4 Court Decides to Grant Liquor License Transfer JlAbr postponing action on the transfer of a liquor license held by Albert Frits, -who conducts a bar anj restaurant in Odd Fellows* Hall, j lyteme, the court late yesterday of- ] tvracm decided to hear the case and after questioning Mr. Frits authoris ed the transfer to a property two Aoora away which has beem bought ty him. It was explained in oourt that the lodge although not ordering FYltz to remove, desired to have the sale of liquor in the lodge building stopped as soon as possible. CHARGED WITH THEFT • Mary Wilson and Nannie Jackson, and Mrs. Bessie Ivory, 1203 North Serenth street, were arrested on the charge of stealing a pOc-ketbook con taining $53 from Emory Cothron, of Steelton. Cothran said that the -Wil son woman was going to rent him a room, and after taking him to a room in Mrs. Ivory's house, disap peared and his pocketbook disap peared too. He secured a patrotma* and the trio was arrested. POM SHOES AS WELL AS GUNS Foot=Ease to Bo Added to Equip ment of Hospital Corps at Fort Wayne. Under the above heading the Detroit Free Press, among other things says: "The theory is that soldiers whose feet are in good condition can walk further and faster than soliliors who have corns j and bunions incased in rawhide." The Plattsburg Camp Manual advises men in training to shako Foot-Ease in their shoes each morning. One war relief committee reports, of all the things sent out in their Comfort Kits, ! Allen's Foot -Ease received the most praise from the soldiers and sailors. It is used by American, French and British troops, because it takes the Friction from the Shoe and freshens the feet. There | is no foot comforter equal to Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic,healing jowder to be shaken into the shoes and sprinkled in the foot-bath, the standard remedy for over 25 years for hot, tired, aching, perspiring, smarting, swollen, tender feet, corns, bunions, blisters or callouses. Why not order a dozan or more 25c. boxes to-day from your Druggist or Dep't. store "to mail to your friends in training camps and in the army and navy. WHEN CHILDREN CRY OUT Ami are feverish and don't sleep welfare consti pated and have symptoms of worms mothers will find quick relief m Mother Gray 's Sweet Powders for children, the standard remedy for 30 years. Th>y are easy to fire and children like them. They cleans* the stomach, act gently on the bow els and break up colds. Relieve headaches and teething disorders. We hare 10,000 testimonial#. Ask your drngjrist and be sure to pet Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, 25c. / A plate wlthont ■ root, which t dor* nut laterferw with tut* • | Plate. rtpitrH ntllt 7*o wait. Come Id the raomlns. have your teeth made the same day. MArif'Q Kfc-NXAL "• HW R W OFFICES SlO MARKET STREET N J (( Big Summer School Who ? • • University and College Students High School Students Eighth Grade Students Women • Registered, Married, Single, Young and Old Teachers Boys Men City, Town and Country Under Draft Age Over Draft Age BECOME* This Summer, a Stenographer, Typist, Book keeper, Accountant, Cashier, Office Clerk, • Copyist. NO ENTRANCE EXAMINATION, Personal Help, In dividual and Class Instruction, Intensive Training. See D. L. M. RAKER, Principal AWI V ? Your Country in Civil Service To Help Your Home and Yourself Where ? AT 1116 SCHOOL OF COMMERCE • 1 The Standard and Accredited Business Schobl WVI PTI V NEXT MONDAY - or Any Day This Summer How? prompt Decision and Action. By sayine "I £IUW ' CAN" "OTHERS WILL, I WILL." You'll be sur prised what you can do in this School with Personal Help—TßY IT. Call For Free Catalog, or Phone Bell 485, Dial, 4393 SCHOOL OF COMMERCE Troup Building, 15 South Market Square The Oldest, Largest and Best Business School in Harrisburg Summer Session Opens Now No Summer Vacation Fall Term (Night School) Opens in September TUESDAY EVENING, DRAFT BOARDS TO REPORT SOON Additional Men Called For Special Training in Uni versity of Pittsburgh An local end district draft bmxdi in Pennsylvania have been called up o hy State Draft Headquarter* to make a report of the number of men | in Class I as of Saturday, July SO. 1 Separate re parts are to be made of the 191" and 191S registrants. Tele i graphic reports arc to be made at ; noon of that day. The third call within five days for white men with grammar school edu cation to be sent to the Cniversit}- of Pittsburgh for special training for the Army was received to-day. It is for 856 men. and the}' are to be train ed as chauffeurs, sheet metal workers, electricians and in similar lines. The previous calls were for "S4 men. These calls are open to voluntary induction until July "2 for registrants of both years. After that they will be filled by compulsory induction from the 191" class. Voluntary indtiction calls have also been issued for twenty donkey engineers, fifty carriage men or doggers and twenty-four edgermen from saw mills, twenty-four chief en gineers; stationary or portable; twelve millwrights, twenty assistant millwrights, thirty-five camp helpers and twenty setters or men experienced in setting cross cut saws, all to be sent to Vancouver Barracks and to be engaged "in producing spruce for airplanes in the great Northwest woods." The quotas for the 6.000 men to go to Camp Wadsworth in the week of August 5 will be announced early next week. The movement of 1.500 men to Wadsworth. begun yesterday, is progressing and local boards are rapidly filling up the quotas for the Camp Lee movement which starts July 22. Francis Fisher Kane, I'nited States District Attorney, yesterday took steps to compel District Draft Board No. I to Justify Its alleged dereliction of duty in connection with the cases of Grover C. A Bersrdoll and 213 other draft delinquents before the Federal srand Jury, now sitting to Investigate the entire draft situation in Philadel phia. Witnesses will be subpenaed, Mr. Kane said, and the first man to tes tify will be Bronte Greenwood, secre tary of the district board and active executive official of that body. He will be required to inform the errand Jury of the local boards from which "names of delinquents were received, and then these officials will testify as to circumstances surrounding each In dividual case. John P. Dwver. secretary of Phila delphia Local Board No. 32. Overbrook, names of whose forty-two delin quents were not sent to Adjutant Gen eral Beary to be posted as deserters, also will testify. Ho will be asked to present evidence, which he says he has gathered over a period of months, and all of it. he says, related to the manner in which the district appeal board is said to have failed in its duties. If You Are Troubled with insomnia, try a diet of Holly Rice and milk. Always keep a few cans in the house. —adv. run-down people in two weeks' time in I I many instances. Used and highly en- I dorsed by former United States Senator* I and Members of Congress, well-known I ~ physicians and former Public Health offi- I cials. Ask your doctor or druggist I ■ hboatjfc I BROTHERS AND SISTER IN THE SERVICE Mr. and Mrs. Irvin G. Gray bill, PaxtornfTle, Snyder county, are the proud parents of two sons and a daughter all tn sejvloß In France, the boys arriving: recently for active field service and their daughter ar riving on Christmas Day for Red Cross work.- They were formerly from Harrisburg, and are shown above: On the left. "Winey Graybai. 312 th Ambulance Company. 308 d Sanitary Train: on the right Irvin Graybill, Jr., 803 d Field Signal Battalion. Company B, both 7Sth Division. Thev trained at Camp Dix. Miss Eltia Gray bill. their sister, is a Red Cross nurse at the 34th Unit Base Hospital. She left with the Episcopal Hospital unit tn Philadelphia. She was formerly a nurse at the state tuberculosis dispensary in this city, and later was on the staff at the Medlco-Chl Hospital in •Philadelphia. Women Will Sacrifice Frills For Fourth Loan Chicago, July IS—The work of en rolling 1000,000 women of the United States pledged to sell one-half of tha Fourth Liberty 1/oa.n of $6,000,000,000 was begun yesterday at a conference of representatives from all parts of the country under the auspices of the National Woman's Liberty Loan Com mittee. "No new dresses." was a slogan of Miss Ella Flagg Young, who in the absence of Mrs. W. G. McAdoo, chair man of the national committee, pre sided at the conference. "I haven't had a new dress for the