lonors Paid to Gen. Stewart at Camp p Honors were paid to the memory of fljutant General Thomas J. Stewart . the camp of the Pennsylvania oops at Augusta, Ga.. on Saturday !ternoon at the hour of his funeral, he flag had been at halfmast ever nee the death of the General. There ere lnattendance over 100 officers, eluding Major General Clement, rigadier General O'Xeil. Brigadier •neral Etilwell and all of the colo ■ls of the various regiments, mem irs of the division staff and other fleers. The Tenth Regiment hand furnished e music. It played Chopin's Funeral arch. while the headquarters' oop stood at attention as well as all the enlisted officers and men con cted with division headquarters. Ie headquarters' troop presented ms as taps were played and the flag as run up to the top trf the pole. ledical Schools Are Opened to Girl Students By Associated Press Xew York. Sept. 17. After 106 ars as an institution for men only, e College of Physicians and Sur ons, the medical department of Co mhia University, has decided to mit women on an equal standing ith men, it was announced to-day. ' By Associated Press Cambridge, Mass., Sept. 17.—Official inouncement was made to-day that ilv qualified women registered at jdcliffe College would be admitted the Harvard Medical School this ar. KILLED IX WRECK By Associated Press Aurora, 111., Sept. 17^— Seven lowa ockmen were killed last night in a ar-end collision on the Burlington nilroad near Earlville, 111., forty-five iles west of Aurora. Ten or more ere injured. t-, i. BtHBHBi Your Liver Is I the Best Beauty | Doctor A dull, yellow, lifeless LjJ skin, or pimples and M eruptions, are twin □ brothers to constipation. Pa Bile, nature'* own l&xa- Hj tive, is getting into your r'j blood instead of passing j j out of your system as it rj ; should. - This is tbe treatment, fat n . I ' cesifal use foe 60 years:—one I j ! pill daily (more only when necessary). ; KITTLE | IVER ,3 Gtm/bre bears Sfgnatmr* Colorless faces often show the ' absence of Iron in the blood. ' Carter's Iron Pills yrifl help this condition. caD&r Easy to apply. Sere, Quick, Sale. !se. Gorgas, Itexall Druggist, IB X. Third St. and Penna. Station. The Enormous Demand For Coal THE coal situation is briefly this: The demand has greatly increased. It comes from factories and railroads and war requirements. Factories and Railroads myst be kept go ing. Households must be kept warm and well fed if the country is to be fit for its great task. We as a people dare not forget that we are at war and that the cause we have at heart depend in a large measure upon abundant production and wide distribution of coal. We must produce all we can and distribute according to the need. In addition to meeting the situation at home we must supply coal to our army and navy abroad and consider the -needs of our neighbors, especially Canada and South America, and some of our Allies whose supply is inadequate. Day by day the demand increases. Coal dealers have had extreme difficulties get ting supplied this summer. Since it was impossible to get a full supply in April, May, June, July and August, what will con ditions be when every person is using a maximum amount? If your bins are not filled—don't delay an other day. United Ice & Coal Co. Harrisburg and Steelton. Peaches! Peaches! Peaches! 10,000 Baskets —Of late varieties including Elbcrtas, Smoek and Crowfords on Bale at H M. Stees, 121 SOUTH CAMERON ST. AND SIXTH AND MUENCH STS. STARTING AT 10 O'CLOCK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18TH. 1 s r w _ " ". " * '• ■ v ' ' MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 17, 1917. NEWS OF S U. S. WAREHOUSE NEAR COMPLETION Two Harrisburgers in Aero Supply Squadron Attached "to Plant at Middletown The United States Aviation Sup ply Warehouse at Middletown will be completed by Thursday. Announcement to this effect was made at the grounds this morning. .Shipments of materials to be as sembled In tho warehouse are ex pected in a few days and by the lat ter paj-t of the week officials in charge believe the Building will be tilled to its capacity. The night torce of 250 workmen will be laid off Wednesday night and the day force of about StoO men will be retain.ed for several days to tlnish up the work about the grounds. Started August 9, remarkable headway was made in the construc tion of the mammoth building. The building is 830 feet long and 270 feet wide. Two railroad tracks in the center of the structure will make unloading easy and quick. A roadway forty-two feet wide is being constructed around the building. The 113 th Aero Supply Squadron of the regular army arrived at the grounds Saturday afternoon and is on. guard duty. The police force with the exception of T. V. Gardner has been taken off of duty, this work being placed in the hands of the squadron. The squadron of 150 men is re cruited to full strength and is the first Aero Supply Squadron to go into regular servipe. Among the mem | bers of the squadron are two Har ; risburgers. They are Jacob L. jNichola. 1445 Revere street and Ottis Hopp, 34 4 Muench street. ; There are forty-nine Pennsylvanlans lin the squadron. The other men are i from various parts of the country. ! Lieutenant Fred Netcher, of Call | fornia is in charge of the company. The squadron was organized at San ; Antonio and located there for about | a month. MANY ATTENDING GOFF EVANGELISTIC SERVICES j *The attendance at the Goff evan gelistic services in the First Meth odist Church is increasing daily. The evangelist will preach to-night on "What shall It profit a man, if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" Tuesday morning prayer meetings will be held at the following homes at 9 o'clock: Mrs. Keister, Front and Adams streets; Mrs. Bogner, 152 Bes semer street; Mrs. Mowry, 339 Pine street; Mrs. Stiles, 427 Catnarlne street; Mrs. Crump. 40 South Second street. The Tuesday evening service will be held at 9 o'clock following the farewell parade •to the drafted men. Steelton Snapshots Theater Sold —Henry C. Claster, of Harrisburg, has purchased the Or pheum Theater building. Soutn Front street, and will remodel it Into an office building. Repairing Street —A force of work ' men are engaged in repairing bad ! holes in Froftt street below the block paving. Harvest Home Services —Harvest home services were observed at St. John's Lutheran Church yesterday with special services. The canned fruits used ih the display will sent ! to the Lutheran Deaconess Mother | House in Baltimore. Church Meetings —A meeting of j the Y'oung People's Missionary Soci ety of the St. John's Lutheran Church ! will be held at the home of Miss Ada Hensel, Front and Adams street, on | Thursday evening. Dr. C. R. Miller's i class of St. John's Sunday School will ! meet at the home of Mrs. M. Zerby, | North Fourth street, Thursday eve ning. Negro Arrested Detective Durn i baugh arrested James Smith, colored, for attempting to shoot Ezekiel Wil , llama. He is the lockup pending a j hearing. READY FOR BIG DEMONSTRATION Organizations to Line Up in Large Numbers; Middle town to Be Represented According to the present outlook, the farewell parade to Steelton's quota of drafted men. to-morrow evening will be a mammoth demon stration. Many of the organizations in the ! town have notified the committee! that they would participate and [ many who have not been heard from j it is.believed will take part. The committee in. session yester- j day afternoon have completed ar rangements for the affair. Tho parade will move from Second j street in Angle avenue at 7.30 o'clock I I to-morrow evening. All the borough fire companies ! will participate in the parade it was! announced to-day. A request was j made by officers of the Citizens' company to all members to report at ; the hosehouse in uniform at 7.15 o'clock. Members of Steelton Conn- | cil No. 162, Order of Independent Americans •will meet at the lodge J hall at 7 o'clock. All Croatians in i the borough have been requested to ; meet at Croatian Hall to-morrow' evening at 7 o'clock to form for the 1 parade. The Steelton band, Highspire band and many other musical organ izations of the borough will \ take part. A representation from Mid dletown accompanied by a band will parade. Alt residents have been requested |to display the national colors on j their homes. The Businessmen's ! Association have notified all mem- j hers to decorate their places of j business. STORES CI.OSE IK KEEPING WITH RBLIGIOUS HOLIDAY | Many stores were closed to-day in j keeping with the Jewish holiday, i Services were held in the Synagogue j in North Second street during the i day. The stores closed were Fru- | min's Jewelry Store. Ideal Jewelry i Store, Quality Shop, Family Shoe Store, Baker's Boot Shop, Joseph | Zacks, A. J. Lehrman, Yoffe Brothers, j J. Levin. I* Levitz, Steelton Under selling Store, Steelton Novelty Store. M. Garonzik, Joseph Robin. POLICE CHIEF GROVE GOES OX DUTY TODAY | Chief of Police Victor Grovd took j charge of the department to-day. He busy most of the morning re- j ceiving telephone calls from people I congratulating him on his new posi- j tion. Night Sergeant Hand will re- ! main on day duty with the next chief j fc.r a few days until he gets accus- j tomed to the new work. BANQUET IN HONOR OF THE DRAFTED FIREMEN TONIGHT; Drafted members of the West Side j Fire Company will be given a fare- I well banquet this evening, in the flre house, Myers and Trewick streets. The | firemen who will go are Robert Price, Albert Reisch, Charles Freak and John Glaser, secretary of the company. John Reider has been elected to suc ceed Glaser. An Invitation has been sent out by the company to all West | Side drafted men to be the company's ] guests. Five Injured in Crash Which Kills Baby Will Recover Five persons were Injured In an accident Saturday afternoon when a motorcycle and an automobile col- j lided near Hogestown, on the Car lisle pike. In which one small child was killed, will recover. John Sourbier, his wife and daugh- ! ter Esther, of Penbrook, all occu pants of the motorcycle, are now | in the Harrisburg Hospital, while i Mrs. Clayton Thomas and her son 1 Wayne, of Lemoyne, whose automo- | bile collided with the machine, are at their home. When the two machines came to- ' gether Mildred Sourbier was thrown from the side car against a concrete s bridge and killed Instantly. Funeral arrangement* have not been ar ranged for the little victim. The injured persons were brought to the hospital in an automobile truck of ! the Cumberland Valley Telephone j Company. RED MEN TO HAVE CORNROAST | Plans have been completed for the I annual cornroast of Warrior Eagle j Tribe, Xo. 340, Independent Order of j Red Men. It will be held Wednesday i night at the Red Men's Hall, Ver beke and Fulton streets. An inter- I esting program has been prepared, i SUE CITY FOR FEED BILL Two suits were brought against the city to-day by J. H. Sheesley and 1 Holler and Garman. feed dealers, for ! payment of a feed bill incurred by the j Citizen Fire Company. Mr. Sheesley In his suit tiled a, charge of $175, and I the Garman firm $220.17. Paul A. Kunkel Is counsel for the plaintiffs. / 1 1 f: MIDDLETOWN . -J 1 Funeral rervices for Mrs. Carlllne Embtck were held from her home Saturday afternoon. The Rev. Fuller Bergstresser, of the St. Peter's Uu theran Church, officiated. Burial was made In the Middletown Cemetery. The Methodist Episcopal Sunday school will hold rally day Sunday morning, October 14. Following is i the committee on arrangements: 1 Miss Edna Schaeffer, Mrs. H. E. Moore, Mrs. O. E. Henry, Mrs. Rob ert Gross, H. E. Moore, P. E. Deihi, George Core and Mrs. Wessloy Rijby's class. Harvest home services and old folks' day will be held next | Sunday morning. Miss Rachel McCarrell Is at York, j Miss Sarah Davis is spending'the week at Shippensburg with Miss Minnie Melhorn. Mr. anH Mrs. John Yost and son, 1 of Harrisburg, are visiting in town. John Wood, Jr., of McKeesport, is visiting In town. . Mr. and Mrs. William Kohr are spending the week at Philadelphia and Atlantic City. George Carr and N. C. Fuhrman i spent Sunday at Lebanon. The one hundred and fiftieth an- ' nlvcrsary of the old Lutheran j church and the ninety-eighth anni versary of the founding of the Sun day school was celebrated yesterday morning by the opening of the Sun-f day school. Their was 583 In at tendance at the Sunday school re sponse. Addresses were made by for mer pastors, the Aev. F. "VM. Staie, the Rev. S. T. Nicholas, the Rev. George Elcher, the Rev. W. M. Baum,! the Rev. B. F. Alleman. the Rev. 11. C. Holloway. They also made ad dresses at the morning and evening j services. This evening services at) 7.30 will be the unveiling of the solid I ironze tablet In memory of the for mer TREE LICENSES ARE IN DEMAND Hundreds Are Being Taken Out at the State Depart ment of Agriculture Licenses for the *V \\ # //J sale of trees and \\\\ nursery stock In (Cry Pennsylvania are rraiffit! t being issued by the hundreds at the sttt,e Depart n'Pnt ot Agricul- I jwßifflteMjW ture an '' f rom re -9 wlWinlllllFsi Ports coming hero fe ls believed that •£ purchases of fruit tree stock will be on an unusually largo . scale this year. The nursery llense act, which was aimed to check the com plaints arising from operation of "tree sharks," and to halt sale of inferior stock, went into effect a few months ago and about 250 nurseries, most of them in the vicinity of Phil adelphia and located largely in Ches ter, Delaware, Montgomery and other counties, were licensed. All sales men must also be licensed and estab lishments In this and other States have been taking out licenses. Some of the New York nursery establish ments have been getting licenses for over one hundred men at a time. All of the applications indicate big expansion of the fruit tree busi ness. The war conditions have practical I "The Live "Always K I Their approval of this "Live Store" | on Saturday. There seemed to be "only one" * Q j candidate in the field in this district Vacant space was —L premium at Doutrichs it's very interesting to watch res P° nße to our advertising hov/ much comment * Ts§W* en *^ Uß * asm always creates. I But our ads are full of interest tell- 1 llllff y* f k \ * n S the plain, simple truth about our mer- -M chandise and that's why a great number of readers "look 5 them over" then respond and fill this store to overflowing. il Iff Although our "Hat Department" is I but "one year old " it was the busy spot on jg| j P*) Saturday—we'd like to tell how many -SOP " Stets ° n Hats " I Mm%' were sold at this "Live Store" on 1 Km -M• : • Saturday. Our Hat man kept insisting on IH 111? more salesmen, all day long—we mustered all possible SIB ' • aid to this department, but found it quite impossible to BH| Sj§| wait on all our customers lf you will kindly come in HI If ; r : | : this week we will endeavor to serve you. I tlf I||. ' Scr I I W | I Kuppenheimer Clothes j I.( Standard merchandise—Cloth bought and reserved for us I I eighteen months a go-now made up into high grade clothing for DOUTRICHS is a big help to keeping the prices right in clothing bought HERE remember price alone means nothing, it's what you get for that given price our liberal guarantee goes with every suit now as always and greater values bring most men here for S2O Suits - $25 Suits - S3O Suits I j ' (y checked the importation of nur sery, shrubbery and floral stock from Europe. Last year some shipments were handled from Holland, Belgium nnd France, whence come most of the stock, hut they have almost ceas ed. Japanese stock has come In, but nothing like the quantity which was formerly imported into Pennsylva nia from Europe. To Issue Index Editions.—Arrange ments are being made at the State Legislative Reference Bureau to is sue this winter indexed editions of the third class city and borough codes. This work was authorized by the last Legislature and will be tho most extensive Indexed editions of municipal law ever issued in the State. In Pittsburgh. Major A. M. Porter, chief storekeeper, ls in Pitts burgh on State business. Ulwrter Granted. The Witman Schwarz Corporation, of this city, has been chartered with $500,000 capital. The incorporators are Liarl K. Deen, Edward Bailey and S. R. Coover, of Harrisburg. Visiting Erie. C. P. Rogers, Jr.,, chief of accounts of the Auditor General's Department, is spending a few days in Erie county. Watching Paralysis.—Close watch is being kept on tho development of infantile paralysis in Lancaster coun.ty by State health officials. Damage Sovrrc. Reports com ing to the State Department of Agri culture Indicate that the damage done by the frosts last week to beans, tomatoes, buckwheat and corn was even more extensive in northern counties than estimated. In some of the central counties the loss in otmatoes was heavy. Wardens' Powers Unabridged. Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, Secretary of the State Game Commission, to-day call ed attention to the fact that the re ! cent opinion of the Attorney Gen- eral's Department regarding powers of the game protectors or wardens, as they are popularly known. Game protectors have the powers of police officers in enforcing game, lish, and forestry laws. They have been di rected to exercise them, says Dr. Kalbfus. Governor Return*. —Governor Brum baugh came back to Harrisburg. this afternoon from Philadelphia, where he spent Sunday after attending Gen eral Stewart's funeral, and was at the Capitol for the first time since the end of July. The Governor issued no statement regarding reports of the re quest for resignation of Chief of Mines James E. Roderick or about appoint ments to fill vacancies. He occupied himself with routine matters and saw few officials. The Governor plans to return to Philadelphia to vote at the primary, and will return here for a number of meetings later on. Blic Dciiiiiu For Men. Director Ltghtner. of the State's Employment Bureau, to-day received one of the biggest requests for men on any day since the bureau was established. There are wanted 100 laborers, fifty carpenters and other men for con struction of 200 houses, mine build ings, water and sewer systW.ns and street improvements at several places in Western Pennsylvania. Laborers are offered thirty-two and one-half cents per hour, carpenters sixty-five to seventy-one cents per hour and time and half time for all overtime, with double time on Sunday. Camp facilities are also offered. Dauphin Coses First. The Kotur and Frazer murder cases from this county are the first on the list for the State Board of Pardons meeting on September 25. Xo Meeting I.lstetl. No arrange ments for a meeting of the State Com mission of Agriculture is scheduled for this week. May Discuss Jitneys. The Public Service Commission may take up the Harrisburg Jitney cases at executive sessions this week. Publle Service. The Public Serv ice Commission to-day began hearing a long list of arguments li cases in which rehearings are asked and will have executive sessions to dispose of I pending cases to-morrow and Thurs-| day. No hearings are scheduled for : Wednesday. Thomas J. Ijindis, of Pittsburgh, to-day charged before the , commission that the Central District I Telephone Company, which operates j in that city, did not keep an adeijunte ] record of limited service calls and sev eral residents of St. Marys complain ed of the refusal of the St. Marys Gas Company to exten dits mains. Dougherty Nsined. General C. B. Dougherty, of Wilkes-Harre, has been selected by members uf the State Armory Board to net as vlce-chuir lnan succeeding the late Adjutant General Thomas J. Stewart. Bernard Schmidt at ' , Meeting of Nation's Bakers Bernard Schmidt has gone to the ' Convention of the Leading of i the Nation which is being held in Chicago, to-day, to-morrow and Wed- , nesday. The convention has been call ed in order that some agreement may be made by the bakers and Herbert C. Hoover, Food Administrator, that will materially change the cost of bread. A committee of bakers has present ed a constructive program of co-oper ation but the program has not been accepted by the bakers as a whole. Nature Says "I can remedy most ills, and j ; help you to escape many ail ments, if you give me timely aid." Naturally, Nature prefers BEECHAM'S PILLS I Lvil Sala of Air Medicine in ths World. Sold STsrywhsrs. la bozos, 10c., 25c. HEADACHE STOPS NEURALGIA GONE Dr. James' Headache Powders give instant relief—Cost dime a package. Nervo-raclflng, splitting or dull, throbbing headaches yield In Just a few moments to Dr. James' Head ache Powders which cost only 10 cents a package at any drug store. It's tile quickest, surest headacho relief In the whole world. Don't suf fer! Itellcvo the- agony and distress now! You can. Millions of men and women have found that headacho or neuralgia misery is needless. Get what you ask for. The Harrisburg Academy Tlc Junior Department re opens September :Mtli. The Senior Department re opens September 25th. The school accommodates pu pils under three arrangements: . First—As day pupils. Second—As live-day per week boarding pupils. Third — As regular boarders. All pupils are grouped in small classes. Each student receives private instruction and supervision during study periods. For catalogue and de tailed information, call at the Academy office or write the Headmaster. Arthur B. Brown. Harrisburg. Pa., Box 617. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers