MEADETHESHOW PLACE FOR THE NATIONAL ARMY \ Proximity to Washington Will Lead to Frequent Visits by Ally Officers Camp Meade, Md., Oct. 5. —This cantonment of the National Army is to be the great show camp because ipf its proximity to the National Cap ital. All foreign military officers and diplomats of the allied powers who want to see the National Army in training will be brought here, and to-day it was learned that President Wilson will make frequent visits as Boon as the camp lias reached its fufi proportions and the soldiers are in good military shape. The relatives and friends of the Pennsyl vanlaps and Mary landers here need not worry about them being sent to France very soon. They will be lihie until after Christmas and No' Year's and able to enjoy all tlie homo holiday cheer sent them. French and British officers are coming here to help train them in the tricks of trench warfare and the hurling of hand grenades. The Seventy-ninth Division, com poser! of Maryland. Pennsylvania and District of Columbia selected men, iv.lf be a mighty fighting force. It w ill carry into battle 27,152 men, be sides leaving behind a depot brigade pf impressive magnitude, and It wll make the might of its men felt by the use of an enormous and highly diver sified amount of ordnance. Acres al ready are covered by the transporta tion equipment of this tremendous organization. and many trainloads more are to be received. In fact, much of the equipment will not be completed for some time. The intensive training of the men In infantry work along old lines is merely a prelude to that highly tech nical training in the use of special equipment that soon will be under vay. The division will have great Hrcngth in machine guns. Thor" wih tie a mobile machine un ! t of ten com oanies, not to mention the regime ntr l machine gun companies nor the forty pight sections of automatic rifle men. The real science of war will be seen in the handling of such units as these to the bi tt advantage. JOIIX 11IXKLE BURIED New Cumberland, Pa., Oct. t>. —The iody of John Lloyd Illnkle. of West r'airvlew, who died at the Harrisburg Hospital, was brought to tlie under taking establishment of M. A. Iloff, and was taken to the home of the boy's grandparents at Mount llolly, where funeral services will be held. SoiEaPlic# A Nutritious Diet for All Ages. Keep Horlick's Always on Hand Quick Lunch; Home or Office. LUXATED IRON "G<t! Hut Woiatpd Iron f\ RiknStron! '■V ' j&Kr T! VifmaliM I. jfU Bciitiiil, t rfcj, aadiuL Dr. James Louii Beyea, for fifteen year§ Adjunct Professor Nrtv York Homeopathic He- Idtcal College says —There is nothinr likeorranic iron—Nuxatrd Iron—to put youthful ttrenfth and power Into the veins of the weak, run-down, |Tfe Infirm or aced. To be absolutely cure that my patients gcv real organic iron and not tome form of tne metallic variety. I always prescribe Nuxatr.l |P| iron in Its o.ifinal packages. Nuxated Iron will increase the strength and endurance of weak, ner r* vou run-down folks 100 in two weeks time in JfeT many instances. Diifenitd ly all Jrufsiiti. CHILDREN Should not be "dosed" for colds—apply "ex- Lmlf Body Guard in Your Horn* "SS HKSty ViaSWo^S Few People ' Know This Large doses of pills for " the liver are not as ef- j ficient as small doses. The big dose purges its way ! through the sys tem fast, but does not cleanse thoroughly. The small dose (if right) acts gently on the liver, and gives it just the slight help it needs to do its own work, and do it well. Take one pill regularly*, until you know yon are all right, fmulntt heart •Signature Colorless faces often show thsabwineof Iron in the blood. Carter's Iron Pills will help this condition. FRIDAY EVENING NEW RULINGS IN COMPENSATION Crossing Watchman Cases Passed Upon by the State Commission This Week The State Compensation Board has reversed Referee Klauder, of Phila delphia, in awarding - compensation to the widow of a crossing watchman employed at Bridgeport on the Phila delphia and Reading Railway. The opinion says: "No case has been brought before the Supreme Court of the United States which has required it to decide whether a flagman at a crossing is or Is not engaged in in terstate commerce while flagging an interstate train. . . . The flagging of an interstate train at a crossing is as essential to the security, expedi tion and efficiency of interstate com merce as is the repairing of a bridge; nor indeed can we distinguish be tveen the employment of a crossing tender while flagging an interstate train from that of a f;agman, who, as a member of the crew of an inter state train, is sent out to perform a similar service." At the time of the injury tile man was flagging a train engaged in interstate commerce. Anotli' r ruling regarding a watch man is made In a Lackawanna county ca.ne where It was found that a man was enag'ed in flagging a train en gaged in intrastate commerce. "As the admitted facts show that the claimant's decedent was killed while the train movements were wholly in trastate we are of the opinion that the referee did not err," in making an award. A ruling regarding time of filing of a claim is made in the case of Ellis vs. Harrison Brothers and Company, Inc.. Philadelphia. The defendant contended that the date of mail ing was the date of filing, but tho Board does not take that view. Ther petition was mailed just one year after the accident and received at the principal office of the Board here three days later. By failing to file within a year the claim lost its force. In a Wilkes-Barrre case compensa tion is awarded men hurt by a ;;as explosion in a room in a mine about wlich there was a contradiction of tostl.i.ony ns to directions given. Tli; men hurt took up rails as directed, but the question was whether they went to tlie room directed. Commissioner John A. Scott says. In dismissing an appeal in Kranyak vs. Hillside Coal and Iron Company, Scranton, that too much testimony is taken from physicians which is of little consequence. The man died from being hit by a drill. .A stepmother need not file a new claim petition to obtain compensation which had been granted to her hus band for the death of his son upon whose earnings the pair were depend ent, according to a ruling made by Chairman Mackey in Ivephart vs. Pennsylvania Coal and Coke Company, a Cambria county case. The award took the wife into consideration. The Board renews its ruling that "involuntary inhalation of gas is an accidental injury," in the case of Baith vs. the Aetna Explosives Company, in which it was claimed that the claimant was made sick by inhaling fumes due to an explosion in a room where he was working. In Zinger vs. Clarke Can Company, Philadelphia, it was held that there must be proof by testimony that a man awarded compensation for an injury dies from another cause before terminating compensation. The Board granted new hearings in these cases: Youngltin vs. Begga and Cobbs Tanning Company, Somer set. in which it is held that there is not enough testimony of infection by anthrax through a cut; Shebar vs. Pennsylvania Foundry, Cambria; Mc- Keown vs. Epping-Carpenter Com pany, Allegheny; Mulhall vs. Pardee, Luzerne. Commutation was awarded in Burns vs. Curran, Philadelphia; Rizzo vs. Bradford Pressed Brick Company, Mc- ICean. Appeals dismissed were: Reilly vs. Erie Railroad, Susquehanna; Galla gher vs. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, and Papoy vs. Del aware and Hudson Company, Lacka wanna; Deane vs. Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company, Schuylkill; Bowen vs. Gault Company, Philadelphia; Brehm vs. Philadelphia and Reading Railway, Dauphin; Davis vs. Carpenter Steel Company, Berks; Schempp vs. German Evangelical Lu theran Church, Allegheny; Koloski vs. Lehigh Valley Coal Company, Luzerne. Farewell to Tech Tutor; New Duties at Toledo For James C. Peet Professor .Tames C. Peet, for seven years an instructor in the electri cal department of the Technical Hijrh school, severed connections with that institution to-day, and will leave to night for Toledo, Ohio, where he has accepted a position. He will be come a member of the faculty of To ledo University, in the electrical en gineering department. During his stay in this city Mr. Peet has made friends who will re gret his departure from Harrisburg. In addition to his classroom work he was instrumental in the forma tion of the Tech Camera and Tech Wireless clubs. During the spring months with another member of the faculty he helped to coach the Tech track team that has been a consist ent winner for the last four years, most of the time as state champion. He was a member of the choir of the Grace Methodist Episcopal Church. An informal farewell was extended to him to-day by mem bers of the faculty and the student body. GIFTS FOR FRENCH RAItIKS W-.conisco, Pa., Oct. s.—After see ing an appeal in the newspapers for the suffering babies of France, Mrs. J. S. Prout was stirred to send some thing for their relief. She also en listed the sympathies of a number of others from AViconisco and Lykens, with the result that they responded so generously she was able at the end of two weeks to send four fair-sized boxes to the relief headquarters i New York and a check for sl7. Mrs. Prout desires to return sincere thanks to all who so cheerfully re sponded. SFVFN FROM PERRY COUNTY Blain, Pn., Oct. s.—Seven more Perry county young men have been called to the Army beside the fifty right that left on September 20. There leave the county seat for Camp Meade, Md., on Saturday morning. Two are well known here and the nnmes of the seven men are: William H. Gaudy, of Marysville; Clarence Stahl, of Blain; Charles B. Crist, of Newport; Melvin M. Oren, of Newport; Chester E. Shuler, of Montgomery Ferry; Roy P. Outshall. of Newport, formerly of near Blain, and Harvey A. Kealtman, of New nort Separated Peoples Being Reunited All tho people who spe(ik English, German, Russian. French, Spanish, Italian, Welsh. Erse or Irish, Scotch or Gaelic, and some oC the Asiatic languages, trace their origin back to the old Aryan race. K used to be thought that the Ar yans came from some point in Asia several thousands of years ago. But now certain people claim that their home was in the southern steppes of Kussia; and that the Indian and Per sian branch went towards the east, the Slavs and Teutons into the Ger man forests, and the Greeks towards Wm. Strouse * $ Do YOU Wear Wm. Strouse Clothes? That's mighty important for us to know. And it certainly is important for you to wear them. Those who wear them KNOW \^Jk their top-notch worth. You, Mr. Reader (and we're assuming you have not as yet (f/nr/X /-A worn a Wm. Strouse Suit or Overcoat), have i II much to learn of Real Clothes value. /Iv(i7r/ .Thread for thread of the fabric, stitch for hW ' stitch of the tailoring, Wm. Strouse Clothes f are as true to Standard as Government I J /r^T\ Bonds. Their fashion lines are impressive. WA V// •/ ) They always command hi that " second look" C(c4 which speaks well for 1 the wearer and the clothes. • not of p^£e h6 YOU They hold those ■models expect your money's worth ffl )/ 'H th \ A ™ eric * n man of —you GET it. They are WtW c I JLJ\ today—whether he be the very much a matter of fj f I * —f|sr-| dashing chap or the dapper Quality and Style and Tail- /f * man of affairs should oring—all three of which I Ii wear, likes to wear, insists are as important to us as / 11 on wearing. , they are to you. V wfl , , V /1 11 man n spend mo- Jj I !||— W ments of uncertainty as to tjf j I|| what sort of a suit or over i h e nee( is or wants IfW to buy. <1 We've given years of hard *l'You might be ever so hard study along those lines, and V to please —or rather we we're not too old to learn should say you THINK more but this we CAN you are —in which case say, and it's our privilege \ you'll be most pleasantly to say it directly to YOU, /if and quickly and satisfac- NOW: Wm. Strouse suits '/ torily served and fitted from anrf overcoats fill every re- X our stocks. quirement of those men who , deserve to get ALL the cloth flOur stocks are large— ing value possible, and YOU very large. are one of those men. Well See You, Tomorrow ' 7 —— —— / The New Store of Wm. Strouse 310 Market St. HAKRISBTJRG TEtEGRAPH Greece, while the forefathers of the Celts and Romans followed the Dan ube River Into Italy and Qaul. We know that all these peoples are related from many words that have the same root. We can tell by words even now in use, when the peoples dwelt together, when they separated, one group from another, and something about their dally hab its and lives. For Instance, wo know that the Aryans traveled in carts drawn by cattle, because our words "wheel," "axle," "yoke," and "wagon" all come from Aryan root-words. We know that at one time they were pas toral people, depending mainly on their flocks and herds, because our words "ewe," "wether," "wool,""eow," "ox," "steer"' and "herd" come from Aryan words. Other words tell us that they were a nomadic people, mi grating according to the season to obtain pasturage. It Is a curious thought, that seems to have occurred to no one, that many of tho Aryan peples are com ing together again In the United States, for the first time since their separation thousands of years back. It will take centuries for their amal gamation in what has been called the "Melting Pot"; but doubtless the peo ples thus descended will be the great est people In the world. The chief Aryan language now Is the ICngllsh tongue, and untold thou sands are being dally educated In Its use through The New Universities Dictionary offered by this paper on terms that make It almost a gift. Our coupon offer elsewhere In to-day's paper explains our meaning. 24 in Open Boat For 9 Days at Sea An Atlantic Port, Oct. 5. —Twenty- four survivors of the crew of the American steamship Itasca, picked up after being tossed about in an open boat nine days from the time the Itasca foundered, were brought here yesterday by a steamship from south ern porta, The Itasca, bound from Bermuda to New York, sank in a tropical muda. OCTOBER 5, 1917. 20,000 Airplanes Being Built For U. S. Birdmen Washington Oct 5. Work is In progress on virtually all of tho 20,000 airplanes appropriated for by Con gress to carry the war across the llln uenburg lin'. Hundreds of American aviatlen students are already in all the allied countries completing- their training. Thousands of men are training to fly on the various (lovernment fields In America. As fast as they learn the rudiments they are being sent abroad. The first ail-American airplanes, equipped with the famous liberty mo tor, will be sent overseas In a "rea sonable time." America will have every known type of lighting ma chine—the training airplane, the fast scout plane and the powerful, dyna- mlte-carrylng battleplane of the Cap-j ronl type. • These giant alr-dread-f naughts will be used to drop tons ofl high explosives behind the German.! lines. These and other Important *tat-t ments were made by Secretary of War Baker yesterday In summarising tho accomplishments to date of the Unit-' ed States In aviation. Comfort Your Itching Skin With Cuticura Snap 25c. Ointment 25 and SOc. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers