O'LEARY-BANKS BOWLERS SHOW CHAMPIONSHIP FORM—PLAYS AND PLAYERS O'LEARY-BANKS TIED FOR LEAD Bach Capture Three Games and Oust Leading Mclvor Team The O'Leary and Banks teams by winning three games each last night took the lead in the Dauphin-Cum berland county duckpin tournament and as a result the Mclvor team was forced into second ytace. The O'Leary team took three games and the match from the pace setting Mclvor team, while the Banks team humbled the Fickes combina tion. The summaries follow: O'Leary-Melvor (Academy Alleys) O'Leary 1686 Mclvor 1467 O'Leary 634 Crow (O'Leary) 165 Crow (O'Leary) 348 Fiekcs-Baiiks (Taylor Alleys) £unks 1618j Fickes 1530 I Banks 558 Mall (Banks) 147 Mall (.Banks) 361 Palmer- Owens (Leiiioyne Alleys) Owens 1419 Palmer 1412 Owens 511 i Baker (Owens) 120 I I.oeser (Owens) 120 Ness (Owens) 300 Baum (Palmer) 300 Myers-Bcntz tParthemore Alleys. N. Cumberland) Myers 1614 Bentz 1487 Myers 575 Butts (Bentz) 150 Butts (Bentz) 344 STANDING OF TEAMS W. 1.. Pot. O'Leary 80 13 .606 Banks 20 13 .606 Mclvor 18 15 .545 Myers . ... 17 16 .515 Palmer .. 16 17 .484 Owen ...... i.. *. 15 18 .454 Bentz . 14 19 .424 Fickes 13 20 .393 WOMAN DRIVES TAXI Amsterday, May 4.—After Hol land's tirst woman professor, conies the first woman taxi-driver. Her name is Miss Houftelaar, and her ex ample is likely to be followed by others of her sex. She has just taken up her stand in front of the big Bourse of Holland's capital, after having passed the tests required to . secure a license. MANY POLES IN ARMY Warsaw. May 4.—Lecturing at Warsaw on what is termed the Po lish army. Colonel Leon Berbecki, chief of staff of the Legion Com 000 r.:eu had been organized up to September, 1915. - ill PUt Clothes—good clothes DO make a man "look the part"—they show how you feel about life. | We carry the best clothes in the land. HUB CLOTHES have a national prestige based on style and quality standards. They are guaranteed by the makers and by us. There's a "just right' Suit in our assortment for every man and young man who seeks and demands the best his money will buy, at sls S2O $25 I We want to emphasize that we are headquarters for the celebrated STYLEPLUS CLOTHES, the only clothes in America whose price is known to remain the same. sl7 A special advantageous purcliase bring:- us the classiest lot of pink, lavender, light green and yellow shirts of splendid materials —easily worth 55.25: special at $1.73. A special Silk Shirt, worth $5, sells at •3.50—a1l the newest colorings, too. If Mr. Lad Is rough on his clothes, bring him to THE Hl'll we ll tog him oat in one or our Two Pants Suits at *s.oo—and you won't have to bring him back soon, either TRe & Hub Nachman & Hirsh Prop's. if —rrrr- L -n—; —m" ■ =0 FRIDAY EVENING, HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH MA\ 4, 1917 I SENATORS MARTIN AND WASBERS WHO SHOT FOR CHAMPIONSHIP OF SENATE -- . • * SENATOR HENRY WASBERS AND SENATOR DAVID MARTIN Senator David Martin, Philadelphia, on the right and Senator Henry Washers on the left, who met in a ltvebirii shoot on the grounds o£ the [ Harrisburg Sportmen's Association Wednesday afternoon for the cluun -1 pionship of the Senate. Senator Martin won the event killing-thirteen i out of twenty-tlve birds, to eleven by Senator Washers. Senator Martin is a veteran at tho traps and although well in the seventies has a ! clear eye and a steady hand. He is well known to local sportsmen having participated in shoots at Second and Division streets. Sixth and Division streets and on the Island. Lafayette Football Will Not , Stop During War Period Easton. Pa.. May 4. The Board | of Trustees of Lafayette College have : extended their action to the majn-1 ; tenanee of college athletics as well' |as to war measures. Robert N. i Berryman, who last year was the: coach of Gettysburg, was elected | ito succeed Wilmer G. Crowell. i . Berryman is a graduate of State j College. He played for four years | on the State College football team and was all-American halfback in j the year 1915. Berryman will also | i coach of the basketball team at La- j i favette and will devote all his time M | to the college. | The action of the board in electing | | a coach for the football team was • | taken in view of the age for con-1 j scription being raisect from 19 to l | 21. In this way a majority of La-i ' fayette's students will not be called. They will presumably be at the col- j lege and by engaging in athletic j sport as usual will be better pre- j pared to light when they reach the j | age of conscription. SNODGRASS CHANGES MIND Los Angeles. May 4. Fred Snod- ! j grass, former New York National | I League outfielder, who refused to re port to the Boston National League club this year and was uneondi- ! tionally released, was signed by Ver 'non in the Pacific Coast League. The former Giant announced last week ' that he was out t>f baseball for good. Yesterday's Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE At Philadelphia— B. H. E. Boston ... 00110000 0— 2 10 0 Phila 10040101 x— 7 9 2 Batteries—Regan and Gowdy; Mayer and Killifer. Vmpires, Quigley | and Bvron. At n4W York— R.H.E. Brooklyn 00 0001000 3 4 7 1 New York 100000 000 0— 1 9 2 Batteries—Combs and Miller; Benton and McCarty. Vmpires, O'Day and Bransiield. At Pittsburgh— R.H.E. St. Louis .. 00000000 4 4 7 0 Pittsburgh .0 0000300 0— 3 64 1 Batteries—Steele and Snyder: i Mamaux and Schmidt. Umpires, [ Klemm and Emslie. i At Chicago— R.H.E. 1 Cincinnati 01000002 0— 312 4 J Chicago . . 0 1 2 120 4 0 x —lo 14 3, Batteries—Ring and Wingo: I ; Prendergast and Wilson. Umpires, ; Rigler and Ortli. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Boston R.H.E. 1 Phila 000000 00 0— 0 73 j Boston ... 00101 000 x — 2 5 1; Batteries—Bush and Haley; Leon- I ard and Thomas. Umpires, McCor- i mick and Connolly. At Washington— R.H.E. New York 00000 100 0— 1 50 j Washington 00100002 x— 3 5 0 | Batteries--Caldwell and Walter; and Owens. At Cleveland— R.H.E. Chicago . . 10000 000 0— 1 6 2! Cleveland . 00000000 2 2 11 1 Batteries—Scott and Schalk; Klep fer and O'Neill. Umpires, O'Laiigh lin and Hildebrand. At St. Louis— Detroit-St. Louis game postponed; j | rain. NEW YORK STATE LEAGCE At Binghamton— Reading-Binghamton game post i poned; cold weather. At Syracuse— Wilkes-Barre-Syracuse game post- [ poned: cold weather. At Utlca— Scranton-Utica game postponed; | i snow. ; i j May Victor Records 18256—10 in.—7sc America, Here's My Boy Peerless Quartet Let's All Be Americans Now American Quartet 18254 —10 In.—7sc Those Hawaiian Melodies Peerless Quartet The Ghost of tin- Vkelele Peerless Quartet 64655—10 in.—sl.oo Poor Butterfly .... Frits Krei^Jer 64564—10 in.—sl.oo I'sc Gwinc Back to Dixie Alma Gluck Be sure and hear these. I P. M. OYLER 11 SOUTH FOURTH STKKET * M 9§f nft Dr. Pcrdinand-Jilng, a New York City Physician and Medical Author, says: "There can be no strong, vigor ous, iron men nor beautiful, healthy, rosy-cheeked women without iron— Nuxated Iron taken three times per day after meals will increase the strength and endurance of weak, nervous, run-down folks 100 per cent, in two weeks' time in many Instances. Avoid the old forms of metallic iron which may injure the teeth and cor rode the stomach, and thereby do more harm than good. Take only organic Iron —Nuxated Iron." It is dispensed in this city by Croll Keller, G. A. Uorgns. .1. Nelson Clark and all good druggists.—Advertisement. & Grantterulltice Copyright, 1917, Tho Tribune Association (New York Tribune). The Big Old Ty fades out, and Speaker's fame is drifting swiftly now; K. Collins no more wears a frame Of laurel on his brow; The new stars now who rule the skit And strike tho winning blow. Step out upon the Held and hit Three Hundred with the hoe. The polished bat is out of date, , A remnant of tho past; The stars who slide across the plate No longer lead tho cast; For now, along the rolling flat, We hear the cheering grow For stalwarts who step out to bat Three Hundred with the hoe. Haus ntit the cheerlug and acclaim And let the old clods fly— Come on and swihg into the game Ami build the Hoeing Eye! For each one still may do his bit Apart from Rooter's Row If he is poised to swing and hit Three Hundred with the hoe. War Finance antl Golf The New York Newspaper Golf Club has opened a campaign whereby each golfer will pay a certain small tine in the way of a war tax for each missed shot. * This may sound unimportant. But suppose it became a national institu tion. Suppose each golfer in the I'. S. A. should agree to tax himself or herself only 5 cents for each missed shot in the course of the next year. The vital statistics here tell a startling story. There are now a million golfers in the country—or, rather, a million eitzens playing golf. A few of these play below 80; a good many more play between SO and 90; a far greater number play between 90 and 100—and still more play over 100. But one might put a score of-100 as the general average and not be many strokes away. Now, the average par of a course is 72. So a score of 100 averages about eighteen missed shots to the round. How many rounds will this million average in a year? Many play twice a week, which means about eighty rounds out of the playing season of forty weeks. Others will play but once Jt week —or only forty rounds a year. Say, the average is only once every week. This would mean 40.000,000 rounds. With eighteen missed shots to a round the total would be 720,000,000 mistakes a season. At 5 cents a miss the net revenue would be exactly $36,000,000. If every golfer had to pay 25 cents for each missed shot in the course of two years the nation would be bankrupt. Tlic Batting Top When Tris Speaker ousted Ty Cobb from the premier peak of swat last season, there were any number who believed that Tris merely had a one-year flash and that he could never duplicate, the performance. This sounded reasonable enough, as Ty had beaten the Texan seven or eight years in a row before the upset arrived. But once having fastened his grip on the summit, once having absorbed the glory of the conqueror. Speaker has already given evidence that he in tends to make a hard tight for his crown. He has started 1917 Just as he began 1916, with a rush to the top, and to-day is hitting the ball even than he did last year. 1 I i> to last season Tris had never carried the flaming ambition that burned in Cobb's breast. He had always been content to drift along as one of the leaders. But to day he is a different type. He is out —not merely to play his role—but to lead the pack. He is as keen to lead now as Ty was and is. Last season Cobb, always hustling, kept figuring that Speaker would soon drop back. But the slump never arrived. With both worked up as they are this spring, the duel promises to be one of the hardest battles that sport has ever known, with the Cleveland star listed as an even favorite in place of a long shot, as he was last year. Wherein SOMETHING Is Said Sir—Why isn't it more necessary than ever to keep sport'going'.' Why isn't it more necessary than ever for those not sent- immediately into train ing for the front to keep in better physical condition for the next call? 1 can't understand this matter of curtailing sport with a greater need than ever before for stamina and physical litness on the part of the nation. Sport of all varieties should be encourag§d in place of dropped. A. N. G. Any one inclined to be a trifle putted up about his importance—any one inclined to be a bit conceited —arrayed with an enlarged dome—might figure this —Wagner, Mathewson, Walsh, Bender, bajoie are no longer in big league line-ups—and the old game is still drifting on just as if nothing had happened. They are missed—but there is no visible evidence at stake. Think this over when the inclination comes to consider the mighty gap you will leave when you drop out. j AMUSEMENTS ij 1 IIMMIMIIIMWIIMIIMMIMMIMIIMMMIMMMMMMMMIMMMMI ORPHEUM Three days, beginning of birtti control, written by How- Monday, with daily matinees. May al 'd McKent Barnes, a brilliant young 7-S-9—"Her Unborn Child." American dramatist, whose theory id Entire week, beginning -Monday night, that, by education of the masses tin. May 14, with matinees Wednesday *l"lighter of innocent unborn babes and Saturday—William Elliott. Kay W 'H. S *°P; . . Comstock and Morris Gest present "Her Unborn Child is a play with "Experience." a purpose, and it will take an honored MAJESTlC—Vaudeville. place among plays of this kind, like COLONIAL.—"The Wating Soul." ±'he Blindness of Virtue." REGENT—"Castles For Two." , , - Marie Doro, the celebrated stage and screen star, who recently scored such - a pronounced success In " * "Cnatle* For "Oliver Twist," will be • / -*■■■■ Two" nt seen at the Regent to the Kexent day for the last time in clever Irish drama. "Castles For Two." As the wealthy -M Substitute ; Refrigerator >vden s. years of age will he admitted. "Her Unborn Child" Is said to be a dignifled drama, dealing with the sub- ______ x society girl. Miss l>oro lias HII oppor tunity to display a number of beauti ful gowns, several of which were de signed especially for this production. In this pi*r>ductfon Miss Doro has a wonderful opportunity to s*n>w her ability as u comedienne, and Is also given plenty of scope for her dramatic talents. To-morrow a double show is sched uled. Rosooe (fatty) Arbuekle will be presented in his tlrst comedy for the Paramount Corporation, "The Butcher Boy." It is a scream from beginning to end. and will lie shown exclusively at the Regent Theater. In addition to "Fatty" Arbuekle, Myrtle Stedman will be presented in a return engagement of "The American Boa uty." "l.auKh and the world laughs yvltli you, cry and you i.et the gate." con tends smiling Douglas Fairbanks. There will be no cause for "getting the gate" If you visit the Regent next week when "Doug" appears on the screen In his first Artcraft picture, "In Again—Out Again." a satire crammed lull of hearty laughs. All future Fairbanks productions will have their lirst snd exclusive presentation at the Regent. • In plays dealing with great prob lems of life. Mine. I'etrova is at her best, she shines, it is Mine. I'etrovn said, to unusual ad nt the Colonial vantage in "The Waiting Soul." a live pint Metro play showing at the Colo nial Theater to-day and to-morrow, that will appeal to every woman. In this powerful production Petrova por ✓ FIRST UII.WU A\.\l VI, CARNI- V \l. AND DAMK OF VIIK KOX A SASTAMAHJA SCIIOOI. OF IA\ri\;i Allt OF KKU CROSS SOCIKTY. Friday evening. May 4th at S o'clock Winterdale Hull Market Square Dancing until 12 o'clock—Myer's Orchestra. Children -se. ndults 50c. TICKKTS AT lIO.Y OKFK'K 1 \ To- iiutl To-morrow MME. PETROVA , 111 it Powerful Metro Piny "The Waiting Soul" A Wlfe'M Trawle Srcrcl and How Sle Revealed It to Her 1IIIMIUII &. Shoemaker Say s can SaveA-DollarVi^^ o^^^^ and more today / \ STEP up to your nearest Newark Shoe Store window and 2Q() Smmrt feast your eye on the many smart styles we are offering Style for Spring for Spring and Summer. and Summer in Of course we could not offer you such wonderful values Oxford!**" * n and threatens her. A tiny visitor is expected in (lie ramlljt'—a "waiting soul" is standing on the threshold of their home. Shall the wife hide her past from her husband and thus risk Influencing the mind of the "waiting soul." or shall she tell tho truth and face the storm of conventionality? A powerful play that only Petrova could depict with the proper shad ings of dramatic power. "The Strug gle." the thirteenth episode of "The Oreat Secret," will he seen on the same program. Monday and Tuesday, the inimitable Douglas Fairbanks will be seen In a reissue of his greatest Triangle play. "Double Trouble," a. picture that shows Fairbanks at his best. In a role that was written es pecially to suit his wonderful person ality. "Her Circus Knight." a scream ing two-reel Keystone comeily, pre sented by an all-star cast, will be on tho same program. i }WILr^&VHNC^TVAUDEV iuT J | PIETRO ! T Tlie Olcbrntod IMiiuo Aecnrdeoulaif f ! T and t | I Four Otlicr Excellent Act*, • I 1 Inr I mil UK j; "MILADY'S GOWN" j j ! A llemitiful Fashion Art • ORPHEUM 3 Days Beginning Mon. May 7 MATINEES DAILY FOR LADIES ONLY Direct from New York with positively same cast as played this success for ten weeks there. Gentlepnen can bring their wives, mothers, sweet hearts, sisters or grown-up daughters to evening performances. Pvi I Matinees j Evenings ii oo % AH MY MULKS IN PIJOWS Fort Bliss, Texas. eared, patient old government mules which huve been kept at the Kovern morrr. eorrul here slnee General Per shing's expedition came out of Mex ico, may be used to lands on the fort reservation And In tli® Rio Grande Valloy for war crops. BASKIVU.Ii QAM 10 TO-MORROW New Cumberland, I*n., May 4. A baseball game will raKe place to morrow between the Reds at)d Blues of the Boys' Brigade. r ~~ ' < Regent Theater I.nut liny MAKIK DORO In a Houinncc of OIl Ireland and America "CASTLES FOR TWO" special double allow to-npfrow. I'lrnt and csclumlvc presentation of Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle lu lila new coined.v# "THE BUTCHER BOY" / —and— MYRTLE STEDMAN lii a return cnicatfement of "The American Beauty" Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Announcement Kxtrnordtnary DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS In the llrst picture produced by lilm ou ii company, "IN AGAIN. OUT AGAIN" First and exclusive presentation. 21