RS-w it Pr m, W. a 7-, t I ift t .-I T4 V t Ba f-AS A SAD DAY tElSCOUT WOLF CLAPPED EYES .,- . -----,-,-- .... . JV UJN A YOUTH NAMED McIjAIJT'UxAIN lert Only Member of Tlayed in Hard Luck, and His Cause Is Hope less Nicholls a Real "Comeback" - f IWHEN Ed WoIf' tl,c Bcnlal scout of tho V" u oum' ,l wlmlniitlve'j'ouiiBHlcr nnmcu McClnlliRnii envoi tins on b mTn iieiti ror tne Vernon club, ljcrt jBMwowy. About tho sanio tlmo Bert was " jki how blp; a. salnry rnlso ho could Worm IT BTftrinilt fl- thnllftht nf lio film tliltirr llml sj.,jlEMt ho assured Pnt Moi-nn Hint, the youth MetiiWllgnn wns u hear nnil I'atilck lost U-no tlmo gnthcrliig .the IJrtilu Into the fold, not because he Imagined that the new 'Vcomer would become a potent club to wave over tho hend of XlchnfT, but simply on (. . - .. w ..,.. v. &..1. mill Hllllh IIIIIV if "vftthe chance that tho youncster would some ft, How Niehoff, Whlttetl ond Stock went through with their hold-out program is now f Jklstory, and" at present the club lsjn tlio !r'Ajn.d sign Stock becauso no sensntionnl vo'uncstcrs developed at St. Petersburg to tk jfltako their places. Not ho with Nlehoff, ,' Moran thnt he can piny the keystone Rack frtf popular with the Phllly ofllclnls as a Teuton fl-i y There is no more reason for condemning Niehoff for holding out than theie iri Is for leveling criticism nt Stock and Whltted for demanding mote money. Perl's ' xy .,...,,,, .. . . . . - . . .. . .... , loyuuy 10 ino cuiii is no more ami no less l'$ iglfference is that Stock linr and Whlttcd will fcjT 'will noi. Tho second-sacker pla.ed In hard A little diamond worker who can play IX to tho face of Pnt Moran swung the scales against Niehoff. and he has Just as few much chance of getting the money he demands as Maxwell has of making the Fifi bantam limit. ,QTOCiC and Whitted are invited to drop Into the training camp at St. Petersburg for a talk with Piesldent Baker and .Manager Moran.) Niehoff Is told that he can continue to .enjoy the scenery in Colorado until he decides to sign at tho club'sflgures. Niehoff About Ready to Surrender NIEHOFF has played and lost, and the quicker he discovers it the better it will be for him. Every day that he stnys nwny gives McOalllgan another chance to tighten his trip on the second sack, nnd tho youngster Is making good. There 1m Kf'' evidence that Niehoff Is beginning to appreciate his status in his frequent com munications to rat .Jioran ana nis request ror me rniines itinerary in oroer 'SC that he may Join the club at any time. No I In 'the cold, and it would not be surprising if the hecond-sacker ambled Into camp nt .any time, with his pride In his pocket and his signed contract In his hand. That he will be welcome Is undeniable, for despite the work of Munnfllgan a vet- II eran Jnfielder of Niehoff's ability Is a vnluable bit of baseball property. The youngster might beat him out for the position, but Bert would still be a salable ' or tradable asset and both Moran and Baker know It. The fact. remains, however, that tho club has Nlehoff on tho ropes simply because of Wolf's acuteness in digging up McGafllgan. lie, of all the Philadelphia players who held out, played in hard luck, and If anything he will be treated fltti greater severity because of the success which attended the hold-outs of his teammates. ' YOU simply have to hand It to the members of the Phillies who held out for their gnmeness. No other rlub, with the possible exception of the Itcd Sox, had three regulars sticking as long as Stock, Whitted and Nle hoff, and two of them are still out. Introducing Another W ell-Known Come-Back GIL NICHOLLS, Great Neck golf professional, evidently had a deep-laid plot up his sleeve to spring on golfing random during the season to come, but he Just couldn't I.ilp letting it leak out at Ashevllle, N. C, this week. The result of the leak is that his friends and foes In golfing circles fear that he has in view tho winning of the national open championship this year, which will be put on the boards at Brae Burn, Boston. The reason these tidings cpme out so early in the Mason is that it became officially known that Nicholls Is going like a house afire when he led" one of the fastest of professional fields to the money at the southern course this week when he landed top card with a neur-record scoio of 1177 strokes for his four medal rounds of the open country club championship at Ashevllle. Gil Nicholls, who used to bo pro nt Wilmington and played a great deal over the Philadelphia courses, is known as one of the most brilliant and at the same time erratic pros now playing in America. He was likely to go off at any tlmo on the Wildest kind of a tear, shooting marvelous golf all the way through a tournament. At other times he was liable to slip into the ruck nnd not, even drag down any of the money. There was a time when Gil was considered as one of the most dangerous battlers for any title run in which he was entered. Thirteen years ago Gil was runner-up for tho national open title and three years later, in 1007, lie was again a runner-up. He won a district open title here and there, nnd even ns late as two years ago Gil took the first money from a great field in the metropolitan open. But last year he was given credit for being on the skids. His name was added by .critics to the list of those famous In the past who would have to be content to -finish behind the younger fields in the years to come. GONE, said the critics, was that sang froid, that careless case with which Gil batted oft the record-wrecking scores of the past that drove him wjlly-nllly to the fore as one of our most spectacular golfers. Gone were ' the hand-raising shots which made the galleries to marvel as the doughty Gil laid one stone dead from afar, to bottle another birdie in a revel of shooting. Gone was the other stuff he uncorked, or wns liable to uncork, at any old time. , But His Latest Doings Push NOW the Great Neck pro, who has plenty of admirers in this city because of some of the great golf he has shown In the past over local courses, looks to be In the come-back class. He has clearly shown that this year he is going out again for the national open title, the cherished nmbltion he has nursed for many years. He meant to keep his form something of a secret until thai day when ho was called upon to tee off, but he couldn't help spilling the beans at Ashcvlllo in his desire to strike the pace of homo of tho opposition he found on every hand. Walter Hagen, former national open champion and present holder of tho metropolitan and western open titles, was among those present. Another was Jock Hutchison, the runner-up In last year's open conflict to Chick Evans and the runner-up also to Jim Barnes, Whltemarsh, for the professional championship of the United States. Others present were Tom McNama'ra, a Massachusets title-holder of parts and a former runner-up to Jerry Traverrt for the national open title. Mike Brady, too, who has figured up there at the top In national events, was teeing them up in other parts of the course. Nicholls was imbued with n healthy desire to win from the crowd. He played all he had anil came home from the first round with a 09, marvelous golf. He kept to this pace throughout and actually ran away from tho feathering, thirteen strokes separating Gil from those In second money Charlie Hoffner, local star, nnd Wilfred Reid, the famous British veteran now coaching at Wilmington. Gil la back with the old stuff, nnd It used to knock 'em all dead. S THE otllcc boy is authority for the statement thnt nny golfer who van romp uway from a field like that should hnve no trouble winning any old title "open or shut." Poor Time for Kinsella to Claim Title m tTTALTEn KINSELLA, national squash tennjs champion, has Issued n .statement j4v VV to the effect that he claims the world's court tennis championship. KInsella's S- action is a little nasty, to say tne least, ror j good men, he has never yet won an Important court 'tennis championship, it jH gj. irue mat wnen in iiiKiunu lie uiiuiieiiKeii ",'; Which Covey declined. There was no apparent reason why Covey should accept ;,,. jms cnuuerigu, Binto iie nuu i-vci) uuuk .caaiiengo was issued wovey ram oiuy just JayiGould at the local Iiacquet Club, and Veumstances was premature. X If InBpllii's mum In rlnlmlncr tho cbamnloiisbln nt tlin nruoni il, ... . ' . " r Jay Gould has decided to defend his title . If, anybody has a right to claim the title certainly Covey has. At tho present time 1 jXhdwever, Coyey Is serving In the trenches, or will bo shortly, nnd therefore is out yy ..w u...v. .w. ..., ..., .. 'n KInsella's part had he waited until .r tn mtmA rnr inn limn iiritiit 11 TL-niiin ueriainiy unaer mo present circumsiunceu ine cnampionsnip would bo a very barren honor for Kinsella. o '' t. vTT WOULD not be a .bad idea for New York or Philadelphia to arrango "VJL a nrofesaional tournament nnd let tho winner challenge Cuvev ,nr ti- ' lOhen professional champion of England 4a pyer, , UX ,f KVERN( pf' tho 8. 8. While M Individual trapshootlng championship of the Trapsliootera' League UMbinnie'tejn'aluba whose representation goes above the mark of 300 mnrks- -ateht maUhw at fifty tarKOls 4)tjWacJaytbircto.UnjQ last I'M Mck.ntce fh f M. gf l"rf'?;W.Tn lllMMiw'ffMlil:iV' y DOESN'T HAVE FOR NIEHOFF . . - , -. - a T111TN 1 Ik. T Holdout Trinity Who ; lMillllcM, nmiilcri out ttMhc Piiclllo const MclioITs jiliice In tho huh liccnmo very IiuvIhr :i wonderful tlmo flfUiiltiK out out of President Unltcr, IiIm employer, l,,i.T niiiiiii ,. ttMua WMimi W,lf Intlirnnfl Mflll V1',,,J ., tl , V """ .,.. ....... time develop Into n regular ball player. position of having to treat with AVhlttrd however. McGnlHgan lin. convinced In big league style, and Xlchoff Is as In London. man mat 01 me omer pair, me ouiy probably getjiwny with It and Nlehoff luck and the other hold-out did not. M-cnnd base In a manner to bring smiles m.-wi likes to be the only one left but Away the Grandolddope despite the fact that he has beaten mm rreucricK wovey to a match for money m ioc mm nuuung to gam. When the returned nome rronvhls match with to hurl a deft nt him under hn m " " tt unwise. and has notified Covey to that effect nn.i ......, ...., ..i. wVnci iursmanstiip after tho war before claiming tho title rpnn niu nni-n Mnan via,.. . . . for the world's title after tho war Gunning Club, of this ci,ty, bids fair to each, Severn has scored 371, or nearlv 93 Saturday the 8. 8. AVhlte'a wingshot was CrrUhern. of the Highland Club, of Kdgo ?f '" -';"- "-mWtltJon, BeVern ' -fr'tyts't i-tC 4. TO JOIN THE i BRliJG'eM WILL YA ' NIMP W &x SAY ,T Wrti Ul- K-Tf WjmmmMs 11 W (""V" ""N I TooTums eiiiHT'S You Teuu "rtous yT AIM-T 1 J 5hg Smd Jo 1 tiixTeefO M S" ii J Tcacher. pp a,,UTl GT Your J t rl tjom't utneue - ,t tobs't I HELP YOU To j V OP A. SYSTeivi ) PUPIL. J few do your J I . y Wy t-Jilsv ' ZAMPLES f S T i 1 GOOD SHE OlD J . a -TAO-t-; ' WHITTED AT PHILS' CAMP FORCONFAB Stubborn Outfielder and President Baker to Talk Over Salary Dispute STAR PITCHERS IN SHAPE 111 n Staff Correspondent ST. PKTHUSBLTtG, Fla., March :S. Pipsldent linker, of the Phillies, tool; another motor trip to this place today in the hope that he would havo an opportunity to clear up tho cafe of Outfielder George Whitted befoio he starts back to Phlln-, delphia tonight to clear up matters per taining to the opening of the championship season ,to weeks fiom today. Only a vvoikout this morning was scheduled for the players. They have worked steadily twice each day since coming heie without a single bieak, and they are looking forward to their half holiday with considerable satis faction. The decision not to play a game this afternoon or next Saturday will give Moran' h twirleis a chance to test up a little. Many of tho players were going golfing or fishing, but some of them changed their minds, as It has been announced that Busi ness .Manager Hilly Shettsllne will ride at the head of the paiade with Chief Nulty, of the Khe Department. Alexander showed In yesterday's game that ho will soon be in prime fettle for the opening of tho championship season. Orover twilled for the Yanigans, and the Itegulais weio able to get a few hits and no runs off him In five Innings. Klxey Is also lapldly getting tuned up. Ho did not, yield any runs In tluee Innings, but he was wild In tho fourth session, which Is ery un common for him, and his two wild pitches helped the legulars to make two tuns. landy slugged the l..-sehldp for a tiiple and ii double. This j uung slugger, though, appears to know little about playing the outfield, and Gene McCunn, the manager of the New London club, to which Gnndy has been assigned, will have haid woik In polishing "Hank" up in this department. NOTES OF THE PHILS "'c Cubans with the Phillies pulled a ntat play on the regulars. With Gonzales on fljst base and Itodes at bat. they pulled off the best hlt-and-iun play seen here this sc.Aon. 'omniodoro Plant, owner of the New I vidon (Conn ) team, with which the Cubni.n will play this season, was so pleased that he peeled two $'i0 bills off his roll and gave them to Rill Shettsllne with the re mark, "Give one to each Cuban. They may need some spending money down here." liuxlness Manager Shettsllne did not sleep well List night. Shettsllne was Invited to lido with Chief Nulty, of the St. Petersburg fire department, at the head of the big parade this afternoon and he promptly ac cepted. t nilly Klllefer had his right leg slightly In jured In practice yesterday mqrnlng, but In the game in the afternoon ho whacked the ball hard Luderus's sun-searched face is gradually healing nnd he hopes to be able to take.hls first shavp In two w-eeks before leaving hero next Sunday. Klllefer and Dugey are having great spoil with Milt Stock's bats. Stock brought three of these bats and refused to permit any one to use them. Whenever Klllefer .and Dugey get a chance thpy sneak the bats out of tho clubhouse and put them with the other sticks. Whenever Stock discovers the fact ho promptly carts, them hack to tho clubhouse. McGafflgan, who played shortstop Ip place of Bancroft for the regulars, pulled off some swell plays In the field. Mc Gafflgan gets over the ground like a jack rabbit. Rookies and Regulars j Maron, (m, The Ilravrs and Ynnkpe planned nntlier Httempt to defeat (leorula weather today. They left for Cnrdeln Oa.. for an ex hibition laime. Italn and muddy erounds have rauaed the !iotponemcnt of two emo to date. l)Jlla, Tex. Th Dillaa Texaa I.raeuen uere out to break the Olantu' wlnnlne atrrak today. Mrflraw'H men continued their un broken ntrliiff .of victorlra over Texas League tea ma yeaterday. Matins Waco, 3 lo 0, In a nlnth-lnnlnc rally. Memphis. Tcnn. L'nile Wllbert Roblnann. I)0 of the Dodzera, settled down to tho crlou bunlneiis of beating the Red Sox to. day, thereby keeplnc up the prrrnlent set by h'a ilub In lint Hnrn. Jlarnuard waa slated to pitch for the Dodders. i Cnlumliua, (lu, With hut four mora da In ramp here Manifjrer Cnllnhan started to wld the ax. Pitcher Jim Travera and Catcher Al fred Hnyder received unconditional releases, while Inflelder Anderson whs sent back to the Charlotte, N, C. iuh. Nrw Orleans Fifteen hits for twenty-one liases weren't enouxh and the Indians lost to the Pelicans, 8 to 7 esterdaV. Chapman, with a triple, double nnd slnale, led with the ash. Hani Itlla, N. SI. The Cubs licked the ttlaml. Arix. team, ft to 3. teslerday and to day are prepared to administer the same dose In the local talent. Tonight the Cubs will he In Jl J'aso. - Tx. "Hr'tk" Klitred i, M-rv. via ret n 'i:.jhikI fr outfielder. hn-'r's, trial ymgMMBQi AVIATION CORPS -HE ALWAYS HAS BEEN A FLIER OH, rITX fHfpn- ' fTTT mJaTT-Z-v ?,D VoR teach crA G. stallings, rough on breeches, HAS SEEMINGLY KEPT YOUTHFUL BY WORRYING OVER BALL GAMES - - Braves' Manager Has Slid Up and Down Pine Benches, to Tailor's Despair, for Years and Years in Terrible Frenzy By GKANTLAND KICK The Barrier I've seen kids who yearned to be hig-lcaquc nttirs t Pirates and robbers and HCfpmcn and crooks; Or lo serve as conductor.? on trolley cars Or even to get on as fane; -cooks; I've seen many a kid in the jamboree Who wanted to serve at a raging fire, ' But I've never seen one who would like to be An umpire. ' I've seen many a kid with a hearing yearn T.o serve as u cop on a busy beat; . And others whose bulging breasts would burn To handle a truck on a crowded street; They have envied the sailor out at sea; To hold up a train's been a big desire, Hut I've never seen one who would like to be An umpire. YOP hear more than n trifle about the long reign of Honus Wagner and Larry Lajole. Also concerning the extended man agerial careers of John McGfaw nnd Clarke Griffith. There Is still another who might be men tioned. When you take a look at George Stallings, of the Braves, you take him ns one still well within his inline; hardly a day over forty. He not only looks to be around this age In physical make-up, but he has all the snap and enthusiasm of a younger . man Yet one of our first recollections of baseball so far back It Is dim nnd hazy Is that of Geoige Stallings leading his Au gusta team upon the field, back around 189 a matter of twenty-three years ago. Stal lings was then one of the youngest man agers baseball has ever known, despite the fact that he won a Southern J.eague pen nant that season. Two years later. In 1896, he was manager of the Phillies, about the time Nap Lajole broke In. Lajoie has served two decades and has passed on. yet here Is Stallings. still looking about as young as ever and far from the end of his managerial career. Worry and Age They say that wony will bring on age quicker than anything else. Yet no man In baseball has ever worried as Stallings worries through every game. At times he becomes a wild man on the bench. He says himself that a pair of tiousers lasts about ,. ,.!. ,.r ten dsivs after he has finished sliding up and down pine oencnes. rm two davs after tho world series of 1914, when lils Braves beat tho Mackmen four straight, he was unable to sit still for ten minutes at a time, through excessive nerv ousness. Yet In place of aging him this ,.r,,,t,,.,i nm- has annarently acted ns a barricade or "barrier to age. A ball game to Stallings Is something more than nn Intense proposition. It keeps him nerved to the breaking point from stait to finish. Yet here, at the end of twent-threo years' service, you find him looking younger than most men of forty one or forty-two a man who only three years ago was able to lift a ball club from last place In July to a world championship In October solely by the. tire and spirit of an Inspiration that has never been equaled. There nre few young leaders In baseball now.' Mack Is beyond fifty. McGraw, Jcn nlng, Stallings, Griffith. Itoblnson, Row land. Moran, Callahan nnd Jones nre nil beyond forty. . Donovnn nnd Hughes are nrotind thnt mark. Christy Mathewson la thirty-seven. Jack Harry Is the youngest of the tribe at thtity. Youth may take the lead out on the field, but when It comes to generalship and au thority, youth must give way to the older regime. Leslie O. Nunamaker is another ball Uilayer who is confident that golf has Im proved his batting, i-ast season ;una- STENGEL SIGNS .CONTRACT; ALL DODGERS ARE IN LINE NEW YORK. March 28, Word has been received here from Hot Springs, Ark,, that Outfielder Casey Stengel, last of the Brook lyn club's" holdouts, had signed a contract with President Ebbets. Lotting Satisfaction Is" Assured wliro you imtronltc me n, that's n flirt. Let ine prove the statement. Your Inspection of our line of Marine. Suitings la asked. Kprtlal leudrr, regular W.M Huttings to 16,50 I our order . Billy Moran, 1103 Arch The Tailor- Open Kvenlngs BROADWAY A. C Thuri. Ngt. Kematrhrd by I'opular Request Jack BUckbixtt vs. Harry" g- Baker Eastern Basketball League' CHAJiriuriBiiir ruiiiHT- -IKt PSTS .MAN! maker took up golf, played tluough the sea son, nnd his average jumped exactly forty points. From a fafvly low mark he tcfok his place at the top of his club, well beyond Baker, Magee and other first-class hitters. Golf Motto He who lets Ms club head lag Should Keep three niblicks in his bap, Prices Effective April 1st The Eight Seven-Passenger Touring 125-inch whcelbase $1950 The Four Seven-Passenger Touring 121-inch wheelbase $1395 Closed Cars Four Coupe .... FourtSedan .... Four Limousine. .Kite- ft' vpy i I f :i.l All Pricts t. p. 6. Toledo Subject to change without notice - ' BALL PARKS FOR GOVERNMENTS USE National Grounds Open for Military Training in Event of War WOULD BE OF BIG HELP NEW' YORK. March 28. National League baseball parks may be thrown open to the Government foi the train ing of soldiers. Govcrnor.lohn K. Tener, piesldent of the league, today declared he had no doubt that If the need arises the Na tionals magnates will be ready to do any thing In their power to help the country wage war to a successful end, "I do not believe the magnates are con templating just now the" possibility of their prounds being needed, but If that need should ailse and the Government should call, our magnates, I am certain, would gladly give their grounds for purposes of training. "It Is a matter for Individual club owners to decide. They own their giounds. 1 cannot speak for them, but knowing them nnd their. feelings well, I feel sure that I speak what they themselves would say. it Is hard for me to believe tlinv the bloly struggle now going on In Europe will be transported partly to this sld" of the Atlantic, but we have no way of telling what may happen AVe undoubtedly need a large auny, and If It Is necessary I believe baseball1' in general will throw Itself In to help." mmmm 2&Illlii This Motor Beneficial Use Those long periods of driving a carbon-choked motor, rather than give i't up for cleaning carbon and grinding valves, are unknown to the owner of a Willys-Knight. The Willys -Knight motor gains in power, pick-up, flex ibility and quietness through makingbeneficial use of carbon and size $or size it excels in these respects in the first place. $1650f $1950 $1950 The advantages of the Willys Knight motor are as practical as they are pleasant. -OVERLAND MOTOR CO., Distributors 323-5-7 North Broad Street, Phila.. ' Prompt Deliveries Belf Phone-Walnut 4897 The.Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio Manufacturers of Willys-Knight and Overland Automobiles ' and Light Commercial Cars "Made In U.S. A." ZjP&$& NDUSTRIALS PLAN A EOI DEFENSE i Local Ball Tossers Offer Services to Government in Case of War LEAGUE SPLIT IN TWO II The bl league baseballers nt-e tint the only onfe. tnnt will receive publicity In the pieparsdiicss line. At a meeting of the IndUKiiinl Oascball League, at tho linc ham, Preslllont Hairy E. rlttel Informed the more than foity delegates i,( u iv lug attended a meeting at City Huji i'a,. week at the tequest of .Mayor H'lilth Tj pi'e. pare for home defense. (Mitel explained the details of the scheme and every one heartily approved of Ills pur. gestlnns The managers of the various t clubs nif now enrolling playeis of the team and men in the shops In the Home Derenie' League. They will serve the (iovern inent at their trades rts inaohlnlats, cleilts stenographers or whatever their occupation' may bo In case of war. 1'iuler no clrcum RtnnceH will the schedule of the league lie Interfered with In case of trouble. The circuit In divided Into two divisions railed the north nnd south districts, The North district la composed of Klectrlc Storage Mattel y, Keen Kutter, Hnln & Kit burn. J, and J. llnb-on, Mldvnle Steel, Standard Holler .Hearing, Henry Dlsstoil Sons and Amerlctn Mnuganese Hiotize. The southern srctlnn Is composed of Hess ltrlght, C. I''. Houghton, Philadelphia Koll am) Machine, I. L. Waul. Hnrrett Mnnu. acturlng Company. .Miller Lock, David ' Luptim .Sons and Quaker City Ituhlier. The Industrial League amateur baseball of Philadelphia Is an organization mnile up of baseball teams from the largest Indus, trial concerns In the city playing strictly nmnteur baseball for tho support It affords the team nnd their followers. All games are played under the rules Of organized baseball with two experienced umpires having chnrge of the games. Tho ofilcers of the Industrial League ar Harry 13. Clttel. piesldent; Rlchaids Seeds, vice president; John Rule, secretary; Krvin Stein, treasurer. Mldvale Steel had' ten players out prac ticing on Northeast Held yesterday after noon. The steclworkers will open the sea son on April 21 at Roxborough against that club, nnd tho batteries will be Stanley Baumgnitner, pitcher, formerly of thu li utiles, nnd .1. Mnley. catcher, who was given a tryout by Pat Moian last year. Mnley was formerly of Glrardvlllo and pre feis to play with Mldvale rather than accept a berth In the Illinois. Hale & Kilburn will have as their main stay In tho box Bemls, who received a try. out with the A's. Stewart, 'who won a pen nant for Hale & Kilburn two yeais ago, will toss 'em over for .1. & ,1. Dnhson. The champion Plsstons rootganlzed for the season at a meeting yesterday, and an election of dli colors takes place today. There aie four vacancies on tho board of governors and ten candidates and tho i hairy for election Is tense. Ball Club to Aid Red Cross UIl.N'Al'Klir: Mnnh Is. Prtsaioni A F TlmniP. of Ihu .Milwaukee Aspnt'lntlnn b.ixetiati tpiun li: iinnmincef that tu wnultl ao 111 r i pnt of tin- nrnlllM of Ills oluli thli nonxo'i to th Milwaukee Hcil I'ruxs to iisilHt In mulpplng a lmsc liiiRTlt.il nf .n lii'ilx, tin- ilon.ttlnn lwin contlnKi-nt on tho ivent of nilu'il warfare. SUITS TO OROER Kedureil from $30, nnd $20 PETER MORAN & CO. "STffiU? 13TII & MA!Uvi:T. ENTHANCE ON 13TH. 8. V.. COR. 0TII AND ARCH KTS. Makes of Carbon B m I --' if m n 1Z1. m. 9 I jm H ?A 'j i u "N f 4 .so S25 'yW''.w . 1 I !! 4L I' ft I ! i P1 K lo It cl .r 1 'ti I ,1 I'n i r ,i t h i i r I.' 'i i v, k: 1 'I t s?l l 'SI 1 - tl m $ SSlic,' Afjnit.i. -'- .1.:. p v ' nimuuit U !sfcay,.Jl''itfii.Vi, j-(S!-rff4jliu... . ,'..- .. . - ' iBBS4C i .. M
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers