12 NEWS OF THE SPORTING WORLD KGB SCHOOL FIVES PLAY Central and Tech Will Meet in Chest nnt Street Auditorium To night The biggest scholastic basketball game of the season will be staged this evening in Chest >ut street auditorium, When Central High and Tech meet in the game to decide the higth school championship of the city. Both teams are confident on the eve of the con test) although the Blue and Grey team is slightly a favorite because of its in dividual stars and the better snowing made against York and Steelton. The Maroon team is evenly bal anced and play well together. Their followers are depending on the team to take the game. Both teams will present their strongest lineup. Ar rangements have been made to handle a record crowd. The game will be called at 8.15 ofclock. - Between the halves of the game the Central scrubs will play the P. K. K. Y. M. C. A. Reserves. VANDERBILT GIVES CUP Donates Gold Trophy For Series of Schooner Baces Boston, March 5.-—Officials of the Eastern Yacht Clufo announced yester day that Harold S. Vanderbilt, owner of the schooner yacht Vagrant, had of fered a gold cup as a prize for a series of races for large schooner** around Cape Cod. The competition, as in form er years, will be held late in June, the boats starting from either New ljondon or Newport, and finishing at Marble head. The owner of the winning yacht will hold the trophy a year ami will receive in addition a silver copy. The owner winning three races, not necessary with the same boat, will obtain permanent possession of the cup. Mordecai Brown With Tinker Chicago, March s.—Mordecai Brown, former pitcher for the Chicago Nation als, who lust year managed the St. Louis Federals and at the end of the season played with the Brooklyn Fed erals, is to play this year with the Chi cago Federals. This announcement was made yesterday, after he had visited Chas. Weeghman. Brown will go Sooth with the Chicaigo Federals on their training trip. Tinker Goes to Second Base Chicago, March 5. —Joseph B. Tink er, manager of the Chicago Federals, after playing at shortstop from the start of his long career in the major leagues, has decided to switch to sec ond base. Tinker asserted yesterday that his place in the short field would be taken by James Smith, a 10-vear-old star, wlio acquired his baseball knowledge »t Duquesne University, Pittsburgh. Smith was signed late last fall. [Quality | NO PREMIUMS | ■ Afairrs of the Highrst Grade Turkish 0 » and Egyptian Oganttcs in thtVirU 8 THE HUB CLEAN-UP SALE Look how we have cut prices. Actual values don't stand in the way when we have a clean-up. We must clear the store for new Spring and Sum mer goods. It's a great big chance for you to buy a Suit or Overcoat at about HALF PRICE. MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S /|)J A ai/V SUITS AND OVERCOATS %| II f%|| that formerly sold up to $20.00 JL \F#Cr \F lfjk MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S J SUITS AND OVERCOATS JC |/I r%|| NJW [\ that sold up to $25.00, Atlr V jrj MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S f Pi/\ SUITS AND OVERCOATS % J f%l| ' * that sold up to $27.50, V V m 1 MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S AJ A «v/V p f 1 SUITS AND OVERCOATS %| K rill 19 |\ that sold up to $30.00, f|r X v9(f V j;| >lll MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S A| AHA [ jtj SUITS AND OVERCOATS lIV r||| that sold up to $35.00 JL v7#£r \P I I nl BOYS' SUITS AND OVER COATS that sold up to $7.50, .. THEIHUB 320 Market Street FtARRISBTTRG STAB-INDEPENDENT. FRIDAY EVENING. MAROH 5. 1913. ' ' BOWLING BESULTB P. B. R. Y. M C. A. LEAGUE Easv victory for Federals — FEDERALS I Mendenhall. 171 203 20-4 578 | Saul 167 147 146 457] | Davis 159 175 137 471 j Miller .... 160 169 188 — 517 i Leaman . . 156 204 172 — 532 | Totals . . 810 898 847—2555 BARONS iMadenfort . 196 181 162 539 I Felker 132 161 1T1 — 404 j Starr 147 148 150— 445 Poft'enberger 17S 150 139 467 Fortuey ... 164 127 166 457 Totals .. 817 767 728—2312 AT THE CASINO Regulars trim P. R. R. Draughting lioum Yanigaiis— REGULARS Ogclsby ... 102 115 115— 332 [Africa 129 103 119— 35 1 Fletcher .. 99 120 119— 338 Joyce 94 104 93 291 i Ross 102 104 105— 311 Totals .. 526 546 551—1623 YANIGiANS * McOutcheon 86 9 7 83— 266 Poffenberger 90 79 88— 257 ltobart .. . 102 86 85— 272 Crow ell ... 81 86 86— 253 McClintoek. 84 94 113— 291 Totals .. 442 442 455—1339 CASINO LEAGUE Orpheums win close match from Al phas— ALPHAS jKnnis .... 126 168 152 446 Kozel 136 181 197 514 j Burger ... 196 191 213 600 Buttorff . . 173 170 213 — 556 I Morrison .. 205 167 181 — 553 Totals . . 836 877 956—2669 ORPHEUMS ] Ross ... . 211 170 177 — 558 Botts 154 183 231 568 Arnsbergei . 156 167 145 468 W. A. Miller 148 164 193 505 Wilson .... 182 165 255 602 Totals .. 851 849 1001—2701 JIM COFFEY STOPS PELKY Dublin Giant Put Arthur to Sleep in Second Bound New York, March s.—Jim Coffey I made the hearts of 4,500 Irishmen j thump with joy when the Irish chain i pion stopped Arthur Pelky, of Chicopee, j Mass., near the end of the second round | of a scheduled ten-round bout at the | Pairmount A. C last night. Coffey 1 ended matters with three stiff rights to I the jaw. The first two punches stag geied Pelky against the ropes, where he was held up as a target for Coffey's well-aimed and well-directed long straig'ht right, whi :h crashed against his chin and toppled him over to the mat. It was then t'liat Referee Billy Joh asserted his authority as the arbi ter of the milling. After assisting Pelky to his feet he waved Cofl'ey to one side and pushed Pelky to his cor ner, at the same time stopping the bout. M'CARRON STOPS RE VOIR j Had Him Down in Fifth and Out in Sixth Allentown, Pa., March 5. —Before a recbrd crowd. Jack McCarron, of this ! city, knocked out Eddie Revoir, of Philadelphia, in the sixth round wit'h ' a short right to the jaw. Revoir was i also seiit to the mat for t'he count of nine in the fifth, and he had hardly ' regained his feet when Jack landed on his jaiw again, sending him to dreamland, but the bell saved him. I The bout was scheduled for ten rounds. Fertig Defeats Commings at Billiards Fertig defeated Commings by the score of 100 to 58 in the finals in the Holtzman billiard tournament last evening. READING ELKS TO INVADE CITY FOR BOWLING HATCH Accompanied by Forty Rooters the Vis iting Team Will Be Given an Auto Bide Over City—Dinner and Lunch eon and a Severe Beating Now that the regular season on the Elks' alleys is finished and the Athletics have the championship all the Bills are looking forward to the series with the Reading Elks who were trim med 'beautifully last year and will com® here for their first trimming this sea son to-morrow afternoon. Jhe bowling contest is a there inci dent in the visit of the Bills from the German village, for Victor Bunsel I Steigleman, a local Elk, in charge of the committee on arrangements, is mo:b --i ildzing his forces for one bis» time. Ac i companied by forty rooters the Read ' ing team wiil arrive in Harris>bnrg at | 4.33 o'clock to-morrow evening. Enough I llarrisburg automobiles will be at the i Philadelphia and Reading station to show o«ir seventy-five miles of paved streets and park system to them. ' At dinner time they will go to the Dauiphin hotel for dinner. Here the vis iting team will be given the richest food in the land in order that they will not be able to bowl to the best advan tage when the game is called at 8 o'clock. Following the game which will take two hours or more, the visitors will be given r. "feed" in the Elks' eluto house, 2.16 North Seconal street. Most of the Reading Bills will stay over until Sunday. If Steigleman is too busy wit'h his social duties he will not bowl but he will make every effort to be on the firing line. Captain Morrison will have other candidates for bowling honors in j Knnis, Beck, Krall and C. Weiber. Mrs. Vanderbilt to Present Cup I San Francisco, March 5. —Mrs. W. Iv. Vanderbilt, wife of the donor of the | Vanderbilt cup, wired to the Fanama- I Pacific exposition yesterday her accept | ance of an invitation to be a guest of I honor at the Vanderbilt eup race to | morrow. She will personally present the coip to the winner. Bransfield Appointed Umpire Boston, Mass., March s.—Before I leaving for Hot Springs with th* Red i Sox yesterday, T. H. Mnrnane, presi dent of t'he New England League, an nounced that he would name William I E. Bransfield, of Worcester, as an um pire in the New England League this I season. Hanover to Bowl Here The Hanover Metropolitans will meet the Holtzman All-Stars on fcho Holtzman alleys to-morrow evening, the contest starting at 5 o'clock. Fau ver, Banks, Wharton, Kimmel and Barber will represent Harrisburg. ' —————— DR.KLUGH, Specialist Phyilctna and 9argc«a Offices* 20ft Walnnt St.. Harrtaburs. Pa Dlaeaaea of nomm and men* apectal. private, specific, nervous anil rbronle dlaeaaea. General office work. Coaanl* tatlon free and contldrntlnl. Mcdlclnt furntabed. Work cuarunteed. Charges moderate. Sitt yearn' experience* DR. KLUGII. tile well-known specialist H prompt relief |u without inconvenience, WW - The one reason wlr** BBUHBP. A. has so many :<^S>S^; ::v tried and trusty friends is because it's so gosh hanged tasty and peace wci" .y ful on the tongue. You can ~: , : , : , ,: , ,: v- i;; Ww«.£ jimmy-pipe or home-made ciga- P :: ' : 1 rette just as fast and hard as ■y 1 you want to, from the time the (l! sun P ee P s out till the little stars ' twinkle, and there's nary a trace H"] ] FRINGE ALBERT ll# | the national joy smoke is made biteless and stingless by a patented process controlled exclusively by us. You just charge a pipe or cigarette with this fragrant, satisfying tobacco and you will wonder why you held out so long and let your tongue curl up and filllllif^lff crack every time you took your old jimmy pipe into your confidence. t I lAny store that sells tobacco can supply you with Prince Albert | / jy|||« l f in the tidy red tin, 10c; toppy red bag, sc; pound and half- I'MM L f pound tin humidors and that dandy P. A. pound crystal-glass | y \ /<. ■ humidor which not onlv keepsy our supply in splendid condition, |; but is a thing of beauty and a joy forever. If 1 R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., • Winston-Salem, N. C. J CARVED A LIVING FISH. Part W» Cooked and the Other Pad ' Swam Around Till Needed. Not ninny years ago. being one of the , few foreigners permitted to reside in' i the interior of Japan. I was favored \ with this interesting experience: Living near a small fishing village and out of convenient reach of the treaty |>orts. I found it necessary to ; content myself to a greut extent with native subsistence. However, a daily supply of delicious living tish went far to compensate for the absence of beef steak and bread and butter. The peddlers of tisb carry their : finny merchandise in shallow tubs I tilled with water, suspended from the j ends of a yoke across the shoulders. I In this fashion they trot along for | miles on their rounds, j' Having the advantage of first choice, j I could usually select one of a size j suitable for the day's needs, but one j morning they were all entirely too large, and when It was pointed out : that the smallest was double the size wanted lie Replied: j "Oh, but you can cut it in two; use half today, the other half tomorrow." I This suggestion would seem simple ; enough in American markets, but when he was told that stale fish was unde sirable he explained that the remaining half would be as lively tomorrow or any day thereafter until used: that the operation would not hurt the fish in the slightest reflect. At this point curiosity prompted me to direct the ! flip vlviseetioulst to proceed with his barbarous act. He immediately laid one of the flsb on a board and placed his long, keen | edged knife just back of the gills and quickly sliced off all of oue side down to the tail and so close to the ribs that you could almost see them. The part I containing the vital organs was return ed to the water, where, of course, ow ■ ing to loss of equilibrium. It turned on i Its side. But to my astouishment it swam round lively as ever, seemingly undisturbed by the loss of so much flesh, and remained so until the next i day wben I was ready to cook it. i My native friends smiled at the sug j gestlon of cruelty and 1 related the story of a distinguished daimlo who caught a fish sliced lu this manner that had I been placed In the river years before : and lived this long time happy and ! lively as other flsb. But the idea of i carving a living flsh made me shudder, | and I never tried it again.—C. D. WeJ j don. in New York Tribune. SYMBOLS AS SHOP SIGNS. A Legacy From the Old Day* Wher but Few Pereons Could Read. The man on the street, and especially the man on the street In Manhattan, does not realize that he is every day perpetuating in the signs that he usee the customs of a people wbo could not read. In the old days it was useless tc put up the sign "apothecary." because few could read It. So the apothecary decorated his shop front with a mortar and pestle as a sign of his trade. We cau read uow. most of us. but we cling to signs of this sort still. The symbol lingers. Here and there a barber tries tc throw off its yoke by uaintine a that reads "tonsoriai parlor," but the normal barber shop proudly sets up its tot»-m pole, which retains as a tradi tion the silent but eloquent testimony of the former practice on the part of the barber of blood letting. Similarly the pawnbroker hangs up his trinity of golden balls because the original pawnbroking business was ftnrted by a Medici, whose coat of arms was charged with three golden balls 011 a field of silver. The wooden Indian signifies a to bacco store because it was from the Indians that the idea of smoking orig inally came. The noble red man has thus been debased and doomed to hold forth In effigy a bunch of cigars to both the willing and the unwilling. A boot that swings as* a sign says plainly to every man. "This is a shoe shop." The shoes within will wear themselves out in the service of those who buy them. A large wooden watch can mean only one thing, and that Is that the sign owner is a horologist.— New York Mall. Long Drawn Out. Kncle Jeff, an aged negro driver of Augusta, was piloting several north ern visitors around Just after the first golf links had been put in there. Un cle Jeff was a little short in his knowledge according to St. Andrew, but long on local pride. "How many holes have they?" in quired a visitor, "eighteen?" Uncle Jeff pulled up to make his an swer more impressive. "More'n dat, suh." he said. "Dey'B got a passel er land, and de holes ain't bigger'n a tin can. I reckin dey's got a thousand holes already, suh."—New York Post 00000000000000000000000000 1 PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT, g o o o Shortneis of Breath. ° o There are many ways in which o g shortness of breath may arise. § o it is often oue of the symptoms o o of Illness. When a person begins 0 o to complain of habitual short- o g uess of breath It is important to § o have a physical examination o o made without delay. One rea- 0 ° son is that tuberculosis often be- o o gins with no other symptoms Q ° than shortness of breath and a o o slight cough. If these cases are o ® seen and diagnosed very early It ° o is not difficult to arrest them. o o The symptom is. of course, ° o present in such troubles as pneu- o o monia. broncho-pneumonia and g o pleurisy, which attack the or- o o gans of breath dtrectly. Violent ® o exercise naturally causes tempo- o o rary shortness of breath. In the ° o case of healthy people It dlsap- o ° pears quickly when the exercise ° o ceases. If it does not do so it is o ° a good plan to have a careful ex- ° o amlnation In order to find out o g what is wrong. Young people g o sometimes persist In a favorite o Q frrm of exercise after they have ° o begu:i to notice their shortening o Q breath. In that way they may ° o do themselves lifelong injury. o o O 00000000000000000000000000 FORMER BANDIT CHARCED i WITH ISSUING PAMPHLET : PLEADING CERMAN CAUSE j' Paris, March 5, 6.10 A. M. —Persons said to have been connected at one time i with t'he notorious Bonnot band of au-1 tomobilo bHndits are charged by the po- j i lice, according to this morning's pa- ; , [>ers, with being responsible for the au- i thorship of a seditious pamphlet with . the title "People, Yon Are Being De- i ceived," in which a plea is made for i the cause of Germany. Several arrests . have been made. ■, It is stated that those taken into i custody include Lorulot, former editor j i of the newspaper "Aiiarchy" and i.l Jeanne Benardi, a friend of the an-1 1 archist bandit Courov who committed I suicide in his cell in the Conciergerie prison after he had been sentenced to l life imprisonment for his share in the; sensational exploits of the outlaw gang 1 which was not broke until the melo dramatic. battle with the police at : Choisy-Le-Royon, April 28, 1912. It is understood that those under i suspicion will be tried by court-martial at Marseilles. The police are main taining the strictest secrecy regarding | the case which the newspapers declare! 1 is likely to have important ramifica-: | tions. ! O'DAY NOW A FREE AGENT Chicago, March s.—Henry O'Dav, after serving the National League as an umpire for sixteen years and as a manager for two years, has been de- j clared a free agent. He is considering j f TEN 1 OLDTOWN CANOES Latest 1915 models are already sold and de livered. We Want Your Selection Early We have the Oldtown Canoes in stock. Let us show you why the Oldtown Canoes are the safest and lightest running Canoe made. - Catalogs free. We carry a full line of Canoe Accessories. Over 100 paddles in stoek to select from. BOGAR'S SPORTING GOODS STORE ON THE B| offers, he said to-day, from the Amer ican and Federal Leagues. . O'Dav received a letter from John K. Tencr, president of the National League, advising him that he was free to sign with any leagne. He said, however, that he would not consider an offer from the National organization. To Remove Adhesive Plasters Every one who has had occijsijii to use adhesive plaster is familiar wit i the line of adherent, discolored mate rial that is left on the skin around the edges of the plaster when the strip is removed. This adherent substance re sists scrubbing with soap and all ordi nary means of removal. Kven scrap ing with a knife fails to remove the grime and stickiness completely. But a few drops of gasoline, benzine, ether or chloroform 'on a piece of cloth will remove the stain as if by magi'. The ,basis of adhesive plaster is rubber, and the four substances mentioned are rub ber solvents. — I