ANY CLOTHING STOKE Can Sell You a Suit of Clothes But this is the only store in Harrisburg that can sell you Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes / and when you buy these garments you get the Best made in America. At regular prices they are BIG values but now while the balance of our summer stock is on sale you get the ADDED BENEFIT of heavy reductions. A great many of these suits are medium weights, suit able for all year round wear. Blues and black are included in the sale. Note these Prices on Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes. $13.50, sls, $16.50, $18.50 formerly priced at $lB to S3O All Clothcraft guaranteed suits, formerly priced at sls, $lB and S2O, are now priced uniformly at SIO.OO H. MARKS & SON The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Fourth and Market Streets • S-V.V-V-V.-.V.W.-.V.V^VVVWVW^.VWJSV.SS\\VII Do These Keys /s\ i Belong on Your ft?s\ } i Chain? They Un- \ j lock the Door of ij :• Business Success. § $ Accuracy, Speed, Neat- 111 II j \ |||! J ness, Thoroughness, fojl HI Ills |J ,■ Shorthand, Bookkeep- _J|Ef UJ Vj|) Ij $ ing, Penmanship, Law, STm ™ Ji j| Typewriting, Arithmetic, ]! Spelling, etc. «| 5 "If you don't know where you're going, you're a fool," says !' J Billy Sunday, and he adds that preparation is the only thing I; 5 that will enable you to reach your goal. \ I; i In temporal things preparation is just as essential as in J« i things spiritual. The boy or girl who expects to succeed must I 1 ibe prepared for success—if your boy and girl arc to do any but ![ j the commonest things in life, you must so equip them as to ![ make better things possible. I; £ THINK IT OVER. Our new classes will be organized j' j! MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. Ambitious, earnest students are I 1 invited to join us. It is our business to put into the hands of !| 5» young people the keys that open the door to business success. !; i * j! ji School of Commerce } I ifro)) 15 So. Market Square f ;■ Harrisburg, Pa. j f 455 Bell. 240-Y Comb. Volley. tfieSmbM S t®rxacntSd*xi Send for free Catalog. ' !®r,c*n< Schodf CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BACKS CITY PLANNERS [Continued From First Pago] involve the city in continuous embar rassment respecting such structures, and, "Whereas, The City Planning Com mission in the performance of its offi cial duty has given full consideration to this matter and presented to the City Council its remonstrancet said Commission having been delegated with powers designed to safeguard the aesthetic features of the city's de velopment against invasion by in dividuals and corporations as well as to further in every way the welfare of the community in the planning of business and residential sections, and, "Whereas. The comprehensive labors of the Planning Commission contem plate the future growth of the city in every direction, it is the opinion of the Chamber of Commerce commit tee that this commission should have the fullest co-operation of the im portant interests represented by the Chamber of Commerce and that the grant for the erection of an overhead bridge in Seventh street was author ized without full consideration of its serious consequences and contrary to law. "Therefore, Be It Resolved, That the City Council be respectfully re quested to rescind its authorization in the light of all the facts and in the event of no reconsideration such legal action be taken as will fully test the right of an individual or corporation CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought FRIDAY EVENING, to erect such a structure across any highway of the city. This committee appreciates the importance of con serving the local commercial and in dustrial interests, but it also appre ciates the enormous value of planning for the future of a city growing so rapidly as Harrisburg, and in view of the serious results of indiscriminate building of overhead bridges and pri vate conveniences on public highways, legal action at this time is believed to be the only proper course to pursue to determine once for all the rights of the city in the premises should City Council refuse to rescind its permit." „ FIVE MORE DIE Washington, Sept. 1. Five addi tional names have been added to the list of known dead in the disaster to the armored cruiser Memphis at San Domingo City, bringing the probable death list up to seventy-one. Over night advices from Rear Admiral Pond to the Navy Department said three of the crew of the gunboat Castine had been lost with the ship's launch and that two of the men injured aboard the Memphis when the main steam pipe burst, had died. WARN DEALERS NOT TO PRICES UNFAIRLY In case of a railroad strike, Mayor Meals to-day warned all local food dealers that exorbitant prices of com modities which are not really scarce, will not be tolerated, and that he is planning to confer with City Solicitor D. S. Seitz, on the advisability of re voking licenses in case this warning is violated. Bears the /f TYPHOID FOUND W ICE CREAM [Continued From First Page] Hflrnlh l n the SU PP!V arrived in ■ _ show that some ice cream raSfi ? Y, e *} p emely dirty, but in some them' K i! ° J disease germs, most of them believed to be typhoid. Special Board Meeting r»^, Spe n ial m ? et 'ng of the health bu or tr* ™ Probably be held to-niglit prelenTthw' - T hC ? Dr " Raunick also !? Cl ? of th 6 situation and «nr*n«? IfL S best course to Stop the spread of the disease. * n , ev ery ice cream test taken with founS^^ PtionS ' d ' sease germs were round in large numbers, and in some instances Dr. Moifltt reported that no estimate could l,e made of the amount" ter MneeJ ?r test s per cubic centime with m ? ne to four millions, thnnboUh 0r , two tests in the hundred thousandi column, indicating unsani cm cream. «ii £*s*7 cases were reported to-day, fck 2m : L S ; atter ?l' and Dr " Raun -ICK said he is positive ice cream was the cause. That more cases will be K n'r da ! , L for at least two weeks, is Dr. Raunick s opinion. _ May Close Plants thJt £» health officer announced Cifv c®„;.f Pla " nil ls R conference with o y shut int° r »■ , S ", Seitz - w 'th a view to shutting oft Infected cream sun cilsUate ge th« al 'i al J d that thls nla >' ,le " ,. e ® s ' tate ' the closing of some of the ,n «>•«,; Forty-six cases of typhoid fever Kh re & e< L' aSt m ? nth ' w 'th one " fV, This ls one of the hiirhpst ease in y th«° r >!f t° f oases of this dis " ease in the history of the bureau Last year 9 3 cases were recorded scat oof throughout the entire year. For fift >earS prior to 1915 'ess than months W6re re P° rted each twelve, Reports Below Standard Arrangements are being made with Cumberland county health authorities and r c°rMi he f !ntire , d . ty supply of milk and cream from dairies in that sec h£?', f 4 ug , ust milk reports In a num have been faj " below standard according to Officer Raunick and a number of prosecutions will fol a week . he stated The-manufacturer whose tee cream n ster " lzat ' on of all equip of h Jhi, P .L ant , » nder the direction tn J*®* 111 * authorities, and reopeneu to-da>. He changed his milk supply and new tests are to be made of the Ice cream manufactured, according to Dr. *vJxunicK. Three typhoid suspects were admit ted to the Harrisburg hospital this morning. They were Mrs. John Kaiser, aged 56, of Enola; Mrs. Ross Dare, 1417 North Third street, and Frank Rupp, 506 North street. Ice cream dealers are greatly wor ried. One prominent maker said that the publicity given had injured his business greatly and he insisted that no typhoid had ever been traced to his ice cream. He says whatever fault there is lies with the dairymen and milk shippers. He sends milk to Nev 1 oik city and says that regularly the health authorities of New York State send inspectors here to inspect his sources of supply. He believes that constant State supervision of all creameries and dairies is the solution oi the trouble here. Dealers are bid ding for milk supply and if thev com- Plain too often of dairy conditions the milk producer simply stops delivering and sells to a less careful customer. NEW DAUPHIN PARALYSIS CASE One new case of infantile paralysis was reported to the State Health De partment from Dauphin county. The victim is Miles Willard, aged R son of Burton Willard, of Willlamstown. A positive diagnosis of the case was made yesterday. No new cases of the disease were reported in this city PARALYSIS IN CREASES New lork Fept. 1. The number of ? infantile paralysis report ed for the twenty-four hours ending at Bi \ owet l another Increase «a" ■ against sixty yesterday— but officials of the health depuartment Thi niH r , feelln S. of certainty thai P f '"i 1 " wane. Their con w.Jv K a r sed , on averages, that foi TVif beln f lower than last week's. The number of deaths to-day was six teen, compared with twenty-one report ed yesterday. " HAKRISBURG tfißk TELEGRAPH UWS WILL PASS IN TIME TO STOP STRIKE [Continued From First Page] j The President nlmself went to the I Capitol soon after 9 o'clock this morn i ing to hurry things along. | The Senate Interstate Commerce 'Committee got to work early on its ! bill for an eight-hour day and an in vestigating commission. I In the House the Rules Committee i assembled to report a special rule and j have it ready for the House when it meets at 11 o'clock, providing for a vote on the Adamson bill not later than 4:30 o'clock this afternoon. The Adamson bill has been approved by the President and the heads of the I railway brotherhoods have said that its passage by 'both Houses of Con gress will be considered a satisfactory settlement. Railway Heads Do Nothing The railway heads, having voiced | their protest against the legislation, : did nothing to-day awaiting its out come. Barring unforeseen complications it seemed assured to-day that Congress would act finally before Saturday night and in time for the brotherhood heads to call off the strike set for 7 o'clock Monday morning. When the Senate convened, a recess was almost immediately taken until I I p. m. to permit the Interstate Com ] merce Committee to continue its work of drafting the strike prevention leg islation and to permit Republican I members to confer on the proposed bills. President Wilson spent almost an hour conferring with Democratic members and then returned to the White House. Keeping Threads Together Definite abandonment of the plan to attach the railroad strike legislation to the pending bill to enlarge the Interstate Commerce Commission was agreed by the Senate Committee. The President explained his pres ence at the Capitol by saying: "I am Just keeping the threads to gether." Majority Leader Kern said after the President's visit that the Democrats would concentrate on the eight-hour bill and put over the rest of the rail road legislation until next week- Many Democrats felt there would be little disposition among the Republi cans to filibuster against the eight hour bill in view of the present situa tion. The Senate committee determined i there was too much opposition to the 'lnterstate Commerce Commission en ; largement bill to risk attaching it to , the emergency legislation. Consider Freight Increase I As the bill stood this morning the I Senate committee had agreed that the new commission should consider an I increase in freight rates to meet such additional expenditures by the rail roads affected as may have been ren j dered necessary by the adoption of I the eight-hour day and tvhich have not been offset by administrative re adjustments and economics, should the facts disclosed justify the increase." Some members were seriously in clined to- the belief that such definite direction regarding the rate question would provoke opposition in the 13en ate from Progressive Republicans particularly, which would make quick passage of the bill impossible. Senator Newlands said the commit tee also was considering including a provision to empower the Interstate Commerce Commission to fix the schedule of wages upon railroads. "We will have to do this some time and might as well do it now," he said. He alfco was inclined to urge the com mittee to include in the eight-hour bill some features of the proposed amendment to the arbitration act which would prevent future strikes during investigation. There seemed to be little prospect that the committee would agree to that because of the certainty that it provoke opposition. President Wilson, it was said, had be come convinced that the only thing that could be done at once was the passage of the eight-hour bill and had urged that the Senate bill adhere as closely as possible to the Adamson bill in the House. As agreed upon to-day the Senate bill would make the eight-hour basic day effective January 1, 1917, and ap ply to railroads of one hundred miles or more In length, exempting electric street and electric interurban rail ways. By 1 o'clock the bill was expected to be ready for the Senate. The Adamson bill was favorably re ported by the House Interstate Com merce Committee which amended it to'make the eight-hour provisions ef fective January 1 next instead of De cember 1 and so as to exempt electric railways. * The bill was immediately reported to the House which met at 11 o'clock. Meantime the Rules Committee held a meeting and without any changes favorably reported the Kitchin rule providing for two hours of general de bate on the bill and a vote on the bill and any amendments in the House at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon. Mem bers of the Rules Committee said un der that rule the bill should be passed by the House shortly after 5 o'clock this afternoon. Senator Norris the first to leave the Republican Senate conference, said each member would be left free to act as he thought best. He said the con ference had been devoted largely to explanations of the deliberations of the Interstate Commerce Committee by Senators Cummins and Brandegee who are members. Personally Senator Norris said he favored passage of the eight-hour bill with a provision tnat the Interstate Commerce Commission have power to regulate wages of all employes on interstate carriers from presidents down, as well as rate in creases. He said he saw no reason why the commission should not con sider the added burden put on the carriers by the eight-hour day bill in considering requests for advanced freight rates. Efforts still were being made to in duce the brotherhoods to call off the strike order but they were standing firm not to do so unless the eight hour bill becomes a law before Satur day midnight. They felt something might arise to defeat the measure and HAIR GRAY? THEN APPLIf Q-BAN It Darkens Gray Hair Evenly If your hair is gray, streaked with gray, prematurely or just turning gray or*lf your hair is dry, harsh, thin or falling, simply shampoo hair and scalp a few times with Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer. Soon every strand of hair (whether gray or not) becomes evenly dark, soft, flossy, fluffy, full of life and health, fun and heavy and fascinating, and entire head of hair is so beauti fully and evenly darkened no one could s»ispect you had applied Q-Ban. It is absolutely harmless and no dye, but Q-Ban acts on roots, restoring color glands. Sold on a money-back guarantee, 50c for a big bottle, at Oeo A. Gorgas" drug store, Harris burg, Pa. Out-of-town folks supplied by rnaiL. JSxKvmaaZ B F.1.1,—1001-tMTKD HARRISBURt*» FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1016. FOUNDED 1871 1 - -• Half Price Sale of Men's Suits Special Lot for the Final Drive We're determined to close out all broken lines of men's and young men's suits at the end of the summer season. A new season means new stock at Bowman's. Sixty-nine suits that formerly sold at $1 2.50 to sls will be sold on Saturday at *sr $7.50 I • They consist of fancy mixtures, light and dark colors. Just the opportunity to buy a suit for Fall wear at Half Price. Men's High Grade Suits ■ At one-third to one-fourth less than regular price. All are high grade suits, smartly tailored and best of trimmings. Men's $16.50 to $lB Suits $12.45 STRAW HATS • Men's S2O to $22.50 Suits . $14.45 HALF PRICE Men's $25 Suits $17.45 All Straw and Panama Hats will be Mixtures in regular sizes 33 to 46. closed out at Mixtures in stout sizes 37 to 48. ONE-HALF PRICE Bowman's Clea Boys' Norf Mother do not pass this opportunity by without taking advantage of it. Selected lots of broken lines. Dark and light mixtures. They are ideal school suits. Sizes 6to 17. 59 Boys' Norfolk Suits, $3 and $3.50 former 82 Boys' Norfolk Suits, $5 former price, prices, now $1.95 '' •*• ••; • • •; ••• v*' V • $3.45 . ~ _ , 40 Boys Norfolk Suits, $6 and $7 former 34 Boys Norfolk Suits, $3.95 former price, price, now $4.45 , now $2.85 Boys' Wash Suits all reduced. BOWMAN'S—Second Floor . that they must guard against It by having the strike order stand. Brotherhood leaders declared after a conference with Senator Newlands and others at the capitol that the I eight-hour bill was certain of passing. While the House Rules Committee was working, the IJouse Interstate Commerce Committee met and favor ably reported the Adamson bill. Kitchin Calls Bill Up Democratic Leader Kitchin called up the Adamson bill soon after the House met. "I ask unanimous consent for its im mediate consideration," said he. "I object," said Republican Leader Mann. Representative Harrison, Democrat, then offered the special rule and there was discussion of that. Mr. Harrison said Congress, in the interest of the American people ought to pass this bill by Saturday night and avert the strike. Representative Bonnet, Republican, denounced the proposed legislation. "There are worse things than strikes," said Bennet, "and one of those things is the destruction of the American system of government. I don't propose to cast my vote with a pistol at my head." Representative Cooper, of Ohio, Re- i publican, denied that labor was hold Typhoid and Ice Cream . I The raw product used in RUSS BROS. VELVET ICE CREAM is sup plied'by the Pennsylvania Milk Products Company, Harrisburg, Pa., whose dairies are in absolute sanitary condition, being inspected regularly by local health officials, as well as officials from New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Health Departments. In RUSS BROS, plant the raw product is still further safeguarded by re pasteurizing and homogenizing. Rigid inspection is enforced throughout the plant daily. VELVET ICE CREAM is first quality and may be eaten with entire confidence. | I Information from officials is to the effect that No Case in Pennsylvania Is Traceable to Russ Bros, Velvet Ice Cream SEPTEMBER V, 1916. ing up Congress as Mr. Bennet I charged. "It was not the railroad men who ■ asked this legislation," he said. "They i do say, however, that if this House passes this bill to-day. and the Senate passes it to-morrow, they would have the power to call off the strike." Both House and Senate bills would provide for payment of pro rata wages for time over the eight hours, and both would have the investigating committee of three members, ap pointed by the President, report its recommendations in from six to nine months after the law becomes effec tive. This date is set at December 1 by the House bill and January 1 by the Senate bill. The Senate measure also would exempt railroads less than 100 miles long, and electrical and in terurban lines. The House would also allow $25,000 for the commission and the Senate $50,000. President Wilson arranged to leave at 3 p. m. for his summer home at Long Branch, N. J., where he will be notified to-morrow of his nomination and a special messen ger will be dispatched to him with the bill when It is passed. ! Brotherhood leaders have reaf firmed their intention of considering provisions of the eight-hour bill a satisfactory settlement and have prom ised to call off the strike if it Is en- 1 acted before to-morrow night. Speaker Clark believes Congress can adjourn by Wednesday if the striko legislation is disposed of to-morrow. Old-Fashioned Antiseptic WONDEROIL For Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Pains and Aches Ham .Stood the Tout of V«an In Hundreds of Households Like a choice family relic handed down from generation to generation. Antiseptic Wonderoll is cherished In thousands of homes us the one reliable "lirst uid" for all aches, pains, irri tations or congestions. For over 50 years it has been a household name and as dependable as the seasons. For, soreness. pain. stiffness and swelling from rheumatic Joints, nothing gives more speedy or sure relief than a little Wonderoll, slightly heated and bound on the ailing member with soft flannel. It never burns or blisters and Is pleasant to use. It is physician's prescription and endorsed everywhere. Wonderoll can be secured at Geo A Gorgas" and from reliable druggists everywhere in both 25 and 50-cent boxes. The 50-cent size will be found most economical. On request M. E. Raymond, Inc.. Ballston Spa., N. Y.. will send vou a generous free sample. You wiU'protlt by sending to-day. 13