Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 27, 1917, Page 11, Image 11

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    EXEMPTIONS TO
HELP WORKERS
Factory Towns Probably Will
Furnish Comparatively
Few Men For Army
Washington, July 27.—Reports of
the first selection boards to fill their
quotas for the selective draft army
are eagerly awaited by Washington
officials because they will give the
first definite information as to the
,-ibable percentage of rejections to
be expected among the 10,'000,000
registrants for physical reasons or
for dependants.
All available statistics indicate a
probable rejection of one in every
four for physical disability. In par
ticular localities this will vary' great
ly. but the average fot the whole
country is expected to be between 25
and SO per cent. There is no avail
able data as to defendants, however,
or as to how many must be excused
under industrial exemptions.
It appears probable that peculiar)
results will be brought out in some!
districts. If the reasoning of some!
officials is correct, the lowest reject- j
tion and exemption rates will be dis
closed in well-to-do communities. :
such as the suburbs of large cities,
where men of comfortable incomes
make their homes. Sons of such
men, it is suggested, have had better
food, better care and better
roundings than the factory hands or
nearby towns, and they should be In
better physical condition.
As a class such young men could
hardly be regarded as indispensable,
officials say. in their civil, business or
industrial capacity, and dependants
probably will not free as many of
them from service as of most other
classes.
In factory towns, on the other
hand, the rejection rate for physical
disability probably will be high. The
fact that the men are confined six
days a week at their machines un
doubtedly will have affected their
physical condition. Virtually every
married man of those registered in
these places is the sole support of
his wife and children, and such men
cannot be taken. Also, if the tndus
try in which they are engaged is vital
to the carrying on of the war, indus
trial exemptions will run high.
Only reports from sections and dis
trict boards in typical communities,
however, can show exactly what is to
be expected. Roughly, the War De
partment has estimated that two
men must be called for every soldier
accepted, but they realize that the
returns may tell a far different story.
New War Budget May
Reach Ten Billions
Washington. July 27. The new
war budget to carry the government
through to next July and to cover
additional credits to the Allies prom
ises now to far exceed eight billion
dollars and may amount to ten bil
lions.
War Department estimates sent to
Congress call now for appropriations
of $5,278,836,000 for that branch of
the military establishment alone. Es
timates totalling another $1,000,000,-
000 or more are expected to-morrow
when the other departments report
their needs and in addition Secretary
Mc \doo has indicated that before
the year is out Congress will be ask
ed for a $2,000,000,000 appropriation
increase available for loans abroad.
\s soon as the departmental re
ports are in the appropriation com
mittees of Congress will go to work
on an immediate budget which prob
ably will total in the neighborhood
of $7,000,000,000. Meantime the Sen-,
ate finance committee, which has the
war tax bill in charge, will i eet to
morrow to consider what part of the
new expenditures is to be provided
by taxation and on what commodi
ties the new levies are to fall. The
committee hopes to have a revised
bill ready early next week.
Congressional leaders do not ex
pect to have to provide immediately
for the additional credits to the Al
lies, as Treasury officials have indi
cated that no appropriation for that
purpose will be requested until the
next session.
Nude Woman Runs From
Home After Being Stabbed
New York July 27. A nude wo
man. bleeding from deep knife
wounds, ran out of a roominghouse
at 522 West One Hundred and Forty
fifth street, at 6 o'clock this morning
and collapsed on the sidewalk.
"I'm killed —my husband did it.
she cried to a policeman. She was
taken to the Knickerbocker Hospital,
where she is said to be dying. She
was identified by Sadie Friedlander.
troprietor of the roominghouse. as
ena Ciadamidaro. Mrs. Friedlander
said:
"She rented a room here Sunday
night, saying she was a milliner. She
later told me she and her husband
were planning a divorce." i
A butcher knife was left in the
bed. The police are seeking Carlo
Ciadamidaro.
MINISTER TO BE INTERNED
Omaha. Neb., July 27. The Rev.
George William Kranleidis, a Ger
man Lutheran pastor, was arrested
to-day at Riverdale, Neb., as an alien
enemy and will be interned.
Kranleidis is charged with having
made threats against members of his
congregation who hoisted an Ameri
can flag over the church and with
having firearms in his possession.
I—Character
2—Mellowness
3 Uniformity
[ These are three of the many reasons
f for which
King Oscar
5c Cigars
have been called good friends by smok
ers for 26 years.
John C.
FRIDAY EVENING.
TRUCK COMPANY
IS VACCINATED
Harrisburg Men Arrested For
Driving Into
Lebanon
Mount Gretna, Pa_, July 27.—The
newest of the new auxiliary units
of the Pennsylvania National Guard,
the military police, are scheduled to
reach here to-day. The first to af
rive will be the Pittsburgh company,
under command of Captain J. Clyde
Miller, former quartermaster of the
Second Brigade.
The company has already been ac
cepted by the War Department and
will ibe brought here for training
and equipment. It will be followed
next week by the Philadelphia com
pany. The organizations are com
posed principally of policemen and
state policemen and they will take
the place of the provost guard. The
police will be under command of a
colonel, who will take over the com
mand of the camp. The force will
consist of 300 men and will be at
tached to the Pennsylvania militia
division.
Vaccination for smallpox was con
tinued to-day by the surgeons in the
motor supply trains, beginning with
the Harrisburg company. This put
u stop to the mountain hikes which
the Philadelphia companies, com
manded by Lieutenants William J.
Crawford and I. Newton Smith, have
been taking as a hardening process.
Major Edwa,rd Schell was desig
nated to-day by Colonel Harry C.
Trexler. commander of the division
quartermaster's corps, as acting
quartermaster for the Mount Gretna
mobilization camp. He has the fol
lowing assistants: First Class Ser
geant Paul K. Collins. Pittsburgh;
Sergeant John K. Spangler and First
Class Privates Robert &. Meek, Wil
son O. Black and Paul Kreitzer, Har
risburg.
E. T. Snyder and John Barlston,
both of Harrisburg. who were em
ployed as truck drivers on the State
Highway Department's road con
struction work in camp, were ar
rested by state police on a charge
cf operating a motor vehicle while
intoxicated and without the owner's
consent. They are in the Lebanon
county jail.
Unable to secure liquor on the
military reservation, the men are al
leged to have taken the truck and
with thirty other road workers to
have gone to Colebrook.
High Prices of Jam
to Change Army Menu
Washington, July 27.—High prices
of blackberry jam are giving some
concern to officials in charge of buy
ing supplies for the army. An offi
cial announcement to-day said con
sideration is being given a change
of the army jam ration "from black
berry straight to jams of alternating
kinds, including peach, strawberry
and plum."
An American army of 1,800,000
men would eat 5,295,408 tins of jam
in a year.
THE FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE
Pure blood is the body's first line of
defense against disease.
Healthy blood contains small
amounts of antitoxins that neutralize
the poisons of invading germs or de
stroy the germs themselves. That is
why so many people exposed to dis
ease do not contract it. Those whose
blood is weak and therefore lacking in
defensive power are most liable to in
fection. Everybody may observe that
healthy, red-blooded people are less
liable to attacks of cold and the grip
than are pale, bloodless people.
To build up the blooa there is one
remedy that has been a household
word- for a generation, Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills for Pale People. They tone
up the entire system, make the blood
rich and red, strengthen the nerves,
increase the appetite, put color in the
cheeks and lips and drive away that
unnatural tired feeling. Plenty of
sunlight, good wholesome food and
fresh air will do the rest.
Two books, "Building Up the Blood"
and "What to Eat and Hot to Eat"
give just the information that every
mother of a growing girl needs. They
are free. Write for them today to tho
Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenec
tady, N. Y. Your own druggist sella
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
FOR THROAT AND LUNGS
STIBBOMN COUGHS AND COLDS
Eckman's
Alterative
SOLD BY ALL I.RADIMG DRUGGISTS
T EET H Tatk '
Our latest sclen-vf
tif I c methods vf/ /YTT ill
enable you to ' -LI •**
get the best work known to den
tistry. Get our prices first.
BELL, DEXTAL OFFICE
10 .Nortli Market Square
I "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" I
"Always in I
'Palm 'Beach Week
AD AO S
Palm i Palm J
| Beach I Beach 1
$7.75 | $7.75 J
I We've been busy at this "Live Store"—We 1
I sold more PALM BEACH SUITS this week than have I
ever been sold in a month in Harrisburg—But why shouldn't we, at
the prices we are offering them for? All kinds of Palm Beach Suits are being offered
at all kinds of prices, but you must bear in mind that at "DOUTRICHS" you get only one grade of fabric—the
best that the mills can produce—and only the one grade of tailoring—"the finest." It takes no effort to dispose
of these
Palm Beach Suits at .$7.75 |
Lookto 'Doutrichs for "somethingnew" Everybody is talking about, and going
they're "always in the lead." PALM BEACH to "DOUTRICHS" PALM BEACH SALE -During
WEEK ha. made a deeded "HIT"-nght in the midst of the thi , exlreme hot weat her there's a cheerful, pleasant atmos
• not weather season, no wonder our customers are showing 1 ... . .
their appreciation by buying PALM BEACH SUITS for phere preva,l,ng ,n th,s L,ve Store and y° u wlll enJ °y much
both present and future needs—You get the comfort, the profit, of ,l ,f you come here and MORE of it if you are wearing one of
in fact, all there is to get is YOURS in this transaction. our ALM BEACH SUITS.
July Clothing Reductions
On All Blue Serges, Blacks
We're setting a record breaking pace in our clothing sale during .
our July Reductions—Most people realize that unsettled conditions in the woolen mark
ets are sure to send the prices of clothing soaring skyward and are taking advantage of "DOUTRICHS" gen
uine July Clothing Reductions.
ALL $15.00 SUITS $13.50 ALL $25.00 SUITS $22.50
| ALL $20.00 SUITS $17.50 ALL $30.00 SUITS $26.50
I r All Straw and Panama Hats Reduced ——— -n I
I || All $1.50 to $3.00 Straw Hats 95c t ' j I
|| All $5.00 to $7.50 Panamas >3.85 I
Market Street Bllra u p a I
v ■ i i ■—
HARRISBURG iSSBH TELEGRAPH
JULY 27, 1917.
11