CIVIC CLUB ASKS TREE PROTECTION Wants Committee Appointed to Care For Trees Adding So Much to the City's Beauty The destruction of many of the city's most beautiful trees by recent storms was discussed at length yes terday at the June meeting of the j board of directors of the Civic Club. The corresponding secretary. Miss Eleanor Shunk. was authorised to write the Park Commission, asking lhat & plan be devised for safeguard ing the trees of the city, and re questing that a committee be ap pointed. the members of which With Her Shoulder „„ MI , Zat/theWheel | /?£'S -|J j fill Woman must see that during their recurring times j f(Ufl of discomfort and distress they are not accompanied IB by P a i n an d suffering. There is really no need of fpfiinf/f/ML women enduring headache, backache, nervousness, 111 fill mfumill lassitude and misery. These weakening and depress llf ii'i i n g symptoms may be prevented or quickly relieved f j | I ;* n a sa^e natural way by taking Beecham's Pills - j |j i| in season and they will prove a tonic and corrective I Women Must Have I jjn| j Health and Strength I ml fft Beecham's Pills strengthen the nefves, tone the stomach, regulate the bowels, stimulate the liver and act favorably on the organs. After a few doses the ■BlfllHln blood becomes purer, the eyes brighten, the ccm plexion takes on a healthier tint, appetite improves PftiluWftUi anc * s >' stem properly performs its functions. !r? Beecham's Pills are made of medicinal herbs \lWHVlW*vf# / w ithout admixture of any harmful drugs. They are H III! A Mil / sa^e g ent l e a nd effective. For over sixty years & Iy\ ■ TMliWlJiy millions of women and of all nations have.found to Hi \ Y li'nu their satisfaction that in seeking health and strength I - the Solution is I I Beecham's Pills I At all draggittt, 10c, 25c. Directions of special value to women are with every box. Uncle Sam's Boys | : cannot know the thrill of Bp ' battle, but you will cer- £HKS| J : tainly wan; ' 188 E§ them day by day as they 2 go "over the top" in | Picardy and in Flanders, |' J at Toul. 5 mm You should cut out the coupon below and send it s to the Harrisburg Tele- fliwßHllil ■ ; that yOU can get a set of Commander-in-Chiefof the Allied Armiea 3 Three V r aluable and Interesting I Guide Maps I To all the Battle Fronts | r They are beautifully printed in 4 colors on high grade paper; size 31x39 inches. 3 Spread them out on the table or hang them from the wall, and you can then get a birds- 3 : eye view of the theater of the military operations on each front. You can see instantly 3 ~ how the battle line is changing from day to day, and you can form your own judgment 3 r of the strategy of the High Commands. Only in this way can you keep up with the news. 3 E A Key to the Maps accompanies each set You will find.it a most valuable aid. This unique series of authoritative maps was prepared by the publishers of The :3 Z Encyclopaedia Britannica, and sold by them at $2.00 for the three. By special arrange- 3 Z ment a limited number can be supplied to Telegraph readers.for 2' —~ , COUPON FOR TELEGRAPH READERS ~ i\ ■ 111 m 1 tents 3flfl nuimHmm : Unly fi i; Tills Coupon presented at or mailed to any office of tile one coupon HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH — ]| with cash, check, money order or stamps for 69 cents - (> entitles the holder to ONE SET of the GEOGRAPHICAI Z You will be well repaid if you I! AND HISTORICAL WAR MAPS showing the world's wars r , . .. I J.J l' from 4000 B. c. to 191. These exactly the same Mans - order a set Ot tnese splendid I j as are sold by the Encyclopaedia Britannica for f 2 - , - 11 Send all mail orders to our Main Office: - maps. Therefore cut out the <; - * ] | (Write name and address very plainly) t coupon TO-DAY. || r L | ! N AME ADDRESS .....: TUESDAY shall serve without pay, whose duty | it shall be to preserve and care for i the trees whlcn add so much to the | beauty of tho city streets. •Airs. William Henderson, the pres-! idem of the club, read a letter from j the Pennsylvania Division. Women's Council of National Defense, asking j that platinum be conserved dbringr • the war and that women pledge i themselves to wear no jewelry with platinum in its construction. Mrs. Alvin I. Miller, chairman of j the Educational Department, told of] the excelent work done in the schools i for backward children and of tlioj manual training which prepares them for usefulness in life . despite i their handicap. Sbe showed small toys made in, one of the schools, which are sold at a low price, the money to be used for materials for future work. Mrs; Miller also asked for the purchase of j these toys and for cast-off silk. clothing for the manufacture of I rugs by these children. The Civic I Club takes an active interest in these special schools and has fur nished one of the two looms used for' rugs and provides a dally lunch of crackers and milk for these pupils. Miss Martha Wolf Buehler. chalr i moil of the Outdoor Department, re ported that SSO has been raised for the war gardens, and Mr*. Mabel Cronlse Jones, of the Program and Year Book Committee, stated that the program for the coming year will have some surprises of much in terest to club members. MRS. IDA SHEESLEY OIKS Xew Cumberland. Pa., June 11.— Mrs. Ida Sheesly died yesterday at the Harrisburg Hospital after aV op eration performed on Friday. She was 5J years old and was the wife of Edward Sheesley, proprietor of the Hotel Iroquois Mrs. Sheesley is sur vived by her husband, one daughter. Miss Mvra Sheesley; one sister. Mrs. Beard, of Reading, and two broth ers. David R. McNetl, of Harrisburg, and William McNeil, of Berry Center. The funeral will be announced later. ; BXItIUSBURft TELE9KXP9 'PEOPLE OF U. S. AT WAR ON HUNS, i LANSINGASSERTS Secretary of State Draws Piti less Indictment on Ger many and Treachery WmhlnKloii, June 11.—The last | shreds of the one-time dominant | theory of the Administration here in j Washington thnt the United States is ' not at war with the German people have at last been swept away, j It Is admitted now that much has gone on in Germany which the world ought to have perceived, but did not. There no longer is any doubt that the Prussian aim of world dominion has "dazzled, with Its anticipated j glories and by its promise of a j boasted racial superiority, the Ger- I man millions who were to be the in- j struments of achievement." It is recognized now that the war , must go on, not alone until the "ar- ' rogant and brutal Prussians are ; humbled," not alone until the Kaiser ' and his military chieftains despair of ' their ambitions, but ""until the Ger man people realize that their inso lent lords are not touched by divine fire and do not have at thetr com mand the powers of heaven." It would seem that at last the Ad ministration has recognized that the German people are fighting because they believe implicitly In the teach ings of the Prussians that the Ger man people are a super-race, destined ito be rulers of the universe. These doctrines and hopes are dominant j over the German people and will not '• die until the leaders they blindly but faithfully follow have been crushed deep in irretrievable defeat. To Secretary of State Lansing was delegated the authority to speak yesterday for the President and the Administration in a manner so frank and convincing that there should be no further illusions about the war. It was. indeed, a notable address the Secretary of State delivered at Union College. Schenectady, and the pro nouncement was followed here in ; Washington as if it nad emanated i from the White House itself. Uermauy fltlltskly Indicted Mr. Lansing drew a pitiless indict rtient of Germany, laying bare some new secrets of the despicable in trigue which centered in the German embassy in Washington during all the days which preceded our entry ' into the war. Re admitted that for [ a time the United States was duped :by the military clique in Berlin, i because dishonesty of this sort j seemed to us inconceivable in these days of internal honor and Christian | civilization." But the United States will never be caught again, the head of the State Department added, In I such a net of duplicity as was spread over the world by the Ber ' lin government. "\\ e have learned our lesson and it has cost us dear," he added. "We will never have to learn it again." The bitterness with which Seere j tary Lansing denounced German | ■ kultur," the finality with which he declared that relations with such governments as havs controlled Ger many in the last 150 years would be impossible in the future, created a lasting impression here, not only among Government Officials, but upon the Allied diplomats as well. The latter saw In the Lansing ad dress the final and irrevocable dedi cation of America to a war which shall not end until the German war lords have been destroyed and the whole spirit of Prussianism driven from the world. The speech also represented the beginning of a definite program of arousing the American people to a full realization of what Prussianism has meant to the world fh the past and what it threatens to-day. Com ing as it does, at a time when there has appeared to be a softening of the "knock-out" policy of Great Britain, the Secretary of State's ad dress should rally the Allies anew to the idea that there can be no negotiated peace with a Germany which, as it exists to-day, is an out cast among the nations and can nev er be trusted again. PORTO RICO GETS CALL By Associated Press WnxhinKton, June 11. Porto Rico and Hawaii were called by Provost Marshal General Crowder to-day to furnish 17.000 draft registrants" for the National Army. Deaths and Funerals MRS. HENRIETTA BOYD Funeral services will be . held to morrow for Mrs. Henrietta Boyd, widow of the late George W. Boyd, who died yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Stephen Bedlma. of Beaver. The body will be brought .here to the home of her brother, H. L. Hershey, 322 North Second street, to-morrow, where funeral services will be held at 2:30 o'jclock. Burial will be private. JACOB A. PALMER Jacob Arthur Palmer. 41 years old,, died at the home of his father-in-law,' D. H. Miller, 1623 Park street, yester day. Funeral services will be held on Thursday morning from the home of his sister. Mrs. Harry Harvey, 2335 I>ogan street. The Rev. Ellis N. Kremer, pastor of the Reformed Salem Church, will officiate. Burial will be in the Chestnut Hill Cemetery, Me chanicsburg. MRS. MATILDA PIKE Funeral services were held yester day afternoon at the Ohev Sholom Temple for Mrs. Matilda Pyke, who died on Friday at Philadelphia. Rabbi Lo. SI slur, now 80c. Price includes war tax. All druggists. i:ard •••• I gj C Beautiful Plaid f MOTH CHESTS ■ | S 1 and StHpe Dress GARDEN HOES $1.50 Quaker City , C Ginghams, 28 in. J Flat and s P ear Gar * Moth Chests, collapsible WHITE | I wide. All new. den Hoes - 25c ° pe " B Uk * 21.19 SKIRTING , 1 Special 25c v P ' e * "White StHpe 1 | g! BED SHEETS LAWN MOWERS CURTAIN STRETCHER Skirting. full C i I 12-lnch Lawn Mowers. Extra good lace Cur- rn A rr>rt™>tf a I Full double bed ball bearing and self tain Stretchers, with " erc eriaew. m , size Muslin Sheets sharpening. 4/1 QC non-rust pins *1 OQ Special % L Bleached- Extra special Special y ar( j , iit m , $1.39 v J v J I BORDERED ( BED SPREADS 1 I 1 ' CURTAIN SCRIM Orochet Bedl Summer Bed Cut cornered 2; Spreads, full Sprea(te. critik- crochet Bed Wlndsor Pllss e / S| & White and Ara- „i Ze an( j hem- led Dimity, full c . , „ . Crepe for Under- %ft M blc Curtain Ma- med, ready for double bed size. s P readai . lull size wear needs no K S t terial 36 in. wide. USCi Hemmed. for Brass and Iron . . % 1] 1 Fine quality. *| cch Each 1 QO Beds. 0O QO ' ronl , '§ lig ( Yard 51.570 | Special 29C * I STORE OPENS 8:30 A. M.—CLOSES 5:30 P. M. JUNE 11. 1918. thelr positions In the earlier at tempts of the Germans to cross the I Oise south of Semplgny. The battle In the new area may now be considered as having deft- j nitely entered ljts critical atuge, as In the Somme, Flanders and Alsne com bats the third and fourth days of ; offensive were most menacing to the 1 allies, it now seems to be certain 1 -that the operation In which the Gr- I mans are now engaged constitutes a 1 jxery serious blow at the allied lines from the Olse to the Marne. as well | as threatening the level country in the rear of the present battle lines. Before this can be reached, however, the Germans may encounter even greater resistance than they have ' overcome since their offensive began 5