Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 11, 1919, Page 13, Image 13

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    SPORTING EDITOR ROCAP TO REFEREE BIG FIGHT; POLICEMAN-PITCHER WINS GAME
"Mose" Swartz and Fielder Fetrow
Star in Another Reading Defeat
Standing of the Clubs
W. L. Pet.
Reading 7 2 .778
Rosewood 5 a .000
Galahad 6 6 .500
St. Mary's 2 T ■*-*
To-night—St. Mary's vs, Read
ing.
Last night's result—Galahad,
9; Reading, 0.
Reading Railway continued its
spinning noee dive in its downward
flight from the top of the Allison
Hill ladder after having won seven
straight by dropping another game
to Galahad last night. 9 to 0.
Mellinger apparently was not
warmed up in the first two innings,
as the victors pommeled the ball
to all corners of the lot. Once the
Ursinus lad got his cross-fire work
ing there was little other to the con
test than strikeouts. To fan thir
teen batters and then be badly
fceatjen is tough luck. Galahad
the better ball and deserved
"Mose" Swartz, the juvenile ath
lote, was the heavy stick artist for
Reading. He clouted out three
binglee. The first round was a night
mare for Reading. In this inning
the team started to bat around a
second time, and Cobaugh knocked
out two hits in this session.
Fetrow. playing center held,
pulled one of the most sensational
catches ever seen on the Hill, when
he ran forty yards and made a shoe
string catch of what looked like a
safe hit. "Tom" Retlly ritched a
Barrett's Show to Match
Four Local Boys With
Out-of-Town Talent
That Young Mahoney, the fast and
gentlemanly little scrapper, not
mean to take any chances of losing
his bout to Sammy SchtffnextMon
dav night at Quartet Hall. Steelton,
is "vouched for by Mahoney mana
ger. Max Waxman. of ®? lt ' mor ?;
Webber's roadhouse, in the Frederick
RESORTS
AT ATLANTIC CITY. X. J.
THE SAN JOSE
132 St. James Place. Fifth house from
beach. European Plan. Terms at'trac;
tive. 16th season. McNamara -
Hughes Owners.
MOST AMIABLE HOSTESS IN TOWN
THE HAVERHILL
17 S. Illinois Avenue
Near beach. $2.50 daily: $15.00 wee.kly
Mrs. Letitia Mathews
HOTEL BISCAYNE
Kentucky Ave. Fourth hotel from
Beach. Amer. plan $2.50 up daily; sl4
up wkly. Europ. $1 up dly. Harrison
Hippie.
' HOTEL BREVOORT
IS South Carolina Ave. Near Beach
and Penna. R. R. Large airy rooms.
Amer. Plan $2.50 up daily. $15.00 up
weekly Under new management.
ft.SO DP Daily. $14.00 an Wkly. Am. Plan
ELBERON
& Fireproof A mi ex. Tennessee Av. nr. b.each.
Cap. 400. Central;open surroundinitsiopp. Catho
lic and Protestant Churches. Private Baths.
RUNNING WATER IN ALL ROOMS
NOTED TOR IT S -TA.BL.E
MILLER £ O J™E-ftNNEX
I M 9„ISN.OEORCIAAVE.ATL.CITY.N.j7 M 1
Scrupulously clean, electric lighted
throughout. White service. Hot and
cold water baths. $2.00 up daily. sl2
up weekly. Estab. 40 years. Emerson
Crouthamel, Mgr.
NEW JERSEY
Brightest and Best
in the early Summer days, when the
gates of the Ocean are thrown open
to the bathing enthusiasts of the
world. Atlantic City's beaches are
wonderful, and early Summer with
its mild but invigorating sunshine, is
the best time to enjoy them.
Come, young or old, weak or strong,
1 there's enjoyment to spare for
everybody.
Golf or horseback-riding, sail
boats or rolling chairs, fishing
or motoring, theatres or con
certs, surf bathing or swimming
I pools, piers or casinos—the list
is a long one.
Come and enjoy them aIL
Ttis Leading Houses Are Always Open
ud will gladly furnish foil information, rata*,
etc., upon requnt (Hotels are all American
Plan, unleea otherwise noted)
Mirfboroogh-Bl.sheila Galen Hall
America, aod Hotel end Sanatorium
. tSSBZSSc* Colon Halt Co.
u , , - The Shelburne
Hotel Dennis Eoropmn Plan
Walter J. Btuby J. Woikol. Mgr.
I Hotel St. Charles Hotel Strand
Wm. A. Leech, Met. F. B. Off and
* IL C. Ed ward i
. n Chc a < l a Seaside House
J. B. Tbompaoo ft Co. r p (;ook .,
The Hoknhurst The Wiltshire
A- H. Darnell Samuel EUi.
far Mamfim and adndolt at on mil rairait
hriMn. coumk leal fcka umu
AT FRANKLIN COUNTY, PA.
fjjpssa
dfoCfM Oil ff TAINS
A Mtrletly modern hotel with excellent
table and service. Altitude 20UU feet.
Splendid woods; golf, tennis, ete.
Open Jan© 80Hi to October Ist
Address until June 10th.
John Js Oibhons^Manajrer
WEDNESDAY EVENING,
good gamo, and with heavy hitting
to back him up was an easy winner.
Reading was close to scoring in
the final inning with two on and
none out, but Reilly kept the plate
uncrossed. St. Mary's and Reading
play to-night. The score:
GALAHAD
AB.'R. H. O. A- E.
Cobaugh, If .. . 4 2 2 0 0 0
Starry, ss 2 0 0 3 2 0
Klerner, 3b .. 4 2 1 1 1 0
Lutz, c 3 1 1 8 1 1
Reilly, p 4 1 2 0 1 0
Fetrow, cf .. . 4 1 2 1 0 0
Clark, 2b 3 1 0 1 3 1
Stauffer, lb ... 4 1 1 7 0 0
Foland, rf.... 1 ® ® ®
Total 32 9 10 21 8 2
READING
AR. R. H. O. A. E.
Cocklin, c, 2b. 3 0 0 5 3 1
C. Swartz. ss .. 2 0 0 0 1:
Shartle, 2b, cf. . 3 0 1 1 0 0
Mellinger, p.. . 3 0 2 1 2-0
Swartz, c, cf . . 3 0 0 8 0 0
Bowman, lb . . 3 0 • 1 5 0 2
H. Swartz. 3b . 3 0 3 1 0 1
Sawyer, If ... . 3 0 0 0 0 0
Crozier, rf.... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Davies, rf 2 0 0 0 0 0
Total 26 0 721 7 6
Galahad 6200 01 0 9
Reading 000000 0 0
Two-base hits—Klerner, Fetrow,
Mellinger, Reilly. Sacrifice hits—
Starry, 2; Lutz. Double plays—
Starry to Clark to Stouffer: Starry,
unassisted. Struck out —Mellinger,
13; Reilly, 8. Hit by pitcher—
Clark. C. Swartz. Stolen bases —
Fetrow. Umpire—Runk.
road, a suburb of Baltimore, is the
training camp of Baltimore's lead
ing fistic artists, along with Ktd Wil
liams, ex-bantam champion of,the
world; Toung Chaney, the inter-
Allied featherweight champion;
Micky Dougherty, the southern ban
tam champion, and George Chaney,
the knockout king. Mahoney is go
ing through his daily grind prepar
ing for his ten-round bout with the
local boy and takes a turn boxing
with them all. Most of his work is
done with George Chaney, who, like
S'chiff, is a southpaw. This, Wax
man says, is done to familiarize his
man with Schiffs style of boxing, so
that Mahoney will not be at a dis
advantage.
George (Toung) Silar, the One
Hundred and Twelfth Infantry,
Twenty-eighth Division, lightweight,
a Yorker, who is equally as good
boxing left handed as with his right,
is on the card to fight Nate Isaac
man in the semiwindup next Mon
day and Silar has arranged to have
himself and Mahoney finish their
training at Barrett's gymnasium in
Steelton.
Two other York boys on the card
in six-round bouts, Paul Wagner,
who meets Billy Morton, of this city,
and Young Wampler, who meets Bill
Atticks, Harrisburg, will likely come
over with Silar and finish their work
at the same time. Barrett feels sure
the show will be of uncommon in
terest, for one reason, because four
local boxers are called upon to meet
four good outside boxers in the same
ring the same night. Advance tick
ets are going fast.
BASEBALL" RESULTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Yesterday's Results
St. Louis. 4; Boston, 2.
Pittsburgh, 10; Brooklyn l , 6.
Chicago, 6; Philadelphia, 3. i
v New York, 6; Cincinnati, 3.
Standing of the Clubs
W. L. Pet.
New York 26 11 .702
Cincinnati 24 17 .585
Chicago 22 18 .550
Brooklyn 20 21 .487
Pittsburgh 19 21 .475
St. Louis 17 22 .435
Philadelphia 15 21 .416
Boston 1? <5 .342
Schedule For To-day
Boston at St. Louis.
New York at Cincinnati.
Brooklyn at Pittsburgh.
Philadelphia at Chicago.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Yesterday's Results
New York, 2; Detroit, 1.
Philadelphia, 5; St. Louis, 3.
Chicago, 5; Boston, 3.
Cleveland, 3; Washington, 2.
Standing of the Clubs
W. L. Pet.
Chicago 26 13 .658
New York 21 13 .647
Cleveland 24 14 .631
Detroit 18 19 .481
St. Louis 18 18 .481
Boston 1 16 18 .470'
Washington 12 24 .333
Philadelphia 9 26 .257
Schedule For To-day
St. Louis at Philadelphia-
Chicago at Boston.
Detroit at New York.
Cleveland at Washington.
WEAKLY
Henry—Did you get your weekly
allowance?
Bill—Yes, and it is wceker than
ever.—Crimson and Gray.
ATLANTIC
9 9
IPOLARINEI
YOU buy Atlantic Gasoline by name.
It is equally important that you
speak right out and say "Atlantic Motor
Oil." One puts pep in your motor and the
other keeps trouble oat of your motor.
Atlantic Polarine, Atlantic Light.
Medium and Heavy—one of these four is
the proper oil for your particular motor
vehicle. Ask your garageman which.
ATLANTIC
4* MOTOR OILS
f£f Keep Upkeep Down %J§
SNOODLES By
AN ODD SHAPE. ) COULD YOO /
OF Goops THAT \
MOTHEft. PATCHED
Trousers CoL<HS; ' " f
"Billy" Rocap to Referee
Willard-Dempsey Fight
He Is Chosen by "Tony" Biddle Because of Honesty and Ex
perience in Boxing and Wrestling Sports
By Associated Press.
Philadelphia, June 11. —The selec
tion of William H. Rocap, sporting
editor of the Philadelphia Public
Ledger, as referee for the fight be
tween Jess Willard and Jack Demp
sey, was announced to-day by Major
A. J. Drexel Biddle, who as presi
dent of the Army, Navy and Civilian
Board of Boxing Control, was re
quested by Tex Rickard, promoter of
the fight, to name the referee.
Himself a fight promoter and a
former amateur boxing champion,
Mr. Rocap has for many years been
a close follower of both professional
and amateur boxing. He has refer
eed a number of matches, the most
recent one being been Kid Williams
and Pete Hermann, in New Orleans.
He is president of the National
Athletic Club, of this city. He is
also a polo expert and acts in an of
ficial capacity in most of the polo
matches in this section.
Rocap is all this and more. He
has done more to expose crooked
boxing and wrestling than any other
sporting writer of the day. When
Lew Tendler played Harrisburg for
a cheap place by feigning a broken
hand, thus getting Joe Barrett bar
red from the Capitol City, Rocap
voluntarily took up the couait against
Tendler, although he is Philadel
phia's favorite son. "Lew Tendler
and his manager have disgraced
themselves in Harrisburg," was the
virile way in which Rocap began his
story on this scandal, and for a num
ber of years this battling editor has
maintained his principles for clean
sport and fair play against all oppo
sition. This is one prime reason he
has been chosen ahead of Corbett
and nil the other ring lights or noted
referees. He will be square and he
knows the game.
Rocap made his first hit in the
Dempsey-Willard literature with an
article asking whether 12 rounds is
long enough for a world's heavy
weight bout. It attracted much at
tention. for, that, in fact is the thing
most discussed right now. Rocap,
with his certain knowledge of ring
history pointed out:
"Since the inception of the Mar
quis of Queensberry rules when the
late John L. Sullivan discarded the
London prize ring code and skin
tight gloves and adopted the 'pil
lows,' no championship battle has
ever been limited to so few rounds
as twelve. Is that limit enough for
Jess Willard to prove his superiority
over Jack Dempsey? Is thirty-six
minutes in the ring sufficient time
, for the relentless slugger to beat
down or land a khockout blow on his
giant opponent? Does this doubt
make the bout especially attractive?
Will the ardent fight fan be satis
fied with twelve rounds of boxing
with an indecisive result? If there
is a knockout, yes? But should the
contest go the limit and opinions
are divided which is the winner, in
will leave a bad taste in the mouths
of those who lose and they will ever
lastingly condemn the whole afTair.
He then pointed out:
"It took Corbett tweny-one rounds
to beat Sullivan down, and here is the
pugilistic tree so far as heavyweight
titular bouts run since 1892 to the
present
"On January 25, 1891, Corbett beat
Charley Mitchell in three rounds.
Then Corbett and Fitzsimmons met in
their memorable battle at Carson
City, March 17, 1897, and the ex-Cal
ifornian bank clerk was sent to the
floor in the fourteenth round. James
J. Jefferies, known as the California
bolermaker, loomed up on the pugi
listic horizon and stopped Fitzsimmos
in eleven rounds on January 9, 1899.
Corbett then decided to take a crack
at Jeffries, and after outboxing the
big fellow two blows to one for twen
ty-one rounds, was knocked out in the
twenty-third, on May 11, 1900. Fitz
simmons then asked for an encore
with Jeffries and on July 25, 1902, was
again knocked out, this time in Jhe
ninth round. Coroett was not satis
fled with the result of this Coney
Bulrrisbttrg iSBk teleghxph
Dempsey's Manager
Agrees to Rocap
as Bout Referee
Toledo, 0., June 11. —Jack
Kearns, manager of Jack Demp
sey, said to-day he would abide
by the selection of William H.
Rocap as referee If the decision
of the army, navy and civilian
board of boxing control was
unanimous.
"I think the move will be
popular," Tex Rickard said. "It
will relieve me of the responsi
bility of picking a referee in the
event neither Dempsey nor Wil
liard failed to agree on one and
also will relieve me of the em
barrassment of declining the
applications of ring officials who
have pulled every wire within
their grasp to land the job. If I
used all of the referees who had
considered themselves already
appointed I would have to build
eight arenas to hold them all."
Dempsey did no boxing to
day because the wound over his
eye had not healed. He prob
ably will resume glove work to
morrow. Willard showed more
dash yesterday than in any of
his previous training bouts. He
has improved, fifty per cent, he
says.
Island bout and asked for another
battle. He got it. On August 14.
1903, Jeffries against sent him to
dreamland, this time in the tenth
round.
"For three years there was no man
in the world who seemed able to cope
with Jefferles's great strength. He
conferred the title on Marvin Hart,
and retired, a procedure unusual in
the annals of the ring and the public
accepted it in the spirit it was ten
dered. Tommy Burns fought Hart for
the conferred title on February 3*.
1906, and won in a twenty-round
bout. The Canadian, for Burns was
born in Hanover, Ontario, subse
quently knocked out several men in
short order, including Jim Flynn, the
Pueblo fireman and Bill Squires, the
Australian, in one round. In 1907 he
journeyed to Europe and stopped five
men in England and France. In the
spring of 1908 he arrived in Australia
and beat Squires twice and Bill Liang
by the knockout route.
Then came the match with Jack
Johnson, who sought the world's title.
j#id he got it on December 26, 1908,
beating Burns in 14 rounds. Yielding
to the entreaties of those whom he
classed as his friends, Jefferies was
deluded with the idea that iie could
"comeback" after six years' absence
from the ring and met Johnson. He
was kneked out July 4, 1910 in the fif
teenth round. The world, was scoured
i na man to beat Johnson. Jess Wil
lard was nominated by the writer and
the Kansas cowpuncher performed the
trick at Havana. April 5, 1915, In the
twenty-sixth round.
Now we have eleven real heavy
weight championship battles cover
ing a period of 27 years and they
have averaged exactly fifteen rounds
in duration. With the exception of
the Hart-Burns bout, which was a 21-
round decision, all won by a knock
out. That is the record which Wil
lard and Dempsey must meet."
SEVEN INNINGS
WITHNO SCORE
Season's Best Baill Game in
Junior League Tied Up
Competing Teams
League Standing
W. L. Pet.
Swatara 10 4 .714
East End 8 6 .656
Algonqulns 3 5 .375
Peerless 1 7 .125
Schedule For the Week
Wednesday, East End vs. Swatara.
Thursday, Algonqulns vs. East
End. '
Friday, Swatara vs. Peerless.
Saturday, East End vs. Algonqulns
(two games).
Last evening's City Junior League
battle was the best of the season, the
Algonqulns and Peerless nines play
ing to a scoreless tie for seven In
nings. Only four scattered
were registered In the entire game,
each team making two. Both twirl
era pitched excellent ball and with
unsurpassed support the teams were
unable to do anything with each
other. The score:
R.HC.E.
Algonqulns , 0 0 0 0 0 0 o—o 2 0
Peerless .... 0 0 0 0 0 0 o—-0 2 0
Batteries: Reel and Paxton; Kam
atz and Jones.
Baturday afternoon the Swatsra
team is to meet the Boys' Brigade,
of New Cumberland, at New Cum
berland. Doutrlch's Is going to pre
sent a large scoreboard for use on
the fleld at Nineteenth and Green
wood streets this season, The board
wUI be placed near tbe backstop.
HIS IMPRESSION
Lady Customer —The parrot f
bought of you swears dreadfully.
Dealer—l'm surprised at that,
ma'am. I thought he was quite an
expert.—Boston Transcript,
-... - • •—°. ,>
% ,
ACTUAL PHOTO OF JAC K DEMPSEY TRAINING
B |
I •'■
J £?£ m e . mps £ y Boin ® *U*h a few rounds with his sparring part
ner, Bill Tate. Dempsey is shown lan ding a hard right to Tate's stom
ach, after feinting him into raisin g his hands
TURKISH TOBACCO IS
PLANTED IN CALIFORNIA
Oakdale, Cal., Ararat Diana, a
Slavonian settler, has planted five
acres to Turkish and Sumatran to
bacco near here. An expert in the
culture of the long Turkish cut, with
an aroma distinctively peculiar to the
land of the sultans, the Dalmatian
sees no reason why that regaling
weed cannot be grown here success
fully.
The soil and climate and some of
the native products are found here,
he says. His experiment is being
watched by the United States Agri
cultural Department, which has taken
cognizance of it. Diana raised the
Turkish tobacco on a large scale in
Dalmatia.
Policeman-Pitcher Wins For,
West End Vs. Commonwealth
LEAGUE STANDING
W. L. Pet
West End 8 3 .727
Motive Power 6 5 .545
-Commonwealth 4 6 .400
E. and F. 3 7 .300
The police department may not i
know how to handle a pulmotor but
in the national pastime some are pr
flcient. There's Big John Hess, who
gave the fans at the West End Twi
light League a spanking run for their
time, by trimming Commonwealth in
a pitching duel with the famous
Dewey Eisenberger. Policeman Hess
at one time wore the spangles of the
New England League, and gave evi
dence In this game of old-time pow
ers.
Smart backing, especially by the
Euker huskies and young Freddie
Llghtner, of Marysvllle, .helped Big
John get away with his first day's
trial. Lightner banged a wallop
three time out of four to the plate,
brought in a tally and made one him
self. Dewey Eisenberger had his usu
al steam and control and in addition
he poled a circuit clout of the police
man's slants.
This occurred in the fifth and put a
little new life into the Commenwealth
team. With the score 6 to 1 against
them, the Travelers got next to he
big copper's slants for two runs in
the seventh, when the ex-New Eng
land Leaguer tightened up, and the
scoring was done.
West End started scoring in the'
.third when Knight was given a base
on balls and scored the West End
catcher. Euker went to second and
a minute later came trotting home on
Llghtner's single, Schaeffer then
doubled bringing Llghtner home for
the third run. Tha fourth run in ths
round was made when Levan singled
and Schaeffer crossed the plate.
Again in the fourth, the League
leaders were credited with another
run when W. Euker walked and went
to third on Llghtner's single, Eisen
berger then made a wild pitch and
the West End short Btop trotted
across the plate with the final tally.
With two men gone in the fifth
Eisenberger connected safely for a
homer, thus ending the Common
wealth's scoring until the seventh.
In the final round, J. Smith tripled to
canter and acored when W. Euker
fumbled Klllinger's single hard hit
grounder, Killinger took second and
•cored on Wrlghtatone's atngle, and
tbe game ended on easy outs. The
scorei
AB. R. H. O. A.
W, Euker, s.a 3 2 1 2 2
Lightner, r.f. 4 13 10.
Sheaffer, Sb 4 112 1
Levan, lb ~..4 0 1 8 1
Hess, p 4 0 0 1 8
T, Euker, c.t, 2 0 2 2 0
___
TOO MUCH FAITH COSTS
*loo,ooo| NOW A LABORER
Los Angeles, A fortune of 2100,-
000 lost in twelve months thru too
much faith in his fellowman, C. A.
Landreth, formerly a Whittler orange
grower, now a laborer at a San Pedro
shipbuilding plant, has filed a petition
in bankruptcy in the United States
district court here.
Dandreth's debts total 224,743, of
which 217,443 i s unsecured. He is
possessed to-day of 22,500 worth of
real estate, the remnant of his for
tune.
"Any one could borrow from Land
reth," said a friend familiar with
his misfortunes. "Why, he loaned
every one who asked him. He signed
notes to accommodate people who
had no claims of friendship upon him.
Thus his fortune disappeared."
Bell. 2b 3 0 0 1 4
McKeever, 1. f 3 0 0 0 0
Knight, c. 2 114 0
Totals 29 5 9 21 11
COMMONWEALTH
AB. R. H. O. A.
Killinger, c. 4 1 1 5 2
Hinkle, 2b 4 0 2 0 2
Wrightstone. 3b 4 0 1 1 1
Klugh, l.f 2 0 0 3 0
Fields, r.f 3 0 1 0 0
Gerdes, s.a 3 0 1 4 1
Palmer, lb, 2 0 0 6 1
Anderson, l.f ..... 1 0 0 0 0
J. Smith, c.f 2 1 1 1 0
Etsenberger, p 3 1 1 0 1
xff.' Smith 1 0 0 0 0
Totals 29 3 8 21 8
xßatted for Klugh in seventh.
West End 0 0 4 1 0 0 2—B
Commonwealth .... 0 0 0 0 1 0 2—3
Errors —West End. W. Euker, 2;
Commonwealth, Gardes, Eisenberger.
Two-base hits, Sheaffer, W. Euker;
3-base hits, Klugh, J. Smith; home
run, Eisenberger; sacrifice hit, Palm
er; double plays, Palmer, Killinger
and Gerdes; W. Euker, Bell and Le
vari; Eisenberger, Wrightstone and
Palmer; struck out, by Hess, 8; by
Eisenberger, 6: oases on balls off
Hess, 10; off Etsenberger, 3; left on
base. West End, 6; Commonwealth. 7;
hit by pitcher, T. Euker, 2; wilu
pitches, Eisenberger, S. Time, 1.30.
Umpires, Carpenter and Kelly. Scorer,
McCahan.
Willard or Dempsey—which?
• "The Philadelphia Pre.." will
| help you size up the winner of
j the World Champion*hip.
LOOK HERE
F WE REPAIR
■ RADIATORS
FENDERS
Wreck Bodies
I Auto Lamps, Etc, I
B Guaranteed Work I
Auto Radiator Co.
125 S. Cameron St.
l' '
JUNE 11, 1919.
Hundreds Take Courses
in Emergency Nursing
Thirty-three classes, having an
enrollment of 525 women and girls,
have been organized until June 1
by the Department of Nursing Ac
tivities of the Harrisburg chapter of
the American Red Cross, Mrs.
James I. Chamberlain, director,
reported to-day.
Until June 1, five classes have
been graduated as follows: Y. W. C.
A., Harrisburg, 18 girls. Miss
Margaret Rotlie, instructor: Girl's
Friendly Club, Harrisburg, 16 girls,
Miss Margaret Rothe, instructor;
Paxtang, 30 girls, Mrs. Sauley G.
Backenston, instructor; Williams
town, 45 girls, Mrs. Sauley G. Back
enston, instructor; Hershey, 38 girls,
Mrs. Anna Becker, instructor; mak
ing a total of 147 girls graduated
to date.
Bicycle Clearance Sale
Months of June and July
Aiftocycle ITSS" uTSSi Westminister rVTns"!?: I
. . . _ , „„j inch frames, colors: olive drab or I
olive drab color, dropside mud- , . . , ' . . .**■"* Ry
' _ A black and white, dropside mud- ■
guards, stand. New Departure guards, stand. New Departure I
brake, one year guaranteed brake, one year guaranteed Grip- I
Griptite tires. Value QiAO OH tite fires. Value £9C flfl I
$50.00. Sale Price .. wtA.W 547.50. g a le Price.. wOO.UU g
! Wneiminieinv Same as above,
Antnrvrle Same as above but ** CSUlHniSier b ut equipped
nuiucyuc equipped with tool with tool bag and a complete set
bag and a complete set of tools; of tools, frame pump, bell, trou
frame pump, bell, trouser guards ser guards and electric lignt
and electric light. Val- tfj/ie Hfl Value $52.50. Sale fc/l 1 nn
ue $55. Sale Price.. w'iO.UU Price D4I.UU
Westminister Double Fork Roadster model, 18 and 20-inch
IT CSUIUIIiLCr frames, colors: cobalt blue or olive drab, dropside
mudguards, stand, New Departure brake, tires guaran- tfJOQ Crt
teed for 90 days. Value $42.50. Sale Price POfiiOU
Miami No - 337 Scout model $50.00 to $55.00. SaleC/19 Crt
midllll and No 338 Roaclstc ,.
model. The highest grade bi-
cycles in the world. Vou can get • Same as above, but
them in 18, 20 and 22-inch miami equipped with tool bag
frames with single or double fork. _ . ,
with or without carriers; colors: and a com P le t of tools,
ivory, green, black or olive drab, frame pump, bell, trouser guards
Musselmann coaster brake, drop- and electric light. Valpe from
side mud guards, one year guar- $55 to S6O. Sale Cfl
anteed Vitalic tires. Value from Price
AI/rf>G'KTHER 4 5 bicycles are included in this sale.
NONE sold on time at these prices. We prepay expressage on out
of town orders. ,
A WRITTEN guarantee tyith every bicycle with the factory serial
number.
DURING THE MONTHS of June and July we give 10 per cent, dis
count on Eastman Kodaks and Ansco Kameras. Also on Eastman
and Ansco Films and Photo Supplies.
COHEN'S Sporting Goods Store
431 Market St. Wholesale & Retail At Subway
Say
KING
OSCAR
to your dealer and past him 7c,
and then he will give you your
money's worth of real smoke
comfort,
John C. Herman & Co,
Harrlshurg, Pa,
To-day Try One
J
13
Says Stable Government
Necessary in Russia
Rye Beach, N. H., June 11.—Warn
ing that if a stable government is not
established in Russia, Germany will
utilize Russian resources and man
power and again become a great
menace to the people of Europe, was
given yesterday by David R. Francis,
American ambassador to Russia. Mr.
Francis is recuperating here from
illness which compelled him to un
dergo a surgical operation in Lon
don on his way home from Arch
angel. He is awaiting orders from
the State Department.
Mr. Francis was prompted to make
the statement by the recent speeches
of Frank A. Vanderlip, formerly
president of the National City Bank
of New York, in which Mr. Vander
lip gave his views of the industrial
situation in Europe and told Ameri
ca that she must be prepared to ex
tend her credit to put European busi
' ness on its feet.