sarod im disor Polo, virtually nonexistent during the war, will experience a revival dur ing the coming winter and spring which promises to place it again among the leading outdoor pastimes in California. Many of the West's prom- inent players served in the army tnd the return of these men stimulate interest in the game, Coronado and Del Monte, as in for- mer years, will be the center for polo enthusiasts, Already ponies are arriving to be prepared for the various tournar To Draw Best Teams. Three tournaments, Monte and lieved, will from the United States and C he principal i will be the invitation tournamen Del Monte, February 1 10; nual spring tournament £t Del March 28 April 15, teenth annual polo Coronado, March 1 to April 1. For the first i of 1917, the Pacifle Coast ste ibies of polo nents, two Del one at Coronado draw the cream events of 10 or = to time ¢ t! ince All e season Arie rica n EDDIE M’'GOORTY Boxer, Now in England, Should Come Back With Roll That Will Make Rivals Envious. # Boxing is the in England right and fighters worth rich, Eddie McGoorty a bundle over not spend the with a that in the tes exces nos i ® i now, whil wad shoul 11 1 roll wil Qty | i ro} as h wrge in Lond« and down Hotes h TI het LL Lig LTT] i er ee CRIA Eddie McGoorty. ~ "a for a distant peek at the doings. This price scale prevails in all classes where the matches are attractive enough, Can you imagine Pal Moore and Jimmy Wilde boxing to an American audience that slapped down from five cases up to a half century to see the midgets perform? If you can, you have a vivid imagination! Yet they can get away with it over there. ORIOLES TO TRAIN IN SOUTH — Manager Dunn of Baltimore Looking Up Place to Take His Team, for Conditioning. Jack Dunn trained his Orioles af home last spring and then walked awny with the pennant in the Inter national league race, but he does not plan to do any more home train. fng. He Is now angling for a loca. tion in the sunny Bouthland, Sera the Recent polo trophy will be competed for dur ing the coming midwinter tournament It Coronado. This trophy was won in { 1017 by the Meadowbrook four, com- i posed of G. M. Kecksher, C. P. Bead- | leston, Malcolm Stevenson (captain), i and Carlton Burke. The Meadowbrook four won the trophy by defeating the | Miami Valley team, captained by Max Fleischmann. Season Opens January 1. | 4 Er 0 Bl BBB Re ghd { COLT BRINGS $50,000 Galroy, a two-year-old colt by Royal Realm, out of Gallinati, by Gallinule, out af Serenata, by Chavening, was sold for $350. 000 at the October Newmarket sales. This is one of the biggest prices ever pald for a youngster In England. Other big prices were realized at the sale, -e 6 i i Ld Drrret er etre ra * natn At Mr AAA Mn Br STANDARD BALL IDEA STIRS GOLF PLAYERS | Rule Would Meet Hard Opposi- “in U. S. and Canada. Nation 1,116,000 Acres in Thunder Mountain Region of Idaho Set Apart, HAS LONG BEEN A MENACE Recurring Forest Fires Have Endan gered Adjoining Portions of Na. tional Forests—Great Tract Is Difficult of Access. United uf Agricult D. C~In the Btates Depares ment Washington, ire.) uecord with No Definite Action Taken at Meeting of Royal and Ancient Club of St. Andrews-—Matter Seems to Be in Abeyance at Present Although the Royal and Ancient club of St. Andrews at its last meeting took no definite action on the stand- ardization of golf balls, the matter was discussed. Prior to the meeting | it was reported on seemingly good au- | thority that it the intention of | the rules of golf committee to intro- duce a rule standardizing the floater, writes Joe Davis In Chicago Tribune, In order to give the golf trade a | chance to unload its stock of heavier | balls, it was to make the change take effect at the close of the present For the to be In abevance, and, while the mat- wns sroposed } BCABOND, time being the matter seems ter of st ardization never has been officially 184 by United cued] the The Coronado auguration will every and Sunday. During the tourn from March 1 to April 1, in addi the All-American trophy, play te the Califor challe Coast junior cham; halleng nt i will January match, foil iO season { Wn he In- i officially 1 with 1 Weekly Saturday | on cup matches low ’ i i very 1} v a i compe or HL { Pacific | i Joseph I ¥% Jessop Pp « 1 | The ng the hes a to rank ai and for a practice area. HANS pint pin COLLEGES RACE BY AIR IN CROSS-COUNTRY TRIP ||| Aerial racing rire port Harvard, ag y recognized consideration at i and Columb according to mem- ! Aerial club | institution. vits { a § is under Yale universities, be rs of last named {ions “ent their movemen 2 the 1a £1 Ww in all probability other ve co-operatien A raf g between and Yale Now to coll Ogos, not! acti t three cross-country gr next Ha snrin prin Columbian, modelo York 1 Val he recent , is planned i GOSSIP TIONG ite have i Connti in Hie the Mack's Ores BAELTR =i Athletics were for cOonseont eo Ye ar. Yale try the ORS + won mre ry i ibd, { to 33. “Pu Ruth declares he may tour | the country with an independent team next year. the" *® & =» | Shorty Miller, former star quarter hack at Penn State, is playing profes. { sional football. *. & = Trapshooting In the United States will be supervised in the future by a committee of ten members, . * - ® a —— 3 Max Carey ls said to be much bene; fited in health since going to Cuba with the barnstorming ball lossers, * * & Frank J. Marshall, chess expert, plans a tour of the country, taking in the leading centers, including Canada, - » * Manager Mike Kelley has returned | to St. Paul without signing to boss | {| the Seattle club of the Pacific Coast league, ® & @» Freak pitching is to be abolished hy the majors, The pitchers would also like to see the Kkibosh put on freak batting of the Ruth order. - * * John MeCGraw, manager of the Giants, denies the story that originated in the east that he is trying to make a trade for “Llabbit” Maranville of the Braves, * » * The Interstate League, Involving Wellsville, Olean and Jamestown, N, Y.. Bradford, Of! City and Franklin, Pa., is to be rovived with Pat Dough- erty, the old White Sox outfielder, as president, States Golf association, the national ¥ f the British decided to ndard ball, i the U, 8 G. A. and the Ancient club differ in thelr nterpretation of the ams authorities Altho tenr rule, the is 1 4 wr wiley or ¥ in difference in the play the U £2. A. of the mallet-headed putter, rules =. eanctions the use which Is barred in Great Britain, Commenting ( on the proposed legis. ‘anadien Golfer says: cerely hoped that the rules ot be ill a radical de- the wwers that be In this and other golf. in the rules of game ax laid faithfully Iation the * 3 of g ittee will 1 80 t dvised as to adopt such mriure without first consulting countries, Canada regulations the down by St. Andrews are any such change as that mooted In with the standardization of viuld be acceptable here, The committee hasten making | certainly ¢ ball we of slowly. rd very rash gol must before It t retrograde legislation. f of fertions slowly, such orld be “The any decision. 3 i made nt it chile the gives a to a half-hit : that ery from hazards too bad shot does not it deserves, llency makes it much | trol on a hard green and an of luck in 3 i to are th shot «ON by # the runishment eloment puting. tons and apply most less which much all Ome thing nidrews dave attem £43 vr Ps rulin anada or the rig tor * 3 GIO, 4 z € MADE LITTLE ON BIG BATTLE Disappointed at Way Things Turned Out at Toledo. it stated that the Demp- ig! said who was » big fight receipts it drew $410,732," toy oe sporting ma edd th in an, the . officials at Toledo. connected wi “Well, iy the gate Ae ade not a penny was m on the venture. Even Tex Rickard, who has been rated Tex Rickard, ns the world's greatest promoter, was disaprointed over the way things tured out, “After settling for the arena and paying off the boxers there wasn't enotigh coin left to buy a square meal, 1 also noticed that it was stated that the Toledo boxing commission's share of the proceeds wes something like $30,000, That's a dream. I am sure that there was nothing for the com- mission after all expenses were paid.” a almost unanimous sentiment ip ¥aho affecting adloining national forests, % has set L116.000 acres Idaho known Thunder region, as This and ON ZTes land Mountain apart in as national forest grent tract, difficult of n Cen having not over 1 pe fires and devastation due to overgraz I ta be added to the Pay It is now which t fryer ing ete national forest adjoins and west, and the Idaho which adjoins it on the The area lier approx miles northeast of Bolse north and west imately 100 controlled, it has heer to the by reason Lo aio is at headw ay rolled regions wept by Forest Fires. y 5 ) plac accordls 8 in * 1y Thu ow § 4 ig to offi 8 tnker © the region, forest service, Unites sts heen Ores have abandoned, | grade have been | general belief Is that | tains i but Rome found, the re low high und HiON Con an abundance of commercial use possible because of | is hus not been nadequate tran of thi National Forest land, once o it was ight retard mine development, | | seen a practical | proper use of the mining { well | grazi g facilities, | Travel At present bridges are portation facilities, Control area as posed because that sal fenred to be a8 conservative Is Difficult, the 5 sad s travel over 1 Os trail en ira in a ' axing mn horseback portant imposs undertal Kerra ervic » generat he area. The region iral wonders, larg Repairs and Results Are Astonishing. wo Yearrving count to 100xx) The fad vacant, Monumental on Kd ’ 8 O boom day Hundreds of clal 5 h while Hae Ma). Gen. Leonard Wood, Mrs, We sons, Capt. Leonard Wood, Jr. and 1 Ties in Congestion That Takes Month Up Railrcad Traffic and Results to Straighten Out—Week to Restore Wires. wl and thelr family, in the first photo The into the ighty-first Jdeut, Osborne C. Wood, went COLLECTIVE BARGAINING URGED ON METHODISTS | New raining the 2 tainment justice report bj of York. “ bar- instrument for industrial in in a the cominit- Methodist Federation srvice, which re and members fastly to in- A ‘ollecrtive fis an of recommended ecrerntive tee the for Bocial B81 quests minis of 11 the church and cone the Chris of the might be nlled.” AA AAA RRR a A A A A A A A A Ry Ao ol A Al Mt AM tp onle Interest “tr Fe | there E IN CHURCH WINDOW One Dedicated Caint wea liliy in London Michael, to Baint of atron Airmen, (HCE heen had riven i Memnwhile, yerensed French Oyers congestion tt in the yards is from the American cone n merchants was a full week, { we wires had finally been restored and the official vises obtained. By that time the block- ade had become so complicated that it will probably take a month to put t and ¢ appeals convoyers, the ind the R Ep urgent. 1 ¥ It i howe wiore er 5 Must Ride Wild Moose To Be Member of Club Nipisiguit River, Can—One of the most unusual sportsmen’s as soclations ts the Moose Riders of the Nipisiguit. To qualify a map must ride moose ih the presence of a guide In good standing. He must get a photo and have this placed in the book of records there, together with the signatures of witnesses and guide. He then receives a metal badge picturing a man riding a moose and the words “Moose Rider of Nipisiguit.,” Wore Sister's B8hoes to Fool Police. Camden, Pa~For months detectives followed what were evidently the foot prints of a woman burglar. Five small boys were arrested and confessed to a long series of housebreakings, One of the youngsters sald that he always wore Ma slster’s shoes while on the job. Americans Find Travel in Ger- many ls Difficult. | Absence of Official American Repre- gentation in Berlin Causes Embarrassment. Berlin~—Lack of American official | representation inh Berlin is causing travelers considerable em- barrassment. | The Spanish embassy representing | American interests can sometimes | help the traveler, but more often not, {ft has too much businesf® to handle, | And red tape unwinds slowly in Ger ny: i As a result of this situation Amer | leans coming here are complaining | considerably of the situation. England and France are liberally represented on missions here. Amer lea has none, And Its interests have to be conserved maloly by the Amer ¥ i i legations Copenhagen. Two stranded American sallors reached town recently, expecting pass. ports here. They were penniless but expected a lift. They couldn't get a in The Hague and long enongh they might have had one through the Spanish embassy, Prob how “on their own” it can be done, but it's unpleasant. And a2 ihe shies Uma an American business man arrived with a pen fectly grod pass, but found he needed” to travel to Crechosliovakia to coms plete an important deal. Could he get his pass amended here? No, he had to travel to Copenhagen and run the: risk of losing his business deal through the delay. These are only sample cases. Daily Americans with difficultios ag bad as or worse than those shove elted are here, and find that the U, 8 A, lent among those presend a si
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers