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S BN TOMORROW’S FOOTBALL \ East Yale vs. Lehigh a.t New Haven. Harvard vs. North Carolina at Cambridge. Cornell vs. Williams at Ithaca. Princeton vs. Tufts at Princeton. Dartmouth vs. Massachusetts Ag- gies at Hanover. Pennsylvania vs. Swarthmore at Philadelphia. Army vs. Holy Cross at West Point. Navy vs. Pittsburgh at Annapolis. Michigan vs. Mt. Union at Ann Arbor: i 81 Chicago vs. Ind?anfl at Chicago. Nebraska vs. Kansas Aggies at Lincoln. Notre Dame vs. Haskell Indians at South Bend. Iowa vs. Grinnell at Iowa City. Tllinois vs. Colgate at Urbana. ‘Wisconsin vs. South Dakota at Madison. Ames vs. Kansas at Ames. Ohio State vs. Oherlin at Columbia. Minnesota vs. North Dakota at Minneapolis. Carleton vs. Macalester at North- fleld. INTERSECTIONAL FRAYS FEATURE (By United Press) New York, Oct. 13.—Aside from the interest which always centers in the activities of Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Cornell, Dartmouth and the other top-notch football teams of the east, Illinois university and Colgate university will hold the at- tention of football followers when they meet tomorrow afternoon at Ur- bana, Ill. This will be the first meeting of Illinois and the husky easterners, who have been considered for some time one of the east’s most powerful reasons why it should be counted first in football. Last year Colgate went through the season with only one defeat. In fact, the team was not scored upon save in its final game with Cornell, which it lost by a top-heavy score. The Army and Yale teams were two of its victims. Ilinois split the honor of being big nine champions last year with Min- nesota, so the east and west will be sending two of the most powerful teams against each other. Lehigh, which hasn’t done any- think remarkable so far, will be Yale’s opponent tomorrow, and Har- vard will battle a southern team, North Carolina. Cornell has Wil- liams for its entertainment at Ithaca and Princeton will go into what probably will be the hardest fought game of the afternoon when it tackles Tufts at Princeton. Notre Dame. another high stand- mad . Whenwe take your measure for { custom tai- " lored clothes, . we practical- | ly make a chart of your . figure, not- ~ ing each of . its propor- i tions and ir- regularities and we build the clothes to fit such a chart. There isn’t an item of guess work any- where in the process—it's absolutely ac- curate and precise—it guarantees real fit and insures genuine satisfactions Let us send a diagram of your figure to The Cont-' nental Tailors of Chicago. 0. J. LAQUA CLOTHIER Third Street ing team in the west, will battle the Haskell Indians at South Bend and Nebraska will tackle the Kansas Ag- gles at Lincoln. NOTICE. On and after Oct. 13, I will not be || responsible for any bills contracted | §- by my wife. : ‘H —Adam Nikle. 5 TO PICK UP ONE OF THESE HIGH — CLASS PERFECT-TONED | INSTRUMENTS 2-1014 DENIHS ASSAILING MR. HUGHER| Percy Mackaye Writes He Nevee| Saw “Authors’ Letter” With f His Name Appended. i Percy Mackaye, playwright, whou! name appeared as one of the signers; of the so-called “authors’ letter,” pub- | lished In the newspapers last week, |7 knew nothing about the matter until after publication, according to a state-. ment given out yesterday at Repub- lican national headquarters. The let-; ter attacked Charles BE. Hughes’ cri cism of President Wilson as constructive” and propounded : questions for Mr. Hughes to answer. In a letter to Mr. Hughes Mr. Mackaye sald:— i h s 'l Cop: right “My attention has just been called. X ; 2pplitd “for to an open letter addressed to you,! ! / printed in the New York Herald of: August 2, signed by a number of pro- fessional writers, among whom my name is intluded. I beg to send you this word, to say that I did not sign the letter dnd never saw or heard of; the lettef until it was shown to me in print.” It was stated at Republican head- quarters that neither Mr. Hughes nor any of his staff had seen the letter except as it appeared in the news- pepers. The President must be credited with having put a slick one over if he can get the votes and make the people pay the freight. Latin politeness 'is proverbial, but aren’t these Mexican commissioners exceeding the limit when they persist in likening Woodrow Wilson to Ven- ustiano Carranza? Of the 38 electors who cast Penn- sylvania’s vote for Roosevelt in 1912, 35 are living and 27 of them have pledged, unitedly, their support to Mr, Hughes, HOME OF THE BRAVE. “This is the land of the free and the home of the brave, and if it ceases to be the home of the brave it will soon cease to be the land of the free”— Charles E. Hughes in a Speech Delivered at Plattsburg, N. Y. MANUFACTURERS INTRODUCTORY PIANO SALE! GEO. T. BAKER & CO., are the distributing representatives of the World Renowned Baldwin Line of Pianos and Player Pianos. In order to quickly and permanently introduce these Celebrated instruments in this vicinity, we have made arrangements with the manufacturers to sell just 20 pianos at Factory Prices. TO THE PUBLIC:-- You have had opportunities in the past to buy a piano at a big reduction, but NEVER BEFORE were you able to buy a STRICTLY HIGH GRADE PIANO at such a tremendous discount as we are offering at this sale. It means you can buy a high grade piano for less money than you ordinarily would pay for a cheap piano. You can make a small payment down and we will arrange the balance on monthly payments to suit your convenience. Every piano we sell is fully warranted, backed by a capital of $4,000,000 together with our personal guarantee. -'YOU CAN PAY FROM S| .§0 PER WEEK AND UP. — 8 R N LR N —- Your old piano taken in ex- change, the balance to suit| your convenience. Come down right away as the pianos are going fast. This sale can last but a few days longer. ; y ‘.} GEO. T. BAKER & €O. |{ 114-116 THIRD ST OPEN EVENINGS Bemidiji el peat