6 Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the sigrna • * tare of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his , personal supervision for over SO years. Allow no ono , to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and :4V •'JFust-as-irood" are but experiments, and endanger tho ■ ,3 - health of Children—£xperienee against Experiment. PI What is CASTORIA ©astoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare ' V* goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither • ; ; Opium, Morphine nor other Nareotle substance. It de ! •. . J Btroys Worms and allays Peverishncss. Por more than 1 ' thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief o| Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou bles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THE CtNTAUB COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. STATE APPROVALS COMMITTEE NOW Safety Device Will Have to v Come Under the Supervision of Commonwealth The special committee established by the State Industrial Board and the Department of Labor and Industry to Sass upon safety devices intended for tate manufacturing plants and other establishments will hold its first meet ing here on September 27 and meet , thereafter on the last Wednesday of each month to render opinions on appliances. This committee, which is a new one Have us play KreUlor McCormnck the new McCormack-Kreisler record for you. It is indeed a gem. When the masterly violin of Kreisler joins the purs tenor of McCormack —wonderful is the result! Thousands on thousands of Victor customers await these duet records with eager expectancy —well knowing that each is a musical triumph. This month the two great artists join in an interpretation of the "Barcarolle" from Tales of Hoffman. It is a languorous, dreamy, melancholy and immortally beautiful love song made greater still by the magic art of McCormack and Kreisler. Victor Red Seal Record 87*45, Ten-Inch, $2 A great soprano I and a grand old hymn ip "Lead, Kindly Light." How often $ have you heard it sung 1 And how often Wf again will you want to hear it as Farrar Jf sings it! Beautiful as Cardinal Newman's // composition is in itself, inspiring as it is always, its appeal is irresistible when ex- Fmw pressed through the gifted soprano of Farrar. Vicior Red Seal Record 87243. Ten-inch, J2 These are only two among the wide selection of New Victor Records for September Every one on the list gives you a real enjoyment. Pay us a visit today get a complete list, and have us play your favorites for you. As many and as often as you please—and no obligation. J.H.TROUP tSjix MUSIC HOUSE tegSli) 15 S. Market Sa. Bringing Up Father # Copyright, 1916, International News Service # <$ By McManus Pi " HEY! WILL INI I |Uo^ l " I 1| I J 1 WELU-TAKe I rH l SOMEBODY HAM BACK-ITb V I S . FRESH COReo MAM J ( T BACK-IT'S ") 11/ PACE MY NOOOD: 7- V. v -J HAD A RE'LAPSEL! I 'J v TELR '-' j K' % <. * TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 19, 1916. - - - _ in Pennsylvania Industries, will re ceive devices or models from manu facturers of safety equipment for ap proval and it is stated that it "makes possible the formulation of a definite list of all types of safety devices." Ap proved devices are to be given a State label. "Any device or guard which contributes to the safety of factory employes in Pennsylvania will be acted upon by the approvals committee," says aji official notice. "When the approvals committee approves a de vice the action is revised by the In dustrial Board at its next meeting and If ratified by the board a certificate is issued." Among the devices already given approval are metal guards of various kinds, safety lbom locks, fire doors, film rewinding machines, boiler ap pliances, picture machines and ap pliances, lungmotors and the like. NEW DRUGGISTS GET LICENSES State Board Announces the Re sults of the Tests Held This Summer At the examinations given by the State Pharmaceutical Examining Board In Willlamsport on September 1 antl 2 thirty-nine applicants appeared for the pharmacist examination, of whom twenty-one were successful, and twenty-nine for assistant pharmacist, of whom seventeen passed. The next examinations will be held in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia on No vember 17 and 18. 1916. The successful applicants were as follows: Pharmacists Albert H. A. Bailey, Ada M. Bern stein, Paul E. Buoymaster, Benjamin S. Corson, Leopold E. Helfand, Jay A. Smith, Michael Stoloff and Benjamin J. Wexlar, all of Philadelphia; Harry Felnstein and George L. Wessels, of Pittsburgh; Paul S. Byrne, Butler; Ellerslie W. Davis, Summit Hill; H. Raymond Greenleaf, Downingtown; Earl S. Gottshall, Norristown; J. Edi son Good, New Cumberland; George E. Hirzel, -Lansdale; George L. Heiges, ivlanheim; Frank J. Keddon, Susque hanna; B. Schlcgel, Allen town; Charles L. Wall, Stroudsburg; Emmett E. Parker, Harrisburg. Assistant Pharmacists Thomas V. Barber, Miitlinburg; G. Ernest Brouse, Sunbury; Roscoa O. Brady, Carlisle; Peter Cramer. Phila delphia; Delia M. Cooper, Philadel phia; Hugh W. Devine, Edinboro; Richard C. Flaherty, Wilkes-Barre; A. Rea Haberstroh, Juniata; Robert Kerchner, Reading; Harry O. Mayer, Sheffield; Horace B. Reynolds, Lock Haven; William R. Reinard, Mount Carmel; Hazel M. Rinn, Jersey Shore; George L. Smith, Hollidaysburg; Thomas C. Seiple, Lancaster; Guy War ren Showers, Harrisburg; Theodore D. Witman, Reading. NEW "TANKS" ARE THINGS OF HORROR [Continued From First Pago] know that as a contribution to mod ern warfare they have proved them selves serious. Prisoners declare they are not civilized warfare. Officer pris oners are angry at the subject, as if they had never heard of poisonous sases, flamenwerer (fire shooters), torpedoing passenger shops, dropping bombs on open towns or shelling sea side resorts, so exquisite is the Ger man sense of humor. Tho enemy evidently had no hint what they were. They emptied their rifles as the things came rolling on. They turned the machine guns on and the bullets only struck sparks. Still the moving horrors came on until they reached the first German trench. There in several places they sat com placently astride the trench and swept it in both directions and all the ground beyond with their machine guns. In some case the enemy surrendered from the trenches to the levlathian itself before tho infantry came up. On their first day in one short hour they did more military service, killed more of the enemy, had a greater In fluence on the war than all the Zeppe lins had ever done. This time the dia bolical machine is ours and nothing if not entirely civilized, and In accord with every convention ever signed. It has scored heavily. British Trench Hurdling Monsters Made in U. S. A.; Can Brush Trees Aside Washington, Sept. 19. The Brit ish "tanks," the armored motorcars used in recent assaults on German trenches in northern France so suc cessfully as to attract world-wide at tention, were built, for the most part, in Peoria, 111., in the form of cater pillar tractors designed many years before the war began to meet some of the difficult problems of modern farm ing. Except for their armor, their machine guns and their crews, thou sands like them are in use to-day in the United States in plowing, digging ditches and other labors less heroic than war. M. M. Baker, vice-president of the Holt Manufacturing Company, ex plained here that they were machines made by his company at its Peoria plant that had hurdled German trenches, walked through forests and crawled over shell craters in the face of intense gun Are. "We have sold about 1,000 cater pillar tractors to the British govern ment," said Mr. Baker. "We have had nothing to do with putting armor on them, or placing machine guns, but some of our men at Aldershot, Rng land, recently were notified that the British Government intended to armor some of the tractors and use them for work other than the usual towing of big guns. "Germany had some of these trac tors before the war began, and al though 1 do not understand just how it occurred. I believe she may have got others since then. We have sent some to France and some to Russia. So far as I know, up until the recent appearance of the armored cars the tractors were sent, only to tow big guns. I understood that Germany used about forty of them in this work before Liege early in the war and re cent photographs show that the Brit ish are using some of them now for the same purpose." Equipment a British Secret I Mr. Baker said he did not know how The Right Kind of Furniture is essential to happy home life. You will never regret buying the furniture for your home at this big store. Of course, you always planned and wanted an attractive home—one that was comfortable, cozy and homelike. If you want to furnish or refurnish a home or probably you just need a few pieces to brighten up your home. It makes no difference what you want this is your store to fill that want. Perhaps you have been under the impression though that it would cost too much to furnish or refurnish your home the way you would like it furnished. If so, remember that this is not true to-day. We are confident that our offers will convince you of our claim—"greater value for the least money"—that all we ask, is investigation and comparison. Pay us a visit this week, and see what this store has in stock for you. See this up-to-the-minute Livingroom suite shown in one of our windows. With it we show mahogany library table, bookcase, secretary and two fireside chairs, all upholstered in blue silk velour. In the other window see the solid mahogany suite with table to match. We are sure it will profit you to inspect our large stock of everything in the furniture line for your home. ( We are showing a larger stock than any seasonbefore of this high grade make of rugs, all at uniform prices. , Store Closes 6P. M. Saturday 9P. M. FACKLER'S 1312 Perry Street many of the 1,000 tractors sent to England had been armored and put In service as land battleships, nor did he know what equipment the British War Office had placed upon cars to be used in this work. "It is true," said Mr. Baker, "that these tractors can go ahead over al most anything or through almost any thing. They can straddle a trench, go through a swamp, roll over logs, or climb through shell craters like a car of Juggernaut. It looks uncanny to see them crawl along the ground, just a huge caterpillar. In a thick forest, if they encountered trees they could not brush out of their way, they could easily be used to uproot them and clean their own path." Mr. Baker said the tractors sent to England weigh about 18,000 pounds each, develop 120 horsepower and are built of steel. The caterpillar feature, he explained, is of the utmost im portance. Speaking broadly, the tractor crawls on two belts, with cor -1 rugated surfaces, on each side of the body. The corrugated surface is on the ground. On the inside of the belts, on each side of the body are two lines of steel . rails, making four lines in all. These rails are in short sections, jointed and operated over a cogged mechanism that actually lays them down with their belt attachment as the tractor moves ahead and picks them up again, so that the car runs on its own self made track continuously. The short points in the rails make it easy to turn • to right or loft. Wheels Never Touch Ground i The body is supported by trucks with five wheels, something like small railroad trucks. These wheels never touch the ground, but runs upon the steel rails. In the ordinary tractor about seven feet of belt and rails is on the ground at one time. Mr. Baker said that the machine would bridge any trench that was not wider than the length of track, if laid on the ground at one time. The "bow" might hit the far side of the trench far be low the top and the "stern" would undoubtedly sink a little, but the tenacity of the tractor, he declared, would enable It to go ahead and climb out. The width of track used on the ma chines sent to England, Mr. Baker said, was twenty-four inches. He declared that the ground pressure is about three pounds per square inch where a thirty-inch track is used, or less • than that of the foot of either man or , horse. He suggested that the British [ authorities probably had lengthened the track on the tractors used In i trench work, giving them even greater power to surmount obstacles. "We have been making these trac ' tors for the British government for a ■'long time,'* said Mr. Baker, "and have | not talked much about it. Since their recent use in storming trenches I have 1 seen published reports that led me > to believe the secret would come out , any way pretty soon, so I decided it i might as well be told now." Although he would not discuss the matter, it was understood the United , States War Department is experiment- I ing with armored tractors, somewhat [ like those now in use on the British ; battle line.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers