20 Many Buy Bonds to Match One Taken by President; Pennsy Men Are Loyal The ".Match the President" idea fori increasing; the wale of bonds in the j city has spread rapidly, but there re- : mains many more bonds to be sold before the 1,000 called for by the Mayor are disposed of. Numerous |SO bonds were sold through the. match ing plan this morning, and the sale will continue the rest of to-day and to-morrow. Chairman A. S. Patterson hopes to have the 1.000 quota reached by to-morrow evening. The large corporations and indus trial establishments are still buying bonds in large quantities. All of them arc striving to make their organiza tions 100 per cent, subscribers. It was announced this morning that j the Philadelphia Division, of the Penn sylvania I tail road. had subscribed i $583,300 during the drive, with a total of 10,490 subscribers. Among thesel subscribers are many train and engine ] crews which are 100 per cent, perfect. Every employe on the road under Supervisor Putney, at York Haven, has ' subscribed at least one bond. Among the laborers are many Mexicans, Au strians, Hungarians, Italians and many other foreign-born workmen. Until noon to-day the Boy Scouts reported forty-nine subscriptions, to the amount of $1,700. The total sub scriptions secured by the Boy Scouts this weel: is 170 for $50,650. Food Dictator Places Ban on Profiteering in Ice This Summer WaKhinuton. May 3. Formal no tice of its determination not to per mit profiteering in ice this summer has been given by the food adminis tration in making public a telegram to-day sent to state food administra tors. Ice dealers will be required to lile with the local administrators any pro posed schedules of increased prices before they are put into effect and I where local authorities are unable to j prevent unreasonable charges the ad ministration is prepared to use all its powers under the license provision of the food control law. • 1| For —■s zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz Desirable property, 14 rooms, 2 baths; storeroom, first floor. 311 Walnut St. But one door from new Penn-Harris Hotel op posite State Capitol Park— near one of busiest corn ers. Possession At O For particulars apply to Bowman & Company. ♦ _ -■ Absolutely No Fain S >7 lataat lnro T l iU --■ ancea, Including aa Nr(B- r, Ji "isfSJSrgraß extracting and all dental work H*ltlvel)> palnleaa >V W and la perfect It harm- .*y , laa. (Asa aa <k Pull aet of _ 1 teeth ..is.uo EXAMINATION # n^AS'fffflig FREE Go'ld*ro itD a „*£ A \f K sold crown* tB.OO Reentered J „ . . " to •P. mi. I Monday, Wed- Gradnnte XT aaaday and Saturday, till Aaalataata A/ V 9 p* m. X BEI.L PHONE SS23-R. J t BAST TERMS OF /k|^U. PAYMENTS ■C18BS& / 'y 320 Market SL (Over the Hah) HARRISBURG, PA. t didn't hart a hit I S " -Jljiliiiiiini PUBLIC SALE! OF BUILDING LOTS or GARDEN PLOTS On the Premises, North and South of Lincoln Street, East of Lebanon Street, Steelton, Pennsylvania Sat., May 4,1918, Commencing at 2 P.M. 30 Lots Fronting on Lincoln Street 30 Lots Fronting on Bessemer Street 30 Lots Fronting on Ridge Street 40 Lots Fronting on Harrison Street 40 Lots Fronting on Baldwin Street And More Lots on Harrison and Baldwin Streets if You Want Them This ib the most desirably located land in Steelton, excepting none. It lies partly within the Borough limits and partly without. Is away from the smoke and dirt and yet close to the trolley and the steel works. Steelton needs many additional homes right now and will need many more each year to keep pace with the improvements at the plant of the Bethlehem Steel Company, not to mention the Government improvements at Middletown and directly across the river from Steelton, all of which will help to increase the population of Steelton. Buy now before prices advance and build houses, or use your lots for war gardens and build at the close of the war. You can run no possible risk way, as these lots are for sale at your own prices and must be sold to settle an estate. TERMS: —$5.00 to SIO.OO Cash, balance $5.00 and upward per month at rate of 5% per month. A discount of 10% will be allowed for all cash and a proportionate discount for part cash in advance. Liberty Bonds or Bank Certificates of dep-jsit accepted as cash and accrued interest allowed. v, Plans may be seen and additional information had at our office No. 122 NORTH FRONT STREET, STEELTON, prior to date of sale. J. A. DUNKLE ESTATE J. H. Soulliard, Auctioneer A. W. DUNKLE, Executor, D. B. N. f ' ' 4 FRIDAY EVENING, , HARIUSBURG TELEGRAPH MAY 3, 1918 REVERSAL TAKES U. S. STEEL ALONG Under Lead of Lackawanna Steel, Sharp Rally Follows With Gains of 1 to 2 Points I fly Associated Press New York, May 3.—A market re . versal at noon carried United Stales | Steel and other equipment, also cop- I Iters, rails and shipping fractionally | under yesterday's iinal prices, auto ! mobile issues meanwhile extending ! their first losses. A sharp rally fol | lowed under lead of Lackawanna i Steel, Colorado Fuel, Great Northern I Ore and several low priced coalers, | | notably Pittsburgh Coal, Pittsburgh | i and West Virginia and Western! Maryland at gains of 1 to 2 points. | Other strong features included Cali-j fornia Petroleum and Royal Dutch Oil. Liberty 3is soid at 98.98 to! 99, first 4s at 96.44 to 96.58, and sec-| ond 4s at 96.34 to 96.50. Stocks were firm to strong at open- j ing except for pressure against thei automobile group. General Motors lost 1 % points and Studebaker IJ point. Pools renewed their activity | in a variety of issues, notably Super- j , ior and Lackawanna Steels, Sumatra | Tobacco, Tobacco. products. Central | i Leather, American Can and some < f j ! the petroleums at gnins oL large! fractions to 1 % points. Unite* States! Steel, however, moved within narrow J limits. Moderate offerings cancelled | most gains before the end of the hrst | half hour. Liberty Bonds were tr j regujar. i XKW YORK STOCKS ! Chandler Brothers and Company. ( j members of New York and Philadel- j i phia Stock Exchanges—3 North Mar- i I ket Square. Harrisburg; 336 Chestnut j street. Philadelphia: 34 Pine street, New York—furnish the following I quotations: Open. 2 P.M. | Allis Chalmers 29% 29 I Amer Beet Sugar 73 73 American Cay 44** 44Vs !Am Car and Foundry .. 77 78 Amer Loco 64V4 64U Amer Smelting 78% 78'/* Every Meal a Poisonous Injection Few folks suffering from kidney j j and bladder troubles ever think that | ! the meals which they are taking are i \ hastening their death. Every morsel I i of food taken gives up its quantity af 1 uric acid. This poison is taken into] the system through a diseased condi tion of the kidneys and bladder. In j I the healthy man nature provides" an j l outlet for this poison. Those in ill- | | health must take a medicinal help to ] | drive this death-dealing poison from ; j the system. Fcr over 200 years GOLD ! MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules have been doing this work. They effect prompt relief in all diseases arising from kidney and bladder troubles. Dor.'t put off tnis vital matter of at tending to your health until it is time to make your funeral arrangements, i Get a box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules to-day. Look for the ' genuine. Your druggist sells them. They are guaranteed or money re- i funded. Insist on GOLD MEDAL i Brand.—Advertisement. UNDERTAKER 1741 Chas. H. Mauk x boTH L PRIVATE AMBULANCE PHONES American Sugar 105'.j 105 U Anaconda .... 65*4 659 a Baldwin locomotive .... 80',79% Baltimore and Ohio .... Sl ß * 51 s i Bethlehem Steel IB) ... 7>/i 78% California Petroleum ... 17 17', Canadian Pacific 140% 139', 4 Central Leather 6f 3 4 66'4 Chesapeake and Ohio ... 56"4 56% Chicago, R 1 and Pacific 19% 19 U Chino Con Copper .. .. 42% 42% Col Fuel and Iron .. .. 41 % 43 Corn Products 39' i 38% Crucible Steel 65', 65t (Distilling Securities . . 5051% Erie • 14% '1 a I General Motors 116% 116% [Great Northern pfd 89% Mi'J i Great Northern Ore subs 30i, 30% j Inspiration Copper .. .. 53% 52% I International Paper .. .. 59% 3:)', j Kennecott i>2'i 32 i Lackawanna Steel 8-' 82% | Merc War Ctfs 23% ?3% Merc War Ctfs pfd .... 86 sfi'4 ! Mex Petroleum 94 14 91% I Miami Copper 27% 27% j Midvale Steel 46% 46 k ! New York Central .... 70 Vft % N Y. N H and H 30% 29% j New York, Ont and West 19 19 j Pacific Mail 31% 30% 1 Pennsylvania Railroad . 44 43 r * | Pittsburgh Coal 5'!% 53% Ray Con Copper 25 24% I Reading 80% 80% Republic Iron and Steel. 81% 84% J Southern Pacific ...... 82% 82% Southern Ry 2' % 21% I Studebaker 37 36% i Union Pacific 1'3% 118% | U S I Alcohol 124 ! U S Rubber 57% 57 % IT S Steel !<S 98% U S Steel pfd 115% 111% Utah Copper 81 81 Virginia-Carolina Chem . 15% -!5% Wfstmghouse Mfg .. .. 4'% 40% Willys-Overland 17% 1"% PHI I. ADKI, t'HI.V STOCKS By Associatii Pi ess ! Philadelphia. May 3. Wheat j Market quiet; No. 1. red. 52.37, I No. 1, soft. red. $2.2 D: No. 2. red. J2.21; I No. 1. soft. i?U. 52.22. ! Oats The market is lower; No. 2, white, 90%<filc; No. 3, white, j S9(U 89% c. | Corn The market is steady: No. 3, yellow, $1.74®1.76; No. 4, yellow, j nominal, f1.T191.73. Bran The tuaruct is steady: sof' "liner, per ion. i-tti.50®47.00; spring | per inn. J4-1.00@45.00. Butter The market is higher; | western. creamery, extras, 47c; j nearby prints, fancy, 51c. I Eggs—Market steady; Pennsylvania ; ana other nearby firsts, free cas-t, $11.25 per case; do., current receipts, free cases. SIO.BO per case; western, extras, firsts, free cases, $11.25 per case; do., firsts, free cases, SIO.BO per case; fancy, selected, packed, 42@44e per dozen. Cheese Higher; New York, full cream, 23@25%c. Live Poultry—The market is higher; fowls, 37® 38c; young, soft-meated roosters, 28®30c: young, staggy roost ters, 24(526C: old roosters, 22® 23c; spring chickens, &5®62c; ducks, j Peking, 28®30c; do., Indian Runner. 26©27 c; turkeys. 27@28c; geese, nearby, 25©284'; western. 25@2Sc. Dressed Poultry—Steady: turkeys, ' nearby, choice to fancy, 39<g>40c; do, lair to good, 32®37c; do., old. 37@38c: I do., western choice to fancy. 37®38c: do., fair to good, 32®36c; d0.,01d toms. ■ 30c; old. common, 30c; fresh killed ; fowls, 341037 c: frozen, fancy, 26©36% c good to choice, 34®35c: do..small sizes, ; 28®30c; old roosters, 29c; frozen broiling chickens, nearby, 40@42c; ® Your Credit by including among your assets United States Government Bonds We are repared to receive subscriptions to the Third Liberty Loan for arty amount and in the most suit able way, A. B. Leach & Co., Inc. Investment Securities I 62 Cedar Street, New York Chicago Boston Philadelphia Huffalo Scran ton Baltimore Represented by LEE A. LAUBENSTEIN Harrisburg m western, 40® iSie; do., frozen roasting ] chickens. 2S®:!dc; micks, nearby. 28© I 320; do., western. 26(&32c; geese, near u> -'< *•!-■ 'JXe. W t*i •• 1M . -u(rl)7e Potatoes'- Market lower; New Jersey, No. I. per basket. 4U'y6oc v.;.! j lbs ). New )<>iev No. >2. per ' ::5® 50c; Pennsylvania, per 100 lbs., j SI.OOSi 1.40; New York, per 100 lbs.. | sl.oo® 1.25; western, per 100 lbs.. $1.25 @1.55; Maine, per 100 lt>s.. $1.60® !.80, Delaware anil Maryland, per 100 Hiss., 90e®$1.10; Michigan, per 100 lbs, $ 1.00 ft) 1.25; Florida, per barrel, 12.50 ®3.50; Florida., per bushel, hamper, 70cfa$1.00; Florida, per 150-lb. bag. $2.00@3.00. Refined Sugars Market steady: powdered, 8.■£••: <-v.ia "ne. ed. '•* 45c. Tallow The ' market Is steady; prime, city, in tierces. 17c; city, special, loose, prime country. 16'ic; dark, 15'ic; edible, In tierces. S k- ® l?c. Flour Firm; winter wheat, lOf per cent, flour. $11.25# 1 l.uO per bar iel; Kansas wheat. 100 per cent. Hour, J11.00@11.50 per barrel; spring wheat, 100 per cent, flour, $10.50@11.00 per barrel Hay Market steady; timothy, No. 1. large bales, s2l JOW 30.00 per ton; No. 1, small bales. $?9.00®30 00 per ton; No. 2. $27.00®28.00 per ton; | No. 3. $2;>.00® 25.00 per ton; sample. $1!i.00®20.00 per ton; no grade, SIB.OO UPli'.bO per ton. Clover Light. mixed. $27.n0fl 28.00 per ton; No. 1. light mixed, $20.00®26.50 per ton; No. 2. light mix ed. $24.00®25.00 per ton. Three Rivers, Canada's Second Oldest City, Is Fire Swept; 40 Houses By Associated Press Three Kivcrs, Que., May 3. Fire which broke out in the business sec tion here to-day, swept through a number of stores and residences. Quebec and Montreal tiremen re sponded to a call for assistance. By 11a. m., an hour after the tire started, forty houses on Bonavenure street, the main business thorough fare, had been destroyed. The flames spread to the nearby streets and the families were compelled to leave their houses because of the tremen dous heat. The lire is reported to have started in the Victoria theater, which collapsed. Three Hivers, an industrial and manufacturing city of about 10,000 population and a port of entry, is 75 miles southwest of the City of Que bec. It is on the Canadian Pacific and Grand Trunk railways. Three Rivers is the second oldest city in Canada. It was visited by a disastrous tire in 1906 when half the city was burned. Rutherford Man Gets Compensation Hjalmar Peterson, of Hummels town, is held to be entitled to com pensation for injuries recei'ved while working in the Rutherford shops on a Reading railway locomotive which the company claimed had been en gaged in interstate commerce. It was also set up that nt one time tne engine may have been engaged in interstate and the next trip in intra state traffic. "The engine upon which the claimant was working at the tib'e of his injury had been engaged in both intrastate and interstate traffic, but at the time of the accident it was engaged in neither," says the de cision. The board has sustained Ref eree Cummings and dismissed ap peals in the cases of J. J. Canfleid. Harrisburg. vs. Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company, and George W. Banner, Lemoyne, vs. Philadel phia and Reading. THE annual meeting or the stock holders of the Blubaker Coal Com pany will be held at the office of the W. O. Hlckok Manufacturing Com pany. Harrisburg, Pa., at 12 o'clock noon, May the 6th, 1918, for the elec tion of officers and such other busi ness as may be properly presented. ROSS A. HICKOK. Secretary. NOTICE is hereby given that the partnership lately exisiting between Martha K. Grissinger and William J Gardner, under the firm name of Gris singer Home Made Cake Bakery was dissolved on the 22d dav of April 1918, by mutual consent, and that the said business will be conducted by William J. Gardner individually. All dobts owing to the salrl partnership are to be received by the said Wil liam .7. Gardner and all demands on the said partnership are to be pre sented to him for payment MARTHA K. GRISSINGER WILLIAM .1. GARDNER. In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County: Sitting in Equity, No. 607 Equity Docket. In Re Partition of the Estate of Mary Schell. Between ICphraim H. Schell and Marv Schell, his wife, Morris Schell and Sadie Schell, his wife, Chas. Schell and Mary J. Schell, his wife, and John H. Schell, Mary Gleason and Richard Gleason, Sadie Brenneman and Wm. H. Brenneman, Clayton Schell Nellie Schell. Albert Schell, Harry Schell, Defendants. i NOTICE Is hereby given to the I above-named parties that bv virtue of a decree of Court of Common Pleas |uf Dauphin County, bearing date the 25th day of March, A. I>. 1918, Victor Braddock, Esq.. the Master named in ! said Decree to divide and partition ! the land described in the bill filed in | the above-stated case, to wit: i All that certain lot or piece of land, I situate in the Township of Swatara] I bounded and described as follows: I BEGINNING at a ,point on the west- I ern line of Twenty and One-Half I street forty feet distant in a south erly direction fyom the southern line I <>f Brookwood street and running thence in a westerly direction paral lel with Brookwood street one hun dred and fifteen feet to Washington avenue; thence in a southerly direc tion along the eastern line of Wash ington avenue twenty feet to a point; thence In an easterly direction paral lel with Brookwood street one hun dred and fifteen feet to Twenty and One-Half street: thence along Twtnty and One-Half street twenty feet to the place of beginning. Being lot No. 58 of Block "M" in Plan of Kwing and Dunkle. Recorded i in Plan Book "A," page 96. And being the same premises which Joseph E. Rhoads and wife, by their deed bearing date the 2dday of April, 1892. and recorded in Deed Book "O." Vol. 8, page 296, granted to Mary Schell, and to value the same and to ascertain the amount to be charged thereon for owelty of partition, and if the land cannot be conveniently di vided into as many purparts as there are parties to award and allot the amount or sum to be paid or to be paid to them respectively, and the time when such payments shall be made and the purparts out of which the same shall be payable, and if the land cannot be divided without prejudice to or spoiling the whole then to value and appraise the same will perform the duties imposed upon him by the said Decree on the prem ises above described on Saturday. June 1. A. D. 1918, at 10 o'clock A. M at which time and place the said par ties can attend if they think proper. VICTOR BRADDOCK. Master in Partition. April 12, 1918. W. W. CALDWELL, Sheriff of Dauphin County, Pa. Proclamation in Divorce Dauphin County, ss: In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County. Pa., No. 6, March Term, 1918. Libel In divorce—a vin culo matrimonii, Stella E. Prentice vs. Jerry E. Prentice. The subpoena and alias subpoena in the above-stated case have been returned "non est in ventus." You, Jerry E. Prentice, are therefore directed "to appear in the. Court at Harrisburg. PH., on the fourth Monday of May. A. D. 1918, to answer the complaint therein filed W. W. CALDWELL Sheriff, Harriburg, gfl~ Mag .. Rainbow Division Has No Casualties Major Q. O. Keitzel, of Lancaster! county, who commands a battalion of the Kainbow Division, and is a former legislator, has written a letter to Ad jutant Geenral Beary in which iie says the division has been oil duty in Hie trenches three times and had 110 casualties up to the time of writing bis letter. He speaks of the men as in fine shape. General Beary is highly pleased al the result of Pennsylvania's record of service and thinks there are close to 150,000 men from this stale in serv ice, including the 83,000 drafted men. There are about 26,000 ii* the Key stone division. 600 in tile Itainbow. 10.000 in the Navy and the rest in the Regular Army or In units from other states. , 1,117 MEN REGISTERED While complete totals of party en rollment for the city registration have not been made at the county commissioners' office an unofficial report has been finished showing the additions and party choice of *.ne 1.417 voters who registered May 1. Of this total 1,059 lutve been listed as Republicans, 304 us Democrats and the few remaining votes in Pro hibition. Washington and Socialist parties. SHOULD MAKE APPLICATION State Highway Department offi cials have told a delegation of resi dents of Oxford botough that they should make proper application for improvement of state highway sec tions in that town. State co-opera tion in surveys and estimates has been assured them. How About Your Fruit For 1918? Apples, Pears and Peaches in = ESTHERTON = THE APPROVED SUBDIVISION BETWEEN RIVER DRIVE AND SIXTH STREET THE IDEAL SUBURB Are Free to the Purchaser Who Selects His Plot Now Under Our Plan $ | H Interest % Month tefe" - ' ' Your Fruit Year After Year Gives You a Continuous Income Besides Raising Your Own Vegetables You soon will realize that renting a house is and becomes more and more an impossibility Rents are out of sight lt is either buying or moving Buying means ready cash Moving means expense Take our advice — Start now Select your location Look around in Estherton A LOOK MEANS A LOT. Talk It Over Between Yourselves—Call 1390 Bell or Dial 3573—We Will Take You to Estherton Free of Charge HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY—GRASP IT—THIS ADD WILL ONLY APPEAR ONCE SAME AS YOUR OPPORTUNITY Every Day—lnspection Day A ROCKVILLE CAR TAKES YOU THERE Eben Kingsbury, BELL 1390 Wirt. J. Sohland, Sales Manager Dial The Lot Man Offices —Security Trust Building, 36 North Third Street j INSURANCE EXPERT HERE' I -Miles M. Dawson, the New York , insurance expert who has been ex amining the state insurance fund.! I was here to-day to discuss matters I ; with the Auditor General. The fiscal! ] o.ficer wanted Information on ex-' 1 penditures of the.fund the lust year' j and since January 1. Cold Lunches Wrecked His System Joyous Over Tonall • "Continually eating cold lunches I wrecked his digestive system," says j Charles C. Schery, of 23 4 13. Gas • I Ave., York, Pa. "My stomach had 1 been giving me quite some trouble • for the last few years and it matters I not how little I ate or what 1 ate, It ; did not taste right and I would rift s up after eating. I really was fast .j becoming a miserable wreck due to I'll disordered stomach. *i "A friend of mine. Charles G. Sel • jmeyer. recommended Tonall to me. II He claimed it done him so much good. 1 at once commenced taking Tonall and the results have been most gratifying. I can enjoy what I eat now, and my wife can vouch for the amount I do eat. 1 feel as though my whole system has been repaired." The above statement was given Nov. 7, 1917. Tonall is sold at George A. Gor gas - Drug Store, Harrisburg, Pa. Seasoned Lumber "PREQUENT neglect to procure properly seasoned lumber is responsible for interior trim of the house shrinking or checking or wood swelling out of shape. If the lumber is not dry shrinking of lum ber not seen will cause unsightly cracks in walls and ceilings. We are as careful as we can be to give our customers thoroughly seasoned lumber. United Ice and Coal Co. l.nmbpr nepnrtnuMit Forstcr ami Cowdcn Streets
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers