BASEBALL PEACE BRINGS CHRISTMAS CHEER FOR FANS—SANTA CLAUS VISITS TECH WILKES-BARRE IS CHRISTMAS BILL Goal Barons Meet Independ ents Saturday Night; Reading Here During Xmas Week The Harrisburg Independents will have as their opponents Christmas night, tli e fast Wllkes-Barre team. The Barons played the locals last sea son, and in an exciting game were defeated by three points. To get them back this season, the Ilarrlsburg management is compelled to give them a higher guarantee than any other Independent team on the sche dule. Most of the players on the Wllkes- Barre team play on different teams In the Pennsylvania State League, but on barnstorming trips play as the Wll kes-Barre Independents. The locals showed great improve ment in their work last Saturday against the Tork team, especially on the defense, in the first hair, holding the York boys to five points. The locals hope to continue the improve ment, so as to play the same fast ' game t.hey did last season. In order to compete with the fast; teams on their schedule, tho locals \ must, show a very fast game, for most j of the games after Christmas until j tii« end of the season are with Penn-1 sylvania State League, and Eastern j T.eague teams. The next Eastern] team to play hero will be Reading. | Manager Geisel has secured this five | as a mid-week attraction lor Christ- | mas week. Penn's Schedule Ready; Includes fyine Contests Special to The Telegraph Philadelphia. Pa., Der. 23. Man ager Lovett, of Penn's football team, has announced tho schedule for the coming year. The team will take two trips, as in previous years, going to Ann Arbor, where Michigan will Vie nlayed, and meeting the University of Pittsburgh at. Forbes Field, In Pitts-1 burgh. There are nine games on the list In- i stead of ten. as formerly. Each one should be a hard contest. The short- I ening of the schedule necessitated the j dropping of the Wednesday afternoon I game, and Albright is not given a! date. Swarthmore will take the place of Annapolis team, which was unable to come to Philadelphia on October fourteen. The schedule follows: West Virginia at Franklin Field, September 30: Franklin and Marshall at Franklin l-'ield, October 7: Swarth more at Franklin Field, Oitober 14; Penn State at Franklin Field, Oc tober 21: Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh. October 28: Lafayette at Franklin Field. November 4: Michigan at Ann Arbor. November 11: "Dartmouth at. I Franklin Field, November IS: Cor nell at Franklin Meld, November 30. Tech Plavs Wrestling Between Halves Tech High tOßSers to-morrow nicht. will lineup against Mfdclletown High five at Mlddletown. Middlctown has a flean slate. As an added attraction for the pat rons in the lower end town George Fitzpatrick, manager of the Tech wrestling team will send down several of his mat men to give go exhibition between the halves of the game. The j teams will likely tako the floor with these players: Tech. Mlddletown. TTarHs. r . Beck. f. (KHlinge •) Cocklin. f. Polleck, f. Albright, c. Beck, c. Kupp, g. (Sonrbier) Snavely, g. Toffee, g. Miller, «r. XKW omtTRS F.T FCTTTD Special to The Telrgrapk Shippensburg, Pa., Dec. 23.—The Christian Endeavor Society of the Messiah TTnited Brethren Church held ! its annual election and the following j officers were elected: President, Wayne .Tacobv; vice-president. W. Clark Sheaffer: secretary, Walter Dielil; treasurer. Mabel Rurtsfleld; chorister, Frank Phillipy; leader. Mrs. Clyde f'oover: junior superintendent, Mrs. Mary Morrow. MOVIE OF A MAN JUST BEFORE CRISTMAS : : : : : : : ... By BRIGGS ' GaoV * ' TS *" ETni * tTS Bee " J A fi °°» M BOY.. AL( ~ " ME ' - W Re „, MD; . ' ' HAMSM'T »g 6n r PEACE " ito The TRenche S ro have a • I*l E J » 'HE. VJtFE S PRESEMt I ■ . ROTTtM CHRi; - J • 111 I I - '^zSW^S THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 23, 19i5. WEST END CLUB MEN GET THREE DEER Members of the West End Gunning' Club annually take a trip to Diamond » alley, Huntington county, during the deer season. This vear the success of the outing is shown above. In the picture from left to right, are M. J. Vogel song, A. D. Shoop and 11. M. Warfel. The deer shown are a six-point eight point and a spike buck, all shot by mmbers of the club while in camp. The oirher members of the club who were on the trip were It. B. Smith. J F Barn ?, a i"t. an(l ' E> of Enola; J. M. Jones, W. O. E. Blight and J. W. Bright. WOMEN TO STUDY i HEALTH PROBLEMS ! Medical College Will Give Course in Elementary Medi cine For Mothers to Tht Telegraph Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 21. The first course In elementary medicine and health problems ever offered to | the lay public has been arranged by | the Woman's Medical College of Penn- I sylvania for the benefit of clubwo j men, social workers and mothers of ! families in Philadelphia. The course I wil consisL of lectures by the fore- I most specialists and educators of the l teaching staff of the college, deliver ed In the ordinary untechnical lan guage of every day life. It will cover all the ordinary prob lems which women have to deal with in keeping themselves and others well. The health of the individual will be first exhausted])' discussed, then the health of the family will Ibe taken up and afterward matters l pertaining to the health and sanita-j tion. of the community. The instruc tion given will enable students to recognize symptoms of any of the more common forms of ailments and apply appropriate first aid treatment. ' Students will also be taught to recog nize vicious and unsanitary i-ondltions at a glance and their remedy. The establishment of the new course was the result of R sugges tion made by Dr. Richard C. Cabot, of Harvard University, during an ad dress in Philadelphia to the effect j that all women social workers ought, to have at least the rudiments of a| medical education. As a result a] committee of clubwomen and social; workers of Philadelphia, headed by; Miss Mary Ingham, was formed to j make arrangements for a courso I which would supply the instruction I needed. Women of Philadelphia in- j terested in matters of health and | sanitation took up with the idea atj once. Applications for enrollment of | the new course were received from j women In all parts of the city. Long; Felt Want The new course will supply in-! struction, the absence of which has j long been felt and lamented by such) prominent women in social service an Miss Jane Addams, of Hull House j of Chiqago, and Miss Florence San- j vilie of the Consumers League of j Philadelphia. It has been felt for years that the most serious question which social service workers have to meet in the course of their duty arc questions relating to health and sani tation. Leaders in such work have complained from time immemorial that young men and women appli cants for positions under them have not been fitted in any way by educa tion for the work they were to per form and that when brought face to I fa?e with conditions of sickness and | evils arising from bad sanitary con- I ditions they were helpless. The Wo ! man's Medical College course is de- I signed to supply this need and to turn I out social service workers tltted to i cope with such cases as they may be j expected to meet most frequently. The oourse, consisting of twelve lectures to be given ono each week 'I is as follows: Normal Activities of J the Human Body, by Dr. Ruth Web ster Lathrop: Principles of Nutrition, | by Dr. Martha Tracy; Food and Effl- I ciency, by Dr. Martha Tracy; Dangers | From Impure Food, by Dr. Henry I lifltman; Health Problems of Wo | men and Girls, by Dr. Ella B. Everitt; | Problems of Prenatal Care, by Dr. s Alice WelH Tallant; The Newborn s Baby and its Needs, by Dr. Alice Weld Tallant; The Care and Feeding of Children, by Dr. Theodore Le Boutil ' i lier; Domestic and Municipal Control ■| of Transmissible Diseases, by Dr. Henry Leffman: Health of School ,! Children, by Dr. Ellen Cuver Potter; • i Personal Hygiene, by Dr. Florence s j Harvey Richards; Conditions and j Care in Old Age, by Dr. Arthur A. II Stevens. Pennsylvania Post Men Held For Court on Libel ! Charges Brought by Nelson W. H. Craighead and Alonzo E. Har -1 j ris, editor and secretary, respectively, also publishers of the Pennsylvania Post, a sheet devoted to the Interests 1 of the colored race, were held under I SSOO bail for court last night by Al derman E. J. Hilton, after a hearing on a charge of criminal libel.. Robert Nelson, of 600 Forster street, brought the charges. Both accused men en tered bond for the amount of the ball. Scholastic Standards at Technical High Raised; Recitations Count More Scholastic standards at the Tech | nical High school have been raised, according to an announcement made | recently by Principal C. B. Fager.! I Beginning with the June examinations, i | 70 will be the passing grade instead ;of 65 as heretofore. At the midyear examinations in February, the exami j nation mark will count one-fourth, j while the grade attained in daily reci ! tation will count for three-fourths of | the final grade. The new method of i marking will put a higher premium |on the daily recitation. WILL GIVE PLAY Special to Tht Telegraph Shippensburg, Pa.. Dec. 23.—The high school pupils will give a home talent play, called "At the End of the Rainbow." This promises to be a good play. Kcd Cross Christmas Seals should decorate every Christmas package and letter. Buy "em and paste 'em.—Ad vertisement. GIFTS FOR TECH FOOTBALL STARS Santa Claus Distributes Letters and Cardigans; Honors For Players on Scrub Team Santa Claus was to-day a welcome visitor to Tech High school, handing out letters and cardigans. The distri bution brought much cheer to *the Students, and they indulged in a one half hour celebration. The jolly saint handed out 19 "T's" and five cardigans to the Tech play ers. The senior members who re ceived the cardigans are Manager Evans. Matthews, Klllinger, McKay and Beck. Those who received the varsity letter are Lloyd, Todd, Britsch, Wear. Cocklin, Cole, McCurdy, Snyder, Lauster, Captain Miller, Fitz patrick, Philippelli, Frasch and Mell. The members of the second team that won from the Central scrubs re ceived the "T. H. S." They are: I Harry Miller, Williams, Compton, ■ Lisse, Kay, Brough, McGann, Esslg, j Hoerner, Ebner, Frock, Moltz, Qar man, Gipple, McFarland, Landls and Manager George Stark. Uncensored War News Procured by Miss Keller By Associated Press New York, Dec. 23.—Miss Helen Keller and other blind persons in the United States are obtaining uncensored news from the capitals of belligerents in Europe in newspapers published for the blind in London, Paris, Berlin and Vienna, according to Mi\s Keller. These newspapers are not censored, she says, because they are printed in shorthand Braille, a point type vised for the blind which the censors are unable to read. "These uncensored accounts of con ditions In the -'arring countries toll me the true s ntinvent among the working people and the intolerable conditions that surround them," said Miss Keller. "Their hearts are almost at the breaking point." Miss Keller made this explanation to show how she obtained information concerning the war disclosed in .a speech she made recently on prepared ness. BOY HAS NARROW ESCAPE IX ICY WATERS OF LAKE Speciil to The Telegraph Hagerstown, Md„ Dec. 2 3,-s-Hanging ! on to the edge of a sheet of Ice with I his body dangling in twelve feet of j water ir the darn of the Thurmont • Pawer C ompany, Charles Jones, aged ! 12 years, was rescued in a novel man- | ner by Frank Harne, formerly a cow- i bo.v. Harne was driving past the spot j and was attracted by the youth's cries for help. Making a lasso of his reins, | Harne walked as far out on the ice as i he dared and threw the noose over the boy's head. Jones was pulled to safety ! in a semiconscious condition. WALTER BAYER DIES Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa.. Dec. 2 3.—Walter Bayer. Ringgold, Md„ a brother of Mrs. Ivan H. Beard, this place, died in the Washington County Hospital, Ha gerstown, of blood poisoning following diphtheria. He was 29 years of age. He was a son of the Rev. John N. Bayer, Ringgold, minister of the old German Baptist Church, and is sur vived by his wife and three children. Funeral services will be held Friday morning. Spangler, the piano man, buys for ] cash, no rents, big business, lowest prices in the city.—Advertisement. BIG JITBUS BURNED Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Dec. 23.—The big Jitney automobile owned by L. H. Yingllng, formerly of Waynesboro, but now of Leitersburg. Md., and used by- Mr. Tingling to carry shop employes from Leitersburg to the Landis Tool Company's shops, this city, was de stroyed by fire on the Hagerstown turnpike at the Green Hill Cemetery, near Waynesboro. THE ttMM.NK THAT DOES NOT \F FECT HEAD Because of its tonic and laxative ef- j feet Laxative Bromo Quinine can be I taken by anyone without causing nerv ousness nor ringing in the head. There ' is only one "Bromo Quinine." E. W I GROVE'S signature is on box. 25c. Advertisement. BASEBALL PEACE GIFT FOR FANS Federal League Passes With Signing of Agreement; One Point Left With Committee Special to The Telegraph Cincinnati, 0., Dec. 23. The Christmas present of the National league to the baseball fans of the country Is peace. After a two days' conference, which ended at 9 o'clock last night, (he Joint peace committee of the two warring factions came to a final agreement on all details with ex ception, and the peace agreement was signed and sealed by both parties to the conference. The Federal League no longer exists. lis suit against the National Commission in the United States court in Chicago will be withdrawn at once and the league which came within an ace of disrupting the na tional pastime vanishes into history. The only point on which a tinal settle ment was not reached is the terms on which the International League shall regain its lost territory in Balti more and Buffalo. This matter was freely discussed and was nnaliy left to a committee of seven members, who will meet in this city on January 3, at the ytime of the annual meeting of the National Commission. This committee was given full power to act and both sides agreed to abide by its decision. Whereupon the peace agree ment was drawn up, signed and seal ed. and the cruel baseball war was officially declared to be a thing of ;lhe past. The provisions in brief fol j low: Tin* Provisions That all Federal League players are made eligible to play in organ ized baseball. That the Federal League assumes all the contracts of all of its clubs, as a league and not as individual clubs. That Charles Weeghman. president of the Chicago Federals, will pur chase the Chicago Nationals from Charles P. Taft. That Philip Ball, of St. Louis, will purchase the St. Louis American 1 League Club. That the Ward interest in the Brooklyn Federal League Club will be reimbursed, both National and American League assuming this burden. Those who signed the agreement were: August Herrmann, chairman of the National Commission: President John K. Tener, of the National League; President B. B. Johnson, of! the American League; President Jas. | A. Gilmore, of the Federal League; President Charles Weeghman, of the Chicago Federal League club; Harry Sinclair of the Newarl; Federal League Club; Secretary J. H. Farrell, of the National Association: Presi dent Edward Barrow, of the Inter national League, and President Thos. Chivingrton, of the American Associa tion. When asked what disposition would be made of the suit of the Federal League against organized baseball charging violation of the anti-trust law now pending before Judge Lan dis in Chicago. President Tener of the National League, acting as spokesman, said: "The suit will be withdrawn." * - News From Sportand Successful deer hunters near Ger mantown were George Gibbons, Frank A. Arnold and W. R. Mumper. They killed one four-spiked buck. James J. Butler, of Wilmington, Del., was to-day elected captain of the Fordliam University football eleven. The board of governors of the Motor Club of Harrlsburg will meet Jan uary 4 at the home of George W. Owen, Mechanicsburg. In the Elks bowling league last night the Athletics defeated the Braves; scores. 2443 to 2213. Winners in the double-header in the Casino Independent League last, night were the Recruits, who defeated the Majesties, scores 24#l to 2400, and Oregons, who defeated the Lancers, scores 23 30 to 2163. 1 >ECOR ATIONS FEATI'RK A feature of the Christmas exer cises at the open-air schools exer cises yesterday which were conducted by the Civic Club were the decorations. Christmas trees, other evergreens, flowers, etc., helped out wonderfully in a scheme that was donated and worked out by Uttley, the florist. WELLY'S®; CORNER "Billy" Tamm, last season's utility player on the Ilarrlsburg Interna tional team, will, in all probability wear a Buffalo uniform next season. He is the property of the New York Ynnkees, and if not needed will be farmed to Manager Donovan. Tamm is a real star. The New York Amer icans have men in their line-up not half as good as this boy. Five seniors at Tech walked out of school to-day wearing cardigan jackets. No Christmas gift will bring any greater pleasure. It requires hard work and many sacrifices to land athletic recognition. Everything From j A to Z I a A UTO Tops. Auto and TV/TUSIC loving people realize fx Wagon Painting -i-VX the importance of having :: Body building for trucks htea S | delivery wagon, a specialty WM R TROUP & SON ii C. A. Fair Wagon Works PIANOS-PLAYER-PIANOS East Knil Mulberry Street Bridge DOS N. Third St., City. BATHS AND MASSAGE:, sulphur tt vapor baths for rheumatism, f • lumbago; sciatica, gout, neu- V/ rltls. colds, obesity, blood polponing ,Bl ® MODEL, $1093. and many chronic diseases. Best motorcar value L«dy and Gentleman Attendants. . . .. ... HEALTH STUDIO money. Immediate delivery. ::: Mi»a if. p. Robinson East End Auto Company 207 Walnut gt. Bell 2160-R. Bel , p| lone 315.11. /CALENDARS are Effective T)ASTE for paper hangers and § Business Promoters. JT commercial purposes where ** Attractive designs In all grades and large quantities are used, sizes. APPLY MYEHS MANUFACTURING co. Harrisburg Paste Works ii Cameron nnd Walnnt St.. |j Bell Phone 1677-R. Bel , phone 2301 DIAMONDS and watches m ° deis . HANDRAILS, JI at the lowest prleea In the stairs, and ail kinds of wood if city. Call 11 round and be con- jobbing. vinced. Also silverware, clocks and Harrisburg Pattern and Model p Jewelry of all kinds. Works H COHEN & SON 28-34 North lamerm. Street « 420-431 MARKET STREET Bell Phone 3071-J. ICTATE to T)OOL ROOM— the Dictaphone J Pi I—' B Arrange for jL. 1 have bought the pool room g a demonstration on and cl ßar store at the corner of £ a