orbin’s
orner |
As you know, this is named
from the English General, Lord
He wore that kind of
a coat, but it has been developed
Raglan.
since his first wearing of it. It
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.,
New Haven, Conn.
[@~ MY DAY IN NEW YorK is Thursday.
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4.
WEAK IN DEFENSE.
But Eleven is Steadily Improving—
Guard Position Problem.
As the football season advances the
list of candidates for the University
even continues to grow until now more
than a hundred men, an unprecedented
iumber, are in their playing clothes
ech day and doing their best to make
a good appearance in the game. As
might be supposed, a great deal of this
naterial is dead wood, .but out of it all,
wery now and then, arises a man who
ius been showing himself willing and
ible to do better things, and he is given
achance at the top. Several good men
lave thus been discovered through this
process of sifting, including George B.
Chadwick of Brooklyn, N. Y., a brother
ot Charles Chadwick of the 1897 team.
Sharpe’s recent injury gave Chadwick
his opportunity and in the Dartmouth
game he justified the judgment of Capt.
McBride, who tried him at half, by
making some of the best gains of the
day. He has jumped to the front very
quickly, but he has the fighting qualities
to hold him there.
It is the truth to say that the eleven
which played last week was a better one
than that of the week before. In other
words there is an improvement, slow, it
is true, but still an improvement, which
ifit can be kept up, will bring the team
into something like championship form
in the next month. No set of men ever
showed a better spirit and every man is
tying his level best. Still, it cannot be
denied that the team is very weak on the
defensive. Every game so far has em-
dhasized this, but as yet no effective
means of patching up the break seems
to have been introduced. Francis, at
Unique
Fancy Hose.
They can’t be duplicated in
any city in the United States.
They are the latest thing in
footwear and the price is
right.
Call at our store or write
W. H. GOWDY & CO.,
Opp. Osborn Hall,
Successor to :
DeBussy, Manwaring & Co.
left tackle, is the chief offender, but
the whole line with the exception of F
G. Brown, at left guard, falls under
criticism. Cunha, at center, while big
and strong and active, has not come up
to expectations and he will have to wor
very hard to hold his place. He persists
in playing a good-natured game and is
consequently pushed about by much
smaller men, who have an aggressive
style of play. The coaches have not yet
given up hopes of making a good man
out of him.
The real problem of this year’s team,
however, is not center, but guard, the
place left vacant by Marshall, who grad-
uated last Spring. So far, Leary, Tom-
linson, C. Brown, and Richardson have
been tried there at intervals, but from
one cause or another, all have been
found wanting. Brown is a Freshman,
and though he is capable of playing a
good game, he is too light to stand much
pounding. Richardson, who has been
playing~ ati: center’ on: ‘the College,
promised better than any of them, per-
haps, and will probably be given another
trial there if he can be spared from
center. With this place at right guard
as well filled as the one at left, the
coaches would regard the building up of
a strong eleven with much more equa-
nimity. The coaches at the field this
week were, besides Messrs. Rodgers and
Bull W. Of Hickok, 765 Sig FF: W.<Wal-
lace, 89; Vance C. McCormick, ’93 5S.,
and S,° Bee Phorne; “06 and Pio T. -Still-
man, 795 S.
The hospital list, from which Yale
has been very free this year, began to
make its appearance last week . and
Adams, with a wrenched collar bone;
Kiefer with a bad knee and Sharpe with
a muscle bruise were the first to be
written upon it. They will all be fit for
use inside of a week. Indeed, Sharpe
played a part of the game on Saturday,
but it did him no good.
Yale 12; Dartmouth 0.
Yale scored two touchdowns against
Dartmouth in the game at Newton,
Mass., Saturday, October 14, and Sharpe
kicked one goal from the field. The
latter was not allowed, however, be-
cause the referee was not in a position
where he could follow the flight of the
ball and did not have personal knowl-
edge of its exact direction. It was a
goal nevertheless and a pretty one at
that. The general play of Yale was un-
even, showing moments of great strength
and immediately afterwards as great
weaknesses. Most of Dartmouth’s
gains were made through and around
Yale’s left wing. Francis, at left tackle,
did not play his position at all well and
in consequence, Thomas, who has been
playing a first rate game all the Fall,
was thrown in a bad light. In the first
half the center trio, Tomlinson, Cunha
and Bayne, were slow and heavy, and
though no gains were made through
them worth speaking of, their work was
far from satisfactory. F. G. Brown and
his brother, C. Brown, took the places
of Tomlinson and Bayne in the second
half, and thereafter Dartmouth had
more work and less gain. In the back
field Fincke, McBride, Chadwick and
Sharpe, as long as the latter stayed in
the game, all played steadily, but as
with the line the fast work looked for
was absent. Fincke’s clean handling of
punts and the fine kicking of McBride
were good to watch. Chadwick made
some of the prettiest gains of the day.
Dartmouth, though considerably lighter
than Yale, played with wonderful vim,
and when they had found Yale’s defense
to be weak in the left side of the line
hammered at that place for big gains.
The backs were frequently guilty of
holding and they lost a good many
yards by this sort of plav. There was
no particularly brilliant work on either
side. The summary:
YALE. PosITION. DARTMOUTH.
MR MOMAS 6550 oss right-end-left:...:.....- Gilmore
Prateier go. 3, right-tackle-left..-....... Crowell
19h bc t So right-guard-left.-.-..-..--- Lowe
WUnhG To COMOE 6 ee Rogers
oo t greater left-guard-right .-....___- Carson
: - { Butterfield
Sinan 24 2, left-tackle-right___- ‘1 Hutchinson
Schweppe.-____.... left-end-right._-_...- O’Connor
Pimeks 225772..<25: qharterback 2.2. 253 Thompson
et Bap ete Gl oie right-half-left_......___- Jennings
Ch : ¥ a ( Farmer’
AG Witk <3. left-half- right... 4 Wainwright
remiae 2. 8-2 Hilal ea Proctor
Summary: Scores, Yale 12, Dart-
mouth 0. Touchdowns, McBride, Still-
[Continued on next page.]
Fall and |
Winter Boots
Double Sole Boots and Oxford Ties
For Fall and Winter wear.
WING TIPS
The New thing in Boots and Oxford Ties.
The New Haven Shoe Company,
842 & 846 CHAPEL ST.
S. H. MOORE
FLORIST
1054 CHAPEL ST.
OPP. YALE ART SCHOOL
In doing 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
Tailors,
123 Temple St., New Haven, Conn.
Graduate correspondence solicited.
LAE ds Bb. AIENDEE €0):
TAILORS
ROOMS 23 AND 24, WARNER HALL,
1044 CHAPEL STREET.
rlurle & Co.,
Tailors,
38 Center Street.
In doting business with advertisers,
please mention the WEEKLY.
CHARLES T. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co.,
IMPORTING TAILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
J. Kaiser,
Tailor,
1042
Chapel Street,
(Opp. Vanderbilt Hall.)
A Yale ©
Home
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.
PACH BROS.,
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 advertisers,
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.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
The Bowditch Furniture Co.
3% Can supply all your needs in the QR
we Newest Goods and Lowest Prices. B
GO AND SEE THEM?
100-106 Orange Street.