit is that hitters don’t pitch. • • ♦ A team representing the Chinese uni versity at Hawaii will tour the United states next spring. • * • Baltimore has asked waivers on Smith. Peltj’ and Roach. • • • Burns, from Utica, will give Beals Becker an awful run next spring fur his job with the Giants. Beals has been H weak sister from the start. • y • Ban Johnson is said to have offered O Day a tat salary to work for him next year. » « American association players are velp dng over the proposed cut in their'sal aries. It’s coming to them, though. The American association clubs have been los ing money with both hands fv '.ears and are getting wearied of the pastime. u * tr John McGraw says he is NOT trying to land Johnny Kling. It is suspected, however, that Red Dooin is. Charlej’ Murphy wants to know where the National league is going to get seven votes to oust Horace Fogel No answer. • » • "It pays to advertise,” Rube Alarquard. Yet the thing can be overdone. MERCER LOOKING FOR HARD GAME WITH TENN. MACON, GA., Nov. 9.—Tin ha:dost game of the season for the Meieer men will be played this afternoon, when they meet the Tennessee eleven. This win be tiie first time that the two teams have met. The visitors have a bunch of big men. who will outweigh tiie Bap tists some fifteen or eighteen pounds to the man. An attempt to compare the ‘votes would make it look like a pretty big job for the Orange and Black supporters. Tennessee last Saturday defeated Cen tral of Kentucky, some 67 to 0; lost to Sewanee. 33 to fl, the week before, and defeated .Maryville, 39 to 0. Therefore, to defeat Tennessee, Mercer will have to show a lot of strength. GOVERNOR WILSON WILL WATCH FOOTBALL GAME I’KINCETON, N. .1., Nov. 9, To tie- Princeton football team tod;.' ’ falls tiie honor of playing before a president-ele. t 1 of ti e United states. .>rn. ■ Wil.-mC announced that he would attend tl game between the Tigers an.l New York uni- I versity this afternoon. The weather ’oft ; nothing to be desired. t’apta'n Pendleton ami "Hobe. " Baker were ordered by the coaches t . altvrna ■ e at left half back this afternoon. Cap- ’ tain Pendleton’s men expected a clean 1 swee i against New York. INDIANS AFTER SCALPS OF ARMY FOOTBALL MEN WEST POINT, N. Y. Nov 9. Hunting the scalp ot the Army eleven, tl «■ Carlisle Indian school football men invaded West I Point today wearing their fiercest war’ palm. This was the second Army-l'ur-l lisle game since the Indians have begun to play football. Both Institutions put their strongest teams in the field. "There could be no better medicine than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. My children were all sick with whooping cough. One of them was In bed, had a high fever and was coughing up blood. Our doctor gave them Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and the first dose eased them, and three bottles cured them,” says Mrs. R. A. Donaldson, of Lexing ton, Miss. For sale by all dealers. (Advt. I WASHINGTON AND RE TURN -$19.35. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. On sale November 8 14. Re turn limit December 1. Which recalls the sad fate of an other first baseman who also reached the heights that he might be toppled to the depths. Harry Davis is this man. You know it was generally believed that Davis bad quite as much to do witli the ."access of the Athletics as Con nie Mack. He was hailed as a winner before he had over man aged a ball club, and the Cleve land fans soared about as high as lans can before their favorites have actually demonstrated their supe riority. And Davis wasn’t even present when the schedule was lin .ished. All the reputation lie had built up in years was lost in a sin gle season. Merkle Also in Danger. Down in New York they claim that the much-buffeted Fred Mer kle will know what it is to be beat en out of a place as a regular. Merkle, termed the prize "bone head" of all time for doing what every other player was in the habit of doing and then halli d ns a man game enough to come from behind and show his real worth, is said to be due to sit on the bench or figure in a trade. Claude Rossman is another firs, sacker who has been up and down. He was about the only man on the L>etroit team in 1907 who showed why the Tigers were better than a second division bail club. And away he went to the minors. Jiggs Donahue is another first sacker who heard the wild plaudits of the fans and then dropped out of sight. Jiggs' first basing in the memorable struggle between the Sox and tlie Cubs in 1906 was one of the big events of that civil war struggle. And Jiggs now is down and out. Tom Jones Also Stung. Tom Jones is another first sack er with whom fate flirted, and Tom surely was singed. It sure looks like the fate of the game is always boosting some first sacker and that when the fellow with tlie mitt gets up there this same fate turns and gives him a nice, healthy swat. 7Ae Indian Motocycie jfa* 1913 HO Ton the trail of the 19,750 INDIAN MOTOCYCLES made and sold during the past year, comes the overwhelming host for 1913. No less than 35,000 INDIANS of the new models will be on the road before the lapse of a year from the date of this announcement. The factory ar Springfield, already the largest motorcycle factory in the world, has been enlarged and its capacity for production practically doubled. A motorcycle better than that which swept all before it during 1912 in popularity and achievement is now offered in the 1913 models. NEW CRADLE SPRING FRAME On top of the “14 Important Improvements” of COMFORT. An immense saving in the lire 1912, which established the supremacy of the of the machine is also assured. INDIAN MOTOCYCI.E more firmly than In addition to tiie Cradle Spring Frame, there ever, are added numerous further improvements. 'Flic ~~~ principal of these is the Cradle Spring Frame. | L Nothing like it has ever be- fore been attempted. It is ,14’;’■ 7'' - ■’AA onlv announced now after syyr*- eighteen months of sever? S' „ SX and conclusive test bj our /ff - r /'Kr vKvtfZw ;3Bi Engineering Department. / #Y .\\ fMefllrf TA' ’» Briefly, the spring frame I u consists of the application I ; 7~-u- of the front fork spring sys- \ z / *■ /Jw ' tern, which has proved so \ Vri / //T\ \Yr m X .f, j I\\'\Z ' successful during the past Yr ■' rs ™ I / three tears, to the rear of ''"hfaj. . rlillteiiß - the machine. Two 7-leaf C* hTO Hl C \ aiiildilUD Steel ? H.P. Twin Cylinder, with new Cradle Spring Frants, $250, F. 0.8. Factory springs extend back from the joint-cluster below the saddle. All road are ten other improvements, all of which are fully shocks are absorbed upon the upward bounce of described in our 1913 catalog. the rear wheel. Ihe rider’s scat knots s nothing the 191.1 INDIAN MOTOCYCI.E, our but the forward glide. I here m> ' bottom” to finest achievement in design and construction, is the INDIAN Cradle Spring Frame. I he heaviest offered to you at the same prices as last ‘year, or the lightest rider, bumping over th* roughest S2OO for the ' rtgle cylinder and $250 for the road, feels no 'ar. Ihe n t result to the rider is twin. Increasing production, and a ready buyer for every- machine,- enables us to market this incotnpar- able and famous motorcycle • by at these prices. l <>r the benefit of the ,y..’.—''t^.Southern trade, we hat e °f’ a nc " distributing war" —liMAOffdlk and service ration at Atlanta, /JT ’ ; V/V *''lW K ■Il X '•* ' his branch will cover ,* » '.® Y xF- 1 t the territories of Georgia, ! | «“ I Eloricia, North and South '* i Carolina, Alabama, Missis- X A |y\NGp* sippi and Tennessee. Com- u j m piete stock of spare parts i<iui. i'l for anv |NI)J\N model. 4 H.P. Sin(le Cylinder, with new Cradle Sprint Frame. S2OO, F. 0.8. Factory ] j ve Agents Wanted Drop a postal for 1913 advance catalog THE HENDEE MANUFACTURING COMPANY, - SPRINGFIELD. MASS. Atlanta Branch. 457 Peachtree Street ’ " ' 11 " ' ■ 1 ■■ ~ ~ South vs. North, East vs. West On Gridirons Today Will Clean Up the International Situation By Monty. "I XAST versus West and North yersus South are the wild calls of tin. football world today. Almost all general interest is absorbed by the two big inter sectional conflicts that head the card —Harvard against Vanderbilt at Cambridge and Pennsylvania versus Micnigan at Philadelphia. The intersectional football of the year—that is, on a big scale will be cleaned up practically at one | sitting, and after the shades of I night fall this evening the a: gu llets will have just about all of their evidence and dope at hand and can proceed to make deduc tions to proclaim resoundingly for the benefit of both friend and foe. Aside from Harvard, the Big Three will see the day go by with- I out a scrap that lias any particu lar importance. And even the Crimson can neither benefit nor harm its chances for the Eastern title by victory or the reverse in the tussle with the Southern score amassers. Yale’s annual battle with Brown r.t New Haven, though looked to as a sure win for the Blue, may. nevertheless. prove a genuine light each inch of the v. ay. but it bears no particular weight toward determining the championship. Princeton's frolic at home with New York university visiting is nothing more than an exercise gal lop. Dartmouth, the most imposing outsider, already Is out of the lau rel race by virtue of its defeat by Princeton, and. of course, so is <’o - null, so the game between those two at Ithaca counts for nothing except as for itself -and itself can not fail to be an overwhelming run - over for Dartmouth. Yes. this is pre-eminently an in tersectional day. Though there is I not a single direct way to compai" {•••••••••••••••••••••••••• • TODAY'S BIG GAMES. • • Harvard vs, Vanderbilt. at Cum- • • bridge. » • Tech vs. Sewanee, al Police De- • j • Leon park. • • Auburn vs. L. S. I’., al Mobile. • • Tenth •■•see vs. Mereet. at Macon. • • W. ami L. vs. V. P. 1., at Roa- • • Hoke. • • Chattanooga is. Eleventh Caval- • • ry, at Chattanooga. • • Tulane vs. Mississippi A. and M.. • • at Now Orleans. • • New York I nivi-rsity vs Prince- • • ton at Princeton. • • Yale is. Brown, at New Huven. • • Pennsylvani i is. M at • I • Philadelphia. • \ • Cornell v Dartmouth, a’ Ithaca • • <’arlislc v-. Army, at W« Point • • Navy vs. Bueknell. at Annapolis • • Syracus- vs. Lafayette at Fas- • • ton. • • W. and J. vs. W rn Rc-. rv. . • • at Washington. • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••a* the merits of the contenders iti the two big games on the basis of rel ative scores, i hey look on tin- face of tilings to promise close lights. The Pennsylvaniar-Miealgaii thing is a meeting of two unsuccessful teams, ai least unsuccessful in tlie early half of their schedules. The Harvard-Vanderbilt tto, on the oilier hand, looks to be Just the reverse. Both aggregations are monsters in tmi. ability to sweep their course lo triumph against the I rival.; they have been called Übon tn meet. Their records to date make tin peruser bat Ills eye and wonder how would t’> -I if forced to get in tiler.- again- . ither one and then iin ;> oil t.i. 11. Id. batterer?, tattered and torn, with no more pleasing Luing ac citing him at ti.e end than the gazing upon a score indicating clearly shown superiority. 7