8 NEW JERSEY HUNTING DEER TODAY; UNCLE SAM URGES GOLF PLAYING FOR SOLDIERS Uncle Sam Ordains Golf as Capital Sport For Soldiers Washington, Oct. 18.—The need for golf as a means of recreation in the training- camps Is apparent, accord ing to reports submitted to the Ath letic Division of the War Department Commission on training camp activ ities by athletic directors of the vari ous cantonments. It is impossible to construct stan dard golf courses in the training camps, it was said, but this need not prevent the soldiers from play ing the game in a modified form. Cross country golf, miniature courses and putting contests readily conform to the Informal schedule and find fa vor with both afllcers and men. The following letter has been sent by the United States Golf Assocla- , on to tin- secretaries of the organ ization's affiliated clubs throughout the country: "Tlie commission on training camp activities of the War Department, Ifter a survey of existing conditions, has decided that there is a real need ALL NEW JERSEY HUNTING DEER First Day of Season Sees 200- Pounders Shot; Hunters Look For Great Season Reports from New Jersey to-day do not Indicate that the deer hunters will help food conservation to any great extent. They blame the poor kill on "too much foliage on the trees" and "poor weather." However, some were lucky. Gloucester per haps sent out more gunners than any other section although nearly every town had an auto load or two, many leaving the night before, so as to get an early "stand." Game Warden Avis, Warden Folker, of Camden county, spent the first day of the season around Willlamstown, and while neither got a shot at one of the fleet-footed animals, they saw a couple of nice docs. Albert John son, of that town, who was among the party, brought down a two hun dred-pound buck, having twelve snags. Johnson took his prey into town and placed it on exhibition. Hunters report that it is almost im possible to have any success without dogs, as the deer hide in thick woods. Another deer of two hundred Old "Pop" Geers Wins With June Red at Atlanta Races "Pop" Geers, Nestor of the turf, figured again yesterday at Atlanta when he piloted June Red to victory in the feature event of the day, the Georgia Railway and Power Company Club race, for 2.07 trotters and a $2,500 purse. June showed a re markable reversal of form and won rather easily, despite the fact and Esperanza were among her competitors. She finished last in the opening heat. Heir Reaper took second money. The free-for-all pace for a $l,- 200 purse, was carried off by Miss Harris M., in a hot battle with Jay Mack, which was second in all three miles. Hal Boy ran third and showed absolutely no form. Murphy drove the winner and also took first money in the two-year old trot. He was behind Doro thy Day, which won in two straight heats. Mark Stout was second in both, and Wiki Wiki was third. The track was again in good condition and a good crowd at tended. "Star Chamber" Football Planned For Tarsus at Middletown, Sunday Sfate College, Pa., Oct. 19. The football situation at Penn State is similar to that prevailing? at many other colleges this season, livery regular and most of the experienced substitutes of last season are in the service. Out of a Squad of fourteen letter men, not a single veteran is on hand for Coach Bezdek's team this year. In his reconstruction efforts, Bezdek is depending on players from last season's undefeated freshman team and a few substitutes from the 1917 'varsity. With this limited supply of material at his disposal, he is push ing ahead determined to develop a representative wartime eleven for the four scheduled games. Of the nine contests originally planned, there are remaining oh State's slate only Bucknell, Rutgers Lehigh and Pittsburgh. Bucknell is Play Safe — Stick to KING OSCAR CIGARS because the quality is as good as ever it was. They will please and satisfy you. 7 c—worth it JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH for golf facilities in the various training camps of this country. It has conclusive evidence that golf provides a form of recreational ac tivity which plays an important part in counteracting the tension of in tensive training. "This association has been asked by the War Department to assist in making the game of golf possible in the training camps. To do this the necessary equipment is required. The department will provide the grounds and the golfers of the coun try are asked to assist in obtaining the clubs, balls and other essentials for the game. The -United States Golf Association feels confident that this suggestion is all that is neces sary to gain the hearty co-operation of the golfers ot the country in the plan to provide their favorite form of recreation for the boys who are going through preparatory training prior to their departure for active service overseas." pounds was shot near Weymouth by Charles Coffee. It was a four-snag buck. Gunners say the deer tracks in the woods indicate that the deer are trav eling in large herds. They predict this will result in a large killing of venison when the foliage is off the trees during the last two Wednesdays of the open season. Gunners on the Delaware river marshes found black ducks plentiful when the season opened yesterday. Presence of many airplanes along the coast is believed to have driven large flocks of water fowl to the inland feeding grounds. A few mallards have also put in an appearance along the Delaware. Flagg's "Columbia" Is Dead in Baltimore Baltimore, Md„ . Oct. 18. —Mrs. I Margaret Eyre Stirling Baldwin, wife j of Willard A. Baldwin, of Baltimore j and New York, is dead of influenza 1 and pneumonia at the home of her ' father-in-law. Homer Field Baldwin. | Mrs. Baldwin was a grandniece of Admiral Yates Stirling, U. S. N., j and the "prettiest woman in Balti- ; more," who recently posed for James Montgomery Flagg as "Columbia" to aid the fourth Liberty Loan drive, i Mrs. Baldwin was a leader in the younger married set. Her death oc curredd almost at the very moment that the body of her brother. Cap tain Archibald Stirling, quartermas-* ter corps, U. S. A., who died of the same causes, was brought to this city from Newport News, Va., for burial. Give Up Light Saving Extension Washington, Oct. 18. —No further effort will be made by Congress to continue the existing daylight sav ing law, and the hands of the clocks will be turned back an hour on Octo ber 27, as originally planned. This decision was reached yesterday at a conference between congressional leaders and Chairman Baruch, of the War Industries Board, who had recommended that the law remain in force for the period of the war. Germany Preparing to Quit Ukraine , Stockholm, Oct. 18. —According to • a Petrograd dispatch, Germany has | manifested the intention to begin t negotiations with the Maximalist j government in order to obtain com- I pensation in exchange for evacuation |of the Ukraine. This has excited po j litical quarters in Kiev, as the gov j ernment of General Skoropadski, the • Ukrainian dictator, realizes that its the only October game booked, the other three being fixed for November dates. Since Carnegie Tech, has call ed off her sports, State has November 2 open for a home game, and Gradu ate Manager Neil Fleming is trying to fill the date. Numerous invitations have come for the Penn State eleven to visit, foreign fields in November, but with Lehigh and Pittsburgh scheduled for the only two trips permitted by the War De partment, there is no possibility that State can play either the Armv or the Navy, both of whom are asking fcr games. This week Bezdek had to start his woik all over again, when Charley Way, the quarterback. Bill Gehring. fu'lback, and Brown, a guard, left the sqquad to enter officers training camps. Their places have been taken by "Buck" Williams, Frank Unger, and X^igue. Snoodles By , 1 } SNOO-OULS !! ) I I C H s_ MOOTHS ) I see IF CAfsl J / . I \ ( KID apdison'S B/B < /I CAMT \ / (SrWON • \ (Yessum . VRI6TAWA.Y r\y ( YOUR. \ I SWOLUBR. ) ■ f B° T TH/Vr l / BMsiy v lT f / I 6LOTTei;L (J3&&&) ( 7 —— f \ SC>AK uP AU __ /sis4/I■?e-nrzq~Z t . t> fall Is certain If the German troops leave. M. Zlnovleff, president of the Pet rograd Commune, declared that M. Dorochenko. tho Ukrainian Foreign Minister, had proposed to enter into an agreement with the Maximalist government in order to prepare for all eventualities. Soldier Athletes Foiled in Catching Baseball From Height of 900 Ft. Last July at Kelly Field, Texas. Corporal Bessolo, a member of the 819 th Aero Squadron, estab lished a world record when he caught a baseball dropped from an airplane flying 700 feet above the. ground. Since then several attempts have been made by avi ators in camps here and abroad to equal or break Bessolo's rec ord, but all attempts have failed. Recently in France several American fliers tried to smash the Texas record. On the athletic grounds close to where the Amer icans are quartered, a 150-foot white circle was marked, and the contestants, numbering fifty, stood within the white lines. A few moments later a small plane, pi loted bv Lieutenant Coleman, came into view, flying low over the field. The machine rose to a height of 750 feet and then turned so that it was directly above the circle, and then the pilot received a prearranged sig nal to drop the white baseballs. After Coleman released his grip on the first ball it could plainly be seen glistening in the sun on its downward flight. As soon as it was dropped the men in the circle, faces skyward, moved about rapidly, first trot ting, then walking, in order to judge the ball as a catcher does a high foul. But the white ob ject came down too swiftly, and fell inside the circle untouched. The aviator again flew over the circle at the same height and dropped a second and third ball, and the result was not different from the first. While the second ball dropped from the plane was on its way to the earth a high wind suddenly blew and the white object was carried out of reach of those in the circle. With the wind increasing the airman ascended to the 900-foot level, nearly 200 feet above the point from which the ball caught by Bessolo was dropped. From this height several balls were dropped within the white circle, but none was caught. After the white pellets had struck the ground the soldiers examined them, and they were surprised to find that they were not damaged by the flight. The baseballs dropped at Kelly Field were bad ly damaged. AROUND THE BASES Sneeze on mo only with thine eyes, And I will sneeze when you sign; O, keep your mouchoi r close to hand, For I cannot lend you mine. The sneeze that from the llu doth rise Doth ask for a sneeze 'long the line; And while I think you sneeze divine, I would not change for thine. A dispatch from The Hague says that Prince Frederich Karl is learn ing Finish so that pop may send him up there to be king.—Finish will come readily to Karl now. ' Common Pleas Judge Stevens yes terday at Cleveland dismissed the in junction barring the National Base ball Commission the National League and the Boston National League team from interfering with Pitcher Scott Perry's retention by the Phila delphia American League team. injunction, granted last June on peti tion of Manager Connie Mack, of the Philadelphia American team, was dissolved on statement of at torneys that the controversy had been settled out of court. Perry, formerly with the Southern Associa tion, was taken by Boston on a thirty-day option but, it is said, was released before the option expired, Philadelphia signing him. Later Boston tried to get him back through the National Commission, on the ground that the option agreement had not been fulfilled. Bethlehem, Pa., Oct. 18. —Coach Ready has uncovered among the football material a sensation in the person of Wey, a Chinese, who plays end on the scrub and who is touted the fleetest man in the sqitad. At any rate, in the hard scrimmage he intercepted a forward pass and got away for a touchdown after a fifty yard sprint Wey ;s developing fast and is a good tackier. Annapolis, Md., Oct. 18. —Tester- day afternoon was the last oppor tunity for real preparation of the Naval Academy football team for its opening game on Saturday, when it will meet the eleven of the Naval Pay School from rlnceton. To-mor row only a short -period is allowed, which will be used for signal and formation work. Loble drilled his men persistently In the forward pass plays, wh;ch aro a big portion of the Academy team's attack. Insurance en Meet New Quota in Drive V. W. Keeney to-day was able to announce that the Insurance men of the city have oversubscribed their Liberty Loan quota by a handsome margin while at the same time giv ing much of their time and labor to the campaigning. The insurance men were asked to subscribe $lO,OOO addit;onal after taking their quota. Seven of the leading insurance men took $7,000 in bonds and eighteen men of the Prudential Company subscribed for $3,300_ Additional subscriptions from other insurance men to-day ran the total up to $13,600. Wife of Marsh Run Surgeon Dies at Harrisburg Hospital New Cumberland, Pa., Oct. 18.— Mrs. Luden, wife of Major Horace Luden, of the United States Army Medical Corps, who is ;n charge of the hospital at the Quartersmasters Depot at Marsh Run, died at the Harrisburg hospital last night from pnemuonia. Mrs. Lucfe's home is in Kentucky, but she came to New Cumberland some time ago to be near her husband when he was as signed to duty at Marsh Run. She was 39 years old and is survived by her husband, a daughter, Margaret, thirteen years old, who was with her here, an da son, Randall, aged 18, who is living with his grandpar ents ;n Kentucky, and who is now ill. The body will be taken to Ful ton, Kentucky, for burial. Swell Golf Weather at Atlantic City; Knight Medal Scorer Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 18.— Never has there been more per fect weather and never has the course of the club been as fine as that which was h,ad by the en trants in the fall tournament of the Atlantic City Country Club, which opened yesterday at North field. There was hardly any wind, the greatest hazard to visit ing golfers, and the day and con ditions certainly were conduoive to low scores. There were fifteen players who broke under 90, within one of being sufficient to complete the first sixteen. C. N. Phillips, of this city, got around in 90 and was lucky in the draw so that his name went in with the first flight. The low medal was taken by F. W. Knight, of this city, who was the only man to play the course in less than 80. Knight took a 79, while his clubmate, Maurice Risley, came in with 81, which was the second lowest score. Easton, Pa., Oct. 18.—Ursinus will be the attraction on March Field on Saturday afternoon, taking the place of P. M. C., whose team was origi nally scheduled to appear, but who canceled on Wednesday because of the influenza epidemic there. Lieu tenant Wohl,, commandant at Ursi nus, was at Lafayette yesterday, and after a conference with Captain Parker, telephoned to Ursinus, or dering that preparations be rushed for Saturday's game. The news that the season would be sure to open on Saturday acted as an excellent tonic for yesterday's practice. Coach Cor bett put the men through a long signal drill, and then lined up two teams for a regular game with eight minute halves. Reeves, Gebhard, Chelson and Lehecka formed the backfield on the first team, and proved to be an effective combina tion. • • • "German medical and surgical treatment is too awful for words" reported Harry Banks, London Rifle Brigade, long a prisoner in Germany. Thigh broken in two places, he was thrown in a cattle truck after being captured, with twenty other men, all helnlesß and given no attention for eight days. Thg Hun doctors only at tended him then to shorten his leg and make him a cripple. • • • How shall we (reat the Cermn thug When this dire war la wont Why, Just like any erlmlnnl; Imprison every Hnn. And when the warden given hln word Thnt Htin wants to reformt Probation hlmi and thnn we will Prevent another atorni. * • • A series of international boxing matches, will be put on at the Na tional Snorting Club. London, in the near future. Many English, French and Ameri can boxers are with the Allied armies, and it Is nroposed to match these men for the benefit of war charity. Among the American boxers who will urobablv be seen in action there are Mike O'Dowd, the middleweight cham pion. and Joe Lynch, the New York bantamweight. It is believed that the latter will be matched with Johnny Wilde, the diminutive English cham pion. Water Bucket Race Is the Latest Sport For the Blue Jackets And now its the "water bucket race" that is occpying the atten tion of sports directors of the Navy Department Commission on training camp activities. This brand new recreational novelty, which has been introduced in the naval training camps throughout the country, was devised by Walter D. Powell, who is in charge of athletics in the Sixth district, the headquarters of which are at Charleston, South Carolina. Every participant in the race travels with a bucket half filled with water, balanced on his head, and held there with his hands. The men who finishes the race with the most water left in his bucket wins. The race is invari ably fraught with amusing acci dents, all of which serve to en hance its popularity among the jackie3. AUSTRIAN FLIES TO FRONT Amsterdam-—To conduct Austrian army operations in Albania, General Von Pflanzer Baltin, who is in com mand there, went to the front re cently by airplane. The distance flown was about 500 miles. | |' !I|l| I Potatoes IC. The Food Administration says so. jl And does anything taste better? Think of a big mealy baked^potato —with a lump of butter, pepper, salt and :||||l |||| And what cooking does for raw potatoes it does for ' s r l S^ 6 lt ' S toasted. Peter P. Carney Tells How Draftees Learn to Handle Shotgun Score one for Atlantic City. It is the first town in the country to teach its draftees the rudiments cf handling a shotgun, one of the most effective weapons yet brought ino play against the Huns, actually in advance of their being called to the colors. This is the result of a patriotic offer by the proprietors of the trap shooting school on the Million-Dollar Pier. The owners offered to provide free the cost of guns, targets, shells and instructors tor ten draftees weekly, the students to be designated by the draft boards. Mayor Harry Bacharach promptly accepted the proposition. In doing so he made inquiry as to the cost of providing for the training of 50 draftees weekly because of the great importance which Provost Marshal Crowder is attaching to markman shlp in the preliminary preparation of draftees. The lately - become -21 - year - old young men will go to the Atlantic City traps first. The Atlantic City idea will more r OCTOBER 18, 1918. Not One Veteran Left For Coach Bezdek of Penn State The Tarsus School of Gymnastics, with its lineup of well-known Har risburg athletes, including some of the champion Allison Hill ballplay ers, expects to battle with the Mid dietown Aviation huskies on next 'Sunday, but if the game come off It will be star chamber proceedings, with no spectators. The commandant at Middletown thought that t.he quar antine would be lifted to-morrow, but more recent orders tell that it will hang on one week longer. How ever, assurance has been given that Sunday's game may be played, if there be no spectators. than likely be taken up by trkp shooting organizations throughout the country. The Wilmington, Del., Trapshooting Association has offered the use of Its equipment to the draft boards of Delaware for the draftees of the Diamond State and will pro vide instructors also. With the ball rolling we may ex pect to hear of other clubs falling in line and making every effort to in struct the draftees In the art of shooting. There is no time like the present to prepare. Tarsus has not been able to get action since the Lancaster defeat when Captain Meek was injured. He is about now, and "Kid" Shay is also in condition. "Bill" Euker is down with tfie "flu" and lthoads, of Marys ville, will take care of fullback work. Under Manager Schraedly, Tarsus went through stiif practice to-day with the following lineup: Fctrow, left, end; Williams, left tackle; l'iarp, left guard; liolohan, center; Laub hery, right guard; Krebs, right tackle; Shay, rightend; Meek, captain, quar terback; Groupie, left halfback: Lick, right halfback; Rhoads, fullback. New Deal Proposed For the New York Giants Harry Sinclair, of Oklahoma and New York, who tried some time ago to buy the New York Giants, is again after the club. It is said that. H A. Hempstead, who controls the club, is not anxious to continue in baseball | because of its future uncertainties.