TRUCK ROUTES TO BE MADEQUICKLY Deputy State Highway Com missioner Hunter Discusses Problems With Officers move In the way \V\\ InZ °' bringing about SSXXXaa establishment of f routes for motor through Pennsyl- I the cities and con : wHlljul Bested districts is j being worked out cers, motor manulucturers, and oth ers interested and will probably be brought to the trial stage at an early day. The plans for half a dozen routes' across the state which will converge at Conshohocken and avoid Philadel phia were submitted to Joseph W. Hunter, deputy state highway com missioner yesterday. One of the routes comes down the Susquehanna Simple Home Treatment Removes Hairy Growths (Beauty Culture.) Two or three minutes use of ft del atone paste will banish every bit of hair from your face, neck or arms. This paste is made by mixing some water with powdered delatone. After the paste is removed, the skin should be washed to free it from the re maining delatone and it will be clear and spotless. You will not be dis appointed with this treatment if you are sure to obtain real delatone from your druggist. Stomach Misery Get Rid of That Sourness, Gas and Indigestion. When your stomach is out of order or run down, your food doesn't digest. It ferments in your stomach and forms rcas which causes sourness, heartburn, foul breath, pain at pit of stomach and many other miserable symptoms. Mi-o-na stomach tablets will give Jovfui relief in five minutes; if taken ! regularly for two weeks they will j turn your flabby, sour, tired out stom ach into a sweet, energetic, perfect I working one. You can't be very strong and vig- | orous" if your food only half digests, t Your appetite will go and nausea, diz- | ziness, biliousness, nervousness, sick j headache and constipation will follow. | Mi-o-na stomach tablets are small | and erisy to swallow and are guaran teed to banish indigestion and any or all of the above symptoms or money back. For sale by H. C. Kennedy and | ell leading druggists.—Advertisement. KDUCATIONAL r' m " 'Nj School of Commerce AMD Harrisburg Business College Troup Uulldin*, IS , Market te llell ptione Ml Dial SMI Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Steno* type. Typewriting, Civil Service If you want to secure a good poaition and Hold it, get Tfaur augb Training in a Standard school of Established Heputatlon, Day and Night School. Kntr any Mou day. Fully accredited- by the National Association. CATARRH MUST BE CURED! Make-Shift Remedies Are Absolutely Worthless Don't think likely of Catarrh. Do not make the mistake of be lieving that it is merely an ag gravated bad cold. True, this trouble usually starts with what is apparently a cold in the head, but beware of any cold that "hangs on." You may as well realize at the outset that Ca tarrh is a serious disease and one that should not be trifled with. In fact, in many instances it is a forerunner of the most dreaded of all diseases—consumption. - Catarrh has become almost a universal ailment among the American people. Almost everywhere, in theatres, cars, and on the streets there-is a con stant sniffling and hawking, for there is bound to be some one in almost every place who is afflicted with catarrh. And everyone is a possible victim, for the ge<"ms of the disease are easily communicated frorti one person to another. So many people afflicted with this disease have been unable to find a cure, although they have taken many different kinds of treatment for years, until now they are almost .willing to be lieve the disease is incurable. Like everything else, to find re lief from this disease, the proper treatment must be resorted to. Xo other kind can be expected to do any good. Read what Mr. C. F. Venatta of New Kensington, Pa., has to say about his Catarrh: "I have used S. 8. 8. In my family and know what it.ls, • and have recomended it to my friends. Sonic years ago I had Catarrh In my head, and after using other remedies without results, which only seemed to dry up the Irritated mucous, I commenced taking S. S. S and after taking a few bottles X was cured." C. F. VENATTA. 724 Anderson Ave., is'ew Kensington, Pa, WEDNESDAY EVENING, HAJRJUSBURG TELEGRAPH •' MAY 22, 1918 Valley to this city and another goes over the William Penn, while the Lincoln is maintained. Hearings Go On.—Hearings were held to-day by the Public Service Commission in this city, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, the hearings here being of a more or less formal na ture. At Juniata To-day. Governor Brumbaugh and members of his staff uro at Juniata College to-day attend ing the commencement. Borough Complains.—The borough of Plymouth to-day complained against the new rates of the Luzerne County Gas and Electric Company. Attended Exercises.' Adjutant General F. D. Beary attended the founders' day exercises at Glrard College, Philadelphia. Few Men Return.—Comparatively few of the men who went away for the" primary have returned to the Capitol to-day. There was little busi ness done in any of the departments. Ready For Returns.—Chief Clerk Thorn, of the State department, has prepared the tables for the official returns from the primary election of yesterday. They will be entered as fast as received. Two Resign.—Lewis, B. Sheehan, second lieutenant and quartermaster of the Second Regiment of the Re serve Militia, has sent his resigna tion to the Governor. He will go to France. Major A. S. Henderson, of the-Third Regiment, has also resign ed. Miss Mary K. Bent Dies at Philadelphia Home Miss Mary K. Bent, for many years identified with the life of this city, died at her home, 2316 Delancey Place, Philadelphia, yesterday after a brief illness. Funeral services will be held from the house to-morrow at 2 o'clock in the afternoon and burial will be made in the Laurel Hill cem etery. Miss eßnt, a woman of extraordi nary mind and grace of character, came to this cit ysoon after her grad uation from the Bradford Academy, Mass., and for years made her home with the family of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Bailey, Front and Chestnut streets. Later she was one of the principals of the Sergeant and Bent School, North Front street, and after that closed permanently Miss Bent went to Philadelphia to reside. She frequently visited her and Mrs. George Douglass Ramsay, her most recent hostess, and Mrs. Robert E. I Speer, of Englewood, N. J., formerly Miss Emma D, Bailey, of this city, were with her at the time of her ideath. I l T sc McNeil's Pain Exterminator —Ad. POSLAM EXCELS IN CONQUERING WORST ECZEMA That results should show over night is a great deal to expect ot any skin Remedy—except Poslam. But Poslam differs from all other remedies in possessing healing en ergy in a more concentrated and more active form. That is thai reason why in stub born Eczema it shortens the time of treatment and drives away minor troubles before they become serious. 'lt is a pacifying balm to angry ir ritated surfaces. Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th St., New York City. Urge your skin to become clearer, fresher, better by the dally use of Polsam Soap, medicated with Pos lam. The most common mistake made in the treatment of Ca tarrh is in directing all effort toward the symptoms, rather than the source of the disease. The inflammation of the mem branes in the nose and air pas sages causing the head to be come stopped up, and making it difficult to breathe, is but an indicatiQn of the disease. In other words, this is not the disease itself, but nature's method of informing the vic tim that he has been attacked. You may treat Catarrh all your life with sprays, atomizers, douches and similar local appli cations, and you will never be really rid of the disease. The burning question, then, is "How Can I Get Rid of Ca tarrh?" You have doubtless used numbers of local remedies, and like every other sufferer you have found out that, they are nothing but make-shifts and do you no permanent good. S. S. S. has proven highly suc cessful in the treatment of Ca tarrh because the real seat of the disease is in the blood, and there is no disorder of the blood which docs not promptly yield to this great vegetable remedy. S. S. S. goes direct to the seat of the disease and routs out from the blood every ves tige of impurity. No disorder of the blood can remain in com petition with S. S. S. It simply eradicates and eliminates every germ of Catarrh from the blood, after which the irritated jnucous membranes promptly heal and the sufferer once more enjoys perfect freedom from this annoying disease. Our medical department will gladly give you all necessary information about the treat ment of your own 'individual case, for which no charge will be made. Write to-day to the Swift Specific Co., 411 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Georgia. STEELTOK STEELWORKERS IN BIG MEETING Annual Get-Together Session Will Be Held Tomorrow Evening Employes of the local steel "plant together with