6
WHERE HARVARD IS WEAK.
[Continued from 4th page.]
THE DARTMOUTH GAME.
The Dartmouth game to-day was the
first severe test of the home team.
The Dartmouth line is heavy and ag-
gressive, and in Crolius, MacAndrew
and Captain Eckstrom, the New
Hampshire men have a remarkable trio
of backs. They dashed aginst and
through the Harvard line with a feroc-
ity that resembled the style of the Car-
lisle Indians. In this game also an
invasion of Harvard’s goal seemed in-
evitable, but Eckstrom, with a clear
field, dropped the ball. ,
No scoring was done in the first half.
In the second Harvard played a kick-
ing game and this enabled her to
win, as a strong breeze was blowing
in her favor. Dibblee, who had made
brilliant rushes for Harvard in previ-
ous games, was unable to make his
distance against the Dartmouth line.
Harvard’s inability to advance the ball
was marked except near the close of
the game, when she scored her only
touchdown. Harry Cross and Letton
of Yale were the officials. The sum-
mary:
HARVARD DARTMOUTH
Cabot, 16.5 <c3 sap ate © eawanaugn
Wheeler, 1:07 34a r.1,.. Place
Bouvés ds gis kioiséc we des r.g., Walker
Burden, ‘Ci 332635. Shee aby c., Rogers
No SHOW, Te oe ee l.g., Lowe
Donald, ri4:s 43 ek es lt putnam
Moulton, r.e....l.e, Walker, Edwards
Cochrane, sar 8.0521653 q. b., Wentworth
q. b., Perkins
Brown: fo dia ees l.h.b., Eckstrom
Dibblee; 12 hv Bie Sis Fh bee Crolius
r. hh. b., Whalen
Haughton; fo 20 hie f. b.,. MacAndrew
f. b., Crolius
Score, Harvard 13, “Dartmouth o;
safety, Crolius; placed goal from field,
Cochrane; touchdown. Bouvé; goal,
Cochrane; umpire, H. W. Letton,
Yale; referee, H. P. Cross, ‘Yale;
linesmen, F. Richardson, Harvard; J.
Bartlett, Dartmouth; timekeeper, F.
Woods, A. A.;3. time,
halves; attendance, 3,500.
A LAW SCHOOL ELEVEN.
A’ movement is on foot to start a
Law School football eleven here to
challenge the Yale and’ Pennsylvania
Law Schools. Among the candidates
who have presented themselves are
Lyman Bass, Harry Cross, H. W. Let-
ton, “Teddy” Eaton, Dean Sage and G.
LB. Hatch of yale:
The Yale-—Newton A. A. game next
Saturday is attracting wide attention,
as it is the first appearance of the Yale
football eleven in this vicinity in many
years. As the Harvard eleven will be
away at West Point, Harvard men will
attend the game in laree numbers to
“set a line on the Elis.” Ex-Captain
Draper of Williams will play on the
Newton team and Lyman Bass will be
invited to play on one end of the line.
J. Weston ALLEN.
SE OR A EIR STINGS
* Consolidated” Elevens.,
The Yale News prints the following
editorial on the bad effect produced by
the organization and playing of “con-
solidated” elevens:
“The plans of the football authorities
regarding the formation of strong class
teams are greatly interfered with by the
action of a few men who have made up
teams take away the regular class foot-
ball candidates and are not themselves
of much advantage to Yale in bringing
out material, nor do they do the good
name of the College any particular
good. They play out-of-town games
with apparently a great regard for
suitable guarantees, and are not re-
ponsible to anybody for their personnel
or actions.
“This state of affairs may not have
resulted in any definite harm so far, but
it seems such a good chance for some-
thing to spring up which will injure the
whole College, that we would most em-
phatically suggest its discontinuance.
This is more to the point this year than
any other, as the class teams are a new
feature of Yale athletics, and their cap-
tains need every man they can possi-
bly have in order to make of them a
permanent success.”
20-minute |
YALE ALUMNI
THE BOOK SHELF.
“The Oceasional Address,”
The recently revived interest in pub-
lic speaking, and the constant occa-
sions in our modern life that may call
upon any of us to address a larger or
smaller body of our fellows, have pro-
duced at once a literature and a need
for some volume ot suggestion and
instruction. In answer to this there
has come from the Putnam’s “The Oc-
casional Address,” by Professor Sears,
Yale ’61, of Brown University. The
subject has been treated in an easy and
readable manner with an eye single to
actual needs that conduces largely to
its practical value. The main require-
ments of the occasional address are pre-
sented, together with the elements of.
structure in general, and the forms it
may take in particular. To these have
been added generous and well-chosen
extracts from the words of this or that
speaker of note, which cannot but offer
valuable .suggestions. The volume is
one that will prove a decided help to all
who aim at the attainment of a well-
rounded education, and of especial
value to those whose collegiate life is
now training them in this important
attribute of the American citizen.
The Atlantic’s Anniversary.
The Atlantic Monthly with its October |
issue completes the fortieth year of its
existence. From the first it has upheld
the highest standard and regard for
true literature, and to-day its volumes
enshrine some of the best work done |
by our ablest thinkers and writers.
From the earliest issues, controlled by
Phillips and Lowell, down to the very
one now under hand, its path has been
held undeviatingly toward the goal of
the best—‘‘Tout bien ou rien,’ as runs
the motto of the publishing house from
which it comes—and that goal it may
justly claim to have attained. In -its
first issue, along with contributions
from Motley, Longfellow, Lowell, Em-
erson, Whittier, and Mrs. Stowe, the
genial old autocrat broke a silence of
twenty-five years, with his immortal
“As I was about to remark when I was
interrupted.” In one of the war-day
issues the message from “The Man
Without a Country” rang forth from
the pages of The Ailantic, and in later
years those pages gave us the best
short story ever written by an Ameri-
can—Mr. Aldrich’s “Marjorie Daw.”
“Paul Revere’s Ride,” and “The One-
Hoss Shay,’ and “The Chambered
Nautilus,’ and “Barbara Frietchie,”’
and “Skipper Ireson’s Ride,’ and
“Brahma,” and ‘The Commemoration
Ode,” and scores of other poems whose
very titles have become household
words, first saw the light in this prince
among magazines. Never has the pol-
icy been altered which kept The Altlan-
- tic’s pages for the best and only that.
So to-day it stands a welcome and hon-
ored guest all over the land, and not a
paper but is truly sincere in wishing it,
as do we, many years of a life as truly
successful as have been the forty it has
passed.
‘Roman and Mediaeval Art.”
Mr. W. H. Goodyear, Yale ’67, has
done us good service in the new and
enlarged edition of his Roman and Medi-
eval Art, which has recently come from
the Chautauqua Press. “Art”
apt to stand for us in too narrow a
sense, signifying only the arts of de-
sign, and so implying luxury rather
than anything of utilitarian value. As
a matter of fact, it is to art (in its
broader and more proper sense) that
the student must turn if he is under-
standingly to know anything of the his-
tory of civilization. Art deals with all
the visible relics that bind the past to
the present, all accessories of its man- -
ners and daily life as well as its build-
[Continued on 8th page.|
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Who bought their clothes of Mr.
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The remaining New York dates this
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The New Haven address is the
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