14 HAND IT TO LOCAL TEAMS FOR GOOD FOOTBALL WORK—ALL BIG WINNERS STATE COLLEGES IN BIG CLEAN-UP JCollegc Presidents Plan Dras tic Rules; Take Up One Year Regulation State College. Pa., Nov. 6.—Athletics In Pennsylvania colleges are likely to le overhauled as the result of action "taken here Saturday by a committee of the Pennsylvania College Presi dents' Association. The committee out lined a clean-up which includes the offering of financial inducements to brilliant high school athletes In return for their services on the college ath letic teams. Rigid inforcement of the one-year residence rule, sometimes called the college migratory rule, was recom mended. Attending the conference ■wero the following: Dr. J. A. W. Haas, president of Muhlenberg Col lege; Dr. W. A. Granville, president of Gettysburg College; Dr. Isaac Sharp less, president of Haverford College; Professor S. B. Linhart, of the Unl .versity of Pittsburgh, and Dr. K. E. Sparks, president of the Pennsylvania State College. The one-year residence rule, it was ROYAL AND NATIONAL THEATERS SHOWING TO-DAY A Fox Flvc-nffl Feature featuring IIOUKItT B. MANTKM, AND GENEVIEVE HAMPER "TheSpiderand the Fly" A Pnri.slnu Drnmn of Drink and . Dl*nnter. V — — —i r ! DrrrxfT KasaSsJlifiJ TO-DAY AND TO-MOKROW j MAE MIHHAV In n powerful drama i of Xew York life, "THK II Ki SISTER" Added Attraction: BL'RTON HOLMES TRAVEL PICTI RES Southern Italy. WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY LOUISE HUFF and LOTTIE PICKFORD In ••THE REWARD OF PATIENCE" COMING—NOV. 13 AND 14 "THE FALL OF A NATION" Thomas DIVOH'M mighty Nequel to ••The Rirth of a Nation** ORPHEUM MARGARET WOODROW WILSON and Company m * V RID A Y EV E^ m * % * ov - 17 - \ Price*, rOe to 92 x \ Sent** next Mon. AH DUn TH/I Two Days ' Frida y & Saturday, Ulvl n J UIVI Nov " 10 and 11 Return En- gagement. Matinee Saturday. SELWYN & COMPANY, Producers of "Within the 1,0n," "I'nilfr Cover," "Twin Urdu," "Under Sentence" and Margaret Illlntcton in "The 1.1e," etc. Present Their ANNUAL LAUGH FESTIVAL FAIR AND WARMER. A Prescription for the bluett, compounded by AVERY HOPWOOD. The Comedy that ran over one year nt the Kltlnse Theater, N, Y.. aud broke all record** for big l>u*lne.s. MATINEE Lower Floor, 75c and $1.00; Balcony, 50c. EVENING 2sc to $1.50. Seats Wednesday. QffiS, KM/ Direct from llroadway Thenter, 41 _ v HXRRISBURO TELEGRAPH LOCAL TEAMS WIN GAMES; HARRISBURG BOYS LEADERS Central Runs Up Big Score; Rote, Beck and Gougler Do Great Work in College Battles Central 55, Nanticoke 7. Steelton 12, Williamsport 12. Tech 27. Lancaster 0. Academy 12. Franklin and Mar shall Academy 0. i Central, Steelton, Tech and the Academy are winning with such clock- i like precision that, it is getting to be ; only a question regarding the score, i The four scholastic gridiron teams ■ have been bowling over their rivals in i regular order so that It begins to look ! as if the Central Pennsylvania cham- 1 pion&hip will have to be settled right j here in Harrisburg. One of the features of Saturday's ! results is the fact that all but the Cen- i tral content was played on foreign soil, j. Tech has won decisively In the Lan- j caster and Steelton games, while the j best Central could do was to make one ; score against the Lancaster team. Too j much strength may not bo placed in . comparative scores, as the dope does ! not always work. While the Central lads had little ; ' opposition in the Nanticoke squad, the 1 Blue and Gray showed that they have i 1 scoring ability when the opportunity j presents itself. Academy Wins Again Captain Phillips and his Academy! players came back from Lancaster with another scalp dangling from their belts. This time it was the Franklin ; and Marshall Academy team, and it | looks more every game as though the L eleven will go through the season , without a defeat. Coach Schlichter's | squad has yet to play with the Gettys- ! burg Prep team in this city, and then will journey to Washington meet the ! Army and Navy Prep team. Steelton showed surprising form at [ Williamsport by holding the Cherry j and White players to a 12 to 12 tie. | Dayhoff starred. Both teams failed to I Gridiron Doings in Saturday Contests Scholastic Battles Central 55, Nanticoke High, 7. Technical 27, Lancaster 0. Steelton 12, Willlanisport 12. Academy 12, Franklin and Mar shall Academy 0. College Games University of Pennsylvania 19, Lafayette 0. Penn State 79, Geneva 0. Lebanon Valley 71, St. Joseph's 0. Dickinson 22, Delaware 0. Haverford 21, F. and M. 0. 9, Muhlenberg- 0. Pittsburgh 46, Allegheny 0. Princeton 42. Bucknell 0. Yale 7, Colgate 3. Harvard 51, Virginia 0. W. and L. 10, Navy 0. Cornell 15, Carnegie 7. Dartmouth 15, Syracuse 10. Maryland 31, St. John's 6. Army 30, Notre Dame 10. Williams 7, Wesleyan 0. Bowdoin 7, Maine 7. Brown 40. Vermont 0. Rutgers 14, Holy Cross 6. Ursinus 0, G. Washington 0. Springfield 20, Worcester 0. Swarthmore 14, Johns Hopkins 6. Rochester 18. Hobart 0- Union 45, Rensselaer 0. Illinois 14, Minnesota 9. Michigan 66, Washington Univer sity 7. Chicago 16, Purdue 7. Colby 23, Bates 7. Country Club of Harrisburg to Have "Sportiest" Course Xo time is being- lost in the erection of the new home of the Country Club of llarrtsburg on the rise of ground above the city overlooking the Rock vine bridge and the river gap to the north. The skeleton construction of the house itself is well under way and present indications are that it will be under roof before the worst of the winter arrives. The golf course is rapidly being whipped into shape, pipes have been laid to all the eighteen greens, on the majority of which grass has been planted and bunkers thrown up, and every effort has been made to develop one of the "sportiest" courses in the state. While the golfers of the club are anxious to have the course completed in short order, the probabilities are that for a part of next summer at least (he club Will continue to use the links at Lucknow. The alternative is to use temporary greens until the permanent ones have had a chance to settle. Independents Start With Victory Over Shamokin Team HArrisburg Independents opened the basketball season Saturday, winning an easy victory over Shamokin; score, 42 to 19. It was a rough contest. The local five showed satisfactory form. The crowd numbered 800. A dance followed the game. The line-up and summary: HARRISBURG Fd.G. Fls. Assts. T.P. McCord, forward . 2 2 1 fi N. Ford, forward.. 9 0 0 18 Gerdes, center .... 3 0 0 6 G. Ford, guard ... 5 0 0 10 Geisel, guard 1 0 1 2 Totals ....• 20 2 2 42 SHAMOKIN Fd.G. Fls. Assts. T.P. Kaseman, forward 0 3 13 Reed, forward .... 1 0 0 2 Marshall, center . . 3 0 0 6 Barr, guard ...... 4 0 0 8 Rhoads, guard ... 0 0 1 0 Totals 8 3 2 19 Referee, Early. Bits From Sportland One busy week for local football teams. • Players who took chances Saturday were real heroes. Muddy gridirons are not the safest place for- an athlete who is making good. The Eagle football team won Sat urday. defeating the Crescents, score 49 to 0. The Evangelical Duckpin League reason is on. The Braves defeated the Red Sox. score 970 to 888, and the Tigers won over the Cubs, scora 94 7 to 934. In the Cross-River Saturday the All-Stars won over the Dye Works, scores 1326 to 1290. Play for the championship of the three-cushion billiard world will start to-night at Toledo between Hugh Heal, of Toledo, present champion, and George Moore, of New York, the chal lenger. NEW I'ASTOII AT IMBXBRIDGE Marietta, Pa., Nov. 6. The Rev. I. P. Zimmerman began his work yes terday us pastor of the Bainbridge Lutheran Church. He succeeds the Rev. E. E. Diettrich who left for Montgomery county. kick the goals from touchdown be cause of the slippery condition of the ball. Steelton will entertain Central High School at Cottage Hill next Sat urday and hopes for a victory. While Central and Steelton are battling. Tech will line up against Wllkes-Barre on the Island. Williamsport, Steelton and Central follow in order with all of the games except Williamsport to be played at home. In College Games Rote starred for Gettysburg against the heavier West Virginia team at Morgantown. He scored after a 38-yard run. Lebanon Valley had a walkover with St. Joseph's College, 71 to 0. This gave Coach Guyer a chance to rest up his players for the annual contest with Muhlenberg at Allentown next Saturday. AVith Swope, the former Susque hanna University star, acting as the battering ram, the Dickinson team wrested a victory from Delaware State, 22 to 0. In the absence of Captain Cfark at the beginning of the contest Bdck led the attack against the Geneva College eleven. So well did lie do it that the gome ended with 79 tallies for the Center county crw. <•ouKlcr is Big Star Pitt still has a clear field for the championship and is picked by many critics as the best balanced team in the country This eleven Is coached by Glenn Warner, who formerly di • rected the Carlisle Indians. While at that place he was attracted by the playing of Gougler, who was then at Conway Hall. Gougler is a Central graduate. Saturday he scored three touchdowns and kicked one goal against Allegheny. With two more years to play on the eleven, he stands great chances of making the All- American team picked at the end of each season. 'LABOR LEADERS FAVOR HUGHES j [Continued From Kditorlal Page] all in the community. In this case, it was used by the few to secure ad vantage in compensation from the many-—something quite different from an eight-hour law. The attitude of Mr. Hughes toward the Adamson law Is consistent with that of the American Federation of Labor itself. In the convention at Philadelphia in 1914 the following resolution was adopted: "The American Federation of Labor as in the past, again declares that the question of the regulation of wages and hours of labor should be under taken through trade union activity and not be made subjects of law through legislative enactment." Nor is the view of Mr.' Hughes in consistent with that of President Gompers. Speaking before the Com mittee on Industrial Relations of the Constitutional Convention of New York on May 26, 1915, Mr. Gompers thus expressed himself: "I should say that I sTiould not favor a proposition which would put power into the hands of the Legisla ture to regulate the minimum wage for men in private employment, or for the regulation of the hours of labor of men in private employment. Let me say this: That reading history as I have, I am chary of placing in the power of any governmental agency, power fo regulate the conditions of employment of the workers of our country." The best evidence of the fair and just attitude of Charles E.'Hughes to ward labor is the following: comment of the Legislative News, the recog nized organ of labor on legislative matters in New York State, in Oc tober, 1910, when he was not a cah didate for office: "Now that Governor Hughes has retired from politics and ascended to a place on the highest judicial tribunal in the world, the fact can be ac- A SENSIBLE CIGARETTE IS EASY TO "DIGEST" No word can describe that mean feeling which often follows smoking a poorly-blended but otherwise good cigarette. Such a cigarette might be called "indigestible." On the other hand, Fatimas always give They "digest" easily, smoothly as only a delicately balanced Turkish blend cigarette can. (J And -best of all, Fatimas leave a man feeling fine and fit—yes, even after a long smoking day.