12 YANKEE BLOWS SEND HUNS INTO RETREAT [Continued from First l*ago.] j most desperate fighting, when the Germans started to throw pontoons across the stream. A few German elements at first succeeded getting over in boats, chasing the allied troops away from the bunks while the German engineers began to lay the bridges. Kuild Bridges Rapidly Six of these bridges formed a lat tice work and rapidly joined the banks on either side. Two of the bridges were most substantial struc ture.' and between twenty and thirty feet in width. French airplanes played great havoc in the German ranks while the bridges were under construction. < >nc bombing squadron, flying at a height of 200 mfters, dropped bombs on two of these bridges while i enemy troops were crossing. The ! bridges were broken and the soldiers ; thrown into the river. Aviators lo Good Execution The aviators constantly bombed • the other bridges and did great ex ecution among the Germans on the bridges as well ns on the banks i where the enemy was concentrated j in it-eat numbers. When the Germans had crossed ] the river the fighting which already was heavy became terrific. The French and Americans, holding the southern side, fell back into their - principal combat positions. They | fought all the way and counterat- | tacked occasionally, creating confu sion in the ranks of the advancing foe. Yankees Sliow Pluck Then, late in the evening, the \mcrlcaits started a dashing coun ter blow which resulted in tlic Ger mans retiring pell inell to the river. The impression of the results of the first day's battle in the new Ger man smash on the French front is very good. Nowhere along the stretch of J many miles did the enemy succeed | in penetrating more than 4.000 yards 1 and that was only on a small sector j in the neighborhood of Marfaux, southwest of Rheims, although or- j ders found on German prisoners an- j nounced that the first day should I take them twenty kilometers from i !ht front line of departure. French Invincible < 'n the battlcfront east of Rheims FOR SALE! No 1001 North Second Street No. 1439 Vernon Street Lots on Curtin, Jefferson and Seneca Streets. Frame Dwelling. All Im provements with Garage. Lot 50x160. New Cumber land, Pa. Frank R. Leib and Son ! Real Estate* Insurance i j IS NOKTH THIRD STREET HAItRISHI RG. PA. 1 J Central Iron and Steel Company Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Are You Affecte " Work or Fight" Order or possibly you are over the draft age and are seeking employment with one of the war industries? Central Iron and Steel Company Is Classified by the Government As An Essential War Ninety-five per cent of our output during June was shipped to the Emer gency Fleet Corporation, U. S. Navy, Ordnance Department of the U. S. Army and the Railroad Administration. Ships are required to maintain an army at the front. We manufactu. * ship plates, also steel for the boilers which drive them. Our product go*s to the shipyards in the East as well as to the Pacific Coast, and some of the ships being built in Japan for Uncle Sam are made from Central plates. We Need Men in All Departments n and E,ecl " c >an Open Hearth Helpers Rolling Mill Hands Blast Furnace Men Railroaders Stenographer! Yard and Shop Laborers . 