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25 SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON [} Crippled Western Team to Open Series !| STARS OF THIRD ARMY CORPS ELEVEN SIX REGULARS CASUALS AT GEORGETOWN SCHOOL Linemen Will Be Moved to Backfield Tomorrdw for Game With Eastern That Starts Scholastic Play—Tech Lightweights Win. BY ARGYLLE FINNEY. ESTERN HIGH" loss of six of star oot ball eleven, severely crippled through the voungsters, will take the field against astern in the initial contest of the annual high school gridiron ampionship series tomorrow nn. The Western foot bal freshmen in one of the bi e afternoon y now that Sandoze riormed so credi unable to play. Some are sufferit tically ine There is some whose hip is sprained. wii ils0 may idle, 2 Coaches nd Alearn of Georgatown titution undou »dlv up against it. Sollivau, M Cahey and Dulin are flankers whose ~hoes prebably will be filled by in- axperlenced b tomorrow., A line- ran will be shifted to the backfield teke the place of Garber. There me question about the cligi- of Bernard Gorn . fullba was found that h uld v ithout violating the series rule is de too. be in t Lastern Appears Sturdy. ‘estern piled up t “bool score of the sea stern, winning, 24 to ¢ it will have to b for the aralnst Tomorrow to win have tw light Blu Charley will e the Hazeage Gormley through the heavy Cathoilc Univer- frosh defense for conside ze, and they are expected ome headway in the series to “trength galore was revealed in the concernc Catholic | ticul. line against the yearlings, but tomorrow hat Eastern will face 1t the We 2t together a line w 15 much_strength as that which infhilated the olic freshmen 2 real battle was annou t Capt. Welchel would be unat Lut it was gi 7 vesterday that the been delayeg twice b high school series entral, hut the postpones its ‘injured plavers more reco Although six of « players will be out of the tomorrow, Coach Guyon of is taking no chances and will am agalnst the Georgetown iy to uncork an aerial at- icks can make no head- the line. Tom Hook, of Eastern, should tomorrow. This adept at throwing can hit the line with some v 1 may be Lamar to pl ¢ boy's ar ern ha r1 Lt to figure somewhat majority of will remove f de- marks by the opening of th advisory period, which gets Monday. The Ninth Street- ppose Central Tuesday in adium. In preparation fo! his fray Coach Mike Kelly will send Jus team against the Swavely grid- r t the tidal basin grounds amorrow at 3:30 o'clock. Swavely, ner over Eastern. is apt to make the going rough for Busines Business High's chances in the title running arc brightened now that the its ineligibles fAcient seond 1ader wi son Tech High's 135-pound team # 6-to-0 victor yover the Episcopal High School lightweights in a_ bit- torly waged battle vesterday. arned caabled the Manual Trainers in the third period. Yall over. The Virginians approached Tech's goal line in the first and fourth quarters, but were halted on eich occasion. to Feore EARVARD BEAT YALE IN 1908. tollowlng_ communication from entative Hamllton Fish, jr. of sixth district of New York, d this morning and is self- SN ent vard ar: of vour rccent headed ‘Believe it failed score for ten stra years. to 1511, 1 would like to call = attention to th ot th ving en and ac Harvard team that four to nothing. in author of referred to meant to as that Harvard failed uchdown inst Yale ten straight years. QUARTERBACK MUST HAVE ABSOLUTE COMMAND Shouid a qrarterback have abso- | lute contmand of the teain on the field? Answered by KNUTE ROCKNE Couch of foot ball, Notre Dame Tniversity. Famous for his fighting beaten only twice in last four A quarterback should have abso- lute control and command of the tecam on the field as regards calling of mals. He alone is highly trained along tactical lines and is re- sponsible for tactical errors. The captain_has charge of all matters pertaining to officiating, accepting or declining penalties, choosing to receive or kick, calling for substi- tutes and telling the referee when ready to recommence after time has been taken out. In other matters he quarterback is the absolute czar. Nothing is more demoralizing to an offense than to have every member of the team a would-be quarterback. Authority must. be given to one man and he must also hear the responsibility. (Copyright, 1923.) whe 1 s the charlex horse i Capitol youns-| combination | able | G tern | tut University ; cecded Wwit-1 hav 4 several | Probably ¥ | fleld to st n out ut!Meade ou A so- | terback, es of well executed forward passes | tackle Bruder took the | | o | B il i | i i | | | tormidable i at o'clock, in Wilson hine that crushed the Catholic Uni- gest upsets of the season will be weak- Garber. Sullivan, McGahey, Gichner | against the Brookianders, will be | 1 injuries a her George Hageage, clever tackle, * Western line-u guard, 1 his leg is just heal FIGHTING 6. U. TEAM WILL FACE SOLDIERS i Surles may bring a husky 0rps eleven from Camp Mecade, will uot be able to do as it €s With the Georgetown Unlver- team in the foot ball game flith Stadium Saturday afterncon. Stung by u series of defeats, th Hilltoppers Zer to take the i measure of rdy opponent and : they poss but it pleas sity ome ss into smashed | the week end ¢ ¥ orgetow 1 this w prepared, speed in and it should be well U us foot all lore is Saturday's fray. Par- 1 is being paid to the re I for the Hilltoppers The - squ uid be physically fit, T Pike Albaugh has suc ng up the play minor injuries. regulars, except will be on the © against the Capt. e BEST TARHEEL TEAM CHAPEL HILL, or the game of versity be in phy Unive €., October 2. firet time since the opening the season the entire Uni- North Carolina squad wil ical tri when it meets the aryland on Saturday . M. L i f o ris. whose bril- n s the feature of the Tolina State game in Raleigh . Was on crutches for scv- following encounter, w He is out and, barring further injury, is sure to nor(‘;r‘:}';)r{l:;' the team on its Maryland trip, Robinson, center. and Randolph, fullback. two regulars who were kept out of the North Carolf: that ine |in playing form line-up Saturday. The Carolina eleven hoping for a repetition ctory over Maryland. Capt. Morris, ead; Matthews, tackle Poindexter. guard; MeDonald, quar and Fordham and Aclver, are the only regulars on this team who faced Maryland last and will be in the is confident! of last year" year' Sseason, The belief here is that aerial passes will “flgure largely in . Saturduys game. Maryland is said to hav team well coached on forward lateral passes. and those who I and ave followed the university’s eleven know | have been one of fts ! that long passe most effective means of sround gain. ing. In the fair week game, for in- stance, seven of S passes were completed, a inctly encour- aging ratio, NOTED ATHLETE HELD. BOSTON, Octol “William W . 3r.. of So former cham pion “shotputt. the world. has been arrested federal agents, charged with the mails with tent_to def His father, Wil- am M. Coc was arrested o similar ch: R vil of by using ad. also arges MARINES ARE AMBITIOUS | TO ADVANCE TO FACE MARYLAND nd others are scholas- | Nile NOYES Quarterback av) weak in substi- | ers who | Camp | T State game | account of injuries, also are back | TRANC . |ment, 18 GREEN -Center FOUR BIG SANDLOT GRID GAM OUR big gridiron contests on pected to give the dopester the District foot ball title thi bing tl shou 3 in the frays are bent on grab! dicates that all ur gaimes Knickerbockers, Georgetown tion, Southern and the titleward Sunday Probably ril att iflith Stadium n will oppose Club of Alex- when the Mercury elev the Virginia Athletic andria, V; oach Brewer of } winged-foot combination fs taking no chances with the Virginians, and will ON GRIDIRON BY LAWRENCE PERRY. N ¢ two service institutions. According to a high western who have shone as foot ball playe to have as little trouble securing graduate foot ball stars have in ge This does not mean that the )| have a degree from a college or the authoritics as to characte Even so, since the abla corp: tion and high nee Marines are with a definite tradi- standard of service the are that Annapolis and West e shortly to encounter a most service rival. a Princeton’s game agninst the turday w show whether o ot the Tigers have profited by th experience of the Notre Dame game. Certainly DLoth players and coaches must aave learned something that will acerue to their advantage. As a result of the 25 to 0 beating adminis- tered to Nassau by West Virginia in 1919 the Princeton system acquired things that were almost directly re- spousible for the productive three vears that followed. The Tigers are an acquisitive bunch and history may repeat dtself. From what the writer has heard from Princeton Saturday’s defeat was taken in the proper spirit. The game was arranged chiefly becsuse the coaches wanted their men to have the experfence of playing against Knute tockne’s wonderful outfit and all the chances are that the South Bend eleven will appear in Tigertown again next year. Every ome out west who has seen John Levi of the Haskell Indians in action say he is the greatest back in every respect they have ever seen When under way in the open field h Is practically unstoppable and in throwing the ball. punting, crashing the line, he is hailed as iu a class by himself. At the close of the hard Minnesota-Haskell game Levi mod- estly remarked that he thought he would have done better had he really got warmed up. 5 Milstead, the Yale tackle, who hailed originally from Wabash, came to Yale via Syracuse. When he turned up at the Salt city institution from the west he said he wanted nothing but the most difficult courses —that he was there to study. The trouble was, accordling to Chick Mee- EW YORK, October 25.—Apropos of the game between the Univer- sity of Michigan and the Quantico Marines two wecks hence it i interesting to note that the sea-soldiers are ver: ear or two, if reports of recruiting of athletes which the writ 1eard in the west are true. the Marin With- er es will probably be ranking up with ambitious. conference official, coliege graduates | Ts in their undergraduate days are commissions in the Marine Cory tting appointment to West Point. larines will take any athlete. He must a university, and, of course, must satisf: r and the like, likely ps as o {han, that he began to tell the profes- just where they erred in thei manner of teaching. One readily can Imagine what happened to this young blond giant at examlnation time. One afternoon Milstead came ou the Syracuse field—this was two v and told Chick Meehan he wi get a little practice on the e n let him go in, and then had the pleasure of watching him tear holes in the varsity line and then lead interference that resulted in three touchdowns. Then Meehan «ve wie varsity the ball and told the bucks to tear into Milstead. He threw them back for half an' hour, but eventua! succumbed to the pounding. 'The greatest iys Meehan. asn’t in Milste t on uld tackle T e San Keck? d's class. er No, saw | _ Consider King College, located in j Bristol, which is half in Virginia and Lalf in Tennessee, has an enrollment of ninety-eight students. Last year with ninety-two students King ran up a total of 498 points in its eight { 8ames, establishing the season’s high | score record. Teams met in_compil- ing this mighty total were V. P. L., | Tusculum, Milligan, Maryville, Roa- noke, Fast Tennessee Normal, Cum- berland University and Lenoir. Le- noir, with 750 students, was snowed under, 206 to 0, and Husculum, 90 te 3. Before the {ornado got going two opening games were lost to V. P. 1. nd Roanoke. Thus far this seaion King s beaten Blueficld College, 63 to 0; Tennessee Poly. 75 to 0. and Eion, 55 to 6. In all 198 points in threc games plaved. This Bristol cy- clone Will be werth watching this season. (Copyright, 1 FURMAN WINS EASILY. COLUMBIA, 8. C., October 25. * Fur- man Purple’ Hurricane, by superior speed and driving power, defeated the Davidson Wild Cats at the state fair grounds -yesterday 30 -to 0, the | Keck | ES CARDED SUNDAY the sandlot calendar Sunday are ex- 1 inkling as to the eléven likely to cop Seven of the teams figuring he gridiron laurels for 1923, which in- d bLe thrillers. Mohawks, Association, Naval Receiving” Sta- e those teams that hope to advance s yea inday that de- cleven a the ated the week ago. Another contest that shoul real combat is the Mohawk ving Station clash, slated for The sailor team thinks fine chance of whipping s, who have been defeated titice this year. Knickerbockers have booked a rug- ged foe in the Apache eleven on the | fleld_at 37th and R streets. The averaging 150 pounds, seem to take the measure of an limited combination. but so far this scason they have failed. The Knicks expect a tough battle. Southern Athletic Club should offer h Georgetown Athletic Association team a stirring battle at Washington rracks. Southern held the Interior m to a scoreless tie recently. same team f Reina Mercedes th | | i | e | Mercury Juniors atill are preparing |for the Peerless fray Sunday after- noon on gridiron No. 1 of the Monu- ment Lot. Another practice will be ;h(']tl by the Mercury youngsters to- | night at 6:30 o'clock at 6th and B streets southwest. 1 Waverly Athletic Club tough job Sunday when it meets th Naval Air Station eleven on the Union tation plaza. Play will start at 2:30 o'clock. Roamer Prep gridironers are to be the opponents of the Southern Preps Sunday at Washington barracks. Coach Snow of the Southerns has his eleven well in hand and promises to make matters hot for the Roamers. The Southerns are working daily at the Hoover playgrounds. Blazing Rags of Anacostia will face the Invincibles Sunday. In prepara- tion for the fray the Anacostia eleven will practice. tonight and Saturday at Logan Park. Much_interest is being manifested in’ the Emblem Reserve-Clover game to be played Sunday on the Mount ! Rainier field. Skip Farran, Bo Han- cock, Dave Gibson, Hudson, Bert Ken- nedy, Dick Kennedy, Speed Waiter, Earl Bauman, Shorty Bauman, Chick Cam; bell, Fddie Smith, Bill Smith. Harvie Wilson, Leo McMahon, Burwick, Allan Weller, W. Pryor and Don Bellman are among the voungsters expected to per- form for the Emblems. Circle Juniors will tackle the Mard- feldt Athletic Club Sunday at 2:30 o'clock, on the latter's fleld. Mem- bers of the Mardfeldt outfit will hold a meting tonight at 7:30 o'clock at the home of Bob Walton, 2725 22d street. Anacostia Eaglex are casting about ames, according to Manager s Zirkle, 2020 14th street south- Zjrkie's phone number is Franklin 2131. The Eagles will prac- tice tonight at' 3 o'clock at Fair. Tawn. ity Jumiors plan a strenuous | practice_today at 5:30 o'clock on the | Knickerbocker Field. Games with the newly organized Federal Athletic Club_eleven can by arranged_by calling Manager Louis TAtman, North 5950, between 6 and 7 o'clock. Mercury, | . {The West Virginia instr is in for a| ‘ D. ¢, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1923.° SPORTS. : Fetzers Put Carolina on Athletic Map WHICH PLAYS GEORGETOWN SATURDAY | | 1 1 1 { | desirea i versity Cavanaugh vere | of to the title < been gen- the mentor but vears Dart head Syracuse nineteen tated from jthe role of outh ch assun Hano has yet h to reach his twents e CENTRE GRID SQUAD IS ON WAY TO PENN? crippled. is EW YORK, October 25.—A shift p! n which but one of the eleven i} Dr. Clarence Spears sends his West Virginia Mountaineers against Hugo ank Cavanaug| hen Spears was a Dartmouth undergraduate, and tor oi the Green [ine it ia the Darimoun acvcon. FIVE BIG TEN TEAMS {upon to shift. In the latest develop- center jumps to a new position just | dopesters, ansious for evidence on joffense, end runs, off-tackle sweeps, | 3 ! . RS pionship, are watching with inter- Penn State has twice cncount consin. the only unbeaten elevens in Dartmouth leleven, employing it g whose | the five to meet Saturday, but the re- {members w two {In 1920 the shift resulted in i cariy and hard practice has been the order ing. when late In the game Glenn | from Saturday in view. Coach Yost of touchdown that gave Bezdek's tean i “|the game this week with the Michi- appears evidenced in the fuct that the 1 plays. so far ineffectually. checked the powerful charges of ng satisfaction, and heen several times tr | occupy the attention of Coach western urday | part in serim mage at Purdue. which is preparing tutored on a vigorous plan of at-| N men holds his original position wiil be introduced to New York foot ball followers at the Yankee Stadium Saturday afternoon, when t Bezdek’s Nittany Lions. } _The play is an e'aboration of the old Dartmouth shiit taught by Maj. h wt employed with some variations by Spears when he became foot ball men- In the original play T lonly the guards 1'backs figured in fment of the play under Spears th ' now employed by Spears West Virginia, every player but the | CHICAGO, October 25.—Foot ball before the ball is passed. and from |which to base predictions on the {the shift are developed all types of |western conference foot ball cham. line bucks, forward passes and kicks. : Hasx Been Effective. est the practice s ons at Michigan, red | 1linois, Chicago, Minnesota and Wis- Spears’ earlier development of the {play. In 1919 Spears’ o T the western conference. Minnesota he basis of |, - B 15 ¢ lattack. defeated one the sturdiest and Wisconsin are the only t s of { Penn State teams. = Al | mainder are scheduled with oppo- | starts, Bob Higgins NaS:inents calculated to test their mettle, | Dartmouth lead over Penn State and was well on its way to further scor- | this week ! Killinger nabbed a Dartmouth pass With the game with Jowa a week {and sprinted seventy vards to a 5 | It Michigan is giving his regulars in- a slight winning m dividual workouts. Preparations for The strength of Spears’ new p = kan Aggies have consisted of light West Virginia _eleven scored two |sgrimmages, with the freshmen using touchdowns on Pittsburgh, which ¢ 1nes preparing for its con- aturday. aithough ainst Wisconsin Sat are at low’ ebb. Wisconsin the | freshmen. vsing Gopher p | s to ¥ ngthen the Illinois | Zuppke Various combi tions have been tried for use against North-! Every regular. un being required to tak: to put up the fight of its career against Chicago. The latter is being tack. with considerable attention to |} defensive plays against an aerial at- LOUISVILLE, Ky. October Twentv-eight Colore! | carrying the hopes and best wishes of Kentucky foot ball fans. were | speeding toward Philadelphia today on Centre College’s fourth invasior of the east in search of intersectional gridiron honors. After three annual contests with Harvard, twice defeat- ed and once victorious, the Colonels face a new foe Saturday in the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania eleven. While the Colonels were waiting | at the station here vesterday to en- train, a civil war veteran, his hair snow-white and legs a bit unsteady under their weight of vears Capt. Edward Kubale to one side. He led Kubale down the platform and pointed across the track. legend traced in heroic letters the side of a mill buildins. “Read it son” quavered the cien y “Centre 6, Harvard 0; we gave ‘em hell.” the sign proclaimed. Kubale pondered the challenge, | «we'll_beat ‘em.” was his reply. Style E 170 Black or Brown Scotch Grain i an- | O many coll Laurel Park Championship Races Friday, October 26th Between the Unbeaten Two- Year Olds Sarazen ‘Weight 118 Happy Thoughts Weight 115 6 Furlongs Purse, $15,000 Saturday, October 27th Washington Handicap $25,000 Added ALL AGES One and One-Quarter Miles S oxford tha it the Scotch Gra soles. WEARY” 7 “City Club Shop” 1318 G St. j at Chapel Hill any North Carolinian wil i Penn ito Bob. | 1oyal ar | way It's the * boaght this hefty winter “Campu ‘trouser creases”’—weig It’s a “Bear” for looks and wear—another —and All-Wool Sports Socks to go with it.$]1 .50 BROTHERS AID TARHEELS ON GRIDIRON AND DIAMOND Bob Directs Activities, While Bill Coaches Eleven and Nine—Will Send Well-Tutored Foot Ball Team Against Maryland Saturday. BY H. C, BYRD. ROBABLY no university in the south has a more unique coaching P situation than the University of North Carolina, which plays the University of Maryland at College Park Saturday. And it is doubt ful if any other university has enjoyed greater success on the gridirot than the Tarheels since they instituted their present system Two brothers, Bill and Bob Fetzer, handle the <quad, and thev hav handled it so well that since they took charge Virginia has not been abl: to win the annual Thanksgiving day struggle, and prior to their arrival C i remember well how few and far between were victories over the Charlottesville eleve Foot ball at North Carolina until, te: 1921 was anything but a huge suc cess. Troubles said to have arisen from alumni interference and a seem- | ing inability to get a coach strong enough to handle the situation and et the best out of really good mi- | terial were the main factors in the lack of real accomplishments in grid- iron competition. Nobody seemed able to get heads or 1ails of what was wrong with North Carolina foot ball Fetzers Then cene a m 0 <howers after talk and by hat the result has been. ings resentment all the bri; deship between iversiti t college under and Jaugh des no matt There'n or il ng about of suck fudents in the of the bi: rolina brings here I eleven, one best 1t the execution of plas | which have deception their ‘mai value ar will be 4 team well drilled in the use of the forward pass Out at College Park the Univers Maryland is spending some rather stren uous moments getting reads for t: kind of struggle it knows it will have when it faces the Carolina eleven Sat urday hour yesterday t varsity second men scrimmag with ti Army Corps team. Todas the equad will line up for thirty minutes of scrimmage Geary _Eppley's Scrambies, | with” North Carolina plays. | brief scrimmage today, the team w get a comparative rest until it the fleld against the Tarheels Satu | afternoon. PECK WILL PRESENT STRONG FLOOR TEAM | things ¢ | saturday North {a biz. powerfy {in the south. Awaken Tarheels. claliziderts § the Fetzer brothers. hings bi#an to take on a new as- pect. Members of the squad found they cculd no longer lazily carry out e " practice sessions, and the found that foot ball was to be more important than dances. that foot ball made demands and requirements that it had not made before. Alumni were told bluntly that when their aid was it would be asked for. Peo- ple around Chapel Hill began to waks up to the fact that somebody at last had begun to run things in no un- certain way. Results began to come. Practical- 1y the same_foot ball team that Uni- of Maryland and Univerait of Virginia had whaled the life out o the year before went to Baltimore ' and Charlottesville and cleancd up both the Old Line and Old Dominion elevens. It was the beginning of the successful Fetzer regime, and not since the brothers took charge at North Carolina in 1021 has either Maryland or Virginia won from Norih a. year had ele: undoubtedly one the two or three strongest south. This vear the team if any. weaker thar woek it treated the North Carolina State College to a far worse beating than the 14-to-0 scorc showed. One foot ball man who watched the con- test said after the game that North “arolina _gained cnough ground to have made two touchdowns before it scored ite first o Penn State, the weck before that. was able to beat prth Carolina State only 16 to 0, and it did not gain near so much ground | against the Ralcigh eleven as did orth _Carolina University. When State's one-sided victory over remembered. something | strength may be | a equippe After the North Carolina a of the i little, was then Last Peck tossers emoria b" will oppose Calvary team in its first contes day Sehool League Saty ber 17, in the Y. M. € athletes who comprised Athletic - Club last year their lot with the Peck plans now are under w one of the strongest qu city. Merman DMyers Frank Athey, busin manager, basket ! Bant f the St Nover Thos: Wester have cas brilliant th team anc to develorn tets in t manager assistan 2nd Herbert Tucker, trea the of discerncd. Get New Comtra When t Fetzer brothers went to North Carolina they went under a contract for two years that called for Bill Fetzer to be director of ath- letics and coach of foot ball and base ball. Bob was to be his_all-around assistant. Last year, =o highly sat- isfled was North Carolina with their services, they were tendered flve- vear contracts, which they signed. But Bill stepped dow athletic director and gave over the job Bob now director of ath-1 letics and assistant coach in foot | ball and track, and Bl is simply coach of foot ball and base ball. And in these capacities they still are making good. Both are splendid fellows person; the kind of me with whom it is a pleasure to come in contact, the kind of men who will vance the cause of university ath- letics and be a distinet credit to any university or enterprise with which they are associated. North Carolina teams are made up of athletes of the highest type, some them boys whose fathe: could build a university if they cared to, some of them boys who have nothing to get themselves a university educa- tion but their own willingness to work as janitors in the dormitorics waiters in the dining hall, or at thing by which they can help them-| lves through. H est state universi the | south, North Carolina, has a2n atmos- | phers all ts own. Bet n its faculty a udents’ exists a_much closer bond t n usually is found in universities and both faculty and stu- dents combine with the alumni to pull for a greater university. Just how the alumni is shown by the they have fallen in behind the present coaching regime and backed the Fetzer brothers to the limit, de- spite the hints thrown out three years | ago that their help was not needed. North Caroiina’s teams are made up of the kind of men with whom another | Independent terel teh team defeating the to 15. Challenges ents are being Charles ged th tea to the Independ received by Manage Abernathy. Lincoln 240 tosxers an vesterda i nd Princess Athletic Clab will hold itial work-out tonight Saturday, as originally Coach Martin wants all players to re port promptly at 8 o'clock. Columbia Wilson Nor: expects to the floor this nior div tc & ame old Junjors, School formerly Junjor two fast teams o: »n. ene in the ju on and another in the mid At a recent meeting Wal- Ogus _was elected president McDonough, secretary; Har rroll, captain of the junior team, and Joe Carroll, captain of t1 midget team. The Columbias ar booking games through C. W. Corby Columbia 916-J. —_— AKRON, Ohio, October 25.—Fred W Gerhardy of Detroit, prominent race , died in a hospital here from wounds received when he was shot by Marior a_trainer. The Largest, Most Economical, Most Reliable Tailoring Shop Open Unti & P, Sa “stablished 1893 Mertz Tailoring 1llustrates the Smartest Fashions Priced Within the Reach of ANl Campus” cge fellows have Suit or Overcoat Made to Measure 25 t0 *60 —correct clothes designed to meet ivour individual requirements. t we've dubbed ” Imported toe, hty in— plain 50 | | Choice of the largest and best stock of fabrics in Washington . $50 | | i Full Dress Suits {to order, silk lincd.. Cor. 7th & K Sts. 414 9th St. 1914-16 Pa. Ave. 233 Pa. Ave | | Mertz & Mertz Co., Inc. 906 F St.