GROUSE HUNTING ! STOPPEDJN STATE Policy of Game Protection to Be Followed by Com mission Pennsylvania State Game Com missioners who last week closced all missioners who last week closed all hunting of the ruffed grouse for a year propose to follow up the pro hibition of shooting of the great game bird by employing special game pro tectors during the bird season. These men will be named for coun ties whore there are a number of grouse and where there is ordi narily hunting by many sportsmen and will be empowered to make ar rests or to bring informations. Some volunteers to help protect the grouse against illegal or careless hunters have already been heard of. This policy to protect the grouse was determined upon a few days ago as something with which it was felt the sportsmen who brought about the closing of practically all of the state to grouse would heartily support. The special men will work with regular protectors and will be | on duty from October 20 to Novem ber 30. Lehigh and Montour counties have filed their petitions to be closed to grouse hunting and are now in cluded In the list, but the attitude of some men in York and Adams will likely prevent any action there with the result that hunters from any other part of the state will be free to hunt grouse in those counties. Phil adelphia and Delaware will not be included as they have no grouse. Steps to propagate the grouse are being taken and it is hoped to buy some of the birds as will be done with pheasants and quail. However, other states are on the same trail. The western half of the state has been pretty thoroughly closed to quail hunting this fall, some of the counties being closed for two years, but there will be good quail hunting in eastern counties, where the win THE GLOBE THE GLOBE SHIRTS—SHIRTS—SHIRTS I Hundreds of Dozens of Them In a Great Every kind of shirt is represented in our Mid-Summer Shirt Sale — complete ranges of patterns and full ranges of sizes. Silk Shirts at $2-Bsl Shirts at CI ft'? I Worth to $5.00 ™ | Worth $2.50 | Shirts at This Bif* Shirt Sale Is In Connection With THE GLOBE'S % GREAT ONE THOUSAND M SUIT CAMPAIGN (Today the Clock Says 540) Mjui -jmrn Every Wise Man is Buying His Clothes at The Globe Now at These Reduced Prices SIB.OO Suits Reduced To $14.50 $28.50 & S3O Suits Are $24.50 $20.00 Suits Reduced To $16.50 $32.50 Suits Reduced To $28.50 $22.50 & $25 Suits Are ' $19.50 $37.50 Suits Reduced To $32.50 THE GLOBE MONDAY EVENING, ter does not seem to have depleted' the stock so much. The reed bird or bobolink is now protected for ten years by federal act, but there are some farmers getting mad enough to kill off blackbirds which have begun to flock before going south. In southern counties the black birde are very numerous. And some re reports tell of much destruction caused by them. 17 Killed and 30 Injured in Railroad Collision Jackson, Mich., July 22.—Seven teen persons were killed and thirty others injured, many seriously, when a Detroit-bound limited pas senger car and a westbound freight car collided, headon one mile west of Chelsea at 8.30 o'clock Saturday night. Six of the dead were soldiers en route to Detroit from Camp Custer. Several men and women civilians are included among the dead. The collision occurred on a straight stretch of the line and was due. according to unofficial state ments, to a confusion of signals. The limited is said to have left Jack son seven minutes late and was trav eling at high speed. Both cars were demolished. Estates of Murdered Czar Declared Forfeit to Soviets Amsterdam, July 22.—A1l the property of the former Emperor, his wife, and his mother, as well as all\ other members of - the lmperlol house, has hen forfeited to the Rus sian Republic, according to a Mos sow message received here. This in cludes deposits in foreign banks to the credit of the members of the imperial family. A decree to that effect was issued by the Bolshevist government on July 17, it is said. In reporting the death of the for mer Emperor, the Moscox Bjedneta says: "By order of the Revolutionary Council of the People, the bloody Czar has happily died. Vive the red terror!" Quentin Roosevelt Buried With Honors of War Amsterdam, July 22.—The death of Lieutenant Quentin Roosevelt is confirmed by a Wolff Bureau mes sage from the front, according to a Berlin dispatch received hefe. The message adds young Roosevelt was burled with military honors by the Germans. The story of the fatal en counter, as told by the Wolff Bureau correspondent, follows: "On Sunday, July 14, an American squadron of twelve battleplanes was trying to break through the German defense over the Marne.. In the vio lent combat which ensued with seven German machines, one American aviator •stubbornly made repeated attacks. This culminated in a duel between him And a German non corr.misioned officer, who, after a short fight, succeeded in getting good aim at his brave but inexperi enced opponent, whose machine feli after a few shots near the village of Chambray, ten kilometers north of the Marne. ' His pocketcase showed him to be Lieutenant Quentin Roosevelt, of the aviation section of the United States Army. The personal belongings of the fallen airman are being carefully kept, with a view of sending them to his relatives. The earthly remains of the brave young airman were buried with military honors by Ger man airmen near Chambray at the spot where he fell." Austria Facing Worst Food Crisis in History Berne, Via London, July 22. —The most critical food situation yet ex perienced is now faced by jfustria. Bakers are demanding tin Increase in the price of bread to twenty cents a loaf. Flour is unobtainable at any price and it has been impos sible to obtain vegetables in the big cities since June 15. The Austrian food situation is worse than that in hunger-stricken Turkey, declares the Vorwaerts. HARRISBtJRG, TELEGRAPH MAY INQUIRE INTO STREET CAR FARES Public Service Commission Maintains That Right De spite Franchise Regulations The Public Ser- V. \ \ ® //J vice Commission \\W ' n an exhaustive y\\\\A opinion written ? Chairman W. D. B. Ainey, holds that it has au \ thorlty to inquire, I jtimtititjetofl into rcasonable i neBS of a rate of - faro a Btreet railway company even though the fare may be fixed in a franchise or dinance. This opinion, which was rendered in the complaint of the borough of Wilkinsburg that the in crease in the rate of fares by the Pittsburgh Railways Company was against an ordinance giving right to construct and maintain a trolley line through the town, means that the commission takes jurisdiction In such cases, of which a number r.re pending from various parts of the state. Commissioner Michael J. Ryan has tiled an opinion dissenting from the finding of his colleagues. The Wilkinsburg case attracted much attention and it was generally accepted as a test. An opinion was given recently by Attorney General Brown that the commission had au thority to authorize a street railway company to increase fares nothwlth • standing the fact that the rate was specified by local authorities in granting the franchise. Mr. Ainey holds it is the specific duty of the commission to inquire into rates when tljeir reasonableness is ques tioned while Mr. Ryan holds that the commission can not override local authorities. Fry Gets a Treat—Howard W. Fry, chief clerk of the State Highway Department left Saturday morning for a three-weeks' vacation, which will be the first he has taken in the entire four and a half years that he has been connected with the depart | ment. A portion of the time will be I spent ijt Atlantic coast resorts. Huntingdon's Record—Every sec ond-class. township in Huntingdon county will receive a portion of the 1911 cash road tax bonus, which will be distributed among them during the year, having filed all necessary papers with the Bureau of Township Highways, of the State Highway De partment. Statfe Highway Commis sioner J. Denny O'Neil has certified amounts totaling $12,227.73 for dis tribution to the townships, and this money may be spent by the super visors for various road and bridge improvement purposes. Jefferson county will get sll,- 572.27 having 1284 miles of road and Laurence county $9,508.40. The commission in a statement says: I "The decision recognizes that I changes in conditions require changes in rates and that the rates I fixed by municipal ordinances, many lof which are perpetual, may at a I later date be found to 'be higher than I the public should be compelled to . pay, or lower than the company I should receive in order to maintain | its property, so as to be able at all times to render the service to which the public is entitled. The ability of the company to make extensions and improvements is so dependent upon the return which it is entitled to re ceive that the regulation of each much be placed in one body and the Legislature has designated the Pub lic Service Commission as this body. The power of the commission to reg ulate rates will also result In elimi nating discriminations which are bound to exist where rates are fixed by a number of municipalities, all served by one street railway system. The street railway business has so developed that large numbers of municipalities are now served by one company and as each municipality has imposed fare conditions, design ed for its parUcular benefit, inevi table discriminations have arisen be tween the various localities, and the only way to remove the same Is to place the regulation of fares in the hands of the commission, which can see to it that justice is done to all." MUiUameu Paid—The 3,250 men of the Pennsylvania Reserve Militia who were in camp for ten days at Mount Gretna, were paid Saturday by Chief Clerk Benjamin W. Dem ming, of the Adjutant General's of fice. The pay amounted to $50,215.89. Collecting Data—The state board of education's special „ committee on teachers' salaries ,is collecting data to be embodied in a report to be made urging the next Legislature to add 25 per cent, to teachers' sal aries. Many Compliments—Adjutant Gen eral Beary is receiving many compli ments to-day upon the appearance of the Pennsylvania Reserve Militia during Oie first encampment. Exper enced officers say that the men show up very well In comparison with the old National Guard. Public Service Hearings The Public Service Commission, which is in a measure on vacation, will sit for hearings in this city Wednesday and Thursday of this week. To Attend Convention of Clothing Merchants William Strouse of the New Store of Wm. Strouse, and Frank E. Wood, manager of the clothing department, will leave for Johnstown. Pa., this evening to attend the three-day con vention of the Pennsylvania State Retail Clothiers' Association which openß to-morrow In that city. Success of Allies Astounds Holland Amsterdam, July 22.—The allied victory has created a deep impres sion throughout Holland. The Telegraaf says that anything is possible; that the capture of 400 gun| will fill the Germans with con sternation. The Handelsblad says the double Franco-American success revives French courage and inspires the Americans, whose young army has proved that it is capable of vig orously tackling the Germans. The greatest importance of the victory, according to the Nieuws van den Dag. is the scoring of a tactical and strategical success against the' German commanders. Even it the Germans recover their advantageous position, the paper says, the fact re mains that the spell of the German army commands Is broken. The Tljd emphasizes the great strategical advantages achieved by General Foch within a few hours. LIKK CAMP LIFE Liking camp life so well that they didn't want to give It up, five boys who were at the Central Y. M. C. A. Boys' Camp during the past week, hiked to the Boyd Memorial Camp near Losh'a Run and spent B'rlday night there, sleeping under the stars. Saturday the boys walked back to Duncannon and boarded the train for Harrisburg. The hikers were Robert Leiby, Richard Stelnmets, ' Donald Neisley, Henry Palm. Roswell Lyon, accompanied by A. H. Dinsmore, di rector of the "Y" boys camp. Why Hand I t The German Is an Overrated False Advertiser, as History Shows THERE was published in the In dianapolis News some months ago a striking article from the pen of Townos R. Leigh in which ho turns he light on the German brain or lack of it, as follows: During the last few months I have heard the Germans arraigned as blatant, boorish, barbaric, yet in nearly every case the speakers suf fixed to their invectives such an ex pression as: 'But when it comes to brains you will have to hand it to mem; they have made science.' , I ! and it to them? What epoch-making invention or discovery or igin. except a stamp on which is inscribed 'Made in Ger ™nn^'*i.,rhe Bte am engine has been called the greatest of all Inventions, it broke the shackles from slave 3; it mingled the, marts of the world: it made neighbors of the Antipodes; Newcomen, a native of Devonshire, obtained the patent for the first par tially successful steam engine: Watt, a Scotchman, perfected it; Cuynet, Murdock and Trevithick brought forward the locomotive, not on Ger man soil; Stephenson, an English man, was the first to apply the loco motive steam engines to railways for r^ Se . nßer , trafflc : Prance, England and America applied it to navigation. ~ T J\ e „ telegraph, which brings us the daily history of the world, was invented by an American, Professor Morse, who also suggested the At lantic cable, which was subsequently laid by that American merchant scientiat, Cyrus Field, assisted in 'Mooring the new world alongside of the old by Lord Kelvin, the prince of physicians, a British subject. Gra ham Bell, the chief inventor of the telephone, was born in Scotland and grew to fame in America. A young Italian, Marconi, gave wireless teleg raphy to the world. "Cyrus McCormick, a native of West Virginia, produced the reaping machine which harvests the food of the world; Meikle, of England, brought forth the freshing machine; thus was famine banished. Eli Whit ney, of Massachusetts parentage, in vented the cotton gin; Hargravcs, an Englishman, made the spinning jenny; Arkwright, also English, sup-' plied its efficiency with his famous spinning frame; the Englishman Kay introduced the fly shuttle in weav ing; Brunei, who devised the knit ting machine, and Cartwright inven tor of the power loom, were British I "The Live Store" Always Reliable" I Palm Beach Week I I This is "Palm Beach Week" at Doutrichs. I During this week this Live Store will sell all PALM BEACH and Cool Kloth Suits at $9.75 These suits are from our regular stocks and every 1 $12.00, $15.00, $16.50 and SIB.OO Palm Beach Suit is included at nine seventy-five. We Ve had no excessive hot weather until now this season and you will appreciate buying from our well selected stock of Palm Beach Suits I at this time when they will be of most value to you I for it's "warming up" and you'll want to shed your heavier weight clothes for a cool Palm Beach Suit especially when you can buy $12.00, $15.00, $16.50 and SIB.OO suits at , $9.75 Palm Beach Week Ends 304 MARKET STREET HARRISBURG, PA. I subjects. Thus was the world clothed. Not Even a War Invention "Although Germany is militaristic and worships at the shrine of Mars, what votive offering has she made to the god of war? It was not she who coit.ributed gunpowder, smoke loss powder, percussion cap, nitro glycerine, guncotton, dynamite, tor pedo, shrapnel, automatic cannon, magazine rifle, breech-loading gun, Gatling gun, revolver, Maxim si lencer, hammerless gun, gunboat, ironclad batteries or ship armor Plate, revolving turret, submarine or airplane. "Germany did not produce the first aniline dye, vulcanized rubber, liquid gase- u , gas engine, water gas, thermometer. barometer. piano forte, barbed wire, cut nails, plate glass, circular saw, cable car, elec tric car, sleeping car, air brake, bi cycle, automobile, pneumatic tire, sewing machine, typewriter, calcu lating machine, cash register, steel writing pen, etc., ad finltum. False. Advertiser "The greatest thing that Germany has done is to falsely advertise her- I self as the light of the world. No son of hers invented the electric light, the gas light, the acetylene light, the kerosene light, the search light, the flashlight, the safety lamp, the candle dip or the friction match. America, France, England and other 'untutored' nations performed these asks. The 6un, moon and stars are the only lights left for Germany's con tention, and according to the Mosaic account, the Lord and not the kaiser made and placed them in the firma ment. Daguerre, a Frenchman, presented us with photography. Our own Edi son brought forth the motion picture to delight and instruct the eye and the phonograph to please and teach the ear. Gallileo, who first saw the heavens with a telescope, was an Italian. The men who first saw the earth and its teeming life with a microscope were not of German ori gin. By use of the compound micro scope, Pasteur, the French biologist, as early as 1857 demonstrated a con nection between microscopic organ isms and disease. This was nine years before Dr. Koch, the German bacteriologist, had graduated. In this connection the Important anti septic surgery of Dr. Lister, of Eng land, should be recorded. Edward JULY 22, 1918. Jenner, the discoverer of vaccina tion, and Harvey, the discoverer of the circulation of the blood, were Englishmen. An American taught the world the use of anaesthetics. Our dentists excel all others. They are employed by many. ' crowned heads—even the kaiser has his. "The Teutons have not shown the engineering skill of the French, who cut the Suez canal, or of the Ameri can, who joined the Atlantic and Pacific at Panama. The decimal or metric system by which the Ger mans make their measurements, is a gift from France. The method by which they make their steel is that of Sir Henry Bessemer, of England. Many of the fruits and vegetables of which thoy eat an enormous quan tity were brought forth by our own peerless Burbnnk. "Lavoisie, the .father of modern chemistry, was French. Linnaeus, the founder of botany, was of Swed ish origin. To Hutton, of England, we are Indebted for geology; to Maury, of Virginia, for the physiog raphy of the Bea; to Descartes, of | French parentage, for analytical geometry; to Comte, of France, ;'or I Sociology: to Germany for sauer- I kraut and pretzels. Her sons did not? | compose the crew of Magellan's fleet, tVie first to circumnavigate the globe. A German did not discover the north pole nor lead the way toward the I south pole. J HAVE YOUR j Lawn Mover, Hedge I and Grass Shears ? -■ — | Put in Good Shape I I * ' f> - | We Can Do It The Federal Machine Shop Cranberry Street, Between Second and Court | Harrisburg, Pa. Boy Scouts, Proud of Companion's Battle Record < Philadelphia, July 22.—The proud- | est company of Boy Scouts to be found j to-day between the oceans Is Troop. 122. A star in the service flag of i the troop represents a scout who has sprung Into world fame overnight. In.j this troop George I* MacElroy learn-: ed to blow the bugle that has sent its blast over the waters of the Murne. There has been but one toplo of conversation among the boys of Olney for the last two days, and the subject of it has been Bugler George, who went without food for forty eight hours and crawled on his stomach through the Hun lines, bring ing safely to headquarters the dis patches of his captain. William C. "Williams, of Company H, 19th In fantry. Every scoutmaster in the city is elated to claim kinship with the Phil adelphia lad whose exploit ranks with the finest episodes of the battle- PF7T DOG SHOT New Cumberland, Pa., July 22.—, Harvey Hetrictk and Charles Con dren had to have their pet dogs shot the past week as the yacted straxig ly and it wa sthought they were go- ! ing mad. Harry Kautz, a farmer re siding near New Cumberland, had to kill one of his cows that was betten by a mad dog and it is feared he will have to kill another. 7