Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 20, 1916, Night Extra, Page 14, Image 14

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EVENING LEDGBB-PHtLADBLPHIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 191G
HARVARD SAVES BEST MEN AS YALE USES REGULARS BROWN WINS, BUT SPECTATORS Lot
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HARVARD'S FIRST TEAM WOULD
HAVE SUFFERED SAME FATE AS
,. CUBS HAD IT PLAYED BROWN
Providence Eleven Outclassed Crimson, But
Haughton Still Has Excuse; Princeton's Mis
erable Showing Against Yale Is a Mystery
T)ERCr HAUGHTON Old not tnnko much of i lilt with tho football public cs-
pednlly tho lloston contingent when ho titcil his substitute against llrown
lattt Saturday. Tho 30,000 poMoni who paid ro.tl money to hco n rent football
same folt ns though they hnd been "Bold-hrlrkcd" when they jinzed upon tho
futile efforts of tho second-string iilsiyera to stop the powerful, bewlldcrltiR attack
of tho men from Brown, They want to tliu nnmo bcllovliiK that Harvard would
not dnro to take a chance on losing tho battle with substitute when 'tho honor of
Harvard was at Make. The scoroi published ut the cloio of thn season wilt not
distinguish between first and (second tenmn. Drown will ho credited with n vlctoiy
tho first wlnco tho colleei h:ii been playlim and tho prrsllRc of the Crimson
Will receive another blow the second thin year. In Ju.itlco to tho Harvard man
agement, however, It must bo atatnd that It warned tho public on Thursday that
tho first team would not oppojn thn plovers from I'lovldenre, mid holdori of sen
son tlckcts.who folt that thoy weto being Imposed upon could f?ct part of their
money back. Hut to orfaot this, HprrIo llrown, defensive conch and chief ueout,
aald In an nrtlclo under lili own HlKtiutiiro that Urown mndo no many mistakes In
the Yalo gitino that tho Crimson necoud team would havo llttlo dllllculty In scoring
a victory, As It turned out. Harvard did not have one chanco In n hundred to
tako tho game, and nil of tho.su picsent realized It after tho tlrst few minutes of
play.
Was It Strategy or Poor Sportsmanship?
PBIUIAl'8 Haughton pullc 1 n brilliant piece of atrntCBy on Saturday when ho
held out nine of his first-strlm; men to keep them In nlinpo for tho Yalo Bme,
but there are many who bellcvo his act did not savor of Rood Hportsmanshlp.
Brown was known to havo n i;ood team ono of the best In tho country n team
Which had outclassed tho Uluo a week before. Hence a victory over tho Bruno
nlans would menu much to Harvard, provided that Harvard would tako a chanco.
Yalo used her first-string men uf.atnst the soma team, so why shouldn't Hnughton
do tho samo? Harvard n action bears nut tho belief that n small college, no mutter
how strong the cloven may be, will not bo iccognlzcd by tho once
powerful members of tho select clrclo In eastern football. It showed plainly that
the Crimson did not enro to be annoyed by any minor college thorns when prepa
N rations were being made for tho "bin" game on tho following Saturday. But what
la a "big- gamo" nowndayo? A team that trounced Yalo and all of Its other oppo
nents surely Is worthy of consideration. ' "
Harvard Has the Advantage Year After Year
HARVAHD always has tho bettor tit It In tho final gamc-i of tho season. Ac
cording to tho schedule, there Is u week's rest between tho Princeton and
Yalo games and tho Crlmron takes advantage of It. Princeton has two hard
fames In a row and Yalo usunlly has three. No effoit Is made by cither of theso
teams to save Its best men, as thoy are out to win football games to provo that
their elevens aro the best, and not drop everything to triumph In ono particular
contest. Yalo used her patched-up varsity against llrown and enmo back tho next
weak with her best mon against tho Tigers. Princeton, of courso, put her strong
at llno-up-ln tho field against tho Crimson nnd lopentcd agntnst Ynlo. With theso
facts staring us In tho face it seemn only fair that Harvard should tuko u chunco
occasionally Instead of playing It safe, or change tho schedule to glvo tho other
tcama a. chanco to dorlvu hoiiio benotlt from tho week's rest. However, With tho
ma)lcr colleges constantly forging to tho front with first-class teams each year.
It will not bo long before tho "big three" will play their "big" games only among
themselves.
All Credit Should Go to Brown for Victory
BUOWN feels proud over tho victory, but fears the team will not be given nil
of tho credit thn't Is due. Tho Impression that "Harvard handed thorn tho
Kama" tnkes tho edge off tho wonderful accomplishment, regardless of tho fact
that the first-string men on the Crimson sound would havo suffered tho samo fate.
Tho Brunonlnns havo dono wonderful work this year, tho team Is well coached,
can play high-class football and thu plnycrs are acquainted with all of tho Intri
cate points of tho gamo. Coach Iloblusou has dono wonderful work and should
repeat next year, an only two regulars nnd 11 vo In the entire sipmd will bo missing.
Pollard, however. Is the star of tho eleven. This dusky Hash Is n sophomore, nnd
his work thus far has stood nut more prominently than that of any other man in
football today. In theso columns lust week, through an error, it was stated that ho
was six feet tnll and well built. 1'ollnril Is only live feet six Inches tall and weighs
but 1C4 pounds. Ho Is very slight and looks n pigmy among tho other players. Ho
hails from Chicago, and Is exceedingly dark. Tho other bucks, Purdy, ."email nnd
Hlllhouse, also aro very good, and It Is tholr lnterfctenca nnd all-around piny that
makes Pollard's long runs possible In Saturday's gamo Pollard was roughed con
siderably nnd tho olllclals warned tho Harvard players tlmo and again to be mora
gentle. Ono penalty was indicted for unnecessary roughness, nnd when tho col
ored wonder loft tho Held In tho last period tho spectators on both sides of tho
field arose and cheered him to tho echo.
Princeton Plays According to Form and Yale Wins
ALIBIS for Princeton's tcrrlblo showing against Ynlo nro missing from tho pic
XJLture. It's Just as easy to llnd them as It Is to pick out Ueimiin soldiers In tho
cafes In London or Put Is, All that can bo said Is that tho bowlldcren, loose-playing",
sluggish Tiger mot tho erratic but keonly alert Bulldog and Insisted on finish
ing' second. Kvery mlstuko on tho calendar was perpetrated, and when tho old
tandbya Wer usod up Princeton dug up somo brand-new "boners" which wero
exposed before the 42,000 spectators. Blunders of tho head nnd tho hands and tho
feet followed with nmazlng frequency, hut always when thoy did tho most harm.
Ah ono expert described It, "It wus tho poorest played football gamo ovor put on by
teams of the first rank." However, crudo as tho Blue attack appeared to be, tho
alortness, confidence and courugo of tho Ynlo players, combined with tradition nnd
sentiment, triumphed ovor u theoretically superior team with an utter lock of
confidence. Tho psychological odds woro against Princeton from tho start, and,
to put It zoologically, tho Tiger wont Into tho gnmo with his tall between his legs.
Showing of Tigers in Final Games Is Mystery
DESPITE tho brilliant showing of Princeton football teams In the early games,
something always goes wrong at tho end of tho season. Last year the eloven
was hailed as ono of tho host that over represented the Orango nnd Black, was
the .favorite In both big games, but tho team didn't come through. It was the
aame this year, and now It Is rumored that a now head coach may be seen In
Tlgertown next fall. Speedy Bush has provod that he Is a good coach, knows lots
of football and has tho ability to teach It, but his teams seem to lack the fighting
spirit, aggressiveness and confldenco that characterized Prlncoton teams In the
post Ho has lost all four big games nnd had narrow escapes In many otnera.
The material this year was better than any In tho East, as ho had experienced
players, twelve of whom will graduato In June. This means that an entirely new
eleven must be constructed In 1017, und If voteran teams wero failures, what will
happen to a bunch of greon players? Whllo this cannot bo verified, wo have hoard
that Big BUI Edwards or Bill Iloper will bo asked to como back to Prlncoton next
fall to assist or take entlro qharge of the team.
Ignorance of the Rules Caused First Score
piUNCETON'8 champion "boner" was pullod at tho beginning of tho second
half, when Yalo kicked off. Now on a klckoff tho only ones who are not on
lde are tho couches, substitutes and spectators, Yet tho Tigers allowed the ball
to bound along, llttlo reallnlng that It was anybody's bull until .Moseley kicked up
the oval on the 20-yard line. The mlstako was Inexcusable, as It paved the way
for the first score of the gnme and virtually caused the defeat. However, the
(lory must not be taken from Yalo lccause of Princeton's errors. Tad Jones
performed a miracle with his patched-up eleven and deserves many bouquets for
his work. At the lost m'nuto Smith, tho rogular quarterback, was sent to the
hospital, and this, coming on top of tho already long list of cripples, was enough
to demoralize any team. But tho men want In and fought harder than ever before,
showing that "a team that won't bo beaten can't be beaten." Yale men now are'
looking toward th Harvard game with more confidence, and all are .hoping that
this Is the year for the worm to turn.
Folwell Has Redeemed Penn
REGARDLESS of what nuy happen on Thanksgiving Day, the 1916 season at
Pennsylvania, must be considered the most successful slnceJU)07, It also must
be admitted that Penn has mudo greater progress this fall than In fifteen years,
despite the fact that games were lost to Swarthmore and Pitt, and Dartmouth tied
the Rd and Blue. Bob Folwell was not expected to get Ha results ho has obtained
In his first season, and he has exceeded the fondest hopes of those responsible for
his appointment by tying Dartmouth and winning from Michigan, as the Red-and
Blue had not won a big game In three years. ' Next season Folwelfs team will be
seen at Its best. He has been building a system that should get better as years
jrojl by until rule changes again affect the general style of play. System and hustlo
are Folwell's greatest assets. No doubt there are many coaches who know the
game as well. If not better, but he has the happy faculty of Imparting his knowl
edge and lighting Bplrlt to others.
Penn and Berry Will Improve-
PENN played Its best game of the season against Jliohigan, bu,t we still Insist
that the team has not reached itaszenlth yet. A team that has been brought
along' gradually, without thought of the result of Individual games, must g?t
afronger as the season progresses, 'and when pointed for one game, as will be the
case when Cornell la playpd, Penn should be a most powerful eleen, Howard
Berry's wonderful work easily was the feature of the victory over Michigan, and
there U no longer any doubt about his. ability to master the signals or anything
pjse connected with the gridiron game. Berry's work in Penn's three most Im
portant games stamps him as the greatest emergency player in a decade. He
ttubi be at his beet against Cornell, as the three brilliant performances, together
MrtUt the kuowWds) tiwu the team t to b built ahguj, jjlpi, wM give the won,
rtui immck. um ownawm una vnm sJip3 W m&gi li?i5 jto uc&
WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND
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Local Football Standings
of League Championships
VfiMhM.t ttlvh
flrhnol..
. ': Hfttith rhlladflohin Jllfh 2 0
- .r Mm rhllDdtlphl tilth, i
:Ttt- (itrl tilth prhool. . I 8
I (Irrtnnntown tilth Mthoal 0 s
.Soo
.000
I.NTEnfJCHOI.AHTiC
ttAn. I., tia. r.r.
z o I Low
X I O .B0
i Nrhanl. .18 0 .33.1
(Irrtnnntown llilh Hthool 0 O .000
INTKBAt'AIIKVUC!
Wn. I"t.rj
IVnn ('hnrir AriJfmt.i. . . . X n 1,000
I.nUfAnal Atmatmr ....... 1 1 .f00
Frlrnda' ntrl Mrhool, . . . 1 1
(Jrrmantown Acnutmr ,,, 0 z
THIS MF.F.K'H flCIIF.nUi.K
l.TKRACAIKMIO
Frlder
rnn t'hnrtfr t. ttTmnnUiwn Afndemr.
rrtfnnV Central . KpUroiml.
INTF.nsrilOI.ASTIO
Hntnrdnr
Wnt fhllndVlphln lllsh tt Korthrnat.
MOTORCYCLE RACES
ON THANKSGIVING
SOUTH PHILLY SHOULD PLAY
GERMANTOWN POST-SEASON Ml
IN DECIDING RACE FOR (M
Booking of Southwark Eleven foi: One GamelS
Liia.ii wiuw w""vio """6 jy venous
Question for League Title
Jnck Roden Will Stage Several
Events at Point Breeze
Motordrome
HARVARD HAS HAD ELI NUMBER
SINCE P. HAUGHTON TOOK REINS
OF CRIMSON ELEVEN IN 1908
Until Then Yale Usually Was Supreme on Grid
ironFor Last Eight Years Bulldog Has
Been Touchdownless Against John H.
ny GUANTLAND KICE
today. nnyl,,ll"f rca,'"lng the .m count
SpeaMiiR of Coincidences
aim" t)pUr"''i-T.0f ?. tlmolj' coincidence. It may
?ho i:av-vC""C: . "nt.1 '"? - tart yea?
Wn WONDFin If the following verso,
no applicable In 10H ami 19ir will bo
ready for uro next Mondtiy utter tho "inlc
Harvard nffnir:
Tho Ynlo of Other Days
. ,A lu, lI.nd.y.Fean-V. : on the X
lleneatn me ortmnon ..h. .
nimfs began to flv .,
me rfotort to watch, alas, another Bull-
Blood? JTice tho Crimson chargo sweep
mitcrtrd through the hate
Balntcd Dtana-can that be the Yale of
other caisf
Ah-,ha,le, o '" ","lJjL.a,orB''
Ktlnatrick. (Hats ana llrown
WhenCrtta,; flesh wa, BulUo9 meat and
Ttger.aklns were down;
When plav by play toe " ,ho flc,l ""
tlotoii the ;unl-Mi" """'",,,. the Yale
We saw the Blue flag wave above the iale
of other days,
But RhevHn's rctgn has vanished now and
IHnkey's dag It do;
JfcCJuno- nnd Coy no longer flash athwart
the old-time run I
Uncertain, lou nnd out of gear, tho Blue
rush crumbles far, ,....,!,
And low fit dusk the Blue flag furls beneath
a Crimson star.
Ola're down, old Hecate, from on high and
let J. Harvard yell
The Crimson horde has cone to rule across
a Camp-less spell;
The Crimson flag has found Us place, and
through Time's drifting hate
The Blue can only wait to meet the Yale
of Other Bays.
Yale's Harvard Slump
Between tho periods of 1901 nnd 1908, a
matter of six pluylnu years. Harvard failed
to score a point against Yale.
During theso six years Yale ran up 7S
points against Harvard.
From 1901 to 1912, a matter of ten cam
paigns. Harvard fulled to score n touch
down on Yale her total for tho decade
hlng a field goal by Vlo Kennard In 1908.
From 1891 to 1908, a matter of seventeen
years. Harvard beat Yale but twice.
Yalo up to 1912 had beaten Harvard
twenty-ono' times, against five defeats.
No wonder, viewing this past record, that
Harvard 'feels her revenge Isn't nearly com
plete. Yale's slump since those ancient days of
glory has been terrific. For Yalo rcored
her last touchdown against Harvard In
1907. Nine years have passed now since
the.UIue attack crossed the Crimson line, a
touchdownless period for 1-11 almost as long
as Harvard knew before P. D. Haughton
registered at Harvard headquarters.
Haughton's Supremacy
Haughton took charge of narvard foot
ball In 1908. Yale has made eight assaults
upon his' goal line since that date without
crossing the line,
The Harvard defense, since Haughton
arrived nine years ago, has held the Yale
attack to three Held goals and two safeties,
a complete total of 15 points,
Haughton's record against Yale Is five
victories, one defeat, two ties: 110 points
against 15.
Haughton has averaged a trifle over 14
points a season against Yale; Yale has
averaged less than 2 points a season
against Haughton and Harvard. The over
whelming margin nero is easy enougn to
see. It took Haughton four years to get
started four years before his attack was
able to score a touchdown against the
Blue.
But since the last scoreless tie of 1911
the Harvard attack has battered the Yale
defense to a dark blue pulp.
The Forty-Year Celebration
Harvard still needs two more victories
in succession to tie Yale's run from 1901
to 1908, But the Crimson needs a good
many more conquests than two before she
can -even up the entire count, dating back
forty years to )7.
It was just forty years ago that the
two rivals sauntered for the first time into
a football arena, Yale having one goal o
Harvard's two touchdowns, which doesn't
Armv 'v" " loucnuown ngulnst the
ii J,. I,.as, won "lnre tnnn "" since
I.M.I-J . , ,,ut,,ler victories have been
,,??!' ,,y, th. ncl1-Ral route-In the
, l '"; ""?'' t'je fldllful too of Jack Dnl
ton. tlio Nebraska detective.
The Army has hnd the call of tho sea
sons, nnd with i:imcr Ollphant. tho Purduo
Projectile, still opening lire, It Is dllllcult
to seo Juit whero tho Navy expects to break
through this yenr, especially as Elmer the
Ollphant Is rc-cnforccd by n Mr. Vid.il, of
South Da leu m, who l.s said to be another
1'lnier, only u bit moro so.
Motorcycle racing "fans" will have the
Inst opportunity of the season to seo their
fnvnrltn uport on ThnnltBglving Day nfter
nonn. when Jnck lloden, the voteran sport
promoter, will hold n "Sports Carnival" nt
Point Brcczcf Motordrome trnck
Manager Itotlen has nrrnngod a series
of events which will Inst all dny, nnd wind
up with tho motorcycle rnccs In tho nfter
noon. In the morning the Point Brecto
dun Club will offer ensh prises for n num
ber of five-bird matches, open to all. Home
of these will be handicap cAcnts, but the
main ecnt will bo a twctity-flvo bird
sweepstake.
In the afternoon the principal eent
In the motorcycle contests will bo n ten
mllo mntch betweon Daredevil liny Vedllr,
Speed Vnnderbcrry, Billy Armstrong, tho
Flying Wlrard, who holds tho trnck rec
ord of K9 4-5 seconds for tho mile, nnd
Jack Keating, the Western demon, who
innken Ills first appearance here. Besides
thin event there will bo a nftccn-mllo pro
fessional nice, a 61 no-port rnce, nn clght
nillo Point Breeze Sweepstake and a rnco
nt an unknown distance, nnd a ono and
three mllo bicycle race, both hnndlcnps.
Anothpr ovent which Is seldom seen In
this vicinity will bo tho meeting of those
two old rival Irish hurling teams, the
Ktnmctt A. A., nnd tho Cork Hurling Team.
Theso are the two best enmn in the New
York Gncllo Iicnguo, and they will Play
for a pursa of 150 nnd a sldo bet of $100
each.
NAVY TO OMIT NUMBERS
System Finds No Favor With Army, So
Rivals Follow Suit
ANNAPOMS, Md., Nov. 20. Though the
Naval Academy athletic authorities are
willing and even unxloun to have their
football players numbered when thoy meet
tho Military Academy team on the Tolo
Oratinds next Saturday, the plan has been
abandoned becauso those In chargo at West
Point nro not In favor of tho plan.
Two years ago tho numbering of players
was not fnorcil nt either Institution, but
those now In chargo here, Including Lieu
tenant Jonas Ingram, head coach, are thor
oughly In favor of It.
POOlt and nbsenl-mlnded Judgment by
the ichedule committee on tho Inter
scholastic League enmpnlgn may rob South
Philadelphia High School of tho Kills ulm
bet Trophy nnd the 1910 gridiron chnm
plpnshlp. Qermnntown High School, under
dog In the rnce this nenson, nnd, with South
Phlily, maklnc Its debut In the titular tour
ney, was plnccd on nil others but the South
wnrk eleven's schedule.
Centrnl High, Northeast High nnd West
Philadelphia High found dermnntown High
easy game, with tho result that each wan
credited with n Icbruo victory. On the
other hnnd, South Phlily proved the dark
horse of tho race, defeating Central and
West Phlily nndjilnylng a tlo with North
east Now If dermnntown had been op
posed It's dollars to doughnuts that tho
Southwark combination would have Hi third
lctory of the championship campnlgn.
Would Dc Lending
In this event. South Philadelphia would
have been mnklng pnee In tho circuit, lead
ing the .Archives by a full gamo. nnd It
would be necessary for Northenst to defeat
the West Phillies this week In order to even
up tho stnndlng with Coach Johnston's
cloven. 'As tho case Is now, Northeast and
South Phlily aro tlod. two victories each
nnd ono tie. The South Phils havo no moro
league gomes to piny; Northenst hns ono
more. Hint with tho Hpccdboys. A win for
the Archives over West Phil will glvo the
former tho championship,
While this In true, looking over statistics
of tho season's race will show that South
Phlily, llko Northeast, hns not been either
defeated or scored on. Then why should
Conch Frank Johnson's team bo classed
superior to Conch Bonn Johnston's eleven
If Northeast beats West Phlily this week?
Post Season Gnme
To bo fair with South Philadelphia High
It would bo necessary to allow tho South
wnrk tenm play n post-senson game with
Oermantown High. Tho result of a South
Phllly-aormantown contest vlrlunlly would
bo n downtown victory, that's true ; yet this
would bo tho only legitimate means to glvo
South Philadelphia nn even chanco for tho
laurels.
It realty seems ns If nn Ihjustlco Is being
done Conch Johnston and tho downtown
lied nnd Blnclc, Since tho beginning of
South Philadelphia High nthletlc competi
tion this Is tho first nenhon that a winning
footbnll eleven Is representing the school.
From tho outset the showing of South
Phlily hns been llttlo short of sensational
and very surprising. After Frnnkford High
School took a fall out of Control High
School, tho South Phils ambled along nnd
beat Frankford Then to prove that this
victory was no fluke, the downtowners nlso
walloped tho Crimson and Ootd. This was
tho first leaguo conquest of tho season for
Southwark and the initial gridiron victory
ever scored by South Phlily over Central,
Tics Archives
Then Northenst was the party of the sec
ond part. Again Old Man Dopa got a
hefty shaking over tho coals. South Phlily
didn't win; but neither did Northeast. The
result was n- 0-0 tic. While Coach John-
Ry LOUIS II. JAFFE
ston hnd filled his nlv... ,..
and "we'll surelv b, i " r..wK."
It was believed that the ShJiT
stop South Phlily. It irSKytS
mo Hpectinoys were stopped
their first league defeat of th, nJ,
...... """uicaoi, iiea with Sonti,
happens to take a fall out of w3.
VmSI
Tfpfe'
.SMi
out of eMt j
m
this week, wlill. h .;.! "l? US'
the Archives will have aXV.., H'M
tnnn southern by a full game. ki.
cast. """"W
Unfair to Southern
Yet South Phlilv. rnhhii .
miro victory over Uormnntown HiS, w
by nn oversight or nbsent mlndtdso
Northenst will have thres victor IsTtoS
Tm-hnlr-nttu (I.. Awl. I I .V ."M W,tl
.. ................. ...u niuillH Will M t
the championship, However, It mi
fair to South Philadelphia High.
At post-season South Phllly-Otrmirt
High mix would right evervthlr. .ST
the event of Northeast and SoiuvwaSf
victories over West Phlily and (L3I
town. respectively, the ehiaiESSf
would end In a tie. ""'HSaSl
Saturday's Heroes
upturn i.usciBKy nnu Buiwotit .jrrr
itmeiuuM ncio ninsuiar ntroes en till ikS
grldlronB during tho counter footbjlllSS
scholastic Lenguo nttractlons on 8tanW
Whllo Kinsman was crashing thronthfW
tral High's lino for a North Ji.-J?:
setsky was rounding left end for a &3
Phlily touchdown nnd victory owYuS
Phlily. Lono touchdowns decided ti IS
tcr teams. Both goals from touchdsS
Wnrn liiiMiippneiafttl V.
l55-3LliP?iiHflM? 7m3Lt a
t'-tm . iim. - s
-3
t
U?
K-SjJJ
2S9
FEW foods contain mitir
nutrltlvo qualities or in
moro delicious thsn Oysters,
Tho United Htates aaTsmmeaf
Indorses their food value anj
evcrytoilr appreciates their
wonderfully appetising flimr.
Hut don't bur Just Oreters
order and Insist upon xettlcf
RYAN'S
OYSTERS
-14
Phtladelphtans art alreslf c?
consuming 830.000 to 000,003
moro oysiera ovjrr
day than they did
one year a so.
Matthew J.Ryan
WftoteiaJe Onlj
Front nnd Dock Sts.
Lorn. 1U3. Main 1891
ioaa,
m
&HHH
-g mMMfy.vw
czmmmt
ody Has Been Buying Clothes
at
It's been .in open Fall with days of real summer Every day we hoped you men would come to a
,,ul"u yu navc DCen pcrtectly contented to forget realization of the unusual values we were offering at
about the cold months to come. Why should you worry $25, $30 and $35. But you didn't.
""" -""""1-' a Z w.tb penccuy COinioriaDier We've thrown nn nnr linnrU Wo'll fnrrrf w1,nt 1
It knocked the bottom' out' of our business We we paid for these goods and the profits we expected, j
stocked heavily with finest grade of all-wool fabrics. We've set a price so low that it seems like giving them i
Wc contracted for them months" in advance at especially away to any man who really knows what all-wool fab- v
advantageous prices. rics are worth today. , )
Two Windows Full of
$25, $30 and $35 Fabrics
for Suits and
Overcoats
Made-to-
Your-Measure
'&.
A?;
$iu
wm
mm
&v-,
'
'-i
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SUIT OR
OVERCOAT
TO OIWB
IUducj from ISO, I9 and 111.
H49 uur r Big Window
PETER MORAN & CO.
OLYMPIA A. A. " Sfsi
TOMOHT 9A0 BUI
IM
Bdwanls. Mir.
aar
lino , Voun irronafi) Conway
if Tuber ss. Baiiiir VaUer
ia r1her vs. Ousal lUnla
Freddy Welh v. Buck Fleming
Adm. tic, JJal. Ru. SOe A 75. uttam . (1.
Mr, dreen says;
"I buy fabrics with the Idea In
mind always to secure only the
highest-grade woolens and at a
prlco wherawe would conscien
tiously say 'here's thq biggest
value In clothes In this city.' When
I do this I feel that you men must
realize the unusual offers we
make. But you didn't this fall,
and you 'skidded' by our shop
like a tin Liny on a wet pave
ment. But we're coming back at you
In a way that will make you take
notice. 20 for a suit or over
coat made from these wonderful
fabrics Is practically nothing for
them.
Don't take my word for It, Just
come and. take a look t theso
two windows Jammed to the cell
ins with our stupendous sacrifices
to get business, ""fc"
Some fellows said catching up
was the hardest work a man had
to do. We've gpt to catch up
with two months of stagnation In
the clothing business and the
hardest part was In marking
down these J25, $30 and J35 fab
rics to a flat price of only JJ0."
Signed
IvW
An astonishing variety of Winter Serges,
Unfinished Worsteds in browns, greens and
grays. Pencil Stripes in blacks and blues,
Rough and Blind Cheviots, Tweeds and other
new fashionable weaves.
- Order your overcoat from your choice
of these Plaid-back Overcoatings, Rough
.Finished Cloths, Meltons, Vicunas. Any kind
of coat you please from ulster to tight fitting,
pinch-back styles.
Our special overcoat service for the man
in a hurry means delivery in three' days.
TT 1 ! .
every garment maae witn our open-try?onj
under our guarantee of satisfaction to ycai'Sr1
you don't need to take it.
Newcorn & Green
Mr, Newcorn says:
Think of It. men. Here w
are waiting, shears In hand. tb
most superb stock of all-wool j
fabrics on our shelves that ww
ever seen In twenty years In busi
ness, and not enough orders com
ing In to take care of our otw
head. Do you wonder wt
slashed the price?
But If'a not only In fabfk
youro getting ths Yea! ttutt'
It's In the custon? tailoring
well. We're not going to dtvUU
a hair's line from our reiuUr
standard, I supervise our oJj
workrooms. We'ro going to
measure you, draft your pattern!
... a. .,., tmnrl-tnllnr suits ao&ffi
I.UI, Ub ,.. -. . (
overcoats that we can conscien
tiously say aro top-notchers.
Ypu've got to have wlnter-l
plothea. You need a new overt
coat. If you'll take out tip o,g
nt vnn will hUV elotheS lOT H
winter as weH."
Signed!
Open Monday and
Saturday Evenings
1032 Market St. Merchant Tailors
PALACE A. C. Sr$JS.
I KOUNI 19 KQVtfOS
I?alMoore sumI Charley Boyk
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