10 Look Out Mutt May Try It Again-*s!«<- '«£ ! «•< TM«,Ut 'I ( SO«.e f)| " I ?.* \ot/"r pop. fit DR(N< ane F. Kubindall. Williamstown. St. Mary's eleven, of Steelton. desires ! n game for Saturday. Address Joseph ■ Sostor. 526 South Third street, Steelton. ; Pa Ted Meredith, . the intercollegiate ! «iuarter-mlle champion anil Olympic! titleholder. will race Homer Baker in a pei lal r,OO-vard match event at New ark to-night. 11l tin' opening game of the Middle town Basketball league, last night, the ! Tennis Club defeated the Liberty Hose, score 21 to IS. The Rescue Hose ' Company team defeated Wincroft, score i 22 to 9. Move new bowling records came in j the Casino League, last night. The ; Senators defeated the Nationals, mar- ' gin 9» pins. The Nationals made a 1 total in one fame of 97S pins, afiil Sena- i tors. 1.066. Sherwood Magee. of the Phillies, is i assisting the I.afayette coaches. St. Cardinals will train at Hot : Wells, Tex., next Spring. Coach By Dickson Wins; Penn Goes Out on Field Special to The Telegraph Philadelphia. Nov. 18.—After a con ference with Assistant Coach By Dick son. and after receiving a plea from the squad and the student body. Coach : George Brooke, of the University of) Pennsylvania football team, decided I to renew practice yesterday in prepa ration for the final game of the season with Cornell on Th ilsgivlng Day. A light signal drill will he held this aft ernoon at the usual time. Coach Brooke hail ordered the tearr, to take a prolonged rest. REAPING ATHLETES TO STRIKE Opposed to Playing Itaskotbfell Under Collegiate Rules: Dccisji.tfi Withheld Reading, Pa., Nov. IS.-i-Jrthletii- au thorities at the Reading high school face a strike of candidates for the bas ketball team as a result of the an nouncement that the team this season ■would play under collegiate rules in stead of national rules heretofore ob served. PRESIDENT WILI, \OT SEE GAME Washington. D. C., Nov. 18.—Presi- j dent Wilson will not attend the Army | and Navy football game in Philadel phia on November 2S, according to an ' Btinouncement made at the White' House Notice How This Cigar is Wrapped Tin foil next to the cigar itself—tissue paper outside. Put on by special ma chinery that does the wrapping at a cost next to nothing. ELDAUP Cigar is too good a cigar to be sold unprotected. Our improved process of curing makes good tobacco still better; then we keep it fresh, fragrant and mild by protecting it carefully. That's why every man who smokes EL DALI.O swears it's ten-iy.nt value, but „ you get two El Dallos for 10 cents. Invest a nickel KKm and try it out- REiD TOBACCO CO., Distributors MII/I'ON AND AI/rOONA, I'A. WEDNESDAY EVENING, CAPTAIN TALBOT RESTING AND DISCUSSING TACTICS BETWEEN QUARTERS This photograph shows Captain Talbot of the Yale football team resting and discussing tactics on the field een quarters in the game. Since the period of rest is fco short under the present rules, there is no time to over new tactics in the dressing rooms. The Yale men wrapped themselves in blankets and lay down in of the spectators. Then the coaches had a talk with the captain about the methods to be used in the latter of the game. CENTRAL HIGH TEAM TO GIVE TECH A FIGHT Saturday Schedule Includes a Num ber of Final Scrimmages in College Circles Evidence of real school spirit came yesterday when a hundred or more Central high students watched the varsity eleven at practice, and cheered the players at intervals. In the opin ion of the Central students, the an nual local championship game Is not going to be a cinch. The poor show ing by Central this season has to some extent been discouraging, but strong hope is pinned on Central coming back strong on Thanksgiving day. Central expects to win at Wilkcs- Barre on Saturday and the champion high school team of the coal region will not find the Central eleven an easy proposition. New tactics will be em ployed Saturday at Wilkes-Barre, and the change promises to be a factor in the big game on November 2li. Tech is working hard for the game with Steelton at Island Park on Satur day. Coach D. Forrest Dunkle had two hard scrimmages yesterday, switching his players at intervals, and introducing a number of new forma tions. Tech expects to go against a much stronger Steelton team than has been in ,evidence since the season opened. After this" week the maroon and gray will change their practice grounds, and all training will be in secret. In college circles a sensational wind up of the season is looked for. The Yale-Harvard game next Saturday is the important battle of the year. Most of the college schedules will end Sat urday. WWln there will be important battles on Thanksgiving day btween c< liege teams, they are annual battles and do not figure in championship honors. Bucknell: On account of the frozen condition of the Hucknell campus the coaches gave the few regulars on the field and the substitutes a light signal practice and then sent them to the gymnasium, where a number devoted a lot of time to basketball practice. Coach Cockill will give a number of the regulars work on the basketball lloor instead of sending them out on the football field for scrimmage work, i Gettysburg: The crippled Gettys . burg squad yesterday resumed work for the remaining games of the sea son. The hard play of the Bucknell game completely used up the men and | Coach O'Brien excused them from j practice yesterday. McCullough suf fered a badly lacerated hand and will , not return to the line-up until the i latter part of the week. Attention was j centered upon interference by the hacks ami upon tackling, both of which were poor in the Bucknell game. I Lebanon Valley: Coach Guyer has j notified all of the varsity men at Leb anon Valley College that they will not | be required to come out for football j practice any more this season on ac jcount of the schedule being played, jAs the second team men have two j games to be played this season, most iof the varsity players have signified I their intention of helping the scrubs I get into good condition for the coni ( ing contests. Dickinson.—As most of the Dickin son College football team is in good shape physically. Coach Harrington put the squad through an extremely hard and long practice. The line, al though showing improvement, does not yet satisfy Harrington, and recelv jed several special drills in blocking I and charging. • Indians: Since the Carlisle Indians land Dickinson College resumed atlile ! tic relations by placing a football game lon their schedules, which event will be ! played here on Saturday, considerable j local interest has developed in the | prospective battle. As the Indians and : the collegians have frequently prae- I ticed together both are pretty well I aware of the other's tricks. Penn State: For the first time in three weeks, Penn State's varsity was able to work with its regular line-up this afternoon. With the rounding up of the cripples Hollenback tried out a new backtield combination that so well satisfied him that he said he would stick to it for the Pitt game on Than -sgiving day. Higgins played fullback; Clark, left half; Yerger, right half, and Captain Tobin, quarter back. This arrangement puts Welty and James to the bench. Six-day Grinders Show Both Class and Speed New York, Nov. 18. Rapid-fire sprints that almost overlapped held cyclists in the six-day race at top speed for more than an hour during the night and carried the new record near ly fifteen miles in advance of the old. To-day fifteen of the eighteen teams that started whirled over the big bowl at Madison Square Garden. The record for the fifty-sixth hour was 1,150 miles and 9 laps made by Thomas and Ryan In 1912. ACADEMY SEASON ENDS Losing live men this year put a crimp in the success of the Harrlsburg Academy football eleven. The Acad emy won two games. In total scorea the Academy scored 25 points and their opponents 90. Coach Tatem Js pleased with the work of the team. Few players on the team will grad uate this year and next year's squad will open strong. (iUS WEI,SCII IS IMPROVING Chicago, 111., Nov. I.—lmprovement was noted to-day in the condition of Gustave Welsch, the Carlisle Indian quarterback who was injured in the Notre Dame game here last Saturday. It will be three or four weeks, how ever, before he will be able to Join his teammates at Carlisln. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ! Operations on Eastern Front Show -Improvement ' Say Belgian Dispatches By Associated £rcss _ Berlin, via The Hague and London, Nov. 18, 10.25 A. M.—An official war bulletin given out in Berlin to-day sets forth that the operations on the east ern front are progressing favorably. The Germans apparently are using their victory at Wloclawek to th«« greatest advantage. The Russian ar mies defeated near Lipno yesterday, probably in the vicinity of Plock, and the forces defeated near Wlocklawek are now at Kutno and Leschytea. WILSOX PREDICTS BRIGHT BUSINESS FUTURE FOR V. S. Special to The Telegraph Washington, D. C. ( Nov. 18.—In a letter written to Secretary McAdoo congratulating him' on the opening of the new federal reserve banks, Pers»- dent Wilson takes an optimistic view of the business future of the United States. The President's letter of hop'e and confidence in the business situation was written in response to a note from Secretary McAdoo announcing that the new national hanking and currency system had been Inaugurated. Perhaps the* most significant por tion of the President's letter is that which refers to the railroads. There is a suggestion that he sympathizes with them in-their effort to obtain per mission to advance their freight rates in his statement that they are affected not so much because their business is curtailed as because their credit is called in question by doubt of their earing capacity. "No doubt, in the light of the new day. with its new un derstandings," says the President, "the problems of the railroads will also be met and dealt with in a spirit of can dor and justice." MEDILI, M'CORSIICK WINS Special to The Telegraph Chicago, Til., Nov. 18.—The offlcia. canvass of the Twenty-ninth senatorial NOVEMBER 18, 1914. district, completed to-day, showed that Medill McCormiek, the only Progres sive candidate elected to the State Legislature from Cook county, would retain his seat, defeating Charles 'l'. Funke, Republican candidate, by 280 votes. A contest before the Legis lature is threatened. WHAT'S IX A NAME? In business it may mean a fortune. Ilepetition makes reputation. There fore it is essential that the name o* your establishment stands out promi nent with the merchandise you nave for sale. An attractive name plate not only serves to embellish your adver tisement but it makes the name stand out in decided contrast from the same ness of type In the group of advertise ments around yours. Sketches sub mitted on request, or engravtngs made from your own drawings. Telegraph Printing Company. SOLDIERS' BONKS POIND Gettysburg Man Uncovers Them in Digging Trench Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg. Pa., Nov. 18.—Bones of two soldiers were found by William Johns on his property at the south, western end of town while engaged in laying a pipe line. They were about tifteen inches below the surface and with the bones were found part of an old army hat, a number of teeth and a brass button, indicating that one or the men belonged to a T'nion com mand. In 1 882 there were tifteen Con federate bodies found about 300 yards from this spot and they were taken to Richmond, Va., for burial. AI'TO RUNS INTO CATCII BASIN Gettysburg. Pa., Nov. 18. —Crashing into a catch basin in West Confed erate avenue near the Lee memorial when the driver's attention was mo mentarily diverted from the steering, the automobile of the Dev. L. D. i later, of Taneytown, was damaged and two of the occupants thrown out, sustain ing slight injuries. The Rev. Mr. Ha ter's wife was rendered unconscious for a short time. ! INSTITUTE AT CARLISLE Program For Sixty-llrst Meeting of Cumberland County Teachers Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., Nov. 18.—Dur ing the week of November 30 to De cember 4. the sixty-lirst annual session of the Cumberland county teachers' institute will be held in the Carlisle opera house. The following program will be followed: Monday morning, organization of institute; afternoon, music lv Professor March; address of welcome. Dr. J. H. Morgan and re sponse by Professor M. M. Metzer; "Good Taachlng, What It Is," Dr. Am brose L. Suhrie; "Measuring Results," Dr. Payson Smith; Monday evening, 8 o'clock, vocal solo, Professor March; lecture, "The Spenders," Dr. Edward Amherst Ott; Tuesday, music; "A Workable School Program," Dr. Suli rie; "Moral Education," Dr. David J. Carver: "The Public School in Its Re lation to Civic and Social Reforms," Dr. Smith; afternoon, "Cutting the Dead Limbs From the Tree of Knowl edge," Dr. Suhrie; "The Contract With Life," Dr. Smith; evening, concert, the Clara Wallace Concert Company; Wednesday morning, "The Study Los son," Dr. Suhrie; "Education Kor Citi zenship," Dr. Smith; afternoon, "The Technique of the Recitation," Dr. Suh rie; music. Professor March; address, Dr. Lehman; "The Element of the Individual," Dr. Smith; evening, the Metropolitan Concert Company; devo tional exercises, the Rev. Dr. A. R. Kteck: "Some Educational Obliga tions," Dr. Smith: "Penmanship," Professor Zaner: "Childhood impuls es," Dr. Arthur Holmes; Thursday af ternoon, "A Rational Program For Rural Education," Dr. Smith; "Pen manship." Professor Zaner; "Dyna mic Ideals," l>r. Holmes; evening, vo cal solo, Miss Rachel Jones; Icctur»\ "The Puritan in Two Worlds," Dr. Samuel Parkes Cadman; Friday morn ing, "Place of Environment in liar actcr Making," Dr. Holmes; "The Test of the Teacher," Dr. Smith. #