thousands of workmen in all plants of the Bethlehem steel plant will be asked to sign a patrio tic pledge card signifying' their will ingness to do their utmost to achieve 100 per cent, efficiency in individual operation ana in turning out 100 per cent, of the possible product of the plant. This plan of enlisting the support of every workman in the local plant will likely result from the annual "get-together" meeting of superin tendent, foremen and safety com mitteemen of the local'plant to be held in the High school auditorium to-morrow evening at 7.30 o'clock. President Eugene Grace, of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation and Quincy Bent, vice-presideht, will be the principal speakers at the meet ing. President Grace will talk along safety first lines and will point out to the men the importance of their efforts in achieving 100 per cent, efficiency. Meetings similar to the one to morrow evening are being held in all the plants of the Bethlehem Com pany. A meeting of officials of the Lebanon and Reading plants was held at Lebanon last week. Quincy Bent was the principal speaker at this meeting. During his talk, Mr. Bent in characterizing the Industrial field as the "first line" trenches of the nation, said that the lines runs from Washington, D. C., and touches every industrial center in the coun try where munitions of war are b ing made. Even now, he said. Fore River shipyards are waiting for the rivets which are to come from the Reading and Lebanon plants for the construction of ships to carry cargoes to France. A decrease of produc tion, he further said, hurts the coun try and is a thing the nation must avoijj if the war is to he won. He was greeted with enthusiastic ap plause at the conclusion of his i<d dress which was brief but impressive, delivered as it was with deep con viction. Other speakers at the meeting will be Dr. MacGuire, of the Kmergency Fleet Corporation, and Douglas Drew, a Canadian, who was In active serv ice at the front for two and a half years. Storm Causes Damage to Front Street Blocks Forces of workmen from the bor ough highway department to-day were making repairs to wooden blocks in several r.ections of Front street which had been torn up by the heavy rain yesterday. Consider able damage to the street was caused at Front and Franklin, Front and Gibson streets, and in Front street at Booser's run. Traffic in Front street between Mohn and Ghambers streets was al most paralysed yesterday by the large amount of ground that was washed in the street. It was necessary to dig the ground from the tracks be fore traffic could be resumed. The wooden blocks at these sections were badly damaged and it will take con siderable time to make the repairs, it was learned to-day. 113 Students Become High School Freshmen With appropriate exercises, 113 grammar school students were last evening transferred into the freshman class of the borough High school. The exercises were held in the High school auditorium and were largely attended. The Rev. H. H. Rupp, pastor of the First Reformed Church, gave the address to tho class and G. S.. Vickery, president of the borough school board presented certificates. The pupils were wel comed into the High school by Miss Lena Anna Hoffman, a member of the senior class. Subject of some of the timely essay* were: "The Biography of General • Pershing," "Lincoln's Gettysburg Speech," "Our Boys Over There," and "Aeroplane of Balloon." District Residents Notified to Register Announcement was made at the local exemption board office this morning that persons who have be come of age since June 5 will be registered at the office of the local board. 49 North Front street, be tween the hours of 7 and 9 on June 5. The official statement follows: "Persons who have become of age, J1 years, since June 6, 1917, living under jurisdiction of local board No. 1, Dauphin county, namely: Bor ough of Steelton. borough of High spire, borough of Middletown, bor ough of Royalton, Pa., Conewago township, Londonderry township, West -Londonderry township, will be registered on .Tune 5, 1918 at office of local hoard, 49 North Front street, between the hours of 7 and 9 o'clock." Residents Continue to Subscribe to Red Cross More than SIO,OOO has been sub scribed to the Red Cross War Fund in this district, according to unoffi cial reports to-day. Although official leports of team captains show that considerably less has bee ncontrib uter, a member of the finance com mittee declared to-day that the sub scriptions total more than half the quota. Captains of the various teams are holding out with their reports until nearer the cKise of the. campaign. Reports mWde at the noon luncheon to-day by team captains were to the effect that al most $5,000 has been subscribed since the opening of the campaign. ARRIVES IN FRANCE Word was received here of the safe arrival in France of Alfred H. Smith, son of. Alfred Smith, Sr., 20 North Harrlsburg street. C/OMPLKTE LIST John H. Moyer, mercantile ap praiser for the city and county for 1918, has pracUcally completed the listing of all business places subject to tax which is due from May 1. Several hundreds have paid tho tax at the county treasurer's 6ffice. GIVK 5 PER CENT. TO WAR The Red Cross will receive five per cent, of the total sales made by H. J. Fornwalt,' drygoods merchant. 1807 North Third street, during the week, he announced yesterday. Amish Sect Fights Operation of Draft; Seth Yoder Wanted Belleville, Pa.*, May 22. —People of the Kishacoqulllas Valley fear they have a white elepljant on their hands in a certain element among the Amish people, a sect that came to the United States from Switzerland under the leadership of John Menno and settled in Lancaster and Berks coun ties. Since the declaration of war they have fought the induction of their sons into military service, re fused to purchase Liberty Bonds, war savings stamps or use war substi tutes. The authorities are making every effort to capture Seth Yoder, charged with evading the draft, and who is said to be in hiding in the valley. The authorities heard he was in hiding in a cistern at the home farm, but searchers failed to find him and later residents on the back mountain road reported a horse with saddle and bridle, but no rider, had been seen op several occasions trotting towards the Yoder home and they believe he is spending his nights in the val ley and using the animal to transport himself into the mountains. Court Scores Persons Guilty fo Flirtations St. Louis, Mo., May 22.—Men and women who satisfy their love of ad venture by what they consider a harmless flirtation with the opposite sex furnished cause for philosophiz ing by Judge Grimm in a decision in a divorce suit filed by Samuel It. Blackshaw against his wife, Belle. He was granted a divorce. Mrs. Blackshaw's appeal for a new trial was denied. Mrs. Blackshaw was accused of intimacy with an attrac tive gardener in Tower Grove Park here. Judge Grimm warned that no wo man could reasonably expect her husband to "cling to her" If she proved herself indiscreet. ■Kerensky Wrongly Reported as Arrived From Russia Nfw York, May 22.—A report which reached Washington last night that Alexander. Kerensky, the picturesque young chief of the Russian revolu tion, who was overthrown by the Bolshevist element, had arrived in this city from Europe proved to be unfounded. There was an inclination in Wash ington to crpdit the report not only on account of it* semiofficial origin but because there has been reason to believe that Kerensky was on his way to America from a place in Northern Europe. At the Russian Kmbassy, however, no advices of his arrival were received, and further investigation proved the report un true. Deaths and Funerals Marysvllle, Pa., May 22.—Funeral services were held on Monday for Mrs. Elizabeth Sadler, 76 years, who died last Saturday, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Simon Lick. Services were conducted by the Rev. Ralph E. pastor of the Trinity Retormed Church and burial was made in the Chestnut Grove Cemetery. Mrs. Sadler is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Lick, of this place; Mrs. F. M. Yount, of Taneytown, Md., and Mrs. John Seidel, of this place, and four sons, Frank Sadler, of New York City; Joseph Sadler, of Fairport, N. Y.; William Sadler, of Steelton, and Hary O. Sadler, of Maryaville. BENJAMIN F. BOWERMASTER Funeral services for Benjamin F. Bowermaster, aged 71, will be held Friday afternoon at two o'clock at his late home, 605 Race street. The Rev. William Moses, pastor of St. Paul's Meth'jtiist Church,'will offi ciate. Burial will be in the Prospect Hill Cemetery. Mr. Bowermaster was a member of St. Paul's Metho dist Church. He died yesterday morning at his home after an illness ot five weeks. Mr. Bowermaster is survived by his widow and two sons, Lawrence, of this city, and Benja min C. Bowermaster, of Chicago, and three daughters, Mrs. George H. Mc- Cormlck, Mrs. Andrew Hoyler and Mrs. Elmer Frysinger, all of this city. Mr. Bowermaster was a mem ber of Post No. 58, G. A. R., and of Odd Fellows' Lodge, No. 160. SIRS. MARY A. MOYER Mrs. Mary A. Moyer died Monday night at her home, 2458 Reel street. She was the wife of Ammon W. Moyer. Funeral services will be held Thursday evening at eight o'clock, the Rev. Walter E. Tolliver, pastor of the North Harrisburg United Evangelical Church, officiat ing. Th body will be taken to Reading Friday morning by the Haw kins Estate, undertakers, and burial will be made there. EDITH GERTRUDE CENCE i Edith Gertrude Cence, daughter of Mr ( and Mrs. T. J. Cence, died it the parents' home, 1932 Briggs street, on Tuesday afternoon. She was aged 14 years. Funeral services will be con ducted to-morrow afternoon at I o'clock by the Rev. Henry A. Post. Burial will be in East Harrisburg Cemetery. Morley Baker Is Thanked by Soldier For Sweater' Morley Baker, twelve-year-old son of W. Harry Baker, secretary of the State Senate, and Mrs. Baker, is one of the most enthusiastic workers In the service of the Harrisburg Red Cross Chapter. He has learned to knit and has . already completed three sweaters, five pairs of socks, three pairs of wristlets and two hel mets for Uncle Sam's men. One of his sweaters, although he desired it to go to one of the men in the naval service, was sent to Camp Laurel, Md., where it was dealt out to John Winter, formerly of 2543 North Sixth street, this city, now serving with Company D, Sixty sixth Engineers. Mr. Winter has just written to Master Baker a letter of thanks which is highly prized by the youthful Red Cross worker, one of the few males knitting for the I HAIR ON FACE I WHAT CAUSES IT It ha* been pro Yen by the world'a irralest authorities that It atlas alatea and lacreaaea hair growth to merely remove It troa the aarfaea •( tha akta. The ant 7 ronaion-senas wax to nmn hair tt " ■•*■ < akta. DoMtracle, the original aaaltary rtli by ahaorptlan. Only ceaalae Dr Miracle haa a moner-back snaraatre la each package. At toilet count era In flOo, •l and 12 alaca, or by mall from na In plala wrapper ,on receipt *1 price. FREE booh mailed la plala sealed eavelopc on reqneat. De- Mlraele. 180 th St. and Park Ata* New York. local chapter. Mr. Winter's letter follows: "Just a few lines to let you know that I am the fortunate one to re- | colve your most beautiful sweater which you worked so hard to make for the Red Cross. I also want to that I am soijry that your I ■ "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" I % I Everybody Is Talking I About DOUTRICHS "Straw" Hats and | "Panamas" This "Live Store" is the chosen store for men's wearing apparel throughout this section of the state Our "Hat Man" is the busiest man in the store, in the first place more than a carload of I Straw Hats and Panamas I have been received from the manufac turers this spring and are moving out rapidly The unre stricted choice of the season's most popular Hats brings out the buyers daily to see the magnificent collection we have There are more jfl Straw Hats here than you have ever seen in a single store before and we're selling three times as many as we did last season Your Straw Hat is waiting for you "See the New Sailor Panama." J Underwear J- j j Summer Underwear in an endless variety, g / M Ff\ C materials of every kind, weight and price I \\ C i Plenty of j y/ | IjB.V. D. "Varsity" "Manseo" || j I I Munsing Union Suits >* * j I Hart Schaffner & Marx Kuppenheimer Clothes I "Manhattan Shirts" "Monito Hose" I Try The Dependable Doutrich Service I 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. | | .sweater did not get Into the naval | | service if that is where you intended 1 it for. But I must say that it could not be appreciated any more any place than It does in my possession, | as It Is very cool here in the morn ings and evenings and that is when I its comfort is appreciated. | "Please excuse me for not writ- Jing sooner as I received It on'the 6th | of Mty, but I did not discover the tag until to-day. ' Well I will close with many thanks to you and hope your good work continues. As I am a citizen of the West End of Harrisburg it pleases me very much to have re ceived a sweater made in the West ICnd. I wish to state that X shall rrmcmber you with many cards and also will try to send you some trinkets. Please answer." P. B.—My home address was 2543 North Sixth street. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers