We Pay Just Tribute to the Brave Boys in Blue, the Living and the Dead CLOSED Memorial Day THE GLOBE ■□■; TO MOVE EAS'I'LAXD By Associated Press Chicago. May 29.—The steamer East land, to-morrow will make its first first trip on Uike Michigan since tt turned over last summpr in the Chicago river, causing the death of more than SOO persons. The boat is to he towed to a shipyard in South Chicago to be rebuilt and equipped as a training ship for the Illinois naval militia. LITTLE RED SPOTS ALL OVER FACE And Chest. Got Very Big. Would Itch Something Terrible. So Bad at Times Couldn't Sleep. HEALED BYCUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT "I first noticed little red spots appear m my chin and forehead, and they got eery big and redder, and a few days later fthey spread all over my face and cheat. The ones on my face were festered and came to a head, but the ones on my chest would get hard and would be full of water. The pimples on my chest were t he worst and they would itch something terrible. They were so bad at times that I couldn't sleep. "After using about three cakes of Cuticura Soap and two and one-half boxes of Cuti cura Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Charles Christopher. 441 E. Washington St.. Rochester. Pa.. July 6, 1915. Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad- j dress post-card "Cutienra. Dept. T, Bos ton." Sold throughout the world. / \ Save Your ROSES! Myriads of Aphis (plant lice, green, red and black) are destroy ing the Roses and other flowers. They obtain their food by sucking plant Juices with their sharp, slender beaks. They cannot eat plant tissue and therefore cannot eat poisons. They must be killed by a "contact" insecticide, one that kills when it touches their bodies. "BLACK LEAF 40" Kills These Lice and is not Injurious to flowers or vegetables. Small Bottle 25c (Makes 6 Gals, of Spray) «~j lb. tin. 75c! make* -H' to 1.10 gals. 2 lb. tin, Makes ltio to <IOU gals. PRUNING SHEARS From 35c to $1.50 Keep the wild shoots cut from the base of your rose plants. FERTILIZERS For ROSES and other flowers. Wizard Brand Sheep I Manure, 5 1b5.,25c; 10 lbs., 40c; 25 lbs., 75c. Dried Blood, 10c lb; 1 0 lbs., 80c. Bone Meal 5c lb.; 10 lbs, 40c. Schell's Seed Store QUALITY SEEDS 1307-1309 Market Street v • r \ Lunch Drinks Liquid lunches of great value at our soda fountain. Eggs, milk and the richest and best flavors. Sustenance and lusciousness. | Forney's Drug Store 31 N. Second St. Suggestions and Estimates Given Free. J. M. SMITH Hard Wood Floors LAID AXD FINISHED OI.D FLOORS RENOVATED ITAIHS COVERED WITH HARDWOOD FLOORS KEPT IN CONDITION Bell Phone i 1301 M. 5219 Brooknood St. HarrUburg, P«. SANITOLI WEEK JUNE 11th , MONDAY EVENING, COUNTY TEACHERS TO BE EXAMINED August 3 and 4 Fixed For State Permanent Certificate Tests Examinations foi JLI 1. ll] I county school teachers who wish jgy to try for State per -1 manent teaching \ certificates will he held in this city 'I August 3 and 4, ac corftin S t 0 the bul rMWlfffllßl lrMn announce tijll ißMliument issued by f Prof. F. E. Sh&m ~hi I—i I baugh. county sup • erintendent. The examining: board for ; this district consists of J. T. Fox. N'ew Bloomfield, president; W. M. Kahne stock, city, secretary, and W. H. Heii t man. Cleona. Teachers who have been holding professional certificates for two years or ioner and who have certificates of good moral character and proficiency in their respective districts for at least two terms will be eligible for examin ation. Wants to Bo Lawyer. Wendell Yeager Planning, Williamstown, a graduate of Dickinson Law school and now reading in the offices of Hargest and Hargest, will undergo examina tions July 5 and 6 by the State law examining board for admission to i practice before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Auditor Mollis Session. Attorney |K. J. Schaffner, the auditor, recently j appointed by the Dauphin county court to examine the accounts and dis tribute the funds held by C. E. Jauss, administrator of the estate of Anna C. Jauss. this afternoon at 2 o'clock j heard claims in the law library of the courthouse. In Soldiers' Memory. All the city land county offices will be closed to morrow while the departmental heads and clerical staffs take the day off to observe Memorial Day. Many of the officials have planned little trips to nearby summer, resorts and cottages. Council will meet at 10 o'clock Wed nesday instead of to-morrow morning. BENNETT ROBBED OF GEMS Paris, May 29.—Gems valued at $28,000, belonging to James Gordon Bennett, have been stolen at Nice. A band of twenty men has been arrested, charged with the theft. Clears Complexion ) Don't worry about skin troubles. You can have a clear, clean complexion by using a little zemo, obtained at any druj» store for 25c. or extra large bottle at SI.OO. Zemo easily removes all traces of pimples, black heads, eczema, and ring worm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is neither watery, sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is always de pendable. Zemo, Cleveland. VICTROLAS All styles all prices. sls, $25, S4O, SSO, $75, SIOO, $l5O, S2OO. EASY TERMS Victor Records Wide Variety 312 MARKET ST. COAL PRICES WILL ADVANCE Homekeepers who delay filling their bins for next Winter will pay more for fuel. A new schedule of prices made necessary by the operators' action in raising prices is being prepared. In the meanwhile you can. buy all the coal you need at last Winter's prices. Kellev is ready to fill any order you require. H. M. KELLFY & CO. 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Street* BIG SAVING IN • PRINTING BILLS Administration Plans to Cut Down the Number of State Publications Soon Steps are being V\ \ 9 //J taken by State au iv\\\w> lCt> terially reduce the number of publica tions now being \ issued by the Com- i "tonwealth and the l i advertisement for i itylliffilJHlllE tl,e n ' xt contract ! fMaaWkStJOlfc will call for print- ' Q?' -■ ■—"J ing and binding of 1 wBMtoMMI approximately 286.- 800 books of various sizes Instead of | I 421,255, a saving of 134,655, which It is j estimated cost about $50,000 a year. ' The reduction of publications thus far has been effected through operation of the act of 1915, which provided that : at least 80 per cent of the different j allotments should be shipped singly, and the Division of Distribution of i Documents, which handled the books, j estimates in a report to the Governor I that there are now three times the I number of documents in the hands of j j individuals than under the old plan. I It is the intention of the division to prepare a schedule showing the | number of each publication distributed ' to December 1, 1916, together with the j number authorized and to provide for j further reduction of publications for i which there is no call. Authority will ! also be asked to sell publications, i thereby limiting the free distribution j to departmental and legislative offl- S olals and in the opinion of the distrib- J I tion officers bringing in revenue to the ' 1 State and meeting requests from I parties offering to purchase. It is | stated in the report to the Governor, "If free distribution were limited only |to a reasonable amount by the mem | hers of the Legislature and the depart ments the selling of the remainder would distinguish between the parties who really desire the publications and i those who request them merely be- I i cause they are deliveVed without cost." ! I Dr. James M. Esler, the chief of the 1 bureau, estimates that the distribution to single individuals has saved many l publications from going to attics or j cellars where they rested until Junk : dealers removed them. Hentlnic Today.—The hearing on the application to make the appeal to the , Superior Court a supersedeas in the I Lawrence county electric company ' , charters is being heard to-day at | Huntingdon by Judge Orlad.v, of the' Superior Court. If the supersedeas is I allowed there will be no hearing on the j i charter prospects on Wednesday. Governor to Speak.—Governor Brum baugh will leave to-morrow morning I for Mercergburg where lie will deliver j ihe Memorial Day address at the Mer- > lorsburg Academy. To Meet \\ eilueatlay. The Public Service Commission will meet Wed- j nesday in Pittsburgh to act on West ern Pennsylvania cases and to give hearings. There will be a hearing here the following Monday. For further Hearing The Public Service Commission has arranged to give a further hearing to the applica-{ ;tion of Milton Hess for a certificate' to operate a ferry near McCall's Ferry I i dam. Protest has been filed. Buller In Clilcngti.—Commissioner of 1 fisheries X. H. Buller is in Chicago on business relative to the food supplv for I the various fish hatcheries for' the , year. Aeroplanes to be t sed—Aeroplanes ! will be used in the First Brigade i maneuvers near Philadelphia. They wui be loaned by people interested. The next Legislature will be asked to I make some provision for aerial serv i ice. Lecture at Beaufort. Arrange- j ments have been made for a lecture ! l>y W. Theo. Wittman, State expert ! on poultry at Beaufort farms to morrow. -Monument Dedicated. Ma ny prominent people attended the dedi cation of the monument erected bvihe State at the site of Washington's crossing on Saturday. Ex-Representa tive Gabriel H. Moyer, of Lebanon crunt.v, was orator of the day. and righteously determined that noth -2,500 Pilgrims Voice Demand For Roosevelt Oyster Bay, N. Y„ May 29.—The call to service was heard by Colonel Roose velt yesterday under dramatic circum stances. rwenty-five hundred dusty, leg- j weary pilgrims, more than 2,000 of 1 whom came from Xew York and not I a few from far more distant places, j marched the three miles from the rail- ! road station to Sagamore Hill to voice i their demand for his leadership. They received with a great, spontaneous outburst of enthusiasm and cries of "Our next President!" the promise that he would serve his country. In his address, made from the porch of Sagamore Hill, while the march ers, massed on the lawn, gave cheer after cheer, he told of the faith that was in him and his beliefs as to the country's needs. Text of Colonel's Address 'To you, both native of this countrv and those born abroad, and above all, to you old native Americans of old I stock." Colonel Roosevelt said, in part, j "you cannot expect to get loyalty from I the immigrant or the immigrant's chil- 1 drcn unless you make this country one to which a proud man can be loyal. And to do that you have got to de mand that the country stand for cour age and for strength. Ideals of Courage "Xo man ever yet was loyal to a coward. Xo man ever yet was loyal to a weakling whose weakness was due to the fact that he would not take the pains and undergo the effort necessary to be strong. If we as a nation do not put our ideals, including the ideals of < ourage and strength; and if we do not put to use our immense national resources—in other words, if we allow timidity and wilful weakness to be come attributes, unless we make up our minds, we shall not command the loyalty of those who come to our shores. "When we were menaced with trouble I acted up to my theorv that the proper way of handling inter national relations was by speaking softly and carrying a big stick. And in that particular case Dewey and the American fleet represented' the big stick. "The way to get peace is not being so unprepared as to invite war. still less by using words which are not translated into deeds, but by behaving with scupulous justice and courtesy toward the other nations, and at the same time being so prepared both in soul and in body, both spiritually and materially, to make it evident that in sult to this nation by any other nation will not be tolerated by our people." TWO WOMEN'S >1 KKTINfiS By Associated Press Chicago, May 29.—There will be two conferences of women here during the Republican National Convention the second gathering being announced to day in a letter from Mrs. Carrie Chap man Catt, president of the National American Women Suffrage Association calling for a meeting of the organiza tion on June 6-7 In a local theater. The Woman's Party Convention will be held June o, 6 and 7* HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH IW hen I Took! Over the Ledger J| g pi a little more than three years ago I found it antiquated in equipment—lß-year-old presses good, but out of date; typesetting machinery and everything else, old, |||| worn and cheap —to get out a cheap newspaper. B pSi The best men in journalistic lines declined to work 8 for it, because they couldn't afford to work for what it KB could afford to pay. ||jj I have been spending money for three years to make th e Public Ledger superior to any newspaper ever published in Philadelpnia, or anywhere else, I have spent money not only for new, efficient and up-to-date machinery, but also for Drams —for the best men who know how to make the vest newspaper. |||j W~ith what result ? Ej|| The Ledger, when I took it over, had an actual net sale of about 45,000 copies daily, at one cent a copy. I raised the price to two cents for a better paper, and we have gradually grown up to 60,000 copies daily, at two cents a copy. Newspaper men said to me: "Curtis, you can't do it. With all other Philadelphia morning papers at one cent a copy, you never can 'put over' a two-cent proposi tion, no matter how good you make your paper. Pennsylvania people are satisfied with what they have. 11 ■ Bh| But I have put it over! ■ ~ " ■ H m The Public Ledger has a much larger circulation at itwo cents a copy' than the old Ledger had at one cent, and with the Evening Edition I am putting out 180,000 copies a day —and trying to find room in the old Ledger building to put in more presses to take care of a growing circulation! Jill To every business man of Pennsylvania the Public |B| Ledger has a special appeal in its Financial and Business Section. Our own industries particularly are reported in detail Try the Public Ledger for six months . Read it long k| enough to get that "fixed habit" for the Ledger. Don't stay satisfied until you know there is "something better' 1 . Try the Ledger to find out —then accept it or discard it. Only a trial can settle the matter for you —that's all I ask. Ij I The Public Ledger I Philadelphia, Pa. MAY 29, 1916. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers