YALE ALUMNI WHEEKLY
orbin’s
orner
TBE RAGLAN
As you know, this is named
_ from the English General, Lord
He wore that kind of
a coat, but it has béen developed
since his first wearing of it. It
Raglan.
is specially noticeable by the cut
of the shoulders.
Raglans will be worn a great
deal this Winter in both ulster
and overcoat. Rough cloth is
used.
F. A. CORBIN,
1000 CHAPEL ST.,
3 New Haven, Conn.
as" My DAY IN NEW YorRK is Thursday.
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4.
PROGRESS IN FOOTBALL.
[Continued from 29th page.]
Yale, 28; Bates, 0.
Yale’s third game of the season on
the home grounds was played Saturday,
Oct. 7, with the Bates College (Maine)
eleven, resulting in a score of 28 to o
in her favor. For the first ten minutes
of play, the Maine boys gave as pretty
an exhibition of line breaking as any
one could wish to see. It was ill-timed
and fruitless, however, for before they
got at all dangerous, or had even
reached Yale’s territory, thev had beaten
themselves out and were soon thrown.
back to defeat. The game was much
the hardest of the season, and while it
told severely on Bates it showed Yale
to be in splendid condition.
Sharpe, Adams, Stillman, Francis,
and Captain. McBride, who was play-
ing his first game of the year, made
most of the gains in the first half, while
Kiefer in the second showed he had not
forgotten to run, by making a couple
of end dashes of 25 yards or so, and
took advantage of several fumbles of the
opponents very cleverly. Cunha played
a good game at center, but was not as
aggressive as the coaches. wished.
Fincke handled the ball cleanly on the
defensive and, ran the team with fine
judgment. Sharpe’s work in punting
New Gowdy’s
The overhauling is about
done now and the store
is better than ever adapted
to show stock.
When graduates are back
we invite them to stop
in.
W. H. Gowdy & Co.
Opposite Osborn Hall.
Successors to DeBussy, Manwaring & Co.
was of the most encouraging _ sort,
every one of his kicks having good dis-
tance and almost perfect direction. He
was tried at goal kicking from the
touchdown: for the first time, and,
though he missed two comparatively
easy ones, the other three went straight
as an arrow. Thomas and Schweppe
played their end positions well.
When Yale kicked off at ten minutes
past three, Purinton, the Bates captain,
got the ball on his ten yard line and
returned it a few yards. On the first
line-up Bates used the old tackles back
play for a gain of five clean yards
through Francis, and a minute later for
six more in the same place. Then they
tried the left wing, where Olcott was
playing instead of F. G. Brown, and
found a hole for half a dozen more yards
and repeated the trick. Through first
one side and then the other the heavy
and fast backs of Bates were shot with
monotonous regularity, until the Yale
team had been pushed back nearly to
the 50-yard line. Here Yale braced
under the urgings of Captain McBride,
and when she took the ball on downs,
began a furious charge: down to her
opponent’s goal, sweeping aside the
Bates line like paper. It took one
minute and twenty seconds to cover
those fifty yards, and there were just
five line-ups in that time. Adams had
the ball when it crossed the line.
The ice having thus been broken,
another touchdown was made in a
couple of minutes, McBride, Leary and
Stillman carrying the ball straight down
the field from the 4o-yard line in four
plays. Before the half ended two more
touchdowns had been made, one by
Sharpe and one by Francis. In the
second half after another touchdown
had been added, McBride retired in favor
of Dupee and thereafter the football of
both elevens was decidedly poor, the
ball hanging near the middle of the field,
changing hands every other minute on
account of fumbles. The attendance
was less than 600.
The line-up:
YALE, POSITION. BATES.
Hone risky ; aoe right-end-left....___- Richardson
wilhinan? oo right-tackié-lett <2. 2 os Sturgis
rey i t ae right-guard-left -...____. Baldwin
Guha. sss See CONIer Yas oe Moody
FG. Brown ¢ --left-guard-right ......___!.Childs
F i .
heres t ee leftetdeklé-tisht 222. os ae Call
Goud pee left-end-right....-....-. Putnam
Fincke .._.........quarterback-._..Purinton (capt.)
Sharpe | . Garlough
Nieher<4¢oo ttre Far left-half-right.___- ; Stenchfield
MOONS Ck Sos right-half-left _...._.2- Babcock
McBride Towne
Dupee t «Cera 2 fullback --....--... ; Hunt
Summary: Yale 28, Bates 0. Touch
downs, Adams, Stillman, Sharpe, Fran-
cis, McBride. Umpire, W. S. Moyle.
Referee, T. F. Fitzpatrick. Linesmen,
Jalcott. Bo ofinll, Yale; O.4V.itordan,
Bates. Twenty and fifteen minute halfs.
——_+0—____
Athletic Calendar.
Saturday, Oct. 14—Yale-Dartmouth
football game at Newton A. C. grounds,
Boston. Fall Regatta at Lake Whitney.
Saturday, Oct. 21—Yale-University of
Wisconsin football game, at New
Haven. |
Wednesday, Oct. 25—Beginning of
Intercollegiate Golf Tournament at Gar-
Gen Laity ee |
Saturday, Oct. 28—Yale-Columbia
football game at Manhattan Field, New
York.
Saturday, Nov. 4—Yale-West Point
football game at West Point.
Saturday, Nov. 11—Yale-Pennsylvania
State College at New Haven.
Saturday, Nov. 18—Yale-Harvard
football game at Cambridge. The
Freshman elevens of the two Universi-
ties will play at Cambridge the morn-
ing of the same day.
Saturday, Nov. 25—Yale-Princeton
football game at New Haven. The
Freshman elevens of the two Universi-
‘ties will play at New. Haven the morn-
ing of the same day.
peas
>
Freshman Football Schedule.
The following games have been ar-
ranged by the Freshman football mana-
ger for the present season:
Wednesday, October
11—Brid
Hivh Scioal oo
Saturday,
October 14—St. Paul’s at
New Haven.
Saturday,
Lakeville.
October 21—Hotchkiss at
Saturday, October 28—Brown scrub at
New H
aven.
Saturday,
November 4—Harvard
Freshmen at Cambridge.
Saturday, November 11—Andover at
Andover.
Saturday,
November 18—Lawrence-
ville at Lawrenceville.
Saturday,
November 25—Princeton
Freshmen at New Haven.
S. H. MOORE
FLORIST
1054 CHAPEL ST.
OPP. YALE ART SCHOOL
In doiwmg business with advertisers,
please mention the WEEKLY.
F. B. WALKER & Co.
TAILORS
SUCCEEDING F. R. BLISS & CO.
CHURCH AND CHAPEL STREETS
FRANK B. WALKER
CHAS. P. WALKER
GRUENER BROTHERS
123 Temple St.,
Tailors,
New Haven, Conn.
Graduate correspondence. solictted.
THB. 1), ENDER CO,
; PAIRS: .
ROOMS 23 AND 24, WARNER HALL,
4044: GHAPELS STREET.
Hurle & Co.,
Tailors, |
38 Center Street.
In doing business with advertisers,
please mention the WEEKLY.
CHARLES T. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co.,
IMPORTING [ AILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
J. Kaiser,
Tailor,
O42 |
Chapel Street,
(Opp. Vanderbilt Hall.)
A Yale
rlome
Center
The families of Yale men
have made, for more
than thirty years, their
- New Haven Home, at
MOSELEY’S
NEW HAVEN HOUSE. |
In doing business with advertisers,
please mention the WEEKLY.
The C. W. Whittlesey Co. —
281 State St.
Our line of Photographic Materials and
Supplies is larger and more complete than
ever before. —
Our facilities for doing amateur work
are unexcelled.
COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHERS,
1024 Chapel St., New Haven.
Branch of No. 935 Broadway, - New York
Established 1887,
ELIAS L. GLOUSKIN,
Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry,
162 ELM ST., cor. YORK, NEW HAVEN, CONN.
Fine Watch and Music Box Repairing.
Fine Assortment of Yale Souvenirs, Loving
Cups and Steins with Yale Seal a specialty.
Mail orders promptly attended to.
Bicycle ©
Tires...
Ican send you by Mail or
Express, Prepaid, a good
HARTFORD Single-tube Tire
for $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
W. P. WEAVER,
Columbia Bicycle Agency,
New Haven, Conn.
Reference—Alumni Weekly.
In doing business with adveritsers,
please mention the WEEKLY.
Positions Secured!
We aid those who want Government positions.
85,000 places under Civil Service rules. 8,000
yearly appointments.
Bureau of Civil Service Instruction.
Station B. WASHINGTON, D. C.
~ The Bowditch Furniture Co.
GY -
ony
oi
Can supply all your needs in the
Newest Goods and Lowest Prices.
@
®
Go AND SEE THEM:
100-106 Orange Street.