SECRETARY BAKER TO TELL BASEBALL FATE TODAY; SHOOT FOR CITY TITLE SATURDAY FATAL DAY FOR BASEBALL Sccrelarj- Baker Postpones His Work or Fight Decis ion Until This Noon To-day Is the day. So declared Sec retary of War Baker last night. In postponing his decision on the work er-fight baseball regulations. "Too busy," was his excuse for keeping the universe waiting, although a whole regiment of baseball magnates kicked their heels In the lobby. There were: President Tener, Na tional League; President Johnson. American League; August Herr mann, of Cincinnati, chairman, and John E. Bruce, of the National Com mission; Secretary Heydler, National League, and these club presidents. William F. Baker, Philadelphia;! Charles Weeghinan, Chicago; Bar ney Dreyfuss, Pittsburgh; Percy D. Haughton, Boston; Harry Hemp-] stead. New York; Harry Frazee. | Boston, and Benjamin Minor, Wash-j ington. There seemed to be confirmation, that the federal government would ease up. They based this hope upon the Secretary's previous statement that it was not certain that the base- | ball industry would be disrupted By operation of the order and their be- ] lief that they had presented facts that would convince him that pro- 1 fessional leagues would have to sus-1 pend unless the order Is modified. General Crowder was tld by the baseball representatives that If the regulations were enforced now. less than sixty players would remain In the two major leagues and that there would be no time In which to ; recruit new players to enable the clubs to complete the present play- J ing schedules. It was expected that j Secretary Baker would send down his decision by noontinfe. John McGraw Has No Faith in a "Hunch" John McGraw, who has been hand ling the Giants with supreme success since 1902, is always in the limelight, because he believes publicity helps the game. He is talking now of tak ing two teams to Paris, and It is safe to say John will stir things up in some way very soon, McGraw has made a record for turning out stars, and all of them will tell you that one secret of his success is that he takes the blame when it is coming to him. A typical story of his, seared deeply in the Giants' logbook, concerns Mo- Graw's system of signalling, for he has always directed his team on tie field with signals. The Giants were playing Cincinnati at the Polo Ground one day, and every time that "Big Larry" McLean, as good a man in a pinch as there is playin" ball, came to the bat. there were men on the bases who would score on a hit and put the Cincinnati club ahead. The first three times that McLean faced Crandall. McGraw held up four fingers with the thumb down, which was his signal to pass a batter purposely. McLean received his base on balls, and the next batter failed to bring the runs home each time, thus vindicating McGraw'a Judgment. McGraw'a Last "Hunch*' The fourth time that McLean came up the umpire passed directly in Cran dall's line of vision as McGraw, on the bench, held up his four nngers with the thumb down, and the pitcher missed the signal. He broke a strike over the plate. Again McGraw held up the four fingers and again Cran dall's view was obstructed by the rest less* moving about of the umpire. Crandall pitched another strike. That was too much for Meyers, the Indian catcher, who thought that Mc- Lean ought to be passed in the face of the present grave crisis, and he looked to the bench to get the signal from McGraw. But the little manager thought that this good start of Cran dall's was a "hunch." and he played It. Crandall wasted the next one. and then pitched another strike. McLean hit for a base; two runs came home, and Cincinnati won the game. That is the reason McGraw says he has stuck to straight catch-as-catch-can baseball ever since and has not played any "hunches." . _ • If i had walked McLean I would have had that game." he said after ward. "but I take the blame for it. What They Did Yesterday; Where They Play Today AMERICAN LEAGI'E No games schceduled. NATIONAL. LEAGUE St. Louis 10, New York 2. Pittsburgh 3. Brooklyn 1. Chicago 5. Phillies 4. Boston 4. Cincinnati 0. STANDING OF CLUBS American League W. L PC. Boston 34 .618 Cleveland oO 42 .a4j New York 46 40 *>3o Washington 47 41 .034 St. Louis 40 46 .465 Chicago 39 47 .453 Philadelphia 36 49 .**4 Detroit 36 50 .419 National League \Y. L PC. Chicago 57 28 .663 New York 53 33 .616 Pittsburgh 45 39 .536 Phillies 39 44 .4io Cincinnati 37 45 .451 Boston 38 49 .437 St. Louis 36 52 .409 Brooklyn 33 48 .407 SCHEDULE FOR TO-DAY American League Washington at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Detroit. New York at Cleveland. * Boston at Chicago. National I.eagae Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. Chinclnnati at Boston. Chicago at Philadelphia. St. Louis at New York. TO UNDERSTAND By GRANTLAND RICE v , Lieutenant, 115 th Field Artillery. [Copyright. 1918. by The Tribune Association (New York Tribune)] He saw long lines of khaki form In quiet order, clan by clan; To drive against the blood-red storm Of flame and steel beyond their span- As one might gather for a game Of two-base hits or tackle runs— Until the zero hour came Amid the thunder of the guns. And some looked out with eager eyes Beyond the gathering barrage. Unmindful of the sacrifice Or service %f their final charge; And some, with faces drawn and gray Stood ready for their final night. Still dreaming of a vanished day And one who waited through the night. . He saw the forming row on row, A line that raw hell couldn't stop; Until, against the dawn's white glow He saw their bodies clear the topi And then, across the shattered loam From smashing shell and shrapnel sent. At last —three thousand miles from home He knew what Flag and Country meant. THURSDAY EVENING, Snoodles Xt Sounds Very Much Like a Pipe Dream >; >; >; // UTIgCTfOTiI X r 7 — —■ -=* ' "T 1 V *iST€*/ To pgr SJV // 1 4 33* 8 x^ — / Mew waxbr:]. a/A A I HBV! \ J l-pipeiffito / • // 1 x / —CTtenr ! / \ O/ £rep\'UQxv^ BIG SHOOT FOR THE CITY TITLE Conodoguinet Range Will Be Scene Saturday of Local Experts Competing ' The city rifle title will be at stake ! next Saturday when the P. R. R. Keystone Rifle Club and the Har risburg Rifle Club meet in cham pionship contest at the Conodoguinet range of the latter club. This may be reached by taking the Enola car from Market Square and get [ting ofT at Adams street, Enola. then ! following the path to the rifle ranse | along the creek. Cars leave the , Square every fifteen minutes. ! The teams which will compete are ' so closely matched that the total team scores for the two previous I matches show a difference of but four points out of a total of 1,000 I points. I Each club is making strenuous | preparations for winning this third : match. A large turnout is expected and each club will likely put some ! fifteen of their best shots on the j firing line to compete for the single man teams representing the clubs for the final shoot. In the practice shooting during the last week, in preparation for this match, several men of each club have made scores of 90 to 95 per cent, and both clubs are keyed up fo turn out a score that will be worth going miles to see. We hear a great deal lately about the benetjts that are to be derived bv drafted men who attend the drills held by the local home guards. These are all well enough so far as they, go and are undoubtedly a help, and a big help, in fitting a draftee for his future army life, but at the same : time men of this vicinity should re member that the fighting ability of; any soldier depends upon two things, j his health and his shooting ability, j His health he can control, but to ob- j tain expert shooting ability necessary' to preserve his life and to make him of some real benefit after he doesj get into the Army, he will need ex pert instruction and this instruction he can secure without cost in either of these two rifle clubs. A visit to a match such a- that] named above would be a real educa tion to those people who believe that j expert sharpshooters are born in stead of being made by years of care ful practice undr competent in structors. Just a few days ago the country was thrilled by reading that two I sharpshooters in Pershing's army each brought down an aeroplane byi two shots apiece from their rifles, a thing unheard of before in European armies. Investigation has showjn that one of these men obtained his skill by practice in squirrel shoot ing with the rifle before he went' in the Army. The other obtained his skill by carefvl practice on a rifle range on Long Island. Both of these men won a secreancy and a deco ration because they were wise enough to train themselves to be of some real value before they entered the Army. • j Ready to Provide New York With Baseball ABWE'-OTHK 2>E VOW -1 >IIVX-TCR. KtJCJXrS Manager Miller Huggins, of the New York Yankees, and Manager John J. McGraw, of the Glagts, are working on a plan to give the metro politan district it* baseball. Their scheme is to assemble teams compos ed of players not affected by Secre tary of War Baker's ruling and play games at the Polo Grounds, should the big league- abandon their pennant races. MAKING GUNS TO FIT SHOOTER Great American Handicap Will Feature This at Chi cago Carnival, Aug. 5 t AH indications are that the Grand American Handicap Trapshooting . Tournament which is to take place . over the ten traps of the South • Shore County Club, Chicago, August ,1 5-9, will be the biggest event over held since trapshooting became . I popular. In telling about the or i rangements Peter P. Carney calls ' attention to the new scheme of hav 'j ing a gun fitted to the shooter. This , j urgency was well illustrated recent : ly In a dispatch from Pershing's 'i Army relating the hard luck of a i Yankee sharpshooter who could have notched a German high officer had i tne gun he was provided with been familiar to him. Carney says that "try-guns,'' while i new in chis country', have been used ' for years in England in the shooting I schools. , The great influx of.men and even i| the fair sex, into the trapshooting | 1 army, has brought guns of all sizes : and styles into play. John Brown has a gun which seems to suit Mm: | Bill Jones likes it and buys the same kind. Such purchasing lias ( ' caused the "misfits." The Gun Shoald Pit Star baseball players have their, hats and gloves made for their in- i : dividual use. This is especially true. iof bats. Players have their grip. j manner of swing and individualities' noted or measured and the bat made : accordingly. So it is with clothes—j a 160-pound man couldn't wear the ; \ suit a 230-pound man could, and yetj at the trapshooting club they use the■ same size and style gun. At the Grand American Handicap ; shooter salesmen will be present, in cluding the try-gun expert. Jack Fanning. "Jack" has made a thor ough study of the try-gun, and ' shooters visiting the G. A. H. should have a talk with him and lqarn just; j where they "fall down" in the shoot-! 1 ing game. He, or the other sales-! men. will be pleased to explain the ' trjr-gun in detail and measure all •hooters. Having your measurement ) taken does not necessarily mean 1 j that you have to buy a new gun— it; I just assures you of the cause of your' I shooting difficulties and their rem-; ! edy. Measuring With a Try-Gun j A synopsis of how a shooter is ; measured with a try-gun is as fol : lows: j First, the adjustability of t)je try-- gun as to length of stock, cast off and: drop of comb and heel is explained. A|-.er 'advising* that the breadth, height and usual shooting position i of the shooter governs his measure-' ; menus the expert takes up separate ly the different parts of a gun that j should fit the shooter. Second, he measures the length of i stock required by resting the butt of the gun in the bend of the arm, find ing at what length the forefinger comfortably reaches the trigger. Then the expert has the shooter take the gun in his natural shooting po3i-j tion: studies carefully the position cf; the butt and the comb: makes the; necessary adjustments until the buttj finally fits the slooter's shoulder and the heel has the correct drop. The comb is a harder proposition. The shooter'*- eye has to be sighted, and attention paid to the way hej "cheeks the gun." The expert men, adjusts the comb several times until i it fits snugly to the shooter's cheek,] making sure that it is impossible fori the shooter to hide his sighting eye] behind the breech of the gun. To note these points, he stands in front of the shooter, making proper ad justments. He also observes wheth- j er or not the stock must be cast-off: j if so hi turns the stock to one; side, an.l makes a slight alteration in the setting of the comb. After satisfying himself that the gun Is a correct fit for the shooter, the stoc't is locked. This completes j the task, and the shooter has 'he measurements for a gun that fits | properly and enables him to shoot j better at the traps or afield. FRED FI'I.TON DKI.IXQI F.NT llarrlann, N. J.. July 25. Fred Fulton, the Minnesota claimant of the heavyweight pugilistic title, has been classed as a delinquent in the draft< and may be taken into custody.. Ful ton is scheduled to meet Jack Demp sey In an eight-round bout here Sat urday night. According to a letter received yes terday. Fulton failed to appear be fore his local draft board for physical examination, ans by virtue of this failure he is classed a delinquent. The Harrison board met yesterday to. consider the case and decided to re fer It to the Attorney General. FANS TWENTY-NINE BATSMEN Srraaton. Pa.. July 25.— 1n an ama teur game here between Taylor and the Brisbln teams. Pitcher Latzo, of the former team, established a record of fanning twenty-nine batsmen In a seventeen-lnnlng contest. He also won the game for Taylor with a three base hit In the last Inning with a man on base. The teams are members of the Victory League. BIG LEAGUERS GET OFFERS Expecting an adverse decision from Secretary Baker, the Duluth baseball team.' of the Head of the Lakes- Mesaga circuit, has wired Walter 1 Johnson terms of S3OO a game. Hen drix, of the Cuba, and Severeid. of the Browns. also received offers. . * BAKJRISBURG TELEGRAPH England Discovers That Baseball Has a "Soul" They've got It good o*er In Eng land. Got the baseball fever. Even the London Himes Is wabbling. Not content with a . two-column story about the flrlt game in London, its editor called In a special writer to dip into the "Soul of Baseball." Read It. Maybe you never knew that baseball had a soul. It takes an English critic to find these things. This one must be an ace for he begins with saying that it is easy to understand baseball strategy. Poor J. Bull. The squeeze play or the double hit-and run would lay him up with brain fever. Thus "The Soul of Baseball." It Is easy enough to understand the strategy of baseball. Strategically. It Is a glorified form of rounders —a pleasant game we have all played im perfectly In the noisy days of child hood before we were old enough to play cricket and the other Ludl Humanlores with the necessary grav lty. But the tactics of the American national pastime, without which no Fourth-of-July celebration would be complete, are beyond the average Englishman. "The English 'tan' or 'rooter.' to use the picturesque trans Atlantic terms for an habitual spectator. In variably misses all the finer points of the team-play. The science of sig naling. for example, which has been more highly developed in baseball than in American football even, is used for the bewilderment of the man with the bat in ways unnoticed by the English spectator and un dreamed of. The catcher and the pitcher are the principals in the plot for his confusion which is improvis ed every time the ball Is about to be delivered. In first-class baseball across the Atlantic every good hit ter's weak points are known all over the continent, from Boston to St. Louis, and the pitcher who did not ] remember them and turn them to ac- i count would not be worth his very j handsome salary (he generally gets j more than the President in a year, but seldom lasts for a Presidential ' term.) An England bowler Is not nearly so well acquainted with the peculiarities of the leading batsmen, either In his own country or In the Dominions. But what happens when a new or little-known smiter waits for them to come over the plate? The catcher's duty is to form a working hypothesis of his psychology and to inform the pitcher of his theory hy means of unostentatious signs (e. g . touching his pad with one hand of* the other), whereupon the required curve, high up or low down, close to the body or far out, very fast or com paratively slow, is at once adminis tered. And. to take one of many side lsues, catcher and pitcher must also collaborate in schemes for running j out a man on first base who is try- • ing to steal second. All this is but a part of the com- ' plex organization, a cosmos of secrets and stunts, which constitutes base ball team-play. To-morrow when the King himself -pitches the first ball in a typical Fourth-o>-July match, the doubts lingering in the minds of many as to whether baseball is a sporting pastime will be eliminated. So good a sportsman (the doubters will say to themselves) -would never take so personal a part in an affair British King Shakes Hands With American Baseball Hero Before Game on July 4 flkr WK ; < > • KDM OEOMC. ADMIRAL SIMS AJBJt LATHAM 'TKM a proud day for Arlle Latham, baseball player In the United States for many, many years and connected with the sport for thirty years, when he umpired the game between American Army teftms at Chelsea. England, July 4. Arlie was the master of ceremonies, and as a conse quence he became the most important man in connection with the game the king had to recognise. > The whole royal family saw the game and heard American doughboy* and Jackies yell at the umpire. i which was not In accord with the ideal of sportsmanship, which is chivalry at play. In point of fact, nobody who has grasped the Ameri can Idea of what a co-operative pas time should be ever for a moment doubted whether baseball was a true sport. Interference Is the soul of American baseball—as of American football which has no offside for the self-same reason, and so differs by the wtidth of the Atlantic from our Rugby game—and. since it is per missible under the code, anything short of physical violence may be done to delude and bewilder an op ponent while batting without offend ing against the spirit of sportsman ship. And it Is only logical, and therefore by no means repugnant to the extended conception of fair-play, that the right to interfere should be also given to the spectators, who may do their best by means of picturesque outcries and all manner of inanimate noises, to 'rattle' the team they wish to see beaten. When the umpire Is also assailed with highly-coloured obloquy the Knglishman is apt to feel a pain in hia temperament. He has been brought up on cricket, in which the white-robed umpire is the auto crat of an artlstocracy, an Incarna tion of conscience, a presiding deity, whose decision may not even be chal lenged in a whisper. 'But baseball is as different from cricket as poker is from chess, and it is sheer Insularity to think com parisons can be drawn between such vividly contrasted games. If custom has made It lawful for both sides and both sets of spectators (that's the crucial point:) to rag the umpire, then It is actually the duty of the keen sportsman to rag him as vig orously as may be. Furthermore we must count it as a merit of baseball —the more willingly as we remember sitting out so many dull hours of slow, joyless business cricket in the peace-time past—that it allows the spectator to take part in it by mak ing a Joyous hullabaloo. "Barrack ing" in cricket is a tendency to grasp the same privilege of long-range in terference. The value of baseball as physical training is manifest. It helps to create a swift, strong, adapt able physique; the constant running and throwing and catching make the long, elastic muscles, which are the best for any special branch of ath letics. It sets a keen edge on the player's 'horse-sense' or open-air in telligence, which is Its very soul, brings it closer to the struggle of life than cricket, or even Rugby football. He who 'plays ball' carries on In a resisting medium, the same in kind if not in degree as the atmos phere of warfare, which invigorates the will and trains it to become in dependent of the influence of opposed volition or of the crowd's antipathy. As a nation we shall, of course, stick to cricket. Cricket is our game of games, a vital part of our nation al life and character. But we can be open-minded enough to admire the varied and vivacious pastime in which American personality playfully ex presses Itself. Some day we shall expect to see President Wilson standing umpire for an over at Lord's or. at any rate, kicking off at Twickenham, special leave having been granted to him by Congress to pay us a visit and grace fully return the King's gracious recognition of America's national game. When the age of victory dawns, we shall expect this favour. BRITAIN RULES STRIKERS MUST WORK OR FIGHT War Cabinet Will Draft Mu nitions Workers of Military Age If They Hold Out By Associated Press Lomlon, July 25.—The British War Cabinet has decided that if the mu nitions strike continues the strik ers of military age will be draft ed promptly into the army, accord ing to an unofficial statement print ed in some of the morning newspa pers. George H. Roberts, Minister of Labor, gave a hint to this effect in a spech in Ixmdon Wednesday when he declared that no young men had a right to exemption from mil itary service except on the ground they were doing work more valuable than fighting. Government Firm With Embargo The government remains firm in its refusal to withdraw the embargo which ostensibly is the cause of the strike, although it seems that in some instances the embargo is used as a pretext to cover other griev i anees. Events now are waiting upon the national conference of the delegates of the engineering trades which, it is understood, meets at Leeds to-day. It is believed in some quarters that a majority of the delegates will in sist on a ballot of the members be fore calling a general strike. * This course is strongly supported by Alexander Thompson, Socialist and editor of the Clarion, who writes in the Daily Mall: Strike Tends to Anarchy "It is unthinkable that the con ference will assume the tremendous responsibility of stopping the mu nition output of the whole country without a democratic vote by all the men and women concerned. The tactics of the young rebels who forced a strike at Birmingham and Coventry against the advice of re sponsible leaders make not for dem ocracy or Socialism, but straight for anarchy and Bolshevism." Meanwhile dissenson is being cre ated in the trades union ranks by the action of the strikers and in many parts of t'ne-country the conduct of the Coventry and Birmingham men is denounced hotly. Even in Birm ingham itself many of the engineers refuse to be stumped into an irre sponsible strike. On the Clyde there seems no sign of sympathy with the strikers and work there Is continu ing smoothly. The same may be said of many other centers. On the other hand 8,000 notices to cease work Tuesday were handed in at Manchester where the Amal iramated Engineers have a member shir) of 15,000. It Is declared a ma jority will join the strike unless the embargo Is removed. Minnesota Woman Dies at 101 Years and 5 Months Daaeca, Minn.—Mrs. John Proechel. the oldest resident of Waseca county. Is dead at her home in Janesvllle. She was 101 years and five months old, and until a short time ago was able to attend to her housework. She was the mother of eleven children, five of whom survive her, the oldest seventy-seven and the youngest six ty-one years. There are thirty-two grandchildren and fifty-eight great grandchildren. BAND CONCERT The Steelton Band, conducted by Director Zala, will give a free j concert this evening in Reservoir Park. This was the first band to offer Its services free tout the con | cert, planned for June 21, was postponed until to-day because of rain. The program for to-night is an entertaining one Including patrloUcv popular and classic numbers as follows: America. March "Liberty Loan" ...Sousa Grand selection, "Macbeth," Melodies from the comic opera. "Maid Marian" .. .R. de Koven Grand scenes from "Samson and Delilah" Saint Baens Ballet "Egyptian" (in 4 parts). Motives from "The Grand Mogul/" ; Star Spangled Banner. ° Luder " ! DEATH OF "DUSTY" MILLER Warnenbaro, Pa.. July 25. Martin Luther Miller, a former resident, of Waynesboro, died in Philadelphia on Monday afternoon. Mr. Miller, who was known here as "Dusty," was an excellent baseball player and a one time played professional ball; he also played with the local club here. He la survived by several children and several brothers and sisters: His re mains will be ahlpped to Hagerstown where burial will like place. JULY 25, 1918. Brothers Arrive Overseas WILLIAM E. FORTENBAUGH ELLWOOD F. FORTENBAUGH William E. Fortenbaugh and EUwood F. Fortenbaugh, sons of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Fortenbaugh, of Oberlin, have arrived overseas, an nouncements to that effect having Just been received by their parents. William is attached to the machine gun battalion of the One Hundred Forty-eighth Infantry and EUwood is a member of Company D, Three Hundred Fourth Engineers. Both of the youths were employed at the Bethlehem Steel Company before their departure and were members of the Bressler Social Club. SHIRTS At REDUCTIONS in Price Boys' and Men's Sport Shirts 750; worth $1.50 Men's Silk Bosom Shirts $1.38; worth $2.00 Men's Madras and Percale Negligee Shirts, * $1.15 and $1.38; worth $2.00 Boys' Underwear 500; worth SI.OO Men's Union Suits. .850 and $1.00; worth SI.OO and $1.75 Straw Hats SI.OO Panamas $3.00 to $4.50; worth $4.50 to $6.00 Men's Guaranteed Hose, Railroaders' Overalls; all grades, all sizes. Working Shirts, the kind worth while. CONSYLMAN & COMPANY 1117 NORTH THIRD STREET Play Safe — Stick to KING OSCAR CIGARS because the quality is as good as ever it was. They will please and satisfy you. 6c—-worth it JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers 13