The evening world. Newspaper, November 7, 1921, Page 30

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een nN RRNA! 1 THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1981 hia. te as en TRAINER KEENE FITZPATRICK HAS MEN IN IDEAL FORM! Crimson Holds Own in Most Every Department, but Tigers Are More Fit, and in Last Five Minutes Cambridge Boys Lose Game That Appears to Be Won, Largely Because Harvard Eleven Weakens Under Strain. : By Charlie Brickley. (Harvard's Famous Captain and All-American Star of 1912-13-14.) RINCETON won from Harvard Saturday because she had a better P team on that day. The margin of superiority was larger than the 10-8 ecore indicates. But this superiority was confined solely te the physical condition of the two, teams. Harvard had a smoother working organization, greater diversity in attack, a better line, and a back field that cannot be considered’ inferior to that of Princeton. During the first three periods, and for more than half of the last quarter, Harvard more than held her) own. With but five minutes more to play, and with the score 3-0 in her favor, Harvard, to a vast majority of onlookers present seemed to have victory well with- in her grasp. But those who were best acquainted with the true condition of the Crimson team knew that its physical power was fast ebbing, that injuries re- ceived in previous hard contests had greatly sapped ite vitality, and that the Inevitable could not long be postponed. And it ‘was the virtual physica! collapse of one of the most important oogs in the Ortmeon machine that paved the way to victory for Princeton. ‘The Tigers won because they de- @erved tu win. Keene Fitzpatrick, | thetr trainer, sent a team on the field thet was in such superfine physical cen4ition not one substitution was re- quired during the entire game which, unless I am mistaken, sets up a new and unique record for what are popu- larly termed “Big Three” contests. It "was necessary for Harvard to make nine substitutions. | Both Harvard and Princeton playe4 bad football ag well as good, As an exciting spectacle it left little to be desired. At the same time there were surprisingly many bad strategical and bungled plays intermingled with team and individual playing that soared to | heights of brilliancy. Of the many thrilling features of if | the game there were five that should havo sent the pulse beat of eyery on- ' looker up with a jump. | § Gilroy’s 60-Yard Run | Was a Thriller. First, there was the 60-yard run to ® touchdown by Gilroy, which 1s cer- i tain to take its place in the annals of | Tiger football history beside the run terback, In his selection of plays. The Princeton line, instead of protecting their territory with a fast low charge, many times were caught napping charging high, and were easily moved out of the way on line bucks. Tigers Were Caught Napping Several Times. One play in particular on which they were badly fooled, was run as follows: Harvard lined up on a threat formation. Owen, playing the num- ber two back on’ the right side, re ceived the ball from the centre ana faked @ pass to a half-back running off left tackle, Princeton tackles in- variably followed the man the ball was faked to. The tackling of the Princeton line will have to be im- proved before the Yale game in order to successfully stop the hard running Yale backs. Harvard used a new kick, run and pass formation, playing a loose tackle and end on the strong side. From tnis formation they pulled the time worn “conversation” play. One back called for a repeat of signals, When this back was about set, another half- back called for a repeat of the signals and started to walk back toward the quarterback. Princeton assumed that the Harvard backs were confused on their signals, but this confusion was made by Sam White back in 1911. 4 pretended. “As the second Harvard Second, the 85-yard goal from the’! man walked toward the quarter- «field, made by Owen in the face of & back for the ostensible pur- iff head wind and which, coming so fate im the final quarter, made Har- vard momentarily look like an almost | certain winner. | Third, the Crimson's magnificent siand in the last minute of the third | quarter when they held Princeton for downs with the latter only eight inches to go for a touchdown. That pose of getting the question of signals settled the ball was put in play and the Princeton line waa caught off its guard. Owen made twenty-five yards on thie play. The first score of the game, which came at about the middle of |quarter, developed as follows: Buell made a fair catch on his 48-yard line. He selected to put the ball in play by. ja free kick from placement. To score a goal from that distance and against a head wind seemed like attempting the impossible. Owen fatled, the ball going to Princeton's %-yavd line. McComber, for Harvard, recovered it, while Princeton's end and right tackle looked on. They seemed to not real- ize that the entire Harvard team was of Fitts, /0M-side and were entitled, under the \rules, to recover the ball.’ After one play eun for the purpose of putting the ball in a better position to kick, tions of Harvard, Fourth, the hard luck that befell Stinson, a Princeton back, at the very outset of the game when, in receiving ® perfectly thrown forward pass fom Lourie he bumped against the Har- vard goal post with such force in mak- ing the catch that the ball fell out of | his grasp for a touchback. Fifth, te heroic gamen the Harvard left halfback. So ine pacitated by injuries that, prior to the ‘NOTRE DAME’S PRINCETON OWES VICTORY TO SUPERIOR PHYSICAL CONDITION THe SLAY THAT Fon Sat 2 ras his GILRO’ e com Post ane MES LOSING TOUCHOOWN mer shone as a great defensive player. For Harvard. Owen proved that there are few If any better backs. Buell had the edge on Lourie in their respective positions and displayed | better generalship. This may have | been because Lourie has not had} sufficient practice this season, Fitts | indelibly stamped his aame on the history of football as one of the| gamest of backfield men. ‘To my mind the Princeton team is | not a really great team. Yet, any team that can come from behind and win after losing several chances to | score, and after two defeats in earlier | games, desorves ull the praise that| can be given them. They demon- strated that thee possessed the most | essential quality—the indomitable fighting spirit. And that was ever characteristic of Tiger teams. | How Princeton Beat Harvard, Copyright, 1921, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) WINNING PLAYS OF THE SEASON. Analyzed by Charlie Brickley. A LvCKY PENALTY SAVED HARVARD Tw POINTS on TAS PLAY | STRONG TEAM OF | FENCERS SELECTED | | TO MEET BRITISH. TH Piay way WORKED By WARVARD. | Six Times, A good team has been selected STRAIGHT to represent Uncle Sam in the in- In THE ternational fencing bouts against | the British team in Washington | and this city Nov. 18, 19 and 21. First HALP TRICKY ELEVEN TO MEET RUTGERS Western Eleven That Plays Here To-Morrow at Polo Grounds Has a Baffling System of For- ward Passing. By William Abbott. Forward passing on the gridiron, eo spectacular and interesting to spectators, had its first and real de- velopment in the West. Less than | ten years ago, when Eastern coaches still clung to the old fashioned line up smashing game, the West made con- stterable headway with the new open attack. In those days forward passes were known aa radical plays by eonservative coaches, who were blind! to the great possibilities of the over- head system. Notre Dame at South Bend was a ploneer among the Western teams a perfecting the aerial attack. Notre! Dame invaded West Point a few sea-| sons ago and caught the Cadets nap- | ping with their Aomplicated passing. | ‘The Westerners ever since have cone | to this section with a baffling aerial offense. This year was no exception beginning of ‘the game, it was re- | () i + wen dropped back to his 45- garded as doubtful whether he would tine and sent the ball over the cross be able to finish the first quarter, he jar atuck to his job until the last few| “momentous events then succeeded minutes of play and gave one of the each other with amazing swiftness grittiest exhibitions ever witnessed on| Harvard kicked off to Cleaves, w [rushed back 25 yards. Princeton then | pulled the finest strategic play of the| i ways give their best when opposed to|ame and turned apparent. defeat | ih other. Individual effort often|into certain victory. The Tiger team | borders on the superhuman. ach|took a spread formation, with two team is imbued with a never-say-die backs behind the ends on the right ‘ spirit that is not equalled in any of!side, ten yards from the centre of their other contests, not excepting thelattack, with Lourie, Stinson and Gil- game they play against Yale This roy together. The most natural thing ) | } | | | stand was worthy of the best tradi- a @ football field. Still, Princeton and Harvard al- indomitable spirit and refusal to en- for Harvard to expect from this for- tertain the thought of defeat was con-| mation was a forwsed pass to Lourie. spicuously in evidence on Saturday. |And therein they were completely The ball was passed to Gil- fooled Harvard Gained 85 Yards \rey, who had not left the line of jserimmage. He atarted on his brill-| On Forward Passes.- tant run with the Ha-vard backs well ad, During the major part of the game *Prctd: aval | { medi desperate attempt to Harvard deviated from ber usual’ stop htm. Atmost at the instant Gil- roy started on his run Fitts divined what was happening. He had an ex- alent chance for a free tackle, for Gilroy had not then been furntshed with his interference. But Fitts was unequal to his task. As I have |stated, It waa thought prior to the game that he would not be able to go total gain) beyond the first quarte= For many minutes until the ball te field or in her opponent's During the enttre first half the Crim- | #on team confined itself mostly to aerial attack. During this haif Har: vard made six successive and com-! pleted forward passes for of eighty-five yards, 2 to the start | i o4 For the greater part of the first half! of Gilroy's run Fitts had been reeling | 9°04 , Princeton's defense against this for-| around the field in conspicuously weak ward pass was poor, They seemed) condition. At every opportunity he | j fotally unable to break it up. The’ would kneel on the ground and rest i pass invariably was made from Buell) nig weary frame. ‘The muscles of his | t to Fitts. Fitts was stationed behind! jert lag were so badly torn that he i the offensive right end. When the! coutd not do much more than touch | ball was put in play he ran into! that foot to the ground, At times Princeton's territory about two yards A at turned to the right, running) would sway Hke a broken obliquely from the line of ecrimmage fo th ide li vT) fter ti h SQught the ‘pave withost ‘veing mae; orilliant Keck At Gilroy’s Side. icstea by the defensive backs. Prince. oli fon finally played Gilroy opposite PS) Vitts and had him run out toward Fitts hobbled toward Gilroy, bu ; the side lines with Fitts, thereby con remaining strength was not e nnn to pually guarding him and making the courage, pass ineffective. like a juggernaut Harvard's increasing confidence in| waa the. brilliant her ability to successfully execute aj gide, And who could give better in- forward pass play finally almost) terference? When Keck joined Gilroy proved disastrous. Near the end of| Harvard’s seeming victory was turned the frst half on a punt formation, | into defeat Buell threw the ball to Fitts, but the) The remainder of the game fur- pess was intercepted by the alert Gil-|nished ample evidence of the rapid roy. Buell failel to run over and| decline in the physical strength of the lcover his territory after passing the| Harvard team. It was then not a : and Gilroy nearly got through | difficult matter for the Tigers to put the field for a touchdown. As It was|the ball in a position where Keck he ran from his own 40-yard line to|could kick a field goal, and within a Harvard's 85-yard line before he was|few more minutes of play another downed. | Princeton touchdown would have been At times the Princeton line was! a practical certainty, made to appear woefully weak. One| ‘To Gilroy great eal, not escape the sepctyaion that ‘given. But equal esis ‘ Tiger trying to given Keck, who p! sterling @utguess Buell, the Harvard quar- game throughout, Garrity lived up to ( 2 Y his flashed by hin But as swift as he Keck was at his Gilroy Praise must be praise must be {has been disappointing to date, but erners, The cadets were powerless tea againsithe combination of Mohardt | Gp and Kiley that manipulated the pas- ses for the visitors. Notre Dame won| P!® NO} 28 to 0 mainly because the Army | game when they met the New York aggregation a few weeks ago. But the couldn't defend itself against # clever| system of passing. On the Polo Grounds to-morrow the| same Notre Dame team will take on the big scarlet eleven of Rutgers. Two games in half a week ‘6 some as®ignment, but Notre Dame feels confident of making a clean sweep, hig ets of their trip East. The Westerne,:! Ma will probably do it. Rutgers has aj big rugged team composed mostly} pia of young players, The team's record it ts the type of eleven that may eud- denly find fteelf and put up a strong came. George Foster Santon, tts coach,| 4, sincerely hopes the Jersey squad will discover its real punch before ali| ,/ returns are in to-morrow up on th Polo Grounds. The game will start at 2 o'elook. Princeton end Yale clash Saturday at New Haven, but another game of widg interest will be the scrap be- tween the Middies and Penn State at Philadelphia, Both these teams have | So championship aspirations. The Navy | at figures after winning from Prince ton that victory over Penn State, fol- lowed by a triumph over West Poin', will give the sailors a clear claim for the mythical title. hal on Celtics at | The Harrison Footbal! Club of Harrt- pon, N. J., eliminated the Celtics of Jer- sey City from the U. 8. F. A. Cup com- sn petition by winning the game at the| Jersey Cliy Baseball Grounds by the | Wt | score of 3 goals to 1 yesterday. At hait| 9; Lime the New, Jersey chhmpions led by | to 0, and this was made 8 to 0 before| of the home team scored through a pen- | po, alt The best goal of the game was a hard drive by Wilson, following a good run Gown the right wing, after ten minutes |of play. Heminsley, from a pass by Brown on the left, placed Harrison two Heminaley also shot the third goal of ends. Blakey of the was penulized for pushing alty kick and shot up. efter change winning si Gillan made the the Celtics’ only goal. — oe aft th in | ‘The Celtics showed clearly their Saturday at West Point the soldiers) Superiority over the Albany Stars at | needed a fleet of aeroplanes to cope, Madison Square Garden last night be- with the overhead game of the West-| fore cient to indicate that they were off | form when the two teams met before. Johnny Beckman scored seven bask- ‘These two Boy various dances between the periods and made a big hit with the crowd. MacDowell Big Five won its sixth straight victory by defeating the’ was loosely played during the first before the Philly team got their eye The New York Big Five struck @ jan Catholic Club in a game at Tam- The Nonpareils quintet of Brook- lyn added two more victories to its Copyright, 1921, by the Press Pubilahing Co. Football is no longer a game of brute force. allowed to have a haircut. Gridiron season ends just tn time for Christmas vacation. Penn State's 1921 schedule is just one dam Saturday after another. | oe Eastern football still lords it over th paid attendance, ticket scalpers and the box office scale of prices. Revised estimates now ow the, Big Three te two-thirds off, | Western Pennsylvania ts football canes of the world, Even Pittsburen | Pirates looked like @ football in the iat os weeks of their season. | The noble record of sporeccabatde nes by the booers: They booed Babe Ruth in the World's Series when Babe quit the game with an abscess on his arm. They booed Suzanne Lenglen at Fo: her championship match, They booed the Harvard football trimmed by Centre College. LIVE WIRES BY NEAL R. OHARA. The American team was selected | at a meeting of the Amateur Fen- | cers’ League of America at the | New York A. C. | The selections as announced by John Allaire, Vice President of the A. F. L. Ay follow: | cetlenry ©. Breckenridge, Fen- ceo ub of New York. et ne oe) | _ Ensign E. G. Fullenweider, U. Each player is now “Sherman Hall, New York A. C. Majer Francis W. Honeycutt, ington Fencers’ Club, Cap: tain. Arthur 8 Lyon, Fencers’ Club af New York. Chauncey MoPherson, New York | | the players to be fired before the | io Western brand in the matter of “Major Harold Rayner, Washing- ton Fencers’ Club. | William H. Russell, Boston A. A. Major Robert Sears, Washing- Hencere’ Club. ena ee John W. Dim- ond, U. Mounted Service School, Leavenworth, Kan., and | Ray W. Dutcher, New York ——— | Larchment Yacht Clem Holds Its First Shoot. ‘Phe regular shooting season of the Larchmont Yacht Club marted yester- jay under excellent conditions. A Jars Feet FEMS when Bupenne cougtel | hf Ses an tie Hine Une The high scratch gunner was T. J iit, who é had a Ca GG Si ny pear e ten targets. eo [3 jandicap prize wen! tearm at Cambride“ tor getting toC. Krickl with e full score of 10) tar- bets, He only. took ‘th vent after a 11,000 Basketball Fans See Albany Lose to Local Quintet Pen eeame eni Se M ac Dowells and Italian Cath- down to defeat in a sensational battle terday, the national champions winning y 30 to 25 and in the evening the South Philadelphia Hebrew quintet ~ was outdistanced, 46 to 80. around work of (Leo Malone featured | tor the winners. TEAMS WITH OPEN DATES. olic Club Also Turn in Victories. ted the up-State team by a score 47—16. The Albany quintet dis- yed splendid ability to play the Pe. h wcore of the Celtics is sum- of for his team, and Nat Holman de seven successive foul hots. men represent the best yers in the game for their posi- Mg tions, for their individual playing and Po teamwork are unsurpassed. O'Neil! | 76 put two difficult ehots through for the Albany five. Mat Brucker also starred Y¢ his team. johnny Logan, the seven-year-old | wonder, gave an exhibition of M'DOWELLS WIN AGAIN, kt uth Philadelphia Hebrew quintet Palm Garden, 82 to 22. |? The game | if, the home team scoring 16 points | 5 the basket. Ki ITALIAN TEAM VICTORS. we ag when it tackled the crack Ital- any Hall, the latter aggregation inning 88 to 9, The feature of the niest was the playing at forward Caliguire, who made his initial ap- avance with the Italian team. NONPAREILS WIN TWO. Bi championship by defea: Andre credit by defeating Aibany in an|Coper in the final wie a 6—8, 6—4. ‘This was the first defeat at ‘ternoon game 26 to 24 and sending Amsterdam team down to defeat an evening contest 84 to 24. Both Seward Midgets, averaging 100 |pounds, have open dates on home 11,000 ns, faba when Wiy 208 || court 8 Btich| of No! 10) Macleon Street, City, is manager. Young Men's Hebrew Association of York teams averaging 116 pounds. Thi Fine, Box 23, Perth Amboy, N. J. | Melrose Big Five, composed of Hud-| Hf! son County League Stars, anxious to | play first rate teams in Brooklyn and New York. Street, Jersey City. Peerless or travel. Average 180 pounds. Book } jng Manager, Gam Miller, No, 7 Sher- man Street, Passaic, N. J firet class travelling team, has dates! open 4 has defeat and the Bronx Giants, Line-up: Norton, Wetgler, Foley, Lawlor, Lar- | 194 and Yonkers will find a formidable This team is composed of Thomas and Garrison. Street, Brooklyn, or telephone Chelsea | 1000, extension 875, between § and 6 P.M. prefers church teams on opponents’ courts. {ndoor tennis that Gobert had met ‘with during the past six year and, F. M. Sioot-oft inst C, 1 Witeon andes. A: Lew! ———— Todd Ghipyards Team in Soccer Victory. Enny \d round of the annual cup competi- tion of the United. States Football As- sociation at Todd Field in Brooklyn yes- M |his first appearance at the post, | breeder, + {SPORT NEWS AND Morvich Goes Into Retirement AND COMMENT To-Day, Unbeaten, Winner of $115,000, and the Champion Two-Year-Old of His Time— Man o’ War and His Turf Those of the Present Thoroughbred King. By Vincent Treanor. ORVICH, the two-year-old | racing sensation of 1921, goes into retirement to-day, not only undefeated, but with the best record of any juvenile racer since 1907, Colfn’s time, He has won eleven straight races and a grand total of $115,285.87 in money. Only two other horses before him, Domino in 1893, and the same Colin, ever escaped de- feat in their twolyear-old season. Domino won nine events and a total of $170,000, and Colin's twelve straight netted his owner, the late James R. Keene, $131,000. Man o' War won nine starts and finished second once, hig only defeat being accomplished by H. P. Whitney's Upset in the Sanford Memorial in 1919. A bad start beat him that day. Morvich jumped from the obscurity of a selling stake at Jamaica into the championship class, Unheralded on and a 50 to 1 shot, he went through the season like a giant among pygmies. Had his future been gauged with the proper degree of confidence by his Adolph Spreckels of Cali fornia, his purse winnings might have been considerably larger. Apparently he was so little thought of previous to his appearance at| Jamaica that his name was omitted | from all the summer juvenile stakes of value. He might have won them | all. As it was, not until he fell into the hands of Maxey Hirsch for a paltry $5,000, after his first start, was he named for the rich stakes at Sara- toga. These swelled his earnings. Had he been in the Futurity he almost certainly would have taken down the $39,700 which went to Whitney’e Bunting, and might in other stakes, had he been eligible, beaten Domli- no's unsurpassed record of winning 890. COMPARED TO MAN O’ WAR. In enthusing over the great per- formance of the present champion offe's thoughts unconsciously go bacit io that other great thoroughbred of modern times, Man O' War. A super hovse if ever there was one, despitn ire unfortunate single blot on his two-year-old record. How wouid Accomplishments Ranked With | Morvich with . him? On might just as well ask how Dempsey might have fared with Fitesimmons Jeffries in ring battles. An answe* would be forthcoming, but at best if | Would be only an opinton. If we fee’, that Man O' War as a two-yearold” vas a better horse than Morvich, that wouldn't make it so, even though we might argue that Man O° War beac better colts and fillies in his yea~ There 1s no sensible way of making the compartson. But Man O’ War oontmued hts won- | derful career as a three-year-ol, hin record of accomplishment excelling that of his previous season. He no: only beat all his opponents ‘but he did it with such ridiculous eee. Only once was he put to anything Itke a test. That was when he met John P. Grier in a mile and an eighth race at Aqueduct. He was extended then, but jit was the champion's first race in nearly ® month, and in the opinion ef his trainer, Louis Ieustel, be was tightened up as he might have been. The crowning achievement of Man |O' Wars three-year-old career was his defeat of Sir Barton in the fa- mous $76,000 match race in Canada. Beating so good an older horse as Sir Barton put the final seal of great~ ness on him, AS A THREE-YEAR-OLD PRO® PEROT. Morviech is likely to continue spring as a three-year-old where |left off. Thie year, beating his two- year-old rivals so majestically, he should, in the matural course ef events, repeat when all are a year { older, but it isn't a certainty that he will do so. Horses, well beaten ae two-year-olds, often reach champton. ship heights as three-year-olds, Roee- jben did among the sprinters, and | Roamer, ordinary in his first racing year, became a wonder horse ths next. j antel, which fintshed third to Mor- vich ‘in Saturday's $50,000 Futurity at Pimlico, is on record already es saying that Runantel will beat the two-year-old champion next year. We'll see. Meanwhile, however, the | palm of greatness must be accorded to Morvich. His rivals may have been below the average of other sea- sons, very probably were, but that can't be charged against him. He might have furnished the same gtor- jous chapter to racing’s history, no | matter what the conditions He's | great hi the king of his time WILLIE KELLY CAPTURES W. C. POERTNER TROPHY. Willie Kelly, Knights of St. Anthony distance runner, captured the William C. Poertner Trophy, offered by the Vice President of the New York A. C. for the athlete finishing with the lowest score in a sertes of four races conducted under ices of the Mercury Foot Club. ured his victory yesterday he raced home in second position final race of the series at Trav- ers. island. —___>__—_ Jimmy Amato Beats Flynn Again BOSTON, Nov. 7.—Jimmy Amato, the sensational welterweight from the east the Arena A. C. by a score of 6 goals to rand, making his noe oming to t Stat Joe Moore Hasy Winner ef MYiq | Skating Race. | Joe Moore, representing the %8iut | Street Rink, eastly won the Class A one mile handtoap skating race at the Ice- land Rink yesterday afternoon. Start ing from scratch, Moare quickly reached the handicap skaters, and Hes at was nearly a lap in front af _ Goid- berg, unattached. The all- rth Amboy would like to play New | is team last year won twenty out twenty-three games. Manager, H | Address J. G., care of | abre, Todd & Co., No. 186 Griffith Five of Brooklyn, 115 unds, Manager, Vincent Galla, No. | Union Avenue, Brooklyn. Monrose Club of Passaia, for thres| are county junior champions. Home | St Augustine Casey's Big Five, a/ November. ‘This team the New York Separates , in and Hart. Telephone Melrose | between § and 5 P, M,, Timothy | v. Foley, manager. | Leading teams of Brooklyn, Jersey Day. Five ussel!, Marroney, Day, Communicate , No, 266 Dean »ponent in the De Pan noblock, Driscoll, ith George Thomas, Criole Five, averaging 110 pounds, Address W. 8. Clos, No. 41/ rinkerhoff Street, Jersey City, striped madras. PARIS, Nov. 7.—M. Borotra yesterday on the French covered court sree oe Beate Phila- games were staged at Prospect Hall|™. ¥. Victory for Brooklyn F. C. before big crowds. 38th Street ‘The Brooklyn Football Club, by de- New York triumphed over Philadel- . feating the Steinway F. C. eloven by} DOUBLE WIN FOR BROOKLYN. 11070, the soccer gridiron yesterday The Man’s Shop the score of 3 goals to 1 at the Ridge-| ‘The Brooklyn Basketball team ac-| when the New York F, C. defeated the Tenth Floor wood Baseball Grounds, yesterday, | counted for tts seventh straight vic- Falrhit B,C, at the New York Oval by | q |placed two more points to its er ait fn tory by taking both ends of a doubl c to 1 in the second rou jxbe New York State Football I Cameron and Jackiin scored the header in Arcadia Hall. for the winning team. In the after- {j riwinds wens moon the Brooklyn ‘ ational Challen, ne of ‘the United Fiates Football ka euciation. Real English value. Siz FIFTH AVENUE Specialists in Chauffeur Livery A Special Selling of Shirts and Wool Half Hose A joint celebration of values specially planned for Election These shirts and wool half hose are members of our regular stock and embody excellent materials—and the con- cession in price in each instance is substantial. Shirts at $2.65 Custom-made distinction is incor porated in these shirts—and there is a wide range of new patterns, in fine woven madras, woven zephyr | cloth, silk striped and white self Half Hose at $1.35 Defiance of cold weather is inherent in these imported wool half hose. ribbed, heavy weight and durable—in heather mixtures of different shades. An exceptional s—10, 10% and 11. Lord & Taylor 39th Street Express Elevators Without Stop Joseph Widener, owner of Run ~

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