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THE NING WORLD WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1922. S 2 ALE ELEVEN EXPECTED TO BEAT ARMY TEAM ON SATURDAY a aonnneneee —oe THEBIUE'S GREATER SPE. RYAL_SAPTANS_AND_staRS FoR vaLtan SHOULD BEAT WEST PONT. gs Poe Ws SCC MST oaneNee oN Eighty Thousand People to See Game in New Haven Bowl Sat- urday for Which Old Eli Will Present Stronger Front Than They Did in lowa Battle Because of Return of Jordan to the Backfield. MY BATTLE REDUCED. WASTES FILM MAGNATES CARVE SURPLUS ROLLS F FROM OVERHEAD EXPENSE—LUXURY ij HORS DE COMBAT IN HOLLYWOOD— THRIFT IS CZAR OF FILM BIZ. By Neal R. O'Hara, } (Copyright. 1922 (New York Evening World), by Press Publishing Co.) By p:oress of filing xeroga off press agents’ typewriters, expease has been slashed to peek-a-boo pattern In moving picture trade. Handsome Alecks that used to. vank five thou @ week are combing thelr own hair. Directors snatched half « million per fillum are 2ow using four bags for pay nvelopes. Magnates that raced to Carlsbad for six months of baths are bbing ‘em in Saturday night tubs to-day, Customers that paid fitty-five for seats are «til! paying fifty-five cents Movies are simmering down to re- & fined aconomy, No more tragic ac- torettes at $7,000 a week when glycer- ine retails at two bits a pint. No more million-dollar smiles when fal- setta teeth coat only sixty a pair. Day has skimmed past when pie-throwing comedian snap® salary that looks like distance to moon, And sun has don fadeout on day when juvenile cake | eaters collect more dough than escap- ing bank teller. ‘Too many chefs curdled the con- somme. When magnates paddicd be- yond necks in promissory notes, Wall Street tossed gold inlaid life preserver. But with a string on !t. Mags had option of taking it or letting it alone. But Wall Street loan sharks were be- Firty.three years ago, as twixt deep blue sea and sheriffs on today, ‘Stuttgarter” Underwear seashore. So magnates were rescued by lifeguards from Broad and Wall. | was selected by discriminating But they have been all wt from that | men as a protection to health a East is Fast. and Waste is Waste.|and comfortable provision So hank guys performed double oper- weath ation on both. Now flime are tring | *eainst chilly 3} twirled off tn Mlywood at minimum WT cost to all peeducers and maximum | We are naturally proud that of agony to gelutine stars. Zeroes in| they first chose “ Stuttgarter” $1,000,000 salaries are demountable His, Leading roles are spare parts. | since it has always been de- Magnates have hayled down >ver- | pendable underwear, sold at head on reels to match price of cellu- By William Abbott. HE West Point-Yale game in the Bow! Saturday will nave a pic- ih turesque setting of marching cadet , bands, hundreds of army offi- cers and the color of nearly 80,000 spectators. The battle itself Should come up to its stage arrangenients, Yale won from the soldiers it year 14 to 7 after the Cadets made a late desperate rally and threat- ened to put the Bulldog to rout with long forward passes. Yale was much relieved when the final whistle sounded Saturiay's game ought to be highly Spectacular, Yale will be a far differ-] Blue opponents tn weight and expert- ent combination from the team that] ence. Storch and White, West fost to Iowa two weeks ago. The} Point's ends, should just about hold Bulldog will be able to give a strong| thelr own with Eddy and Hutman, punch with Capt. Jordan in his ola] N20, Undonbtedly will start the game f for the Bulldog. Place in the backfield. Without Jor- | °F. ara Me @an and O'llara the Blue. team|,2" Mallory the Blue also will have meitist: town wae tke the strongest defensive back on the n auto- 2, field. Mallory plays No Y Mobile with several cylinders missing.|6¢ the Yale formations and ian ce There wasn't any speed in the team. 9 der taking Neidiinger, playing In a new position! the tine Me leg utes weal sratloce at quarterback, occasionally showed) ig q highly efficient back who re. flashes of speed against the Hawk-|ceives little glory because his main eyos, but the other Yale backs re-| strength is clearing the path for other forted to old-time football. The few] runners. attempts at forward passes were| West Point hae a ca : : ‘s ‘apable bhack*in crude. Twice the passer didn't eve) Smythe, who runs cleverly and han- get the ball away before the West-[adles forward es uccurately. BIL erners stormed through Woods is another who'll likely give It Is our prediction that against the] Yale considerable trouble when. he Padets the Bulldog will be greatly im-| crashes through tackles broved and will look like a new team. It isn't to be expected the Elis willl O’HEARN NOT LIKELY ington Swift has fired sixteen seam- stresses that were sewing monograms on silk underwear When the L trains ran by Steam, JORDAN Yet-E CAPTAIN ; ; CRUICKSHANK YALE'S AANT GUARD nst West Point this cylinder. Movie dukes are honing t k 1 lold collars the lowest price consistent win by a big sec “ew elevens ever id "aetes! Fa | defeat the future Generate oy & top TO PLAY ON SATURDAY with quality. | heavy score. But barring fatal upsets One-piece dotlien on those bathing s . Yale should come through success NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct —Yale beauts have been knocked off 50 per | Form fitting union suits and shirts and fully Saturday on the road for Prince-| followers were disappointed to learn i cent. Two-gun Western heroes are | drawers in cotton, cotton and wool and 5 ton and Harvard that Charlie O'tleurn will probably be now pumping lead from only one! 199% guaranteed pure wool - at the | Both Yale and West Point made al unable to play a tacit agreement not to make spe day after the encouraging reports fouble blade axe to slash expense | Set retailers preparations for their struggle in the ave been current during the past week. By PERCY D Urey RLS oe right down to hones: ca taers is H.LOEB&CO, Inc. owl. Although O'Hearn has been [n uniform A plenty bone around Hollywood, hiding } The Army, like Yale, will not risk] fr the last few days and has been NINE YEARS COACH AT H ehcAe) behind ambush of talcum powder, “Max Kuhn, Pres. hnnecessary chances getting ready for] Wovkine {wiih the punters and drop- grease paint and phoney marcel curls, 456-460 FouRTH Avt. it, feature games with the Navy Code fonek aie ot ihe sent inners Ferdinand Mushie has mortgaged New York City There's not much difference In the is not quite in shape, There is a Imerits of the rival elevens Saturday | smail chance that he will be used late The Army line is composed of vet-]in the Kame but the possibility te quite erans and will slightly surpass their! remote. Columbia Students Not Thrilled By Football Score Reversal— eee 4 Victory Still Claimed by the [ASCENSION ACES | N. Y. U. Officials—‘Out- RANK WITH BEST fought Them,” Says Thorp, IN BASKETBALL IN EIGHTH ARTICLE OF A SERIES FAMOUS FOOTBALL AUTHORITY WRITES ON THE PRINCIPLES OF DEFENSIVE LINE PLAY IN CONTENDING AGAINST A GRUELLING AT- TACK. private lake In Mushie back yard. Oliver Goo has auctioned off orange- wood forest for keeping his nails in 7 trim,, Delacey Tweetle has let option sxpire on gold mine for furnishing nderwear cuff Inks six times a day, And Lush ERS Tan. . . ‘ On plunges und slants directed inside of tackle there results a mighty Ch enact i onflict between opposing linemen. Of course the brunt of the battle comes n the two defense men, between whom the play ts aimed, But players re- n, by w vicious charge und & side ‘lunge, oved evey two “holes F , I N , f often tackle the runner before he reaches the line, Conversely the offense amous Uriote tune o intist alwaya lend lateral support even to plays of a plunging nature. . The cardinal principles of defensive line play in contending against a grueling attack to ¥ t the offensive charge in a position strong 1894-95-96 Meet Again)» «© eS aw Referee Morice’s reversal of decision| Ascension basketball teams are ve {coming to the front this season just last Saturday's game, which gi he victory to Columbia University |®% they did last y over N.Y. U. by the score of 6 to| Parish House boasts of four formi- @ was the topic of conv le quintets, the Ascension Aces, Right at both training camps. The} @vywelghts; the Pirates, lght- @eneral sentiment among Columbia weights, and the Ascension Lassies, students was not one of eo a girls’ team, nough to prevent being pushed back and at the same time to diagnose the “ur. The Ascension play quickly and accurately enough to reach the “core” of the play, 1. ¢, ag sa bY McGraw Jennings. Kelly, | Player to discover a certain weakn runne , : , 11a a game and work all morning for 5 ely diMeult for the a Brodie, Robinson and Others] the next week to overcome it. T wag] Tt 18 extremely dimeult fo! weak on a ball on my left side for]erage spectator to see and understand | of tactics may be ployed from the of Old Club Hold Reunion. Jawuite. The gang went ont with maine fine points « » line play, ;OPER formation which stretches th ation last ‘ defense in width and depth, yet by ation 0 every morning and batted me con- wu to C y a it would + y dimen’ ine le: poaitior ; ot the decision The Aces, under the management tinually until T had ov me ite Teva] AT } a ” inv Sufice tt to it a AS LEHETRIAe, tNe aaron es “We re were beaten and out- Dunn since thelr organization, By Bozeman Bulger. seen McGr Ww wei ” ous Bue ae i ai } ; Paerestor are ee eae J | . ki a ve bee 1 - | Down in Baltimore yesterday there| come some little fault that he had dis- [state that goer lay i ie ; layed whether we got the re 8 n playing the game for two was)rouch ‘baseball’ talk going on. covered in iimself at third base. importance and that granted ap) The duties and theories of defensive ” years and have g@ined considerable gong E backfield pla » sO numerous and elon or not," sud Robert Watt.) catige, enough, in fact °| There was talk of the decadence of| They di tell Us to go out for ray Ke y F rank In all other essential Graduate Manager of Athletics.|them along with the best in the met- “After we expected to win by a targe|ropolitan district. Last season the seore the fact that we won because|Aces held a record of fourteen games ball bounced into a grand-stand 1@{'" "2d three lost, an average of 2 Bune sre an) (823. So far this year they have won six games and lost one, which makes At N. Y. U. officials would not|/their average .857 for the the sncrifiee hit, of the bunt, of the|morning pract They didn't ° omplex, especially wrainst forward pitekrauts ae the hit and run, There|to. We went out because we wanted | Slight superiority in t re depart) passes, that the author feels the was talk of ballplayers no longer tak-| to have the best base team in the|m is sufficient to bring victory In| reader san best re to the deserip- ing their profession seriously. There] World and because each of us wanted! the great majority of cases Hons with seterpnos to the diagrams was talk that baseball runs more to|to be the best in his line. It isn’t! When opposed to an open or kick| The diagrams show the chief forma- money than to the fine points of the| often that we see ballplayers doing! formation the defensive line are still | Hons for a Sere against Close game. Yes, there was a whole lot of|that to-day. The fact that members| called upon to meet ise running | OPEN, loose and wide formations, Their Number the same as losing."’ ° resel f ae henG : F | (Copyright, 1922, by the Marshall Jones Co.) vf L Resi int tnorermratiet etwas prevent atk sich other shows a lack of thet feel oes ane ee er mack: | (The ninth Haughton article will ap 8 Legion . % The old Orioles were having a re- 4 ows a lac n @l-lsumed a position ten yards to 4 Morice’s decision altered the vietory.| , TO date the echedule of the Aces in-| union, “McGraw was there. So waa ‘9K We had. This ts going to be alyyom thie” position he threatens] pear on these pages Saturday.) . They contended that if the correction | Ides such opponents as the Franklin! Hanion, Jennings, Kelley, McMahon, |8teat reunton.”* sweeps so seriously that both ends —Men who favor conservatism—and manner of play would have been|A; © New York Five, Italian C. C.,! Robinson and Clarke. On that famous team of Orto Kle are compelled to move out- = for them we are featuring a pure worsted, semi-rough finish sack suit in two pleasing mixture variations. Dark and light tones in blended black and white. Supreme value at..........$50 West End Post, Starling Greys and Mount Vernon Big Five. Walter Garland, the star forward of the Ascension Aces, is largely re- In A Written statement. sent our{SPonsible for the success of the team. from Philadelphia, Morice announcea| @#"!and hus been playing for fifteen that he had reversed his ruling on}Ye@rs with the best teams in and the play which was scored us a touch. |®20ut New York. As manager of the changed, The students and coaches still claim they won on the grounds that a referee's decision cannot be altered after a game The mere presence of these old sur-| UAbeaten for many years—were Rot vivors of the famous Baltimore team|!P80n. catcher; Doyle, 1b; Reitz, 2b; urthermore, the backtleld needs of 1894-95-96 is rather positive proof |Jenmings, es; McGraw, 3b; Kelley, | assistance to ‘cope with a probable that the Orioles made up the greatest | Brodie, Keeler. o.f.; McMahon, Vond.} «so or forward pass, so the centre team that baseball ever has known. | Corbett, pitche! . often goes to their ald, thu You say not? Well—one moment— pense yn two have gone to the greatl ine spaces between the van have you ever heard of any other] b*vond, but the rest ure all in Baltl-| yen much wider than when lined w More thrashing over old times. Ned formation. Hence eat club | > ve against a close formatlo nee great club having a reunion? Haveliy tion is managin He's a a down for N. Y. U. in the first period] Yonkers Chippawas, ha became|you heard of the Glants of 1905, or]ine party. Ned is rich ‘@NBINF}each lineman has to cover more Other sack suits down to $38 and up to $80. and officially declared it a xafety,|*nown to fans for his speed and ag-|the Cubs of 1908, or the Athletics of rie nak Bed A Ba ow . ground laterally than againet a close making the final score 6 to 2 in favor) STessiveness on the court several years] 1912 having a reunion? Gae iene 4 a Tete len tam cormation of Columbia instead of 7 to 6 in favor}##0. With the Knights of St. An-| You have not. I asked Mathewson|@ o it into Jett feld-1 tn 1914, during the Kame inst Being left-handed, he was a natural Lakewioe som pete outfie of everythin of N.Y. U, thony, last year; Garland occupied ajthe other day if he knew what had} signe eid hitter, In the fall he ana] Vale the Harvard team, with w Weker men and boye wear ‘inter The disputed play occurred not long|POSition of one of the best forwards | become of Bowerman, of Mertes, of] Jennings went to St. Bonaventura's| i Position for ‘op kick, executed after the beginning of tpe gume,|in the Metropolitan League, Atevery|Dahlen, of others, He couldn't re- ‘ ‘ 2S) seven consecutive pluys, all of which Coll ate member. I usked Arthur Devlin the pp 8s, 0 PICK, UP same thing. He could not recall. During the World's Series I asked thetr studies. chapel, with Its stained glass windows, was in right field. Me- Graw, practising baseball, drove tw) Harry Davia if he knew what had be- | iiners through these windows, It cost come of Sox Seybold, of Topsy Hart-| him §5 in addition to a severe repri- ; sel, of Ira Thomas. He hadn't heard.| mand. He was forced to shift his po- We want to have a hand Frank Chance was here at the same|sition and hit tn left or be diegraced | Gestion taleht well be ralved as Oy, ' time. He could not recall the where-| The next season at Baltitnore he was|¥!¥ the offens r in shoeing your boy: abouts of but one of the old Cubs.| one of the cleverest left field hitters|9¥me an op That's why we're selling ‘With the ball inside her ten-yard line Columbia decided to punt, and Ren|outscored Holmes consistantly. Boderick w nt back. Berkwit, the] The Mystics, one of the first teams N. Y. U, tackle, broke through unsidered for the new Catholic cleanly, blocke! the ball with his|League tn this clty are expected to broud cliest, und it rolled back of the]add to the prestige of the Parish Boal line. It bounded into the West | House stand ar eral roote eting with the Oriental Celtics, he were directed. ut points which were successively expos’ y diffe members of the Yale team in t r anxiety to prevent the drop which was never pli “Under = these cir ROKAW BROTHERS Broapway AT Forry-‘SECOND STREET 4 y thelr good playing this sea- the spectators, and]son. ‘The Lassies and the Ptrates leaning forward over|have not, as season, ave as yet, begun the season, he edge, knocked the bal! back onto] but will do so soon. Tinker, Schulte, Sheckard, Steinfeldt the team—for a left hander In answer: Althoug _ r C : cinder path below. Tooroc of N. Y. siete ati of themitad gone intove cloud, | More of thoes reuntons erouid be e[Micker'a position a one entire line of our boys , fell on the spheroid, and Referee h gs riol me . é ing of the defensive line, 40 that they] oc x i Cr BF) On ane spheroids, aud Reteres| LANDIS HAS MAILED cpu Sie Baltimore Oriaiee, tar cider | Reo thing tar padebal DIS tetter poalt 85 Percenter shoes for $5 a Loge! followers of football were LAST OF CHECKS was, What's more, they sent out a|MRS. DU BOIS WINNER ics sen. cobs k pair. stirréd but not surprised by Refere seria yet the removal! of say of fants Mosralk veversal The conolen ee FOR WORLD SERIES) 000 Fiige Landis decided that the| IN ‘MET’ GOLF TOURNEY | tion robs tho ots __ Just our way of acquaint tha! unless there were certain com- $120,000 from the tled game waa to <i who, tn a clos tor ing more New’ Yorkers with Plications which had not appeured in], CHICAGO, Oct, 28.—The last of the Mre. I. E. Du Bois of Englewood, | importance go to disabled soldiers and other char-| with an £8, won the low «ross prize in ities Joe Kelley rose right up in com-]@ one-day tournament of the Women's| THE OEFENSE MUST pany and declared himself, repolitan Golf Association yesterday THE TACTICS. “Why not send a bit of it to Willie] at the Paumonok f Club Mra. Wal- Keeler over in Brooklyn, wasting away | ter Perry id was low net with the “lasting satisfaction” you You can buy your newor buy at the “four corners’ used BUICK outright or turn your present car in 1 hag | 2922 World's Series checks to bal! players ision | those, Whose clubs finished in third Mort lace fn the American and National Morice) Leagues, amounting to $24,730.9' let 48 SOON AS aHY-| been matled from the offi accounts of the play the offi Ro ground to stand on in his de Judging from his statemen discovered that body elms, Tis pubite admin.ion of [Eandiay Brseball: Commissloner from heart disease?” Ne asked, & card of 85, and Mrs mitlor re es egg op prices a4 well as as part payment when error and his act of reversal were ap-| The Detroft club was given one cent] ‘yes,"" agreed McGraw and Jen-| Brown © Hills was second r ‘ uali’ in everything men ; plauded by men neutral in the mutter} more than the amount divided between rice ay ny Hott a with 12-16 ve BER Dee fae b fa Gi y . you deal with the One result of the mix-up will be to|the two National League clubs. The] ily a, oe teen. aR a 1 value ys wear give Columbia the lead again in t mae Pesta s 300.49, which W9] oa maraderie of a group of great play- RUN OFF DEAD HEAT i Hue field (thone | ,,0Rteutered Trade we anon wMeh annual series with the Viol twenty-one players receiving $516.33) re that made baseball what it Is to- AT LATONIA TRACK Seg sx. formaliani teu Cancaae chau ice ee ane eluding the S. A. T. C. game of 1918.) each and three players, Fothergill, Holl-|day. The Orioles founded club esprit Taekaentncios bikolauenis tt @ach team has won three contests up|ing snd Moore, recelving one cent less.Jand morale in baseball, gave the game| LATONIA, Ky,, Oct. 26.—Fant Ghent tomake' lino plays Rooers Peet Company to Saturday The St. Louls Nationals, who wereJall the sportsmanship that it keeps |and Sway ran dead heat (n the last py ae as iii Stes MOTOR SUPPLY CQ - Bo far us Tom Thorp, coach of the 'awarded $6,182.74, divided it into twenty-lPhose Orlolen were not commervial tr PACA Bee tala . Broadway Herald Sq, & N. Y. U. eleven is concerned. the, four full shares, twenty-three "sl phey were a great hall club and purse UrEnee ‘ . . * &~ at Lath St. “Four at 35th Se, Authorized Buick, SUPPLY CQ Bame was played wind finished jast {8nd Joe Sugden, the veteran ‘lthough thelr activities in life are wi inar of eee ewe ' : enjant ; portend vs Set CURE Lae ae Setween Players. Hottomiy,| 1¥ diveraified now they a Nasr zulned,. éy do often’ ant mess” = Fifth Ave, 239 West 58th Street, New York or yed them in their own buck- nig n we ball club to each othe: “In those days,"’ said Hughey Jen- ings, ‘it was not uncommon for a Blades and MeCuray, who were given yard, and we don’t haye to out-talk|sii0 each, "4 MA : at 41st St, ons: h, and Sell, « pitcher, pe said Thorp, who received $92.76, ( at Broadway ate ih bce tn