past three years." Many Harrisburgers Are in Attendance at Bible Study Englesmere. Pa., July 16. Many Harrisburgers are in attendance to day at the Bible Conference now in session here under the auspices of the Moody Bible Institute, of Chi cago. Dr. James M. Gray, dean of the institute, delivered the opening address on "Bible Prophecy and War," and said while he did not believe this would be the last conflict of nations, he did believe that there will be a realignment of European nations which will make wars very much fewer in the future. Mr. and Mrs. Kalph Norton, just returned from the Belgian front, told a thrilling story of their Gospel ministry among the soldiers. "Mel" Trotter and the Rev. !W. H. Griffith were among other I speakers. Homer A. Hammontree, of the extension department of the It j stitute. has charge of the music. WHEAT TO SEI.I. HI".HI-: AT *2.15 A BISHEI. Wheat will continue to sell at $2.15 per bushel in Harrisburg as a re sult of the Presidential veto of the Agricultural Appropriation bill fix ing the wheat price at $2.40. The passing of this bill would have rais ed the grain price in this vicinity, although it would not have reached the figure fixed. The lower price for wheat in this section is because of the lower quality sold in this sec tion. This is a soft winter wheat which is lighter than the first grade red winter wheat. The figure at which wheat is selling here is twenty cents higher than that fixed last year. I due to the Food Administrator's or der that farmers shall not sell it for a figure less than $2 per bushel. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Big Motor Truck Supply Train Halts on Circus Grounds For the Night The first of a series of motor truck trains spent the night, on the city circus grounds. Twenty-first and Greenwood streets, last night. The corps included an ammunition train of twenty-five immense five-ton army trucks. Truck trains are expected on the circus grounds every night this week and it is very probable that in the future, the grounds will be used al most nightly. For months, trucks have been pass ing over the Lincoln Highway, pass ing through Harrisburg en route for an Atlantic port, it is said. For mili tary reasons it is impossible to di vulge the destination of the trucks. As many as a hundred trucks have passed through Fulton county in a single day. It is said. The" circus grounds are owned by S. F. Dunkle, president of the Harrisburg Manufac turing and Boiler Company. Bismarck Feels Name Is Standing Disgrace Bismarck, N. D.. July 16—Agita tion to change the name of BismSrck received added impetus here when it was found that in the night unidenti | tied persons had obliterated the name ion the Northern Pacific sign board I with yellow paint. A six-foot sign. ; erected nearby read: "To hell with this block-headed Hun. What did he ever do for Us?" Several downtown buildings to-day 'displayed signs which read: | "Change the name of the city to j something decent." British Submarine Gets U-Boat in 40 Minutes I.ondon, July 18—Within forty minutes recently a British submarine accounted for a German U'boat. Tho story in brief is: 10.30 A. M.—Sighted enemy subma rine, so dived and altered course. 10.47 A. M.—Enemy picked up in periscaes. 10.50 A. M.—Again altered course. 10.52 A. M.—Stern tube torpedo ' fired. 10.53 A. M.—Sharp explosion heard. ! 11.10 A. M.—Came to surface and sighting oil right ahead with three men swimming in it. Two were pick ed up, but the third sank before we could reach him. Dived. Survivors stated that submarine U— was hit just before the conning tower, Kiwanis Club Getting Ready For Big Picnic A Conklin self-filling fountain pen, given by Ernest Eppley of the D. W. Cotterel statipnery store is the attractive attendance prize for the lucky member of the Kiwanis Club, to be awarded at to-morrow's luncheon. The weekly luncheon will be held at noon in the assembly room of the Central Y. M. C. A. building. The picnic committee, which la making plans for a big picnic of the club members, will have charge of the festivities at this week's lunch eon. L,. M. Bricker, of the' West Shore Bakery, will be the silent booster. Plans for the stag picnic of club members ire materializing. The Ki wanians will be the guests of H. C. Claster in his beautiful country home at Summerdale. Among the stunts there will be house tjpll, quoits, a shotting match, running matches and all sorts of games. RED CROSS XOT TO ENTER POUTICS Red Cross executive officials will not be allowed to become political candidates. This Is the substance of a new order received this morn ing at the headquarters of the Har risburg chapter, American Red Crass, in the basement of the Pub lic Library. The order has been is sued pursuant to instructions from the War Council and is above the signature of George E. Scott, actinj general manager of the American Red Cross. "No new hat ornaments." said Mrs. A. S. Baldwin, San Francisco. "No new clothes for the children or as few more as possible," said Mrs. Frank A. Vanderlip, member of the national committee, who explained that her own children are dressed In the blue denim French peasant's smocks. The women leaders of the Nation emphasized that thrift must become fashionable to aid the new loan so that they might better the record made In the last loan when forty per cent, of the total sales were handled by women. NEW K. OF C. CXil'B OPEXED London, July IS—The second of the clubs of the Knights of Columbus was opened in London yesterday afternoon. It Is situated In the Edge* ware road. Walter Kerman, of New York, over seas commissioner of the Knights of Columbus, and delegates of the Su preme Council of the Knights, were present, as also were prominent En glish Catholics and representatives of the American Army and Navy. GET WAGE INCREASE Beginning yesterflay, employes of the Harrisburg Railways Company will receive an Increase of two cents an hour in wages. The increase was announced severay weeks ago. This is the fifth increase in wages since August, 1918, and the men are npw earning 4 4 per cent, more than two years ago. They now receive from 31 % cents to 35% cents, depending 1 upon their term of service with the company. Twenty-nine Registrants Leave For Army Schools Twenty-nine registrants were sent by city boards 1 and 3 to schools es-j tublished in eastern colleges, where they will receive special training be-1 fore they enter the United States Arm>\ at specialised branches. ' The first city board men and their destinations are: Lewis R. Bowman, James F. May, Stanley F. Wilson. William B. Shimp and Edgar L. Spijyd to Xortli Carolina State Col lege. Raleigh, N. C.; Benjamin H. Boggs and William Albrecht Davis to Lehigh University, South Bethle hem, Pa.; Joseph Minnaugh, Rus sell J. Carpenter and John R. Taylor to University of Pittsburgh, Pitts burgh; Roy John Myers, Ernest H. Sullings, Harry M. Hitter and Chal mers B. Behney to Bowman Techni cal school, Lancaster; and Vaselois G. Kastoekletys, Harry B. Hoakland, Chester H. Motter, Carl R. Schmidt, and Aristotelys K. Beleras to Penn sylvania State College, State College, Pa. _ The third city board's men are Forrest Sowers, Boyd Manbeck find Elmer Kirk to Lehigh University. Charles Breneiser to State College, and Paul Ryan and Frank W. Triest to University of Pittsburgh. CHARGED AS DISORDERLY J. B. Baird, who was arrested last j evening on the charge ot being dis orderly and resisting the officer, •will be given a hearing to-day. He works at Marsh Run and lives at Altoona. m-, The New Store J. STROUSE Good News For Thrifty Men Special Lot of 100 & Palm Beach 1W and Kool Kloth Jjgl Suits For Men Extraordinary Value s io= mm A man will only begin to realize what great values he has in these suits ? JB| Raffly when he compares them with the usual run of summer suits. We have this W * lot of a hundred to sell special and we dare say that they are not likely to be <■ tseen at such a price next year, by the way all signs point to higher prices. All sizes to choose from. All fine fitting, good looking suits. A Group of Boys' Kool Kloth and Palm Beach Suits: Special 1 Were $6.50 and $7.50 $ h .75 At One Price > This lot oi boys' suits has Been reduced in order to readjust the stocks and at the same time it gives parents an opportunity to procure a splendid suit for the boy at a very attractive price. All sizes in the lot. Be as early as possible for these suits won't stay here long at this price. Boys' Straw Hats Reduced As Follows: $1.50 Straw Hats, $1.25 J $2.50 Straw Hats, $1.95 $4.00 Straw Hats, $2.95 $2.00 Sraw Hats, $1.45 $3.00 Straw Hats, $2.45 $5.00 Straw Hats, $3.95 Harrisburg's Specialty Store For Men and Boys 310 Market St. —W———W' IT —M^—Ml— SAYS HIS WIFE IS DRIVING SPIRIT. Witness Declares She Urged I Neighbor to Leave Husband "My wife lias a dominating, drlv- | ing spirit und she and the Baker wo-1 man planned the whole thing. 1 1 knew it would happen long before it | aid. My wife and the other woman gloated ->ver tho matter and how easy it was to get a support order | from the coui't." This was part of the testimony given by David H. Miller, of Enola. called to the witness stand by coun sel for H. W. Baker, who was sued by liis wife for support. Miller when cross-examined said he and his wifei only talked when it was necessary toj conduct the business of the home. | "You're r.ot living together aroj you?" he was asked. "NVell, you'd hardly call it living , together, we's staying together," was 1 Miller's reply. Family and neighborhood troubles j were aired at the hearing and finally j President Judge George Kunkel said: i "This woman isn't entitled to! much of an order; technically she l is, but from the evidence' here she 1 liad no cause to leave her home." j Mr. and Mrs. Baker finally agreed to live together again and will re- j port in court in September. An 1 uncle and an aunt of Mr. Baker, who had been living with them, said they would leave at once since it was tes tified by witnesses for the prosecu ' tion that they were the cause of fam ' ily troubles. They said they had i: never heard Mrs. Baker make such a statement and felt sure that the I Miller woman was causing the trou ' ble, but rather than be the cause of keeping Mr. and Mrs. Baker sepa ■ rated they consented to leave. Thomas Smith, of Columbia, Insures Dyspeptics Against Indigestion ; Policies Obtainable of Any DrugKlxt What Is virtually an Insurance ■ policy against indigestion, gastritis, • sour stomach and dyspepsia is now . obtainable of all leading drugKists. . If you suffer from pain after eating. j if food disagrees, or if you have any •j of the above mentioned forms of • stomach trouble go to Geo. A. Gorgas ■ or any other good druggist and get. a f J package of Bi-neMa Tablets. Then ' j go home and eat anything you wish I and take three of the tablets. If you i aren't delighted with the results—if I 81-ncsla Tablets don't keep you en . tix-ely free from the usual pain and , i discomfort, return the guarantee con [l tract—your Insurance policy—and the 50c you paid will be refunded. In other words, 81-nealn is sold under the fair and square plan of "Payment for results." If 81-ne*la does not C stop the pain or if you are not abso lutely satisfied, it costs you nothing; , you can have your money back for 1 the asking; and the druggist of 3 whom you buy it is authorized to . stand back of this guarantee. JULY 16,1918. charged with fuilure to support a minor child, was directed to pay a hrother-in-lnw $7.50 a week to keep the K'rl. Other sentences of the afternoon Cheaper Ice At Alspure Ice Stores The "cash and carry" price for ice is 40 per cent, to 50 per cent, less than the wagon rates. For five cents you get as much ice from Ice Stores as the wagon sells for 10 cents. This is a saving of 50 per cent. j . Alspure Ice Stores are located at: Race & Nagle Sts. 114 S. Dewberry Sts. (near Mkt.) South & Second Sts. (rear) 3rd & Delaware Sts. 3rd & Boas Sts. (rear) Green & Basin Sts. (near Reily) 4th near Hamilton Sts. sth & Woodbine Sts. 6th & Hamilton Sts. 7th & Woodbine Sts. Forster & Cowden Sts. 13th & Swatara Sts. 13th & Walnut Sts. 15th & Chestnut Sts. 18th & Forster Sts. 27th St., Penbrook, Pa. The U. S. Goernment wants delivery equipment reduced to a minimum so that more men may be used for war purposes. We ask the co-operation of our customers so that we may reduce the number of ice wagons making house-to-house delivery. United Ice and Coal Co. Office —Forster and Cowden Streets Included: Lillian Alexander, lr< ceny, 6 months; Brownie Smith, lar ceny, and James Oakley, larceny, 3 months, each.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers