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. PITTSBURGHW. 8. { aschedule of < tcam will give the Panthers the hard- Avery’s Walk 737 MAIN STREET LADIES’ AND MEN’S SHOF As a rule women do store the way men do. not adopt an exclusive shoe The fact that the satisfaction given by Walk-Over Shoes is strong enough to over- come woman’s natural tendency to shop around is something to think about. Men and women, too, in great numbers never thing about buying any other hoe but the Walk-Over. DARTMOUTH-PENN, | Two Games Tomorrow Stand Out ! As Peatures of Gridiron Clashes | York. Nov. 9.—Two games the Lastern football ‘( the morrow as giving! promise of being close, hard fouzht contests. These are the meeting of | Dartmouth at Bos- | New stand out on and and Jefferson strugsle at Pittsburgh. | In other respects the Saturday list! of gridiron combats i» not likely to| Lo productive of either form or score | upsets. Judged upon the son Burtmouth and Pennsylvania appear to be aably evenly matched and the outc is likely to be a small| ) in vi for the eleven which the more alert andg quicker to take advantage of the breaks in the play. T.st season the teams of these two qollcges played a 7 to 7 tie but this fact has little bearing upon the re- sult of tomorrow's contests as very few of the men who participated in that struggle are now wearing mole- skins. The Quakers have played sev- on games to date winning five and being defeated by Pittsburgh and Georgia Tech. Dartmouth has won all six games scheduled thus far this| peason, the defeats of West Virginia and Penn, State being the outstand- ing features. The record of the University of Pittsburgh eleven is more impressive than that of Washington and Jeffer- son but the latter combination is one of great strength and has been pecially pointed for this struggle. is certain that the smaller records | es- Tt college est kind of a gridiron battle before they will admit defeat. In their game of a vear ago Pittsburgh won from Washington and Jefferson by a pcore of 37 to 0 but it is doubtful if the present team will duplicate these figures. = In the other games of the day in which the more prominent olevens of the section are scheduled to particl- HARTFORD HERE is many a man who would like to wear a govd-looking Shoe, but thinks he would have to sacrifice comfort, if he did. This is not the case at The Walk-Over Boot Shop. All Walk-Over Shoes are made to fit, but all feet are not alike. We carry a sufficiently large stock to give you a fit you will enioy, in a style you will ap- prove. g FITTING MEASURE IR UGG CUSTOM SvaW 1004 QuvONVAS SdiIIKd “amo>aa ebut AT T T T AT F L Have Your Feet Fitted RIGHT, Qur Salesmen Know How New York, N. Y.—Columbia vs. Ho- bart, did not meet. Carlisle, Pa.—Dickinson vs. Frank & Marsh, 13 to e Gettysburg, Pa.—Gettysburg vs. Mt. St. Mary’s, 12 to-8. Buffalo, N. Y.—Hamilton vs. Univ. of Ruffalo, 19 to 0, Haverford, Pa.—Haverford vs. Le- Lanon Valley, did not meet. Baltimore, Md.—Johng Hopkins vs. Western Ma and, 21 to O. Allentown, Pa.—Muhlenberg vs. bright, 43 to 0. New York, N. Y.—N. Y. Univ. Trinity, did not meet. Chester, Pa.—Penn. Wash. Coll., 17 to 0 State College, Pa.—Penn. State Lehigh, 10 to 7 Excter, N. H.—Phillips Exeter Dartmouth Freshmen, 3 to 14. Hoboken, N. J.—Stevens vs. Dela- ware, 0 to 5. Shamokin, Villanova, Swarthmore, ‘Mil. Coll. Pa.-—Susquehanna did not meet. Pa.—Lafayette vs. vs. | Swarthmore. 6 to 10. Syracuse, N. Y.—Syracuse vs. Buck- nell, did not meet. Medford, Mass—Tufts vs, Colby, aid not meet. Schenectady. Rensselaer Poly, West Point, N. Y.—Army vs. Carl- isle Indlans, did not ‘neet. Annapolis, Md.—Navy vs, George- town, 13 to 7. Boston, Mass.—Univ. of Penn. Dartmouth, 7 to 7 Pittsburgh. Pa.—Univ. of Pitts- burgh vs. Wash. & Jeff., 37 to 0. Rochester, N. Y.—Univ. of Roches- ter vs. Wesleyan, did not meet. Williamstown, Mass.—Willlams vs. Middlebury, did not meet. New Brunswick, N. J.—Rutgers va. Springfield T. S., did not meet. Worcester, Mass.—Worcester P. I vs. Amherst, did not meet. College Park, Md.—Maryland State St. John's Princeton, N. J.—Princeton Fresh- men vs. Harvard Freshmen, did not meet. Cambridge, formals vs. meet, Durham, N. H.—New vs. Maine, 0 to 0. Providence, R. L.—Brown vs. New- port Naval Reserve, did not meet. vs. vs. ve, Mass.—Harvard In- Camp Devens, did not Hampshire MAY GET McCANN’S JOB. New London, Nov. 9.—With Gene McCann lopped off the New London pate the outcome appears to be more | A question of scores than victory or defeat. Both the Army and Navy teams should win from their respe: tive opponents, Carlisle Indlans and Georgetown. Rutgers appears to have the edge on the Springfield Y. M. ‘C. A. Training school eleven although the latter combination is exceedingly proficient in the use of the forward Colgate | pass In all itg variations. should win from St. Bonaventure bu both Syracuse and Swarthmore will fAnd Bucknell and Lafayette, respec- tively, more difficult to subdue. The principal games of the day, to- gether with the scores where the same Institutions met a year ago, are as fol- Jows: Worcester, Mass.—RBoston Col. Holy Cross, 17 to 14, Hamilton, N. Y.—Colgate vs. Bonaventure, did not meet. vs. St club’s pay rall as a war measure | (Gene was always a rather expensive luxury), the problem of naming his successor is yp to Morton H. Plant. ! The millionaire owner of the club is | receiving numerous tips from the fans {and baseball writers, but it seems { that just now Otto Deininger has the . inside track. RESERVES TO ATTEND GAME Newport, R. I., Nov. 9.—A special train is to be provided to carry the Newport Naval Reserve football team !to Providence Saturday for the game with Brown University. Liberty is to be granted to all men desiring to at- {tend the game. Capt. C. R. Black, !Jr.. announced last night that the Secend Naval District team would play the First Naval District team in ,Harvard Stadium Nov. 15. | OMAR KHAYYAM WINS ‘Wilfred Viau’s Great Three-Year Old Adds $5,000 to Owner’s Winnings at Pimlico Track. Pimlico, Md., Nov. 9.—Omar Khay- yam, the great three-vear-old colt be- longing to Wilfred Viau, added $5,000 to ais big list of winnings here yester- day. He won the Pimlico Autumn Handicap and in doing so showed that his strenuous campaign this year had sapped none of his speed or stamina. He carried 180 pounds and conceded lumps of weight to a big fleld of high class horses and beat them easily. Guided perfectly by Jimmy Butwell, Omar Khayyam won in sensational fashion. Gifford A. Cochran’s chest- nut filly Fairy Wand, ridden by little George Walls, finished second, and Richard Wilson, Jr.’s honest little selling plater Straight Forward, with Johnny McTaggart in the saddle, was third. To win the event. Omar Khayyam daid not have to break a record. Un- der restraint almost all the way, he travelled the one mile and a quarter route in 2:05 2-5, three and two-fifth seconds slower than the time made by Hourless in the match race at Laurel last month. Behind Strajght Forward finished such good horses as A. K. Macomber's champion three-year-old filly, Sun- bonnet, Andrew Miller's Ticket, Emil Herz's Mai Manister Toi, W. R. Coe's Jack Mount and Oscar Lewisohn’s Bella Desmond. GILROY INJURED Bernie Wefers, the Fordham Trainer, Says Johnny Played in Election Day Game With Broken Shoulder. New York, Nov. 9~—There is an- other chapter to be written about the Fordham-Georgetown me on Elec- tion Day, and it centers about Johnny Gilroy, of Georgetown. Johnny was the leading polnt 'scorer in the East last season, and he was ranked by all critics as one of the really great backs of the year. But last Tuesday the Georgetown star did not play up to his usual form. His dashes lacked the drive of vore and his tackling was one-sided. Every- one deoided Gilroy had gone back. Yesterday, however, Bernle Wefers, the Fordham trainer, explained Gil- roy’s form by stating that the gritty Johnny had played through the whole game against Fordham with a broken ! shoulder. A heavy harness afforded fair protection, but it also greatly in- capacitated the Haverhill star. John- ny, like the “war” elevens, is the bet- ter player for the poorer game he played. FELEVEN ELECTS OFFICERS. Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 9.—John A. Sessions, of Northampton, and Thomas S. Lamont, of Englewood, N. J.. was elected, respectively, manager and assistant manager of the Harvard tfreshman football team. Three sec- ond assistant managers were chosen, 1as follows: John R. Meeker, of New York; Henry R. Atkinson, of Brook-l line, and Gardner Foster, of Malden. 1 GOLF AIDS WAR FUND Idberty Day Tourmeys Under Aus- pices of National Association Net $72,375.78—Pittsburgh Deads All New York, Nov. 9.—While it would be futile to attempt to enumerate or itemize what has been done in the way of war rellef work on the part of the golfers at home, each succeeding week furnishes additional news of the good efforts. There have been Red Cross and Tobacco Fund matches and tournaments galore, but the latest authentic word of a material increase to the grand total comes from United States Golf Assoclation headquarters. This has to do with the Liberty tourn- ament held on July 4, in which a total of $72,875.78 was raised. It's a long time since Independence Day, but just the same Howard F. Whitney, secretary, and Frederick S. Wheeler, treasurer, had been unable to garner the returns from hither and: yon any sooner. No less than 485 clubs through the land participated on July 4. They represented every State in the Unlon excepting Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico and Oregon. Prior to the tournament Whitney communicated with 1,497 clubs. ‘The honor of raising the most mon- ey went to the Allegheny Country Club near Pittsburgh, its total being $4,269. From that the amounts ranged down to the modest sum of $3, sent in by a small club in the Northwest, but, llke the widow’'s mine, it was none the less welcome to the associa- tion. In looking over the list it iz noticed that there is a big gap between Al- legheny and the next contributor'the Columbia Country Club near Wash- ington, with $2,089.88. After that both the Apawamis Club, at Rye, N. Y., and the Country Club of Detroit had totals of $1,600. The Nassau Country Club at Glen Cove followed with $1,600 and the Oakmont Coun- try club was next with $1,484. A total of $1,360 was returned by the Bloomfleld Hills Club of Detroit, while $1,306.26 was the offering of the Oaks Park Country Club at Roches- ter. The Tedesco Country Club in Massachusetts furnished $1,318.80. According to Whitney there are a number of clubs still to be heard from which, it is believed, will bring the to- tal up to $75,000. WANTS TO PLAY SOLDIERS. U. of M. Students Start Movement for Game With Camp Custer. Ann Arbor, Mich, Nov. 9.—Uni- of Michigan students, keenly disappointed because their football eleven cannot play Chicago this year, yesterday began a movement to urge the university authorities to schedule a game with the crack Camp Custer eleven. It has been proposed that the receipts be turned over to some military charity. The Cornell contest noxt Saturday is the last home game on Michigan's schedule. It is known here that- the versity er Boot Shops 160 ASYLUM ST., MEN’S SHOES ONLY - Service Shoes not only for the soldier and civilian in training camps, but for the farmer, the munition worker, the nurse, the home gardener, in fact appropriate shoes for the great auxiliary army which backs up our boys at the front. Most Styles $6.00 ] to $8.00 FOR QUICK RESULTS USE A CLASSIFIED ADVE RTISEMENT. of their REAL VALUE. HOSIERY AND UNDERWEAR BEST MAKES STANDARD QUALITY Women’s Fast Black Cot- ton Hose. 19¢ value. Sale l 21/2c 13783 500004 Women’s Lisle Thread 17¢ Hose. 25c value. Union Sale Price ..... 89c¢ Women’s Heavy Ribbed Suits. $1.50 val- ue. Sale Price Girls’ Fleeced Union Suits: 4 to 6, extra spe- 59 (o 8 to 10, extra special at ..... ch 12 to 14, extra special at ..... 790 Men’s Wool Ribbed Under- wear. $1.25 val- Camp Custer team is anxious to play Michigan. cialtat o. ool ue. Sale Price Plush Coats that Cost to Make U $25.00, Sacrifice Sale Coats Worth $35.00, Going at Coats Worth $40.00, Going at . _SEE DISPLAY IN SOUTH WINDOW—This is in fine high grade SEAL PLUSH COATS at this seas Come in and see the values offered. EXTRA SPECIALS High grade Sateen Petti- coats $1.50 value. 9 7 c Sale Price ..... Women’s Fancy Collar and Collar and Cuff Sets. 58¢ and 75c value. 39c Sale Price ..... Women’s Muslin Under- skirts. Neat Swiss edge flouncings. $1.00 and $1.25 . value. Sale 7 9 c IPricEREEE Men’s Negligee Shirts. $1.50 value. Sale 89 c Price s Men’s All Silk Neckwear. Neat patterns. 75\ cent value. Sale . .. The CURRAN DRY GOODS CO. Great Values in Ready-to-Wear Garments for Saturday’s Selling Big Sacrifice Sale of Fine Plush Coats 50 models, all of the latest designs. We have purchased the entire stock of one of the largest Plush Coat manufacturers in the line, at a big sacrifice in price, as he is retiring from business and wants cash. We will put these 200 Coats on sale tomorro: 200 COATS in the stock. w at a price to sell them quickly, regardless » $17.98 $22.50 $25.00 the greatest opportunity ever offered on of the year.—Beautiful garments. OTHER BIG SPECIALS FOR TOMORROW Dress and Shirt Walsts Women's fashionable Dresses in silks, satins, velvets and French serges. Suitable for street or re- ception wear. A beautiful collection of new models and the prices most rea- ‘Bonable. French Serge Dresses. Worth $15.00 to $17.50. For Satur- $9.9 8 dayZe: = Women’s Voile Shirt All new models. Waists. 89 - $1.25 value. Sale Price Women’s Fine Georgette Crepe Shirt Waists. $5.98 value. Sale Wonderful line of Coat Sweaters and Slip-ons, at special prices.