LANCASTER IS TARGET FOR MANY GUNNERS-STEEL LEAGUE TO GET MORE TALENT TRAPSHOOTING AT LANCASTER Gunners From Alii Parts of the State Flock Annual Tournament This was "practice day" at the great annual shoot in Lancaster, where the twenty-eighth tournament of the Pennsylvania State Sportsmen's Asso ciation is being held under the man agement of the Lancaster County Gun Club and the well-known firms. Rem ington Afms Co., Dupont Powdw Co., Chamberlain Cartridge Target CO. and the New York Athletic Club. Dozens of Harrisburg men identified with trapshooting went down this morn ing, many of them to contest. Gunners from all over the state are piling in hourly, and it looks like the biggest attendance on record, such is the re vival of rifle shooting since this war began. The program includes the most im portant purse of the year and will also carry for the flr.st time this season the shoot which will decide the ama- f e "r state trap-shooting title, now held by Mclntire. The opening to-day featured ten events of fifteen targets, total 160, for money prizes. Nearly $2,000 is hung up for prize money. The "Maplewood 100" and the "In the Open," both classics, will be" shot for 011 the second day. The feature of the entire shoot, the Pennsylvania State Artateur Citampionship event, will be run oft on the third day. The special prizes for resident Pennsylvanians will be shot on the third and final day as well as the team races and the title for women. Hill Games Postponed; Reading and Hicks Tonight Allison Hill League STANDING OP THE Cf,l'BS W. L. Pet. Rosewood 5 2 .714 Galahad 5 3 !25 Reading .... .... 5 3 .625 Hiek-A-Thrift .... 1 8 .111 TONIGHT'S GAME Reading vs. Hick-A-Thrift. Rain interfered with the Rose wood-Galahad contest last evening in the Allison Hill League after the two nines had made all plans to fight it out for undisputed possession of first place. To-niglit Reading and Hick- A-Thrift will battle. It will be the first contest for the latter team un der the management of Dana Griffin. "Bill'' Reiff, center fielder on The Galahad aggregation and leading batter of the league, has been draft ed into service and will be called June 24. "Kid" Strieker, who pitched the "Hickies" to their first victory in a long time, is going to be a great I help to that team. The "Kid" has had quite a loniy experience in the pastime. His home is at New Bloom field and lie played with the Acade my train there. Next he was heard of with Harfisburg and York in the Tri-State and after that with New Cumberland in the old Central Penn sylvania League. Last year he was sovh with Newport in the Dauphin County League. He is a brakeman on the Middle division and he hits .350, making him a very valuable asset. SELLS PROPERTY TO BUY BONDS, THEN 'ENLISTS IX ARMY Washington.—Found: .A 100 per cent, patriot. Linn F. Hansen, a young farmer of Wayne, Neb., hearing the call of the country, sold his entire property and with the proceeds donated $3,800 to the American Red Cross, contributed SI,OOO toward the erection of a church and bought SI,OOO worth of Liberty bonds. Then he enlisted and since has bought $4,500 more in Lib erty bonds. He is now stationed at Pensacola, Fla., with Company G of the Forty-third Infantry. President Wilson, hearing of Han son's record, sent him the following letter: "Indirectly, through a friend, I have learned of all the circumstances of your joining the military forces of the United States and I want to send you this brief line to express my ad miration of the spirit which prompt ed your action and prompted your whole course in connection with leaving your farm and throwing your fortunes entirely and unreservedly with the great country we all love and seek to preserve." . . f II I' Hart Schaffner L fxMarx , \&jy H. MARKS & SON 4TH & MARKET STS. The Harrisburg Home of HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX and , SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES | HAVE YOUR 1 Lawn Mower, Hedge | and Grass Shears J I Put in Good Shape | I We Can Do It • j The Federal Machine Shop I Cranberry Street, Between Second and Court I; | t'■ | Harrisburg, Pa. . | : V . % TUESDAY EVENING, Snoodles Kid Addison Has Already Chosen His Profession >; By MILTig 6TfOT(I / (NELL-W \ ' ! ( WHAX PO YOU-fHiNK: ] A OOMT KNOW-A f IB> - \ - V YOUR. ADPISOA/ J I poPPY, \ \ AWP V/sJHAT ] jr. A \ V UT 1 K, s al wa y 3 the ■1 and Company ** I 1 U K E „ 3 ation in their . § (g making. | P Bay IV. S. S. | 12 which is a short, easily handled ma chine on caterpillar creepers, de pended upon turning out an engine that would function efficiently at a sharp angle. The engine used will work at a slant of 70 degrees. It can climb in and out of shell holes, and a special device furnishes a soft ground grip that can be removed for operation on a road. Ludendorff Hoped to Divert French Reserves Paris.—L'Homme Libre, Premier Clemenceau's newspaper, says that Ludendorff hoped by his march to the Marne to draw the French re serves to the south and then to drive to th'e west through the valleys of the Aisne and Ourcq toward Com piegne and Villers-Cotterets in order to take the allied positions in the rear from Montdidier to Noyon and force a great retreat on the Oise in the direction of the capital. "But up to now," it continues, "this great plan has only succeeded i$ its first part, and the remainder of the plan is about to meet with a great failure. We would have, in deed, committed a grave blunder had we accumulated our troops as a stopper between the Marne and Aisne. "The important concentrations of troops we have made in the salient, which now forms the new front, be gin to produce their effect. Every thing suggests that the enemy will be completely checked and blocked and that the economy made of our reserves, in preferring to yield terri tory, will permit us much more pow erful reactions than those produced after the battles of March and April. "We need, therefore, have not the least fear on account of the exten sion of the enemy's success. Not this time will he get the decision." ARROW COLLARS CLPBTT, PEADODY & CO., Inc. MAKEB3