ROWDYISM Will BE ENDED SHORTLY State Police Will Keep the State Highways Clear of the Young Men Making Trouble 1 Rowdyism along: the State high ways leading to this city from Ungles town, Hummelstown and other coun ty towns, including the firing of re volvers and the shouting and singing by bands of young men after midnight, is to be broken up by the detail of State policemen assigned to the Pen brook station. This is one of the mat ters which Is to be given prompt at tention as many complaints have been made of people being insulted after nightfall and of the disorderly con duct of some automobile parties. The announcement that the State Police would establish a substation at the H. H. Walter farm was received with considerable relief by residents of Susquehanna and Swatara townships which have been much annoyed bv j the petty thieving and stealing of ] food with occasional house breaking, j Assurances of co-operation have i been given by the people of Paxtansj j and any arrests made of persons for i thieving In that borough will be backed up. Several men who have qualified as; sharpshooters in the United States! army are among those who have been enlisted to fill vacancies In the State | Police force In the last few days. ; Fifteen men have been enlisted since ' the first of the month and all but one has a record of good service In the army, most of the men being veterans of the cavalry service, while one was a sergeant In field artillery and an other a sergeant In the signal corps. The men secured are declared to be of a high order. The names of the men enlisted are as follows: Edward A. Trine, Cat asauqua, who by the way served twelve years in the regular army; L,ouis B. Powell, Crafton; Thomas F. Martin, Shamokin; Warren Bittinger, Musgrove; James H. Johnson, Lob-1 anon; Michael J. Dando, Minersville: Howard Confer, Ansonia: Louis A.I Benz, Philadelphia; Warren C. Dout-| rich, Reading; Peter T. Link, Mun-1 hall; Rush W. Humer. Carlisle: Jas. O. Conrad. Hewry; Stephen U. Maddo, | Newton Square; Albert F. Husbner, Harrlsburg, and George L. Syberger, Muncy. Man Held on Charge of • Libeling Dead Banketr Lancaster, Pa., July 9. On the charge that Paul G. Hartman, cashier of the Honeybrook National Bank, had defamed the memory of his predeces sor. G. L. Ramsey, who died last April, his widow. Mrs. Belle C. Ramsey, also of Honeybrook. appeared as prosecu tor yesterday afternoon at a hearing before Alderman Doebler. The charge against Hartman was criminal libel. Ramsey, prosecuted in the T'nited States District Court at Philadelphia by the Honeybrook Bank on the! charge of having embezzled $lOOl which Mrs. Catherine Witman. of | • "hurchtown, claimed she was short in I her account, was acquitted. . Later Hartman sent Mrs. Witman I check for her claim, writing on it. "For claim in full for embezzlement; held against G. L. Ramsey." At the hearing John S. Gait, the bank presi dent. produced the check and identified I the writing:. Hartman, on the stand, admitted writing it, as well as the letter in which he sent the check to Mrs. Witman. In which similar refer ence was made to Ramsey. He said he did it to keep the records clear as a sort of receipt. The direc tors had not told him to do this, he said. He admitted having attended Ramsey's trial and knew he was ac quitted. When Mrs. Witman produced Hart man's letter an additional charge of I libel by letter writing was preferred' against him. Mrs. Witman testified I she had never accused Ramsey of em bezzlement. The two cases were ■ merged and Hartman was held under bail for court. Free Jitney Ride Monday —lf You Get a Seat * Desiring to impress all with thel popularity and permanency of the I jitney, the local organization at a meeting last night decided to have a free-for-all parade. Monday afternoon ; at 2 o'clock, in which anyone who I can secure a seat in a machine will I be taken for a ride. Promptly at 2 o'clock all the jit-1 neys will pull into Market Square. Then! the scramble for seats will be on. The parade will be headed by officials of the club and will proceed up Sec ond street to Maclay to Sixth, down I town, out the Mulberry street bridge and return to the Square by way of Market street. Discharging their pas sengers the jitneys will take up an other load and continue the parade for one solid hour. Casualties in World War Total 8,770,810! Casualties in the world war exclu- 1 sive of those in the Italian army andj navy, have reached the enormous to- j tal of 8,770,810, according to compu tations contained in an appeal issued In London by the French Relief So ciety. The figures, which were com piled from official reports of losses up I to June 1, show that 2,228,300 men have been killed and 4,837.510 have been wounded. Austria Apologizes For Abusive Newspaper Attack Vienna. July 8, via London. July 9 9:04 a. m.—Formal apology has been made by the Austro-Hungarian Gov ernment to United States Ambassador Frederick C. Penfield, because of an abusive article printed in the Neues "Wiener Tagblatt attacking Presiden' Wilson and the American people in connection with the second note pro testing against German methods of submarine warfare. As a rigid censorship is exercised I over Austrian papers. Ambassador Penfield had Informally asked the Foreign Office if the article represent ed the opinion of the Austrian Gov ernment. The result was an apology and a sharp reprimand for the official censor. TYPHOID AT DILLSBURG Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa.. July 9. Tvphoid fever has again developed in" Dills burg. For the past five years Dills burg has not been entirely free from this disease for any length of time The new case is that of Miss Laura Bushey. the 12-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Bushey, of South Baltimore street. COPPERS TO MEET PBFTZFXS Members of the local baseball teams are arranging a game with the nine from the Reading force, to be played next month. A challenge received yes terday has been accepted. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JULY 9, 1915 I M DOUTRICHS JULYSHIRTSALE I IUITr To-morrow I IgilJi nliPly ll 111 I IIIIf More Than 9000 Shirts in Our I llllpil rnmrMlll 111 BIG SEMI-ANNUAL SALE j filial jI j ifjj ri Manhatten, Bates Street, Manchester, 1 jjfffEclipse, Foulton and many other makes 1 remember the sensation last year when we sold nearly 8000 shirts I at our big sale, quality and price did it. Our patrons responded so m enthusiastically and appreciated our efforts so thoroughly that we are going to outdo not K only our previous records but any sale ever held in Harrisburg. II Hundreds of our satisfied and pleased customers have expressed to I \ us their appreciation of our introduction to Harrisburg of the extra ordinary opportunity to secure the standard makes of shirts at ridiculously low prices. iLv This great special offering of handsome silk and negligee shirts in Ducetine, Soisette, Silk Front Sport Shirts, Regular Attached Collar Shirts, Work Shirts, Flannel Shirts, Boys' Shirts, Boys' Blouses, in fact everything in shirtdom at regular reduced prices. All 50e Shirts, 39c All SI.OO Shirts, 79c All $1.50 Shirts, $1.19 All $2.00 Shirts, $ 1.59 All $2.50 Shirts, $ 1.89 All $3.00 Shirts, $2.29 | All $3.50 Shirts, $2.<59 I I SPECIAL—'OIus Shirts with knee length drawer attached, that sell regularly at I $1.50, will be closed out at 59c. Come early. I Hurrah! Hurrah! Men and Boys 1 1 &S& ore an ver y P°P u l ar Sport Shirts at sale prices. I Doutrich Sport Shirts are the most sought after shirts on the market to-day, at our regular prices, but during the sale prices are cut on every shirt in the store. There \jlfill fflllf fore ' every Sl>ort shirt in the store will sold at the following prices: 1 50c Sport Shirts, 39c SI.OO Sport Shirts, 79c $1.50 Sport Shirts, $1.19 I / They consist of plain white, fancy stripe collars, blue and white stripes, black and white stripes, silk collars and assorted stripes, with both short and long sleeves—most of them with short sleeves.* I July Reductions on All 1 I Our price reductions are not so sensational as some you will see, but they have the I advantage of being absolutely truthful and apply on all new desirable merchan dise, no odds and ends or left-overs from bygone seasons are here at any price. You will receive the same careful attention, you get the same guarantee of satisfaction here at sale time as at all other times. Except Palm Beach Suits, every suit in our entire stock is reduced, blue serges and blacks included. 1 Every $12.00 Suit now $9.50 Every SIB.OO Suit now $14.50 Every $15.00 Suit now $12.50 Every $20.00 Suit now $16.50 I Every $25.00 Suit now $21.50 ALL BOYS' SUITS REDUCED I WINDOWS[ 1 TEACHERS ELECTED Special to The Telegraph , Shlppensburg, Pa.. July B.—Luyan township school directors have elected those teachers: Roxbury grammar, J. F. Swanger; Roxbury primary, Lau ra Helman; Donavln. F. A. Greena walt; Mowersvllle, O. 8. Swanger. Col. Roosevelt Lowered Standard at Annapolis Special to The Telegraph i Annapolis, Md., July 9.—Prof. H. E. Smith, head of the department of \ mathematics, who testified yesterday i that the standards of scholarship in that branch had greatly lowered in i recent years, was again on the stand i to-day at the court of inquiry. He ] cited two instances in which tne aver age necessary to attain a passing mark had been lowered. These were on June 7, 1907, when the order, he de- 1 dared, directed that the passing mark I should be 2.3 instead of 2.5, was issued i by President Roosevelt, and on Feb- 1 ruary 15, 1912, when a similar order was issued by Secretary of the -Navy Meyer lowering the mark to 2.2. According to Professor Smith, the passing mark was lowered because so many midshipmen failed to pass upon the markings given them by the aca demic board after their examinations had been taken and the atandLns • sheets forwarded to Washington for ' approval. . MURDERER OF Hllili WOMAN STIULI UNKNOWN TO POLICE ' t [ No new light was thrown on the i mystery which surrounds the murder : of uad Mrs. Ella Albright In her i . w , home. Fifteenth and Briggs strata more than a week ago by the corontff'ji Jury at the Inquest last night. The jury decided that the wornan met her death by strangulation' at tbo hands of a man unknown to the po lice whose motive was robhr>rv. Malty witnesses were heard. The police ha*» been completely baffled and are at a standstill. El #* 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers