10 TECH WINNERS IN UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH MEET—HARRISBURG LOSES TWO "RED" OWENS LANDS ANOTHER Local Motive Power Team Wins; Trenton Victor Over Baltimore "Red" Owens aitd his aggregation opened the Motive Power League season at Harrisburg Saturday be fore a large crowd. Alcorn, who was selected for mound duty, was in splendid form, allowing the Quakers but two hits up until the final ses sion when he was touched for three hits with but one down, which netted the visitors a pair of counters. j Snappy fielding, led by Gerdes, in this inning settled the proceedings. Carney was the only one of the visi tors who seemed to be in a batting mood, collecting three hits for the j day's work. Trenton remained at the-top of the heap by defeating Baltimore in a fast game, 7 to 3. Matthews was again on the hill and pitched a good I game, not being in danger at any | time. The pilfering of second and i third by Wentzel in the fourth frame j unnerved Armiger, who was un able to hold the shop team safe af- i ter that inning. The hitting of Spen cer featured Baltimore. Washington received another | drubbing, being decisively walloped i by Wilmington. 19 to t. The P. B. & i W. boys entirely outclassed the Sena- I tors, a total of 20 hits being earned : off the delivery of the three slabmen j used by the Ivy City manager. The opening clash at the Federal League Park at Newark resulted in i Meadows downing New York. S to 4. Timely and consistent hitting in the i early periods gave the Meadow boys a lead that the Gothamites were un able to overcome. The stick work i of McDonald for New York and the | all-around work of Maybaum and Pollock featured the contest. The I local score follows: IIAKUISBURG li. H. O. A. E. | Waltz, c 0 2 6 0 0| Gerdes, ss 0 0 6 4 0 Embick. cf 1 2 3 0 0 Wrightstone, lb .. 1 2 5 1 0| Moore, If 0 0 2 0 (I i Dwyer, 2b 1' 0 4 2 0 . Anderson, rf 3 0 0 0 0| Weaver, 3b 1 1 1 1 II Alcorn, p 0 2 0 1 0 Totals 7 9 27 9 1 | PHILADELPHIA R. H. O. A. E. Carney 3b 1 2 2 2 1 Heist, ss 1 0 2 1 2! I ■- PROTECT YOUR ACCOUNTS FROM FIRE \ You can't afford to trust to luck that your jr place of business won't be burned out, and your own good judgment tells you that to leave your unpaid accounts and record un protected is as risky as leaving your cash in the till over night. You don't have to run the risk of being cleaned out some night, when you can have the use of a McCaskey Safe Register in your store, while it is paying for itself. Besides protecting your accounts from || fire, the McCaskey Safe Register provides you with a wonderfully complete, yet simple ac- % counting plan. For further free information, drop a card or phone to— The McCaskey Register Co. | C. L. Sawtelle, Sales Agent Harrisburg Office, 211 Locust St. n " 11 Lake Louise the Canadian Pacific Rockies V With its Alpine trails to Victoria Glacier, Lakes > in the Clouds, Paradise Valley, Valley of the Ten ML Peaks; to many other points of unsurpassed beauty. Boating, Pony Riding, Coaching, Climbing , Gay social life or rest and relaxation at Chateau Lake Louise Facing the loveliest of all mountain lakes "where . each window frames a million dollar picture" This Chateau is only one in the Canadian Pacific ' Railway Hotel System. Liberal stop-overprivileges along the World'* Greatest Bighicay 1, Write, call, or phone for information on Tour No. — 111 j (i— __ F. R. PERRY, Gen'l Agent, Pass. Dept. Pacific Railway MONDAY EVENING, | Ryan. 2b 0 0 1 3 1 j Smith, lb 1 l 8 0 0 Lindenmyer, c .. .. 0 1 6 1 0 1 Love, If 0 0 1 0 0 Mulligan, cf 0 0 3 2 0 ! Hendrix, rf 0 0 1 0 0 ; Fuller,/ p.: 0 0 0 0 0 Elflng. p 0 1 0 0 0 i Totals 3 5 24 9 4 ! Phila. ..... 10000000 2—3 Harrisburg .00031201 x—7 P. 0. S. of A, Quoit League Has Final Game This Week; Camp 8 Is Sure Winner The quoit league of the P. O. S#' of A. will close this week ' when Steelton meets at Enhaut, Thursday evening. President Frank Lindsey, ! of Camp S. has called a meeting on i that evening, so that all officers and members may witness the final game j of the series. Camp S's wonderful team will be | a sure winner and a pennant will be | selected at the meeting. Standing of the Teams I Camp. W. L. Pet. ! No. 8 100 20 .833 | ; No. 102 65 50 .565 j No. 522 65 50 .5651 No. 716 60 60 .500 ] No. 505 49 71 .409 1 No. 639 48 72 .400 | j No. 477 38 82 .371 j COMISKEY AIDS RED CROSS Chicago. May 21.—1n addition to I j donating to the Red Cross fund ten j per cent, of his share of the receipts I |at all baseball games this year. : President Charles A. Comiskey, of j the Chicago American League club, ; gave the leaders in the movement I permission to press their campaign | for memberships at to-day's game I | between Chicago and Boston, j Speakers, including former Gov ernor Edward F. Dunne and former i Mayor Carter H. Harrison, addressed ! the spectators in each section of the : stands before the gate, and envel- j lopes were distributed by boy scouts! to each patron of the park for the 1 I purpose of obtaining membership I subscriptions to the association. CALL OFF PRINTERS' GAME Boston, May 21.—The tenth an j nual'tournament of the Union Print- j ers' National Baseball League, sched j uled for August 18 to 25 at St. Paul, j | Minn., has been cancelled. It was an i nounced to-day. Joseph J. Dallas. , local secretary, said the cancellation j was actuated by a desire to eneour- I age the members to devote their j i time and energy to war duties. | The cities represented in the lea- ! | giio are Indianapolis. Philadelphia, ■ ! Cincinnati, New York, Pittsburgh, j j St. Louis. Chicago, Detroit, Cieve | land, St. Louis, Washington and Bos- ! ! ton. i & GrantJandJtfce Copyright, 1917, The Tribune Association (New York Tribune). How'd You Like to Put a Heavy War Tax On 1. The rival who sinks a 30-foot putt against you in a tight match? 2. The citizens sitting back of you in the theater who insist on talking? S. The golfer who plays over every shot in the locker room after the game? 4. The fan who is always peddling inside stuff from McGraw or Commy or Mack? 5. The bloke who knows when the war is going to end? l*rograins anil Patriots Does calling oft all sportive programs add to patriotism? The East | made this decision In.nearly every line. The West and South have gone on | ahead with the scheduled events —or with most of them. Perhaps the East is more patriotic? Perhaps it is. Then why is it that the West especially has sent in a greater proportion of enlistments than the East? | The East raised the bulk of the hubbub; the West has raised the bulk of the men—proportionately. Pitching vs. Hatting "Why is a strong pitching staff more valuable to a club than a hard bat ting outfit?" comments J. L. .G. "Why Isn't one of about the same value | as tho other?" Apparently, on the thin face of returns, they should even up. Only they don't. The ball club with the better pitching nearly always has the call, i even where the other club has the harder clubbing. There have been any number of weak batting clubs, or comparatively weak batting clubs, that good pitching has carried through—the White Sox of 1906, the Braves of 1914 being two rare examples. But we can't recall a club attached to weak pitching an Oc tober banner. The old Cubs and the old Mackmen didn't need pitching, we have heard. Bflt the lirst had Brown, Overall, Pfetster, and the latter fiair Bender, Plank and Coombs. * Strong, steady pitching holds the morale of a ball club better organized. Given erratic, unsteady pitching and few clubs can continue the drive. "How about Walter Johnson?" you may remark. "Minus any batting support, he has lost nearly every start this year." True enough. But with one of the weakest batting machines in base ball Johnson has won the majority of his games over a ten-year span. He is now away to a rickety start. But despite the fact that Washington can't hit a lick, Johnson will have more victories than defeats by October. The Destroyers Before they stop the U-boats , With devices known to scieriye. It might be just as well to try The new scheme on the Giants. 1,. T. P. Maybe He Is Sir: 1 hear more than a little gossip here and there as to the game's greatest lirst baseman —from Coiniskey and Anson on through Fred Tenne.v to Chase and Dauhert. Most of the gossip seems to be that Chase and Sisler have the call. But why isn't Stuffy Mclnnis at the top? He is not only a grand tirst baseman, but with a far better batting average than Chase, Daubert or Sisler. If Mclnnis isn't the best all-around first base -1 man baseball has ever known 1 don't know why. H. L. T, Just as Well Dear Sir: In my opinion it is just as well that golf championships were | abolished this summer. The committee in charge has retired from compe tition the only two golfers we have ever had* capable of making any sort of showing in international affairs. If it wasn't for Ouimet and Travis American competitive golf would be a joke in comparison to British golf. With these two retired it is just as well and only fitting that all champion ships be called off. G. L. T. Under the Ban Sometimes I like the two-base hit, Sometimes the bunt's a bird; And yet 1 very rarely like The pop-up back of third. "And Hans Wagner, out of baseball only a few weeks, is about forgot ten already."—Exchange. Or, as Mr. Henley said first, "Into the night go one and all." "Since most golf courses," writes Duffer, "are merely patches of green turf between vast sand traps and bunkers, the majority of them would be about as productive as the Sahara Desert, on the average golf course now it takes an expert to linij anything but sanded depths and grottoes." In the interest of science we'd like to see Hank O'Day sent to the front to face a combined gas and shrapnel attack from the Prussian Guard. We doubt very much whether an inspector operating a telescope at three paces could detect even a quiver in Mr. well-adjusted countenance. Penn-State Football Star Is Army Officer; Is Second Lieutenant State College, Pa., May 21. —Levi L. Lamb, one of tho best who has worn the Blue and White of Penn-State, has passed his examina tions and been-commissioner a sec ond lieutenant in the regular army. Lamb was graduated trom the State College with the class of 1915. For four years he was prominent in football, track and wrestling sports. Penn-State students remember him as the big tackle who kicked two Held goals against Harvard in 1914, enabling his eleven to tie the Crim- J son team, 13 to 13. During his entire career on the ] wrestling mat. Lamb was defeated i only by Dorizas, the Pennsylvania; strong man. Following his gradua- j tion. Lamb coached the Huntingdon school athletic teams at Boston and | instructed the Massachusetts Tech. grapplers. For the last year he has j been coaching at Jamestown, North i Dakota. How Points Were Scored in Pittsburgh Meet A glimpse at the summary of the Pitt scholastic meet Satur- j day, shows how well balanced | the Tech team was in that it j scored in all but one event. In | many of the sports Tech placed ! several of the wearers of tho i "T." Of Tech's 11 men to make the trip all were point winners, I which indicates the fact that the [ right lads were selected to make ' the long trip. The summary fol- | lows: 100-yard dash Harrisburg j Tech 5, Schenley 5, McKeesport ! 3, Peabody 2. f 220-yard dash Harrisburg i Tech 6, Peabody 4, Monessen 3, I Kiski 2. 4 4 0-yard dash Harrisburg | Tech 5, East Palestine 5, Kiski ! 3, Wilklnsburg 2. Half-mile run Harrisburg 5, | East Palestine 5, Kiski 3, Wil- I kinsburg 2. One-mile run East Pales tine 5, Wilkinsburg 4, Kiski 3, ! Harrisburg 2. One-mile relay—Harrisburg 5, I Peabody 4. Wilkinsburg 3, Kiski 2, Schenley 1. 120-yard high hurdles—Har risburg 6, Wilkinsburg 5, Kiski 4. | 220-yard low hurdles—Harris burg 5, Kiski 4, Meadville 3, Wil kinsburg 2, Peabody 1. Broad jump—Harrisburg 5%, I McKeesport 6, Brookville 3, Fifth Avenue 1%. High jump Harrisburg 6, Wilkinsburg 5, McKeesport 3, Greensburg Irwin Pole vault Brookville 6%, j Peabody 5, Allegheny 3%. Discus throw—Kiski 9, Harris- j burg 3, Greensburg 3. Shot put—Harrisburg 6, Schen ley 3, Greensburg 2. COLLEGE BASEBALL RESULTS Holy Cross, 7; Penn, 1. Tufts, 2; Springfield Y. M. C. A., 1. Colby, 6; Bates, 5. Bowdoin. 8; Maine, 7. Seton Hall, 7; Brown, 5. Albright, 6; Kutztown Normal, 0. Susquehanna, 13; WilHamst