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30 Sweetser and Guilford Clash on Links Today : East Should Beat West on Courts | OUIMET MEETS VON ELM IN ANOTHER STAR MATCH Bobby Jones Shoots 35 Ho! Succumbs to Par-Shattering String of Birdies by Marston, Ph: BY W. R. McCALLUM. LOSSMOOR COUNTRY CLUB, ing of the 1922 and 1921 natior event at Flossmoor tod: ton, is out to do or die against Jess ing champion, in a meeting of golfin attraction in a day of unusual matches, in which one present champion and three former title holders are matchin and all the glory that goes with it. The other star match of the day of Boston, the 1914 title holder, and third round of match play in the 1923 amateur golf championship Jesse Guilford, the mighty swatter from Bos- | les in One Under Par, But iladelphia Vet. Chicago, September 19.—The meet- | nal amateur champions featured the weetser of New York, the defend, | g giants. This match is the stellar g shots for the title of 1923 | s the meeting of Francis Ouimet seorge Von Elm of Salt Lake City, declared a professional last year and reinstated so he could play in the | amateur this year. Ouimet has been going Hunter yesterday, tion to the Guilford-Sweetser combat In the other two matches Densmore hu astounding _kid from Va., is playing Bob Chicago, twice champion, Wells of Ohio stacks up against Max Marston of Philadelphia, conqueror of Bobby Jones vesterday match which for thrills and golf seldom has been equaled mateur tilt uilford-Sweetser of two cocky nervous, confident and & of his 'magnificent gam just as he was at Brookline last ye Guilford, glum. dour, unun’(urlul:lv‘ great guns, n, V of crand n_any The meeting Sweetser, the crest match is a golfers— and a dry Yankee, sanguine that he ill get revenge for his whipping at | ston in 19 He thinks so with | every bit of confidence he has, for big Jesse is Ritting_the ball wonderfully and will force Sweetser to the limit today. The men are of two entirely | opposite types—-Sweetser the facly trained athlete. nervous and on edge | fer days of stff competition; | uilford the nerveless, heac hose tremendous tee shot atched by the finesse Truly a meetin ind one that will b putting greens, for both men are at the peak of their games Gardner Should Defeat Shute. Bob Gardner. should defeat young . but anything can happen here, and if Bob is a little off the kid will very likely come through with a vic- | tory, for he is a splendid golfer and takes odds from no man in the field. | Considering his defeat of Bob Jones, the open champion, vesterday, Miux Marston should win’ from Joe Well but Wells has been below 75 con- sistently around Flossmoor and will sive Marston a scrap, holed a mash Geo Von Elm shot for a 2 on the par eighth hole vesterday, the outstanding shot in @ day of surprises that witnessed the defeat of Bob Jones of Atlanta and Willie Hunter of California, who on Tuesday put out Chick Evans, Chi- cago's mainstay in this champion n Bob Jones ran up aga 5 succumbed t hattering string of 4s and 3s by Max Marston. Bob has the rough est luck of a championship com- | petitor who ever played for the title Bob shoot ly fine golf, and then son comes through ‘with + black socks him back of e least expected it. ot thirty-five holes yesterday under par and lost to Marston and The veteran Philadel- phian had the same thirty-five holes in 3 under par. His friends watter, | are only of his sho g of the mighty decided on the think if Bob Jones is ever to win the amateur champion- ship he will have to go I action with a pair of brass knuc and a abbit foot. Cer nl t does seem as if Bob ran up against some of the toughest eggs in the world in th amateur tilts. He shot a flat 70 in the morning, and was only up on Marston's In the afternoon Mars- ton was out in 34, and was 2 up on Bob's 40—bad golf Tor the open cham- pion, but still far better match-play golf than it ems. This gent Mars- ton was worried by the “Flossmoor mosquitoes,” but they only seemed to him ‘more“tenacious. The gal- also bothered him w bit, but rammed the ball against the of the tin. and by the time he ached the tenth hole he had Bobby struggling to catch him. Max w down at juncheon, but picked up the second hole in the afternoon, and was still 1 down at the end of the fifth. It looked as if ob would have a_close match, but uld ill win But here the tall from the Quaker city took the s re off three row—a 3, 2, 3—on hole are a stroke higher, according | par, and won all three from the ern youngster Within twent. wutes the situation was reversed. ere was the open champion coming » the sixth hole 1 up. And here he went the ninth 2 down, after a string of golf seldom equaled in any championship. And Bob took it like @ man, even though Marston's putts dropped with the precision of a chronometer, w e Jones’ approach putts curled away from the edge of the cup like the lips of a Boston uildog. ’ ¥ still Bobby struggled for a hold on the amateur championship that should have been his years ago. He ggled through the thirteenth still down, and finally got back a hole the fourteenth, where he laid Marston a dead stymie, which the tall | Willfe.” | eighth {ended ten feet beyond the pin. | Franc Von Elm has been burning up the course, while “as he demonstrated against Willie | and this match should prove a welcome counter-attrac- 41 to 20 to wig Ray. Apparently without nerves, and playing with a big wad of gum in his mouth, the stocky Britisher, who will be an ‘American citizen within a few | months. finally cracked when he shanked a short pitch at the eighth hole when he should have had a shot at a birdie,and lost the hole. From | then on Francis romped away from him. | splitting the middle with his tee shots and rapping the ball confidently against the back of the tin for the holes that spelled disaster for wee Willie Hunter's magic putting touch was gone in the afternoon, where he was uncannily accurate against Evans on Tuesday. He missed a three-footer at the h for a half and failed to sink a four-footer at the sixteenth, which would at Jeast have carried the match another hole. Ouimet made but one stake in the afternoon- n under-| played pitch to the short seventh hole, | which just landed in the edge of the | water. front of the green. Francis! took one swipe at the buried ball and | then id, “I've had more than enough, | The 1oss of this hole put Ouimet 1 down, but the popular Boston star was smiling when he came to llm’ He still smiled when he; hooked his tee shot to the rough and smiled @ broader smile when his mashie ‘shot from the high grass And wee Willie stepped up to his bail with all his usu: nonchalance and really missed his first shot in three days. He | hit the mashie shot in the socket and it went off at right angles, barely carrying a bunker. From then on the downfall of the ex-British title holder was as definite as a train schedule. He faded like a hothouse plant, while ame through with the game hampion | Ouimet's Putting Masterful. H Francis putted like on inspired through the last round, where the day before Hunter was the gent whose putter blade was crammed | with sorcery. Ouimet holed a te fcoter on the third to win, and ran a five-footer past a partial stymie at the fifth to win the hole and finally square the match. Ouimet rimmed a | yard putt at the tenth, but came back | at the eleventh with a five-footer f a birdie 2 to again become one up. He holed another good one at the fourteenth for another birdie and| from then on the end was forecast. ruggle as he might, Willie Hunter Wwas up against a stronger game, but he went down fighting like the game battler he is, even though he took } tkree putts on the sixteenth hole, where thé match ended. Francis was out in 36 with a 4 on the seventh and was two under fours for the last nine when the match ended. Jesse Guilford walloped his wa nother victory over that king of m t sluggers, Dexter Cummings Onwentsia. This match saw some the most astounding hitting ever wit- | nessed, but it was not close. Guilford lost the first three holes in the morn- ing, turned 2 up, and won from the irtercollegiate champion by 7 and 6. Jess Sweetser, the defending cham- pion, showed Davey Herron the way home to the tune of 4 and 3, and Jess wasn't outdriven by the husky Ch cagoan. On the other hand, more often than not, Herron, the 1919 champion, plaved the odd. Jess let out on thé ball vesterday and romped around with the match well in hand all the way | 3ob Gardner and W. C. Fownes, jr., of a v to | ! scheduled for today, weather pemmit- | the first return to each loft: | |the rate of 1,013 | 854: V. -THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. .C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1923. BOY SPRINGS UPSET IN “BARNYARD GOLF” CLEVELAND, Ohio, September 20.— The second round of play in the fourth national tournament of the National Horseshoe Pitchers’ Association was ting, with forty players from six states contesting. Of the fifty-three who started vesterday thirteen were eliminated. Two players drew by Today's contestants were divided into eight groups of five players each Each player plays every other player in his group, the two winning the least number of games being elimi- nated from each group. | The women's tournament was scheduled to open today, with ten en- tries, among them being Mrs. J. F. Francisco, Columbus, Ohio, the title holder. Only one other Ohfoan is listed, the others representing Min- nesota, Michigan and Towa The ' surprise in_yesterday's play was furnished by Willie Zeinstein, a fourteen-vear-old boy from Youngs- town, when he defeated William Yocum of Zanesville in a spectacular game. Zeinstein overcame a lead of by a score of 50 to 49. had® thirty ringers, ten of them doubles, out of fifty-six shoes pitched. Yocum had twenty-eight, including six doubles, Seven of yesterday's players fin- ished ‘the day with perfect scores.| Among them were F. Jackson, Keller- ton, Towa, former national champion, and Ralph Spencer of Pitcher, Okla. tate champion. MOONLIGHT LOFT BIRD TAKES 150-MILE EVENT Flying at a speed of 979.88 vards to | the ‘minute, a bird from the Moon- light Loft won the race of the Amer- ican Hytex Racing Pigeon Club, cov- ering a distance of 150 miles from Amherst, Va., to this city. The average speed per minute of | Zeinstein Moanlight loft, 079.88 yards: D. C. Hartley, | 979.86; Blaine, 975.74: M. J. an; | : W. W. Hardy, 972.49: E. F. Briel, | 970,63; Rauch & Rodgers. 954.99. FERGUSON’S ENTRY FIRST IN 'YOUNG PIGEON RACE | W. E. Ferguson's pigeon, Miss Fergie, won the race for young birds | held by the Aero Homing Pigeon Club from Cumberland, Md., to this | city, a distance of 110 miles. The winner made the flight at| vards to the min- | ute. Two hundred and fourteen birds | from twelve lofts competed. | The average speed per minute of the first return to each loft: | W. E. Ferguson, 1,013; E. J, Krahling. 904: | W. R. Pennington, 955; E. J.' Kelly, 900; R. A Hunt, 889; E. C. Whitmore, 888; G. I Thomas. '886: M.’ J.' Fitzgerald. 883: C. H. Durr. 881; E. C. Koch, 818; F. M. Frasior, E. Burgess, 760. Duluth Boat Club oarsmen have won the Barnes trophy, emblematic | of -best point scoring in the national | championships, ten vears in succes- sion. the fight, 1910 champion, had a cat-and-dog with Gardner copping, 2 up | and 1 to zo. Big Bob now is level | with Fownes, having beaten the | Pittsburgher as often as the veteran | has beaten him. With Gar@ner and ! Fownes it was a question of relative | distance, with’ the verdict going to | the longer hitter H One of the surprises of the day was the one-sided victory of Densmor Shute, the West Virginia champion, | over Ned Allis of Milwaukee, a west- | ern star and runner-up in the western championship some years ago. Shute is the eighteen-year-old son of the professional at Huntington, W. Va. and is the youngest qualifier in the tournament. He is the lad who thowght the matches were at eighteen holes and congratulated Eddie Held Tuesday when Held was 1 up at luncheon, later beating the trans- mississippi champion over the thirt six hole route. Yesterday he turned 1 up on Allis and was headed for a 72 when he closed the match on the thirtieth hole, | stronger THE GLUB & LEFT ARM SHOULD BE AS ONE | SAME STRIE,\?GTH /e SHAFT AND | | WRIST || What points are important for| a player to watch in selecting clubs suited to his use? Answered by j BOB MacDONALD | Veteran tournament player. Win-! ner of the Metropolitan open eham plonship, 1921, and the Texas open ship, Famous the over long-distance driving. There is no club or combination of clubs that will make a golfer.| This is the first thing to keep in| mind. | The weight of the clubs should | depend chiefly upon the strength of | the player’s wrists. 1f his wrists are weak he needs a light, springy | club; if his wrists are strong he can use a heavier club with a stiffer shaft. When a club is in use, the club and the left arm are as one, the real terminus of the club being the left shoulder. Consequently the strength should be about the same all th way down, the wrist not being than the shaft, nor the shaft stronger than the wri (Copyright, 1923.) | Marjorie | resentation | vesterday's RESUME NET TILT TODAY. Play in the final match of the tour- nament for the District playground junior tennis singles championship will be resumed on the dale court today, 0 o'clock rl Rankin of the Garfleld playground was lead ing Burn Curtis of the lowa Avenue playground when dark MULLIGAN IS LEADER IN A. A. U. FIGHT HERE Eight clubs, the minimum number prescribed by the by-laws of the Natlonal Amateur Athletie Union for a chartered subsldiary of that body, effected temporary organization of a District of Columbia branch of the A. A. U. at a meeting last night. James Mulligan of Aloysius Club, for years prominent in athletics in this section, twas made temporary chair- man of the new body. Among other representatives at the meeting were Miss Florence Skadding of Capitol Athletic Club, Yank Rob- bins of Drifter Canoe Club, Norman Landreau of Washington Canoe Club, Bryan Morse of George Washington University, Charles Swan of the American Legion and E. C. Jones of Wardman Park Athletic Club. The Tidal Basin Swimming Club was rep- resented by proxy. The tentative organization has in- vited Epiphany Athletic Association, Waverly Athletiec Club, Gonzaga High School, Western Athletic Club, Old Dominion Boat Club and Cardinal Athletic Club of Alexandria, Potomac Boat Club, Western Athletic Club, Webster School, the “C Club, C. & P. Telephone Company Club, Catholic University and other institutions, to send re to the next me nesday_night, at Hotel Washington. It is also planned to ask Virginia and North Carolina colleges. schools and clubs in the organization. Efforts to form a new A. A. U. branch are the result of the action of the South Atlantic A. A. U, with headquarters in Baltimore, in tabling § o'clock, at the {applications of Washington clubs for membership and refusing them rep- in the association coun- cils. TWO REACH SEMI-FINALS IN WOMEN’S TENNIS PLAY Louise Welckel and Corinne Frazier. qualified for the semi-final round in play in the annual tour- of the Women's Tennis The former defeated Eliza- —1 le the lat- nament League. beth'Gibson, 6—4, ter overcame Aileen Fe 8—6, 6—4. In a third round match, Elizabeth Pyle defeated Marjorie Wooden, 6—4, In the only doubles match played, | streets. Regan beat |t Warner and Miss Martut and Eleanoe Wells, presentatives | ting, to be held Wed- | DUMBARTON TENNIS SEMI-FINALS TODAY Semi-finals in the singles division of the first annual invitation tennis tournament at Dumbarton Club were scheduled for this’afternoon. In one of the matches starting at 4 o'clock Clarence M. Charest, former District champion, was to oppose A. O. White and in the other Tom Mangan was to encounter John Temple Graves, jr. Graves qualified for the semi-final round yesterday when he took the measure of Capt. Albert J. Gore in a fourth round tilf, 6—1, 6—2. The final round will be played to- morrow afternoon. Today's pairings and yesterday's re- sults in the doubles division follow: Pairings, 4 o'clock—Gore and Dudley vs. Robertson and Cox; Elliott and McDiarmid vs. Ballinger and Holt. 4:45—Charest and John. son vs. Burwell and Oarr. B:1! en and vs. winner of Dowd and Howinstein- dnd Harding match, its—Cherest and Johnson defeated At- wood and McCabe, 6—1, 6—2; Burwell and Carr defeated Bessey and M. Wilion, 6—2, 6—4: Gore and Dudley defeated Jennings snd e L e efault; an unl ea nd Haas, 8—6, 6—3; Elliott -nn_,!e.m-?fm.fi n_and White Ballinger and Holt defeated E. C. Wilson and Dolles, 8—6, 6—3; Dowd and Howinstein vs. and ' Harding, 6—2, 3—8, incomplet SUBURBAN RACKETERS BEGIN TOURNEY SUNDAY Racketers in the Suburban League will start play in the singles of their third annual tennis championship tournament Sunday at 9:30 o'clock on the Holmead and Capital courts. Drawings are as follow: HOLMEAD COURTS—Hal Fowler vs. Love, A. May vs_ H. Callan, T. Brown vs. McGinty. | Ruth vs. MoCabe, Bessey va. Thomas, Barr s Hoover, M. May ve. “Maidens, . Brown vs. oetzel. CAPITAL COURTS—Ralph Fowler vs. Kis- liok, Burwell vs. Xantor, Buckingham vi. At- Fopd, Seward v, Sopervell, Ha P. May, ‘Callan vs. Farnsworth, Beale vs. Stauffer, Polk vs. Robinson. BAPTISTS IN NET EVENT. Play in the singles of the annual tennis tournament of the First Bap- tist Church was booked to get under way today at 4:30 o'clock on the courts ‘of Henry' Park, 6th and B Included among the twenty- ¢o players are Fayette, No. 2, on Yale's team, and Short of the Naval Kunky Grat Academ How to Know Good Clothes The front of a good coat is never hard or stiff. It should never break into uneightly folds after you have worn it awhile, as il- lustrated— Point No. 1 To prevent these fauits, the layers of canvas, haircloth and Jelt forming the foundation on which a Goodman & Suss coat is made, are HAND-SEWN to- gether by hundreds of small stitches to give permanent soft- ness and pliability. . w On a good coat the chest should not fiat- ten out thie armbole = and a break in the shoulder, as in illo.- tration— Point No. 2 In-order to hold the ches: of the coat forward as it shoulc be and have the shoulders lic srsoothly, the canvas fronts are ;{aAr%uuy pressed and shaped BY ‘The lapels of a good coat are never stiffnor dothey curl outwards, as illustrated— Point No. 3 « » » Q sketch— Point No. 4 ‘The collar on a good coat is never stiff and unyielding and never cyrls up, as shown in TR MQ\/ PP eos To eliminate the possibility of these faults, the lapels are HAND-SEWN to inner founda- tion by hundreds of small ir- visible stitches, insuring sojft- ness and the proper roli. SPORTS. INTERSECTIONAL TENNIS MATCH TO BEGIN FRIDAY Ability of Tilden, Richards, Hunter and Williams in Addition to Johnston’s Slump, Forecasts Forest Hills Verdict. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. (Copyright, 1923.) HILE there always are possibilities of overturn in the ficld of tennis as in any othgr sport, it does seem as though the east ~ N should prevail over the west in the intersectional tennis match which begins Friday at Forest Hills. Johnston’s failing form—which his legion of admirers here are hoping is a passing manifestation of his game—seems to remove the one player whose prowess might otherwise have rendered the outcome of the series doubtful. As for the east. Tilden, Richards, Hunter and Williams con- tribute singles and doubles contestants which Johnston, the Kinseys, Harvey Snodgrass and Griffin should not, on their 1923 showing, ove come. It is rather a curious fact that this east versus west series should in- volve rather a wide representation of the eastern section, while Cali fornians alone stand as representa tives of the immense stretch of coun try bevond the Alleghenic South Midwest Weak. Why 1s it that the middle west does not produce outstanding tennis stars— outstanding, that is to say, in ter of' international, or even national, tennis? And what about the south? The writer heard this question asked | several times In the course of the national singles tourney at German- town. One answer may be that lawn tennis has not attamed the popu- larity in those sections that it has on the west coast and along the Atlan- tic seaboard. Fewer boys are taking up the game with serious purpose. Perhaps another reason may be found in the reply of a Canadian editor to a similar question put to him by the writer concerning the Dominion. He sald, “Our young men work too hard up there, and no posi- tions are open wheréin a_tennis player may work only when the ten- nis season is not on.” A Story 6t Tilden. Here is a story relating to Tilden's wonderful form against Manuel Alonso in the national tennis simgles at Germantown—form regarded as the most brilliant ever shown by a tennis player. It was at luncheon. tretching and paniard “My “I feel like temnis today.” He nodded at the son of Cas- tile.” “Manuel,” he said, “friendship ceases out on the court this after- noon.” It certainly did. PAPYRUS TO BE VIEWED ON SHIP BY PRINCESS LONDON, September —Papyrus is to have a roval visitor after the great thoroughbred goes aboard the Aquitaniatomorrow preparatory to sail- ing the next day for New York for his race with the king of American three-year-olds, says the Daily Ma Princess Beatrice, aunt of K George, is to inspect the liner and will take the opportunity to sce th famous horse in his air-cushioned stall. Meanwhile, Papyrus' tratner inspected the accommodations pared to insure the racers’ safe while crossing the Atlantic. Hp sux- gested minor_ alterations concerninz ventilation. A movable hatch will | put in between the stalls of and his stable mate, Bargold they can have a chat” as th put it. Tilden aros smiling at the he said, has pre Every Man Wants to “Look Like Somebody” Joe Wells of East Liverpool, Ohio, outgolfed Harry H. K. Davis of Hol yoke, Mass., by 4 and 3, while Jimmy Manion of St. Louis succumbed to the deadly approaching of Geogge von Iin_of Salt Lake City. HAIR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY “Hair-Groom” Keeps Hair Combed—Well-Groomed To prevent curling the under- collariscarefully sewn BY HAND to inner canvas by small in- visible stitches to give softness, pliability and permanence .to the original shape. .« o An excess of mate- rial never aj in the’ front of a good 'i:th after wue;:; fo::a‘- du‘wx‘:n.wl?'lhnkl“,p like illustration— Point No. 5 To overcome this fault the front chest seams of a Goodman ¢ Suss coat are invisiblv HAND- SEWN to canvas foundation by linen thrmd; ’yj : Point No. 6 To insure front of coat hold- ingits shapeandtogive strength to pockets, the top and]mmg lower pockets of a Goodman Suss suit are fastened to canvas Jfoundation BY HAND stitches of linen thread. (To be continued) Philadephian failed to negotiate with | a niblick. But Bobby hooked his tee shot into the rough at the fifteenth and pitched to the right of the green, while Marston got home in 2. Bob )t a brainstorm and chipped fifteen feet beyond the hole, losing to Mar- | ston’; birdie 4 to become 2 down again. They halved the sixteenth in 4s, where Bob lipped a seven-footer to win, and M ston brought the match to an end on the seventeenth, sinking a_six footer for a birdie 4 on_this 461-yard affair. Bob took his licking like the gentleman he is, but it does seem as if Bob might go through one championship with- out some golfer going crazy against | him. Marston Emulates Sweetser. weetser broke the course record against ‘him 'last year at Brookline and here yesterday Marston shot thirty-five holes in 1 under 4s over the toughest kind of going. Bob hasn’t won his amateur title, but they | can’t_deny him forever. Some day he will go through without some op- ponent rising to dizzy heights and shooting far over his head. Max Marston ‘is a fine golfer, without question, but it is aoubtful if he ever shot golf of the brand he played yes- terday against Jones. Marston is colorless and testy, here Jones is full of fire and spirit. The Phila- delphian was worried by the gal- lery, while Jones never knew, appar- ently, that any one else was within miles. But Marston's round-house swing was poking the ball down the middle, while Bobby's flawless style sometimes allowed a bit of a hook to creep in, and that was his dowrfall. The finest golfer in the tournament has been removed. The boys in the press tent think the world of Bobby Jones and again are sorry he lost. That's their long sult, being sorry for the losers, but they have a soft spot in their heart for Bobby, whom they have watched since he was a husky kid at Merion. Marston is going to be the person in charge of festivities at Merion next vear, where the amateur probably will ‘go. >k Francis Ouimet of Boston broke the iron heart of that king of short-game players, Willie Hynter of California, with his accurate pitching and deadly putting. Two down beginning the afternoon round, Francls outdrove, outputted and outgames e nervy - ox-Pritish champion, who nr&tc):fid =—Nat Sticky, Greasy or Smelly definitely at the eighth hole of the & 5 afternoon round when he was 1 up. A faw conts buys & Jar of! 'Hairmeen at For three days Willie has been |sny drugstore, which makes even stubborm, the solidity and nonchalance of Ted |unruly or shanporsd hair stay combed all voting the giume of a master—with !dsy in any style you bae, . - . If he is a man of censervative tastes, whose associa- tions are with men of smart but quiet preferences in dress, he would not want the free-and-easy type of clothes worn by the college man. If he is a man of the collegiate, athletic type, either in or out gf college, he would not want the style of clothes worn by the better dressed men of the stage or screen Or if he is a man with tastes running to trim, form- fitting, slender clean-cut lines in dress, he would not want clothes that are smartly conservative. 4 An exhaustive, analytical study of the clothes- preference of these three distinct types of men enables us ,to meet the apparel need of all men, with the - correct styles for each type of man—all this at prices that no man wanting good clothes can object to. More than this, Goodman (& Suss Clothes are “23 Point Hand-Tailored”—where hand-tailoring will give a suit or an overcoat that permanent custom-made appearance which convinces a rian that he “looks like somebody” and has attained the standard of taste and style he wants to dress up to. / N\ * In good clothes weight or bulk in the lower pockets never causes the pockets to sag nor pulls the front of coat out of shape, as sketched— A Tailored Trouser Crease Built into the leather to stay Black or Tan Calf 62 Other Oxfords and High Shoes at %657 58 1337 F Street N. W. ‘GA@DMAN & SusS CIOTHES “23 Point Hand-Tailored” Millions Use It Fine for Halr