!wp! " EVENING PUBLIC" LEDGER PHILADELPHIxV, THURSDAY; OCTOBER 2 1910 Sl 1C .MORE TROUBLE AHEAD FOR YALEHAUGHTON EXPECTED TO RETURN TO COACH HARVARD (' "BAUGHTON EXPECTED I ' TO FINISH SEASON ; AS HARVARD COACH, AIN'T IT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEELIN7 FOR FIRST TIME ON -ArsJD YoO DRAG VoUR SELF OUT OF 'BED AMD YbO PAT HER Ori HER SHoOLDEr? ONTl i SHE IS APPARENTLY SMHCM CRIES THE. AT BsBY A WD You SELF OUT AMD GIVE PRY Your- OF SEX3 HER. A ArJD Voo GET 'BftCK INTO "BED AfslD SHE CRIES A-6MrsJ - n ASLEEP Famous Tutor, IV ho Made Gridiron History for Crimson, Will Be Back Shortly, According to Unverified Rumor- -Reggie Brown Also Will Return -y f i Br Ity KOIIKKT V. MAXWKIJ., Com 'iht. tlt'J. Xtj Vnhllc Lrttvrr Co. A UIO, healthy rumor has been Moating nromul for the Inst week rcRnrilliig ""the Ilatvitrri football team and its former com-li, I'prcy 1). llniiglitoii. Ac conling to the uuu'i'llieil dope, Percy P., who annoiineeil his titlrrmeiit from nil gridiron, nctititle.s when lie assumed the presidency of tlio ltoston National IiCague I'aseball Club and changed his mind, only to retire again after lie Stepped out of baseball, will be back on tiie job in a very elioit time and take charge of the Crimson in the lemainiug games. This minor, which lloated down fionj Iloston way, is only n rumor and should be regarded as micIi. Nobody will ullirni or deny it, but where there's nmoke thcte usually is lire, especially In the sporting world. It is said that Head Coach ISob l-'isher and his assistants are getting along well with the team and are well liked by the players, but there is something lacking in the team piny, and Ilaughton is supposed to be the only man who can BCt it light. Harvard alumni in New England are hot on the trail of the former coach, nie willing to meet his teims, and the chances are 1'ercy will be iu harness again within u week or so. Another member of the boaul of strategy also is likely to return to the fold. It Is Itcggie lirown, considered the best football scout in the country, who has been trailing the Yale team iu all of Ijs games for the hist ten jears. Drown has helped considerably in outliuiug the offense and defense to be lived against Old 1311 in the past, but this year was forced to retire because his business took up most of his time. With the Yale game approaching, however, it is said the alumni hae prevailed upon him to lesiimc his old duties with the team. Harvnid has won all of its games thus far, and will liatc an unbroken string of victories when she meets I'lincetou, but the leal strength of the team Btill is to be detei mined. The stiffest opposition was furnished by lirown last Saturday, but the Druuoniaus had a hard battle with Colgate the week before, and several of the best men were out on account of injuries. Doston College was defeated by the score of 17 to 0, but it was early in the season. Dntes and Colby were practice scrimmages. . - 'TIRGIXIA icill be played this Hat unlay, and Sprintfield comes on November I. Those tcumi will not be m strong rn Ihc thud varsity and merely are ttainiiiy bouts. Talcing it all in all, the schidulc hai been so weak that the Harvard followers ac woriying about the bin yumes and wondci ing if the tiam has the goods. It's hard target a football team in shape trillion! the aid of two or thiee stiff battles. Expect Revival of Hidden-Ball Trick I V HAUOHTON comes back, and the sure to go back to the hidden ball trick, which has been so successful sime the fall of 1!)1". This consists of faking the ball to one man and passing it to another, thereby deceiving the opposing linemen nnd making it easier for the runner. Large holes are left open in the line if the play is worked successfully, with the forwards running all over the place looking iu vain for the man with the ball. That is what happened in one game before they got on to it. Ilaughton is given credit for originating this play, but I doubt it he ever Claimed it himself. Ilarturcl never tried it until lltlii, but A. A. Slagg, of Chi cago, used it in 11)01 when the Maroons heat Michigan, He called it the "whoa hack" play and used it up to 11100. Harvard improved upon it, however, by having yeliow leather dis sewed on the upper part of the jerseys, and when the backfiell men ran low at the line with their arms tucked under them, it looked as if tour or fie footballs were in play. That helped the hidden ball trick consideiably, but even that was not new. And thereby hnngs a talc. 'Way back in 11)08, according to Walter Smith, graduate manager at Svradiisc. Carlisle idnjcd Syracuse in J'? n.na eiwiiintni, .,,. I.- u ( 1 1 O iiitli li iu TmllMTiii . t 0 CJIllllhlU(,r LI11JI I'lUU ...... ..... . ...... but to make it more intricate, insisted that his men wear pads over their chests. These pads were wonderful to behold. They were ninde of cheap footballs, cut in half from the long sidi, padded out and laced like u regular pigskin. When the team trotted on the field for signal drill, it looked ns if each Indian was wearing a football around his neck and the crowd and the Syracuse players thought it was a good joke. Ou the first play of the game, however, the joke was on the other side. The quarterback bluffed the hail to a couple of backs, and then the entire team started down the field, beut over, with the fake footballs showing. "W; 'I'ACh'I'II) lc" l'"li" " that Vl"iu" said Smith, "but the "' eleventh guy had ihc ball and he romped over the line for a touchdown." Warner Introduced Play Twenty-four Years Ago rnilAT play looked pretty good to Warner nnd he decided to save it for some JL big game in the future. He had the decided to spring it on Harvard. The week before going to Cambridge, Carlisle again donned the fake footballs and won an eiiHy victory. A Harvaid scout told Haugbtuu nbout it and I'ercy notified Warner that he must remove the pads or sever ull athletic relations with Harvaid. Then came the jcllotv leather discs on the crimson jersejs, four jears utter that. Therefore, there uie few new stunts iu football. Ken the lateral pass is very ancient, having been sprung for the fust time in Atlanta, On,, in ISO.". Wnrner again was the Columbus of this play. The name of the Pitts burgh coach appears frequently in football history, but it must he remembered he originated nime plays than any other man. Pop was coaching at the Uni Tcrsity of (leorgin twenty-four jenrs ago, and played Clemsou in the final game of the year. Clemsou, by the way, was coached by Dr. John Heisman, present ttitor of (leorgin Tech, the team that meets Pitt on Saturday. "I never will forget that game," said Warner. "The first half ended in a scoreless tie, and between the halves I told my boys to try a triek play right after the kickoff. We used that wiug shift, with eight men on the other side of the man passing the bull and two men iu the bnckfield. The first man re ceived the pass, ran wide anil before he was tackled, Hipped the ball backward to the Other man who got away for a big gain. No sooner was the ball downed thau we lined up on the other side and pulled the same trick for a touchdown. That's how we won the game." H OWIdVlUl, thcic ii some doubl about who originated the lateral pass. Xatc Tufts, the football offiiial, says Wallace iloylc, coach of lirown Iniversity in lk'OJ, was the fust man to use it. Depending on Done of 1913 OUNKLL men really don't believe that the lied team Is going to be able to uniash Dartmouth at the Polo Crounds Saturday, but they are hoping that conditions similar to those in 1013 will arise. That season Cornell was beaten by Pitt nnd Colgate, neither of whom that year was considered outside of the small fry class. The next week Cornell managed to get the decision over Urown, but Ithacan followers lost all hope of winning the Michigan game which w.as to be played on Ferry Field, Ann Arbor. The- first half of that bpectaeular battle ended with Michigan leading l.'I to C after having outplnjed the big Ited team iu every department of the game. Then Jt w-as that Cornell made football history. Their spirit or something re turned and they piled up 212 points in the final half and held Michigan to her 'erlgiual 111, thus putting over a 28-1J1 victory. That comeback of Cornell is one of the great events of football lore, nnd Only such a comeback this season can save the Ithacans. The coaches are working feverishly to whip tint eleven into fighting shape. Whether they will &a it or not will be determined about .5 o'clock Saturday afternoon. UPS13TS being the order of the day, Princeton has a corking chance to put through a tidy one on Saturday. All she has to do is overthrow Colgate. Ml ' Fostoc College have to beat Yale than twenty points? . - jflhlirAB -Upsets Football Pope,,--A four-year war involving 55,000,000 men ". . ig BW o .wpl vjMBete than that, flyite w , betting is even that he .till, Hirvard is Duffalo. Glenn Warner, who always unu IIQltif Mm litflilen linll nttflpt. ...u, ...... ..u...D ..... ..........a ...... .....v... pads removed nnd three jcars later or Syracuse to beat Pittsburgh by more . r kmtfihiuiii. , -And Then she YOvNLS as .SooM AS SHE J)E.C..PE.S Yovj Have. Got BftCK ItJTO BED AGfMNl $L CAPTA1NSOUT0F LEAGUE GRID EASVIE Bickley and Eddows Will Remain, on Sidelines When Central Meets Frankford PLAY ON COMMUNITY FIELD!DiAr M'NICHOL HURT My PAUL T'KKP Itcspective cnplalns of Central lllsh School and Frankfoid High School will be on the sidelines this afternoon when these elevens meet in an Interscholhstic League game, on Community Tield, Wnkeliug nnd Large streets. Hickley, the Frankforders' leader, is out of th'e game with water on the knee, and it is probable that he will he un able to get into uniform for several weeks. Captain Kddnws, on the other hand, has recovered from a bruised shoulder. but Coach Doctor O Iliien said today that he would not send 1'aul into the fray unless it was absolutely necessary. Linc-uns announced this morning by Coaches CJeiges nud Doctor O'lSrien fol low: 1'ritnkfonl If isli ( cntral llicli (cihMeln I.clhern.iin smithi" left eml. . .If nrei . . . left Imklc. .. left Ktcirtl tenter rlelit Kiiufil. . . . . rlelit tnclcle . . . . rlcht enil riimrterli.irk. . . . . right linlrhnrk. left li.ilfh.uk .. . . ..riiiiiniik li'liefler. Iliiierfnrit II n Inker . . W.illme . ebster Newtun KaiitTni.ln . Kiibell saumlerH HarriH Ilennelt Thornton sldrbothuni l.ell 1 rout ... Werks . . . . IIh . . . Ilnml . .. SltDllIlClKl . fHlTsOII . Keferre Vmplre DliltlNon. l'enn litno of pcrlocls- llnemnnn .l.icolij Tnelvo inlmiles. I'enn. First C. II. S. League Fray Today's fracas will be Central High's lirst league contest of the season Frankford already has nlajed two (iini- bel cup matches, showing up surpris- inglv well uj holding West I'hilh High to an 0-0 tie, and losing to .Northeast High on a safety. For toda.t's con test the Crimson and Cold rules a lieavv favorite ; still Frankford can be counted on to hold the champions to a chip score. liesides being handicapped by the In.s of Captain Itiekley's plajing. Coach (leige's eleten also will miss Kinkniile because of the hitter's splendid kick ing In Kinknlde'i absence Fullback Anderson again' will foot the hruut of his team's punting. Wells again will have charge of Frankford fiom the qunrtcrbnek position. He proved him self an uble general against Northeast last week. There is a possibility of Dr. (TlSrien sending Joe Ualney to one of the end or halfback positions some time dining the game. The monthly scholastic n port lias placed Joseph on the eligible list. He is very fast, and in a pinch Hniney may be given an opportunity to get away under a forward pas or on nn end run. Thirteen finnies Tomorrow The regular weekly heavy scholastic schedule is on for tomorrow. Lleven games, in addition to two Interseiiol astic league contests, will he put on for decision. Northeast High s. West Philadelphia High, and (ieimantown High vs. South Philadelphia High are the league matches on the program. St. Joe Prep will do the Oeorge Wash ington net and play iamdeu High. Other games nre: Oertcantown Acndemy at Ahlnnton Hlsh llrvn Athyn at Chestnut Hill Aractenw. Haddonfleld lllffh at Moorestnwn Friends. Radnor Hlsh at Hawrfnrrl Hluh West Chester llluh lit I'rlenda' Central. Oermantown Friends a p i n. Glnssboro Hlsh at Woudhurj High. West Catholic High ut Su irthmoro High. ilUdley I'ark Hleh nt l:iHBcr.p.i l Academy. I'aimyru jukii v v-vuiiibkwochi iiign. Catholic High's game with Chester High is scheduled tor Saturday at Twenty-ninth 'and Cleaificld stieets. Coach Glendon has anounced his line un for this match as follows: Luc- cesi, left end; CnMon, left tackle; O'Connei-j left guaid; Healy, tenter; Lynch, right guard ; MtOovern, right tackle; Leonard or Dougherty, right end; Thompson, quarterback; Ilrad ley, left halfback; Costello, right half back; Kennedy or (ileason, fullback. Clarke Shoots 97-100 Making two ruus of 25, getting a -'4 and then a ISi enabled S. E. Clarke to oustsboot a small field nt the lllillailel phia. Shooting Academy at Maple Orovo yesterday by scoring 07 out of 100, Tulpehocken Socked Th Oermantown Itoya' Club defeated the Tulpehocken Club last evening by a score, of 31 to iT. 'he gams was closely contested. )ut the Oermuntown Ave managed, to keep stall out at daustr. . - AMD YtfU W6AR1LV GtO ItO AMD TURr-J HER OVER oro HER Side - hummimG a LVJL.LBY 'lvd wra y developed st, says In His First Year Penn Center Was Very Green; State's Former Captain Quaker l!y RinVIN J. POLLOCK A L .lOUItNEAT, who captained the 11)11 eleven t Penn, was a visitor at Franklin Field the other day and took keen delight in the work of Lud Wrny. the present Ited nnd Blue cen ter. In his first .days at the Univer sity Al plaved a guard position, but when AValt Simpson graduated he was moved over to the center of the line. Lud Wr.iy came to I'enn ns a half back and he plajcd on the freshman offensive of 101:1. He began his var sity cniccr in 3!)11 ns n back. Then Conch lliooke began to look around for a suitable substitute to act as .lourneny's iniderstud. Wray was se lected for the job. "Lud ((Mainly has come along," said .Inurncay, as lie watched v ray bleak up a line play and drop the runner. "Iu my last year here Lud was one of the greenest centers in enp tivitj. (ieoige Jiiooke took him from the li.uMield and told him lit was go ing to be my substitute. (iood Fighter "Lud showed a lot of fighting spirit. He was game and willing, but he was one nf the easiest men to handle on the whole sipiad. Fcn Nik Koons, who weighed around 1,"j or 1(50, could play imgs mound him. "It took Lud a long while to get on ' lo the tricks of the position, but 1 knew ne woum unite, uecause ne showed the piimary icqiiisite of a foot ball pla.ter lighting spirit and sand. I haven't seen Lud play this year, or anj other year since I've been out of college, but 1 understand he's a bear much better than I ever was. I can tell just by watching him now that he's not only a good center, but a heady ime, too." Starts at Center Wray was taken from the hacklield in .louineaj's time mainly because lie was not fast enough getting btnrted ou plunges. That jear he took Al's place whencter the captain was removed, which wasn't often. In 10in be was a much better center and be earned the regular post. The following year he was considered second choice to Hob Pick, the all-Ainencan I'itt snnpper bnck. Wray entered the service in the spring of l!ll", nnd therefore he did not hate time to finish his studies. This .tear ho lias played great football for Penn, nud with Uohertson, of Syra cuse, leads in the race for all -American honors. McNichoI Hurt It was just a scrimmage day at Franklin Field jestordny, and then was nothing startling that happened during the p. in. Hob Folwcll has not ueen wirrhiuK ins men lo ileum iu preparation for the Lafayette game ou Satin day, but it is merely the Folwcll system and no evidence that the Ited and Itlue holds Jock Sutherland's team cheaply. Trainer Robertson says that all the men are in good shape and thert Is no need to work the playcis hard in'scrim mage nnd huvc them waste their energy for no purpose. Hobertson is n believer in fitting the amount of work to the in dividual and not the individual to a cer tain amount of scrimmage. Dun McXichol was the only player out of luck yesterday. Iu the play that followed the kick -out at the start of SHOPS " GENTLEMEN LARGEST mSTltlBUTOBS 07 MANHATTAN SHIRTS in rniLiptxi'iiu 1018 CHESTNUT 113 S. THIRTEENTH NATIONAL A. A. R-XE- SftViT Jlli: Ci Kent Iluntama In the World) JOU BURMAN vs. LYNCH Willie Kuln . Jon Stanley Victor Illtchla t. Jlnunr Olendo Vrunkle like v. Vounir Itoblddau ounar docco v. iiarrr tiuuj llrou KervuuoDft at iJonasnya. as m. 11 mo xctrTiuioa,uuu aim soaj: -AND YfciU CRAVAJL lrvir& B(X ASAM AMD LIE THERE wine-EYED FOR Ten minutes waitiM6 FOR AM OUTd&Y journeay Harry Rosetshy ilay Play Line Position at Penn Harry Itosetsky, the fonnT Southern High Selioil star, may be moved from the baeMiehl to the line, on the Penn gridiron squad. The eoaeWng staff is contemplating this change and may put it into iffcct this week. Kosetsky was taken over into Doctor 'Wharton's line squad yes terday and woiked out with tho for wards on the tackling dummy. In the scrimmage, however, l.e went bnck to a hacklield position. Itoset sky is a bit slow in getting started, nnd it is believed he would develop into a better lineman than a hack. the scrimmage Danny stopped a speed ing foot with his left thigh and sufTcied n severe muscle bruise. However, he will be able to get into the Lafayette game if called upon. Pearco Slay Start In the signal drill that preceded the scrimmage, Pnrd Pcarce was in the varsity hacklield nnd it would not be surprising if he started as the fourth member of the offensive quartet on Sat urday. Hell, Light and Itruncr, of course, were the other members of the backfield. The line probably will he the same ns the one which began the Swnrth more battle, but in all likelihood Heine Miller and his brother Itay will be nt the end posts, llud Hopper played with the second varsity ycsteidny. EWING SET FOR VINCOME Team Twenty-five Years Old Has Flock of Yanks After its auspicious stait by holding the strong Phoeniwillc team to a score-' less tie last Saturday, the Ewing A. A., which lias been represented on tlio grid iioj for U2 last twenty-four years, is getting its team in shape for the big game with the Vincomo Club next Sat in day. The 1010 Hwing team is made up hugely of players who won renown for Hwing in football circles in 1017, the line-up being comprised largely of foimer college and scholastic stars, most of whom served in the United States army or navy during the war. In Jimmy Moore, who wo"S-'fnmc by his great punting while nt Ilnverford School iu 1010, LVing has n bulwark nf defense, and it will be rather hard to find any team in .this section who can produce his equal in ability to punt, while Hobby Altorfer, who just recently has been mustered out of the nrmj, is back at his old position at full back as speedy as ever. Other veterans iu the line-up nre Danny Ahern, Uris tow, Ilynn, MncClclIand, Girtou, Jones, Stonelnke, Curtin, Simcox, Captain' Coghlan, Ihibin and Tompkins. Some of the newer material includes Loux, former Lafayette halfback; Fitzgerald, of Maine University ; Sullivan, of Ornnge, N. J., High School; Jimmy Moore, of Ilnverford School; Fallon and Senior, of the Seventv.ntntt, nt. vision team, which made such n good itcord in the army; Witmer nnd Davidoff. "THOUGHTFUL' 1 lr i: i.ri. ivxcn realize umi Boot Shop Shoes 're turn a full dollar's worth of VALUE for every dollar paid for them. 1420 Chestnut St. "Whra Only th neat la Qood rnouto" Steirferutali s- "W V AND TrieN You REAUZ.6 SHE'S A-SLEEP- - Oh-H-rt- BOY J J Airt'T n A" PPBI IN1 ? odWrp mm . . V.fiH Vv i SZfr'fr 1T5.TM $Z !o:HEARN BINS TO HELP CORNELL Captain of 1.91 4 Team Assisting Rush in Drilling Team for Dartmouth Game POLO GROUNDS SATURDAY Ithaca. N. . Oct. 2:?. Another famous Cornell stai of other days has come to Ithaca to assist in developing n nntverfiil team for the Dartmouth game. He is John O'Hearn. well known in the foot ha whrlil ns .lacu. captain of the 101 I team and one of the greatest ends ever developed at Ithaca. () Ilcarn is n close student ot ine game and was considered one of the hiainiest football platers that ever wore the "C" AVIth O'Hearn and Jinimie Munus, captain of the fighting lOHI team, ro-enforcing the regulnr caching staff, composed of Speech- Huli, Hay van Oiman nnd Willard Cool, the Cor nell i-qniid is experiencing the most in tenslte practice of the jear and grati fying detelnpment both 'in defensive and offensive play is the result. Judired bv the careful individual coaching Cool nud Munns are giving the line and the new oiicnsive neing developed by Conch Rush, the Cornell team that faces Dartmouth Saturdat will he n much stronger aggregation than anv Cornell eleven that has tiiken the field this year. Hopes are run ning high among its undergraduate backers that the Dig Ited team will stage a real "come-back" against the (ireen nt the Polo Orounds Saturday. The Cornell squad largely is made up of inexperienced platers and it has naturally been nt a dlsadtantage in the early games because the coaches haven't had the time needed to make green ma terial into the finished product. CXI Men Who Coma to Tills Hiirher Shon Lent o With, hmllefl nn 'lhrlr 1'uies J JU..1 leave eatlsRed nt treatment accorded them Ilarbers hate been attentive, their wlfthm hm.a i.aAn ..An swered It Is thn place ot sunshine and pleaBant Bertie We want to make you happy to rang in and happy when sou leave kkihb jou Httentltc prompt pome and nlwata courteous trcattm nt in an advertla alile virtue You will lind it hero (UwayB. Robert Koch's (Formerly of Ilellevne-Str.itfonl riiirber hllop) At 1117 Walnut St. 20 Barbers 10 Manicurists Ultott rowna Blacks 5I2.S0 ratr!nttm and , Treat liuy w, S, 8. gks ' W j I , I I J J 1 if I JmJ . x S. Jyv- .' 5 B RECORD YALE FACES 2 BOSTON DANGERS Now Boston College Has Entered Field of Neiv England Hurricanes, and Elisllave Found That Harvard Is Not the Only Terror IN TIIU SPOUTLIfiHT 1IY CHANTLANI) KICH Copj right. 1010. All rights resorted. Autumnal Reveries ' 'i, lleffclftngcr, Tharnc and I,ca', . Truxlon Hate and Johnny Vac, , Drifting ghosts of memory j Jllown from out of hong Ago: Jldwards, Cowan, Church anil OIa,ss, ' Irc they 'only built of dreamsf As the new-formed legioni pass s ' ' ' Oec how long ago it seems! . ' - Wharton, Woodruff, Kelly, Ames, '" Itcston, Kckcrsall nnd Snow, ' Still their ancient glory flames Into an autumnal glow; '-1" Cochinn, llillcfirand and 11'ceKr, , Stars of yet i emembcred teams, ' Onto they held the autumn peals- , Occ how long ago it seems! ' Si lirctocr, Campbell, Ohadwlctc, Coy, Whirling In against the foe; ' ' llach a phantom "Attaboy," Illown from out of Long Ago; Martcy, Curtis, Cults and llroolce. Waiting where a far light gleams, As wc tal;c a backwaul look, Gcc how long ago it seems! No, You Can't Always Know WHEN the White Sox came to Cincinnati, Hcd fans wanted 7 to 5 on their club. In the main they spurned even money. Yet the Itefls won four of the first five games. When Pittsburgh came to Syracuse, Syracuse supporters were not very eager to collect many wagers at 2 to 1 on Pitt. Yet Syracuse won by a margin of 24 to 3. "JV17X in the friendly and compact home circle you can't always 4 figure, it to a gnat's cue in advance, Xot always. Out of Boston YALE has always had to figure on the chance of one defeat coining oift of Iloston. One defeat has generally proved quite enough to develop unseemly de pression. This is the first year Yale has ever hail to face the possibilities of two defeats stalking her from the classic New England metropolis. Boston Col lege lias nlrcady planted one variety ot Poison Oak in the New Haven foot ball garden. v. F HARVARD doci the same thing later on, it will be a cold and cheerless winter around ATcm Haven, even if the coal strike falls thiough, Advance Notice THERE may be a better battle this season than the Colgntc-Syracuse clash at Syracuse on November 15, but offhand we can't think of one just now. When these two meet the thud will be heard from forty to fifty kilo meters away. ' WITH the Pittsburgh Panthers skinned and the Yale Ilulldog trimmed, the football zoo is crowing dcnlcted. For the Michigan Wolverine isn't nulte yet out of Ohio State's husky reach. H 1 iIira irm ill iii Mm w& & miWm 13 (!' II If I K5 a v-JW Ira? m m ;J m V am W m i I lilimil'iJyiiii ilF If you enjoy the mildness, the mellowness, the fragrant aroma of finely blended Hava na, you'll enjoy El Producto. There's distinctive character to El Producto's blend and it can't be copied. 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Phila delplila, Js'ov. 12 I'ennu., ana marued 1919.' 2. Eacli bid must bo accompanied by a certified check for 1" of the total bid, made payable to United States Sblpplnc Board Emcrefiioy Fleet Corporation, tvlilfli amount tyill !o applied to tho purchase prlco of tlio euc. tessful bidder a:H re(ivned in'tha case of the unsuccessful Mdders. 3. Bids are to bo based on taklne delivery within 60 days F. O B, pres. rnt location. 4. The right la reserved to reject any or nil bids. , U. S. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation 140 N, BROAD STREET, PHILADELPHIA -' "7"" - i G. H. P. CIGAR CO. "pMUdelphU 1 Plate and Angle Shop, 701 ft. 42 in.xl22 feet, 2260 tons. 1 Iron F'ndry,312xl37ft.,920tons Tlftslmrirh nnd TlGthlehem dlfitrlcta. Illliernlu Hank UIdB..N'ctv Orleniu.l.u. OVi KdUnll llldir.., OlllcaKO, III. v Custom nune. HoHton, HIaH8. OF SALE and Sales Division, United States et uorporauon.'HU W uroaa oireot, I'nna 'Sealed Bid Structural Steol, to be opened -,q 'T. 1 M '. I Jjl ,1 tnrl 13 . -4 A 4 .trr ,M i n i. "MI a. "3 T5f: 17P 1 - "J " 1 . Jf'il Hi. rt W .f'S 'm ?;i r MS "" If- .3" -m u 'M &'. m $ 'v2. y m T U . ' iW'