18 LEAGUE DECIDES FATE OF HARRISBURG TEAM TONIGHT—HEIL IS AGAIN WINNER YALE WILL NOT PLAY FOOTBALL War Will Crimp Sport; Many Regular Athletes Have Left Halls New Haven. June S. Although efforts are being marie at Yale to re vive athletics at the opening of the fall term, indications are that' no or ganized intercollegiate sport will be possible this fall. In the case of the football schedule, notice has been given that games cannot be played in the case of continuance of the war. . . While the need of athletics is felt, the difficulties of staging delinite in tercollegiate sports are felt to be too great to be overcome. Members of the athletic council, which has ex ecutive control of athletics, detailed to-day some of the obstacles to car rying out a formal program of sports next fall or the following spring. I/Ottor Men Gone These include, first, the departure from college of more than two-thirds of the regular athletes. Including the undergraduates who have won their "T"; second, the fact that the hours usually devoted to athletics are now given over to military training, from 3 till 6 p. m.: third, that fear is felt that the public will not take kindly to sports between athletes who have had little time to train; fourth, be- i causo of continued uncertainty re garding the international situation and the possibility that, even if a fall [ schedule were arranged, it might be summarily interrupted. From the present Yale senior class practically every athlete has already gone to the war. All of the major | sport captains for 1917 and for 191S are enrolled in a military unit of j some kind, and if football and base-; ball are to be played next year new I captains must be chosen. a Captains i Art Gates of the eleven and Ray' Snell of the nine are already in khaki uniforms. Half of the members of the class; of 'l9 and of "IS have already en listed for military service. Yale has; already sent HOO students into its' country's service, and more than ! 1.000 will be enrolled before the close of the summer vacation. Yale. Harvard and Princeton are: not only considering the situation j together, but all three feel about the: Bftme way regarding the outlook, j They believe that difficulties which ! are apparently too great to be sur-1 mounted will prevent a football sea- j son next fall resembling those of; the past. At the same time they greatly de- ; sire a revival of sports on some basis. ] At Yale a feeble attempt was made! to start athletics on either the basis | of rival departments or classes, but; it fell flat. Intermural athletics seem j to have no future here. Criticism Unjust Yale men are inclined to resent | the criticism that has been made by i West Point and Annapolis that the j big universities did about the worst thing possible by abandoning ath-1 letics. It is felt at Yale that condi-j tions are entirely different here from ! those at the army and navy head- j quarters, where the morning and I early afternoons are given to rou-j tine instruction and military drill, I leaving from 3 or 4 to 6 o'clock fori athletics. At Yale recitations and lectures | raiHi n!0" - I i!!§pr IIISM FL#* ufli# NQIM UISIM iiigiw mgU MSUN nig!'" >FL9IRI = a. Bay a Liberty Bond Today ■u # ® ® ■T /' t - §> I Men Who Seek § | Wsjj and Demand | # iSq ttpl the Greatest § | IBy Value Wear | # Hub Clothes f ifli # tf-% f JL a IT* OD #ln these days of economical buying men are more in- aS sistent than ever that their dollars must do their utmost ™ £ —that they must secure the greatest possible values. m To-day, as always, HUB CLOTHES represent the <§? greatest possible values because they are the product @ #of the country's best and most skillful tailors, expert ® designers and manufacturers—of smart, nobby fabrics (Qj in models with snap and dash models that speak a ® A style language all their own. A ™ V • There's an unfailing satisfaction and unquestioned Ja saving in HUB CLOTHES at f sls sl7 S2O $25 f ® SB • Yes. warm weather is here—and to stay too. The past few (lays men changed to light, summery clothes, underwear, etc. Here for that new and "different" styled Straw—a cool and rT: serviceable Silk Shirt—Underwear that defies "Old Sol"—a real, classy Cravat—and Silk Hose in every shade—all at very easy = SB prices. , © w• f w • Clothes for your Boy—certainly—the kind that will steadfast- £ ly resist all sorts of juvenile gymnastics—they're priced so as ™ not to stretch any modest purse. ® J . Nachman & Hirsh Prop's. q ♦■ •■ • • •# FRIDAY EVENING, . occupy the timo till 3 or 4 o'clock ; and military work tho remainder of i the day. The only chance for ath letics to be revived seems to be to give some of the hours now allotted to recitations over to athletics, for f the military work comes first In the scheme of things now regarded es sential at Yale. Dauphin-Perry League Kutter, Marysville's star third sacker, who suffered a severely wrenched leg In the Halifax game j on May 19, is gradually rounding . i Into shape and will be ready to jump . Into the fray within several weeks. Mlllersburg has won three games thus far this season, but all three have been thrown out because of in fringement in the rules, playing men . before they were eligible for duty. Halifax has been awarded two of the games and Dauphin one. Military enlistment is hitting the i various teams hard. Marysvllle will i lose Kurzenknabe, catcher and out fielder when the National Guard leaves, and F. Palmer, intlelder, who ; corps of the United States army. Heckendorn and Frankhouse, first I baseman and third baseman, of the fast Duncannon infield, have also signed up for military duty. Illness is making further inroads j [ into the depleted ranks of the Marysvllle champs. Catcher Hip pensteel is housed with a severe at- i tack of diphtheria and First Base- j man Herman is out of the game j with pleurisy. Brenner, the Bucknell University ; hurler, is doing good work on the mound for Duncannon and his bat ting has telling effects in most of the games. Dearolf, the Duncannon receiver, j earned his letter as a baseball and : football player at Lebanon Valley j j College. His catching and receiving ! have been above his last year's work | and have helped the team material . ly this year. King Lear, the former Cincinnati I Red, has not found the sailing al- j together easy in the Dauphin-Perry , I League. He conquered Dauphin. | , not yet well organized, at the begin- ! 1 ning of the season in two close games, in each of which he was hard hit, gained a ten-inning verdict i over the crippled Marysvllle squad ' without a single earned run for his ; i team, won a close game from Hali- . ! fax, in which he was again hard ! ■ hit, and in his final start against 1 Halifax, was yanked from the box. Strieker, the New Bloomfield boy i ' and former Blue Ridge League star. | is serving with the engineering ; for Newport. During off times he i has been working in left field where j Ihe handles himself well and his! i work with the willow has been well ; | up, he having secured nine hits out [ • of twenty-five times at bat for an I average of .360 thus far this sea- I son. Frankhouse. the ' former Carson ! Long Institute star, is starring at 1 j third base for Duncannon. He is I able to play any position on the | team except that of catcher. Millersburg appears to have land- i |ed a good pitcher in G. Miller. In j I his initial workout against Dauphin j he held this fast going combination ! j to five hits. I Halifax has suspended Aderholt, | shortstop, because of the failure to | report for duty at a recent game. | t ONE OF ENGLAND'S NATIONAL SERVICE GIRLS ! ' ll' ''' Gll2b Practical training in farm work is now being given by the English au thorities in Cornwall. Hundreds of girls have joined women's organizations under the National Service scheme. The photograph shows one of the "National Service" girls who is learning to be a farmer, vaulting a fence to do "her bit on the plot of ground assigned to her. & GnsniJarulJtice Copyright, 1917, The Tribune Association (New York Tribune). HANK GOWBY The first of the active major leaguers to enlist. Tris is up at the top again; Ty Is out for another bid Alex's speed has the winning slant And Big Babe Ruth is the all-star kid; Hand 'em the old hip-hip, and such; Stand 'em up in a leading row; But don't forget, as the cheers emerge. That Old Lank Hank was the first to go. Burns and Kauff and the rest of 'em— Johnson, Fletcher and 7Am and Chase^ Moving on with the best they have, Romping through in the spicy race— Hand 'em all that is due to class And let the boost or the headlines grow; But don't forget, as the cheers are forged. That Old Lank Hank was the first to go. And old Lank Hank Gowdy is precisely the type that would be the first |to serve. There are very few better catchers than Gowdy, but beyond this ! ability he 1s also a tine, likeable type of citizen, one of the best of which | there is in any profession. IN THE RECORDS Records are valuable contributions