Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, September 11, 1915, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
BILLY CLYMER'S BOYS PUSH INDIANS INTO SIXTH PLACE-GIBBONS READY
INDUS LOSE TWO;
NOW IN SIXTH PLACE
Pitcher Cooke Refuses to Allow
Harrisburg One Hit in
Second
Special to The Telegraph
Toronto, Sept. 11.—"Billy" Cly
mer's Maple Leaves took two games
from Harrisburg yesterday, sending
the Indians to sixth place.
In the first game Toronto blanked
Harrisburg 1 to 0. The second con
test was all Pitcher Cooke who did
not allow the Indians a hit. The score
was 4 to 1.
The first game was not decided un
til after one was out In ninth. Enz
jnann then weakenad. G-raham singled.
Kooher walked, Wares doubled to
center, scoring Graham. Until that
time the game was a fine duel be
tween Luque and Enzmann.
In the second game Harrisburg's
only score came in the fourth frame.
With one out Kraft walked, stole
. second, went to third when Kielly
threw the ball to center field, he
scored when Ruth let Witter's infield
• bounder bounce off his knee into left
Held. The scores by innings:
First Game— R.H.E
Harrisburg .... 00000000 o—o 7 0
Toronto 00000000 I—l 7 0
Batteries: Enzmann and Heckinger;
Luque and Kocher.
Second Game — R.H.E
Harrisburg 001000 o—l 1 1
Toronto 001310 x—s 7 1
Seven Innings by agreement.
Batteries: Small wood and Rey
nolds; Cook and Kelly.
blossom of Yale Is
Individual Winner
Special to The' Telegraph
Greenwich, Conn., Sept. 11.— F. R.
Blossom, of Yale, won the medal in
1 the qualifying round for the inter
• collegiate individual singles golf
i championship over the links of the
Greenwich Country Club yesterdf^v
iwith a score of 153. He had rounds
of 78 and 78. The total was one
stroke better than that of Louis L.
Bredin, of Yale, and John M. Simp
son, of Illinois.
I INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE) SCORES
At Rochester— R. H. E.
(Providence ..1 0000 000 0-—1 7 0
'Rochester ..02 00 0 o>oox—2 7 0
Batteries —r Pennock and Haley;
'Herche and Williams.
At Montreal— R. H. E.
l Jersey City. 10502000 2—lo 10 1
'Montreal .000000001 2 3 8 1
Bajteries Sherman and Schwert;
tFullerton and Madden.
At Buffalo—First game. R. H. E.
KRichmond ...00010000 o—l 8 0
(Buffalo 00020051 x 8 12 0
Batteries Cottrell and Sweeney;
*®eebe and Onslow.
Second game— R. H. E.
Jißlchtnond 0 l'O 00 0 I—2 4 1
•Buffalo 10 1010 x—s 10 2
(Seven innings by agreement).
Batteries McHale and Sweeney;
,Beebe and Onslow.
L MoLf>rr,HLr\ MAY RF.TrRE
New York, Sept. 11.—It is rumored
•here that the famous "Comet" had
.played his last championship tourna
'ment, and that from now on he would;
ileave the burden to Johnston, Wil
' Hams and others of the younger
school.
The Lancaster Fair
and
OPEN-AIR CARNIVAL
September 28-29-30 October 1
* "
Biggjer, More Elaborate and More In
?% structive Than Ever Before. Thousands of
Buildings*and Tents, and Hundreds of Acres
of Ground filled with Exhibits. A superb
v Midway of the Rarest Attractions. Harness
and Rtanning Races every afternoon. Free
Circus-and ,Vaudeville Acts, Band Concerts
, and Baboon Ascensions Daily.
Special Excursion Rates on all steam and
trodleyiroads.
ADMISSION 25c
»tH II I IH I IM
JUNIATA COUNTY — l7
•p y u September 14 to 17
SPECIAL TRAINS
PORT ROYAL _ Thursday, September 16
Leave Harrtnhnri Thnraday, September 16, at T.M A. M„ Newport 8.4S
A. M.. Mlllemtown 5.54 A. M., Thiimpaontown 8.04 A. M. Heturalnß, leave
Port Royal 5.30 P. M. for HarrliihnrK and Intermediate atatlona.
Leave Altoona Thuraday, September lfl, at 7.00 A. M., LerrUtoivn Jnnrtlon
, ».22 A. M. and 12.00 nnont Mifflin ».4S A. M. and 12.21 P. M. RetnrnlnK.
leave Port Roynl R.IB P. M. for Mifflin only) 6.00 P. M. for Altonna and In-
I termedlate atatlona
REDUCED FARE EXCURSION TICKETS
aold to Port Royal September 14 to 17, nood on date of laane only from
HarrliihnrK, Altoonn, Sunbary, Levrlatovrn and Mllroy and Intermediate
atatlonn.
PENNSYLVANIA R4ILROAD
| It's Getting Close to Coal Time
| Do you realize that It will be but a short time before we run Into
| that weather when a fire In the house will be necessary to health and
| comfort? Better be prepared. Look after your bins now, phone us
I your order, and we'll send you the kind of coal that gives out the
| greatest amount of heat units —the kind that goes farthest.
J. B. MONTGOMERY
; Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets
SATURDAY EVENING, HAFTOSBURG I&3£2b> TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 11, 1915.
Gawy Cravath's Homer
Increases Phillies Lead
Special to The Telegraph
Philadelphia, Sept. 11.—With the
terrific crash of Gawy Cravath's twen
ty-ftrst homer of the season still ring
ing in their ears, the Philadelphia® left
town at 11.16 last night, westward
bound on their moat crucial trip of the
most cruoiaJ ysar In their 88 years'
history as & hall dub. Their victory
over the I*ew York Giants yesterday,
giving them a olean sweep of their
next to last series at home, Increased
their lead over Brooklyn to three and
a half games, and over Boston to four
and a half. A goodly gathering of
about 8,000 fans was present at Na
tional League Park to say farewell.
That clout of Cravath's deserves a
separate story all by itself. It came
suddenly, with the score tied at 3-3,
in the eighth, after Gavvy had come
to bat three times without getting a
hit. As very, very seldom happens
with home runs, the bases were filled
at the time, which Is why the above
mentioned 8,000 stood up and roared
and roared, for the four runs that rip
pled across the plate were the margin
by which the PhiladeJphias won—score
7 to 3.
Sports of All Sorts
Harrisburg and Sunfcjry Elks met
In combat at Island Park to-day.
To-day's battles in Dauphin-Perry
League promised home changes in
the standing.
The semi-finals in the Harrisburg
Tennis Association will be completed
this afternoon. The finals are sched
uled for Monday.
Booster Day was observed at New
Cumberland to-day. Steelton is the
attraction.
Maurice E. McLoughlln of Sao
Francisco was an individual winner at
New York yesterday.
Harrisburg will play In New York
on Sunday September 19.
Place 4 Lights on
City's "Front Steps"
Four of the 64 ornamental electric!
standards that will light the length of |
the River Front wall have already
been placed by the Harrisburg Light
and Power Company on the section
north of Hardscrabble and as rapidly
as the other standards are received
from the factory they will be put into
position.
Nearly all of the 24,000 odd feet of
cable that will be used in the lighting
of the wall has been received and
more than half of It has been stretch
ed in the conduits.
While work is being hustled on the
River Wall lighting the ornamental
standards in Second street from State
to Locust streets has practically been
completed.
Arc lights are now being installed in
accordance with an ordinance recent
ly passed by Council, at the following
points: Fifth and Strawberry; Ninth
and Market; Nectarine and Kittatinny:
Fifteenth and Market; Seventeenth
and Dock; Seventeenth and Revere;
Twentieth and a Half and Brookwood;
Twenty-flrst and Berryhill; Twenty
second and a Half, between Derry and
Philadelphia and Reading; Twenty
seventh and Derry; Twenty-fourth
and Ellerslie; Eighteenth and Herr;
Fifteenth between Briggs and Herr;
Seventeenth and Walnut; Royal Ter
race, Elizabeth and Sw-ab; Second and
Reel's Lane, and Briggs and Ash
streets: 60-eandle power incandescents
are being placed at Market and Cow
den, Drummond near Fifteenth, rear
of 1412 Market, Dare and Miller, Clo
ver and Brensinger, Chayne and Crab
apple, James, between Calder and
Reily, and Snow and Cream srtreets.
TWO EASTERN WOMEN S C
I |
LJLLtAH 3. HYDE. «€S C//-
C.I Chicago. .®? P V 11 —Setting a record for long distance golf. Miss Alexa
512 it i 1"! 1 ?', southern champion, yesterday took Mrs. C. H. Vander
• iTr ■« Philadelphia expert, to the twenty-second hole before succumbing In
the semifinals of the women s national golf tournament at Onwentsla Club.
„n~ 8 i Vanderbecks hard-earned victory over the seventeen-year-old girl,
fil.* «u 6r ?. c ? f s l Vj? fln l l rou , n(l to-day with Mrs. W. A. Gavin, of Kng
and 3 eliminated Miss Ernestine Pearce, the last Chicago contender, 5
c=„iVL th T e ®Penlngr of play Mrs. Vanderbeck. and Miss Lillian B. Hyde, of
«»» yi «?' L" t tu " ied J" cards of 85 and 86 respectively. Miss Hyde dropped
out of the contest on Thursday.
Baseball Summary;
Games Past and Future
SCORES OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES
International League
Buffalo, 8; Richmond, 1 (first
game).
Buffalo, 5; Richmond, 2 (second
(fame).
Toronto, 1; Harrisburg, 0 (first
game).
Toronto, B; Harrisburg, 1 (second
game).
Rochester, 2; Providence, 1.
Jersey City, 10; Montreal, 1.
National league
Philadelphia, 7; New York, 3.
Pittsburgh, S; Boston, 1.
Boston, 3; Pittsburgh, 2 (second
game, 10 innings).
Cincinnati, 7; St. Louis, 1.
Brooklyn-Chicago not scheduled.
American League
Boston, 7; Philadelphia, 2.
St. Louis, 8; New York, 1.
Cleveland, 6; Detroit, 2.
Chicago-Washington not scheduled.
Federal League
Buffalo, 3; Kansas City, 1.
Brooklyn, 2; Pittsburgh, 0.
St. Louis, 3; Newark, 0.
Baltimore-Chicago not scheduled.
WHERE THEY PLAY TO-DAY
International League
Harrisburg at Buffalo (two games).
Jersey City at Toronto (two games).
Providence at Montreal (two games).
Richmond at Rochester (two
games).
National League
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh.
Boston at Chicago.
New York at Cincinnat.l
Brooklyn at St. Louis.
American I<cague
St. Louis at Philadelphia (two
Detroit at New York.
AMERICA'S
GREATEST
CIGARETTE i
\
Makers of the Htghnt Crude Turkish
and Egyptian Gganttes In thtVMd '
Cumberland Valley Railroad !
TIME TABLE
In Effect June 37. 1915.
TRAINS leave Harrisburg—
For Winchester and Martinaburg at
6:03. *7:62 a. m., *3:40 p. m.
For Hageratown. Chambersburg. Car
lisle, Mechanicsburg and intermediate
etations at *5:03. *7.52, *11:53 a. m
*3:40. 5:37, *7:46, *11:00 p. m.
Additional trains for Carlisle and
Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m„ 3.16; 6:36,
6:60, 9:36 a. m.
For Dlllsburg at 6:03, *7:63 and
• 11:63 a. m.. 2:16. *8:40, 6:37 and 6:86
p. m.
•Dally. All other trains dally except
Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE.
J. H. TONQE. Q. P. A.
r \
HEADttI/ARTERS FOR
SHIRTS
SIDES & SIDES
\ i. , ■
Cleveland at Washington.
Chicago at Boston.
Federal League
Newark at St. Louis.
Buffalo at Kansas City.
Baltimore at Chicago.
Pittsburgh at Brooklyn.
Central Pennsylvania League
Highspire at Lebanon.
Steelton at New Cumberland.
Hershey at Middletown.
Dauphin-Perry League
Halifax at Dauphin.
Newport at Duncannon.
Marvsville at Millersburg.
Dauphin-Schuylkill League
Lykens at Elizabethvllle.
Williamstown at Tower City.
WHERE THEY PLAY TO-MORROW ]
International Ticague
Providence at Montreal.
Other teams not scheduled.
National League
Boston at Chicago.
New York at Cincinnati
Brooklyn at St Louis.
Philadelphia-Pittsburgh not sched
uled.
American League
No games scheduled.
Federal League
Baltimore at Chicago.
Newark at St. Louis.
Buffalo at Kansas City.
Brooklyn-Pittsburgh not scheduled.
WHERE THEY PLAY MONDAY
International League
Harrisburg at Buffalo.
Providence at Montreal.
Jersey City at Toronto.
Richmond at Rochester.
National League
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh.
New York at Cincinnati.
Boston at Chicago.
Brooklyn at St. Louis.
American League
St. Louis at Philadelphia.
Detroit at New York.
Chicago at Boston.
Cleveland at Washington.
Frirleral League
Pittsburgh at Brooklyn (two games).
Other teams not scheduled.
STANDING OF THE TEAMS
International League
W. L. P. C.
Providence 80 47 .630
Buffalo 77 46 .626
Montreal 62 63 .496
Toronto 61 66 .480
Rochester 59 65 .478
Harrisburg 59 66 .472
Richmond 56 74 .431
Jersey City 47 76 .382
National I<eague
W. L. P. C.
Philadelphia 73 56 .566
Brooklyn 71 61 .538
Roston 69 61 .531
St. Louis 65 70 .481
Chicago 61 66 .480
Pittsburgh 64 71 .474
Cincinnati 61 6 9 .4 70
New York 59 69 .461
American league
W. L. P. C.
Boston 86 43 .667
Detroit 86 48 .642
Chicago 79 52 .603
Washington 71 59 .546
New York 59 69 .461
St. Louis 53 78 .405
Cleveland 59 82 .379
Philadelphia 38 91 .295
Federal Ijeague
W. L. P. C.
Pittsburgh 73 57 .562
St. Louis 71 60 .542
Chicago 70 62 .530
Newark 67 61 .523
Kansas City 68 63 .519
Buffalo 68 68 .500
Cleveland 50 32 .379
Baltimore s 43 85 .336
Central Pennsylvania League
W. L. P. C.
New Cumberland ... 15 7 .682
Lebanon 13 10 .565
Middletown 11 9 ,550
Steelton 9 11 .450
Hershey 5 12 .294
Highspire 5 12 .294
Dauphin-Perry League
W. L. P. C.
Marysville 9 6 .600
Dauphin 9 7 .563
Duncannon 10 8 .556
Newport 10 8 .556
Millersburg 8 8 .500
Halifax 8 13 .235
Dauphin-Schuylkill League
W. L. P. C.
Williamstown 14 5 .737
Lykens 10 8 .555
Ellsabethville 9 11 .450
Tower City ......... 5 14 .263
GIBBONS FAVORITE
IN TONIGHT'S FIGHT
Sale of Tickets Indicates Record
Crowd; Promoters at Big
Expense
Special to The Telegraph
New York, Sept. 11.—The promot
ers of the McFarland-Glbbons fight
that will be staged at Brighton Beach
to-night were confident to-day that &|
crowd between 30,000 and 45,000 j
would be at the ringside when the |
two welterweights begin their ten- j
round battle.
"The receipts from the sales so farj
are above $40,000," said William
Marshall, chief promoter. "All of our
sales to date have been of the more
expensive seats." This fight will be
staged at a cost of $50,000.
The betting odds favored Gibbons
at 8 to 5, with a fair amount of money
being wagered in the different betting
centers in town.
INDIANS WITH GOOD RECORDS
In summing up the work of Inter
national League players two Harris
burgers are prominent. Among the
ten leading hitters are Kraft, with
.312, and Witter, .310. A 1 Schacht is
still the leading local twlrler with 14
won and 10 lost.
C r "
I POLLING PLACES OF CITY
Following is a complete list of
I the polling and registration places
I throughout the city, the precincts
of each ward being in numerical
I order:
First Ward
| First Precinct—No. 1276 South
Cameron.
Second Precinct—Barber shop.
Ninth and Hemlock.
Third Precinct—No. 600 Race.
Second Ward
First Precinct—Second street, Al
derman Caveny's.
Second Precinct—Paxton engine
house. South Second.
Third Precinct—Cigar store, 1129
Mulberry.
Fourth Precinct—Garage, Nectar
ine and 'Reese.
Fifth Precinct—Allison Fire Co.
Sixth Precinct—Sixteenth and
Compass.
Third Ward
I First Precinct—Friendship Fire
j Company.
Second Precinct—Central Hotel.
Third Precinct—Rotunda Court
House.
Fourth Ward
First Precinct—Huggins' tailor
shop, 207 Locust Street.
Second Precinct—Hope Fire Com
pany.
Fifth Ward
First Precinct—Herr and Capital,
M. C. Shaffner.
Second Precinct—Chas. Adler,
Third, near Boas.
Third Precinct—A. B| Tack, 1217
Susquehanna, near Broad.
Fourth Precinct—David Simonß,
Broad and Capital.
Sixth Ward
First Precinct—J. R. Miller's liv
ery, Broad and Marlon.
Second Precinct—Pointing office,
1405 Third, near Calder.
Third Precinct—Barber shop, 300
Reily, between Third & Fourth.
Seventh Ward
First Precinct—Eagle Hotel, 944
North Seventh street.
Second Precinct—A. L. Taylor,
Sixth and Cumberland.
Third Precinct—Good Will engine
house, Sixth and Calder.
Fourth Precinct—W. Scott Stroh,
1713 North Sixth street.
Fifth Precinct—No. 1911 North
Sixth street.
Sixth Precinct—No. 1028 Herr
street.
Eighth Ward
First Precinct—Citizens engine
house, Fourth street, near Wal
nut.
Second Precinct —Fry Hotel, State
and Fifth streets.
Third Precinct—No. 124 Linden,
corner Calamus, (Lee Kambeitz)
Fourth Precinct Mt. Vernon,
North Fourth, near North.
Fifth Precinct—Garage, rear 1522
State street.
Ninth Ward
First Precinct—Washington House,
Cowden and Walnut.
Second Precinct Eleventh and
Market, Cozzolt's Hotel.
Third Precinct—Paxton Hotel, 1108
Market street.
Fourth Precinct—Mt. Pleasant Fire
Company.
Fifth Precinct J. A. Rhoads'
office, Eighteenth and Hildrup
streets.
Sixth Precinct W. H. Zerby's
store, 1451 Reglna.
Seventh Precinct—No. 1600 Mar
ket street, garage, rear.
Eighth Precinct-r-Dr. Miller's gar
age, Nineteenth and Market
streets, rear.
Ninth Precinct—Eighteenth and
Chestnut streets.
Tenth Ward
| First Precinct Electric Cycle
Company, Maelay and Green.
| Second Precinct—Sixth and For
rest, pool room.
| Third Precinct—Sixth and Emer
ald, pool room.
I Fourth Precinct—No. 2537 North
Sixth street.
Eleventh Ward
i First Precinct—Fourth & Dauphin,
I Relly Hose.
j Second Precinct—No. 2004 North
Sixth street, near Peffer, Pye's
barber shop.
| Third Precinct—W. H. Diffender
fer, 1846 Green.
Fourth Precinct—lce cream par
lor, 1932 Susquehanna.
Twelfth Ward
First Precinct No. 1537 North
Third, near Harris, barber shop.
I Second Precinct—No. 304 Harris,
near Third, drug store.
Third Precinct —No. 401 Kelker,
Bishop's barber shop.
Thirteenth Ward
First Precinct Store room. No.
1911 Derry.
Second Precinct —Carpenter shop,
No. 1922 Berryhill.
lonr C ATKO W AX.
School of Commerce
Tronp Building, Phone, Bell IM4J.
IB So. Hukrt Square. Rarrlibnrt, Pa,
Fall term beglnat Day School, Septem
ber If Night School, September i
Office open ffom 8 a. m. to 3 p. m.
Phone, write or call for catalog oi
further information.
Harrisburg Business College
Day and Night School
Sept. 7, 1915
Business. Shorthand and Civil Serv
ice. 80th year. 320 Market St., Har
rlsburg, Pa,
MILITARY SURGEONS; |
By Frederic J: Has kin
[Continued From Kdttorial Page.]
oism that brought lasting benefits to
the world.
But because of the establishment
of the manner of the transmission of '
yellow fever it was made possible to
dig the Panama caDal, to make Cuba
habitable, Manila safe as a place to
live, to stop the recurrence of plagues
at American ports, to bring new pos
sibilities to the tropical countries of
all the world, hundreds of
thousands of lives every year on
through all the decades and centuries ,
of the future.
Military Surgeons Responsible
From the standpoint of the benefit
.derived by humanity, the discoveries
jof methods of fighting these two dis
eases are the most important event*.
lof the present generation. Military
| surgeons are responsible for them.
It fell to the military surgeons of
j the United States to go into Manila,
i a plague hole of the East, and make
it a demonstration plant of the effi
ciency of sanitation. There they
demonstrated their theory that fleas,
living on rats, are the bearers of bu
bonic plague, and freed the city of
it by killing the rats—a process that
has since been applied to many ports,
i It was there that they whipped Asiatic
| cholera, which had been xnown to
kill 30,000 in a single year. It was
I there that they went forth and vac
cinated 7,000,000 people and drove
smallpox from the land, a process
that was later repeated in Cuba and
Porto Rico.
These military surgeons found an
other problem when they went to
Porto Rico. There upon the hillsides
dwel a race of. people unthinkably
poor, shabby, degenerate—a race with
only sufficient energy to sit in the sun
as death crept upon them. The Span
ish, the French, the English, had own
ed such islands inhabited by such peo
peoples for centuries and had com
plained of their worthlessness and
shiftlessness.
Discovery of Hookworm
Major Bailey K. Ashford was the
young American surgeon who was
sent Into Porto Rico. He had not been
there six months when he announced
that the Porto Ricans were not suffer
ing from laziness but from disease.
There was among them a malady that
was responsible for 30 per cent, of
the deaths of the island. A thousand
of them were dying each month from
it. There was within them a parasite,
the hookworm, that sapped their vi
tality and converted them into the
miserable creatures they were.
In a little while Major Ashford had
developed a cure. When the cause of
the disease is known the greater part
of the task is usually accomplished.
With a dosage of thymol the parasites
were banished from their victims.
These worms live in the sand and en
ter the body through the bottoms of
bare feet. Methods of keeping them
out were devised.
Dr. Charles Waddell Styles, of the
Public Health Service, was at the
same time working along similar lines
among the "poor whites' of the
South. There he found the hookworm
also. It has since been found the
world around and millions of people
In the tropics who had previously been
thought to be merely lazy and good
for-nothing are being treated, cured
of a disease and converted Into useful
men and women. It is another accom
plishment for the permanent good of
humanity.
When the present war got well un
der way in Europe one of the most
pathetic calls was from Serbia, where
a whole people was being attacked by
typhus fever. Had the war come five
years earlier typhus fever would Jiave
been a mystery, and no man would
have known the method of its trans
mission nor how it might be fought.
Get Secrets of Typhus
But two surgeons of the Public
| Health Service had gone to Mexico
j City five years ago and there wrested
| from the slums of that unfortunate
capital the secrets of typhus. They
were Dr. J. F. Anderson and Dr. Jo
seph Goldberger, the latter of whom
I came down with the disease, but re
covered. They proved that the dls
|ease was carried by a body insect, and
I' in no other way.
Typhus fever had been variously
known as army fever, prison fever,
I ship fever and latterly as Brill's dis
ease. It had baffled the scientists
through the centuries. But here was
Its riddle solved and so were army sur
geons able to stamp it out in Serbia.
These are but the high lights of
the accomplishments that have come
about in that era of sanitation that
has followed the Spanish-American
war. Each of the riddles solved has
i been one that has baffled mankind
through the ages and has always taken
Its toll of human life. Nearly all of
them came about because the Spanish-
American war thrust American armies
into the tropics and with them the
military surgeon whose business it
was to keep those armies healthy.
It is infinitely to the credit of the
American army surgeon that he solved
in a decade most of the great puzzles
that had defied similar organizations
of other nations which had been in
the tropics for decades and even cen
turies. >
In but one of the important dis
eases has the United States yielded
the palm to other nations. Military
surgeons of England and France ini
tiated the theory that malaria was
transmitted by a mosquito, a work
which American surgeons have helped
to complete and which has an import
ant place in the accomplishments of
the era of sanitation.
KING OSCAR]!
5c CIGARS |
An incomparable blend of choicest Havana g§j
and domestic leaf selected with such care jg
that this smoke is always to be depended up- M
on to be worth the nickel. Needless to say it fig
fully satisfies! §5
Regularly | mKi
Good ®
CM MUTCHES
SIIBIJBT WEEK
Tomorrow Last Day to Qualify
Colonial Club Tourna
ment
To-morrow will be th« laat day
available for those who wish to qualify
in the preliminary round of the Col
onial Country Club golf tournament.
The course is in excellent shape and
is becoming more and more popular
with the golfers of the city. The Fall
tournament will continue for four
weeks, counting the semifinals, finals
and the play for the beaten eights.
Next week, between the 13th and
19th of September, all matches in six
teens must be played. All matches In
eights to be played between Septem
ber 20 and 26 inclusive. All matches
in semifinals to be played between
September 27 and October 3, inclusive.
All matches in finals to be played
between October 4th and 10th 1 In
clusive.
Prizes will be awarded to the win
ners of the different eights and to the
runner-up In the first eight. Entrance
fee is 50 cents. The final play will
be for thirty-six holes.
All Kinds
of Lumber
Rough lumber
dressed lumber floor
ing —scan 11 in g—
moulding lath —shin-
gles—
If you desire a spe
cial size we will cut it
for you without delay.
You will find in our
yard a complete line
of the best grades of
lumber.
Telephone orders
will be given very
careful attention.
United Ice & Coal Co.
Forster & Cowden Sta. j'
A
P SAFETY]
FIRST
The object of "Safety
First" Is prevention.
Tou can prevent your
advertising from meet
ing the fate of the waste
basket If you will make
It attractive with proper
Illustration.
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to us for Illustrative
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The Telegraph
Art&Engraviiig
Departments
i
Resorts
DOCnUNG GAP, PA.
White Sulphur Springs Hotel
DOUBLING GAP. PA.,
V'n NMTvllle
Noted for its refined patronage,
numerous medicinal springs, natural
beauty, and abundance of fresh vege
tables which aid In emphasizing ex
cellent table service. Special attention
along with reduced rates will be given
to Harrisburg patrons during the month
ef August. For prompt reply Inquire
of Mrs. G. A. Freyer.
S
THE
Office Training School
Kaufman Hlrinr., 4 S. Market Sq.
NOW IN SESSION
Day School mid Nlcht School
Call or send for 32-page booklet—
Bell phone 694-R.