JACK OZAR, CHAMPION WRESTLER, NOW IN STATE POLICE; TECH PLAYS TOME SCHOOL Tech Boys Off For Battle With Strong Tome School At 6.40 o'clock this morning: Percy L. Grubb, uthletic director ut Tech, gathered his squad of demon football ers together at the Pennsy Station and hopped the rattler for Port De posit. where a game was arranged at last moment with Tome School, wmcli will have its baptism in the "treat 'ein rough" pastime for this season. While reputed to be a strong lot of warriors they will probably get something of a surprise' for the Tech bunch, after a two weeks' rest ed as though it couldl scrap—l.eap its weight in wildcats. Early morning travelers were re galed by a notable concentration of sinew, muscle and straty, made up as follows: "Bill" Hoerner and "Bud' Bell, ends: Peifter and "Hap" Frank, How Tom Marshall Met the Fighting Channel Cat Fish The fighting channel catfish of the j Mississippi river. Holden in .his book , on Big Game Fish of the United | States ignores the channel cat as a ; game fish. The male is a real care- ; taker and defender of their young, j guarding their nests and eggs, which j are usually covered with a layer of ! stones. Unlike the bass and pickerel | the catfish are non-cannabilistic, pro- j 'ecting instead of lunching u P° r | j their offspring. The Silurida family : of catfish are really a table delicacy. ; They were named after the night| prowling felines on account of their ' long barbels or feelers about jheir j mouths, resembling the whiakers of : a cat. Heads are large with a wide : mouth, eyes are very_small, they are | covered with a smooth scaleless, slippery skin. The Mississippi river produces specimens four to six feet in length, weighing fifty to 125 : pounds. Usually caught in bait nets, , by fishermen, and they command top j price on the tish market as food. The small channel or silver cattish I known to fishermen as "fiddlers" or j "musicians" must not be confused , with "horned pouts" or "bull heads." ; Egypt has a catfish which swims In j reversed position, the belly upward, j When alarmed they immediately re- i v ert to their normal position to es cape more rapidly. Immediately above the little city of Keithsburg, 111., a railroad bridge had been construc ted across the Mis- ! sissippi river. Wing dams had been j run out from both main shores, forc ing the water through a limited : channel under the draw span, creut- ; ing a rapid current below the bridge, | a deep channel which was a mecca for catfish of all sizes. Handlinin'g | was a favorite fishing phstime at this point. With my friend, O. H. Lloyd, : we had fine success landing "fid- j • lers," our combination bait of liver ( and chicken intestines was seductive. | Our b*...... line was finally assailed,; a qu.et jerk, a steady pull and we ] ■et the hook. The fight was on. This j silvered beauty showed his towing j strength, our anchor up, he rushed I Uncle Sam Juices Up Porto Rico With Army Sports Wanhlgton, Oct. 19. —Rallying to the support ot the athletic work conducted at Camp Las Casas, San Juan. Porto Rico, under the direc tion of J. B. Maccabe. of the War Department Commission on Train ing .Camp Activities, a number of prominent businessmen of San Juan have organized a ar Ath letic Committee, the duty of which I will be to provide the Porto Ricans I now in training for overseas duty with athletic supplies to enable them to enjoy the sports inau gurated by the Training Camp Commission. According to a report received at the headquarters of the Train ing Camp Commission, in this city, the committee was formed at an enthusiastic meeting of business men, at which Mr. Maccabe told of the result ' accomplished from teaching the soldiers how to play football, baseball, and kindred sports. . . , Mr. Maccabe has had two months' experience with the boys at I .as Casas. The majority of the soldiers at the big cantonment never plaved games before the Training Camp Commission inau gurated sporfs at the Porto Riean camp. Now they are playing base ball and football, and are boxing and wrestling, with the same en thusiasm that characterizes the soldiers of "the States." "Aside from the mere fun of the thing." says Mr. Maccabe. "these games bring muscles into play that promote agility in their move ments. Boxing lays the founda tion for the skillful use of the bayonet when it comes to the real work of war. All games tend to develop the morale of the men and keep them cheerful."* The officers of the War Athle tic Committee are: Chairman, Robert H. Todd; office chairman. Lucas Blanco: secretary. C. O. Lord; treasurer./Hayden L. Moorp, and assistant treasurer, John M. Warren. V J Boy Scout Bond Sales Now Mount to $82,850 'Eighty-two thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars in 1,199 subscriptions is the total at noon to-day of the sale of bonds by the Boy Scouts. It looks very much as if the scouts would reach their coveted goal of SIOO,OOO by 9 o'clock to-night. The local Liberty Loan officials have given permission for selling to continue to that time. When that was announced there was renewed excitement in Scout Headquarters for many boys saw their chance to improve their re sults and vet win the Treasury De partment medal. The "fighting trio," as Karl Mocs- j lein. Donald Royal and Ralph Huston I have been called, are still in the lead, but other scouts are creeping up/ .There have beon some splendid! gains in the last twenty-four hours.) Here are the results of all the scouts' who have sold thirty or more bonds: '■ Karl Moeslein. 42: Ralph D. Hustons) 41: Donald Royal, 40; John C. Rein-! oehl, 37; Samuel Isaacmnn, 3ft. Those scouts who have sold be- j tween twenty and thirty bonds nre:< Richard Johnston. 29; Joel Earnest.' 27; Christian Brandt. 22; William j Murray, 20; William Fenstcmacher,' 20 " ' PENNSY COP SUCCEEDS PORT ' Altoona, Pa.. Oct. 19.—John W.J Carroll has been appointed captain J of Pennsy's Middle division police,' to succeed G. Chal Port, deceased. Corroll was made acting captain af- ' ter Port was appointed state fire i marshal. He was previously a lieu- I tenant. ' j SATURDAY EVENING; tackles: "Fat" Lauster and Connors, guards: "Vic" Bihl, center; Carl Back and Hinkle, halfbacks; Captain 15b ner, quarterback, and "Doughnuts" Wilsbach, fullback. The substitutes include: "Ap" Dingle, John Back. F. Beck. Malick and Garret. Manager "Bill" Fortna also accompanied the team. Tech will play minus the import ant services of "Hen" Kohlman who is scrambled up with the "flu," and "Bill" Hoerner is assigned to play end. "Buddy" Dingle, with his busted Shoulder went along but will ogle the fray from the sidelines. ' The Sunday game twixt Tarsus and Mlddeltown Aviation was canceled last night by Colonel Nelson, on ac count of "flu." but it will be played as soon as the ban is lifted. I us down stream, a sudden turn, we I held the taut line. ile sulked and 1 sounded. A stiff pull on the line | again started acrobatic perform j ances. The game fighting qualities ! demonstrated by this lish leads me to insist upon their being classed game. Worn to a frazzle, we brought him : to the side of our boat and cuddled a | gaff hook into his Hoaxing ribs. Our i efforts #etted us fifty-three pounds of i excellent lighting fish meat. Question: What is the use of two sights on a shotgun? You say a man | shoots with both eyes open and sees , only the flying objects. Waterloo. lowa. JAMES KNOTT. Answer. The object of the second | sight is correct alignment, to keep : one from firing in a twist, before the ' proper adjustment, absolutely worthless in game shooting. If both sights were rerhoved without your knowledge, your success in wing shooting with a gun that fit would ;be the same. It is the Hying object : you watch, not the gun sights. Question At what age does a man j cease to be accurate in trapshoot I ing? Does accuracy depend entire ' ly upon one's eyesight? CHARLES BONAUX. i Milwaukee. Answer: Dr. O. F. Britton has bid ! his 80th birthday good-by with Andy Meaders, of Nashville, Tenn., a close runner-up. Both men are turning in as good scores as they did thirty-five years ago. You will have to ask soma j man older than those boys, as re- I gards the. age limit. When a man arrives atsthe age he cannot see a ! target leave the trap he will then cease to be accurate. Question: What has become of Dick Clancey, the professional trap | shot? Pittsburgh, Pa. C. B. P. | Answer: Dick is "over there" in j charge of the "Gas Bomb Distribu tion Brigade." He Is teaching our , "Sammies" the high art of feeding j the "Huns" their own medicine, ! thrown from the different heights. | angles and positions. The funda | mental principles of this art he I learned in his trapshooting career. Czecho-Slovak Nation Proclaimed Republic 1 Washington. D. C., Oct. 19. lnd e pendence of the Czecho-Slovak nation was declared formally yesterday by the Czecho-Slovak National Council, recognized by the United States and the entente Allies as a belligerent de facto Government. The declaration. t renouncing allegiance to the Haps , burg dynasty and announcing princi- I pies for the foundation of a republic, , was issued in Paris, and a copv was handed to President Wilson bv J. Clsar. of the council's staff in Wasli l ington. | The document is signed by Dr. • Thomas G. Masaryk, president of the i council, as Premier and Minister of i 1 inance, and by other officers of the I Provisional Government. Camp Hill "Over Top" in Liberty Loan Drive Camp Mil, Oct. 19.—Camp Hill went over the top in the Liberty] I Loan campaign, subscribing more I than its allotment, which was s6l,- j 000. The committee, of which George! Cook is chairman, met last evening! and found the town $3,000 below quota The members of the com-1 ! mittee subscribed the difference and | this mornig otlfer subscriptions came' i in, taking the town considerably over 1 the amounts ought. Marriage of Well-Known Young Couple Announced Annvillc. Pa., Oct. 19. W. Elmer Heilman, clerk of the local draft board, newspaperman and promi- I nent in fraternal circles, was mar- I ried Saturday, October 12, to Miss ! Ella Leah Berry, of Harrisburg. Mr. ! Heilman proved that a newspaper ! man can keep a secret, for not even his most intimate friends knew of his marriage until the announcement reached Annville to-day. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Rebecca Berry, of Harrisburg, and is well known here and in Anirville. The newly-married couple will be at. home after November 4 at 113 Hoerner street. Harrisburg. MURRAY J. REX'ECKER DIES j SliipjK'iisburg, Pa., Oct. 19. —Mur- , ray J. Kenecker. aged 32 years, con- I ductor of the Philadelphia and Read ing work train, operating from Ship ! pensburg. died at his home in South j Queen street Thursday night after a ! few hours' illness from pneumonia, j resulting from intluenza. Mr. Ren •) ecker was born at Lemoyne. but lived most of his life at Harrisburg. i He entered the employ of the Phila ! delphia and Reading Railway Com ; pany in 1905 and had since been erit* 1 ployed by that company. He came | to Shippensburg three years ago and worked about two years in the local .jyirds with a shifter crew. The past f several montns he conducted the j work train, operating from here. He j:s survived by his wife and three j daughters, Mary. Anna and Nora, all i at home. RED CROSS CONTRIBUTES l.emoyne, Pa., Oct- 19—The chalr | man of ttte Lemoyne branch of the Red Cross wishes to announce that I the auxiliary has given its allotment J of the linen shower which consisted , of five dozen towels, five dozen hand- I kerchiets, ten dozen hand towels and eight dozen sheets, the total which" amounted to 116H.55; also there will j be election of officers on October 31 j and a largo attendance of the mem j bershlp is desired. i Snoodles By Hungerford I PAPETQ. SAYS \ - /Me AH \ / "o'* *"" \ j \? BROTHER. Uup a pump; nearly broke all the me chanical devices for registering. He also passed a blue-ribbon mental ex amination and by all tokens he will be a star even in this band of mag nificent guardians, second to none in the whole world. ' Ozar came over from the old coun try when a bit of a boy and is as true and thorough an American as one could ever find; patriotic to the heart. With small encouragement he began to improve his strength and finally concentrated on wrestling, I flooring the top-notchers here and [abroad. Many of his friends wanted to see him try for heavyweight championship in boxing, but this will never be now. for Jack hopes to be a permanent figure on the nation's finest police force. 'Alien Laborers Desert Farmers . Kcglna. Sask.—Farmers complain that j hired men are giving more trouble in j.the way of leaving their work than ; ever before, and in nearly every case ! the complaint Is directed agaiirst a I man of alien birth or descent. Within | the last two weeks large nuropera of I summonses have been Jssue'd under I the Master and Servants act, charging farm laborers with leaving their work without notice and with breaking agreements. Generally the evidence I is that the hired men engaged them | selves for the whole season but when fall arrived and high-day wages were i being offered, they threatened to leave | unless wages of from $4 to $7 a day | were paid. [ I.KBAXOX COLLECTS MAM PEACH STONES FOH YAXKS I Forty-nine bags of peach stones and other pits weighing almost four ! and one-half tons, is the contribu- I tion of Lebanon to the peach stone ' campaign. The shipment was sent I under -the direction of H. J. Hhenk, to the Harrisburg collec | tion center to be forwarded for use ! in making gas helmeWT r it was an : nounced to-day by J. W. Bowman, chairman of the campaign. It is an ticipated by Chairman Shenk, of Leb anon, that more shipments will be forthcoming. \ SEEKS DACGHTER 1 W. Glace brought habeas corpus proceedings to-day to get his 12- year-old daughter Beatrice. He al leges that Carrie Glace enticed the girl by frau dand artifice from the home of Charles Hoffman, Halifax R. F D. 3 and that since that time she has refused to give up the child. The hearing will be held October 31. AROUND THE BASES "What are th' Germans runnin' for?" Asked Private Jones, of York. "Because we've got their bacon. And they hope to save some pork." "But Where's the Kaiser Wilhelm Who started all the row?" • "Why, he's shivering, hiding, bawling In some Berlin hay-mow." News Note—"/X correspondent of this paper tells about a man who lives on onions alone." Why shouldn't he? Hasleton, Pa., Oct. 19.—Hugh Dins more, of Beaver Brook, well-known pigeon shot, died during the night from bronchial pneumoniu, following an attack of Spanish influenza. He was thirty-five years of age and was scheduled to meet Peter Bfesbline, of Jennesville, in a match for ISOO on the Park View grounds October 29. State College, Pa., Oct. 19.—Coach Bezdek to-day selected the men who will star for Penn State against Bucknell In the first local game of the season to-day. Bezdek picked the following team: Ends, Grimes and G. W. Brown; tackles, Henry and Farley; guards, I. W. Brown and Logue; center, Bentz; quarterback, Williams; halfback, Snell and KiUing er; fullback, Unger. Mittel Europa was the Kaiser's ambition. Lucky now if he holds on to Mittel Hohenzollern. The biggest game in the western part of the-state to-day is between W. and J. and pamp Sherman. The teams will lineup at Washington, Pa., as follows: • W. and J. Camp Sherman. Aiken left end Sharks Henry left tackle .....Murphy Templeton .. left guard . .^.Bodnar Sterck denter Bowers E. Gardisch . right guard .Burroughs Edgar right tackle .Coughenour Tress*l right end Morton Lally quarterback Cordy Marshall left half Hinman Bell right halfback ..Spellman: Fasten. Pa., Oct, 19.—Yesterday's work on March Field was contlned to signal practice and to the final re- '■ hearsal of the plays that are to be ; used by Lafayette against Urslnus j to-day. "Haps" Benfer, the old Albright star, | Rapid Progress Made in Derry Street Paving Work Rapid progress is being made by city highway department employes who are at work paving Derry street from Cameron street to a point near. Sylvan Terrace. The work will prob ably b€ finished in a week or two ' according to Commissioner W. H. Lynch. Bricks for the paving were taken from the streets which have been abandoned In the Capitol Park ex tension zone. Curbing necessary for the work also was taken from that district, so that the only cost of the improvement will be the salaries of the workmen. The paving was necessary Mr. Lynch explained, because during heavy rains, mud and stones from Derry street were washed across Cameron street. at times almost blocking vehicular and street car traffic. - Malted Milk Is Made (by Former Brewery Denver, Col. That a brewery can be converted into a factory fqr.the manufacture of something more use ful to mankind than beer Is shown by the fact that a former brewery at Golden, Col., transformed into a fac tory for the making of malted milk. Is to Increase its output from 1.000 pounds to 5.000 pounds dally. It Is also learned that the employed force, already greater than that existing in brewery is to receive an in crease in wages by the first of the year. Practically the same brewing force, as to size, took up the manufacture of malted milk when beer-making ceased. The sales force of the insti tution, however, was greatly enlarged. Although an Infant industry, upward of thirty men are on the road to-day for this concern. Meanwhile, great herds of dairy cattle in the vicinity of Golden are supported almost solely by the demands of this company for their product. Reinstatement of Teacher Is Denied Xew York. —Miss Mary S. McDowell, a Quakeress, who was dismissed as a public school teacher because of her alleged unpatriotic attitude as an op ponent of war. has failed to obtain a Supreme Cdurt order directing the Board of Education to reinstate her. Miss McDowell held that her offense, if any, was in disclosing the state of her mind and her beliefs, and that there was no elment of behavior or conduct in a mere belief. Justice Philbin held that her con tention that in spite of her views against the war, she might still be able to do her full duty as a teacher in the classroom, could not be upheld. NEW OCMufcltLANn OVER Now Cumebrtaiid, Oct. 19.—New Cumberland has gone over the fop in the Liberty Loan campaign with approximately SIO,OOO to spare. It was announced to-day. The, quota of the borough was $50,750. F. E. Coover is borough chairman. whose brother-in-law, last year's quarterback at Albright, is a candi date for a backflgld position, was out on the field, assisting Coach Cobbett in putting the finishing touches upon the first eleven. Atlanta, Ga„ Oct. 19.—"Pop" Geers, the grand old veteran, collected first money in the big event of the fifth day's Grand Circuit racing here this afternoon at Lakewood Park. He finished first In all three heats with Oro Fino in the Piedmont hotel cup race. For 2.11 pacers and a $2,600 purse. Frank Dewey took second money, but hardly gave the victor a real run in the first two heats, while Billy Jackson, finished second in the final mile, and forced Oro Fino to extend himself. Among the football contests which appear most likely to be held to-day are the following: Navy vs. Naval Pay station, of Princeton, at Annap olis; Lafayette vs. Ursinus, at Eas ton: Pittsburgh vs. Detroit Naval Training station, at Pittsburgh: Washington and Jefferson vs. Camp Sherman, at Washington, Pa.; Dart mouth vs. Norwich, at Hanover; Brown vs. Rhode Island State, at Providence; Penn State vs. Bucknell, at State College, Pa.; Amherst vs. Trinity, at Amherst. With the exception the Notre j Dante-Chicago National Reserve game I scheduled for Notre Dame, the Mid jdle West will be entirely deprived of | notable contests. The naval eleven, ! composed of former intercollegiate ! stars, triumphed over the University of Chicago a week ago, and is ex- I pected to furnish strong opposition j to Notre Dame in its first start of |the season. All contests scheduled in Illinois j and lowa have been called off and health authorities also forbid the game : between the University of Michigan and Michigan Aggies scheduled for ; to-morrow. The game, between the | Cleveland Natfal Reserves and Wash ington and JeaTerson also was among ' the important games canceled. Get this: a quotation from the com j mentarles of Julius Caesar: "The I Germans turned and ran, nor did they stop until they had crossed the I Rhine." | Liberty Bond Arguments j From Front in France ! Extracts from a letter received ! this morning from Samuel Ellen berger Phillips, of Medical Depart-; . ment, Three Hundred Fourteenth | Infantry, American Expeditionary j Forces, are strong arguments for the i success of the Fourth Liberty Loan | drive. The two sons of Dr. C. R. | Phillips reached France early in July and since then have been stead • ily moving toward the front. They : are now in the fighting. These ob ■ i serrations of the younger son were ' J based upon his impressions of the j country through which "lie moved. . I peopled entirely by the peasant > class: i "I see by the New York Herald, ' European edition, that the Fourth : Liberty Loan is now on. I wish America could take a five-minute glance at France before that loan is pushed. It woulcr go over the top so high that it would be out of sight. I was talking lost night with two r old French people whose only son has been a prisoner for five months, ! and was trying to show them the difference between France and the United States and the superiority of the latter. It was utterly Impossible. That made me wonder if you folks at home realized the difference. Imagine If you can these poor peas ants driving the cows and sheep down the main street and. watering them at a public fountain in the square. Imagine streets of mud and drinking water from wells. Imagine the women doing their family wash ing at the public watering place and using stones for a washboard. Im agine never seeing a trolley car or an automobile except the big army trucks —imagine everything at least one hundred years behind the times —candles and oil being used fof lighting purposes, the people with out any know-ledge of sewage, plumbing or sanitation. It is truly wonderful to see the towns clean up and begin to shine with a new . splendor within half an hour from | the time the troops pull into them. We will teach these people things about sanitation that they never knew before. "Imagine the women—for there are no men except the very old or the crippled home on furloughs— j working in the fields from parly morning until late at niglit and never getting through with their work. One cannot give credit enough to the French for their part in the war. When I get down in the mouth I just look about me and see with my own eyes the evidence of their faith in themselves and I Just buck up right there. But don't misunder stand me. I never get discouraged. • It's just that sometiihes the old town looks mighty good to me and I wish I could run in and see you all for ' l a few minutes." 1 BAHOX RI'RIAX QIIT M Basel, Oct. 19.—Baron Burlan, the 1 . Austro-Hungarian foreign minister,! • has resigned, according to Vienna newspapers. , OCTOBER 19, 1918. GAME SEASON TO STARTMONDAY Fair Amounts of Small Game in the State; Grouse Pro tected Very Generally between influenza "and war It is not believed that the number of men who will be out in the fields and woods of Pennsylvania for the opening of the Keystone State small game season will be as large as expected. Sales of hunters' licenses w „ er ? r ®P°