TO PLANT SUGAR CANE Kingston, Jamacla, May 24.—The government has decided upon an extensive plan of sugar development, in which government credit will be pledged for raising capital to estab lish central factories in Jamaica. The pronts of the venture are to be shared by the government and the cane farmers. FOR THROAT AND LUNGS STUBBORN COUGHS AMD COLDS Eckman's Alterative SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS! I Quality GORGAS Service | When You Need Drugs Quickly When you want something In drugs quickly—especially In an emergency—think of Gor gas he will have it the store will be open— Gorgas has looked ahead and provided for your needs—he aims to have everything that may be called for and nearly always hits the mark. GORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. and Penna. Station Freshly Mined Coal - ifißfc This assures"its quality. screened, is a guarantee of jLjjpilfl -ujA Delivered promptly, is our evidence of Hy re You a Customer of Ours? J. B. MONTGOMERY THIRD AND CHESTNUT STS. Bell Phone 600 C. V. 4321 Care of Yourself— Br How many times have you given this advice to others ? you stop to think all it means to your well-being, comfort, enjoyment and progress. Begin at once to guard your health as your m?st precious possession, one you cannot afford to lose. not neglect the slight ailments. Let BEEem/ws PILLS help you to take care of yourself. Take them whenever you feel the need of a natural and dependable remedy for the stomach, liver, bowels, blood or nerves. These pills relieve indigestion,, correct biliousness, keep the bowels active, and increase the bodily vigor. Beecham's Pills are sold the world around, and used wherever man is found. J Taken in time, they protect against disease, and help to jjm I"Make Health Doubly Sure" |l pjj . At Ah Druggists, 10c., 25c. J Directions of special value to women are with every box "The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World" iji > WHY*- - Baseball Players Are Recommending Everything Under The Son? d™ forpaper By fisher T J I THE RHUM TSLUE IZ I A?PLEIr —1 l J>E}<S? \ FIELDER' RUNK mSmmk g ' ll \ ... I &Sw%&o\ T !l® 1 HE SAYS''T AM STRONG I .FP V I L /7JY +CL FOFC ><Oufc EAS^-CLEANID>PLTB ALL d)niTH. ,= I l?IVF-FINF FRFN"(£RFFN SAY<; FlTS*"—"— EOLLAQS-1 SMPLV RUELPITCHER SATS HAH HICHLV PLEASED WITH! -MY WIFE . Ja j MM SLEEVE, over, IT ICAIi TRUTHFUL LI STATE ,-YOuR SHOES ufoi nY 50LE B ~~• >Ry >Jr WW/ I|T LOOkS UtiE NEW ■ THAT VOUR TOBACCO is; THE IAM 1 GIVE E.M THE HOOK DAILY ■ FPIMOuS SAFETH RA7OR. IT -. /o cimL .vf > A n(?sl "VEft ?"Q*SP- A *vr*L LI nc. nuurx mm MAKES A L OVELS CAM OPENER* k '- (3~~X . ; " 1 -■'• r m TUESDAY EVENING, BIG APPROPRIATIONS PASS Over 250 appropriation bills carry ing $6,174,400 for hospitals, homes and sanatoria were passed finally in the House to-day. It took Just one hour. As each bill was taken up and the roll called Speaker Baldwin asked if any member desired to vote in the negative. The bills were ordered sent to the Senate. SENATE PASSES BILLS The Senate to-day passed bills providing for auxiliary game pre serves, requiring all State employes paid monthly to have their pay not later than the tenth of the month following and requiring borough council to arrange for a special elec tion When two-lifthhs of the voters of the borough petition for annexa- j tion to a third class, city. mis WILL INTEREST MOTHERS Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children i Certain relief for Feveriahnees, Headache Bac Stomach, Teethinfl" Disorders, move and regular he liowcls and destroy Worms. They frequently areak up Colds In 24 honrs. They are so pleasan to the taste Children like them. Over 10,000 testi monials. Used by Mothers for BOyears. Thtunnet hit. Sold by all Druggists, 28c. Sample mailer FUEE. Address, Mother Gray Co., Le Hoy, N, y, I / Gettysburg Wednesday May 30 Via Reading Railway SPECIAL EXCURSION TRAIN From Fare Lv. A. M. Lebanon *1.50 8.11 Annvllle 1.45 8.21 Palmyra 1.3,-, 8.30 Herahey 1.30 8.37 llHiiunclHtnn'n 1.20 8.44 llarrlburg 1.00 0.05 Gettysburg (Arrive) 10.40 HKTI Special Train will leave GettyMbnrg Depot 4.40 P. M. for above Minions. ' v JUDGE ALL MEN BY PROFESSIONS What They Might Have Been Rather Than What They Will Be, Is Advice i BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX Justice and fairness cannot al ways walk hand-in-hand. Justice has to bring her verdict against a man because of what his evil mo ments force him to do. Human kindness dares vision a man as the noble soul his great moments have let him long to be. "Ever judge of men by their pro fessions. For though the bright moment of promising is but a mo ment and cannot be prolonged, yet, if sincere in its moment of ex travagant goodness, why, trust it and know the man by it, I say—not by his performance, which is half the world s work, interfere as the world must with its accidents and circumstances. The profession is purely the man's own. I judge peo ple by what they might have been— not are, nor will be," wrote Robert Browning. Of course law can hardly be ex pected to respect Mr. Browning's beautiful thought. But if we hu mans were charitable enough and generous enough to practice it to ward each other I think we might well avoid many of our clashes with the law. I know a man who is a liar, a • thief of love, a weakling, a selfish poseur. And yet he avoids the bar of human justice by going along his selllsh way without ever doing any thing bad enough or definite enough Ito come within the law. His people I are constantly being forced to pay | his ugly debts. The woman who is i foolish enough to love him has ! grown to tired middle age waiting | for him to "make good." His friends I listen to his brilliant and cold-blood [cd sophistries and become imbued | with his ugly and selfish cynicisrfl. I Because this man is brilliant and | handsome and charming, beause he is clever enough to evade actual I crime, he is permitted to seduce the RHEUMATISM Physician Believes a Genuine Rem edy For the Uiseu.se Has Been Found. Rhetima, the wonderful rheuma tism remedy sold by H. C. Kennedy and all druggists, gives quicker and more lasting relief than other rem edies costing many times as much. Rheuma passes the deadly poison ous secretions into the bowels and kidneys from which they are quick ly thrown off in a natural, healthy way. Read what a reputable physician says about Rheuma: "I have made a most careful investigation of the i formula employed in the manufac- I ture of Rheutjia, and I heartily rec ommend it as a remedy for all forms { of rheumatism. 1 find Rheuma far • in advance of the methods generally I employed in the treatment of rheu i matism, and altogether different in I composition, front the remedies usu | ally prescribed."—Dr. Lyons. | This should give any sufferer from I rheumatism confidence to try Rheu j ma.—Adv. HARRISBIXRG %££& TELEGRAPH _ COVERING SERB ATTACK y' """* ■""■■■' l IJ J.I inwwpwwwl.iiUl 11 1.1.J i ■.[ fW'JHMJM'.Mi 1..1 WLV.'J J... IJ - ""'WITH THE S?SBSjWS. r^ 1 . e stirring 1 events connected with the allied advances on the western front have taken nubile atten are^seen B bu*riting°i m metiiaUs* y* fonef Uul^ r ®v®**ted'*f rorn doing sV% sheik minds of his friends, to steal the happiness of the women who care for him and to kill the hopes of his own people. And yet this man once did a thing so big and generous that 1 dare not call him a scoundrel, even while all else 1 know of him makes me hesitate to call him a hero. He was In a great fire years ago. AH his ugly, selfish instincts react ed to the danger, and he elbowed his way out, leaving behind him the girl ho had escorted. She was burned to death! Rut the man reacted to his own hideous brutality the moment he reached the outer air and safety. He plunged back into the burning building, and before he was placed on' a stretcher and carried uncon scious and helpless to a hospital an hour later he had saved, or hail been largely instrumental in saving, eight people. The hero of that dauntless hour is the man, the weakling and cow ard I happened to know he might have been. To me it is hideously pathetic that he has not chosen to be what he had it in him to be. But the great poet has suggested that that "moment of extravagant goodness" is the thing by which we shall know the man. After all, which of us dare set up our judgment of any human being against the momentary flicker of greatness we could not see? Few of ! us are in a position to judge any ■/one's life as a whole. And shall we dare, then, to judge it at all? The question of legal and judicial I necessity compel us to judge and punish for a mompnt of evil. Even i motive in the highest dare not lie.' legally recognized as a full excuse; for crime in the lowest. That is i how law has to conduct itself for ! the good of society. But we' who are brothers and sis- ! ters must recognize that we owe [ each other enough of kindness, j enough of fairness, enough of un- i derstanding to grant that spark of good which we cannot see may be hidden under the evil which wo hate. Has not each on<r of us known an impulse so big and fine and gen erous that it fairly swept us into actions we hardly dreamed we were capable of doing? No one knows, no one sees. The fineness lies with in us, and we are likely to fail it. But the impulse was there. For that impulse we respect ourselves oven while wo grieve that we had to fail it. Dare we guess whether or not another might have risen to meet it? Dare we guess whether the very man we despise has not his glow ing moments of impulses as big and tine and beautiful as our own best ones? Department Stores Sell Liberty Bonds on Credit By Associated Press New York, May 22. The flying squadron of bond salesmen working In the financial districts and the es- ! tablishment of booths in the larger re tail stores of the city for the sale of | bonds have so stimulated the general j sales that members of the bankers' committees were predicting to-day that New York would over-subscribe its allotment of $750,000,000 of the Liberty loan. The department stores promised to he the largest sources of subscrip tions, many of which permit credit customers to charge SSO worth of bonds to their regular accounts, pay able in instalments until August 30. Yesterday's sales, because of this sys tem, amounted to thousands of dol lars in several of the larger stores. A majority of the customers were wo men and the subscriptiions ranged from SSO to $1,500. AUTO VICTIM l>ircs Harry M. Durborow, aged 33, who was hurt Sunday night in an automo bile accident near Klizabethtown, died last evening at the Harrisburg Hos pital. Several ribs were fractured and his liver punctured. He is sur vived by his father, Jacob A.; two sisters, Daisy and Eva; six brothers, Frank, George, Charles, Karl, Clayton and Thomas Durborow. •Funeral services will be held Thurs day afternoon at 2 o'clock, from the home, 243 Hummel street. Burial will be made in, the East Harrisburg cem etery. SON OF MR. TAFT IS IN ARTILLERY j Harrisburg Boy Among Those Who Enlist With Him New Haven, Conn., May 22. Charles P. Taft, 2d, son of William Howard Taft, and a junior in Yale University,, was enlisted for the ar tillery branch of the regular army, with nine other undergraduates, to day. All the enlistments were of I students who* were under ago for | the Reserve Officers' Training Corps I of the university, and all had con sent of their parents. Charles Taft took leave of his father a few minutes before he was enlisted. The students who were enlisted with Mr. Taft wrfle John M. Ander | son, Jr., Cincinnati; Robert T. Cairns, Overbrook, Pa.; George H. I Knnis, Jr., Derby, Conn.; John K. ! i Fasick, Altoona, Pa.; Francis T. lie- I ; Namara, Clinton, Mass.; Cyril B. Mo- I I sher. East Greenwich, R. I.; Albert I \ H. Stackpole, Harrisburg, Pa.; H. S. Porter. Higganum, Conn., and Carl i M. Thomas. St. I.ouls, Mo. TAKKV TO HOSPITAL Frank Steviek, 5J6 Calder street, was admitted to the Harrisburg hos pital late this afternoon for treat ment. He is a bookkeeper at the Harrisburg Light and Power Com pany. FIRKMKN'H 31EKTJNCJ The Volunteer Firemen's Benefi cial Association will hold an import ant meeting at the Reily tire house this evening at 8 o'clock. Refresh ments will be served. "Brownatone" Tints Your Hair In a Minute Prefered to Slow Acting Dyes, i The straightest road and the short- i est cut to the certainty of an attrac- | tive and beautiful appearance is the I use of "Browna tone" Hair Stain. ----- j—r- Thispreparation will instantly wkGv-Sv w I change gray, }| , ' streaked or faded il/Cl hair to the softest and richest gol- MpffciMjSSC t { den brown, medi dark brown or *Wy,77j3jß.k Y ' l)la<'k—just as you Just comb or - SSSsPS " brush it into your Impossible of 'y detection, will not /f rub or wash off, ,0! and needs re- I touching only as K the hair grows out. • • "Brownatone" hair stain is far su perior to "dyes," and is absolutely ! harmless in every way. Sold by all druggists, in two sizes, 25c and SI.OO. If you are offered a substitute, save annoyance by refus ing it and ordering "Brownatone" di rect from the makers. Insist on "Brownatone" at your hairdresser's. A trial bottle and interesting book let will be mailed for 10 cents. Men tion shade desired. Address The Kenton .Pharmacal Co., 672 Scott St., Covington, Ky. Sold and guai-tintecd in Harrisburg by Clark's Medicine Stores, 1100 Market St., 306 Broad St., and other leading druggists.—Advertisement. \ HBADdIIAHI'KItS FOI4 SIIIUTS SIDES & SIDES V WILSON FOR DAYLIGHT PLAN Washington, May 22.—President Wilson expressed his approval yes terday of the daylight saving plan to a delegation headed by Repre sentative Borland, of Missouri, and Marcus Marks, of New York, presi dent of the National Daylight Sav ing Association. President Wilson told them the only question in his mind about legislation to carry it into operation was whether Congress leaders would look upon It as war legislation, to which they have tac ticly agreed to limit the session's activities. The subject will be taken up with the leaders. m I C?TRIPPING back the thick, tough Black Safety Tread of this |j Goodrich SilvertownCord Tire, we here lay its rubberized, cable cord body. Note the size of the cable-cord, cross-wrapped into two & layers, and but two. Under the hide there are but three tires: FABRIC, swathed in five to seven plies; K THREAD WEB, a five to seven ply MASS OF STRINGS; CABLE-CORD, the unique two-ply, rubber saturated, patent-protected tire body, found ONLY in Silvertown, the original cord tire. K Tires wear out inside, not outside. They are burned out by fever, rubbed up between the plies of the tire. |! As every extra ply in a tire means extra tire fever, extra wearing out, Silvertowns with but two plies outlive many-ply tires with their multiplied heat. . n Though they cost more than ordinary tires, you can not afford to H m deny yourself their smarter appearance, smoother riding comfort Zg and gasoline saving economy. The B. F. Goodrich Rubber Company, Akron, Ohio M Goodrich alw makds the famous fabric tirei— Goodrich Black Safmty Tread# Local Depot, 1412 N. Third St. Bell Phone 3714 "Silvertowrur make all carir " MAY 22, 1917. REFUSE ANOTHER TRIAL FOR LANE Convicted on Two Charges of Selling Cocaine in This City Meyer Lane, convicted at March sessions of criminal court on two charges of selling cocaine in this city, was refused a new trial to-day by Additional Law Judge S. J. M. Mc jCarrell in an opinion, of the motion 'made by counsel for the defense. The Lane case was one of the most sensational handled recently by the district attorney's office. The first in dictment against Lane was quashed because u did not allege to whom the "dope" had been sold. Deter mined not to let Lan.e escape. Dis trict Attorney Michael E. Stroup brought two more charges, hurried the cases to the grand jury and came neurasthenia is a condition of nervous exhaustion. Worry, overwork, excesses, an attack of the grip—many things may cause it. Symptoms: Oversensitivencss, irritability, headache and a disposition to worry. The only way to feed undernourished nerves is through tlte blood. Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People ' are recommended in such cases because they are a non-alcoholic . tonic and through the blood build up the weakened nerve cells. They also correct a tendency to anemia, usual in neurasthenia. TWO FUEE BOOKS Write for them todsy. Address: Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. I Your own drucslst sells Dr. Williams Pl.-.k Pills. Prl;o CO ccr.'.i per box. In court the same day for th trla^B The jury returned verdicts of in both cases. This was followed by a motion a new trial which Judge McCarrell i dismissed to-day ruling that the jurj verdict was in accordance with th evidence and that it would have been difficult to establish beyond doubt an 1 alibi. Other Opinions Lan.e will probably be called fol sentence within the next two weeka Three other opinions were handed down in the following cases: Commonwealth vs. Josoph Blum son, convicted of charge of false pre tense; motion for new trial over< ruled and dismissed. Cora M. Attick vs. Lizzie Baerj damage suit for alleged slanderoul remarks. The jury returned a ver dict of six cents an.d costs agaiript thi defendant. A levy was made oil goods owned by H. H. Baer, husband of Mrs. Baer. The court granted a rule to determine whether Mr. Baer'i goods could be levied upon for th< costs. The plaintiff averred this was lm< material, but Judge McCarrell madt the rule absolute. In the suit of Charles F. Mes. singer vs. Massachusetts Bondini and Insurance Company and Daniel Krehling a motion for a new trial was overruled. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers