THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

PAGE 6

SPORTS

FOOTBALL
WILDCATS

PREPARE

STRUGGLE WITH

OUR RIVALS.

FOR

CENTRE

Kentuckians Determined to
Upset High and Mighty
Colonels

SPIRIT RUNS HIGH
If nny of the dear profeBsors are
thinking of holding classes on the
morning of Saturday, November 15,
we would suggest that they arrange
to hear the recitations "In transit,"
for It is n certain fact that on that
wonderful day every student of the
good old University will either scramble aboard the crowded morning train
for Danville or "bum" a ride with one
of the hundreds of automobillsts
whose machines will line the pike solstretch.
idly for the whole
' Next week the big battle will be
staged. Both the Centre Colonels and
the Kentucky Wildcats are eager for
the fray, and Coaches Moran and Gill
are hard at work on their respective
squads as the last week of training
before the big game approaches.
Yes, there's
Dope on the game?
lots of it around the campu3 and the
Lexington Drug these days. Stock In
the Wildcat squad has risen 100
during the laBt two weeks, although at
no time during the season has it been
the slightest below par. The Wildcats have staged a real comeback
since the Indiana and Ohio games as
only true Kentuckians are capable of
staging, and have developed from an
awkward squad of individual players
into a machine that trounced Sewanee
iu her den on the mountain, and made
"Vanderbllt pray for the timekeeper's
v.histle to end their terrible suspense
and save them the dishonor of an
ignoble defeat.
We've '.'settled down to It" now, and
there's trouble ahead for the
Colonels. The va3t field of good
material from which to pick the best
eleven players was quite an undertaking, which required no end of substituting and experimenting, but now
Coach. Gill knows his men, knows
where they belong and what style of
football they can play best. The 1919
squad is now one which should be a
pride to any college and represents
the cream of Kentucky's collegiate
moleskin warriorsj The whole State
is behind the Wildcats, for Kentuckians had rather support her own
sons under any circumstances than
a band of imported players under the
leadership of a Texas ranger. The
"University prides itself on a strictly
team, the flower of her
studentry.
Behind the team stands
the united student body and the entire alumni of this grand old institution, Kentuckians,, "they shall not
y

;

GOOD STYLES,

How

For All These See

FRESHMEN UNABLE TO

They Fared Last Week.

Georgetown, 53; Chattanooga,
Indlnnn, 3; Notro Dame, 16.
Ohio State did not play.
Sewanee, 0; Alnbama, 40.
Vanderbllt (Poor old Vandyl).
Cincinnati, 0; Wittenberg, 0.
Centre, 49; Virginia, 7.
Tennessee, 0; N. Carolina, 0.

GOOD SHOES,
RIGHT PRICES

TRACK

HOLD

HEAVY

SENIORS

0.

CROWD TO ACCOMPANY
TEAM TO CINCINNATI

String Men Will
Probably Start Against

Second

Crimsons

WILDCATS CONFIDENT
The first train to Cincinnati Saturday morning will be found crowded
with dozens of Kentucky students,
faculty members, alumni, football
players, subs, mascots, and the entire
coterie of a winning college football
team. Saturday afternoon on Carson
Field, Cincinnati, the University of
Kentucky Wildcats will stack up
against the heavy Crimsons of the University of Cincinnati.
Both teams are eager for the fray.
Since the Sewanee and Vanderbllt
games Kentucky fans have been
optomistic over the prospects
for the remainder of the Wildcat
schedule, and somehow the impression
has gotten out that the Cincinnati
game will be a walk-oveLet's hope
that it will be an easy Kentucky victory, but beware of
Word comes from Cincinnati that
the backers of the Crimsons are boasting of the walloping they are going to
give the Wildcats, yet they concede
that they will realize It when the
huskies from the Bluegrass State hit
them. Newspapers aay that the slogan
around the University of Cincinnati
these days is: "Bring on your Wildcats, who held Vanderbllt to a tie, and
we will show you what the Cincinnati
Reds showed the "Wildcats" of the
American League not quite a month
ago!"

Cincinnati has four excellent football players: Stack, captain and end;
Meyers, end, and Frey and Pullen,
backflelders. Pullen is an old Kentucky man, having won his "K" in
football with the team of 1917. But
the Cincinnati squad is pretty badly
crippled up at present. Frey, Sarvls,
Huke and Pullen are all uncertain
quantities, because of severe injuries
received In recent games. Eddie
Coons, varsity's star quarter, has an
injured arm, and is almost certain to
be out of the Kentucky game. The
pass!"
"dopesters" also tell us that the play
Kentucky prides herself on a sterers are extremely poor mud larks, so
ling defense. She reposes the greatest
a heavy field might be to our advanof confidence in her line, and defen-- j tage, In spite of
their large size.
sively the backfield will do its part
Coach Chambers says that the game
In handling the "Bob" McMillan out-- j
Saturday will probably be the hardest
fit. If the Wildcats lack anything in
of the three closing the Crimson's
the offensive skill, old Kentucky fight
season Kentucky, Miami and Ten
will more than take care of it, and
nessee.
with the psychological effect of a vie-- J
The Wildcats, although having the
tory from Cincinnati Saturday they
edge on the Crimsons from every point
will be able to show the Colonels a o
view are by no means In perfect
few of the finer points of football. The j
Murphree, who held the
condition.
Colonels will find that they are not giant
Josh Cody last Saturday, is sufbattling with St. Xavler, Hanover, Vlr- - fering from a
bad foot and will not be
ginia, Transylvania, or with any other
in the Cincinnati game. It is thought
(Ct!aue4 o Page 7)
(Continued on Page 7)

Seniors Win Hard Fought
Game 0 Bayless Makes
Eighty-Yar- d
Run

The Special Shoe Co.
206 W. Main Street

Lexington, Ky.

7--

Edmunds, Senior halfback, crossed
the Freshie's goal line for a touchdown In the Freshman-Senio- r
game
plnyed last Monday, thus winning
their first game of the Inter-clas-s
series. In the third quarter the Seniors
advanced slowly but Bteadlly upon the
Freshmnn goal, then when within 20
yards of the posts, worked a neat
end run around the left wing and
Edmunds slipped away, untouched, for
a touchdown. MIzrach kicked goal.
During the last few minutes of play
Hayless, left half for the Freshmen,
threatened to tie the Bcore by slipping away with the ball on his own
line and apparently safely
plunging through the entire Senior
defense, making an
run, and
crossing the goal for a touchdown.
But investigation proved that he had
stepped out of bounds at the
line, and the Freshmen's hopes sank
as, with only two minutes of play remaining, the ball was put back into
play in the middle of the field.
Thus ended, with a score of 7 to 0
in favor of the Seniors, one of the best
inter-clas- s
games seen on Stoll Field
this year.
d

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JUNIORS' GAME CALLED

Darkness Interrupts Soph-JuniStruggle With

or

Sophs in Lead
The Sophomores walked through
the Junior line last Friday for a 6 to 0
victory in the third game of the inter-clas- s
series. When the game was call
ed by Referee Owens on account of
darkness there was only two minutes
o play remaining, yet a continuation
of real football playing was Impossi
ble, for already the contest had begun
to resemble a game of "Blind Man's
Buff."
However the winning score
was made when opportunities were
Brown,
equal, in the first quarter.
left end for the Sophomores, received
the Junior pass and made away for
run resulting in a touch
a
down. The Sophomores failed tp kick
goal.
A fumble gave the ball to the Sophomores and they began a march
toward the Junior goal. Each down
showed an advance of rom 5 to 15
feet, until the ball was on the
line. It was then, with only two
minutes of play remaining, that Referee Owens thought It to the best Interests of both teams to call the game
on account of darkness, giving the
game to the Sophomores by a score
of 6 to 0. Although some of the members of the Junior team at first contested the decision of the referee, the
team showed its true mettle and
by announcing that
sportsmanship
they would abide by the decision of
the officials without further

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j

ON TO DANVILLE

I

ON TO DANVILLE

Corner Short tnd Mill Streets

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