ri ,;1 S BAD FOR PENNSYLVAN J m. WOLVERINE SQUAD OUT FOR REVENGE AGINST THE Q ES SATURDAY Cornell Defeat Makes Varsity Danger- ous Opponent for Pennsy RED AND BLUE LINE STRONG Maulbetsch and Zeiger Play Strong Defensive Game Against Ithacans "I'd rather face a good football team that had just won a game than one which had just suffered defeat," re- marked Coach Fielding H. Yost a cou- ple of weeks ago as Michigan was preparing for Syracuse. "Syracuse has just been licked, and she's going to give us an awful bat- tie," remarked the Michigan leader. As results turned out, the coach was right. This same thing is true at present with reference to the Wolverines. If Michigan had defeated Cornell, Penn- sylvania would have more chance against the Maize and Blue than she has right now. The Varsity learned Saturday that you've got to do more than outplay a team to win, and they're determined to end the season with a victory. Every- one on the squad is so mad at things in general that even Harry Tuthill, who asserts he could handle a group of wild men, proceeds with caution and one eye on the nearest exit. The team is in first class condition, and this is due to the most part to Trainer Tuthill. Tuthill only went on the field once during all the game Sat- urday, and that was to help Maule recover some breath upon which he had relinquished claim after half the Cornell team had clambered over his frame in an effort to stop one of those off-tackle smashes. Sharpe probablyswon't start, and the chances are that Sparks will open the game at quarterback. He is rapidly rounding into condition and should be fit on Saturday. The squad pulled through the Cornell game in excellent shape considering the fact that they met one of the two toughest opponents that they face all season. Coach Yost announced that Michi- gan probably would not receive any new plays this week. The offense against Cornell worked in splendid shape and the Ithacans were not able to check the Wolverine advances. Maulbetsch played one of his old time smashing games at half, and he was gaining ground all afternoon. The Dutchman and Zeiger were the biggest factors on offense, with' the honors resting with Maulie. The captain gained more ground when it was need- ed than he has any time this season and his showing was one of the most encouraging features of the entire game from a Michigan point of view. Pennsylvania has had considerable difficulty in securing backfield men this year, but -their defense has been of a stone wall character all season. Whether this stone wall can check the German Bullet is rather doubtful. Cor- nell couldn't. Several times during the game on the fourth down with a yard or two needed, Zeiger entrusted the ball to the Captain. Maulie made good' on every occasion except one all afternoon, and on this one trial liter- ally the entire Cornell line drove in front of the hole that the German was trying to make. Pat Smith played a nice defensive game against the Bid Red team, back- ing up the line in the same sure man- ner that he has all season. Shiver- ick's widely heralded end runs from punt formation didn't fool, the Wolver- ines a bit, and Fritzie didn't travel far enough on these plays to get well un- der motion. Sparks. will be in shape to do the punting on Saturday and this will strengthen the teai considerably. Sparks perhaps can't lift the ball as far as Dunne in some instances, but he is much more consistent. With Sparks back at, punt. formation, the Pennsylvanians won't know whether he's going to pass, punt or run, and he has the facility for doing a creditable job at all of them. Michigan's pass- ing Saturday was excellent, and Bull Dunne made the finest catch that has ever been seen on Cornell's new field of one of Peach's throws. Signal practice and a chalk talk oc- cupied the squad for the afternoon yesterday. FRESHMEN DOWN SENIORS 12-0 Line Smashing Game of '17 Team Spoiled by Weather Ability to pick passes out of fog and darkness netted the freshmen of the literary college two touchdowns and enabled them to defeat the seniors of the same department by a score of 12 to 0 yesterday afternoon. The game was played on a cold, wet field and neither team was able to use its usual lines of football to any great advan- tage. This disadvantage hurt the seniors more than the younger organ- ization, as most of their plays directed at the line were made ineffective by the prevailing weather conditions. The freshmen gained the upper. hand at the start when Hand grabbed a pass and scored on the first play after the kick off. The seniors came back with a vengeance, but upon reaching the freshman 15-yard line fumbled. The first year men, relying for the most part on end runs, were able to gain more consistently than their older op- ponents. The second score came in the last half through an intercepted pass. Besides the work of the freshman ends, Hand and Lowstuter, they .of the remarkable vision, Kane and Marri- field; deserve credit for the victory. Grylls played in his usual good form but was handicapped by forementioned weather conditions. Joslyn and Muzzy also played an all around good game for the seniors. The lineup: Seniors-Joslyn, I.e.; Richardson, L.t.; Hopkinson, I.g.; Weis- burg, c.; Preston, .g.; Muzzy, r.t.; Burge, r.e.; Grylls, q.; Hardie, l.h.; Talbot, r.h.; Adams, f.b. Freshmen-Hand. i.e.; Hansen, I.t.; Schmok, I.g.; Bornstein, c.; Gillespie, r.g.; Fralick, r.t.; Lowstuter, r.e.; Kerr, q.; Kane, l.h.; Marrifield, r.h.; Campbell, f.b. EVERYTHING SEEMED TO BE MAULBETSCH FROM THE STAND FRESH TEAM WINS ONE GAME IN FOUR Yearlings Completely Outclassed in But One Contest; Luck Turns Tide in Others WEST AND LAMBERT BEST MEN Coach Yost's Idea of Saturday 's Score, -Shiverick, 23; Michigan, 20 * * * * * * * * All-Fresh, 0; Ypsi Normal, 0. All-Fresh, 7; M. A. C. Fresh, 13. All-Fresh, 21; Evanston Acad- emy, 10. All-Fresh, 0; Heidelberg, 24. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Saturday saw the finish of the most disastrous season a Michigan All- Fresh team has ever experienced, if games won and lost are the only cri- terions to go by. One victory, two de- feats, and a tie surely is not the most impressive record in the world, but it must be remembered that the year- lings were outplayed in but one of these games. The youngsters were clearly rattled when they stacked up against the Nor- malities in the first game of the sea- son. They had had little more than a week's practice, they had scrim- maged but three times before the game, and were at least two weeks be- hindtthe Teachers in point of develop- ment. At that, they held their op- ponents to, no score and would have scored themselves had it not been for a few bad breaks in the luck. Two weeks later the M. A. C. fresh- men put over one of the flukiest wins ever perpetrated by the goddess of luck. After losing every'break of the afternoon, the yearlings had the long end of a 7 to 6 score with a half-min- ute of play left when an Aggie sub intercepted a forward pass and raced 60 yards for touchdown, time expir- ing while he ran. Impartial spectators at the game declared that the Michi- gan verdants were at least 20 points better than their opponents. At Chicago the freshmen played good ball and won their game hands down. The score probably would have been much larger had the coach not turned all of his substitutes into the game late in the afternoon. It was not until Saturday that the youngsters met a team that really outclassed them. The Heidelberg eleven was a strong one and presented some of the best back- field men seen on Ferry field this sea- son. There was no fluke in their vic- tory, they were at least three touch- downs better than the yearlings. The material this fall, while not comparing with that offered by some of the freshman teams of recent years, was far from being poor. Hammels and Cress at ends, Chapman at tackle, Culver and Lambert at center, Froemke at half, and Captain West at full are men who give promise of de- veloping into acceptable Varsity ma- terial in time. Elmer Cress, at end, outshined his more experienced fellow flanker, Ham- mels, in the season's work. His style of play was not flashy but he could always be found somewhere in the vi- cinity of the ball. Hammels showed very strongly at the beginning of the season, but was handicapped later on by an injury to his ankle which slowed him up considerably. On his early per- formances, however, he is entitled to consideration in doping out next year's Varsity team. Diekema, the substi- tute flanker, was a green man who was coming fast at the end of the sea- son. Chapman and Earl Cress made a steady pair of tackles. Chapman was the faster and more aggressive of the two and, although he is a little light for the Varsity line, might make good as a back of the smashing type. The freshman guards, Fortune and Blackmore, were heavy and full of fight. Blackmore was the more con- sistent. Booth is another guard who has shown fairly well. Zapp is very light for a lineman. Culver at center was a disappoint- Michigan played Cornell last Satur- day. The game officially ended at 5 o'clock. As a matter of fact, it should have ended some 30 minutes before this un- reasonable hour, but the officials were so lax in their duties that everytime anyone quoted a rule in an audible tone, they grew panicky and tried to interview everyone in Ithaca from the little black bear who was staked out on the north end of the field down to Ambrosia, the porter in one of the cars of the special. But the delay wasn't Cornell's fault. Michigan was defeated and she isn't going to sob. We'll "smile and look the other way." Whatever inclination there may have been to revert to the alibi is checked by the memory of those pathetic and plaintive wails that arose from Syra- cuse after the Orangemen had crept furtively back to their lair after that awful and hideous 10-minute night- mare that they suffered on Ferry field. Cornell, 23; Michigan, 20. This is the verdict and Michigan recognizes it as such. However, The Daily does feel that the students deserve some apprecia- tion of the excellent game that the Wolverines put up. Let whatever is said be prefaced by the remark that Michigan was licked and she knows it and isn't trying to crawl, but the team played a wonderful game. .4ichigan absolutely and undeniably outplayed the Cornellians in every de- partment of the game from line plung- ing on down to the manner in which the men had combed their hair when they appeared upon the field-with one exception. This was in kicking. Shiverick booted three field goals and the last two were from the 35 and 45-yard lines. One of his punts traveled 75 yards in the air and they were all going well towards 60. In addition, they possessed uncanny rolls. Towards, the conclusion of the affair, Shiverick used to signal the athletic association authorities when he was going to kick and they hastily de- spatched a messenger boy on a motor- cycle with instructions to mail the ball back immediately special delivery, so that the contest could continue. But Shiverick's kicking alone wasn't enough to defeat the Wolverines. Other unfortunate elements entered in that were beyond the control of either team, but Michigan isn't going to enumerate them and then sit back and weep. Francis Shiverick himself stated to the writer after the game: "You had a better team than we did." This means considerable coming from whom it does. Yost stated in the train on the way to Ann Arbor that the score ought to read: Michi- gan, 20; Shiverick, 23. Michigan. was walloped at Cornell, but the students should realize that al- though the Wolverines went down to defeat, they gained more ground than Cornell on rushes through the line, gained more by forward passes, played a better defensive game and offered better interference for the backfield. Cornell took our number, but before Pennsylvania returns to Philadelphia Berry and his cohorts are going to realize that life on the Mexican bor- der is just one long sweet song com- pared to that on Ferry field. Come on, you Quakers. We're all set. CORNELLSUP[I ONY INRUSHIF Michigan Takes Honors in Rusi Forward Passing, and Re- turning Punts SHIVERICK KICKS 75 :YAR Cornell has little to boast of Saturday's game as far as the fig go, except in two things-punting he score. The Wolverines took ho in rushing the ball, forward pass kick offs, returning punts, were pe ized less and fumbled the same n her of times as Cornell. Michigan made 22 first downs w the so-called "Big Red" team gathering 15, and rushed the ball yards to 198 by Cornell. When "Fr Shiverick got his toe into gear, h ever, the pigskin knocked the bo off the fence and advancing the lea by rushing 'looked like a primi method. The Cornell star booted team into safety seven times for a tal of 355 yards or an average o yards each from the line of sc mage. Considering the fact that S erick stood about 17 yards back the scrimmage line on his boots average of the distance actually t eled on his punts would amoun about 68 yards each. Two of Shi ick's kicks traveled 75 yards from line of scrimmage, or about 92 y each. Not all of the distance trave by his punts were in the air, a good bit of the distance resulted the ball bouncing, rolling and hop' over the ground after hitting t Zeiger's head or off to one side. Raymond had the edge on Shive in kicking off, "Phil" booting the from the mound seven timesdfor average of a trifle over 50 yards e One of Raymond's kicks went over goal line while three boots were yards each, the Cornell back recei the ball on his own five-yard Shiverick kicked off only four ti for his team, two boots going 55 y each, one 20 yards, and the othe yards. Once "Fritz" kicked to namesake, "Fritz" Rehor right u the front line and the other tim booted out of bounds just beyond 10-yard limit. During the first half of the g Michigan reeled off 14 first doy gained 165 yards by rushing, made 60-yard punt, fumbled twice, capt 43 yards on one forward pass and up 14 points with two touchdowns their resulting goals. Michigan ried punts back only 10 yards du this period of the game. Cor during the first two quarters, i only five first downs, totaled 56 y by rushing, punted five times f total of 230 yards from the lin scrimmage, tookyone five-yard pe and fumbled but once. The sco by Cornell during these two qua amounted to two field goals by Sh ick, one from the 20-yard line and other from the 45-yard strip. With the cards shuffled and the reversed during the second half, 1\ igan made eight first downs, was for downs three times, rushed the 70 yards, punted three times fo 20, 25 and 40 yards each, kicke twice, once for 60 yards and the o time for 50 yards, lost 25 yard penalties, worked two forward pa one for 43 yards and the other f yards, made five incomplete p while frantically trying to overc Cornell's three-point margin, and one pass intercepte'd. Michigan st only once during the second ha forward pass from Peach to Dunn( ing for a touchdown. "Is that Maulbetsch?" Michigan press representatives were asked the above question approxi- mately 7,938 times last Saturday after- noon. Every time anyone on the Michigan team made a tackle, caught a pass, or gained two or three inches eastern newspaper men demanded in excited tones to know whether it was Maul- betsch, As a matter of fact the Dutchman put up one of the stellar exhibitions of his career and he looms up prom- inently again as an All-American pos- sibility. Maulbetsch shot through that Cornell line for three and four yard gains so 'often that no one kept track of them except the head linesmen. He had to you know. Maulbetsch .was gaining so muchl ground and carrying the ball so often that every time a Michigan back gained some one in the press stand would yell, "Is that Maulie?" It made no differ- e'nce who it was. Zeig is about Maulie's weight, or at least near enough to justify a mistake, but how anyone could see big ponderous Pat Smith plough through center and then ask whether it was Maulie was beyond the western newspaper men. Drop patterns in various sizes of Brussels, Velvets, and Axminister rugs at reduced prices. Martin Haller's Furniture Store. 14 For results advertise in The. Michi- gan Daily. ment in many ways, but. it is hoped that he will find himself next year and will develop into a star. He has many things to learn but he is big and heavy and fast, which qualities are very good foundation for a foot- ball player. Lambert, who was forced by parental objection to drop the game after the Ypsi contest, is prob- ably the most promising man on the entire team. He has everything a good center needs and is almost certain to make the team if he is able to play next year. In the backfield, Hitchcock at quar- ter was not a wonder at advancing the leather, but used his head well at the pilot's position. Weadock, the second- string signal-screecher, was a better man at carrying the ball than Hitch- cock, but was not as steady at the helm. Yroemke, at halfback, was the best ground gainer on the team. He was slippery and extremely fast and with experience should develop into a good back. Perrin, while not so strong on offense as his partner in crime, played a strong game on defense. His tack- ling and blocking was very good. He also did the punting for the team. Gin- nebach, who was used as an added starter in several games, has possi- bilities. Captain Jack West, fullback, played the most consistently good game of any man on the team. He is a comer in every sense of the word. Yale Blames Defeat on Substitutes New Haven, Nov. 13.-Tad Jones and his associates in the teaching of foot- ball at Yale are far from discouraged over the defeat administered Satur- day by Brown. They feel that the eleven which bit the dust before the Brown assault was just that good and no better and declare facts show that if the first string men had been able to take part the Blue would be cele- brating another victory. The finest Floral Shop in the city will open soon in the Nickels Arcade, State Street. 3-tf SEAT SALE FOR PENN CAME TOBREAK RECORD All Pasteboards Sold Out Yesterday Afternoon; Attendance May Reach 24,00 Yesterday they were stating at the Athletic offices, that there were no more seats on sale. That meant that all those in the two side stands were gone, totaling 13,200 in the south stand and about 9,000 in the north bleachers making a grand total of 22,200 gone and that with five days left before the whistle sets the east and the west into mortal combat. The seats in the stand to the west of the gridiron will go on sale Wed- nesday. According to the way in- which students were clamoring for pews yesterday all these will be taken. That would increase the attendance to 23,200 and possibly over. There was a wild rumor that the baseball bleachers were to be trans- ported to the east end of the field to accommodate the crowd expected, but as yet that project has not been tamed. However, there will be a platform erected at this extremity of the field to provide room for those who don't mind standing. Student tickets will be mailed out to- day. There are still about 40 seats left in the block "M" section unsold. All seats in the student secti6n not called for by six o'clock tomorrow night will be sold. Fourteen special trains will be chart- ered by Detroiters, Detroit alumni and their friends. No one seems to know how many will whistle from Philadel- phia. In view of the great game the team put up against Cornell, there ought to be hosts of hilarious alumni on Ferry field Saturday ready to ruin the new derby whenever Maulie mauls. They are expecting quite a crowd of Pennsy rooters. ,. ADMJSSION $1.50 LIMITED TO 125 Couple Friday, November 17 Shook's J=Hop Orchestra CLARION 2~ in. LENOX-2j in. Two heights in the new COLLAR 010. P. IOE C.,' akers. TROY. N. Y. Also fMakers- of Ide Shlots ANIDEAL STUDENT'S SWEAT JACKET Most admirably adapted for study1 et and class;sweater. Made of special quality; worste4 Navy Blue, Gray, Black or Mar Has two pockets, and pearl but No. 10CP Jersey - Five Do Catalogue showing our complete of Jerseys and Sweaters mailed or quest. A. G. SPALDING & BROS 121 Woodward Ave. Detroit, N AT ARMORY at Busy Bee (on sale Wed. to a. m.) Dancing 9-1 f S .' -2 4'4" _ _