1
otudeMe'L 6*oaoway 'tew™*? *~ ' \u25a0•^i^BßS^B^aa^"^ CARRIAGES of every description for Autumn ar.d Winter. A! very large and handsome assortment of BROUGHAMS COUPE ROCKAWAYS STATION WAGONS, &c. Every kind of -^rr' \z* for ntetmm invir.g ia th- country or city. Some v--. interesting bargalna in good second- hand work. _____ VAN TASSELL & kLAR\EY, 130 and 132 East 13th St., 123, 125, 127, 129 East 12th st. CARRIAGE REPOSITORY. Finest diaslay In New Tork of Carr_c«a at ia« >"f > '.«it \u25a0Trade and most fashljaable designs. BROLQMA.MS. OMMBLSES, VICTORIAS, STATION WAGONS, WAGONETTE3. TRAPS Freundberger betel pu=hel over for a touchdown, but no goal was made. Tfce Cadets braced up dur- ing the rest of the half, aid Booker went over ' •» a touchdown. Th^ goal was kicked by Bettlsor.. Krum did Sue •<\u25a0 rk .-. the second half for tha Cadets, <in i -.- game ended mttix tha score IS to SB in favor of the soldiers. Lineup: Wm: Point. Positions. Buekr.*lL S»m!th p-.A.n) Left »r. i Barrwrt Farnsworth . . . . IW. tackl* <J»:» R ran - L--?t iruar5. ................ Taytor Bettlson _ Centre Bwaai Goodspeed •• R!*hj gruarf SUaa Bunker. R:«nt tack!*...... Grmy Zell _ Right s.-.i J'renC'Jberx^r Litim _ Quarterback Prlciar-l ra«a<l _... Lert .^A:f^«ok. . .StutJn (captain) Clark R:*ht halfback J"a.t:«ra:i Phillips Fallback MattSew»oi- F.efer»e Mr. Vail. Caapiaa Mr. StaufTar. Ttaekeep** <^aie: Sterling. T!m» Ol Twec:y>-n»a aad J> rr.'.r.'.t-j. WESLEY AN. 35: WILLIAMS, t. Williams town. Mass.. Nov. 17 (Special).— WllUaiss met defeat at the hands of Wesleyan here to-iay by the score of 3. to I About one hundre-i .Wesleyan men came up to cheer their tean. and their cheering was a feature. The condition of the Williams team was poor, whi! a Wes- leyan was in great form The two teams wers about evenly matched in weight. Winiaraa b*l££ a trifle heavier. The field was slippery, which favored mass plays. Ing.is. of Wealeyan. gays one of the finest exhihttkMM of line bucking; cv»? seen on Weston Field. Wesleyan's best play wu a revoliir.cr wedge, which. the Williams line seemr 1 to be unable ta sto:>. The first touchdown waa made by Inglia after about six minutes cf play, during which Wesleyaa had pushed Williams steadily back with her w^J«:> formation. Williams had the ball only three tlinej In the first half. ar> succeeded in *«.:-'.r.s :-': -' distance only once. Wesleyan scored three ssoi touchdowns in this half, batter.ng the Winiarr.a line for big gair.s. In the second ha'.f Wllliarra braced up and bi ped the wedge several times, but Wesleyan succeeded tn scoring twice. Four times tVtiliams br<v:?ht 'he bail to Wes!eyan"s •*• - yard line, and ibody tried' from there for a *Ojl- from th* Held. He failed each time. The garc* ended with the ball on the Williams 20-yard i!ne. James W. O'Neil. of Manllus, N V.. was e!ec'-* 1 captain of the Williams team for next year. Ti": liner: W»*>yan. Petition*. wniiaics. S. A. I>oiMs tcaptiin). ..Left end O'Xeil i?o::er) Y«rr->w I-e?t tackla ?'.mmo=s fcspra:r.) Yi'Af L*fl w .i.-J Cole (Davenpor:. Montgomery CVatre Ka... r ?iHin:ar. ..... Flight guaM Hugs*.r.» Good* (Acjcert) Kmht laekla Hates iJa>» Garrison... R:^-.t r-ni '.....-.an iWUbori CR. 1 '.'.* Quarterback GatMnoa Corscar.len ...I^rf: ha.fba.-k. .Graves (Charspicr.i Thompson Ri^.t rback.Lawrw (Roon?-> Ir.fj..- . Fallback Do:-*-. iPesN-*;-.* Touchdowns Ins!!?. 3: Corscarden. 1 s. r>vM». o^i'.t from touchdown* Concarfien, 5. Referee I^ane. cf Harvard. ITmpire Ha::, of Dartmoath. Tlmeke«rer» CaMer. "\u25a0-' Wwalajai Decamp, of '.v. .laras. T*.in«—3>- mlnute luiw* "WISCONSIN, 3>: CHICAGO. 5. Chicago. Nov. 17.— Wisconsin University's r«am playing the fastest football seen here this season. simply overwhelmed the University of Ch!ca»:> eleven on Marshall Field thi3 afternoor.. Bsstttnc them by th,- score of 39 to V Wisconsin's goal Un* was not crossed, the rive points «.orrd by :b -3 .Maroons being the resuit of overeatercess oa thj part of the Wisconsin linemen. This ifiye Chicago. a free kick on Wisconsin^ 15-yarJ line, and th* tall sailed squarely between the goa'. posts. Wtseoosta played lightning fast football. Cham- berlain ar.d Curtis. Lorura am* Rior-iart opened b:^ r-..v1. in th. Maroon line, through which the Car- dinal's hacks tore for gains of thrte xo ten yards, while Curtis and JTEddle" Coehems several ' m-* skirted Chicago's ends for ?.• and Z~> yard gains N : oii^o was -i trick r>!ay used. I: was stri:»;h.t foot- ball, iirit- bucks and end ru: s behind perz^"z lntei> ferenee. with every irnn in tr-.r- play untii Jowa «is called. Ti-.e lineup: Wlaconsln. I'osition*. Chicago- Junnu 1,-'- end s>il Chamber Uia L*?t t,?ckl«. Atw»J 'in. . Uft K jar.t Erv:* w «"-»ntTe .S;** 1 -! 1 " riil " r.isnt su«n! liAnjjC*! •\u25a0urtia Right tarkl* McNab Abbott ••• R:«!it «-nvl Oj.r~rT Tratt ... Quarterback s^-.i. n I.;ir»on \u25a0 Urft r.airback . it?nry Cochema I'.isU hairtAck 11.«rt n Pr'.Vfr t i!.: ;,-s ;tr.>ier Sabstitutts-^Fot Chirac. F.MTidj:,., parkins %r.i P^J- »rU. Touchiiu*^*—(.Vfcnnj lit. l^rsvn O Oir;:s tfl. Driver. *I'aU Urked—Tratt, •». Pla,-^ kit-* Fci'.. R*> ere« •'bob" Wraa. Cntpira— Evaria Wrtctn CLXTELAXTJ WINS LEJ - I : won th* 8 I a of 6 :>j i. UNION. 6S; ST. STEPHEN'S. 0. Schenifctady. N. V.. Nov. 17.— Ctdoa administered to S1 3t*pti College this afternoon. a.rx over- whelminK drfeat on the gri.liroa. the wearers of the garnet rolling up th.- b ! BS^st scor»» of the s-.x- son. The halves were .<nlv twonty and r'Tteen min- utes, bjt i too , i..- up vt joints while Ste-i r.h*-n » could not ct wtthin fl'ty yards of Union's g,oal WORK OF YALE'S STARS. Yale, of course, did not play a perfect game, but any game that is good enough to rollup five tour -.clowns against a Princeton eleven is bound to look about right. But the players in Blue, for instance, did a good deal more fumbling man wajs on the schedule. Wear, in the back fieid. in the early part of tte game made three f urr.:,>p n rapid succession, and one of them gave Princeton her only chance to score. Then another time Yale dropped the ball after work- ing it up the field, and lost a sure chance to score again. Another point about Yaies play which was not commendarl* was her too great rstUnns on four great players that stand out in the eleven Hale, the fullback; Brown, left guard and ca.ptaln. and both tackles. Stillman and Bloomer. It seemed as if these men did Ju»t about Elne-tenths of the w.ork of the whole team, and sheer beef did the rest. Both Still- man and B'ocmer did tremendous work at rush- ing the ball, and the freshman. Bloomer, cov- ered himself with glory. Captain Brown was also ail over the field, pulling along the man with the ball and always getting into the play. But from the Yale point of view Hale was aasily the hero of the game, and he was treated as such. Whenever Yale wanted to squeeze out her distance Hale was on hand to do the trick in Impressive shape. Then. too. although fcis post 1* fullback, be had a way of getting Into th* pifcjr that was marvellous, and he WEAK AT ATTACK AND DEFENCE. Although the Tigers managed to score once, a a goal from the field, there was no period in the struggle at which they showed steady or con- elstrr.r work. Here are a few striking facts that rcay emphasize this: Princeton only once through the entire game gained her five-yard dis- tance by rushing except for a single dash around right end for fifteen yards, which McClave made late in the contest. Neither by line bucking nor by end circling, neither by tandem play nor puards back, could the Tigers gain an inch. There was. in fact, no substance whatsoever to their attack. They had no attack. They had a few men running around in circles, but nothing that could be called interference. They were thus utterly weak on the offensive, but on the defensive they were even worse. They fai'.ed to hold Yale for four downs a single tim*-. and there was no point in their line that was not perfectly vulnerable. It seemed to make little difference who carried the bal! for Yale: he had r.o trouble in making his distance almost every time, and It seemed to take a half dozen Tigers to pull down one Yale rusher. PRINCETONS LOYAL DEMONSTRATION. Such a woful defeat may well dismay Prince- ton men. but, after all. it was so complete, with no chance of escape, that the Orange and Black men seemed to be taking it more philosophically than they would if Yale's score had been much smaller. They recognize simply that the Prince- ton eleven of 1900 is a poor team one of the kind that are bound to happen every few years at all the big colleges— there is therefore r.o use of mourning over the Inevitable. That the undergraduates attribute their defeat to no lack of spirit on the jw:. of the eleven was phown by the magnificent. -way in which they cheered the weary players up to the bitter end, ar.d then, when the struggle was all over, broke out again into cheering as brave and loud as if they had been victors. It was a splendidly loyal demonstration on the part of the undergradu- ates, and was Just the sort of thing that the football men will remember and make good when they gird up their loins for another sea- son's work. SOME OF YALE'S GREAT PLATS. Yale reaily had no chance to show her mettle against a strong ar.d formidable foe, but even a? it was she had opportunity enough to send cold shivers chasing up and down the spin*? of the Harvard men who were there to g"t point!" on the play. Thr<-e members °f the Har- vard eieven. Lee and Barnard, guards, and Law- rence. Tackle, were on the side lines, as well as Head Coach Dibble of Harvard, and Cameron Forbes. They all saw sights that ar" lik< haunt their dreams unpleasantly from now until the battle hour at New-Haven next Saturday. Her* are pome of the things that those Harvard players ard the thlrtet-n thousand or mor>- \u25a0 spectators witnessed: The;, saw. in the first place, a team of Yale giants. And th^se giants were not slow, sluggish and slothful, as they appeared in the game against Columbia, but they were keer. nimble-footed and quick as a flash They saw. secondly. Yale p;ay a tre- mendously fast and snappy game, it was not simply that the individual players were fast, but the whole play moved off like a machine at full Kpeed. The quarterback pulled the throttle and the whole train started off at the rate of an Empire State Express. That was the feature that was most pleasing to the New-Haven coaches. Another disturbing revelation which was unfolded to the gaze of the Harvard on- lookers were some new and irresistible forma- tions which Yale worked constantly. They may not prove Invincible against Harvard, but they certainly looked as if nothing couid touch them. One of these was the "tackles ba^-k" formation which was sent crashing through Princeton's left wing all through the first ha'.f, and which knocked the other side of the line to smithereens in th<» second half. This formation took the shape sometimes of a powerful tandem, at others of a revolving wedge, which unrolled five good yards at a ciip, and like clockwork. Yale tried little end running, contenting herself with thos* steady onslaughts on the Tiger rushers wh:ch were so constant and co heavy that they finally reduced the Orange and Black line to about the yellowest thing at football ever seen at Princeton The result of the game Is a bitter disappoint- ment to Princeton, as she had fondly hoped that the work of the last two weeks had bro-upht the eleven up to formidable condition. But it was f«v>n apparent that the earlier reverse* of tha year were only a fair indication of the Tiger team for tho season of HHM\ for at not a singl» point in the game did the Jerseymen show any improvement over their play against Columbia. 7n fact, it was not simply a defeat tf>-day. It was an utt<»r rout. Yale simply played havoc •with the Orange and Black line broko It. crushed it, buried it. and finally reduced it to men a rr.as* that it fell to pieces at the slightest fhork from the heavy Blue runners. Yale's vic- tory, which was won in impressive style, should rot be depreciated, but at the same time Prince- ton's weakness v as f>ven more conspicuous than Tale's: strength. IT WAf SIMPLY A CASE OF RUNNIKG UP AND DOWN THE FIELD— DBEAT WORK. Princeton. N. J.. Nov. 17 (Special).— Yale over- wfcetmed the Tiger* here to-day by the heaviest *c>r«- that the Blue has rolled up aeainst a Princeton football team since ISOO. The final score was 20 to o. and Yale's ability to make touchdowns seemed to be limited only by dark- n*-f-» and time. THE STORT OF THE PLAYS THAT HEAT PRINCETON. Princeton. N. J.. Nov. 17 (Special) Hall kicked off for Yale to the Tiber's !5-yarc! line, and Meier ran back twelve yard?. On the first lineup Matti.s punted»to midfleld. and Yale at once kicked ba<*k. Meier, the Tiger quarterback, ran for the spinning leather, and just got hia hands on it' only to drop It. Like i. flash Gould. Yale's left end. scooped up the leather and started for the Princeton goal. A dodge and duck landed him clear of any Tig. r tacklers. and the Yale cheerers rose with a shout as their man dashed into the open with no one to binder. The Tiger pack set out in hot pursuit, hut the distance was too ahort, and before most profile knew what had happened the man In blue had dashed back of the goal po.*ts and scor- i the Brat tuuohdown. The whole play had come and gon« like a flush, leaving the New-Haven contingent wi'.d with delight and the Jerseymen dismayed at such a terrib!.- reverse at the very outlet of the battle. The Tigers' leaders nevertheless sprang to their feet, and Princeton began to cheer ilke mad; but rhere was many a downcast eye as Haie easily kicked the goal for Yale. S.-or-: Yale. 6; Prince- ton, 0. Princeton kicked off to Yale's 6-yard Une, and !lt- tle Wear set the Blue stands roaring by getting behind his Interference- in beautiful shape and run- ning back thirty yards. Yale was away offside In her first down, and had to lose ten yards. A couple of rushes failed to gain, and Hall punted On hr first down Princeton booted the leather back, and now rarne the Tl«er innings. Wear, of Yale, ran for the ball at full tiit. to take It on the fly with a great running start. But h.; muffed it squarely, and the efficient Reiter dropped on it. The Tigers bu. ked the centre in vain, and ho Mattis punted again, this time to the Yale 15-yard line. Again Yale. Position. Princeton. Gould Left en Roper Bloomer L*Tt ta kle...E'e!! (capt.) (Sheffield) Brown (captain) Left g-jard Wright *->lcott iVr.tr>- Losey (Butklewtu* Sheldon Right cuard Mills Stillman Right cackle Davis Coy (Rafferty) HU'ht end Little Fincke I^ft halfback... .McCord (McClave) '•hadwick P.iEht halfback 11-Mt^r (li.tru Hale (Dupea)) Fullback Mattis DETAILS OF THE GAME. HOW THE ELEVENS LINED UP. The Yale men, after the long wait for their baggage, trotted on th* field at 2:3." p. m. Th«y were headed by Captain Brown, who was con- spicuous by his great stature and by a pictur- esque white bandage around his head that gave him a fierce yet jaunty air. Princeton came \u0084n the gridiron soon after, armored cap-a-pie, and all with new and yellow leather helmets. The Yale singers started up a cheer, and the Tigers broke forth into song. Then things quieted down for a moment, and the two teams Uned up like this: JUST HOW THE BATTLE WAGED. The early part of the struggle was by far the most Interesting. After that Yale touchdown? became too monotonous to be exciting. At the very start the Princeton quarterback muffed a punt on his 30-yard iine, a Yale player gTabbed the ball and scored a touchdown within two minutes. Then Tale's quarterback returned the compliment by dropping a kick. Princeton U'nk the ball on Yale's 15-yard iine and. not gaining by rushing, kicked a pretty field goal. That made the score 6 to 5 for Yale, and Princeton plucked up hear?. The Tigers kept the play fairly near mldfield for a time, but Yale's machine soon got in motion and whirled it up to Princeton's 25-yard line. Here a fumble gave a Princet< n !ark a chance to grah the ball, and he started down the field with nothing in front of him. But after cover- ing forty good yards, a rnup> of Ya'.e players caught him and downed him. This roused Yale's spirit, and she rushed the leather straight up the field for a touchdown and goal. In the second half Yale got the ball on rhe kick-off, and did not once lose it till she had scored. Then, after another kick-off, the powerful Blue line got in motion, and after once losing the play on a fumble .-rossed the line again. Yale's last sr.ore \u25a0was a little slower in coming 'out it was per- fectly inevitable, and. with the goal, made a total of 29 points. That, in brief, is how the battle \u25a0waged, was lost and won. CROWDS FILL THE COLLEGE TOWN. Princeton began to fill up early this morning, and before noon the special trains from both New-York and Philadelphia began to arrive and pour out a hungry throng of Blue and of Orange and Black. Eleven special trains, each of twelve cars, started from Jersey City alone, and, in addition to the crowds of Yale and Princeton sympathizers, they had the felicity of carrying fifty stalwart members of the Jer- sey City Police Department, who were sup- posed tn help preserve order in this little uni- versity town. Th» facilities which the trades- folk were able to offer the visitor? in the way of luncheon we-e perhaps far less adequate than might found at New-Haven or Cam- but if Princeton is short on restau- rants she is long on picturesqueness and •-arr.r>\:? beauty. Princeton people believe that this town resembles the English university towns more than any other place in America I c and they are glad of every opportunity to Ehow it. But most of the crowds lingered little on the -•• i ampus, rather hurrying away to the Bpot where the mighty fray was soon to begin. Yale Bbouters from New-Haven, several thou- ES_nd strong innumbers and lungs, occupied the I on th<= west, while th>- Princeton cohorts -a pr» '••m banked on the eastern side of the fl'-'.d. There was certainly a big crowd, but there were enough seats for every one. The day was gray and chilly a typical November afternoon, raw enough to give life to the players and an excuse to the spectators not to neglect frequent oppor- tunities of manipulating those indispensable flasks that are the adornment of every big foot- ba'.l game. NEW-HAVES MSN PERFECTLY FIT. Physical condition always counts for much, and it seemed to do so this afternoon. Yale was in perfect phape. Xot a single man in Blue was laid off for injuries, and. though a couple of men retired in the second half, it was simply for the purpose of Riving practice to their substitutes. With Princeton, on the contrary. some player was constantly laid out for repairs. It was perhaps little wonder, for the onslaught of Yale's heavy men would be enough to ac- count for an army of cripples. At the same time the Princeton players did not seem in first rate condition. Captain Pell himself looked wan and overtrained, and. while he played aggres- sively for a time, the persistent attacks that were sent against him knocked him out, and he was compelled in the second half to retire. LOgT BTRAYEt) OR STOLEN*. The fame here this afternoon was a most an- noying exception to the general rule that these big college struggles begin on time. To-day it was forty minutes late in starting It seems that the Yale property man. who looks after all the costumes, sta^o scenery, etc.. of the Yale eleven, "fell down," or else the railroad slipped up. At any rate, the Yale trunks were all thrown off at Princeton Junction, and it took an everlasting time to get hold of them again. Now, every- body knows that a football player has to be made up with more care than the most ancient Rnd fussy actress. When you dress a football player you have to start with first principles and make him up slowly. You have to buckle on hi? nose, pad his eyebrows and strap a muz- zle over hip teeth Then you have to pad his person all ay.er with quilted stuffs, and wind up by trussing him up completely with many in- tricate and -la'" rate device^, to preserve him from the rude shocks of the world. That is the reason why th" game to-day was so late in starting that before the second half was nearly- over twilight ard semi-darkness had descended like a p?.Il over the scarred battlefield. Perhaps the players could see the ball, but the specta- tors certainly could not and it was mere guess- work as to what was doing. usually was to be found at the bottom of the heap. Hale was c#rtainly a lion among all the Tigers to-day. FOR SECOND COLCMBIA-\riliX*Jta QAMBi The management of the Columbia football team Is trying to arrange an<Mh* r game with Wratutta for Wednesday. Th* contest originally scheduled for Wednesday with Manhattan has been can- celled, Columbia peayed a sauna with WUXlaxas ir» the early part of the season, in which, neither s>4« Lafayette. 6; Cornell. 0. 'mis touchdown was made In two minutes after play was begun. On the next kick oft Morrison again caught the hall ard carried it thirteen yards before being downed. Lafayette then began batter- ing Cornell'c line with telling effect, carrying the ball down the field without once losing it to the visitors. Platt made another good run. netting twenty yards, and finally Ernst went over the line for the second touchdown. Bachman again kicking tne goal. Lafayette. 12; Cornell. 0. Shortly after the next kl'-k off Cornell secured the ball for the first time, on a fumble, and made several good gains by end runs, but was soon held for downs. Lafuyette fhen renewed the attacks on the Ithitcans' line, and advanced the ball slowly but su-adlly toward Cornell's goal. With the ball on the vi«itor«>' 8-yard lin*. Cure. Lafayette's fall- back kicked a pretty goal from placement. Score Lafayette. 17; Cornell. •\u25a0. The half ended with the ball in Cornell's pos- session -on Lafayette's thirty-yard line. Captain Starbuck retired at the end of this half on account of injuries, and so did Captain Chalmers, of La- fayette, for the same reason. In the second half Cornel] took a decided brace, whi'.e Lafayette seemed content to play a defensive game. There was no further scoring, and the play for the most p.irt was in the centre of th» nelcl. The haif ended with Lafayette carrying the ball Into Cornell's territory at a rapid pace. The playing of Platt. Horan. Cure. Trout and Morrison for Lafayetre was excellent, while Schoelkopf. Starbu?k. Warn-r and Purcell did the best work for the visitors. The lineup: L*fayette. Po«ltlon*. Cornell. E. Haldrnon R'.srit »nd Cross Trout Rleht tack!» Alexander Ernst Rlgbt guard Hunt Ba.hman remre Nemark Cooper Ueft g'iarj . - W arr.er McDem-iOtt Left tackle Ler.i-r Chalmers (.captain.) (Hal- dema.n) Left end Tausal* J. Morrison Quarterback Brewater Horan Right halfback. Morrison (Hilburn) Flatt .- Left halfback Purcell Cure Fullback . . Starbuck (Schoelkop?) Umplre-^Joha Minds. University ot Pennsylvania. Ref- eree J:*h Hartwell, Yale. Timekeeper Lr. Carr.ett. Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. Time of halves^ Thirty rr.in- ures. Touchdowns Platt and Ernst. Goals Ba-hmann i 2). Goal from placement Cure. HARVARD '04. IS; TALE '04. 0. New-Haven. Conn.. Nov. 17.—The Yale freshman football eleven gave an erratic exhibition this after- noon In Us annual game with the freshmai class of Harvard. For thirteen minutes the Yale men had the ball continually In Harvard territory Thpy were finally held on the Harvard five-yard line. Harvard then took the leather, and withoul losing possession of it landed it behind the Yale fresh- men's goal after a series of rushes, none of which was greater than five yards In length. Harvard's fierce attack seemed to rob the Yale youngsters of their nerve, and they went to pieces, while Harvard banged tneir line for repeated gains. Harvard kept the ball for the next ten minutes, rolling up two more touchdowns, from all of which goa-s were kicked by Hutchinson. This rounded the Harvard score up to IS. The nrat half closed with Harvard bucking the Yale line for what would apparently have been turned into another touchdown wUala nve minutes. In the second half Yale took a new lease of life and fought desperately to escape the ignominy of a whitewash. But try their be3t the Tale players couid not get the ball inside the Harvard 25-yard line. The game developed into a punting contest toward its close. Jennings, of Yale, having a little the better of the argument in this respect. L'ntll almost the close of the second half Yale h-:!d back the Harvard attack. During the last rive minutes, however, it was evident that Yale's strength waj gone, and Harvard was rapUUy ploughing her way through the Tale centre for an- other touchdown when time was called. Meier Harvard's fullback, waa used almost con- Stantly In making Harvard's first score. He was the only player of the visiting team who seemed able to crush the Yale defence at the start of the game and he smashed the line for repeated gain 3 until he had given his side the lead. In quick suc- cession Pruyn. with a series of end rushes, made Harvard's second ichdown. Lindsay, who .-..ii been called into the game only a few minutes be- fore was shot through centre for tne third. Harvard's favorite method of attack was a tan- dem plunge aimed at tackle, with three men In line. v, . relied continually on her tackles back formations. The lineup: Harvard. '<>\u2666 PoslUon* Tale 'iM. Hul :in« r. I^': *n<* ... ;. . .Blount Hodge I^-- tacltl*.".Fwguaen (Ir.?rar.»rai Robinson i6connert L«-ft guard O'NeUl Roo^rts I *::•-: c. . Patters* a Shay i Jack- ir. i \u25a0 .R»S*« guard Jofcnsoa ' jOBj 0B Right tackle Drummon'i Bure*ss (captain Ki<r. er.J B«nh Marshall .. .Quarterback Wlnslow (captain) : yf,iv n .'.'.'. IW: halfback Cross Ma ok ay (XJndsajr) .. K.g:.t halfback .'.Welton (DOnaJ Meier iParmalee) . . Fullbadi Jennings ! rrr)f ,i re Ijir.gford Tr-.nlty. Retrrf Cnlius, Dart- mouth Utttmto Olcott. Tale; Thayer. H»nar!. Touchdowns Meter. Pruyn. Ljndsay. Goals Hut-hinaon (3t. Time of halves Tnlrly minutes. BROWN. 12; DARTMOUTH. 5. Hanover. N. H.. Nov. 17 t Special) .— Dart- mouth-Brown game to-day wa a lonjj drawn out \u25a0 wrangle, owing to the Instability of Uefi»r*e Pen- i ro«p, who constantly allowed himself to be turned ! from his decisions, and took part in many disputes, j The game was called at 5 o'clock, with the second t half Just be?un. after more than two hours of r'-ay I In what should have been thirty-minute halves, j Dartmouth surprised the Brown team, who h.i.l expected a -0 to 0 score. Karly in the nrsi half '' Dartmouth advanced rapidly toward Browo g^al ' line and made as° from placement from the 30-v'ard line. Brown got in one touchdown lust before lime was called in the first hall by a ; fivike following a blocked punt, and In the second i ha'.f si •• scored similarly from the 20-yard ! line after a fumble. It waa a hard fou^-nt Karac, j with Dartmouth playing slightly the better. aside from the two Instances mentioned. The lineup: | Hrown Positions. Dartmouth. Abbott lUr:>U) Richt end O'Connor Shechan Right tackle AiUnc \l.. , |) Kight gunrd Marshall Wheeler Ceatra R>> ..Smith) ' WMttt-more.. •• l*'x. gruard Low* ' Keen* L«U tackle Place Slocum I^ft mil ... . ... ...K'r*\% i p.-udder (Wado) Quaftarbacll. ... H-;kn«p <Thomrs.-n) ! Barry -•• L rt halfback. Wa.nwright (Farmer) I;a "..^" PJ.iht halfback Whelan Wasbburnc .. t\i!lbaok Grirftn iHaltiday) ; ichdowns —^Tiittemore. Bated. Gon: from placement ! AUlns G<a'.§ fr -m lonchdown 2. Kcfai I Panroee. raplre Upton, Time 30 minute hai^s. WESTERN RESERVE. 0; BUFFALO. 0. Buffalo, Nov. IT-— Ostsj to the bad condition of the gridiron which was covered with snow and ' slush, neither the Western Reserve team, of Cleve- land, nor the men of the Cniverstlty of B-.iffalo played up to form in to-day's game, waicb re- suited In a score of 0 to 0. MICHIOAN, 7; NOTRE DAME, 0. Ann Arbor. Mich. Nov. 17.—Michigan derea j Notre Dame this afternoon by the small s.-ore of 7 to 0. Two of Michigan's potnts were scored on a j safety by Notre Dame when the ball was mufr^.i ! by Salmon on an attempted pant from b»hlnj th.- ' goal line. Michigan's showing was dioappotnt . to her partisans, while Notre Dame i>:,iv. aur- ' prlsingly well. Weber, ot Michigan, outpunted I Salmon, and the Michigan men frequently dowi I ' the Mooslen in their track! after a >unl Michi- gan s touchdown was secured by ha:, l line bu k- itig after nve minute* of j>Uy. In the second h\\f Notrr Dame had the ball on Michigan »-yard line four times. * WEST POINT. IS; BI'CKNELL, 10. West Point. N. T.. Nov. n (Special).— The Cadets defeated Bucknell this afternoon by a score of H lo 10 It was a eloaeiy contested gma uml looked durinj; the first half like a Bucknell victory. Mat- tbewson scored tirst from a -irop kick from West Tolnt's 25-yard line. TM* wu »ooa followed by [ Lafayetto won the toss ami elioee tae north io.il having th«< ad van tag* of * light wind In her favor. Captain Btarbuck of Cornell punted to Lafayette'i 20-yard Hn»\ Ht«i Morrison ran tin- t.n!i bacs nrvnn yardi Trout carried it three yards mor«, •"" | tf "' i" 1 -' 1 ' l>rok»> through CoraeH's line nd rtn y-ihron yard* with th« Whol# Cor- n,.i| fiim it his lierla. n'n.l pl»nttHl th« oval *.|iinrHv Behind tho tfuul uosta. Uiuhmiui kicked th* AOikL LAFAYETTE, 17; CORNELL, 0. A CLEAN CUT VICTORY FOR THE GUARDS BACK FORMATION. Easton. I>nn.. Nov. it (Special).— fur- Blshed another nurprise. to the football world to-day by d-featlriK Cornell, the conquerors of Princeton, by tho acore of 17 to 0. The visitors were clearly outplayed in all d^pnrtmfnta of the game- by the Maroon and White, and never had a chance to \u25a0cor* It whs tho guards back formation, taught to th* Lafayette team by I>r. S. H. Newton, their coach, that defeated the Ithacans. Try na they would they were- tumble la stop It, It tore bi< hoJe3 In their Ilnn time mid time .iL'iiln. and one«. in th«» first h«!f. Lafayette made By« first downs in suc- cesalon by this «tyi« of plaj Captain S:.<truuck an<i all the Cornell players praised Lafayette's excellent work. «nd declared that lha b*si team had won. Three >»boti»aii(l p«opis witnessed the K«rne. To- ntght Lafayatts celebrated the victor) with a mon- B trr bonfire on th« college i-ampua «r..l .t parade through the streets <>f lbs city. No sooner waa the final score posted than the crowd of several hundred made a rut>h for the campus. Men were hugging each other, leaping and throwing their hats high tn air in uncontrollable Joy. g one one raised a cry of "Fire: 1 At once the familiar. "Oh. Freshi go gel some wood!" was ringing through the >ampus in an Instant a small si/^ii forest was procured, and before any or.c realized what was «oiiiK on a huge blaze was Illuminating the ba k of "Old North"' Every one jo!n*fi in ii long cheer f«r Yale, for Capt*ln Brown arul for ench one of the eleven men who had brought victory back to the Blue. To-nighi tin college Ist bubbling over with good spirits and enthusiasm. All expected Bweet revenge for last year, but 19 to 5 seems too good to be true. The last line of tn "undertaker soii^" that haa grown so popular here during the last week is on [ne lips >>' every one "No hopo for Harvard." it runs. As the first wtl<l rush of excitement quiets down the feflln^ becomes more anil more eviii> •:.: that next Saturday musi and will witness another victor}'- If ever Yale had a chajnj>tonshlp team she has it tills year. OLD ELI AT HOME RUNS WILD WITH JOY. New-Haven. Conn., Nov. 17 (Special).— The news of Yale's great victory over Princeton was posted h\ "The Alumni Weekly" In successive bulletins during the afternoon, and ;t-> the returns were put up the large crowd of undergraduates assembled in front of "The Weekly's" office welcomed the good tidings with long and Joyful cheers. The first touchdown, coming f»o soon after play began, started the Ij.'H ro'M.iK. Tremendous shouts greeted the si ore of 11 to 5 at the end of the nrst half. No one then doubted the result. If Yale's heavy team had come out of the first half victori- ous, endurance would tell, and there need be r.o fear of the outcc ne of the whole game In the :.-xt few minutes, aa touchdown after touchdown swelled th» score for the Blue, the greatest enthusi- asm prevailed. It was a great day for Yale, anil dergraduates gave free vent to their feelings in w:ld. delighted >vl!s. A deep gloom has cast its mantle over Princeton to-night. The happy thought of a blazing bonfire around the hls'oric cannon to celebrate another championship victory most completely lost expres- sion amor.:? the undergraduates when the New- Haven eleven trotted back to the fie'd house a.ft-r the game with the pigskin and 2a points to their credit It was a severe blow to every Princeton student, and although they had only naif hearte.iiy expecit-d a victory, they did not for a moment •• ertaln the thought tnat Lhe team would me--t such a crushing defeat. With rather tearful voices they discussed the contest at the clubhouses t->- r!ght. P.eAlizing the bard, uphill npht the team hits had this season, r..> severe criticism has» been a.'!- van<-ed. Every man stomachs the bitter dose he has been forced to take, and contents himself in the hope that next year the victory will come t>. "Ol i Nassau." Coach Alexander Moffat. of Princeton, said: The game belongs to Yale. Their men were su- perior In weight, and outplayed us in almost every point. A continuous hamrm-r.ng on our line caused it to weaken. Our n^cn fought to the best of their ability, and mad? Vale earn all their points, but were badiy overwhelmed. It is the best team Tale has turned out i:. jears. Our men are stlil altve. and I am satisfied with their showing. What could you expect tht-m to do with such giants" That's all I have to ?ay. "Pop" Corbin, of Yale's '88 team, said: The strength of tha two rush lines tells the story- We outclassed Princeton except on kicking and in handling punts. I think if the officials nad in- f',rmt-d the captains when there was only five minutes left to play iri the first half we would have -cored another touchdown before time waa called. The game was very satisfactory to us. but there was too much fumbling in the fir«t half. We were rather confident ot" winning, but thought the score would be smaller. Our men were heavier, and our Individual and team work better. Nune of Princeton's coaches ur Captain Pell would, say anything on the game. Trainer Robinson when Interviewed said: settle down darkly over the field. To the west there was a light streak Just above the horizon, but overhead all was sombre and -overcast. The winter of Princeton's discontent and fallen hopes was closing in fast, and the day of her defeat was almost spent. Rut it was Just at this point that her defenders gathered their courage, and there broke, clear and ilnging from the Orange and Black hand of loyal undergraduates, that song of "Old Nassau." Louder and stronger the chorus swelled, while out on the field in the gathering darkness the Tiger team was struggling hopelessly against a Ktronger foe. The play was close up under the Jersey goal line now. and Fincke dashed across for the last touchdown. Brown kicked the goal. Score: lale. 29' Princeton. 5. This was tha end. The half was almost up. and both sides played a kicking game for the few mln- utjfe that were left. Little could be seen by the onlookers, yet from out of the semi-darkness still came rolling that chorus for "Old Nassau," and th«t waa the last sound that was heard until the shrill whistle broke out to tell the throng that the battle had ended. Summary: Final score— Yale. 29; Princeton, 5; Touchdowns for Yale— Gould. Bloomer (2), Still- man and Fineke. Goals— Brown. 4. Field goal for Princeton— Mattis. Offlcfals: Dmpire— Paul J. Dashiel. Annapolis. Referee— Edgar X. Wrightington. Harvard. Timekeeper— A. E. Whit- in? Cornell. Linemen— H. H. Janeway, Princeton; Dr. Hull, Yale. Halves— Thirty-five minutes. GLOOM AND SORROW AT PRINCETON. Princeton, N. J.. Nov. 17.—Captain Brown, of Yale, made the following statement to The Associ- ated Press correspondent on the game to-day: The game reaily speaks for Itself. We simply outclassed Princeton's ream. Failure to stop our pinss plays for the most part accounts for our l>ic score, which was larger than we anticipated. We found Princeton's centre, guards and tackieg very weak, but their ends were pretty good. In Duntlng Mattls excelled Hale. All of Princeton's bnrW field was fairly good. The only criticism I would make on our team is the fumbling in the first half. We nad good concerted action in the plays, and will have more next week. Ex-Captain "Jim" Rodgers. of Yale's '07 team, said: A CHANCE TO SCORE LOST. That curious and terrible mechanism of beef and skill was started up once again by Captain Brown, and it landed the ball in a Jiffy on the Tiger 27- yard line Stillman and Hale did most of the rush- ing, each gaining at a whack anywhere from four to fourteen yards. But at this point the ever vigilant Relter got the ball as Stillman fumbled it, and, plunging through a hole in the Yale line, he started down field full tilL The Tiger benches rose up with a roar, and all of old Nassau saw in pros- pect a repetition of Poe> long run and touchdown of two years ago. But Reiter. like the Greeks of old. was well greaved. In fact, his leg guards were so heavy and clumsy that although he had a great start, the swift Coy of Yale, and Fincke, who runs a hundred yards in even figures, overhauled him a little way beyond midfleld. The Princeton chance for a spectacular score was gone. THE BLUE'S STEADY WORK. But the Jersey eleven was useless on the attack, and so Watts punted again, this time to Yale's 10-yard line. Fincke was waiting for the ball, and although a half dozen Tigers almost had him in their claws, he eluded them all and dashed away for a good fifteen yards. Here began again the Irresistible Yale attack that ground out 5-yard gains like clockwork. Finck and Chadwlck both made good dashes through the line, and then Haie, Stillman and Bloomer took turns rushing. At Princeton's 30-yard line Yale got offside and lost ten yards. But not a whit daunted. Hale put on an t-xtra burst of speed, and tn one bull rush made up the forfeit. Quarterback Wear kept the play at a fast clip, and Yale went down the field as if she had on!y wooden men to oppose her. Most of the attacks were directed against Captain Peii. whose energy they were fast wearing down. Straight down the field the Blu. ilr.e travelled, and it was finally Bloomer who shot over the line for a touch- down. Captain Brown failed to touch the goal. Score— Yale. 11; Princeton, 5. Princeton kicked off, and the grasping Yale men actually would not allow the leather to go out of their possession for the rest of the half. The rush. push, shove and d.ish machinery soon got running again at full speed, and simply ate up the chalk marks that lay before the Princeton goal line. Nearer and nearer the New-Haven men were com- ing, and finally Bloomer and Brown made a co- operative dash that landed the leather two yards from the .i ersey goal. The Blue line was just gathering Itself for the flnai push when the whistle blew and the< half was over. A practically sure touchdown had been averted, and little thrills of thankfulness for even this negative blessing ran through the Princeton men. The score stood. Yale. 11; Princeton. 5. but it was perfectly evident that Yale : had a cinch on the game. There were no changes in the teams when they lined up for the second half, which began at 4:"5 p. m. But, while the Princeton men looked j;i led and worn, the Yale players were lively as crickets. And this despite the fact that they had thrice car- ried the ball aimost two-thirds the length of the f.eld in the rirst half. This wa? a feat that w v d have worn out most elevens, and Vale's abun freshness and energy showed well the stuft truit her yen was made of. Th» men in blue started the play with a rush. Wear r,tking the Itlckoff nicely and "sifting" back a good twenty yards through, the broken field. On the Uneup Fincke wriggled through a hole that Brown had thoughtfully arrangi ! for him, and Haie took the ball along five yards more ' The tackles" back formation, whi h had hammered the Prinoeton left wins? into small pieces in the first half, was now directed toward •.. r.sher - .\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0 ar.d soon had It on the run. Stillman was in the'mld- dle of the combination, and he was bustled alon^ for six yards. Then Bloomer was used, and ihe freshman gained his distance igaii .-. i ac:iin On the Tiger 13-yard line the f'.lnperj ris.skin dropped from Hale's grasp and fell, b unding almost to the feet of Mattis, the Grans?-.' and Bla , full- back. Ti the agonized J'rir eton rooters it seemed as if Mattis had oceans of time to f l! on the ball lUit he w..s slower than stoc-k still, an.l while he was thinking about It Cha.iwick. of Vale dove under and nabbed the leather. "That means a touehdpwi f*.r us." remarked the Yale men. Of course it did. and In short order, too' Bloomer leaped tnrnu-jh the yielding P'-iner-ton line for six yards, and then four of Vale's heaviest men went like a battering ram \u25a0\u25a0 Captain Pell There was nothing doing so far n> -.. was concerned for what could on- dought} ti«er aoeonioli^h aeainst tho«» four v il, pinr.t?'' The play passed right over the Princeton leader, and il was up to "'• l-J ird II •- I!- th< \u25a0.-. i f, r 9 stand. I is weU have tried to keep out the Red Sea The great Blue tide came on with a mighty rush: md swallowed .id the user host In a twinkling. When •;,. wave fell back'lt \u25a0•'\u25a0\u25a0 that Stillman had b< en left hich and Iry on the Tiger shore, ar.d vv a l, was mother touchdown to the good. Brown kl.ked the goal score— Yale. IT; Piinceton, 5 . ROUGH PLAYING HERE AND THERE. Princeton kicked off again and Wear made an- other almost sensational runback ot thirty >>:! Or; the lineup Yale started right in at her rushintj tacti again. Princet men egan to be laid out now prettj rapidly, and the play waxed a trlfl- rougher. Urnpfre bashiel was vigilance Itself "but 1 7 k T lld , nc>t be everywhere -at once and there could be heard occasional w tcks and thuds I that were not in the strict order of the playing.* Captain Pell; of Princeton, and Stillman. or Yale.i had i been having an unhappy tlmetogether from the very start" honelo i ins aide something for off.- id* play- and loitfno opportunity to getuhe better of hejMher; Stillman had long hair md {'ell lone fii \u25a0• \u25a0 - t> : resulting combination must have cost "stillmanva good many luxuriant locks In the course «of the struggle, for Pell did not spare him Then too a^ ! W- R.' i:i ° Vfcr a a!n\u25a0-"p." p. S5 t°h f,f ,s D Sme CAPTAIN PELL, HAS TO RETIRE. I M \u25a0" '\u25a0"- came on \u25a0• McCord's place at halfback but the Yale players came right along fust th« . same to Princeton s 3G-yar.i Une. Here a fumble gave the Tigers a chance. Bu, they were Kettlr ( uj. against a stone wall an,i had to punt. At thin »# tn7Son a % r^t^^i c u *<y an.i for his .substitute. Sheffield"" to* the captain tale made no change, except jjerhans t<-> !„„, the speed of her attack. Bloomer «, | aI T" tween them squeezed out about twent- Vv ! V and th-n the wonderful fullback in-.SJ' £ ar s, < ' 1 that landed him on the® enemy', ,^L° Bloomer and Brown pul their heads tM«SS?i "?*• : and th.-n ma.le. a bolt through th.Or. w a Kaln. i Back line. Bloomer pushed and ib,?^* and When they Btopped t,/ \u25a0\u25a0„,»' B . rown ' >ullt'd - was only a short five yards to th? Ti K . ? ~" P < <%%* \ v.a- an easy thing snd on th« very rl»r*rfl hla the . •\u25a0\u25a0 tr : , h Xl \u25a0I "* ri : and . anoth, Kn ;., .' V., . I V'^'-i'. th^ e wa s Tmfx n J^^ ll K nn ' ai r il r^ n 6r . t^, klck^ blocked and rMnc?to°n woke up witH SS r '; k w . as once, that end Interference tha? th. Ti> r" i '" r '\u25a0•-\u25a0• vainly attempting an through the lfc " r h<l<> in moUon and close behindl^Mer KeUn t' BOt a ound right end for fifteen yards Xt ? ha:)f " <1 Tlccrssgot their '-\u25a0-\u25a0 down *but? then v ? aln tn " through like a Hood and smothered ?v,J , br< ? £**«£[? third t!own th^mal^ ,?& ?#&<>» ;'A r k s i COMES FAST. Yale blocked the kick like a flash and .started h*r rushing tactics once more. The Ti rs wSejfS? weakening, and In their desperate effort, to -' the tide they frequenUy got offside or int. rferJd with the snap back. Three tjmei within minute, Princeton was penalized five yard? , thew. errors, and this, together with that r..i for crushing wedge, brought the %y c oJ £ ,h 011 l, n *' sey .al once mor* fwill«bt already b^ua^ A FIELD QOAL FOR PRINCETON. Here was the Tiger's chance, and he took It. The big Blue lino held firm, but in two rushes the Jersey men worked the piny out directly In front of Tale'e goal, and on the third down Mattls dropped a pretty field goal, the ball Just Bailing over the crossbar. Then it was the Tigers' turn to go mad. and they did It all right. It was the last glimpse they were to have of the plea-.ires of football life this season. Score-Yale. 6; Prince- ton, 5. Yale kicked off and McCord ran back fifteen yards. He was thrown down with a whack, and "Jim" Robinson, Princeton's trainer, was sent for. He dashed out with a sponge and then a curious thing was evident. Wherever •'Jim" Robinson went, there Umpire Dashiel was sure to go. The papers have printed a lot of things this year about the Princeton coaches sending instructions out to the players by means of Robinson and a big sponge, and Umpire Dashiel -was determined to nip any- thing of the kind In the bud. Robinson rushed out on the gridiron probably fifty times In the course of the- game, and Dashiel was like a sleuth on his tra.l every time. When McCord got his breath Mattis punted finely from the 25-yard line to midfleld. Wear cov- ered himaelf with obloquy by Juggling the ball again, but at last he dropped on It and Yale started to work that new formation with the tackles back. On the first trial of It Hall ran six yards. But Fincke had butter-fingers on the next down, and Princeton got the leather. A couple of punt ex- changes followed, In which the home players got the b«*st of it. Then from their 35-yard line the Yale men rushed the play to midfleld. where Hall punted to the Tiger 35-yard mark. Another ex- change of kicks made little change In the situa- tion, until Stillman broke through with a rush and stopped Mattis's kick. Wear made an atrocious muff, and Little, for Princeton, nailed the ball. SVmomobilca. Automobiles. Qlntomobilce. NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1900- poßTsricN 8 YALETROUNCESTHETIGKKS COMPLETELY OVERWHELMS PRINCE- POX BY THE SCORE OF 20 TO r .. tjoraea and Carnages.

New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1900-11-18 [p 8] · CaMer. "\u25a0-' Wwalajai Decamp, of '.v..laras. T*.in«—3>-mlnute luiw* ... fcis post 1* fullback, be had a way of getting Into

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Page 1: New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1900-11-18 [p 8] · CaMer. "\u25a0-' Wwalajai Decamp, of '.v..laras. T*.in«—3>-mlnute luiw* ... fcis post 1* fullback, be had a way of getting Into

otudeMe'L6*oaoway 'tew™*?*~ '

\u25a0•^i^BßS^B^aa^"^

CARRIAGESof every description for Autumn ar.d Winter. A!very large and handsome assortment of

BROUGHAMSCOUPE ROCKAWAYSSTATION WAGONS, &c.

Every kind of -^rr'\z* for ntetmm invir.g iath- country or city.

Some v--. interesting bargalna ingood second-hand work.——— _____

VAN TASSELL & kLAR\EY,130 and 132 East 13th St.,

123, 125, 127, 129 East 12th st.

CARRIAGE REPOSITORY.Finest diaslay In New Tork of Carr_c«a at ia« >"f>'.«it

\u25a0Trade and most fashljaable designs.

BROLQMA.MS. OMMBLSES, VICTORIAS,STATION WAGONS, WAGONETTE3. TRAPS

Freundberger betel pu=hel over for a touchdown,but no goal was made. Tfce Cadets braced up dur-ing the rest of the half, aid Booker went over

'•»

a touchdown. Th^ goal was kicked by Bettlsor..Krum did Sue •<\u25a0 rk .-. the second half for thaCadets, <in i-.- game ended mttix tha score IS to SBin favor of the soldiers. Lineup:

Wm: Point. Positions. Buekr.*lLS»m!th • p-.A.n) Left »r.i BarrwrtFarnsworth....—

IW. tackl* <J»:»R ran - L--?t iruar5. ................ TaytorBettlson

_Centre Bwaai

Goodspeed •• R!*hj gruarf—

SUaaBunker. R:«nt tack!*...... GrmyZell

_Right s.-.i J'renC'Jberx^r

Litim_

Quarterback Prlciar-lra«a<l _... Lert .^A:f^«ok.. .StutJn (captain)Clark „ R:*ht halfback J"a.t:«ra:iPhillips „ Fallback MattSew»oi-

F.efer»e—

Mr. Vail. Caapiaa—

Mr. StaufTar. Ttaekeep**—<^aie: Sterling. T!m» Ol

—Twec:y>-n»a aad J>

rr.'.r.'.t-j.

WESLEYAN. 35: WILLIAMS, t.

Williams town. Mass.. Nov. 17 (Special).— WllUaissmet defeat at the hands of Wesleyan here to-iayby the score of 3. to I About one hundre-i

.Wesleyan men came up to cheer their tean.and their cheering was a feature. The conditionof the Williams team was poor, whi!a Wes-leyan was in great form The two teams wersabout evenly matched in weight. Winiaraa b*l££a trifle heavier. The field was slippery, whichfavored mass plays. Ing.is. of Wealeyan. gaysone of the finest exhihttkMM of line bucking; cv»?seen on Weston Field. Wesleyan's best play wua revoliir.cr wedge, which. the Williams line seemr 1to be unable ta sto:>.

The first touchdown waa made by Inglia afterabout six minutes cf play, during which Wesleyaahad pushed Williams steadily back with her w^J«:>formation. Williams had the ball only three tlinejIn the first half. ar> succeeded in *«.:-'.r.s :-': -'

distance only once. Wesleyan scored three ssoi •touchdowns in this half, batter.ng the Winiarr.aline for big gair.s. In the second ha'.f Wllliarrabraced up and bi ped the wedge several times,but Wesleyan succeeded tn scoring twice. Fourtimes tVtiliams br<v:?ht 'he bail to Wes!eyan"s •*• -yard line, and ibody tried' from there for a *Ojl-from th* Held. He failed each time. The garc*ended with the ball on the Williams 20-yard i!ne.James W. O'Neil. of Manllus, N V.. was e!ec'-* 1captain of the Williams team for next year. Ti":liner:

W»*>yan. Petition*. wniiaics.S. A.I>oiMs tcaptiin). ..Left end O'Xeil i?o::er)Y«rr->w I-e?t tackla ?'.mmo=s fcspra:r.)Yi'Af L*fl w .i.-J Cole (Davenpor:.Montgomery CVatre Ka... r?iHin:ar. ..... Flight guaM Hugs*.r.»Good* (Acjcert) Kmht laekla Hates iJa>»Garrison... R:^-.t r-ni '.....-.an iWUboriCR. 1 '.'.* Quarterback GatMnoaCorscar.len ...I^rf: ha.fba.-k. .Graves (Charspicr.iThompson Ri^.t rback.Lawrw (Roon?->Ir.fj..- . Fallback Do:-*-. iPesN-*;-.*

Touchdowns—

Ins!!?. 3: Corscarden. 1 s. r>vM». o^i'.tfrom touchdown*

—Concarfien, 5. Referee

—I^ane. cf

Harvard. ITmpire—

Ha::, of Dartmoath. Tlmeke«rer»—

CaMer. "\u25a0-' Wwalajai Decamp, of '.v. .laras. T*.in«—3>-mlnute luiw*

"WISCONSIN, 3>: CHICAGO. 5.Chicago. Nov. 17.— Wisconsin University's r«am

playing the fastest football seen here this season.simply overwhelmed the University of Ch!ca»:>eleven on Marshall Field thi3 afternoor.. Bsstttncthem by th,- score of 39 to V Wisconsin's goal Un*was not crossed, the rive points «.orrd by :b -3

.Maroons being the resuit of overeatercess oa thjpart of the Wisconsin linemen. This ifiye Chicago.a free kick on Wisconsin^ 15-yarJ line, and th*tall sailed squarely between the goa'. posts.

Wtseoosta played lightning fast football. Cham-berlain ar.d Curtis. Lorura am* Rior-iart opened b:^r-..v1. in th. Maroon line, through which the Car-dinal's hacks tore for gains of thrte xo ten yards,while Curtis and JTEddle" Coehems several

'm-*

skirted Chicago's ends for ?.• and Z~> yard gains N :oii^o was -i trick r>!ay used. I:was stri:»;h.t foot-ball, iirit- bucks and end ru:s behind perz^"z lntei>ferenee. with every irnn in tr-.r- play untii Jowa«is called. Ti-.e lineup:

Wlaconsln. I'osition*. Chicago-Junnu 1,-'- end s>ilChamber Uia L*?t t,?ckl«. Atw»J'in. . Uft Kjar.t Erv:*

w «"-»ntTe .S;**1-!1"riil

"r.isnt su«n! liAnjjC*!

•\u25a0urtia Right tarkl* McNabAbbott ••• R:«!it «-nvl Oj.r~rTTratt ... Quarterback s^-.i.nI.;ir»on

\u25a0 Urft r.airback .it?nryCochema I'.isU hairtAck 11.«rt nPr'.Vfr t i!.:;,-s ;tr.>ier

Sabstitutts-^Fot Chirac. F.MTidj:,., parkins %r.i P^J-»rU. Touchiiu*^*—(.Vfcnnj lit. l^rsvn O Oir;:s tfl.Driver. *I'aU Urked—Tratt, •». Pla,-^ kit-*

—Fci'.. R*>

ere«—

•'bob" Wraa. Cntpira—Evaria Wrtctn

CLXTELAXTJ WINS X» LEJ-I

• : won th* 8I

a of 6 :>j i.

UNION. 6S; ST. STEPHEN'S. 0.

Schenifctady. N. V.. Nov. 17.—Ctdoa administeredto S1 3t*pti College this afternoon. a.rx over-whelminK drfeat on the gri.liroa. the wearers ofthe garnet rolling up th.- b!BS^st scor»» of the s-.x-son. The halves were .<nlv twonty and r'Tteen min-utes, bjt i too ,i..-

•up vt joints while Ste-i

r.h*-n » could not ct wtthin fl'ty yards of Union'sg,oal

WORK OF YALE'S STARS.Yale, of course, did not play a perfect game,

but any game that is good enough to rollup fivetour -.clowns against a Princeton eleven is boundto look about right. But the players in Blue,for instance, did a good deal more fumblingman wajs on the schedule. Wear, in the backfieid. in the early part of tte game made threefurr.:,>p n rapid succession, and one of themgave Princeton her only chance to score. Thenanother time Yale dropped the ball after work-ing it up the field, and lost a sure chance toscore again. Another point about Yaies playwhich was not commendarl* was her too great

rstUnns on four great players that stand outin the eleven

—Hale, the fullback; Brown, left

guard and ca.ptaln. and both tackles. Stillmanand Bloomer. It seemed as if these men didJu»t about Elne-tenths of the w.ork of the wholeteam, and sheer beef did the rest. Both Still-man and B'ocmer did tremendous work at rush-ing the ball, and the freshman. Bloomer, cov-ered himself with glory. Captain Brown wasalso ail over the field, pulling along the manwith the ball and always getting into the play.But from the Yale point of view Hale wasaasily the hero of the game, and he was treatedas such. Whenever Yale wanted to squeezeout her distance Hale was on hand to do thetrick in Impressive shape. Then. too. althoughfcis post 1* fullback, be had a way of gettingInto th* pifcjr that was marvellous, and he

WEAK AT ATTACK AND DEFENCE.Although the Tigers managed to score once, a

a goal from the field, there was no period in thestruggle at which they showed steady or con-elstrr.r work. Here are a few striking factsthat rcay emphasize this: Princeton only oncethrough the entire game gained her five-yard dis-

tance by rushing except for a single dash aroundright end for fifteen yards, which McClave madelate in the contest. Neither by line bucking norby end circling, neither by tandem play norpuards back, could the Tigers gain an inch.There was. in fact, no substance whatsoever to

their attack. They had no attack. They had afew men running around in circles, but nothing

that could be called interference. They werethus utterly weak on the offensive, but on thedefensive they were even worse. They fai'.ed to

hold Yale for four downs a single tim*-. andthere was no point in their line that was not

perfectly vulnerable. It seemed to make littledifference who carried the bal! for Yale: he hadr.o trouble in making his distance almost everytime, and It seemed to take a half dozen Tigers

to pull down one Yale rusher.PRINCETONS LOYAL DEMONSTRATION.

Such a woful defeat may well dismay Prince-ton men. but, after all. it was so complete, withno chance of escape, that the Orange and Blackmen seemed to be taking it more philosophically

than they would ifYale's score had been much

smaller. They recognize simply that the Prince-ton eleven of 1900 is a poor team one of thekind that are bound to happen every few yearsat all the big colleges— there is thereforer.o use of mourning over the Inevitable. Thatthe undergraduates attribute their defeat to nolack of spirit on the jw:. of the eleven wasphown by the magnificent. -way in which theycheered the weary players up to the bitter end,ar.d then, when the struggle was all over, brokeout again into cheering as brave and loud as ifthey had been victors. It was a splendidly loyal

demonstration on the part of the undergradu-ates, and was Just the sort of thing that thefootball men will remember and make goodwhen they gird up their loins for another sea-son's work.

SOME OF YALE'S GREAT PLATS.Yale reaily had no chance to show her mettle

against a strong ar.d formidable foe, but evena? it was she had opportunity enough to sendcold shivers chasing up and down the spin*?of the Harvard men who were there to g"tpoint!" on the play. Thr<-e members °f the Har-vard eieven. Lee and Barnard, guards, and Law-rence. Tackle, were on the side lines, as well asHead Coach Dibble of Harvard, and CameronForbes. They all saw sights that ar" lik<haunt their dreams unpleasantly from now untilthe battle hour at New-Haven next Saturday.Her* are pome of the things that those Harvardplayers ard the thlrtet-n thousand or mor>- \u25a0

spectators witnessed: The;, saw. in the firstplace, a team of Yale giants. And th^se giantswere not slow, sluggish and slothful, as theyappeared in the game against Columbia, butthey were keer. nimble-footed and quick as aflash They saw. secondly. Yale p;ay a tre-mendously fast and snappy game, it was notsimply that the individual players were fast,but the whole play moved off like a machine atfull Kpeed. The quarterback pulled the throttleand the whole train started off at the rate of anEmpire State Express. That was the featurethat was most pleasing to the New-Havencoaches. Another disturbing revelation whichwas unfolded to the gaze of the Harvard on-lookers were some new and irresistible forma-tions which Yale worked constantly. They maynot prove Invincible against Harvard, but theycertainly looked as ifnothing couid touch them.One of these was the "tackles ba^-k" formationwhich was sent crashing through Princeton'sleft wing all through the first ha'.f, and whichknocked the other side of the line to smithereensin th<» second half. This formation took theshape sometimes of a powerful tandem, atothers of a revolving wedge, which unrolled fivegood yards at a ciip, and like clockwork. Yaletried little end running, contenting herself withthos* steady onslaughts on the Tiger rusherswh:ch were so constant and co heavy that theyfinally reduced the Orange and Black line toabout the yellowest thing at football ever seenat Princeton

The result of the game Is a bitter disappoint-ment to Princeton, as she had fondly hoped thatthe work of the last two weeks had bro-upht theeleven up to formidable condition. But it wasf«v>n apparent that the earlier reverse* of thayear were only a fair indication of the Tiger

team for tho season of HHM\ for at not a singl»

point in the game did the Jerseymen show anyimprovement over their play against Columbia.7n fact, it was not simply a defeat tf>-day. Itwas an utt<»r rout. Yale simply played havoc•with the Orange and Black line

—broko It.

crushed it, buried it. and finally reduced it to

men a rr.as* that it fell to pieces at the slightest

fhork from the heavy Blue runners. Yale's vic-tory, which was won in impressive style, shouldrot be depreciated, but at the same time Prince-ton's weakness v as f>ven more conspicuous than

Tale's: strength.

IT WAf SIMPLY A CASE OF RUNNIKG UPAND DOWN THE FIELD—

DBEAT WORK.

Princeton. N. J.. Nov. 17 (Special).— Yale over-wfcetmed the Tiger* here to-day by the heaviest*c>r«- that the Blue has rolled up aeainst a

Princeton football team since ISOO. The finalscore was 20 to o. and Yale's ability to make

touchdowns seemed to be limited only by dark-n*-f-» and time.

THE STORT OF THE PLAYS THAT HEAT

PRINCETON.

Princeton. N. J.. Nov. 17 (Special)

—Hall kicked

off for Yale to the Tiber's !5-yarc! line, and Meierran back twelve yard?. On the first lineup Matti.spunted»to midfleld. and Yale at once kicked ba<*k.Meier, the Tiger quarterback, ran for the spinningleather, and just got hia hands on it'only to dropIt. Like i. flash Gould. Yale's left end. scooped upthe leather and started for the Princeton goal. Adodge and duck landed him clear of any Tig.rtacklers. and the Yale cheerers rose with a shoutas their man dashed into the open with no one tobinder.

The Tiger pack set out in hot pursuit, hut thedistance was too ahort, and before most profileknew what had happened the man In blue haddashed back of the goal po.*ts and scor- i the Brattuuohdown. The whole play had come and gon«like a flush, leaving the New-Haven contingentwi'.d with delight and the Jerseymen dismayed atsuch a terrib!.- reverse at the very outlet of thebattle. The Tigers' leaders nevertheless sprang totheir feet, and Princeton began to cheer ilke mad;but rhere was many a downcast eye as Haie easilykicked the goal for Yale. S.-or-: Yale. 6; Prince-ton, 0.

Princeton kicked off to Yale's 6-yard Une, and !lt-tle Wear set the Blue stands roaring by gettingbehind his Interference- in beautiful shape and run-ning back thirty yards. Yale was away offside Inher first down, and had to lose ten yards. A coupleof rushes failed to gain, and Hall punted On hrfirst down Princeton booted the leather back, andnow rarne the Tl«er innings. Wear, of Yale, ranfor the ball at full tiit. to take Iton the fly with agreat running start. But h.; muffed it squarely,and the efficient Reiter dropped on it. The Tigersbu. ked the centre in vain, and ho Mattis puntedagain, this time to the Yale 15-yard line. Again

Yale. Position. Princeton.Gould Left en RoperBloomer L*Tt ta kle...E'e!! (capt.) (Sheffield)Brown (captain) Left g-jard Wright*->lcott iVr.tr>- Losey (Butklewtu*Sheldon Right cuard MillsStillman Right cackle DavisCoy (Rafferty) HU'ht end LittleFincke I^fthalfback... .McCord (McClave)'•hadwick P.iEht halfback 11-Mt^r (li.truHale (Dupea)) Fullback Mattis

DETAILS OF THE GAME.

HOW THE ELEVENS LINED UP.The Yale men, after the long wait for their

baggage, trotted on th* field at 2:3." p. m. Th«y

were headed by Captain Brown, who was con-spicuous by his great stature and by a pictur-esque white bandage around his head that gavehim a fierce yet jaunty air. Princeton came \u0084nthe gridiron soon after, armored cap-a-pie, andall with new and yellow leather helmets. TheYale singers started up a cheer, and the Tigersbroke forth into song. Then things quieted downfor a moment, and the two teams Uned up likethis:

JUST HOW THE BATTLE WAGED.

The early part of the struggle was by far themost Interesting. After that Yale touchdown?

became too monotonous to be exciting. At thevery start the Princeton quarterback muffeda punt on his 30-yard iine, a Yale player

gTabbed the ball and scored a touchdown within

two minutes. Then Tale's quarterback returnedthe compliment by dropping a kick. Princeton

U'nk the ball on Yale's 15-yard iine and.not gaining by rushing, kicked a pretty fieldgoal. That made the score 6 to 5 for Yale, and

Princeton plucked up hear?. The Tigers kept

the play fairly near mldfield for a time, but

Yale's machine soon got in motion and whirled

it up to Princeton's 25-yard line. Here

a fumble gave a Princet< n !ark a chance to

grah the ball, and he started down the field

with nothing in front of him. But after cover-ing forty good yards, a rnup> of Ya'.e players

caught him and downed him. This rousedYale's spirit, and she rushed the leather straight

up the field for a touchdown and goal. In thesecond half Yale got the ball on rhe kick-off,

and did not once lose it tillshe had scored. Then,

after another kick-off, the powerful Blue line got

in motion, and after once losing the play on afumble .-rossed the line again. Yale's last sr.ore\u25a0was a little slower in coming 'out it was per-fectly inevitable, and. with the goal, made atotal of 29 points. That, in brief, is how thebattle \u25a0waged, was lost and won.

CROWDS FILLTHE COLLEGE TOWN.

Princeton began to fillup early this morning,and before noon the special trains from both

New-York and Philadelphia began to arriveand pour out a hungry throng of Blue and ofOrange and Black. Eleven special trains, eachof twelve cars, started from Jersey City alone,

and, in addition to the crowds of Yale andPrinceton sympathizers, they had the felicity

of carrying fifty stalwart members of the Jer-sey City Police Department, who were sup-posed tn help preserve order in this little uni-versity town. Th» facilities which the trades-folk were able to offer the visitor? in the wayof luncheon we-e perhaps far less adequate

than might h» found at New-Haven or Cam-but if Princeton is short on restau-

rants she is long on picturesqueness and•-arr.r>\:? beauty. Princeton people believe thatthis town resembles the English university

towns more than any other place in AmericaI • c and they are glad of every opportunity to

Ehow it.But most of the crowds lingered little on the-••

iampus, rather hurrying away to theBpot where the mighty fray was soon to begin.Yale Bbouters from New-Haven, several thou-

ES_nd strong innumbers and lungs, occupied theIon th<= west, while th>- Princeton cohorts

-a pr» '••m banked on the eastern side of the fl'-'.d.There was certainly a big crowd, but there wereenough seats for every one. The day was grayand chilly

—a typical November afternoon, raw

enough to give life to the players and an excuseto the spectators not to neglect frequent oppor-tunities of manipulating those indispensableflasks that are the adornment of every big foot-ba'.l game.

NEW-HAVES MSN PERFECTLY FIT.

Physical condition always counts for much,

and it seemed to do so this afternoon. Yale

was in perfect phape. Xot a single man in Blue

was laid off for injuries, and. though a couple

of men retired in the second half, it was simply

for the purpose of Riving practice to their

substitutes. With Princeton, on the contrary.

some player was constantly laid out for repairs.

It was perhaps little wonder, for the onslaught

of Yale's heavy men would be enough to ac-

count for an army of cripples. At the sametime the Princeton players did not seem in first

rate condition. Captain Pell himself looked wanand overtrained, and. while he played aggres-

sively for a time, the persistent attacks that

were sent against him knocked him out, and he

was compelled in the second half to retire.

LOgT BTRAYEt) OR STOLEN*.

The fame here this afternoon was a most an-

noying exception to the general rule that these

big college struggles begin on time. To-day it

was forty minutes late in starting It seems that

the Yale property man. who looks after all thecostumes, sta^o scenery, etc.. of the Yale eleven,

"fell down," or else the railroad slipped up. At

any rate, the Yale trunks were all thrown off

at Princeton Junction, and it took an everlasting

time to get hold of them again. Now, every-

body knows that a football player has to be

made up with more care than the most ancient

Rnd fussy actress. When you dress a footballplayer you have to start with first principles

and make him up slowly. You have to buckle

on hi? nose, pad his eyebrows and strap a muz-

zle over hip teeth Then you have to pad hisperson all ay.er with quilted stuffs, and wind up

by trussing him up completely with many in-

tricate and •-la'" rate device^, to preserve him

from the rude shocks of the world. That is the

reason why th" game to-day was so late instarting that before the second half was nearly-

over twilightard semi-darkness had descendedlike a p?.Il over the scarred battlefield. Perhaps

the players could see the ball, but the specta-

tors certainly could not and it was mere guess-

work as to what was doing.

usually was to be found at the bottom of theheap. Hale was c#rtainly a lion among all the

Tigers to-day.

FOR SECOND COLCMBIA-\riliX*Jta QAMBiThe management of the Columbia football team

Is trying to arrange an<Mh*r game with Wratuttafor Wednesday. Th* contest originally scheduledfor Wednesday with Manhattan has been can-celled, Columbia peayed a sauna with WUXlaxas ir»the early part of the season, in which, neither s>4«

Lafayette. 6; Cornell. 0.'mis touchdown was made In two minutes after

play was begun. On the next kick oft Morrisonagain caught the hall ard carried it thirteen yardsbefore being downed. Lafayette then began batter-ing Cornell'c line with telling effect, carrying theball down the field without once losing it to thevisitors. Platt made another good run. nettingtwenty yards, and finally Ernst went over the linefor the second touchdown. Bachman again kickingtne goal. Lafayette. 12; Cornell. 0.

Shortly after the next kl'-k off Cornell securedthe ball for the first time, on a fumble, and madeseveral good gains by end runs, but was soon heldfor downs. Lafuyette fhen renewed the attackson the Ithitcans' line, and advanced the ball slowlybut su-adlly toward Cornell's goal. With the ballon the vi«itor«>' 8-yard lin*. Cure. Lafayette's fall-back kicked a pretty goal from placement. Score

—Lafayette. 17; Cornell. •\u25a0.

The half ended with the ball in Cornell's pos-session -on Lafayette's thirty-yard line. CaptainStarbuck retired at the end of this half on accountof injuries, and so did Captain Chalmers, of La-fayette, for the same reason. In the second halfCornel] took a decided brace, whi'.e Lafayetteseemed content to play a defensive game. Therewas no further scoring, and the play for the mostp.irt was in the centre of th» nelcl. The haif endedwith Lafayette carrying the ball Into Cornell'sterritory at a rapid pace. The playing of Platt.Horan. Cure. Trout and Morrison for Lafayetrewas excellent, while Schoelkopf. Starbu?k. Warn-rand Purcell did the best work for the visitors. Thelineup:

L*fayette. Po«ltlon*. Cornell.E. Haldrnon R'.srit »nd CrossTrout Rleht tack!» Alexander

Ernst Rlgbt guard HuntBa.hman remre NemarkCooper Ueft g'iarj . -

W arr.erMcDem-iOtt Left tackle Ler.i-rChalmers (.captain.) (Hal-

dema.n) Left end Tausal*J. Morrison Quarterback BrewaterHoran Right halfback. Morrison (Hilburn)Flatt .- Left halfback PurcellCure Fullback .. Starbuck (Schoelkop?)

Umplre-^Joha Minds. University ot Pennsylvania. Ref-

eree—

J:*h Hartwell, Yale. Timekeeper—

Lr. Carr.ett. Uni-versity of Pennsylvania. Time of halves^

—Thirty rr.in-

ures. Touchdowns—

Platt and Ernst. Goals—

Ba-hmanni2). Goal from placement Cure.

HARVARD '04. IS; TALE '04. 0.

New-Haven. Conn.. Nov. 17.—The Yale freshmanfootball eleven gave an erratic exhibition this after-noon In Us annual game with the freshmai classof Harvard. For thirteen minutes the Yale menhad the ball continually In Harvard territory Thpy

were finally held on the Harvard five-yard line.Harvard then took the leather, and withoul losingpossession of it landed it behind the Yale fresh-men's goal after a series of rushes, none of whichwas greater than five yards In length. Harvard'sfierce attack seemed to rob the Yale youngsters oftheir nerve, and they went to pieces, while Harvardbanged tneir line for repeated gains. Harvard kept

the ball for the next ten minutes, rolling up two

more touchdowns, from all of which goa-s werekicked by Hutchinson. This rounded the Harvardscore up to IS. The nrat half closed with Harvardbucking the Yale line for what would apparently

have been turned into another touchdown wUala

nve minutes.In the second half Yale took a new lease of

life and fought desperately to escape the ignominy

of a whitewash. But try their be3t the Taleplayers couid not get the ball inside the Harvard25-yard line. The game developed into a punting

contest toward its close. Jennings, of Yale, havinga little the better of the argument in this respect.L'ntll almost the close of the second half Yale h-:!dback the Harvard attack. During the last riveminutes, however, it was evident that Yale'sstrength waj gone, and Harvard was rapUUyploughing her way through the Tale centre for an-other touchdown when time was called.

Meier Harvard's fullback, waa used almost con-Stantly In making Harvard's first score. He wasthe only player of the visiting team who seemedable to crush the Yale defence at the start of thegame and he smashed the line for repeated gain3until he had given his side the lead. In quick suc-cession Pruyn. with a series of end rushes, madeHarvard's second ichdown. Lindsay, who .-..ii

been called into the game only a few minutes be-fore was shot through centre for tne third.

Harvard's favorite method of attack was a tan-

dem plunge aimed at tackle, with three men Inline. v, . relied continually on her tackles backformations. The lineup:

Harvard. '<>\u2666 PoslUon* Tale 'iM.

Hul :in« r. I^': *n<* ... ;...Blount

Hodge I^-- tacltl*.".Fwguaen (Ir.?rar.»rai

Robinson i6connert—

L«-ft guard O'NeUlRoo^rts I*::•-:c. . Patters* aShay iJack- ir.i \u25a0 .R»S*« guard • Jofcnsoa 'jOBj0B Right tackle Drummon'i

Bure*ss (captain Ki<r. er.J B«nhMarshall . . • .Quarterback Wlnslow (captain) :

yf,ivn .'.'.'. IW: halfback Cross

Maok ay (XJndsajr) .. K.g:.t halfback .'.Welton (DOnaJ

Meier iParmalee) . . Fullbadi Jennings !rrr)f,ire

—Ijir.gford Tr-.nlty. Retrrf

—Cnlius, Dart-

mouth Utttmto Olcott. Tale; Thayer. H»nar!.

Touchdowns—

Meter. Pruyn. Ljndsay. Goals—

Hut-hinaon(3t. Time of halves

—Tnlrly minutes.

BROWN. 12; DARTMOUTH. 5.

Hanover. N. H.. Nov. 17 t Special) .— Dart-mouth-Brown game to-day wa a lonjjdrawn out \u25a0

wrangle, owing to the Instability of Uefi»r*e Pen- iro«p, who constantly allowed himself to be turned !from his decisions, and took part in many disputes, jThe game was called at 5 o'clock, with the second thalf Just be?un. after more than two hours of r'-ay IIn what should have been thirty-minute halves, jDartmouth surprised the Brown team, who h.i.lexpected a -0 to 0 score. Karly in the nrsi half

''Dartmouth advanced rapidly toward Browo g^al 'line and made as° from placement from the30-v'ard line. Brown got in one touchdownlust before lime was called in the first hall by a ;fivike following a blocked punt, and In the second i

ha'.f si •• scored similarly from the 20-yard !line after a fumble. It waa a hard fou^-nt Karac, jwith Dartmouth playing slightly the better. asidefrom the two Instances mentioned. The lineup: |

Hrown Positions. Dartmouth.Abbott lUr:>U) Richt end „ O'Connor •Shechan Right tackle AiUnc\l.. , |) Kight gunrd MarshallWheeler Ceatra R>> ..Smith)

'

WMttt-more.. •• —l*'x. gruard Low*

'

Keen* L«U tackle PlaceSlocum I^ft mil ... . ... ...K'r*\% i

p.-udder (Wado) Quaftarbacll. ... H-;kn«p <Thomrs.-n) !

Barry -•• L rt halfback. Wa.nwright (Farmer)I;a"..^" PJ.iht halfback WhelanWasbburnc .. t\i!lbaok Grirftn iHaltiday) ;

ichdowns —^Tiittemore. Bated. Gon: from placement !—AUlns G<a'.§ fr -m lonchdown

—2. Kcfai I

Panroee. raplre—

Upton, Time—

30 minute hai^s.

WESTERN RESERVE. 0; BUFFALO. 0.Buffalo, Nov. IT-—Ostsj to the bad condition of

the gridiron which was covered with snow and'

slush, neither the Western Reserve team, of Cleve-land, nor the men of the Cniverstlty of B-.iffaloplayed up to form in to-day's game, waicb re- •suited In a score of 0 to 0.

MICHIOAN, 7; NOTRE DAME, 0.Ann Arbor. Mich. Nov. 17.—Michigan derea j

Notre Dame this afternoon by the small s.-ore of7 to 0. Two of Michigan's potnts were scored on a jsafety by Notre Dame when the ball was mufr^.i !by Salmon on an attempted pant from b»hlnj th.-

'goal line. Michigan's showing was dioappotnt .to her partisans, while Notre Dame i>:,iv. aur-

'

prlsingly well. Weber, ot Michigan, outpunted ISalmon, and the Michigan men frequently dowi I

'the Mooslen in their track! after a >unl Michi-gan s touchdown was secured by ha:,lline bu k-itig after nve minute* of j>Uy. In the second h\\fNotrr Dame had the ball on Michigan »-yardline four times.

*

WEST POINT. IS; BI'CKNELL, 10.West Point. N. T.. Nov. n (Special).—The Cadets

defeated Bucknell this afternoon by a score of Hlo 10 It was a eloaeiy contested gma uml lookeddurinj; the first half like a Bucknell victory. Mat-tbewson scored tirst from a -irop kick from West •Tolnt's 25-yard line. TM* wu »ooa followed by [

Lafayetto won the toss ami elioee tae north

io.il having th«< advan tag* of * light wind In herfavor. Captain Btarbuck of Cornell punted to

Lafayette'i 20-yard Hn»\ Ht«i Morrison ran tin-

t.n!i bacs nrvnn yardi Trout carried it three yards

mor«, •""| tf"' i"1-'1' l>rok»> through CoraeH's line

nd rtn y-ihron yard* with th« Whol# Cor-n,.i| fiim it his lierla. n'n.l pl»nttHl th« oval *.|iinrHv

Behind tho tfuul uosta. Uiuhmiui kicked th* AOikL

LAFAYETTE, 17; CORNELL, 0.

A CLEAN CUT VICTORY FOR THE GUARDSBACK FORMATION.

Easton. I>nn.. Nov. it (Special).— fur-Blshed another nurprise. to the football world to-dayby d-featlriK Cornell, the conquerors of Princeton,

by tho acore of 17 to 0. The visitors were clearlyoutplayed in all d^pnrtmfnta of the game- by theMaroon and White, and never had a chance to

\u25a0cor* It whs tho guards back formation, taught

to th* Lafayette team by I>r. S. H. Newton, theircoach, that defeated the Ithacans. Try na they

would they were- tumble la stop It, It tore bi< hoJe3In their Ilnn time mid time .iL'iiln. and one«. in th«»first h«!f. Lafayette made By« first downs in suc-cesalon by this «tyi«of plaj Captain S:.<truuck an<i

all the Cornell players praised Lafayette's excellentwork. «nd declared that lha b*si team had won.Three >»boti»aii(l p«opis witnessed the K«rne. To-ntght Lafayatts celebrated the victor) with a mon-

Btrr bonfire on th« college i-ampua «r..l .t paradethrough the streets <>f lbs city.

No sooner waa the final score posted than thecrowd of several hundred made a rut>h for thecampus. Men were hugging each other, leaping andthrowing their hats high tn air in uncontrollableJoy. g one one raised a cry of "Fire:1 At oncethe familiar. "Oh. Freshi go gel some wood!" wasringing through the >ampus in an Instant a smallsi/^ii forest was procured, and before any or.crealized what was «oiiiK on a huge blaze wasIlluminating the ba k of "Old North"' Every onejo!n*fiin ii long cheer f«r Yale, for Capt*ln Brownarul for ench one of the eleven men who hadbrought victory back to the Blue.

To-nighi tin college Ist bubbling over with goodspirits and enthusiasm. Allexpected Bweet revengefor last year, but 19 to 5 seems too good to be true.The last line of tn "undertaker soii^" that haagrown so popular here during the last week is on[ne lips >>' every one "No hopo for Harvard." itruns. As the first wtl<l rush of excitement quietsdown the feflln^ becomes more anil more eviii>•:.:that next Saturday musi and will witness anothervictor}'- If ever Yale had a chajnj>tonshlp teamshe has it tills year.

OLD ELI AT HOME RUNS WILD WITH JOY.

New-Haven. Conn., Nov. 17 (Special).— The newsof Yale's great victory over Princeton was postedh\ "The Alumni Weekly" In successive bulletinsduring the afternoon, and ;t-> the returns were put

up the large crowd of undergraduates assembled

in front of "The Weekly's" office welcomed thegood tidings with long and Joyful cheers. The firsttouchdown, coming f»o soon after play began,started the Ij.'H ro'M.iK. Tremendous shoutsgreeted the si ore of 11 to 5 at the end of the nrst

half. No one then doubted the result. If Yale'sheavy team had come out of the first half victori-ous, endurance would tell, and there need be r.ofear of the outcc ne of the whole game In the:.-xt few minutes, aa touchdown after touchdownswelled th» score for the Blue, the greatest enthusi-asm prevailed. It was a great day for Yale, anil

dergraduates gave free vent to their feelings

in w:ld. delighted >vl!s.

A deep gloom has cast its mantle over Princetonto-night. The happy thought of a blazing bonfirearound the hls'oric cannon to celebrate anotherchampionship victory most completely lost expres-sion amor.:? the undergraduates when the New-Haven eleven trotted back to the fie'd house a.ft-rthe game with the pigskin and 2a points to theircredit It was a severe blow to every Princetonstudent, and although they had only naif hearte.iiy

expecit-d a victory, they did not for a moment•• ertaln the thought tnat Lhe team would me--tsuch a crushing defeat. With rather tearful voicesthey discussed the contest at the clubhouses t->-r!ght. P.eAlizing the bard, uphillnpht the team hitshad this season, r..> severe criticism has» been a.'!-van<-ed. Every man stomachs the bitter dose hehas been forced to take, and contents himself in thehope that next year the victory will come t>. "OliNassau."

Coach Alexander Moffat. of Princeton, said:The game belongs to Yale. Their men were su-

perior In weight, and outplayed us in almost everypoint. A continuous hamrm-r.ng on our line causedit to weaken. Our n^cn fought to the best of theirability, and mad? Vale earn all their points, butwere badiy overwhelmed. It is the best team Talehas turned out i:. jears.

Our men are stlil altve. and Iam satisfied withtheir showing. What could you expect tht-m todo with such giants" That's all Ihave to ?ay.

"Pop" Corbin, of Yale's '88 team, said:The strength of tha two rush lines tells the story-

We outclassed Princeton except on kicking and inhandling punts. Ithink if the officials nad in-f',rmt-d the captains when there was only fiveminutes left to play iri the first half we wouldhave -cored another touchdown before time waacalled.

The game was very satisfactory to us. but therewas too much fumbling in the fir«t half. We wererather confident ot" winning, but thought the scorewould be smaller. Our men were heavier, and ourIndividual and team work better.

Nune of Princeton's coaches ur Captain Pell would,say anything on the game. Trainer Robinson whenInterviewed said:

settle down darkly over the field. To the westthere was a light streak Just above the horizon,but overhead all was sombre and -overcast. Thewinter of Princeton's discontent and fallen hopes

was closing in fast, and the day of her defeat wasalmost spent.

Rut it was Just at this point that her defendersgathered their courage, and there broke, clear andilnging from the Orange and Black hand of loyalundergraduates, that song of "Old Nassau."Louder and stronger the chorus swelled, while outon the field in the gathering darkness the Tigerteam was struggling hopelessly against a Ktrongerfoe. The play was close up under the Jersey goalline now. and Fincke dashed across for the lasttouchdown. Brown kicked the goal. Score: lale.29' Princeton. 5.

This was tha end. The half was almost up. andboth sides played a kicking game for the few mln-utjfe that were left. Little could be seen by theonlookers, yet from out of the semi-darkness stillcame rolling that chorus for "Old Nassau," andth«t waa the last sound that was heard until theshrill whistle broke out to tell the throng that thebattle had ended.

Summary: Final score— Yale. 29; Princeton, 5;Touchdowns for Yale—Gould. Bloomer (2), Still-man and Fineke. Goals— Brown. 4. Fieldgoal for Princeton— Mattis. Offlcfals: Dmpire—Paul J. Dashiel. Annapolis. Referee— Edgar X.Wrightington. Harvard. Timekeeper— A. E. Whit-in? Cornell. Linemen— H. H. Janeway, Princeton;Dr. Hull, Yale. Halves— Thirty-five minutes.

GLOOM AND SORROW AT PRINCETON.Princeton, N. J.. Nov. 17.—Captain Brown, of

Yale, made the following statement to The Associ-ated Press correspondent on the game to-day:

The game reaily speaks for Itself. We simplyoutclassed Princeton's ream. Failure to stop ourpinss plays for the most part accounts for ourl>ic score, which was larger than we anticipated.We found Princeton's centre, guards and tackiegvery weak, but their ends were pretty good. InDuntlng Mattls excelled Hale. All of Princeton'sbnrW field was fairly good. The only criticism Iwould make on our team is the fumbling in thefirst half. We nad good concerted action in theplays, and will have more next week.

Ex-Captain "Jim" Rodgers. of Yale's '07 team,

said:

A CHANCE TO SCORE LOST.

That curious and terrible mechanism of beef and

skill was started up once again by Captain Brown,

and it landed the ball in a Jiffy on the Tiger 27-yard line Stillman and Hale did most of the rush-ing, each gaining at a whack anywhere from fourto fourteen yards. But at this point the evervigilant Relter got the ball as Stillman fumbled it,and, plunging through a hole in the Yale line, hestarted down field full tilL The Tiger benches roseup with a roar, and all of old Nassau saw in pros-

pect a repetition of Poe> long run and touchdownof two years ago. But Reiter. like the Greeks ofold. was well greaved. In fact, his leg guards wereso heavy and clumsy that although he had a great

start, the swift Coy of Yale, and Fincke, who runsa hundred yards in even figures, overhauled him alittle way beyond midfleld. The Princeton chancefor a spectacular score was gone.

THE BLUE'S STEADY WORK.

But the Jersey eleven was useless on the attack,and so Watts punted again, this time to Yale's10-yard line. Fincke was waiting for the ball, andalthough a half dozen Tigers almost had him intheir claws, he eluded them all and dashed awayfor a good fifteen yards. Here began again theIrresistible Yale attack that ground out 5-yardgains like clockwork. Finck and Chadwlck bothmade good dashes through the line, and then Haie,

Stillman and Bloomer took turns rushing. AtPrinceton's 30-yard line Yale got offside and lostten yards. But not a whit daunted. Hale put onan t-xtra burst of speed, and tn one bull rush madeup the forfeit. Quarterback Wear kept the play ata fast clip, and Yale went down the field as if shehad on!y wooden men to oppose her. Most of theattacks were directed against Captain Peii. whoseenergy they were fast wearing down. Straightdown the field the Blu. ilr.e travelled, and it wasfinally Bloomer who shot over the line for a touch-down. Captain Brown failed to touch the goal.Score— Yale. 11; Princeton, 5.

Princeton kicked off, and the grasping Yale menactually would not allow the leather to go out oftheir possession for the rest of the half. The rush.push, shove and d.ish machinery soon got runningagain at full speed, and simply ate up the chalkmarks that lay before the Princeton goal line.Nearer and nearer the New-Haven men were com-ing, and finally Bloomer and Brown made a co-operative dash that landed the leather two yardsfrom the .i ersey goal. The Blue line was justgathering Itself for the flnai push when the whistleblew and the< half was over. A practically suretouchdown had been averted, and little thrills ofthankfulness for even this negative blessing ranthrough the Princeton men. The score stood.Yale. 11; Princeton. 5. but it was perfectly evidentthat Yale:had a cinch on the game.

There were no changes in the teams when theylined up for the second half, which began at 4:"5p. m. But, while the Princeton men looked j;iledand worn, the Yale players were lively as crickets.And this despite the fact that they had thrice car-ried the ball aimost two-thirds the length of thef.eld in the rirst half. This wa? a feat that w v dhave worn out most elevens, and Vale's abunfreshness and energy showed well the stuft truither yen was made of. Th» men in blue startedthe play with a rush. Wear r,tking the Itlckoffnicely and "sifting" back a good twenty yardsthrough, the broken field.

On the Uneup Fincke wriggled through a holethat Brown had thoughtfully arrangi !for him, andHaie took the ball along five yards more

'

Thetackles" back formation, whi h had hammered thePrinoeton left wins? into small pieces in the firsthalf, was now directed toward •.. r.sher -

.\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0 ar.dsoon had Iton the run. Stillman was in the'mld-dle of the combination, and he was bustled alon^for six yards. Then Bloomer was used, and ihefreshman gained his distance igaii .-. i ac:iinOn the Tiger 13-yard line the f'.lnperj ris.skindropped from Hale's grasp and fell,b unding almostto the feet of Mattis, the Grans?-.' and Bla , full-back. Ti the agonized J'rir eton rooters it seemedas if Mattis had oceans of time to f l!on the balllUit he w..s slower than stoc-k still, an.lwhile hewas thinking about It Cha.iwick. of Vale doveunder and nabbed the leather.

"That means a touehdpwi f*.rus." remarked theYale men. Of course it did. and In short order, too'Bloomer leaped tnrnu-jh the yielding P'-iner-ton linefor six yards, and then four of Vale's heaviest menwent like a battering ram \u25a0\u25a0 Captain Pell Therewas nothing doing so far n> -.. was concernedfor what could on- dought} ti«er aoeonioli^haeainst tho«» four v il, pinr.t?'' The play passedright over the Princeton leader, and il was up to"'• l-J ird II •- I!- r« th< \u25a0.-. i f, r 9

stand. I is weUhave tried to keep out the Red Sea The great Bluetide came on with a mighty rush: md swallowed .idthe user host In a twinkling. When •;,. wave fellback'lt \u25a0•'\u25a0\u25a0 that Stillman had b< en left hichand Iry on the Tiger shore, ar.d vval, was mothertouchdown to the good. Brown kl.ked the goalscore— Yale. IT; Piinceton, 5 .

ROUGH PLAYING HERE AND THERE.Princeton kicked off again and Wear made an-

other almost sensational runback ot thirty >>:!Or; the lineup Yale started right in at her rushintjtacti again. Princet men egan to be laid outnow prettj rapidly, and the play waxed a trlfl-rougher. Urnpfre bashiel was vigilance Itself "but

17 k Tlld ,nc>t be everywhere -at once and therecould be heard occasional w tcks and thudsIthatwere not in the strict order of the playing.*CaptainPell;of Princeton, and Stillman. or Yale.ihad ibeenhaving an unhappy tlmetogether from the verystart"honelo i ins aide something for off.-id* play-andloitfno opportunity to getuhe better of hejMher;Stillman had long hair md {'ell lone fii \u25a0• \u25a0-

t> :resulting combination must have cost "stillmanvagood many luxuriant locks In the course «of thestruggle, for Pell did not spare him Then too

a^ !W- R.'i:i°

Vfcr a a!n\u25a0-"p." p. S5 t°hf,f,sDSmeCAPTAIN PELL, HAS TO RETIRE.

I M\u25a0" '\u25a0"- came on \u25a0• McCord's place at halfbackbut the Yale players came right along fust th«. same to Princeton s 3G-yar.i Une. Here a fumblegave the Tigers a chance. Bu, they were Kettlr(

uj. against a stone wall an,i had to punt. At thin

»# tn7Son a%r^t^^icu*<yan.i for his .substitute. Sheffield"" to* the captain

tale made no change, except jjerhans t<-> !„„,the speed of her attack. Bloomer «, |aI T"tween them squeezed out about twent- Vv ! Vand th-n the wonderful fullback in-.SJ' £ars,<'1

that landed him on the® enemy', ,^L°Bloomer and Brown pul their heads tM«SS?i "?*•: and th.-n ma.le. a bolt through th.Or.

w aKaln.i Back line. Bloomer pushed andib,?^* and

When they Btopped t,/ \u25a0\u25a0„,»' B.rown '>ullt'd-was only a short five yards to th? TiK.? ~"P< <%%*\ v.a- an easy thing snd on th« very rl»r*rflhla

• the . •\u25a0\u25a0 tr:, h Xl \u25a0I"*ri

: and. anoth, Kn ;., .' V., .IV'^'-i'.

th^ewasTmfxnJ^^ llKnn

'airilr n̂

6r. t^,klck^blocked and rMnc?to°n woke up witHSS

r';k w.asonce, that end Interference tha? th. Ti> r" i'"r'\u25a0•-\u25a0• vainly attempting an through the

lfc"r h<l<>

in moUon and close behindl^Mer KeUnt' BOta ound right end for fifteen yards Xt? ha:)f"<1Tlccrssgot their '-\u25a0-\u25a0 down*but?then v ?aln tn"through like a Hood and smothered ?v,J , br< ?£**«£[? third t!own th^mal^ ,?& ?#&<>»

;'Arks i COMES FAST.Yale blocked the kick like a flash and .started h*rrushing tactics once more. The Ti rs wSejfS?

weakening, and In their desperate effort, to-'

the tide they frequenUy got offside or int.rferJdwith the snap back. Three tjmei withinminute, Princeton was penalized five yard? ,thew. errors, and this, together with that r..iforcrushing wedge, brought the %y c oJ £ ,h

011l,n*'

sey .al once mor* fwill«bt already b^ua^

A FIELD QOAL FOR PRINCETON.

Here was the Tiger's chance, and he took It.

The big Blue lino held firm, but in two rushes theJersey men worked the piny out directly In front

of Tale'e goal, and on the third down Mattlsdropped a pretty field goal, the ball Just Bailing

over the crossbar. Then it was the Tigers' turn

to go mad. and they did It all right. It was the

last glimpse they were to have of the plea-.ires of

football life this season. Score-Yale. 6; Prince-ton, 5.

Yale kicked off and McCord ran back fifteenyards. He was thrown down with a whack, and

"Jim" Robinson, Princeton's trainer, was sent for.

He dashed out with a sponge and then a curiousthing was evident. Wherever •'Jim" Robinsonwent, there Umpire Dashiel was sure to go. The

papers have printed a lot of things this year about

the Princeton coaches sending instructions out to

the players by means of Robinson and a big sponge,

and Umpire Dashiel -was determined to nip any-

thing of the kind In the bud. Robinson rushed out

on the gridiron probably fifty times In the courseof the- game, and Dashiel was like a sleuth onhis tra.l every time.

When McCord got his breath Mattis punted finely

from the 25-yard line to midfleld. Wear cov-ered himaelf with obloquy by Juggling the ball again,

but at last he dropped on It and Yale started to

work that new formation with the tackles back.

On the first trial of It Hall ran six yards. ButFincke had butter-fingers on the next down, and

Princeton got the leather. A couple of punt ex-changes followed, In which the home players got

the b«*st of it. Then from their 35-yard line the

Yale men rushed the play to midfleld. where Hallpunted to the Tiger 35-yard mark. Another ex-change of kicks made little change In the situa-

tion, until Stillman broke through with a rush

and stopped Mattis's kick.

Wear made an atrocious muff, and Little, forPrinceton, nailed the ball.

SVmomobilca.Automobiles.Qlntomobilce.NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1900-

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8

YALETROUNCESTHETIGKKS

COMPLETELY OVERWHELMS PRINCE-

POX BY THE SCORE OF 20 TO r..

tjoraea and Carnages.