1/ employed by a war industry, remain where you arc; if not. we have a job for you on Government work. Apply at EMPLOYMENT OFFICE FRONT STREET GATE During Business Hours any hour of the day or night The orders and the equipment are here—you can furnish the manpower Come With Us and Help Central Iron and Steel Company Harrisburg, Pennsylvania TUESDAY EVENING, the enemy did not even get be yond the advanced line, the Invin cible resistance of the French troops jpieventing him from attaining the I main combat line. With the French | on the section west of llheims fought American and Italian troops, both of whom vied with the other allies in keenness and 'courage. STKA.MKKS COLLIDK; 1 SINKS An Atlantic Port.—The sinking at I sa on July 11 of the American steamship Oosterdjyk after a colli sion with the American steamshp I San Jacnto was reported by a Swed ish steamship arriving here to-day. ! The Osterdjyk's crew was taken aboard the San Jacinto, which, al though badly damaged, had man j aged to reach an Atlantic port. It I was said. I'HII. VDKI.IMII \ STOCKS I'hilntlelphin, July 16.—Stocks clos ed strong. .Baldwin Locomotive S7*j ; General Asphalt 3iV| | General Asphalt. Pfd 69 Lake Superior Corporation .... 21 >. Lehigh Navigation 68 Lehigh Valley SS^ Pennsylvania Railroad 44 Philadelphia Electric 24'. Philadelphia Company 29 Philadelphia Company. Pfd. ... 26 Philadelphia Hapid Transit .... 27 ! Reading 88 3 . ! Storage Battery 54 . Cnlon Traction 37* i 'United Gas Improvement 64'., Vnited States Steel 105 i. York Railways 71^ York Railways, Pfd. . 3] * Fair Food Prices The following statement, revised to July 16. regarding: fair prices for food necessities, was issued to-day by the I local I'ederal Administration. Consumer prices are figured on a quotation of "cash-and-carry" basi<* Credit and delivery prices may be higher .he Federal Food Adminis tiation has 110 authority to fix nric If your retailer charges more on ■ cash-and-carry basis than the price* named below, report him by letter to the federal Food Administration Chamber of Commerce. ' Consumer { „ should pay Henna Navy 1 pea), lb 15 to ISe 1 Gray (marrow), Tb. ... ,s*! Lima. Ib " 17 f }{<;! White imarrow), tb . "" ' Js Hutler Creamery, tb .. Creamery. 1-Ib. prints.'ib!! sn to i City Market. 1 lb. . 2, ! Oleomargarine. 1b " 3n to -- ' Comment Package of 2H lbs., pkg. . in , n 9n„ Bulk, tb 1 * I> . t ° 2 2 c City Market, tb 0 to i c Krb* Fresh, do* .- , City Market, doz ] J| Jfc I- lour Wheat Flour. 12-lb. bags ri lrt t . Corn Flour ? " c 50-50 War Flour (12Vi. Riee'flour,' lb.' .!i!!! J3 to ?4c ! erenl* Oatmeal and rolled oats, lt>. 7 „ Rice (whole. 11. i 2 ' t o°i^ Rice I broken), tb I 1-dible starch, lb 10 to t" i Milk l " c . Evaporated, small cans ... 5 to 7c 1 Evaporated, large cans.... it t. u..' Cheese York State, 1b 30 to 3^ l.nrd P u r c ;.. n> - 29 to 33c; Substitute In '6 to °Bc Country, lb 28 to 30c Fotatoen City Market, bushel 75c' New. per half peck 3: to 35c I Sugar Granulated, per cwt J8 05 ' Granulated, per 1b 9 to 9Hcl The following are the authorized I substitutes for wheat flour: Hominy I ccrn grits, commeal. corn flour, edibie cornstarch, barley flour, rolled oats oatmeal, rice, rice flour, buckwheat flour, potato flour, sweet potato flout and soya bean flour. nijBBER siAMnr If IB SEALS & STENCILS w MFG. BY HBG. STENCIL WORKS ■ ■ It] 130 LOCIiSTST. HBCiPA. li THREE BROTHERS IN U. S. SERVICE HARRISON* HOOVER JACOB U. HOOVER SAMUEL. T. HOOVER The above young men are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. David M. H onver. 1901 State street Jacob and Samuel are now overseas, the former receiving his preliminary training at Camp Gordon near Atlanti Ga.. while the tatter embarked for the scene of righting in the record time of three weeks after he left the city with a contingent of Dauphin county selectives for Camp Lee. V a Harrison, the vouneest son le.ves Monday. July is. for l.ehigh University, where he will pursue a course which will enahle him U, serve hil country >n a mechanical capacity. MARKETS \ K\V \OIIK STOCKS Chandler Brothers and Company, members of New York and Philadel phia Stock Exchanges—l! North Mar ket Square, Harrisburg 336 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. 34 Pine street. New York—furnish the following Open. Close. Allls Chalmers 33 33 T i American Can 47 47'J Am Car and Foundry Co S9 7 s M's Anier •>'< 65H Ainer Smelting 77 3 7S S American Sugar 11l 111'j Amer Woolens 58 T 59 s Anaconda 67'. 68 >. Atchison 84-Si SI 3 . Baldwin Locomotive .... 84 s . 88 3 . Baltimore and Ohio .... 54 5 . 55 Bethlehem Steel 81'. 82 Butte Copper 28®s 2S a California Petroleum ... 19 19 Canadian Pacific 147 147 Central Leather 67 3 68 Oh*.i ~. 57 B6H Chicago R I and Pacific 23T 2 4 .•p,-cr 39 39V Cul Fuel and Iron 45 a 45^ Corn Products 44 s . 45% Crucible Steel 65 65 S Distilling Securities .... 55', 55M General Motors 151 M> 152 Goodrich B F 45 :, 45 5 . Great Northern Pfd .... 90 . Su a Great Northern Ore subs 32 H2' Hide and leather IS 1 ? 17'. Hide and leather Pfd .. 77 77 Inspiration Copper 53 53 International Paper .... 36 37' i. Kennecott 33 s * 33'.2 Kansas City Southern .. 18 18 Uckawanna Steel 82'. 82', Merc War Ctfs 26 s . 27'4 Mer War Ctfs Pfd 96'.. Mex Petroleum 98 99 Miami Copper 29 s * 29 3 s Mid vale Steel 51 1, 51-%, HAJRJUBBURO (MAt TELEGRAPH New York Central 711 a 71 i N V X H and H :!S>.j 38 7 Northern Pacific 57% S7' 3 Pennsylvania Railroad .. 4 1 4 4 Railway Steel Spg 60 60% Kay Con Copper 24 21'* Reading ss 88% Republic Iron and Steel Hl l ** 92 Southern Ry 23% 23% Studebuker 45 46', Union Pacific 122 121'4 U S I Alcohol 123'., 124'(i U S Rubber 6163 U S Steel 101i 4 105% Utah Copper SI 81 % Virginia-Carolina Chem 49', 49% Westinfchouse Mfg 42<, 42% Willys-Overland 19% 19.% I'HII.ADEI.I'HIA PBOOICE Philadelphia. July 16. Wheat Market quit.. No. 1. r.u. $2.27; No. 1. soft. red. $2.25; No. 2 red, $2.24: No_ 2. soft. red. $2.22. Corn—Tlie market is steady; No. , yellow. sl.9Bft 1.99; No. 3, yellow, *1.97® 1,98. Oats The market is steady; No. 2. white, 90(1/1(0Vic; No. 3, white, M'l'd 89ijc. Bran —T"lie market is steady; soft winter, per ton, $46.50@47.U0; spring. Per ton. *44.00®45.00. Butter The market is firm; western, creamery, extras, 45c; nearby prints, fancy. 51 53c. Eggs—Market lower; Pennsylvania, tl'io/li lienriiy firsts, free cases. *12.90013.00 per case; do., current re ceipts, free cases, $12.60 per case; extern, extras, firsts, free cusos, $ 12.90 ft 13.20 per case; do., firsts, free cases, $12.60 per case; fancy, selected, packed. 49*6 51c per dozen. Cheese Firm; New York and Wisconsin, whole milk, 24%@25%c. Re.liiru Sußtrs Market oleauy. powdoed. 8.45 c; extra fine, granulat ed 7.25 c. Live Poultry Market higher; fowls. 38ft39c; young, softmeated roosters. 2_5®27c; young, staggy roost er*. 25®)27c; old roosters. 22ft 23c; spring chickens, not leghorns, 36 ft 44c; ■leghorns. 33®36c; ducks.. Pekin, SOc; Indian Runner, 26(ft)27c turkeys, 27®28c; geese, nearby. 25®26c; west ern. 25® 26c. Dressed Poultry—Higher; turkeys, fUaroy. choice to fancy itc, .air to good. S2®37c; do., old. 37®38c do., western choice to fancy. 37 ®3Bc fair to good. 32©36 c; d0.,01d toms. • ec: tlrf. coirimon. SOc; fresh klll1 fowls, fancy. 36%® 37c; do., smaller sues. 3„<g.t6c; old roosters. 28c; spring ducks, Long Island, 35@36c; frozen fowls, fancy, 35®35%c; do., good to choice, 32ft)34c; do., small sizes, 28® 30c; broiling chickens, western, 40® 42c; do., roasting, 34®38c. Potatoes The market is firm; K Jp rsey. No. 1. 85c a < SI.OO per basket; do.. No. 2, 50®60c Pennsylvania. 100 lbs.. ew York - old. Per 100 rbs. $1.55© 1.75; western, per 100 rbs., $1.25 JcX A , Malne ' Per 100 n>s.. $1.60® and Maryland, per 100 • °^. MI ? hl gan, per 100 lbs., 11.50w 1. <0; Florida, per barrel Florida. per bushel', hamper. 75@85c; Florida, per 150-lb bags $1 50®3 00; North Carolina, pep barre . $1.75® 4.75; South Carolina, per barrel. $1.75®4.75; Norfolk* and East ern Shore, per barrel, $3.25® 4.00. Tallow The market is quiet: prime city, in tierces, 165* c; city special, loose, 17% c: country, prime! 16% c; dark, 15@15%c; edible. In tierces, 18%®18%c. Flour Firm: winter wheat, new. 100 per cent, wheat. $11.25® 11.50 per barrel; Kansas wheat, new, $11.50® 11.75 per barrel: spring wheat, old 111.50® 11.75 per barrel. Hay Market Arm; timothv. No. 1. large and small bales. $25.50® 26.50 per ton; No. 2. small hales. $23 00 ® 24.00 per ton: No. 3, $17.50®19.50 per ton: sample, $12.50®15.00 ier ton; no grade, $7.50 1 50 per ton. Clover Light, mixed. $24.00® 25.00 per ton: No. 1, light mixed. $20.50® 21.50 per ton; No, 2, light mix ed. $15.50® 1.17.60 per ton; no grade, $ 18.00(B) 20.00 per ton. CHICAGO notrin OF TRADE By Associated Press < hlctitcn, July 16. Board of Trade closing: Corn August, 1.60%; Septem ber, 1.60%, Oats August, 72%; September, 70%. Pork—July. 44.80; September. 45.00. Lard—July, 26.15; September, 26.15. nibs —July, 24.30; September. 24.62. CHICAGO CATTI/E ChlcnKo. July 16. (U. S. Bureau of Markets). Hogs Receipts, 35 - 000; mostly 15c to 25c higher than yesterday's average. Big packers buy ing sapringly at 10c to 15c high prices. Bulk of sales, $17.50® 18.25; butchers. slß.oo® 18.30; packing. $17.35 ® 18.00; light, $18.15® 18.35; rough $16.00® 17.25; pigs. $17.00® 17.75. Cattle Receipts. 14,000; good to best steers strong, others slow; butch ers' stock slow to lower; calves strong to steady; stockers and feed ers steady. Sheep Receipts. 12,000; sheep and yearlings steady lambs strong, mos ly 15ft 25c higher than packers' buy ing yesterday. LKGAL NOTICES * In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County No. 196, Septem ber Term, 1918. Notice is hereby given that applica tion will be made to the above-stated Court on the 29th day of July, A. D. 1918, at 10 o'clock A. M„ under the Corporation Act of 1874, of the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania, and the supplements thereto, for the charter of an intended corporation to be call ed the Yugo Slav Independent Relief Society, the character and object of which is the maintenance of a society for beneficial or protective purposes to Its members from funds collected therein; and for these purposes to have, possess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges of said 'ct of Assembly and Its supplements. The proposed charter Is now on file in the Prothonotary's Office to the above stated number and term. WICKERSHAM & METZGER, Solicitors, industrials , . Last Sale. Aetna j2a Crevrolet .... JS-J f" 11 *'! , 5.16 w right tftSl| ' Am Marconi •• 1 • l] s Shin jj * United Motors ......... I.* 1 ' independent OIW 8 _ Sale. Barnet Cosden Federal 2^ Inter Pet ' 14 " Houston 75% Met Pet i 4 Okmulgee '.... I Northwest 62 Seciuoyah 11-16 Elk Basin k Glenrock 45^ I sland 514 Merritt 25 Midwest jo] Okla P and R 7V£ Sapulpa „ s " MINING Last Sale. Bis Ledge 1 I_i 6 Cal and .leronie 1 1-8 Canada 1 a Howe 4 i 4 Mother Lode 37 Rescue 8 Tonopali Ex 1% White Caps 33 Boston and Montana 53 Caledonta 46 Cash Boy 5% Con Arizona 1 13-16 Heela 4 North Star 6 West End 1 1-32 I Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ail. HANDY BUYERS' GUIDE A. B. C. OF BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS WHERE SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED Watch for your Residence or Rural Route Address among these Ads. If you find it call at THE HARRISBURG'TELEGRAPH office and receive FOUR admission tickets to the COLONIAL THEATER (This does not include war tax.) TEN addresses will be selected at random from the City and Rural Route Directories each week and the tickets will be given to the first person calling from each address. This Guide will appear EACH TUESDAY in THE HARRISBURG 1 ELEGRAPH. See if your name appears in small type. If it does, come in and get your tickets FREE. A l 'S2 M n?™^ E n S u, oDKm,pr 0 DKm,pr m LJ ATTER M. GOLD ~J2! Su ™ THE OVERLAND-HARRISBURG CO. T £ J, M " NU A '"S'" RRR RENOVATOR •YSSETIJ£ D 212-214 North Second Street "THE THHIKT CAR" PANAMAS A SPECIALTY BELL PHONE IMS ———; llernlce Nlwwley, HnmrneUtowß AUTO PAINTING KEYSTONE MOTOR CAR CO. *CE CREAM SUPERIOR Auto Tops Built and Repaired, Slip Covers I OCrSIICy S ICE CREAM 57-109 S. CAMERON STREET 1 Made In Slgbl bjr 111 Whit* — BELL 7,7 DIAL 8252 Agnes IJevlne, 615 Hcrr Street *- - - —' AUTO REPAIRS SUNSHINE GARAGE |EWELERS chas. Krauss Co., 411 Market St. nnA - Q . e rS ra LH?^ ine T., Sl !2P Repair Work ■ We SBVe You Mon< . y on |j ia _ • City I, nnn Offlcei— Money Loan anQ 01 Unnuu of ALL KINDS. Welding . a "£ / i?i rooniln, Watches, Jewelry, Silver- I ed on Article* of Value. Lovreat NEW LOCATION [Frames and Fenders Straightened. All ware, etc. I rate*. 27 N. CAMERON STREET I work Guaranteed. IZZIZZZIZIIZIZIZZIZZZZZZZZIZZZZZZZZZZIZIIZZZZZZZZZZZZ!rr AUTO SUPPLIES Myers' Accessory House OPTOMETRIST T C# A?iUaorl^VulAiUS*" LE Distribution of Diamond Tire. II OPTICIAN TL •IJ • IJTILMIIGCR BellVhone 561 Cameron and Mulberry St. 212 Locust Street —Next Door to Orpheum B "MOTORCYCLES Di * ,on ®* c ' e Company ■jAINTS PISJTCFRPO Speclaltlea VALSPAII. ON E MUIUKLY tLba H. F. E* t rbr,ok Prop. (Ili N. 3rd SI. , and VARNISHES COAT AUTO FINISHES Motorcycles from *.30.00 up. Bicycles from 8.00 up. We can save II Alt It I Sill'KG WALL PAPER AND PAINT CO. you dollar, on used and new tires. DIAL 4W)Q Bell 330-W 201 CHESTNUT STREET United 43JW Martin T. Wrlnhtstone, New Cumberland - BILLIARDS AND BOWLING LEONARD'S QHOTOGRAPHER MUSSER STUDIO Rear Kennedy'a Dru B Store, 321 MARKET STREET I OF PHOTOGRAPHY AND PORTRAITURE Carom and 8 Packet Billiard Tables. 4 Bowlln K Alleys. A ]MF,W T OCATTON NORTH SFPfIMn CT Use part of tbat lunch hour at Bllllarda or Howling here among *en- IN EJ VV X X\JIN O/ INWXVXn L) bl. tlemen. ■ Elisabeth J. Kherts, 120 )lrkft Street CLEANERS CIMIWS Be " Phone 704 J C HOES" KINNEY'S 19 and 21 n7 4th St and DYERS OILTHHU, QUICK Service Guaranteed W p Qr th# Entife Family and NQthing High Priced A " wrc"°:nd°neH''e , r. , " eM - Br™'." S<< Fifty-eight Stores and Still Growing. Elisabeth A. Mngulrc, 881 North Street ———— * *—- . COLONIAL WED.— HMJRS.— FRI. JAILOR s|||J3 JQ ORDER S2O (IP I THEATER JAMES W. GERARD'S I V| MY FOUR YEARS IN GERMANY 1 NORTH FOURTH STREET ___________ Irene S. Bennett, 313 Cumberland Street " * DRUGS RAZOR BIJADILS SHARPENED—AH Kinds 25c DOZEN * WED—THURS.—FRI. KELLER'S St. L COLONIAL MY FOUR YEVSM GERM AN Y A rail Down-Town Drug Shop uwnl ' l 1 F LORIST TH C ,M F'r TRS,,OI> | TNDERTAKER GEO. H. SOURBIER 706 N. Third Street I J FUNEIUL DIRECTOR tut Doners and Potted Planta. Funeral Designs. 1 01A M TUTDn OT Bell Phone 2479-It. Buth M. Maeder ljlU IN. 1 XIiKD ST. Samuel Seymour, 12 Nagle Street C. A. Haas. Overview FURNITURE For tXirnlture and Upholster, w riCTROLAS ¥> mm AVI T^n AND UPHOLSTERY __ of J" \l and RECORDS *• M. OYLER 221 North Second street Harris--!be upholsterer v 14 SOUTH FOURTH STREET c. gtraabauh,QlPegcr Street Utvrcucc H Hsnd, 1714 Miller Street /GROCERIES POLLECK-S— CSSTORS!? JOMEN-S WEAR ;YG :s.,. v .'.7n'-'-i"-c ' Robinson's Woman Shop, 20 N. 4th St. SOVIET ENEMIES PUSH AHEAD FOR SIBERIAN POWER Finnish People Changing Atti-! tude toward Hun-Con trolled Government H\ Associated Press ' . Wugliington, July IH.—Although, overshadowed by the tremendous de-j velopnients on the western front the | situation in Russia and Siberia isi daily presenting: ne wphases. At noi less than three widely separated! points have the opposition to thej Soviet government greatly strength-! ened their positions, thus heavily J taxing the inadequate military ma-' thine of the Bolshevik!. On the shores of the Arctic and j White seas, the small international: entente force which has been holding, the railroad terminus at Kola andl Murmansk has been considerably J reinforced and is understood to be j advancing southward along the rail - j road towards Vologda and Moscow. It is admitted officially that there arej some American sailors and marines j in the neighborhood of Kola, but it! is doubted whether, in the absence of! special instructions, they would par-j Lticlpate in this southward movement unless it were necessary as a defen-, sive measure. Finnish I'eople Change Tuna j Reports from reliable sources In Sweden indicate a surprising change! of sentiment among the Finnish peo- j pie toward their German controlled, government, making it impossible fori that government to raise any vol-] unteer troops to attack the entente; forces on the line of the Kola-Mos-I cow railroad. This has greatly re lieved the minds of officials whoj realize that this railroad could be; held only by a very large force if; attacked from Finland. futting off| I communication in that way would j ! greatly endanger the position of the ; entente forces on the Murmansk I coast when winter comes. With Finland virtually neutral, • and the local population in the Mur i mansk country coming to the aid of I the entente forces it is believed that j the allies now arereasonably sure of | being able to maintain a channel of communication with Central Russia (and Siberia against any German at-1 j tack. Entente Ignore the Bolsheviks i The protest of the L,enine govern-• I ment against the entente operations i in the north is believed to have been j a mere formality, made possibly to j satisfy the Germans who are endeav i oring to control the Bolshevik gov-1 | eminent. Officials say that it will not I be entertained because the entente I does not recognize the Bolshevik as the real government of Russia and persists in regarding that nation as still in the war on the side of the entente, regardless of the peace! treaty of Brest Litovsk. • I HEIJ* WANTED—FEMALE WANTED EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER by high-grade business estab lishment located in Harris burg. State age, experience and salary expected. Address S„ 7522, CARE OF TELEGRAPH. JULY 16, 1018. BURIANSEESNO THORNS IN U. S. PATH FOR PEACE Austro-Hungarian Foreign Head "Heartily Agrees" With Points of Wilson's Speech \ motrrilam. July 16-—Baron Von Burlan. the Austro-Hungarian foreign minister, in a note addressed to the Austrian and iTur.s. i'an premiers, is quoted in a dispatch from Vienna as saying: "There is hnrdly any difference be tween the general principles enun ciated by the statesmen of both bel ligerents. President Wilson's four new points of July 4 shall not, apart from certain exaggerations, arouse our opposition." Continuing, the Austro-Hungarian foreign minister said: "The enemy's obstinacy regarding his territorial demands concerning Alsace-Lorraine, Triest, Trentino and the German colonies, appears to be Insurmountable." In his reference to President Wil son's four new points in his July 4th speech. Baron Von Burlan said he was able to approve of them heartily, and that to a great extent "nobody would Save a Couple of Dollars, Have Your Old Hat Done Over We clean and reblock it so that it looks like new. Join the Thrift Movement. We have a reputation for better work and lower prices than any place in the city., Columbus Hat Cleaning Parlors II North ThlrU Street FOR SALE Well-built brick dwelling No. 221 Forster street, vacant. Set back from street, 1 5-foot alley in rear, small side yard. Contains twelve good-sized rooms, sec ond and third story bath rooms and first floor lavatory. Water heating system, gas and electric fixtures. For inspection inquire J. E. GARNER 2 1 8 Forster Street. refuse homage to this genius and no body would refuse his co-operation." Itraaly For Peace Parley Baron Von Burlan said none of the belligerent states need ever come into the position reached by Russia and Rumania as "we ever are ready to enter into peace negotiations with our opponents." Continuing, he said: "If our enemies continuously demand atone ment for wrong done and restitution therf this Is a claim which we could urge with more justification against them, because we have been attacked and the wrong done tb u must be redressed." "We are prepared to discuss everything." said Baron Burien, "ex cept our own territory." MOVING INSANE Removal of insane in the York county almshouse who have been illegally committed to that institu tion to hospitals here and in other central counties has been started under direction of the State Board of Public Charities. The removal is the result of drastic sieps taken against the York authorities by the State Board which demands a new almshouse. Quality Aircraft Production Wide-awake investors the coun try over are beginning to realize what a program of quantity air craft production means to the na tion's aeroplane manufacturers and greatest logical beneficiaries. WRIGHT MARTIN CURTISS We are prepared to furnish gratis complete authentic and up to-the-minute information on these issues, and welcome in inquiries. HS2ZSSBARSS7SG. I 212 N. THIRD ST. Harrlnburg I Hell 341W *>•■' I I Philadelphia New York J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers