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23° % HELP WANTED—FEMALE, - THE EVEVING WOwLS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1919. Vitam, eventuatiy wil earn @ place C Gridiron Punts and Passes) \sii is so ra left half, Garrity was shifted from full- hy 4 teams, took an Yaad Po LY AT YALE. AT PRINCETON. |back to Fight half, while Witmer was at|the business of instruction and much | > “ fullback, Strubbing again called tho | progress toward strengthening the eleven NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. 22.—Capt. | Jvarsity had ite frst serimm: McGraw of the Princeton football eleven | “ants {ovmect the Green was accomplished. the by Boston on § Was shifted from right tackle to guard BONwST ENVY, rom the Washington Star.) “How I envy that great singer!” ex- aimed Senator Sorehum. “But he expresses no thought of his own.” Beatles the regular coaches, Speedy Rush, Van Orman and Cool, Jimmie Muntis, the fighting 1913 leader, and Charles Shuler, halfback on the 1913) Glenn Riddell, the Metropolitan Bow!-) ing Academy representative in the Bast+ ern Individual Bowling Championships showed a liash of his old form last night Py. 1%, 213, 201, To. i ITT, 196, 163 “That's the point He can hold audiences spellbound for hours with- These backs had no chance to show as the work for the ‘ thelr acoring abilit AT DARTMOUTH. when he easily disposed of Frank Cox |p 2omr, 169. 175, 148, 205, 178, 101, 212, 94. }azainst tne second varsity and while Joe Lynch was moved out tol yrrsu¢ iF Sractically ai! on the dee a Oe An single dea lo tthe White Elephant. Academy. in a | lta) 1Ms sretaer THUS” oo say, gap,|seainat the college team in the Bowl. | tackle ‘in a ati defensive scrimmage | finaive, “Incidentally, the. scrup made |, HANOVER, N. HL, Oct. 22,—Several et ne Serivs rolled at the Metropolitan’ Bowl. | 1 4g TS, . 18, 1.1 With Kempton in at quarterback, the | with the scrub, and indications point to|oniy three first. down® by rushing in| hundred undergraduates and the college Ing Academy before a sel this evening. /team played with more snap. 1@ col ie change ing permanent, r on wo! ni accompany the tmoutl Ing Acad f i Ith ‘The cold | the chi bel it hicey ‘minutes of hard band Das nh ——— of bowling fans from the “Hi Bi i} weather also contributed a good deal to| pili Roper and his assistants felt . en to New York for its firat Gienn averaged 26 5-7 for the se ef ni 7 be nanan keeping the team more in midseason | that something must be done to bolster game away from home against Corneil es rolled, while tie best Cox co a the Partha callbres SS i AT CORNELL. nhanie at the up the centre of the line, and It is next Saturday, The student body places 270s to roll an average of 191 6-7. | Kempton had with him In the back: |noped that this change will have the| ITHACA, N. ¥., Oct. 22.—The Cor- | Kreat confidence in the eleven that “Fat- Heights” bowlers feel certain that the | field Crane, Webb and French, and | ijesired result. Proof may come in the|nell football team’ went behind closed | ty Spears has developed, by. virtue of young bowler, who only re ently waa of Nell Kennedy.}the combination worked weil, Don | Colgate © on Saturday, , gates as it plunged into the thick of | its strong play againat Penn State, and Felensed from the army after serving 8°] Welles and Bob Lay followed the var- ike Callahan was at conire for the|its preparation for the Dartmouth |It [Is anxlous to show its Uncle Sam for more than a year In|}! sity in the scrimmage so that the back- Sox firat time this season in an actual|game. It was the first secret practice | and support in the beat poss! | France, will be returned the winner of it ney to| field for next Saturday is by no means | scrimmage, and his work was of a k of the year at Schoelikopf Field and it The squad had a fairly | the tournament. Jers eritoliod under the banner| made up. Jim Braden came down from|ty give the coaches much encourage-| is likely that the secrecy rule will be|out principally due to the condition 7 | Marry Colin added “another ‘i : He intends to canvas «very |the infirmary and did some road work: | ment, enforced for the balance of the week, |of the fleld. The varsity held a long HOW “RE YOU AIDING IN | inva sevice tolled at the Blunts Toint "Measioaay | mec Y vata on fims fo tape, wha |FURHI:g around, the outside of the Nell |" Harvey and Biter were on the enda| Five couches drove the squad at « fast | signal drill, ‘affording the ends excellent | | whem ‘he met Bjule Knob Cohn, rolled aa | ting’ all of the bowlers take’ part jh ral times during the afternoon to ang there two may game on|pace in an effort to spe both at | opportunity to try thelr akill with « wet 37 for K the metropoutan championships, which are to be} Keep in good physical condition, so that | saturday, but the fi g seems to be|tack and defense for the Dartmouth | ball. Robertson, Eckberg and Young- THE TASK OF decided at the concluion of the bowling peason, enld es oe enely RiGee 4 general among the wi ates that! game. strom spent much time in punt'ng. o 2 The W. H. Dural & Co. team was a ti wind will be good. — a RECONSTRUCTION? fhm imi over tie Chere Hine tan tens | dack Cates allowed his two firat ends further rest to-day, Reinhardt and Babe Allen watched the work from the 2, series of games in the Bik ‘alless, Only one double cen ‘ary scoce was rollel during the evening. This o heir places were Fred Wa sett gf Winsnl'h i8s Dal aa | woes and iB ghele, Bigsee ots, rat tase Ye the ta ries, WRESTLING CHAMPION \t WILL SOON APPEAR HERE. Graham and Storrs. crimmage Fred he The proudest boast an American can make to-day is to say “T am doing my part his elbow, though he didn't into the big &: He then went and came back this fat pounds, but is fast. His Three Men He welghs 187 prep school was St. Mark’s, where he One day the idea popped into our heads that if we A representative entry list has been sent in for the seven-mile walk and ten-mile run, national championships of the Brooklyn Athletic Association, which will be held this Saturday at Earl Caddock, the world's heavyweight champion wrestler, will appear at Madi- | js before many | in son Square Garden moons In one of the matches in the grappling carnival being arranged by played football, His younger brother, ‘substitute end, AT HARVARD. Harry Graham, id should develop in the great task of re- construction.” Our country needs the ut- picked out the best points and three heels r Brooklyn Field. Ten athletes are! sack Curley. Jack received the foi-| CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct. 22—Waile pa an of our most becoming} scheduied to start in each event. The lowing message from Gene Melady, |#'ving (ull value to the punch that the ost efforts of : ri hey list fot varsity developed in scoring an early nest, sineer en and bies and combined | sntry list follows ‘8 manager, to-day: touchdown In the Brown game last Sat- s em Caddoc! ‘Ten-mile run—Charles Pores, Millrose| «J, em all into one com-|a. A; James Henigan, Terry Halpin, Frank Zuna and Frank Titterton, un- ite hat, we'd have a attached; Hi Shuster, Morningsid ‘by that would fit and) ee AL Husenback, New. York look well on 80 out of every | $i {ii.88 filverstain Glencoe A. ©. t received a wire from Earl. He ts fit to win and will be on the Job about Nov. 15.” Curley admitted combined tones urday, the Harvard football coaches con- tinued to impress on the eleven that @ game is four periods long To drive home this idea the varsity | was withheld (rom regular scrimmage and for the greater part of the afternoon was set at work getting smoothness into women who will work, save, and sacri- flee, if need be, to aid to-day that the the Metropolitan Orchestra and Sousa’s Band couldn’ \ Regiment, and een sweeter music to his e the running game. in the work of putting 100 men. Hannes Kolehmainen, Todd Shipyards | {ve fee? Anecncnment that cadd For years Harvard teams have been | ws . A. would re-enter the arena as the w noted for their fine work in offensive our social and com- | 0 even-mile_ walk—' iam McFadden, stling champion, assignments, an in order ge! *Composite is the re-| ,,* rT 1k—William McFadden, | Wrestling p' d it is in order to get po Nionkea Mier, Mexander Jensup and | "'Sadduck aaw service over Im France {more cohesion that Dr. Kishor 1s spen mercial activities on a hoes chard Remer, unattach + Far-|and returned to this country last| ine so much time plugging at fun eult—the best seller we) Riherg Romer, unattached one. Broken in health and stamina. | mentals, ever had Dacka, American Walkers’ He hied himself to his ranch in Wyo-| xhe varsity line has been unchanged, : ‘Ted Neuendorfer, Todd Shipyards A. A.!| ming and has been building himself | but with Ralph Horween and Casey out All sizes 654 to 734. Joe Aronson, Pastime A. C., and Kuri|up ever since. & new backfield combination ts being sizes 078 va Zulch, American Walkers’ A. A. ‘When Curley received the message eloped with Humphrey, who has | from. Melady he Immediately an-|been put last in the tandem, Burnham and Arnold Horween, Burnham was rated as the best of the backs to hit the line in Harvard's regulation attack and was making good when hurt a/ Among the noted athletes who will compete in the athletic games of the “ith Infantry, New York State Guard, are John J. Eller, holder of the world’s nounced that Caddock would meet the winner of the Strangler Lewis-Joe Stecher bout scheduled for the Garden on the night of Nov. 3. We also have a *‘Com- posite” soft hat built on There are many ] ways in which you th id TS-yard hurdle fecord: Erdman, star pencils AC few werks ago. Ho is again ready, to ‘ sam Umber-topper of rinceton Universit: take is ances in oe every-day ‘ | a pit ncae and inter-collegiate -hampion, and Kelly | PEELS SORRY FOR LADIES workouts and returns at about the can help. eats Newt rhe A bh These three AFTER WEARING CORSET. | right time. athletes wi! Ye amo: the starters in (From the Solo (Kan,) Tritvune,) { The Stetson factory | the various nurdie even Cuner nun- éC Rane oe mn been ee Teephund opeeaing : ers on e ogramme 100- ‘d plumes itself on the “Stet-| Gish, one-mic'retiy, two-mile rune ac |traina this morning on his way home| If your MEAT or FISH jals’’! yard novice, 600-; ard handicap, three-|from Barnard, where he had been as- : is Tastel is one. In these days son-Specials'’ mile bicycle race, one-mile walk, tus h % Pasteless It’ leas to have the|°! War an¢ squad hike, Entries ‘close reid sr ister and some others wit! you can greatly mprove of reconstruction few $8 a pleasure on Oct. %, with the 47th Infantry Ath- | the harvest. letic Association, Marcy Avenue and Shortly after he started work he got a Heyward Street, Brooklyn. its flavor by adding Hard rubber heels — little better than leather exclusive New York sale of such excellent soft hats and workers are more im- portant than the tele- wrench in his back which laid him up a couple of days. He made the re- . Py KNEW MEANING OF A mark to the fellow he was working for Cea dering Derbies. AS HE WAS A $0. CER, | that if he had a board to his back he be- —_———_, phone operator. She Registered Trademark bs {rm the eihddcale Siar.) i ae ee eee ee SAUCE is a vital aid in the e class was bored. ‘was @ read- Why not put on a corset and try $ i Ing class, and the book was full of bis " farmer asked. ne oy periece ae aes al great task of recon- Roa: words. hunted up a big corset, a ball ‘oas ERS Peet COMPANY “Archimedes,” read Jimmy Jones, wine and strapped Leslie up. Gavia Chops. Cheese, struction. | 4 Broadway | Jept, from big bath sholting “Eureka! | Ho worked this way for a week or 80 E MS Tea Dy aha at 13th “ jureka !""" and got along fine, sand Salad Dressin, ea at 34th St, | "The teacher stopped him. ; ‘About the only inconvenience was re- Be Be sure it is 8 hard and brittle as in a pipe stem. Broadway Comers" Fifth Ave, Jaanunt’ 1008 ‘Bureka’ mean?’ she) moving the thing at meaj time, and then His ordinary bard rubber heels are Telephone operating j at Warren ‘at 41st St, | No one knew, so no hand was raised.|ing up of more twine so he could make much like leather heels. They trans- ith | Tt, means,” sald, “I have foun: |\t meet. & does not stop with ser- | it!" Now, what had Archimedes found?’ | ‘The first day he laced it a trifle tight mit the shocks of walking instead of vice. Its advantages After @ long moment Jimmy venturea and was sick two or three times during SAUCE th ¥ Bore ics elas, the PEM ieeva alia foe coat herent eee are worth noticing, THE ONLY ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE For heels, rubber must be neither too hard nor too soft. It must be both unusually tough and unusually springy. The work is pleasant and the surroundings H are pleasant. A salary is paid during instruc- tion, and the oppor- tunities for advance. ment are many. Heels that are both springy and tough Ts man has found a heel that has unusual spring and that is at the same time tough and long-wearing. He is using O’Sullivan’s Heels, To secure the resiliency and darabil- ity of O’Sullivan’s Heels, the highest grades of rubber are “compounded” with the best toughening agents known. The compound is then “cured” or baked under high pressure. By this special LN process the greatest resitiency is com- bY bined with the utmost durabitity. GIRLS & YOUNG WOMEN TO SERVE THE PUBLIC AS TELEPHONE | OPERATORS. | Girls, 16 to 28, as day Telephone Operators, Young women, 21 to 85, as Night Tele. phone Operators. For full particulars call “SPRING OF. FICIAL” (free call) or j Guaranteed to outlast any other heels. O’Sullivan's Heels are guaranteed to wear twice as long apply at as ordinary rubber heels; and will outlast three pairs of leather heels. Go to your shoe-repairer today and have MANHATTAN O’Sullivan’s Heels put on your shoes. (Main Omce), | 1158 B'way, cor. 27th } St., 8 A. M, to6 P, M, Awaiting you you'll find toppy tidy red ting, b pound and P' tin humidore el teal pound humidor with 3’ e 3’ BRANCH OFFICES: ulllvan s ee BRONX, 458 E, Tremont Av,, \ tha nadtanel joy smoke Meepe rlnce altar tn ase Absorb the shocks that tire you out BM Rat Me B. 3, Revmalbe Tovaese Oo, BROOKLYN, , Conyriahted, 1919 by O'S. K Co. 81 Willoughby St. 9 A.M. toBP, M. 1886 Broadway, : 9AM. to5P, M, { OLLING your own cigarettes with Prince Albert is just about as joy’us @ sideline as you ever carried around in your grip! For, take it at any angle, tossed into a cigarette—and, so easy to roll! And, you just take to it like you been doing it since away back! You Ba ete + see, P, A. is crimp cut and a cinch to fp? iia. 3 you never got such quality, flavor, fra- handle! It stays put—and you don’t atta ane grance and coolness in a makin’s ciga- Jose a lot when you start to hug p } rette in your life as every “P,A.home- the paper around the tobacco! RINCE Al BE made” will present youl ‘oles. You'll like Prince Albert in a jimmy snes eee prota ei pipe as much as you do in a home right for you when you alip a tidy rod rolled cigarette, too! You know P, A, tin or red bag of Princo Albert '8 the tobacco that has led three men to anda op vs pen. Into your pocket! smoke pipes where one was smoked = FOR SALE. RELIABLE GOODS = LOW PRICES = £ASY WEEKLY OR MONTHLY PAYMENTS “TRANSACTIONS CONFIDENTIAL = INO EMPLOVERS REFERENCE CALL, WR/TE OR OE NT CALL PHONE. Al wh VAL AMERICAN Wor artes: (Pron NEW YORK TELEPHONS COMPANY. tee | " 6g. Borvien, utes Cocrted UDSONNAVIGATION COMPANY before, Yessir, Prince Albert blazed 'CAST TRIP of SEASON. NEW YURK p WW | HELP_WANTED—MA \ It's aomo company! eee hes ATSIL YON VALUES Ne man Aaa A hae Ee ES pg iyo A the way, And, me-o-my, what a wad jfor BOSTON, SATURDAY, OCT. 25th EW EER est VA» tens ica HEA eee Sas of smokesport will ripple your way METROPOLITAN LINE every time you fill up! cigar Landth Hs es Si OVAL DIAMONDS WATCH CO, Bid sort a ud | 39 MAIDEN LANE. o* Floor TelJown 24g DISMAPS Era CUT 4ONG BURNING PiPt-ANo CIGARETTE. TOBACCO It's eo delightful SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS, ander your bennet! R J, REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N, C are