to tho lore of the day and the dope ! of the era. j They are supposed to furnish a fairly true line on the general situation, I ' being, as they are, a summary of results. And results are supposed to ! couut. • I So, if you owned a ball club and some one offered you the four pitchers who had lost the greatest number of games, the odds are that you would ! very quickly arise upon your hind legs and emit a lusty roar of protest. You would—until you happened to glance at their names—Walter Johnson, ■ ,Joe Bush, Fred Toney and Ray Caldwell. These have been the main losers up to date. Which proves again that I even a cold, pallid, unbiassed record isn't always a certain inside tip on the i ; outstanding situation. |i THE BEST TRAINING Is football or baseball the best training for war? Football, beyond any ' ■ doubt. The training grind is much harder in football than In baseball, and the toughening process, physically, is much more extreme. A contender i must be in much better physical condition to stand up under football than I i he needs for baseball. Baseball is tine training for the big, red game of conflict, just as tennis is But so tar as war preparation is concerned, there is nothing as good as i the old college game tor developing fiber and confidence in one's ability ! to grapple with the test. As Colonel Shakespeare said first —"Hardness ever of hardihood is! mother.'' And football makes for hardness beyond any game we know of, not even barring boxing. LEONARD AND THE BOXING GAME Benny Leonard, the new lightweight champion, can accomplish more than a trifle for the boxing game by carrying forward his intention to enlis. The fighting contingent hasn't been overly keen about heading in j the general uirection of the trenches, referring to those between twenty , and thirty without dependents. And If any game ever needed help, the righting game is the answer. No sport in the widespread universe has suf fered so much from general crookedness and greed. Leonard gives promise of being a proper type. He is a hard, clean fighter; there has been no question us to his direct honesty in the ring, and jho has played out the game. By enlisting at an early date he can become tar and away the most popular tighter in America. YE ANCIENT PROVERB I! Many are called — But after the call unly a few keep their eye 11 on the ball. 1 y. G. T. Many are called — i ' But out from the line Very few bat above .22 . | "Any one who doubts that sport Is doing its bit," writes an observer, I "should visit any of these training camps for officers. Life there is just one |. athlete after another." With the White Sox storming the crest while Eddie Collins and Joe Jackson are batting below .250, where will they be when Eddie and Joe I resume their n.orinal status between .320 and .350? "All Hughey Jennings and his Tigers need are pitchers."—Exchange. | And all we need to have as much money as John D. Rockefeller is $2,000,000,000. LEONARD TO ENLIST MUST New York, June B.—Billy Gilbson. manager of Benny Leonard, an nounced yesterday that Leonard will ■ not enter the ring for a champion ship bout nor consider theatrical offers until after he is enlisted in seme branch of the United States Army. "We have attractive offers from Matt Hlnkel. of Cleveland, and .John Welsmantel, of Brooklyn, for | a championship bout with Johnny Kllbane, July 4," sijrt Gibson. "So far I have not accepted an offer, and | nothing will be done until after | Leonard enlists." DUNDEE DRAWS WITH WELLING 1 New Tork, June B.—Johnny Dun dee and Joe Welling fought a great ten-round draw at the St. Nicholas 1 Rink laat night. It was a bitter struggle every bit of the way. Well ing landed the cleaner punches and might have earned the verdict had |he been a little more aggressive. Dunde's willingness evened up the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH! I IvIHUY GOKS TO SCRAXTON i , Scranton, Pa.. June B.—Returning - from a road trip, Manager Coughltn, 1 of the local New York State League ■ - team, announced that he had com -1 pleted a deal with Manager Mike ' l Doolan, of the Rochester team of the ■ s International League, whereby the s locals will get the services of Out -1 fielder Klrby. He has been landed r to 1111 the vacancy created by the ' release of Tommy McCabe, who Is > to leave In a few days to join one of 1 the teams In th Western League, r Coughlin issued releases to Pitcher Wertz and Inflelder Bill Purtell. 1 READING HIGH'S CAPTAIN Reading, Pa., June S. At the t meeting of the letter men of Reading High's baseball team, held in the • training quarters at George Field yesterday, Stanley Nyquet, '2O. was 1 elected captain of the 1917 Red and I Black baseball squad, defeating . Potts, 'lB, by the narrowest of mar s gins, one vote, after a spirited clec • tloa ©>k">tvhvaai| YESTERDAY'S SCORES National 1/eaguc Brooklyn. B; Pittsburgh, 3. New York, 1; Cincinnati, 1. St. Louis, 9; Boston, 4, Philadelphia-Chicago same post poned, cold. A merioan I x'atfuc ■Washington, 1*; Chicago, 0. Other games postponed, rain. Xew York State league Wilkes-Barre, 2; Harrisburg, 1. Utica, 4; Binghamton, 2. Heading, 3; Scranton, 2. Syracuse-Elmira, wet grounds. International League Newark, 4; Richmond. 1. Other games postponed, rain. Lucknow Shop League Game postponed, rain. Allison Hill 1 /*'aguc Game postponed, rain. WHERE THEY IM;AY TODAY National League Philadelphia at Chicago. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. New York at Cincinnati. \ Boston at St. Louis. American league St. Louis at Philadelphia. Chicago at Washington. Cleveland at New York. Detroit at Boston. New York State league Harrisburg at Wilkes-Barre. Binghamton at Utica. Elmira at Syracuse. Reading at Scranton. WHERE THEY PLAY TOMORROW National Ix.'flfiiie Philadelphia at St. Louis. New York at Chicago. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. Boston at Pittsburgh. America n 1 c St. Louis at Philadelphia, t Detroit at Boston. Cleveland at New York. Chicago at Washington. New York state League Harrisburg at Scranton. Reading at Wilkes-Barre. Elmira at Utica. Binghamton at Syracuse. Bethlehem Steel I A'ague Bethlehem at Steelton. Lebanon at Wilmington. Sparrows Point at Fore River. Reading Railway league Shamokin at Rutherford. Reading Locomotive Shops vs. Transportation. i Carshop vs. N. C. R. R. (Egg Har ; bor). Reading Division vs. Spring Gar-! 'den (Philadelphia). Accounts vs. St. Clair. Motive. Power I/Cagiie Washington at Harrisburg. Wilmington at Philadelphia. Baltimore at Meadows. Trenton at New York. Dauphin-Perry League Duncannon at Newport. Marysville a-t Millersburg. Dauphin at Halifax. STANDING OK THE CLUBS National league W. L. P.C. Philadelphia 25 14 .641 New York 24 14 .832 Chicago 28 18 ,09 St. Louis 23 20 .535 1 Brooklyn '.... 15 20 .429 Cincinnati 20 27 .426 ! Boston 14 21 .400 i Pittsburgh 14 28 .333 American league W. L. P.C. I Boston, 29 13 .696 Chicago, 30 15 ;667| New York 23 19 .548 I Cleveland, 25 23 .5211 Detroit 18 24 .429' St. Louis 17 26 .395 Washington 17 27 .3861 Philadelphia 14 26 .3501 New York State League W. L. P.C. Syracuse, 15 10 .600! Beading 17 12 .586] Binghamton 16 12 .571 i Wilkes-Barre, .... 17 13 .5671 Elmira 14 14 .500 Utica 12 12 .500 Scranton, -12 17 .414 Harrisburg 6 18 .2501 Dauphin-Perry League W. L. P.C. Newport 6 0 1.000 j Duncannon 4 1 .800 I Dauphin 3 2 .600 i Marysville 2 4 .333 ! HUllfax 2 4 .333 I Millersburg 0 6 .000 MAY TAKE OVER SUGAR By Associated Press Buenos Ayres. June 7.—The ad ministration is planning the requl- j sitloning of fll sugar held in the j government warehouses and the pur chase abroad of forty thousand tons. ! FRENCH STRIKE SETTLED By Associated Press Paris. June B.—The strike move ment which existed in Paris during the last three weeks is practically over. The demands of the majority of the strikers have been met by the employers. GOI.DSBORO HERE TOMORROW The West End A. C. will play the Goldsboro team to-morrow. The game will be played at Fourth and I Seneca streets. Both teams will be [strengthened for this contest. Veteran Foreman Honored by His Fellow Employes Patrick J. King, foreman on the Williamsport Division of the Penn- ! sylvania Railroad, has been placed | on the "Roll of Honor" after a ser vice of 35 years and 6 months. At the time of his retirement he was foreman at the freight station at Lock Haven. His exodus from ac tive service was the occasion of a re ception In his honor. Appropriate speeches were made by Freight Agent McFadden, Frank Beardsley and C. F. Kane. The employes at the freight station presented Mr. King with a handsome chair as a token of their appreciation for him. Resorts ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. MOTEL STRANy ki# ATLANTIC CITY MmM Be cool andcomfertable t/iis summer j UN THE OCEAN HOIST "IN TOE VERY CENTRE 01 EVERYTHING" The Hotel It built of STEEL, BRICK nd STONE. 300 deliahtful room*. 250 with pri- . vate bath, equipped with hot and cold. freh water. Crcheatra of o!oiti. WALK. DRIVE or MOTOR amid unusual interesting surroundings. Private garage on premise* i yachting. fishing, shooting, and • Finest 18 hole course on thr Atlantic Coast. " *'• s in linartly int9r§sUd LEAGUE MEETS AT WILKES-BARRE Will Consider Plans to Take Care of Harrisburg Club; Lose Close Game With the departure of President J. H. Farrell from the city yesterday afternoon efforts to secure $5,000 to tide the team over ceased. Manager George Cockill failed in his eftorts at YVUUamsport. It Is said there will be bidders for the franchise from Poughkeepsie, South Bethlehem and other cities to-night. The meeting will be held in Wilkes-Barre. Indications are not favorable to Harrisburg. There are several rep resentatives who will be at the meet ing to-night who have been sore ever since this city was represented. They have knocked this city without cause. Manager George Cockill is coming in for some severe criticism because he wr.lted too long to let real conditions known. Lose Another Close Game There are a number of business men in this city who have never been approached on tho question of aiding in the organization of a base ball organization. There was an im pression in baseball circles that the club had been financed for the sea son. In the game with Wilkes-Barre yesterday Harrisburg lost out. score 2 to 0. Barnes pitched a good game. The Barons got to his curves In a bunch in two innings. Harrisburg could do little with Beretskl except ir. one inning. The score: HARRISBURG AB. R. H. O. A. E. Harrison, rf 3 0 1 0 0 0 Cook. 2b 3 0 0 4 0 0 i Downey, 3b 4 1 0 2 2 o Brown, If 3 0 0 2 0 0 Belchle, cf, 3 0 1 1 0 0 Boley, ss 4 0 2 0 3 t Mack, lb 4 0 0 11 0 I Miller, c, 3 0 1 4 0 0 Barnes, p 3 0 0 0 5 0 Totals 31 1 5 24 10 2 WILKES-BABBE AB. B. H. O. A. E. Warner, 3b 3 1 1 1 2 1 Kirkpatrick, 2b,. 4 0 112 1 Clemons, rf, ... . 3 0 0 3 1 1 Kraft, lb 3 1 1 10 0 0 Weiser, If 3 0 1 2 0 0 Clemons, rf 3 0 1 2 0 0 O'Neill, ss, 3 0 0 2 3 0 Snyder, c 3 0 0 5 1 0 Beretskl, p 3 0 0 1 2 0 Totals 29 2 4 27 10 3 I Harrisburg, ..00000000 I—l | Wilkes-Barre, 00010001 x—2 Two-base hits, Kraft. O Two-Wse hit. Kraft. Stolen bases, Weiser. Harrison, Boley. Double plays, Orcutt to Kraft. Left on base, Harrisburg, 6: Wilkes-Barre, 3. First base on errors. Harrisburg, 3: Wilkes-Barre, 2. Base on balls, off Beretskl, 3. Struck out, by Barnes, 3; by Beretskl, 3. Umpires, Pfirman and Johnson. Time, 1.30. GAMES WANTED FOR SATURDAY The Hiek-A-Thrift Club is in the field for a game for to-morrow after noon. Communicate with Benjamin Whitman, at the Commercial Trust Company, or Murray Washburn, in the P. li. B. Draughting office. Manager C. Beatty, of the Engine men and Firemen nine, is after a game for to-morrow afternoon. He j can be called by telephone at the Camp Curtin Fire Company build ing. NO MOTIVE POWER GAME Owing to the busy times at Wash- I ington the game scheduled fot- to \ morrow in this city between the Har j rlsburg and Washington Motive I Power teams has been called off. A 1 | date will be announced later. This , | puts the local Motive Power team ; without a game. They are ready to play any local nine, the game to i take place at Island Park. i ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■Ml ! Getting Under A Poult on Straw It means Straw Hat satisfaction an assur ance of correct style linked with pronounced value. #1.50 to $lO po,®N WHERE THE STYLES ORIGINATE. it 9 FURNITURE POLISH GUARANTIED TO GIVE, SATISFACTION * ALL . m IUVA _ *Zi£l 1 PO MOP NC L ®f. Kaufman'* Underselling Stores It ill ii I IIV 1 V] Non-greasy Toilet Cream Pre vents Tan Relieves Sunburn I Keeps the Skin Soft and Velvety. I An Exquisite Toilet Preparation, 26c. GORGAS DRCG STORES 18 N. Ttalril St.. sad P. R. R. Station I '>■ll 1 I- . 1-11- J . I.Hl*' JUNE 8, 1917. [WELLY 5 ERI Baseball angels have been a scarce article in Harrisburg for several years. Those who held on to the sport at their own expense won a place in tho hall of fame and could not be expected to shoulder all the burden. That they are good sports is shown in the willingness to do their bit. What happens at the league meet ing in Wilkes-Barre to-night is not likely to be favorable to Harrisburg. An active businessman might be able! to take care of the team, for the | league playing home games in Har-1 risburg and breaking even. It would bo a better proposition than making the Islanders a traveling team. Willlamsporf has turned the op portunity to get a New York State League franchise. Buying a tail end team is not a good chance to make money according to the way prospective buyers In Billtown look at 'it. Weather conditions were favorable to-day for the annual Grammar AGAINST FIGHTING IN FOOTBALL GAME; LEADS WAR UNIT Dispatches from the French front state that Lieutenant Fred J. Daly, Yale football captain in 1910, has or ganized a unit of American college i [ students, who have been with base hospital contingents in France and will lead them, along with several other units, as the first American combatants to carry the Stars and Stripes against the central allies. Daly's whole life might be put down as a paradox. He was born and raised in Cambridge. Mass., right in the heart of Harvard Univer sity traditions. But Freddie didn't want to go to Harvard. He went up to Phillips Andover Academy, a Yale prep school. He didn't have any money, and the first year there found him living In an uncarpeted room in the commons, sleeping on a cot that sagged badly In the middle under his heavy weight and getting his meals by washing dishes, serving as a bus boy and later as cashier punching meal tickets in the academy dining hall. Gridiron Loader He played football and captained the academy eleven in 1907. He played baseball and basketball and was a fair track team man. He never smoked, drank nor swore. He was painfully quiet. Many marveled how he, being so mild mannered, could get up enough belligerency to play football successfully. And many will marvel now that he is to be one of the first American combat ants abroad. A little incident in a midwinter boxing tourney at Andover illustrates his noneombatant spirit. He was matched in the finals of the heavy weight class against John R. Kilpat rick, afterward a Yale ail-American and a wonderful track man. Daly could have knocked Kilpatrick out in a single round. Instead, he merely stayed on guard for three rounds, refusing to mix it up with his lighter opponent and Kilpatrick got the decision. Coach at Williams At Yale he kept on with his ath letics, played football four years and was a great leader. For a year or two after his graduation he coached the Williams College eleven at Wil liamstown, Mass. His pupils played I ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Schleisner's Men's Shop i 28-30-32 N. 3rd St. | —the weather is the same for everybody but I Schleisner Hot Weather Suits are different. After it's all said and done j good materials for men's hot —-rr\U which brings us to the clever Hot Weather Suits -—4=l - $7.50 to $12.50 —in Palm Beach, Tropical Wor- _ ,/ steds, Kool Kloth and Coolkenny ■ ' " ' Crash—ready to slip on. Summer Troasers-$5 & $6 —white flannel and striped serge -—go with a blue coat—or any coat I you have. I Men's and Young Men's Suits SINGLE AND DOUBLE BREASTED —plain blues—grays—fancy stripes—just to your liking— tailored In strict accord with Schleisner standards—de signed by artists who appreciate the styles American men want— slß to $25 to S4O I ) school track meet nt Island park, forces were out early putting the track and field in shape. A record crowd was looked for. The Phillies and Chicago were un able to play yesterday because of cold weather. Rain stopped other games, it looks like a bad season all around for baseball. Reading and Scranton had a close j fight yesterday, the Wiltse crowd winning out by a score of 3 to 2. Buckles had costly errors back of I him. Utlca trimmed Binghamton, ! score 4 to 2. It was a batting argu | ment. An interesting story may some day be written on "Why Harrisburg Is Without League Baseball." it can j be told in one volume and a general belief prevails that it would prove I interesting reading. Manager George Cockill expected to join the team at Wilkes-Barre to day and will attend the meeting to night. Ramsey and Cooper will represent the players. Rood football, but the quiet, dignified Dalyism appeared In them each game they played. They were quiet on and off the field, seldom protesting decisions and never guilty of dirty work. Daly wouldn't stand for it. Then he went back to Andover and lived with the boys as he did when he was a student there. He was the academy football coach. Daly was among the first to go overseas with academy and college student base hospital units. And when the declaration of a state of war came he was, dispatches say, one of the first to propose leaving the work of mercy for the work of combat. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers