20 ASTRICH'S ( I ve ® un<^ ew Trimmed Summer Hats I For Saturday's Selling The Most Remarkable Values You Have Ever Seen $2.98, $3.98 and $4.98 Leghorn Hats—Fancy Tuscan Hats—Hairbraid Hats—Tailored Hats— White Hemp Hats; also French Room Models reduced to $3.98 & $4.98 WE WANT YOU TO SEE THESE HATS __________ WILSON TALKS ON RESPONSIBILITIES [Continued Eruni Eirst Pago.] flay, declaring that great responsibili ties rest on naval officers of the United 6'tates. He had not planned to speak, but said he felt a particular interest in t :iis year's class because it saw him "get into trouble'.' at his inauguration ; three years ago. The President declared that he rained a liberal education in the White House. He said that discipline in the' academy must be strict because "you i-re more than collage boys; you are Officers of the United States," and ! i.ny laxity of duty cannot be over- j looked. There might come a time, he ; t-dued, when a laxity in duty might I change the world's history. . "What I want to say to you young gentlemen is this: 1 can illustrate it j in this way: Once in a while when youngsters here or at West Point have | forgotten themselves and done some- i thing that they ought not to do and! were about to bo disciplined, perhaps, j severely tor it, 1 have been appealed to by their friends to excuse them ! Irom the penalty. Knowing that I have | spent most of n>y life at a college, they I commonly nay to me 'You know col- I lege boys. You know what they are. ! They are heedless youngsters, very ! often, and they ought not to be held \ tip to the same standards of respon i.ihilit.v that older men must submit lo.' And I have always replied. 'Yes, 3 know college boys, but while these youngsters are college boys, they are something more. They are officers of the United States. They are nut merely « ollege boys. If they were, I would 1 )ol< at derelictions of duty on their 1 nrt in another spirit: but yiy dere liction on duty on the part of the r-aval officer of the Untied States may involve ihe fortunes of a nation and i..nnot be overlooked.' Do Not forget Duty "Do you not see tjie difference? Toil cannot indulge yj.trselves in *«.nk ftess's gentlemen. Tou cannot forget I'out il ity f< r a moment, because there migl't ion).; a time when that weak rpot in you should affect you in the Midst of a great engagement and then i the whole history of the world might JAN ORGAN FREEI | Tomorrow Morning to Each of the First I I Four Persons Entering Our Doors After I I Opening at 8 O'clock I We have a lot of organs which we do not care to carry longer in stock. Rather than destroy them or sell them at a song to sec | ond-hand dealers, we will give them away as an advertisement I for the store. To each of the first four persons entering our doors after opening at 8 o'clock Saturday, morning, we will give one of these organs Absolutely Free—No Restrictions ■ \ & g We Have the Greatest | g Talking Machine Club Bp* 11 | g Plan of All ■ | Your choice of Columbian Grafonolas or milfflti!! li in p H Star Talking Machines, from sls to $350, gk| D g will be delivered to your home upon pay- | □ ment for $5 to $lO worth of records, de- | RU 9 pendent upon style of machine selected. [) While Here, Be Sure to Inspect Our Line of- Celebrated Pianos and Player-Pianos including such well-known makes as Henry F. Miller—Decker & Son—Behr Bros.—Behning— Sterling—Huntington—Radle—Schenke and Others. Sold 011 small initial payment and easy monthly instalments Spangler's Music House 1 2112 N. Sixth Street Open Evenings $75 to SIOO on a Piano or Player HBESfiSHfIHHHH FRIDAY EVENING, | he changed by what you did not do j or did wrong." Prior to the President's address and the presentation of the diplomas the ' graduates were addressed by Secretary of the Navy Daniels. The President personally gave each i of the ITS graduate his diploma and ; shook hands with them, extending warm congratulation.-:. He praised the ten ranking members of i the class. The President and Mrs. Wilson wit ■ nessed the celebration of the lower classmen with interest. He laughed as they ran from the hall and marched ringing and yelling about the grounds. Rwcivcd With Military Honors The President arrived off the acad . emy early in the morning aboard the Mayflower, remaining about the yacht i until a few minutes before the grad | nation ceremonies began. He was re i ceived with full military honors when I he came ashore, accompanied by Mrs. ! Wilson. After according him honors j the regiment of midshipmen entered 11he hall and formed in two long lines, j between which he walked to the speak | er's platform, accompanied by Super j intendent Eberle and the latter's staff. On the stand with the speakers were I Governor Hcrrlnifton. of Maryland, i several members of the board of vls ! itors. including Senators Phelan, Poin | dexter and Tillman I After th" graduation ceremonies were over the President, accompanied 1 by Mrs. Wilson, went for a short auto mobile run through the academy and about the roadways on the big govern ment reservation. He lunched with Superintendent Eberle and later in the afternoon will return to Washington, making the trip by automobile. Daniels Addresses Men Secretary Daniels welcomed the graduating class with an address counselling a steady continuance on their part of the training and studies begun at Annapolis in order that the navy, dependent upon their knowledge for efficient expansion and co-opera , tion might remain equipped and pre pared always for any emergency. The Secretary told the graduates they were coming into the navy at the period of its largest expansion, its highest efficiency and when lessons from Europe point directly to the i need of trained men in war if human ' life Is to be spared from the killing I of men unprepared anil unskilled in I the science of militarism. "The training that produces skill | and efficiency," said the Secretary, | "should be encouraged among naval : officers after they are graduated if I that navy is to profit by their services. "Another lesson of the war and one needed in America," he continued, "is that industrial preparedness must fro hand in hand with building battle ; cruisers anil other naval craft and se i curing more trained officers and men. : Most of the great nations had but ! dimly understood that ability to quickly mobilize the resources and convert industrial plants into munition factories was as important as to mo bilize men." Secretary Daniels paid high tribute i to the naval consulting board which, he said, already had undertaken the pioneer work of Industrial prepared | ness in the United States and would 1 soon provide the army and navy with i this essential feature. WOODFORD CI..W BREEDER I OE THOROUGHBREDS, IS DEAD By .Associated Press Louisville, Ky., June 2.—The death of Woodford flay. 43, of Paris, Ky., breeder of thoroughbreds and widely j known among turfmen, was announced j to-day. He died at a hotel here last night after having been stricken with I apoplexy. He had raised and raced a number ( of horses which had gained distinction on American and foreign tracks. Among them were Roanier. which Is I entered to-morrow in the Kentucky handicap at Douglas Patk, l.ouisvllle. Most of the thoroughbreds raised and i raced by Mr. ("lay were of the famous sires Hindoo. Sir Dixon or Star Shoot. BVKIAI.O STRIKERS RACK Hv Associated Press Buffalo, N. V., June 2. The mem bers of the Buffalo longshoremen's local, who Struck Wednesday for high er wastes. returned to work to-day. William J. Conners, a leadins employ er, announced that n voluntary ad ' vance of five cents an hour for day work and ti 2-3 an hour nfKht work would be wanted to take effect at i once. H ARRISBURG S&S& TELEGRAPH PARK EXTENSION OPINION DOWN Late Jottings About Activities in Capitol Hill Offices Ways for the Capitol Park Exten sion Commission to make disburse ments in payment lor properties are outlined in an opinion Riven to the commission to-day by Deputy Attor ney General Joseph I-». Kun, to whom certain questions wtre referred. Mr. Kun says that the commission should receive written authorization that the amount of awards should be used for payment of mortgages or taxes where such matters exist. In. case the agreement cannot be made or there is a dispute regarding liens, it will be the duty of Auditor General to draw a warrant for the amount of the award on the State Treasurer, who will make payment into court, and distri bution follow In proper form. The commission may secure affi davits to satisfy itself as to persons to whom payments should be made. It is said that one of the speeches presenting the name of the Governor at Chicago will be delivered by Deputy Attorne.s General Emerson Collins. Congressman \V. S. Vare is also ex pected to speak. J. Linn Harris, of Rellefonte, Re publican state committeeman from (.'enter county, was at the Capitol to day. The Public Service Commission to day received word that the Pennsyl vania Railroad Company would con sider the complaints about Pennsyl vania and Reading trains not being ar ranged so as ;o afford convenient con nections here when the new schedules are made up. The complaint came too late for the May 28 schedule. Governor Brumbaugh has approved the merger of the Bucks County and Do.vlestown Electric Companies into the Pennsylvania-New Jersey Power and Light Company with a capital of SIOO,OOO. Sydney L Wright, Phila delphia, is the president of the merged company and Gaylord Thompson, Trenton, vice-president. The State Forestry Commission was to-day offered a tract of 8,800 acres in T.uzerne county for inclusion in the State auxiliary forest reserves. Next to a tract in Forest county, this is the largest property offered for the auxiliaries. John J. Curley, of Philadelphia, treasurer of the Liebel compaign com mittee, to-day tiled an expense ac count showing; receipts of $3,850 from Michael Llebel, Jr., of Erie, candidate for Democratic national committee man, and expenditures of $8,831.44. F. J. Lenahan, candidate for alternate at-large, certified to expending SI,OOO and statements of less than SSO spent were made by John Jay McDevltt, Dallas Bumbaugh, W. J. Burke and George T. Weingartner. Daniel Young, Jr., was to-day ap pointed alderman of the 21st ward, Scranton. W. E. Malr, lieutenant of State Po lice, was to-day appointed captain and assigned to command Troop D suc ceeding Thomas M. Weichard, cap tain, who resigned after ten years' service with the State police. Governor Brumbaugh to-day ap pointed Dr. Edgar M. Green, of Eas ton. a. member of the advisory board of the State Department of Health, to succeed the late Dr. G. W. Guthrie, of Wilkes-Barre. The Attorney General's Department to-day brought suit against heirs of Ephralm Porter, of Mercer county, for $1,775, representing accumulated fines for failure to remove a building de clared a menace by the State fire marshal. The building is located at Jamestown and notices to remove were ignored. Thirty-one complaints against jit neys operating in Scranton were filed to-day by the Scranton Railways Company, making eighty-six com plained of as violating the Public Service Company law in county. Tf.e commission to-day set. June 13 at Wilkes-Barre, as the time lor hearing argument and testimony on Luzerne county jitney cases of which there are 238 pending. The White Silica Sand Co., of St. Mary's, to-day complained that the Pittsburgh, Shawmut and Northern Railway had discontinued its pas senger service from St. Mary's to Sands, thereby depriving its men of the only means of transportation. The State Fire Marshal's office to day received word that in investiga tion of a fire at Altoona in the home of Joseph Stein, it was found that Philip Stein, aged 4. had caused the blaze. The boy confessed, according to the State authorities, that when he was refused permission to go some place he got angry and set fire to a curtain. Sheet Metal Company Locates in This City The Eastern Sheet Metals Company Inc.. of this city, with a capital stock of $50,000, has been incorporated to engage in a general sheet metal job bing business. Recognizing Harrisburg's advant ages as a distributing center, the new concern, through Miller Bros. & Co., has taken over the property of the Rumley Products Company, South Second street, with a siding on the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and will open a large warehouse here. The Rumley building is a three stcry structure, 55 by 75 feet, and Is admirable situated for distributing purposes. C. E. Jones, of Camp Hill, is gen eral manager of the new concern which will buy sheet metal products in the Pittsburgh district and distribute them through the east. Four sales-' men and a large office force will be employed here. AI) PACKARD WRECK Bridge I'ndermlnetl The wreck was due to high water which had so undermined the bridge supporters that when the train struck the bridge, the entire structure col lapsed. The engine plunged into the creek, carrying with It the baggage car. smoker and day coach. When the train turned over many of the passengers smashed the windows of the coaches and crawled onto the [sides of the cars where they remained ' until taken off by rescuers in boats. The sleeping cars remained on the ! track and the passengers aided in the work of rescue. i The wrecked train is the Chicago, 1 Uock Island and Pacific's fast night ! train between Chicago and Minneapo- | IIS - RIOACH IRISH Si;TTI,KMEXT London, .lune 2. The Evening Standard makes tho statement that a basis of agreement has been arrived at for settlement of the Irish question and that the proposed Irish parlia ment will he set up Immediately Ulster being excluded. The parliament, this newspaper says, will be made up of the present Irish representatives in the British parliament. 81 Vi CENTS FOR COPPRR t'ltjr t'iiniml*jitonpr 11. K, llmvmnn Sell* 1.750 Pound* of If nt n ,\lrr l'rlep i Twenty-one and half cents per , iiounil was offered yesterday to City i <'nmmissioner 11. F. Bowman for the i l.'fiii pounds of t opper the Superinten dent «f Public Safety had advertised I for sale. The successful bidder was tlie , Keystone Iron and Metal Company, and I Commissioner Bowman wll recommend that its o;tter be accepted. JOVIAN LEAGUE IS FORMED HERE P. H. Bailey, Electric Co. Man ager. Chosen Tribune; Noted Engineers Enrolled P. H. BAILEY Tribune of Jovian League Harrisburg league of the Order of Jove, comprising electrical engineers and others interested professionally in electrical work, was formally organiz ed last evening at a big dinner in the Board of Trade. Pressley H. Bailey, commercial manager of the Harrisburg Light and power company was elected president and "tribune" of the newly rejuven ated league. Other officers will be chosen at the first wekly luncheon to be held in the near future, a committee of arrange ments for which will be named by Tribune Bailey within a few days. J. C. VogeT, Philadelphia, states man-at-large of the order and one of the leading candidates for the job of ; Great Jupiter, the supreme national I head of the organization, came here from Philadelphia with the degree team of twelve men from the Phila delphia league and initiated the 22 | new candidates to the Harrlsburg I body. Harrisburg lias boasted of some 20 Jovtans for several years, many of them high in executive positions in the State service or public utility corpor ations, but last evening's preliminary was the first step toward establishing a league in the Pennsylvania capital. Among the resident members are: John Price Jackson, State Bureau of Labor and Industry: P. H. Bailey, Carl M. Kaltwasser, Harrisburg bight and Power Company, and George B. Tripp, I'nlted Gas and Electric engi neering corporation: Samuel M. Bair, Geo. L. Blicker, Charles Albert Carl, M. B. Doughten, Theodore Gould, Er vin W. Howard, Archibald B. Millar, John S. Musser, Horace B. Pratt, Mau rice Russ, Ernest T. Selig, L. A. W. Shoaff, Dr. F. Herbert Snow, R. R, Jones and Frank S. Kirk. The new members initiated last evening included the following: Har ry F. Hope, Shirley B. Watts, Carey E. Williams, Bell Telephone Company; E. A. Blumenstlne, Frank Hoffman, State Board Public Grounds and Build ings: W. Henry Bates, L. L. Ferree, H. Denny Ogelsby, J. Harry Boyer, Chas. K. Steinmetz, Clarence B. Lober, Har rishurg Light and Power Company; City Electrician C. E. Diehl, County Commissioner Henry M. Stine, Joseph Lodge, United Telephone and Tele graph Company; James Cox Thomp son. Valley Railways; Edward C. Smith, Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company; Joseph Weather by, Electric Ore Separator Company; T. E. Seeley and F. W. Fleming, Jr., Gannett and Seeley Consulting Engi neering firm; C. A. Markley, D. L. Dowhouer, J. S. Montgomery and H. M. Weidenmeyer. TO EXAMINE REGISTRARS Applicant* For Registration .loll* Mn*t Cnderfto Tests, County Com missioner* Say Candidates for the positions of regis trations officers to serve this Fall, will be required to take the examinations as to age. residence and qualifications, etc., as required by law, according to a de cision to-day of the County Commis sioners. The Commissioners are eager to have the registration books kept hereafter in such shape as will raise no question as to eligibility and so on. June 15, 10S registrars will be ap pointed, and June 5 is the last dav up on which applications can be received. To date 114 candidates have filed re quests for the jobs. NEW RATE FOR "ADS." The County Commissioners to-dav fixed five cents per line as the rate for publishing In county newspapers of the quarterly Court Proclamations. Notice to this effect was sent out to twenty one papers of the county to-day. EXCESSIVE MEAT EATING ' Most people who are troubled with flatulency eat more meat than is good for them. Flatulency is wind on the stomach. Excessive meat eating or de fective nerve force is responsible in most cases. Cutting down the amount of meat in your diet and taking a course of treat ment with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to strengthen the weak nerves that control the digestive processes is well worth trying if you have wind on thestomach, sour risings in the throat, a feeling of weakness in the stomach and palpita tion of the heart. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are recommended for thin blood and weak nerves, whatever the cause. Send today to the Dr. Williams Medi cine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., for the diet book "What to Eat and How to Eat." It gives information regarding the tonic treatment for many forms of stomach trouble. There cannot be perfect digestion without a sufficient supply of red blood and there is noth ing better than Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to enrich the blood and tone up the stomach. Your own druggistftflls Dr. Williams* Pink Pills or they will be mailed, post paid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per DOX, six boxes $2.50, by the Dr. Wil liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. IM ON EYI sls AND UPWARDS Fur Housekeepers aad Salaried People IVo red tape, bother or worry. Yon may have the eanli 10-day If you wish. LGUAI. HATES. lJeenned l»y Ihe State Bonded to the State EQUITABLE INVESTMENT COMPANY 10 If. MARKET SUC ARB Room !il 4th Floor Bell Phone IMJ-R JUNE 2, 1916. Every Family This Splendid Remedy Compound of Simple Laxative Herbs Recommended For Constipation. When a remedy has stood the test of critical analysis and strong com petition for over a quarter of a cen tury and establishes itself as the indis pensable household remedy in thou sands of homes, it is pretty good evi dence of its efficacy. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has been on the market since 1889, its use being gradually extended until now it is generally regarded by druggists as the staple family laxative. It is a combination of simple laxative herbs, free from opiates or narcotic drugs, gentle In Us action and positive In ef fect. It costs only fifty cents a bot tle and can bo purchased in drug stores everywhere. Mr. Frank Kllma, of 2309 Ashland Ave., Baltimore, Md., wrote Dr. Cald well recently that he had tried about everything without being helped until he got a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which he considers the great est known remedy for indigestion, constipation and stomach troubles. Railroads and Managers Holding Public Meetings By Associated Press New York, June 2.—Preliminaries still occupied the railroad managers and the representatives of their con ductors, enginemen, firemen and train men at to-day's meeting. For the first time in the history of their labor con troversies the railroad leaders and their men are trying to settle their dis putes in public. Both sides have agreed that an open conference will give the public a chance to form its own opinion of the merits of the ques tions under consideration. Elisha Lee, of the Pennsylvania Railroad, is spokesman for the man agers, and A. B. Garretson, grand chief of the Order of Railway Con ductors, acts In the same capacity for the men. There is r.o time limit to the conferences. Meetings will be held each morning at 10 o'clock. Some of the conferees believe that they will not finish their work for two or three weeks. Declares Newspaper Best Medium For Securing Help By Associated Press Pittsburgh, Pa., June 22. The daily newspaper is the best medium for securing employes according to a report made by F. P. Pitzer, of New York, at the session yesterday of the fctirth annual convention of the Na tional Association of Corporation Schools "It is said that in the cities tbe morning newspapers reach the higher grade help for office positions and the evening papers reach (he mechanics and manual workers,' the report says. "A new channel to obtain employes is opening through the magazines and especially trade publications. Where quick results are desired, the maga zine may be too slow." STOP BEFORE THEY INSPECT Just after the automobile containing the County Commissioners' official bridge inspection party had rolled over the inter-county bridge across the Oonewago creek, at Ressler's Mills, in lAindonuerr." township, yesterday, the commissioners looked back at the structure—and promptly decided that never again will they inspect a bridge AFTER they've crossed it. The viaduct trembled and shook as the car crossed it and an examination showed it to be in such shape as to make it danger ous. Nineteen bridges in all were in spected. The Commissioners to-day decided to let the Steelton Transfer Company make the necessary earthen "fill" for the ap proaches to the Ninetenth street bridge. FOR SALE Property Cor. South and Myrtle Avenue 26x107. Fine site for erection of a garage. Inquire DAUPHIN DEPOSIT TRUST CO. ————————^——i—————— „ m t .yyyyyfyyyyyyyyyyyfy TT" T T T ▼ ► < ► Front Street Property < ► For Sale « K One hundred feet north of Seneca Street with 100- < K foot frontage and 185-foot depth; extends 100 feet < [ along 12-foot alley in rear; paving and 40 feet of < ► riparian rights; old trees well preserved and well ► spaced. Two houses in rear will take care of taxes ► until purchaser is ready to build. Make application < K through broker or direct to < ; BOWMAN & COMPANY : WATAD Wc have just issued a valuable Market ITiU luK Letter and Supplement on the motor FMFMT stocks which have made such a sen- JUI rLLI'ILII I national advance in the past ten days. Full detail* ore given about CHEVROLET SAXON UNITED MOTORS PEERLESS Our Market Letter dated May 26th. mentions several new mining and industrial issues, notably ACME TEA NEW YORK AND ALA SKA-WESTOVER HONDURAS MINING FLEMISH-LYNN DUNDER-ARIZONA COPPER The same letter contains valuable information on such standard favor ites as MIDVALE MAXIM SUBMARINE BOAT MAGMA KENNECOTT CERRO DE PASCO IRON BLOSSOM TONOPAH BELMONT TONOPAH EXT. (13th annual report) (Annual report) MO.IAVE TUNGSTEN CALEDONIA YELLOW PINE Copies of our Motor Supplement and Weekly Market Letter will be found invaluable to Investors and speculators alike. They will be sent free upon request. Howard A. Riley & Co. I.nnd Title Building, Philadelphia Telephone*! Spruce 4410 3D Hrwad St. Hai-e 130 New York Ml{. FRANK KT.IMA^ Get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin from your druggist and keep it in the house. A trial bottle, free of charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 454 Washing ton St., MonticeMo, 111. 11.0(10 LONGSHOREMEN ARE OUT ALONG PACIFIC' COAST San Francisco, June 2. Statements made to-day by representatives of the striking Pacific coast longshoremen and of their employers Indicated that a "reasonable period' which the water front employers' union announced would be given the men in which to return to work, would terminate Mon day morning. Meantime it was expected that there would be a series of conferences In an endeavor to adjust the differences. Officials of the longshoremen's organi zation reiterated assertions that a ; compromise offered by the employers would not. be accepted. Three com i panies have acceded to the strikers' i demands. From Puget Sound to San Diego the first day of the strike passed | without trouble of any kind being re i ported. According to union officials, j 11,000 men are on strike. CLASSSFBED BUSINESS DIRECTORY THINGS YOU WANT AND WIIEHG TO GET THEM Artificial l.luihs and Trusses Braces for all deformities, abdominal supporters. Capital City Art. Limb Co.. 412 Market St. Bell Phone. French Cleaning anil Dyeing , Goodman's, tailoring and repairing, all guaranteed. Call and deliver. Bell phone 32K8, 130616 N. Sixth St " t>'tre Insurance and Ileal Ealale ! JR. Gipple —Fire Insurance—Real tate —Rent Collecting. 1251 Market St, Bell Phone^ Phntoffrapncr Daughten Studios—Portrait and Com mercial Photography. 210 N. Third St. Bell 3583. ' Tailors ! George F. Shope Hill Tailor, 1141 Mar ket. Spring goods are now ready. Tailoring, Cleaning. Pressing. Ladle* work a specialty. Steve Wugrene? 207 Locust. Slgna and Enamel Letter* Poulton. 307 Market street. Bell phona. Prompt and efficient service. Upholsterer—Furniture Hcpalrer Simon N. Cluck, 320-326 Woodbine St. i Bell phone 1317 J.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers