WEST END REFUSES TO GIVE TARSUS CITY TITLE; TECH READY FOR QUAKER CITY SATURDAY Work All Day and Box All Night Is Sammy Schiff's Activity Sammy SchifT, Harrisburg's pre mier boxer, scrapped four rounds with Tim Droney, at Lancaster, for f" the benefit of the ynited War Work Fund, without a decision. A house filled to the roof witnessed the.fray and Sammy's leff-hunded clever ness was applauded wildly again and again. This local athlete is greatly to be commended for his persistency and ambition. He works every day, here, in an industry; lias little time to train, and yet, unlike the Fultons •' and Willards, he freely gives his services to the big cause, and fur thermore takes on every foe who challenges. Schiff is a tighter who handles himself something like Joe Choy insky, excepting that he is a south paw and his left thrusts are very perplexing to encounter. lie always wudes in and his performance is spectacular, while his gamencss is noticeable. He will be seen here again, probably, on November 26 when tlie Motive Power A. A. ex pccts to hold another exhibition at its arena, and Frankie Clark is to be his opponent. The two met re cently in Philadelphia and put up a lively bout. "I'd rather box-tight than eat," observed Mr. Schiff, on returning i from Lancaster. "I believe that' every able-bodied chap, even though | he has to work all day, should take | up some sport and specialise. 1 I have been ambitious to be a good , boxer ever since kid days and while i / IS HE OUT? 'YES,' j CRIES THE 'UMP' Peculiar Situation Which De- \ velopcd in New England League Last Summer One of the chief charms of baseball. | according to a famous veteran are the new plays and situations which . constantly arise in diamond battles. : It is doubtful, however, if ho ever j t conceived of a situation similar to ( that which arose during a game play- \ ed in New England during the past j summer. It was in the fifth inning three runners on the bases and none out when a batter stepped to the plate. I Right at his heels came the next I player entitled to bat, who took posi- > tion just a step or two away from; the batter's box. The batter hit a ' sharp bounder directly at the pitcher I and dashed for first base while all j the runners raced around the bases j / toward* home. It appeared to be an easy matter : , * to throw out the player, attempting! to score from third, at the plate and j J the pitcher promptly threw to the j '' catcher, who was all set to complete the play. At this point, however, the unusual happened. The man who had been awaiting his turn at the bat Jumped into position and as the ball shot across the plate took a mighty swing at it driving the bail far into the outfield for a home run; five runs crossing the plate before the ball could be retrieved. Something resembling a riot among the players of the two teams and the partisan spectators immediately develofted and there was a rush for e the umpire. After much argument the arbiter declared the hit and sub sequent runs legally scored, basing his decision upon the fact that both the pitcher and catcher were in their respective positions when the ball was thrown up to the plate. Not sat isfied with this ruling the losing team took the case to high basebll auth orities, who, after a careful study of the circumstances, reversed the umpire's verdict. It was I their de- , clslon. which has generally been ac • cepted as correct, that the runner' attempting to score from third, was out owing to the interference of the j batter, who by hitting the ball thrown i to complete the play at the plate, j ' prevented the putout being accom- : , pnshed. The rule governing this case is j found in the official baseball code 1 * under rule 50, section 15; which reads: ' 1 "The base runner is out; if with one ' or no one out and a base runner on ' third base, the batsman interferes . with a play being made at the home J plate." With the runner out as the result ! of Interference the situation after the play is as follows: there are still three men on base; one out and the player who drove out the alleged \ home run comes to bat in regular i turn his Illegal hitting of the ball ' having resulted In putting out the 1 base runner without affecting his j status as a batsman. A somewhat ] Play Safe-- j Stick to . I KING OSCAR | CIGARS Because the quality is as good as ever it was. They will please and satisfy you 7c—worth it i JOHN C.' & CO. Makers L— : I THURSDAY EVENING, • . * HAHRISBTTRG 1&S& TELEGRAPH! NOVEMBER 21, 1913, * ' ' •< ■ ' • * '• - - | SAMMY SCHIFF | 1 am no champion yet, I'll keep on until I am." • Glenn Warner Preparing for tlie Ming ot the Yellow Jackets i j All hands admit that Glenn War ! ner has the Job of his life ahead | In beating the "Yellow Jackets'' of j Georgia i'ecu next Saturday. Yes- j terday all the well-known plays of ! Johnny Helsinau's Georgia Tech I were explained, us well us a few | pointers noted on the Jump shift, ' us given to Warner by u close ' friend, who has seen it played. I The iiiue and Gold players are last I getting into the winning mood [ again, the lack of which has been I loured by tile coach and trainers. What pleased Warner, although I It upset his ideas of discipline, was ' the fact that the team asked him to reinstate Dave' I'itler and Hill Harrington, both of whom were suspended last week for violation of his training rules. He finally agreed. j similar case Is quoted In Umpire i Billy Evans' book on umpiring and J the answer is in accordance with j the foregoing rule. Seattle Labor Hosts Threaten Strike if Mooney Is Refused New Trial Seattle, Wash.. Nov. 21. —By unanl- j mous vote, the Seattle Central Labor j Council last night voted to strike on • December 9 unless prior to that time 1 Thomas J. Mortiey, convicted of mur der in connection with a San Fran- ! Cisco bomb explosion, had been grant- J ed a new trial or given his freedom. Immediate referendum vote on the ] strike resolution was asked of all labor unions affiliated with the coun- i cil. JUST KEEP DRAFT CARDS Local draft officials have warned ] registrants that they should not de stroy their registration cards, as any one caught without one might be held until he can prove he was regis- ' tered. The district appeal boards j have received orders to cease Classi- j fication. Between October 1 and No- J vember 16, 103,051 claims for deferred ] classifications were acted on by the ! eight district appeal boards In I'enn- ; sylvania, and 26,409 claims were de- ' nled. * WANTS ASHES CAST ON W ATERS New York, Nov. 21. —That his j body be cremated and the ashes ; thrown into San Pedro channel be- , tween Catalone Island and San Pe dro, Cal„ was directed by William C. : Boschen, whose will offered for pro- j bate here yesterday. Owners of large tracts of land In Beaufort county, N. C„ Bctschen left an estate valued at upward of half a million dollars, j REJIEMIIER RED CROSS A football game between teams of| the First Form and the Lower School, I of the Harrisburg Academy, was play- i ed Wednesday, In which the First Form came out as victors, score 42 to 12. The receipts of the game, amount- I Ing to 34.66, have been given to the] Red Cross. ] SNOODLES Hungerfora ' _ I >■ — ~l| . I ' II llr/s CO-DOCroR! . ( Trr / -<:- VSr? FINEST ATHLETES IN THE WORLD; NOW IN TRENCHES By Walter St, Denis I At the outbreak of the great war j more than fifty months ago one I athletic expert predicted that few, I if any, of the sportsmen who took "j part In the great struggle would ever jbe soen In competition again. "Life | in the trenches will Incapacitate ] them for any sport, oven though they como through unscathod-ln tho tnattoc of bullet wounds," said he, Tronch fever, rheuntntlsm and other ailments were expected to work tho I most tcrrlblo results with the men who wero called to the colors of their various countries. Just how entirely wrong expert j opinion can be is proved by tho fact i that to-day, after four long find I wearisome years of bitter sfritggle, ! the finest athletes in the world are in the trenches, and some of these have been in the war from its very star. The sprinter who is beating them all in Franco is a French soldier who has been at it ever since that fateful August day in 1914, Not only has Georges Andre, France's all-around athlete, been a fighter for four years, but three of these he i has spent in a German prison camp ! on the wrong side of the Rhino, liv ing on'tho miserable food that the Huns give the unlucky wretches that /all into their hands. Just take, for instance, the case ! of James H. Ducan the world's rec , ord-holder at throwing the discus, | J Ducan has been in the French I j trenches with the Eleventh Engi- j ' neers of the United States Army. He I went into the Army a 100 per cent. ] perfect man, and after some four ! teen months of battling with the rats, Huns and cooties that infest the trenches, he emerged last Au gust to go to Paris and smash an other world's record. That's what trench fever did for Discus Jim! ; Thousands of young athletes who ] have gone to war, and have been | I fortunate enough to sidestep the ; j Kaiser's bullets and shrapnel have j ! gained tremendously tn their physl- ! 1 cai setup. It is a common thing for : 1 a recruit to pick up twenty pounds j j of hard flesh in his first three months ' , RIVERSIDE IN NEED OF FUNDS [Continued from First Page.] I to that banking institution. The Tele | graph has contributed SSO toward the relief fund and also received two I contributions earlier in the week! I which will be turned over to the : : trust company. The other two con- j ' tributors through the Telegraph are; Kough, Brightbill & Kline, $10; A. j S. K., sl. ' Committee Is Named The finance committee, which met , this morning authorized a special re lief committee, including Cominis ] sioiter C. \V. Burtnett und R. Ross Seaman, to advance funds at once, leaving It to them to determine the amounts which are needed by the ' various families, some of whom lost i almost everything because of the storiv damage. On the finance committee are ! Mayor Keister, B. F. Blough, D. E. I Tracy, George \V. Reily, A. S. Patter son, William Jennings, Commission ier Burtnett, Mr. Seaman, Donald 1 ' McCormick, J. William Bowman j and David Kaufman. Mr. Kaufman, the chairman, said ! to-day that the public is urged to | contribute liberally to the relief fund I because of the pressing need of some i of the residents in the storm-swept j district. "All of these families have | been cared for and do not need food, but some of them do need financial assistance to meet repair costs and other expenses caused by the storm. To Help at Once "The special relief committee— Commissioner Burtnett and Mr. Sea man—will proceed to give assistance at once. The other members in ses sion to-day authorized this action and are now appealing for public subscriptions. The people of Harrls burg have liberally contibuted to other similar funds, largely for re lief work to be done outside of the city. Now an opportunity Is here for them to help fellot* cltizns, some of whom lost hundreds of dollars be cause of the storm. Everyone should Tech Is Ready to Treat Quaker City Boys Koudh I With the exception of "Tony*" Wils j bach," who is out of the game tem ■ porarlly with a bruised right shoul der, the Technical High school foot bali squad is in trtm condl'ion for the contest over on the island with Williamson Trade School of Phila delphia. Yet it will not be surpris ing to see "Tony" take his position at least at the start of the contest, as It is not often that this player sees ia ccr.cst from the side lines. He i 3, the mos important cog in the Tech machine on the defense. Should Wilsbaoh r.ot he able to ho pii'j eo. or rather nursed 'along for the Thanksgiving contest. WJ place will be taken by "liirdto" IJlnkle Garret is also available. All the other vxtcians will ba in their places when |in the army. The answer, of course, i • | is, outdoor life and the tinest food j I that can be served. , j In the matter of escaping disease ; I there hsMs never been such an army , j as the one that is flying the Stars I and Stripes in the Kaiser's face 1 J "over there.' Its morals and its I morale, and consequently its health, j have been one of the wonder spots of , Uncle Sam's participation in the ! 1 1 great war—and will continue to be. j The answer here is the V. M. C. A.. , I the Knights of Columbus, the Sal- I , vutlon Army, and other organlza- j i tions which have spent their all ! ! freely in keeping up the moral and i physical Strength of our fighters. i An American officer, returned i from France, in speuking of the | tenacity of the Y. M. C. A. men in j their efforts to help our doughboys, ! has said: "These Y. M. C. A. men 1 ! are simply wonderful. They arc; i everywhere, and seem to be un canny in their ability to scent out an action. Nt long ago my battal ion went over, and after about forty ; minutes of pretty stiff work reached i its objective. We had hardly round- j ! ed up our prisoners and dug in a' ! bit when I noticed that all of the ] men were smoking and chewing on \ | chocolate. In a few minutes I spot- • i ted the 'Y* man standing by with a ; sheepish grin in his face. I asked ; him how he made it in such a hurry, j and he answered, 'Oh, I 'don't know, ! I just came along somehow.'." "Thouf& the troops don't make a | lot of fuss over a thing like this, ! j they appreciate it down deep. To | have smokes and sweets passed out to them almost in the heat of action j drives home the thought that the < folks back home havp provided this I stuff, and the 'Y' man brought it up to the tiring line at the risk of his life. Men who are cared for in this way, even to the little details, are bound to possess a superior ! brand of morale." j It may be, however, that many a ; lad who has gone tTiroligh the war j | will never be seen on the athletic i j field again, for as one New Yorker ] writing from the trenches, puts it: "Gee, what am I going to do for 'excitement when this war is over?" [ contribute as much as possible." Practically all the "temporary re pair work to damaged houses in I Riverside has been completed and j with the houses again under roofs I ! there will be no further damage to j | them or to furniture of the families I because of exposure to rain. I _________________! NEWS NOTES FROM NATION'S CAPITAL | Washington. Spread of Bolshevik | doctrines in the United States has • been watched carefully by Department | of Justice agents, with a view to un : dertuking prosecutions if the agitata ' tion goes beyond legal bounds and de velops into sedition, officials declared to-day. Washington. Cancellation of war contracts involving more than |l,- 336,000,000 since the signing of the | armistice is announced in a letter j'from Secretary Baker, read to the I Senate to-day. Washington. Machinists of the j American Locomotive Works, at Rat j erson, N. J., are granted a Xorty-etgnt | hour-week, with half holiday on Sat urdays, under an award to-day by the War Labor Board effective No \ ember 30. \\ uaklngton. Excerpts from the record ot -an executive meeting of the cnited Brewers' 4,ssociaiion, Held at Atlantic City, live years ago, were lead at to-day's session of vne sen ale committee investigating brewers' ! propaganda, in an effort to throw light on the association's alleged po litical activities. MAY GO TO LANCASTER City officials have received an invi tation to attend the opening of the new water supply plant at Lancaster. The opening will be held to-morrow afternoon when the new equipment will be put into service. Some of the officials may go to Lancaster. I . tho officials start the contest. A .3 ! an extra attraction u.O resort < t, who j ! aro aiso undefeated will play before! tho Mart of the I>l* gamo. Ciilef Cheer Dsailar Shnnk has' been getting his squad into shape, i for this game, as it will also give the cheer leaders a chance to get their voices in trim for Thanksgiving. "Dave Rosenberg, the Tech Sousa, ; held two practices this week, so as to have the band in the best possible condition. , Williamson Trade School beat Vil : lanova Prep two weeks ago 20 to S, and last Saturday they held Hahne : mann College to a 6 to 6 tie. Captain Koons, at center; Fray at quarter back and Byerley at fullback are > the stars of the squad, LEHIGH PLAYERS ARE VERY SPRY Gridiron Boys Nimble; Ready For Any Foe, They Say • "With the exception of Capt. Wy i socki, the players will emerge from . | the Penn State fray in good con dition. Hdrry Sax man, who was re- I lieved in the closing minutes, suf- I fered greatly with his arm as a re j suit of the vaccination. Much of I this soreness is disappearing and it I is not believed will affect him any in ' the practice. Joe Spagna was muss , ed up some at tackle and although ! a bit sore, should be at his best, I barring accidents in practice during | the week. The injuries sustained |by Shiner and Calvert, guards, in J a collision last Friday night, are healing nicely and it is believed will j not give them any further trouble before the big game", says Fred S. Nonnemacher in the Bethlehem Globe, speaking of the Lehigh Urui iron fighters. "The loss oHL Captain Wysocki is ! keenly felt ana his absence may re sult in an entire change in the back | field. No captain will be appointed i to take his place until the squad | lines up for the game. The makeup of the backfield with the exception of Dowd at quarter, will depend en tirely on the showing of the players in practice this week. In the Penn State game there was little ground \ gained through the line and this j same line will most likely be used :to check the Lafayette offensive, j Tomlinsogi, who played right end on i Saturday, will probably be replaced ! by Caplln, Weh or one of the other | | ends, depending entirely on their | 1 showing this week. The backfield, al- j j though at this time a mere specula- ! tion, will most likely be composed ! of Savaria and Tomlinson at half- j ) back and Webb at fullback. In Sa- j varia and Webb the coach combines i two great driving forces while Tom- | I linson in the State contest showed a ; ! wonderful ability at defensive play : ] and should fit in well. GREAT YANKEE ARMY IN FRANCE j [Continued from First Page.] i June 1. The department of light ' railways reports the construction of 115 miles of road and 140 miles of I German light railway were repaired i j and put iij operation. Two hundred I and twenty-five miles of French | railway were operated by the Amer- ! { icans. Vast Supplies on Hand Modern warfare Is motor warfare. I : The American expeditionary .forces ! had in operation on November 11 I more than 53,-000 motor vehicles of i all description. -•s ! Even at the present stage of the ' I armistice, it is not permissible to ( j hint at the vast stores Of munitions , [ and armament brought over and ! held in rehdlness. The American | j expeditionary forces were in no dan- i ger of being placed on short rations had the war continued. For instance, the Americans have ! 390,000,000 rations of beans alone; 1 183,000,000 rations of flour and flour substitutes; 267,000,000 rations I of milk; 161,000,000 rations of but- I ter or substitutes;* 143,000,000 raj | tions of sugar; 89,000,000 rations of i meat; 57,000,000 rations of coffee, j and 118,0^00,000 rations of rice, horn- j | iny and other foods. There are | : requisites such, as flavorings, fruits, | i candy and potatoes in proportion, [while there are 761,000,000 rations' of cigarcts and tobacco in other j forms. Ports. Arc Enlarged Ten steamer berths have been built at Bordeaux, -having a total length of 4,100 feet. At Montolr, near St. Nazarle. eight berths are under construction with a total | length of over 3,200 feet. Great la- i i bor has been expended in dredging [ ' operations, repairing French docks and increasing railway terminal fa cilities. Warehouses having an ag gregate floor area of almost $3,000,- 000 square feet have been construct ed. These figures serve in a measure to show tUp magnitude of American accompliswnent, and the great ma chine is in operation to-day as the American third army moves .for ward into Germany territory. Yankees Moving Back to Rest Camps in France With the American Army In j France, Nov. 21 —The movement of I American troops to the rest areas ; behind the former fightfng front is I progressing rapidly. The Seventy- I eighth, Eighty-second, Twenty ! ninth and Twenty-sixth dlitsions ' have been withdrawn from the front and now are in rest camps. The ! Thirty-sixth, Eightieth, Eighty-first | I and Sixth divisions are marching to the rest Breas. It-is understood I ! that the Seventy-seventh division. j will be moved to a rest camp In southern France. The Fifth, Eighty-ninth, Nlne | tieth and Seventy-ninth divisions j have been formed into the Seventh j army corps and will remain tem ' porarlly in their old positions, BERI.IN ORDERLY AND BtSY Berlin, Nov. 21.—Most of the large Industrial plants In and about Berlin already are working. No unemploy ment la reported as a result of the cessation of war Industries work. College Boy Breaks National Record in Run of 102 Yards j The star play in the Gettys burg-Eucknell game here recent- j ly was a 95-yard run by Lewis, of Bucknell, who caught a kick off from Braem and ran nearly the length of the Held, which is 100 yards, ahd made goal. The fans were electrified and many wise guys figured that this must be a record feat. But it was feeble compared to the stunt of Loudy Welborn, of Butler College, not yet 18 years old, who has the re nown of making the longest run for a touchdown on an intercept ed forward pass in the history of American collegiate football. In the annaul game between Franklin College and Butler, played at Irwin lj,old last Satur- ; day, Welborn ran 102 yards for a touchdown after intercepting a Franklin forward pass. This is a world's record, exceeding, all other records for the same play by seventeen yards, according to a list of famous runs compiled by , Parke H. Davis, football statis- ! tician. Thb play occurred in tho last J three minutes of play. Welborn, I who- was on the Butler scrub j team for the first time last year, i was sent in as quarterback in the ' last of the third quarter after j Captain Harold Dailey had been ' injured. Franklin had scored a j safety shortly before, and the j score stood 2 to 0 against Butler. ! The Butler team could not hold ! the Franklin eleven, which out weighed the Butlerites twelve pounds to a man, on tho slippery, i field, and Franklin marched slow ly but steadily toward another | touchdown. On Butler's ten-yard line the i Franklin quarter called for a for- J ward pass. The play was a fake I line plunge. The Franklin bafks were pulled in close, and the ends I also in. Butler and the crowd ex- | pected a lino plunge. The pass was intercepted by Welborn two ! yards behind his own goal. He. caught it cleanly and started worming his way through both his own and the Franklin team.' Mendenhall was the only other" ; man on the fielid who realized the possibilities of the play. He Jump ed ahead of Welborn and made sonic interference for him. After several seconds, when it seemed that ho would fall, Welborn I struggled through with four ' Franklin men after him. His | footing was insecure, but he started away like a fresh track i mnn making a 100-yard dash. | Several times he looked back, and i until he had crossed the center ! of the field he was not safe from pursuit. The Franklin men fagged j as the sprint continued, and Wei- I born led them by ten yards when j he crpssed the goal for the game ivlnnlng touchdown. He dropped | from exhaustion immediately aft- j erward. _____— — Breezy Bits About the Football World Recounted Negotiations were opened between j Columbia and Fordham yesterday j with the object of arranging a foot- | ball game between the two for Sat- ! urday. Dec. 7, at the Polo Grounds. I The football squad of the Great i Lakes Naval Training Station, which ' v(on fromßutgerS, Saturduy, has ar- j rived in Annapolis with Commander J. L. Kauffman, athletic director, i and Lieut, C. J. Mcßeavey, coach. I Big preparations are being made for | the game, which will end the sea-! son there. Yale, once the greatest of grid-' iron centers, will have been inactive ' more than any of her usual rivals— j Harvard, Princeton, Brown—when ! interqollegiate playing resumes full 1 sway next Autumn. Ad Kelly, who is to go to France ; for the Y. M. C. A., was a member! of the best football team Princeton J ever had—Church's 1896 eleven. 1 Except Doc Hillebrand, no Tiger! and few from anywhere else, ever combined football and baseball to I such a degree. A football game between teams re- I presenting Camp Devens and the 1 Great Lakes Naval Training Station will be a Thanksgiving Day feature in Boston if present plans arfc car ried to completion. Final word from the Great Lakes team Is await ed. The contest, If urranged, will be staged at Braves Field. ARROW COLLARS p IUtTT. PEABOOY 4 CO.. INC. MAKERS 1 - A Big Gain in Resources The following table of figures shows how the Harrisburg trust com panies Increased their resources and deposits by three per cent, during i a year of war. It is a graphic comparison of the stability of the city's financial structure during war times as compared to a previous year of peace. Kosources, Resources, Deposits, Deposits, Trust Companies— 1917 1918 1917 • 1918 Allison Hill $7911840 $916,036 $418,733 $509,427 Camp Curtin 1,137,122 1,266,267 836,681 962,638 Central 1,898,509 2,078.031 1,423,116 1,569,069 Commercial 814,316 841,217 483,914 540,031 Commonwealth 3,006,985 3,268,173 2,168,836 2,268,302 Dauphin Deposit 3,937,933 3,961,596 3,252,262 3,304,759 Harrisburg 3.578,707 3,267,377 2,472,641 2,174,018 Mechanics 2,151,788 3,240,255 1,365,323 1,301,315 Security 1,200,527 1,391,208 833,148 1,014,097 Union 1,796,190 • 1,869,627 1,258,845 1,339,763 Totals...* $20,342.92S $21,108,792 $14,513,882 $15,043,422 SPARE CASH IS BEING BANKED [Continued from First Page.] 1 per cent, during; the fiscal year end -1 ins June 30, 1918, over the re | sources and deposits of the year end i ingr June 30, 1917, according to the I figures gleaned from "Trust Cont ( panics of the United States," the slx -1 teenth annual production of the j United States Mortgage and Trust i Company, New York, and made pub ! lie by Donald McCormick, president lof the Dauphin Deposit and Trust I Company, this morning. Dig Increases' The resources of the trust com i panies this year are $21,108,792.30. i l.ast year they were $20,342,928.36. i The deposits are $15,043,422.93, as ! compared to $14,513,882.80 last year, i The figures compiled by the trust I companies speak eloquently of the 1 increased amount of saving in the ! city and vicinity, due to the advent j of* high war-time wages, and the ! greater number of opportunities pre sented for saving through war-time | conditions. Did Loyal Work Trust companies have lost no op j portunity to render loyal and whole ! hearted service toward the winning j of the war, it is pointed out, and the"events of the year have shown more clearly than ever before their great importance and usefulness as an integral part in the finanpial structure of the nation. In registering an increase of three per cent, in their resources and de j posits, the trust companies of Har- I risburg arc keeping pace with the | average of the state, which shows a three per cent, increase. The de- I posits represent the savings of hun- West End Calls Tarsus to Play Out City Championship The West End team will play Marysville next Saturday at Fourth and Seneca streets, game starting at 3 o'clock. All players are asked to be on hand this afternoon for prac tice. West End is by no means satisfied to let# Tarsus claim the city cham pionship. In a communication from the manager the team demands a return fray on November 30. Says he: "The championship hasn't been won or won't be decided until Tar sus has defeated West End the best out of a series of three games, which the management of both teams agreed to play when the arrange ments were made for these teams to meet. An article stating that the West End team outweighed the Tarsus team twenty pounds to the man is untrue. The West End team's I =r I sz- Annual Cap Sale, 85 c Values sl, $1.50, $2, $2.50 / Taken from our regular stock. Do not miss this sale ySmf' °* exceptional values. A good cap for little money. Genuine American Made Velours $5.00 to SIO.OO LADIES: Why not wear a Man's Velour Hat? It will give you that much desired "tailored effect," bringing out that "individual ity" which sets one apart from the masses. United Hat Stores, Inc. 7 MARKET AND THIRD STS. 1 ' \ C. deeds who never before took any part of their earnings to the banks Trust company olficials feel that the increase amouhts speak favorably for a gradual economic readjustment after the war without attendant hardships when wuges begin to de crease. Penn Swimmers Will Hold Many Meets This Winter Swimming meets between the uni versities of Pennsylvania and Yale, Princeton, Columbia and College ot the City of New York during the coming winter are assured, as Capt E. J. Elderkin of the Red and Blue champion plunger has received word, that they will compete at the Wight man Hull pool, says a Philadelphia dispatch to the Christian Science. There will be no intercollegiate meets, however, as the teams will represent only S. A. T. C. schools. Coach George Kistcr of the Red and Blue tank men has ordered all swim mers to report to him for practice. HUN GAZE ON I.OJtlt A^NE Copenhagen. Nov. 21.—A dispatch by the German Premier Ebert and Foreign Minister Haase and received by the Strassburg Soldiers' and Workmen's Council says: "The oc ' cupation by the Allied powers ol Alsace-Lorraine will not prejudice a solution of the question according to the principles of international I right and peoples' self determina tion." average is 150 pounds, the same average as the Tarsus team. Also wish to state that the Tarsus man agement should be sportsman 1 enough to publish the right names of the layes who did the fight ing." The only printed answer so far to West End's demand is the fol lowing from James Hoholan, of Tar . sus: i "We claim the city championship for having defeated the West End tcaln. We do not care to meet them on the gridiron again as they arc beyond our weight and we fear physical harm from playing the i game. We defeated them cleanly 'and claim the championship for hav ing done so." These teams might obviate a lot of trouble by employing referee and umpire who would punish any rough stuff. 13