Al 11VC11 V~ L3.L 1J / SPILLS 9 FARME.Il,',,,,,,,,- PLA IL a FORWARDW PUSES SCRUBS BACK FROM BOTH 5 AND 2YARD STRIPES' Varsity Scores Three Touchdowns in 15-Minute Struggle With Subs And We Expect to Beat 'em too! Michigan faces M. A. C. tomorrow' with just one man in the lineup that started the game last year. This is Captain Maulbetsch. M. A. C. will start with no less than seven of the same men that lined up We Don 't Have to Stop Him Saturday F p. r L!' Aii LL' thorities and they have sent a hur call to Ann Arbor for more. Almc the entire student body of the Farm school will be here to cheer for favorites. If the crowd at tomorrow's game to gain the title of the largest ev gah i red on Ferry Field, it will ha xo eceed 25,000, that being the size the multitude that witnessed the 13 (;Rt* 4i~ i. r i ... LANSING TEAM IS CONFIDENT against the Wolverines last year. __The Michigan line from end to end Rehor, Boyd, and Welmann Turns in Starring Against Scrubs Take last year was composed of Benton, If M. A. C.'s plays don't meet withI any better success in the hands of their originators tomorrow than they did as employed by the scrubs yester- day afternoon, the Farmers' ,total yardage gained will be expressed in a minus quantity. The Varsity was given the ball dur- ing the early part of the workout and they chalked up three touchdowns in 15 minutes. Then the ball was given to the scrubs on the 5-yard line and they were instructed to "do their worst." They did. They couldn't advance a foot, or an inch, or even one of those millimeters that the engineers tell us all about. The coaches then carried the ball to the 2-yard line and told the scrubs to go to it again. This time the Varsity grew nervous and so they began spilling the backs behind the line until they had shoved them clear back to the 5-yard mark. Nor did they stop there. They pushed them clear back to the 10-yard stripe. Proceedings were halted and the bail was carried up to the 2-yard line. Again it was the same old story. Big Fritz Rehor, Boyd, and Weimann burst through on every play and nailed the man with the ball before he could hardly start. They shoved them clear back to the 10-yard line once more. The term "stone wall" defense is a misnomer as applied to the Varsity yesterday. A "stone wall" can't push anything the other way and that's just what the Varsity was doing. The work- out lasted 40 minutes and when time, was finally called, the scrubs were sitting back on the 15-yard line and retreating rapidly. There is no doubt but that the Michi- gan Agricultural college will be able to handle their plays in a better fash- ion than the scrubs did yesterday. The athletic association hopes as much, otherwise some of the spec- tatOrs may instigate legal proceedings to collect money obtained under false representation. The athletic associa- tion has advertised a football game for -the morrow. No matter how well the Aggies play, 'from present indications they're going to have a hard time gaining much ground against that Michigan defense if it plays in the same fashion that it did yesterday. Everybody was travel- ing at top speed and a repetition for tomorrow is all that will be required. Coach Yost left scrimmage yesterday shortly after it began, departing for Jackson where he was booked to de- liver an address on prohibition. After seeing what he did, the coach should have been in the proper mood to con- vert the worst offender against demon rum that hibernates in Jackson, and Jackson isn't noted particularly for a lack of offenders in this connection. Reports from Lansing bespeak of untold confidence in the Aggie eleven. The results of the last three years have fired the Farmers with enthusiasm and Watson, Millard, Norton, Cochran, Reimann, and Whalen. Not a single one of these men will start the game and there is only one man in the group that is on the squad. This is Whalen. Comparisons are unfair, but man to man, this year's line is much stronger than was last year's. In the backfield last year Michigan started with Roehm, Maulbetsch, Eber- wein and Bastian. Michigan's present backfield composed of Sparks, Smith, Raymond, and of course Captain Maul- betsch, is infinitely stronger than the quartet that represented the Maize and Blue last year. M. A. C. will have Butler, Straight, Frimodig, Blacklock, and Hubel in ad- dition to Captain Henning. All of these men started against the Wol- verines in last year's battle. FRESH WORK HARD FOR RACE On the Other Hand the Sophs Seem to Be Doing a Little Sleeping Between halves, as heretofore an- nounced, of the Washington football game, there will be a feature event in the form of a race between the sophs and fresh. Each class will be repre- sented by a relay team composed of eight men, each man running 220 yards for the supremacy of his class. The event will be staged within full view of the stands on the circular track and the whole campus will wit- ness whether sophs or frosh can turn out the superior aggregation of speed- sters. Once more the two classes will have an opportunity to carry their rivalry to the ordeal by cinders. In view of having an opportunity to hand the sophs a beating the fresh- men are out working like a collection of Dan Patches. But the sophs are still sleeping, and it looks as though the yearlings will steal a march on their second year brethren. Only about four sophs have reported for practice with the inten- tion of trying to tramp on the verdant ones. Take heed, you laggard 1919 men, of your team will play second fiddle to the lowly frosh. Y l Blake Miller making one of his characteristic smashes against right side of line in last ye ar's Aggie game. THREE CORNELL SRS BARRED FROM ATHLETICS Faculty Says Clary Eckley, Valentine, and Played Summer Baseball Ithaca, Oct. 19.-Declaring that they have taken part in summer baseball games, the Cornell faculty has barred Eckley, star end of last year's team and shortstop for the baseball team, Clary this year's captain and catcher, and left fielder Valentine, from further participitation in athletics. The ruling Vnder which Eckley was dismissed takes in all summer base- ball, whether for pay or not. Eckley declared the games he played did not bring him any money. Money was taken in at the gates, he said. His absence from the football squad is keenly felt this year. The Cornell eleven is being put through a hard practice in prepara- tion for the game with Bucknell Sat- urday. CORNELL SCORES TWICE WHEN LINED UP AGAINST SECONDS Ithaca, N. Y., Oct. 19.-Cornell got down to hard work this afternoon when the Varsity and second team fought out a bitter scrimmage. The regulars scored two touchdowns, Bretz and Van Horn carrying the ball over. Benedict also got a field goal. Second string men got a chance on the Varsity today, Shiverick, Ryerson, and Mueller not playing at all and Benedict, Hoff- man, and Mueller going in for part time service only. Bretz, playing quar- ter, took advantage of his opportunity to make a number of rattling runs, one of them a 20-yard burst through the line for a touchdown in which he dis- played good fighting qualities. The second team on several occasions held; the Varsity. Ensworth and Zander played fairly well at ends, but the most noticeable feature of the end play is the improve- ment shown by Hoff, a recruit from last year's freshman team. Taylor, a big sophomore, made a good impres- sion at left guard, where he subbed for Miller. The coaches this year are developing & second team that prom- ises to be good enough to keep the1 Varsity on the jump all of the time. Tilley, one of the men remaining over from last fall, donned togs today and began to get into condition. He will work out lightly for a few days before trying to get into the lineup.a MANY FOOTBALL SPIES COME TO SEE YALE GAME TODAY New Haven, Conn., Oct. 19.-Foot- ball spies are cluttering up New Haven today intent upon seeing Yale's team in action tomorrow against Vir- ginia Poly. The fact that Yale's game this week is scheduled for Friday in- stead of Saturday has made it easy for rival elevens to send men to the conflict. Coach Tad Jones probably will try to send his men through the game with his plays covered and with only sec- ond string men forming most of the eleven. PENN FACULTY BARS NEILL; PLAYED FOOTBALL 4 YEARS Philadelphia, Oct. 19.-Philly Neill, stellar right guard of the University of Pennsylvania's Varsity, and last year a contender for that position on the all-American team, has been ad- judged ineligible by the faculty to play for Pennsylvania this season. Protests that Neill had played col- lege football for four years were up- held by the faculty. The blow is al- most a K.O. for Bob Folwell, it is said. Japan Going to Have Basketball Tokio, Japan, Oct. 19.-While in this country the baseball team from thel Japanese University of Waseda were so favorably struck by the value of basketball as a sport for collegians that they purchased equipment for the game and will this winter introduce it into the three big universities of Tokio. Mikami, the tennis player, is so strong for the game that he will add his influence and skill as a player to the efforts of the baseball players to make the sport a feature of Japanese intercollegiate contests. Phone 1564-R for Hasty Messenger Service. Messages and Parcels deliv- ered, 10c each. 510 E. Williams St. 20 The 11. A. C.-Michigan football game will be covered play by play in The Michigan Daily extra. Dancing every Saturday Evening. Armory, Ypsilanti. 19-20-21 Pianos for rent; terms right. Schae- berle & Son, 110 South Main St. oct3tf 'Phone 600 for signs and show cards. oct3 to 29 Dancing classes and private lessons at the Packard Academy. 18-tf 15,500 T k ' J SL Oe FAR Atier -v l: i Lasing' ('all Ihc AM'Iei vi For lie With the game but 30 hours away and the orders for seat' still rollin in in an una bated tidIe, all records for at- tendance on Ferry field :,eem ldestined to be shattered. Fifteen thousand five hundred paste- boards have already bo n disposed of, with every indication that the remain- ing 7,000 reserved seats will be sold by noon tomorrow. The entire block of 4,500 seats sent to East Lansing has been sold out by the Aggie au- defeat of Pennsylvania by Captai "Bubbles" Paterson's husky crew i 191. The next most numerous coi gregation gathered on the South Stal Kreet pasture was that at the Minne sata game in 1910,.when Wolverine aw Copher battled for the western chan yiouship. The figures for this contes totalled 23,000, a most remarkabl crowd considering the limited seatin facilities at that time. Third on the list is the M. A. I game of last year. On that day of sa mem~ry,'22,000 persons were pushe hauled, or dragged through the Ferr, field gates. This was by far the larg est attendance an Aggie game ha ever drawn. When the Olive an White warriors triumphed over th Yostmen 12-6 in 1913, the crowd 8,000 that witnessed the game wa heralded as a record one for a Mich igan-M. A. C. battle. TiEbott 's Forty-six Yard WJoot Jakes Scribe Dig for Other Teal Princeton, N. J., Oct 19.-Dave Tib- formance of J. T. Haxall in goals fro bot's 46-yard drop kick in the Prince- placement. It was back in 1882 in t ton-Tufts game last Saturday, which Princeton-Yale contest that Hax was just enough for the Tigers to tri- scored for the Tigers when 65 yar umph over the conquerors of Harvard, away from the Elis' goal. In 1945 promises to stand as one of the long- P. Davis of Dickinson scored a go est field goals in the 1916 gridiron from placement against the Univers season, if not the longest that will be of Pittsburg from the 58-yard ma recorded this fall. but last year the best records esta Tibbott's boot was the only score lished for the season were of 48 yar in the long battle, and it came after set up by J. G. Wilson of the Misso several of his teammates had en- ! School of Mines and Joseph Catlin a deavored in vain to hang up a tally James Millikin. That the intersch of some sort over the Medfordites. His astic placement kicking last seas kick was perfect in direction from was of a higher calibre than in the c such a distance, and although as it legiate games was shown in the wo sailed through the air it seemed to be of Orson W. Wilcox of the Mansfi destined to fall short of the cross- (Pa.) Normal school, who made c piece between the goal posts, it did of 55 yards length. not begin to drop until it had cleared Previous to Payne's drop-kicki the bar by about two yards. record, a mark of one yard shorter The tabulation and analysis of field 62 yards-had stood the test of tin goal records have been annual hob- since 1898, when P. J. O'Dea of W bies of the followers of the greater consin booted that distance in a gan American college game. Last year the against Northwestern. The next ma experts saw the drop kicking mark, is of 55 yards, and is held jointly which had stood since 1898, shattered J. V. Cowling of the 1883 Harva by Mark Payne of the Dakota Wes- eleven and J. E. Duffy, a Michig leyan eleven, who established the new player, in 1891. world's record wih a boot of 63 yards. No one last season came within Get the pink extra, on the stree striking distance of the wonderful per- immediately after the game. *ts they' seem certain of romping away with the game of tomorrow. The team spent the last part of the day in running through signal prac- tice and perfecting their plays. Welch Goes to Hobart as Director Philadelphia, Oct. 19.-Vincent S. Welch, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, has taken the position of director of athletics at Hobart and began his work with the opening of the fall term. Welch was a versatile athlete in his school and college days, playing baseball, basket ball, and foot- ball equally well. He captained his football team at Penn in his freshman year and made the Varsity as half back two seasons. TENNIS SHOS t ~FOR THE.' Y BRUSH' GEO. J. MO E 711 N. University Ave. f' Velox prints at Sugden's. octS-29 CAN YOU IMAGINE IT? -By The Dictaphone Just heard a good joke! Our guests of tomorrow who hail -from the capital afternoon city, are responsible for this laugh, and they certainly do take down the little old brown derby for being the kidders. The wild dream which has just de- tached itself from the mystery of the Aggie camp is to the effect that in case they beat Michigan saturday, for the first time in years the Wol- verines will have no alibi! Sounds interesting, doesn't it? Here's the way they ladle out the dope: M. A. C. is now confirming strictly to the three-year playing-limit rule and the one-year residence rule. All of which is supposed to mean that a football player can play no longer than three years on a Varsity team,: and that no one can play on the Varsity until he has been in residence a full year at the Farmer institution. Those rules are just like the ones at Michigan, and so far, so good! But they don't stop there! They let their imaginations rove all over the skylight, with the result that our agri- cultural cousins say they are meeting Michigan on even ground-in other words, that they are confirming to the same rules as those which bind Michi- gan, and that they are following them this year. Looking over the eleven which will represent the Aggies Saturday, we find that three of their foremost gridders would not be eligible to play with Michigan, were they members of the Wolverine Varsity under the same con- ditions that they play with M. A. C. Captain Henning and Blacklock are now completing on the Aggie Varsity their fourth season, while Jacks has never put in a full year at the cow college. But it's a good joke, anyway! For J1ou anb ILour Jfrieuos w-latlu hat bx3aub oba beinin a elvno'lc rubx vuu uceu,~x~ et rh e tf r1 tt u lahr r r rPt t1 e Fnl Ir a t T4nm p SEND THEM YOUR PORTRAIT STUDIO 319