2 CALL TO AMERICAN COLORS TO COME WITHIN 30 DAYS Jury Wheel System Will Be Used to Pick First 500,000 Men to Be Taken Under Army Bill Washington. April 30. W ithln thirty davs after the selective serv ice irmv" bill becomes a law there will be a national registration day, at which all men of the ages covered by the bill Khali present themselves for enrollment. The House provision makes men between the ages of twentv-one and forty subject to serv- i ice, while the Senate limit* the se- e to men from twenty-one t" twentv-seven. Indications are that 1 Congress will tlx the uge limit at' twenty-nine The War department estimates that, there are 7,000.000 in the United J States between tne ages of twenty- ; one ami twenty-seven, inclusive. i There are f.000.000 between the GOVERNOR ASKS A "DRY" NATION: Makes Speeches at Philadel phia in Which He Urges Action Assailing the liquor interests of' Pennsylvania and the nation in two I addresses last night in Philadelphia, I Governor Brumßaugh urged the resi- i dents of that city to petition PresN I dent Wilson to have the manufacture ' and sale of all intoxicants prohibited | during the period of the war. Speaking from the pulpit of the < Central North liroad Street Presbv- i terian Church, last night. Governor Hrumbaugh said: "Let the experience of the nations now at war teach us that to win this war the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor in Pennsylvania and throughout the na tion must be prohibited while the war lasts. If you are the right kind of i citizens you will petition President I Wilson to have its manufacture and sale abolished." In a second address delivered before-; ."00 men assembled in the chapel of! the Sunday Breakfast Association.Gov ernor Brumbaugh promises to And a ' place for every man present as a laborer on the farms of Pennsylvania. He urged them to %olunteer for farm i service and in that way serve their country. The collection of a special Pennsyl- | vania French relief fund, through ten-cent contributions, was suggested ! by the Governor, who said he intend- j ed to take the necessary steps to start I ihe movement. To be sure look for " The Bayer Your Guarantee Cross on every package and every tablet of genuine Aspirin. ZLmmmm TABLETS: The trade-mark "Aspirin" B ' I PacLat loiuaf t> IS(. U.S. PitOfficelln I I Bottle* of 24 uj 10Q guarantee that the mono- If I yWWi' *ocuee of £4 ana 100 aceticacidesterofeallcylic- I rtKinr. KiJ in thee* tablets and llii'l I fill it] . capsules ie of the reliable Sealed Boxes of 1J nd 24 !*>>■- £a< The Victrola will bring the Sterling Trio, Peerless Quartet Vess Ossman & in your own home to Sing or Play for you when you desire Victrola sls-$250. Terms if desired C. AV Si&lar, Inc. Pianos Victrolas A/die* T.A O J CI ***/3SO*G c fv '*v~ '' : ' MONDAY EVENING, HARBXgBURG TELEGRAPH APRTtJ 30, 1917. ages of eighteen and forty-five, and. roughly, about 15,000,000 between the ages of twenty-one and forty, the ages covered by the House bill. Secretary linker nld he favored the use of the Jury wheel ajateiu for *e j lectin* the Itrxt .VM.IMKI men. ! There wll be no physical examin j ation of those registering In advance of the selection. Secretary Baker has announced. The first 500,000 names 1 will be drawn out by lot, and the se ( lectlve feature will then be placed in j operation as local exemption boards , withdraw the names of all men ex empt for physical or other reasons, j A second drawing will then be made I to fill the gaps taused bv exemp ( tion. SCHWAB TO PUSH | SUBMARINE WORK Bethlehem .Steel Company Well Equipped to Aid the Government \ Bethlehem, Pa., April 30. While | Charles M. Schwab was in Washing - | ton last week, ostensibly to greet i members of the British and French I commissions whom he had met while I on visits to Europe. he must have re ! eeived more than an intimation that I jhe will be expected to do his duty ! 1 in the matter of building submarines for the United States. This, at least, is the inference of the men at the steel works, who have received direc tions to devote all the energies of the | plant to the production of plates. I frames, beams, rudders, shafts and [other material that goes into the mak- i | ing of undersea craft. j PATTERSON* ENTERS RESERVE ! W. Kenneth Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Patterson, 208 South ' j Thirteenth street, a sophomore at j j Cornell University, has enlisted in | the Naval Coast Reserve Fleet, and | his headquarters are at Newport,; ; Rhode Island. Mr. Patterson is a | graduate of Central High School, cfttss 1915. NEW FARM AGENT TO TAKE CHARGE HERE ON FRIDAY 11. G. Niesley Is Well Fitted to Assume Supervision of New Bureau IgSMPF % > "* ' ————————— H. G. NIESLEY H. G. Niesley, recently selected by State College to direct the work of the recently organized farm bureau in this county, will assume his duties next Friday. The farm bureau will be located in the Kunkle Building I with the Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Neisley was born and reared on a g.?neral farm near Carlisle. Cumberland county, and received his early education in the country schools of Middlesex and Monroe townships. Eater he attended Kast's Normal and Classical School at Me ehanlcsburg and also the Shippens burg Normal school. After teach , ing one term at the Monroe township ) district school, Mr. Niesley completed | his course at Shippensburg Normal, from which institution he graduated in 1911. I • Well Fitted For Work Subsequently he served for two i years as principal of the high school at Palen vllle, N. Y., where he started | and maintained a course in agricul ture. and in the fall of 1913 he en tered the Pennsylvania State College I School of Agriculture. Mr. Niesley graduates from State College in the i department of Agronomy this year. I His experience on the farm and his I education along agricultural lines as j well as his experience as a leader acquired in his teaching work and in college lit him for extension work. The Chamber of Commerce gar den plots at Sixth and Reel streets ' and Cloverly Heights were opened 1 this morning. There are over fifty j plots in these sections and many | were given out this morning. The garden work is progressing rapidly ( and the majority of plots already | given out are under cultivation. The Agricultural committee of the ! chamber has secured J. B. Sherrer. In charge of the extension vegetable garden department of State College, to lecture to-morrow night at 8 o'clock in the Technical high school auditorium. The agricultural com mittee will meet to-morrow after noon. FUNERAL OF M. TROUP Funeral services for Edwin S. Troup, aged 48 1921 North Fourth street, who died Saturday in the : Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, i will be held Wednesday afternoon at' | - o'clock, from the Sixth Street United i Brethren Church. Mr. Troup was foreman of the cabinetmaking shop of the Pennsylvania Railroad. He is survived by his wife, two children, George and Mary Troup, one brother, George B. Troup. Newvllle, and two sisters, Mrs. Kate McCormick. War ner, S. D„ and Mrs. Ida Brown, Mt. Holly. TIMELY NEWS OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA CUMBERLAND COUNTY FARMERS PLEDGE SERVICES TO COUNTRY Four Hundred Gather at Meeting at Mechanicsburg; Splen did Address by Carl Vroo man, Assistant Secretary of United States Department of Agriculture Mechanicsburg, Va., April 30. — ii With every inch or available space i 1 taken, a mass meeting of farmers to ' ( consider war service, was hold on 1 , Saturday evening in Franklin llall ■ which was elaborately decorated j with the national colors. The Singer Hand furnished music and the meet ing was opened with prayer by the Rev. S. S. Games, pastor of the j Tnndle Spring Lutheran Church. ; Vance McCormick, of Harrisburg, i presided and presented fho phase of j the problem the war brings to the farmer, and the seriousness of the situation. Professor F. P. Weaver, extension j specialist of State College, made an earnest appeal to ttte farmers to help the food supply; \o use every labor I device available to assist nature to I bring forth the largest crops, lie: gave practical illustrations of ways to treat the soil which gives best re-! suits. Patriotic enthusiasm gave j vent to its favor by prolonged ap plause. An eloquent and practical address ! was made by Carl Vrooman, Assist- j a , nt . Secretary of Agriculture of the United States, who was interrupted ! time and again by hearty applause. He said, in part, that scientific farm ing is needed for the country in the greatest crisis this nation has ever reached, as there is need of food, I TRUE PATRIOTISM HAS NO LIMIT Dr. Hillis Jo Speak on "Our Country, Worth Living and Worth Dying For" A positive assurance lias been re ceived from Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis, pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, New York, and special representative of the National Industrial Conserva tion Movement, that re will speak at a patriotic industrial dinner of the Chamber of Commerce Wednesday evening at 6.50 o'clock. Using as his theme. "Our Country, Worth Irving For and Worth Dying For." Dr. Hillis will draw an effective picture of the spirit of liberty and freedom fhlch has guided this coun try through all its wars. The same spirit. Dr. Hillis will assort, actuates the United States In the present con flict. In the present war. Dr. Hillis will declare, this country hopes to extend the great American principles of freedom and self-government to Austria Germany and Turkey. Should >ot He l.imltol True patriotism, however, Dr. Hillis will explain, should nof be limited to the battlefield, but should be carried into the shop, the accounting room, the church, the home and the manu facturing plant. If the country's prin ciples are worth dying for. the speak er will add, its Institutions and as sets are worth preserving and con serving. Lynch to Confer on Sewage Disposal Plan City Commissioner Lynch and City Engineer M. B. Cowden are arrang ing for a conference later in the week with James H. Fuertes. of New York, the consulting engineer who supervised the making of plans for a sewage disposal plant, ordered by the State Health Department. Recently citl officials were asked by the State Department to make changes in the plans as ordered last fall. It is understood these will taken up at the meeting. * ZZZZZZZI Dauphin County Farms Up to High Standard Dauphin, April 30. —It will be no hardship for the farmers of Middle Paxton township to wheel Into line in the matter of the more intensive farming made necessary and desir able under the war conditions. Most of them were brought up to do just that thing, as witness a case in point, that of Ellas Ellis Fertig, present owner of the farm known as the Elias Fertig farm. Had his grand father, Elias Fertig, lived until the 13th of the present month, he would have celebrated liis one hundredth birthday, all of his life having been spent on the same farm, and his parents, Peter and Elizabeth Fertig, succeeded him in the same high de gree. Adam Milton Fertig did much to bring and keep this land to a de gree of high cultivation, and Elias Ellis will do honor to the Fertig name in the same way. DIES AI'TKK liniKf II.LSGSB ltouben Stauffer, aged 36, died this morning at 2 o'clock, at his home, ITI9'A North Fourth street, aftar' a brief illness. eH Is survived by his wife, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abrani H. Stauffer. two brothers, Clayton anil Jacob, all of Mt. Joy, and two sisters, Mrs. Levi Kby, Sporting Hill, and Chris Newcomer, Mt. Joy. Funeral services will be held in the Pethel Church, Mt. Joy, Thursday morning, at 10 o'clock. Burial will he made in the Mt. Joy Cemetery. Mr. Stauffer was employed in the signal depart ment of the Pennsylvania Railroad, having been transferred to Harris burg April 15. SATURDAY EVENING DANCE Dauphin, Pa.. April 30.—Attending the regular Saturday evening dance, last week, were the Misses Ora Bickcl, 'Annie Shaffer. Ruth Shaffer, Esther Shaffer, Ethpl Forney. Kath r.vn Breckenridge, Emma Kaeney, Susan Jackson, Ellen Feaser, Doro thy Singer. Anna Houck, Elizabeth Dill, and Thomas Kinter, Ralph Sei ders, Charles Weigel, Charles Ger berioh, Fred Kamerer, Kenneth Thomas, Ernest Shaffer, Raymond Long and Lynn Gable. MRS. KDW. FETTKRHOFF DIES Dauphin, Pa., April 30.—Mrs. Ed ward Fetterhoff, age about 48, died 'on Saturday at her home at Red Bridge of pneumonia, after a linger ing illness. She Is survived by her : husband, one son, William, at home, her mother, Mrs. Lydia Etzweiler, and one sister, Mrs. Clem Bechtel. Funeral services will be held Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock in I the Evangelical Church at Zlonsville. ! The Rev. John Shoop, pastor of the 1 church, will be Jn charge, and burial will be made in 55ion cemetery. I'se McNeil's Pain Exterminator. —Adv. more food and then food. Every energy and thought must be directed toward using means to yield great est production. The food problem confronts the United States to-day and it is up to us to feed the warrtaig nations who are lighting against mili tarism. Farmers are asked to par ticipate in the greatest movement that the world lias ever produced. Arrangements for the meeting were made by a committee of live |appointed by the Hogestown Horse and Cattle Show committee, as fol lows: The Rev. Thomas J: Fergu son, John H. Musser, Henry B. Mc- Cormick, Milton M'.imma and Harry ■ Shaull., It is planned to hold thirty six farmers' mass meetings in Cum berland county in different sections. The following resolutions were j presented by the Rev. T. J. Ferguson ; and unanimously adopted: j Whereas. In the words of our ' President, "Our beloved country has j entered into the grim and terrible war for democracy and human rights ! which has shaken the world"; Whereas, We know that our fel low citizens who are to light In our ' army and navy cannot alone and unaided win victory in the war, but must have behind tnem. "The indus trial forces of the country, men and women alike, a great international service army engaged in the service of the nation and the world." P. 0. S. of A. Camp Will Hold Memorial Day Services Elizabethville, April 30.—0n ac count of the small number of Grand Army men living in this vicinity, Washington Camp No. 110, P. O. S. of A., of this place, will take charge of the Memorial Day services in con nection with the veterans here. The various local orders and school chil dren, accompanied by the Citizens' Band, will proceed from the public school in Broad street and march to the cemetery, where a suitable pro gram will be rendered. At a regular meeting of Camp No. 110 on Thurs day evening the following committee was appointed to make arrange ments: Warren F. Swab, Earl K. Romberger, Paul S. Bonawitz, Clair I. Hoke and Charles E. Forney. \VH —jpF delving deep into all of the diffi |^r^^^^ gaaasas "~" 1 " Jr culties of housekeeping* and successfully solving many-of its knottiest problems. This department, as well as the Domestic Science Page on Sunday, is under the personal supervision of Mrs. Nevada Hitchcock, the famous dietician, lecturer and instructor in Domestic Economy. On the other days of the week this page is devoted to \ general feminine activities. Fashions are sketched by our fTmlljuJ\\ own artist in Paris, at Palm Beach, in New York, in Phila delphia's shops, so that the latest quip and turn of the mode is quickly pictured and described. w/nl I In Society is in the capable hands of Miss Agnes Repplier, Jii [. j I\\ '2d, probably one of the best-known social writers in this £1 II I 111\ j country, and she gives you the latest news of society's Jjl J ' 11M V events in a most enjoyable and entertaining fashion. jj\ I > 11 And all other woman's activities receive similarly gen- PHIK erous attention, making this a page that is invariably of unequaled interest in every particular. Why not notify your newsdealer to deliver "The' ft. y Record" to your home regularly? Or if more convenient J ■ notify us and we will attend to it for you. THE PHILADELPHIA RECORD Record Building, Philadelphia >• / PLACE Fl/.Vi ON MOUNTAIN Marysvllle, J'a., April 30.—Mt. Patrick, a little village in this coun ty, with imposing ceremonies, at tended by Ihe village's entire popula tion, a large American flag was raised on the lofty peaks of the mountain range overlooking the vil lage. The (lag was placet' by Sam uel F. Seal and John Nissley, and Is about 500 feet above the roadway which leads to Liverpool. 28-30-32 N. 3rd. St. Will Place On S One Day Only 500 Beaded Georgette Costume Blouses A most exceptional unexpected opportunity that dis scriminating dressers will recognize. None of these blouses will be on sale Wednesday as the remaining lot must be returned Tuesday evening. This is a very extraordinary . c i • i being able to offer the blouses to )ei . h °" I C ° }\ s cs accounls you al the prices listed below. he sc . nt these blouses to hold a 1 onc-dav sale and return those that €J The manufacturer, a maker of were left at the end of the day. only exclusive and line blouses, became momentarily overstocked. €J That's the whole story. Me overestimated the amount of beaded georgette blouses he could €| Those who know Schleisner dispose of in a short time. This styles and values will understand was due to his enthusiasm over how important this sale is to the unprecedented demand for them. Others will have a splen this character of blouse. did opportunity to learn that fact. Values Range up to $15.00 They will be placed on sale as follows : $5.95 $6.50 ASK PRESIDENT'S IN FI.UENCK Marysvllle, Pa., April 30. —Meth- odlst Episcopal churches of Duncan non and Roseglen last week forward ed petitions to President Wilson ask ing that he use his influence and au thority to bring about the establish ment of a law providing for national prohibition. MTKRARY SOCIETY OFFIOERB New Cumberland, Pa., April SO.— New Cumberland High School Llter ur.v Society has elected the following officers: President, Donald Shuler; secretary, Elma Garver; treasurer, Verna Hair; chairman, program com mittee, < Millie Conley; Merril Landls and Annie Osier.