13,000 TO SEE FIGHT FOR BELT [Continued From First Paso.] won the title from Jack Johnson at Havana last April and is the first •iVillard has fought since that his :orlc battle. Moran Is Confident No matter which way the battle %,'oes, Willard will receive $47,500 and Moran $'23,750. Moran to-day appears as confident as ever that he will be able to land the blow that will give liini the title by a knockout. He pre dicted that he "would get over the finishing punch in the seventh or eighth round." Willard is equally certain of clinch ing his grip on the championship. He declared that if Moran fights the ag gressive battle which the Pittsburgh man is said to have planned, the cham pion would end the bout with the knockout. Xo matter what Moran's tactics, Willard expressed confidence of victory. The big bout is to start nt 9.30 o'clock if the program is carried out. Several preliminary bouts of other boxers will precede it. All Seats Sold The sound of carpenters' saw and hammer to-day filled the big arena where the bout is to be staged, as a new structure of boxes and seats was hurriedly erected. It was promised that all would be in readiness this af ternoon. Every seat in the building has long been sold and would-be spec tators, many from distant cities, ar- FLUSH KIDNEYS WITH SALTS IF BACK IS ACHING Noted authority says we cat too much meat which clogs Kidneys. Take glass of Salts when Kidneys hurt or Bladder bothers you. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by 'flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then wo get sick. Nearly all rheuma tism, headaches, liver trouble, ner vousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache In the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or at tended by a sensation of scalding, stop gating meat and get about four ounces ™ f Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take n tablespoonful in a glass of water be fore breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with llthia and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it. no longer causes irritation, thus end ins bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can not injure; makes a delightful effer vescent litliia-water drinlt which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications.—Adver tisement. ;■ Boxing—Management of Keystone Sporting Club Or pheum Theater, Wednesday Night, March 29, 1916 •; Wind-up—LEO HOUCH, Lancaster JACK RECK, U. S. Marine Corps !■ Semi—Jl'T.K RITCHEY, Lancaster, vs. TERRY HOWELL. Canulcn,X.J. Preliminaries —AVI LL GREEN, llarrislmrg, vs. EDDIE SULLIVAN, J" Philadelphia: KID SMITH. Columbia, vs. KID WEST. Philadelphia. \n extra bout will l>o added later. Lew Grlmson, Philadelphia, will •J referee. ■; Prices 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00; Ringside, $1.50 !■ SEATS OX SALE MARCH 27TH ill W Jit Jit SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 25, 1916. How Willard and Moran Compare In Physical Measurements Willard Moran 29 years Ape 29 years 245 pounds * Weight * 205 pounds f, ft. 6 in Height 6 ft. 1 in. S3 % inches Reach 77% inches 17 % inches Neck 19 inches 3!t Inches Chest, normal 43 % inches 44 % inches Chest, expanded 47% inches 37 inches Waist 36 inches 25% inches Thigh ' 25 V 4 inches 17% inches Calf 15% inches !»% inches Ankle 9% inches 15% inches Biceps, right 15% inches 15 1 4 inches Biceps, left 15% inches SVi inches Wrist, right 7% inches 8 % inches Wrist, left 7 inches "Estimated. riving late, are clamoring in vain for tickets. Managers gave warning to-day that counterfeit tickets supposed to be re deemable at the Garden for admission tickets have been sold in Boston, Philadelphia and Connecticut cities. They said no such tickets had been issued by the management and that they would not be honored. Spend Oulot Day Their training completed and both men asserting they are fit and ready, the principals spent a quiet day in preparation for the bout. Willard planned to pass the time in company with his manager, Tom Jones and his trainer. Talk o£ the fight was barred as Willard said he had made all his preparations, both mentally and phy sically. A walk through Central Park in the morning and an automobile ride in the afternoon continued his outdoor program. He is keyed up for the tight but shows no signs of rest lessness or of impatience to have it finished. After a light dinner early this evening, the champion intends to go down to the Garden about 8 o'clock. He expects to weigh in at about 250. Moran Taking Nap Moran planned a walk early to-day and a good sleep this afternoon. Everything possible was done by his friends to keep his mind off the light as he has been impatient about it for several days. Moran and his handlers will leave the roadhouse in AVest Ches ter at 7.30 to-night and go to the Garden by automobile. Willard said: "It is hard for me to say how I will win. Thatl will be the victor is the most positive statement I can make. Whether it will be a knockout or by popular decision re mains in doubt, if I can win by one punch 1 will. If this bout were sched uled to go to a finish. I would not hesitate to say that Moran would be knocked out. As it 'is only for ten rounds, it would be ridiculous to make such a declaration. "I am going to win as quickly and decisively as 1 can. I feel as well as I have ever felt before any tight in my career, If not better. I am not worrying. If Moras starts to rush the battle 1 am satisfied I will knock him I out." I Moran said: "Do not be surprised ito see the Ilnish of this tight come !in the seventh or eighth round. Then | you will see Willard drop. Before the i Havana tight Willard was nothing to | be afraid of, and I don't think he is | now. I feel confident that I can take Willard's punishment. There was ' never u big fellow like him who did J not have a weak spot somewhere. I can take all that he has. 1 have con fidence in my own hitting power to bring him down." There has been little betting on the result and most of it has been upon the ability of one or,the other to land a knockout blow. The opinions of the experts, including many of the best known fight men of the past, differ so I widely as to afford no consensus. ■ As a spectacle the throng that gat'i ers at the ringside to-night promises to be one to be remembered. Among the boxholders are men well-known in the financial and social world, fam iliar figures of the stage or in profes ! sional life. | A notable feature, will be the pres ence of from 1,000 to 2,000 women. LONG WHEELBASE AND FLEXIBILITY These Are Essential to Easy Riding Says Pathfinder Official ■f | r jfl i * i "I take it," says W. E. Stalnaker, general sales manager of the Path finder Company of Indianapolis, "that the Impression was at one time be ginning to gain prominence that the so-called small car was making fast inroads into the field of the big, luxurious transcontinental type of touring car. "Nothing could be farther from the real facts. "There is absolutely no substitute for whelbase when it comes to ob taining the Important element of com fort in a motorcar. "The little car is alright for strict ly town use. It will answer for rural use where the object to be attained is purely service. But where the mo torist appreciates and demands a lit tle comfort along with his service, there is no alternative—he must have a reasonable amount of wheelbase. "And along with wheelbase he must have motor flexibility, if he is to know the acme of motorcar lux ury. "This means that he should go ! n for the multiple cylinder type of car, and even at that he should be very careful to see that his multiple cylin der motor is of the corrected and ac cepted type. "A multiple cylinder motor, if cor rectly built, is so far ahead of any other that there is absolutely no com parison in actual demonstration. It has more power in proportion to its bore and stroke. It requires far less Scar shifting. It requires less fuel in proportion to the piston displacement for the very simplo reason that not an ounce of its fuel is expended for generating the necessary momentum to carry over the lapses between cylin der explosions—of course In the multiple cylinder motor there are no lapses, the power flow being continu ous and uninterrupted. ' "The Pathfinder Company, which is now well into production on Path finder The Great, the twelve with the overhead valves, tfs enjoying the best year in its history." said Mr. Stal naker at the special display room of the Pathfinder Motor Sales Company, 110 North Second stret. A -twin six motor of unusual de sign is used by the Pathfinder Com pany in their latest model, "Pathfinder the Great." Around this multiple cylinder motor every unit and working part has ben carefully designed and tested, over a protracted period until the Pathfinder Company is willing to accept the judgment of the American public on its latest effort. Its speed range in righ is capable of doing 70 miles an hofir and throttle down to two at will. Because of this speed flexibility, it would be entirely pos sible for the ordinary driver to go from New York to San Francisco in high gear, if he cared to devote himself to such an unusual undertaking. Even on hills "Pathfinder the Great," it is said, has time and again succeeded in accelerating in high after starting from a dead stop. There has been a great deal of mis understanding so far as the term "multiple cylinder" Is concerned. Every one knows that so far as mere utility goes, a four-cylinder car will do the work, but there is more to motoring than mere utility. The Pathfinder Company has long real ized that the multiple cylinder type of motor represents the only possible solution to ihe vibration problem, that is made by the "lapse" or explosion points of the lesser cylinder type mo tor, and has been experimenting on this subject on constructive lines for a number of years. These experi ments led to the adoption of the Path- I finder twin six motor, as superior to [ an eight. The Pathfinder twelve-cylinder mo tor, by employing valve-in-head con struction does away with the draw backs charged against the "V" type motor with "It" head construction. In the "It" head, valves must be placed either inside the "V" or outside. The entrance to the angle of the "V" is obstructed by placing valves inside, making adjustment of carburetor, valve tappets, etc., extremely difficult and unhandy. By placing the valves outside the "V," the motor requires increased ho.od room without increas ed power or efficiency. The cylinders of the Pathfinder twelve are cast in blocks of three, with motor head, intake manifold, and wa ter outlet integral for each set of six. Block castings maintain a more per fect bearing alignment due to In creased rigidity of the crankcase. To permit connecting rod bearings to be side by side on the same crankshaft pin, the right set of cylinders sit 1 V*. inches forward of the left. The stroke is 2 % inches with a 5-inch bore. The twelve cylinder ignition prob lem is solved by the Pathfinder igni tion system giving extreme simplicity, eliminating the vibrator and assuring a constant supply of current. The current for ignition is supplied by the motor generator with a strong bat tery floating in line. A single igni tion timer and distributor unit con tains a separate circuit breaker and distributor for each set of six cylind ers. These are operated from a single crankshaft speed from the camshaft, resulting in perfect synchronization. A centrifugal governor in the base of the timer housing automatically regulates the spark advance for normal running. A hand advance is supplementary for extreme conditions. "Pathfinder the Great" has a vir tue which is demonstrated to a re markable degree, namely, its wonder ful smoothness. Its power is gene rated with such oily regularity that there is no suddenness in its action, in face of the fact that it is by actual demonstrations one of the fastest ac celerating cars built. Its balance has been perfected so that even at 70 miles an hour, not a passenger has any sensation of extreme speed. MAY KXTKND TROLLEY MXE Lewistown, Pa., March 25.—There are good prospects of an extension of the Lewistown and Beedsville Street Railway line over the Seven Moun tains to State College. This line was established about sixteen years ago and runs from Lewistown Junction to Reedsville, a distance of about seven miles. The distance from Irfiwistown to State College is about thirty-five miles. NEARLY 50,000 WOMEN IX BRITAIN WIDOWED BY WAR London, March 26. —The number of widows of British soldiers who have thus far been reported to the army council Is 41,500. There are about 8.000 widows of sailors. If you were among those who waited in vain last sum mer and then couldn't obtain a delivery—DON'T DELAY. If you wish an Overland delivered to you in April or May—DON'T DELAY. We are taking orders now for April and May delivery —DON'T DELAY. We are facing a shortage—steel, aluminum, leather, rubber—all materials are scarce and greatly advanced in price. While we guarantee that the Model 83 Overland will never be sold at a lower price than now—s69s —we do not gurantee that the price will not be advanced—DON'T DELAY. More people are interested now in the Overland than ever before. And we regret that we will be obliged to dis appoint the tardy buyer. This is going to be the BIGGEST AUTOMOBILE SEASON EVER. So OPEN EVENINGS The Overland-Harrisburg Co. 212 North Second Street Both Phones Carlisfe Wants Place on William Penn Highway special to the Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., March 25. Carlisle may make a bid for a place on the proposed William Penn Highway on the ground. that, the earliest travel routes to the West lead through this section. Historical authorities here have discovered that at the May Quarter Sessions Court in Lancaster in 1748 an order was issued project ing a road from the Susquehanna into the interior through the Cumberland Valley. In 17 57 a weekly post was estab lished between Philadelphia and Car lisle and Congress by a resolution passed on May 20, 178S established a postal route from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh by way of Lancaster, York Carlisle, Chambersburg and Bedford. ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE New Cumberland, Pa., March 25. Harry M. Chalfant, editor of the American Issue, of Philadelphia, will deliver an address on the subject "Temperance" at Trinity United Breth ren Church to-morrow evening at 7 o'clock. _ = ___ ====E— —— r \ Fire Accident J. HARRY STROUP Insurance tan N. SECOND STREET Automobile Surety Bonds * Peerless 8 Demonstrator Now Here That 7-passenger, 8-cylinder Peerless about which you've heard so much favorable comment, both during the show and since, is now here for demonstration. Call us by phone—arrange for a whiz through the city's crowd ed traffic; out into the open country; up steepest hills; through val leys, and always on high. Note the elimination of gear shifting: the easy riding; the total absence from shocks and jars; the luxurious comfort of large roomy seats. SOME OF ITS CHARACTERISTICS 3'/4-liu*li bore, .1-1 noli ntroke. ' WrlKht, 3500 lbs. ... _ „ .... , , „„ J Gray & l)nvl» Electric l.lxlitM and 33 8-10 H. P. ruled, NO actual. Starter. l'J5-lnch nheclbaic. Perries* platform, aprlnK sunpenmlon. Price, $1,890, f. o. b., Cleveland, Ohio. Keystone Motor Car Co. 1019-25 Market Street C. H. BARNER, Manager. Both Phones Dauphin Conclave Grows; Paid $135,000 Benefits Dauphin Conclave, No. 90, Improved Order of Heptasoplis, held a social in (heir hall, 321 Market street. L. O. Phillips, treasurer of the conclave, was j one of the principal speakers and said ! in part: "Dauphin Conclave has many { of Harrisburg's prominent citizens en- | rolled as members since its organ ization in 1885. It has paid 55 bene-I ficiaries a total amount of $135,000 as benefits. If the same interest Is • LITTLE RO Perfect running condition, tires good, one extra; body, top and wind shield almost new. Ideal car for physician, salesman or for ladies' use. Cost $750.00, will take $275.00. OPEN EVENINGS The Overland Harrisburg Co. 212 NORTH SECOND STREET shown to-day by the younger men as was shown by those of thirty years ago, It. will have three times Its present membership of 300." f 11 ' ' ■ V HEADQUARTERS FOR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES ' 13