Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Hart, Schaffner & Marx L NEW COLLEGE LINE J For Young Men Never before in the history of clothes-making have the well-dressed young men of this community been offered better clothes, livelier styles, more new and snappier features than we are now offering in the new College line, created by Hart, Schaffner & Ma*~x, special designers of young men’s clothes. These models are expressly for young men; the fabrics specially chosen for young men; and many new features have been added which will please the critical young college and high school fellows; and dressy young business men. Fine ready made clothes like these are now the standard of quality in men's wear; no tailor can touch them under double the price. Be sure you see these before you buy. SDjKjJJSjOOandOTI^OVERCOATS^l^O^iiHJP A. M. WALDROP & CO. The Home of Good Clothes for Men and Young Men REGIMENT IN PARADE Corps in Column of Platoons Escort King Nottoc XIV. In accordance with the agreement made with the No-Tsu-Oh Carnival Association, the entire corps was present to act as official escort to King Nottoc XIV in his majesty’s pa rade through the streets of Houston. The tw r o special trains carrying the regiment to Houston arrived on time and each battalion moved off prompt ly to its assigned place. There was no long and tiresome wait, as there has been in past years, for the arrival of the king. The parade moved off promptly down Main street, which Avas thronged with thousands of ap preciative people, making a veritable wall of humanity on both sides. Pretty girls were evrywhere. The windows of every office building fairly teemed with them, and it was no uncommon occurrence to see as many as six in one window. For one to keep his head straight to the front under such try ing conditions was a downright hard ship, to put it lightly. The cannoneers brought up the rear in automobiles carrying their large banner and trying hard to make up for the seeming indifference of their unfortunate brothers in the in fantry toward the fair sex. After the parade, arms were stacked on the ground floor of the new South ern Pacific office building, and all hied themselves to the various restaurants to satisfy their inner cravings before going to the game. UTAY ISSUES STATEMENT TO NO-TSU-OH PEOPLE A. and M. Will Not Be Candidate Carnival Date Next Season. AN HONOR TO MONTGOMERY. In a conference between Captain Bell of the A. and M. football team and Moise, Referee Moise is said to have told Captain Bell that he has seen all the big games in the South this year and refereed in most of them, and that he has seen no end that could compete with Montgomery, and that he was going to see each coach of the Southern teams sepa rately and get them to give the honor of being an All-Southern end to Mont gomery. Joe Utay, graduate manager of the A. and M. team, issued the following statement after the game: “I want to take this opportunity of expressing my thanks to the directors of the car nival association for all the favors they have shown the Agricultural and Mechanical College. We appreciate their action in giving us the football game on the opening date and also such assistance as they have given in staging the game. “It is not the intention of the A. and M. management to ask for a foot ball game at the carnival in 1913. There are two reasons for this posi tion: First, the carnival association favored A. and M. this year by giving us the game on the opening day, when the University was bidding eagerly for the same date. Since we had the best end of the trade this year we feel that we should not embarrass the carnival directors by forcing them again into the delicate situation in which they were placed last January. Again, we have no right to expect, and we do not expect, that we could he favored with the opening date per manently, and we do not think that the follow-up game would be very sat isfactory. Hence, it seems best for us to simply step down and out and thus simplify matters for all concerned. “My second reason for thinking the A. and M. will not seek the 1913 car nival date is that the financial impor tance of this game is greatly over estimated. While the crowd today was splendid, the expense of staging the game is quite large and the division of the net income leaves a very mod est amount for the team. I do not know of another big game in the world where the athletic association, which goes to all the expense of hiring coaches and maintaining and equip ping a team, is required to share the proceds equally with another organi zation which does not, and in the very nature of things can not, make any thing like an equal contribution to the successful staging of the game.”— Houston Post. 1