SIBERIAN ARMY TO REORGANIZE BATTLE FRONT Against German Ag gression Sought by People Washington, Aug. 6.—Everywhere tin Siberia the population, belonging to different classes and political groups, has manifested vivid Interest and sympathy with the organization of an army, which is Intended to re establish, together with the Allies, a battlefront against Germany; and the formation of this army Is pro ceeding very successfully, the Rus sian embassy declared to-day in a statement explaining the political situation In Siberia. The relations of tho temporary government of Siberia, with the Czecho-Slovaks aro stated to be friendly, and it is the Intention of this government, the embassy as serts, to reform together with the Allies, the eastern front, to promote the unity of Russia and to recognize all the international treaties and agreements of Russia which were in force until the moment of the Bolshevik uprising. „ Russians in Washington are high ly optimistic and contented with the decisions of the United States, Japan and the Allied nations to send an ex pedition to the relief of the Czecho slovaks and to assist Russia in every possible way. The Czecho-Slovak army, it was learned authoritatively, will remain in Russia, having aban doned its Intention of going to the western front, "being satisfied," it was declared, "to fight Germans and Austrians wherever they may be found." No Sign From Bolshevik! The Bolshevik attitude toward the American and Japanese action is ex pected to be hostile, but up to this time there have been no advices from Russia indicating whether the Len ine-Trotzky regime will make itself completely the instrument of the Berlin government in opposing the Czecho-Slovak and the American- Japanese forces. The initial number of American and Japanese troops to be sent to Siberia while small, will be suffici ently strong to assist in re-establish ment of contact between the Czecho slovaks in western Siberia and those at Vladivostok, but the ultimate size of the international force will de pend, it was emphasized, upon the strength of the Austro-German re sistance in Siberia and Eastern European Russia, The State Department received a telegram from Ambassador Francis, dated July 24, and forwarded by the American consulate general at Mos cow, saying the embassy was obliged to leave Vologda because its com munications had been out. and fear was in Ambassador Francis' mind i,ooncerning what might happen, as all news was cut off. Pittsburgh Class to Go on August 15 Scchdules have been issued showing that the class of men to go to the University of Pittsburgh for special training for the Army under the spec ial induction calls will stare August 15. These men are all with gram mar school education and with an ap titude for mechanics, and they will bo trained for chauffeurs and automo bile repairmen. Harrisburg's three districts will contribute 8. 10 and 14 men, respec tively. and Dauphin's three will send 9, 6 and 2. respectively. Cumberland. No. 1. w4ll send 3; Adams. 3: Franklin, No. 1, 3. and No. 2. 8; .luniata. 1; Lancaster City. No. 1, 1; Lancaster county, No. 3, 1, and No. 4. 2; Lebanon, No. 1, 15; Perry, 4. In all, 1,427 will go. Wants Quicker Service on Soldiers' Letters Washington, Aug. 6. Senator Johnson, of California, declared in the Senate yesterday that the un r necessary delay in transporting let ters between soldiers and their fami lies not only was destroying the mor ale of the mothers of this country, but was injuring that of the fighters themselves. "I ask the Senate to aid In sparing these boys in France additional hardships," he said, "and in bringing by united action better service in the transportation of letters written to them from home." Physician Explains Who Should Take Nuxated Iron Practical Advice on How to Help Build Up Great Strength, Energy and Endurance Commenting on the use of Nuxated Iron as a tonic, strength and blood builder by over three million people annually. Dr. Jam*-s, Francis Sul livan, formerly physi cian of Bellevue Hos pital (outdoor Dept.) New York, and Tlx "Westchester Count' Hospital, said, "Lack of iron In the blood not only makes a man a physical and mental weak linn. nervous. Ir ritable, easily fa tigued, but it ut terly robs him of that virile force that stamina am strength of wll which are so neces sary to success anc power in everj 4# walk of life. It may also transform a beautiful, sweet tempered woman Into one who is * cross, nervous and irritable. 1 have strongly emphasized the great neces sity of physicians making blood exam inations of their weak, anaemic, run down patients. Thousands of persons go on year after year suffering from physical weakness and a highly nerv ous condition due to lack of sufficient \ron In their red blood corpuscles vvithout ever realizing the real and. Irue cause of their trouble. Without Iron in your blood your food merely F asses through the body something ike corn through an old mill with rollers so wide apart that the mill can't grind. For \yant of Iron you may be an old man at thirty, dull of Intellect, poor in memory, nervous, Irritable and all "run down," while at 50 or 60 with plenty of iron in your blood you may still be young In feeling, full MANUFACTURERS' NOTE—Nuxated and others with such surprising res recommended above by physicians is is wei) known to druggists everywhr product.' it is easily assimilated and ( black nor upset the stomach. The mn entirely ratisfactory results to every money. I* is dispensed in this city by Clark and all other druggists. TUESDAY EVENING. COMMISSION TO MEET TOMORROW Agricultural Board Will Sit at Lancaster Tomorrow, Then Will Go to Chester ■MnMMHHk Members of the V \\ ® State Commission V\.\ of a ST Ic ullu re A ff]r\ will meet to-mor row In Lancaster I 0 n agricultural c 0 n road tax bonus will be made from tho State Treasury in a few weeks. There will be close to 1,000 warrants to be drawn for distribution of $944,000. Times Are Abnormal.—Abnormal conditions now prevailing in regard to labor and material are given as the main reasons by the Public Serv ice Commission for dismissing com plaints brought against the Pennsyl vania railroad in regard to station facilities in Cambria county and against the Latrobe Water Company operating in Westmoreland county. The decisions were written by Com missioner James Alcorn. In the complaint against the Pennsylvania it was asked that an agency station be established at Beaverdale as more convenient to many people than Lloydell, 2,500 feet 'away. Beaver dale has developed more rapidly due to mining operations. It is suggested that it would "be better to have one commodious station and an agency situated with regard to the bulk of tho population, but owing to the war the commission will not act. In the Latrobe case an extension of water lines was asked for and the company agreed if the persons to be served would pay the difference between the prices of labor and material now and in normal times. The complaint is dismissed with leave to renew In January, 1920. In the complaint of Byron C. Bair against the Bell Tele phone Company, growing out of Ger vico at Sinking Springs, Berks coun ty, it is' held by Commissioner John S. Rilling that the company should not refuse service. COll lpen sat ion Award". —The state compensation board to-day announc ed that it had again awarded com pensation jn the claim of Eugene J. Glasser vs. J. N. Canfield, Philadel phia, a case which was remanded back to the board by Judge Suden leid, of Philadelphia, for a supple mental finding. The board goes into much detail of the case and holds that there is no testimony to substan tiate even an insinuation of malign ing and gives data as to the in jury sustained by the claimant. The board awarded compensation In three other cases which had been the subjects of extensive study: Hain vs. Reading Paper Mills, Reading; Cromly vs. Everhart, Williamsport, and C'leland vs. Garrett, New Wil mington. The latter case was a complicated one in which the owner of a saw mill agreed to remain with the new buyer to show him how to operate it. After the sale had been made the holler blew up and the former owner contended that he had remained as an employe and was en titled to compensation for injuries. The defendant 'strenuously," In the language of the opinion, denied .such an agreement. The board in con sidering the testimony of the claim ant and a miller to whom he had spoken awards compensation. In Executive Session. —The State Public Service Commission today be gan its first August executive t>es sion and will probably take action on the applications for approval of con tracts and agreements on the ex tensions of the Philadelphia Rapid The accompanying article of Dr. Sulllrnn nhould lie carefully read by every man nntl womiin ivhii nania tr. Sullivan tell* how ito IMNMM the iron In onr blood and 'thereby gain Krcater phyNic-aJ and . menial power, brighter Intellect* and better % health, / of life, your whole be InK brimming over with vim and energy. But in my opin ion you can't make strong, vigorous, successful, sturdy iron men. and healthy, rosy cheeked women by feeding them on metallic Iron. The old forms of metal lic iron must go through a digestive process to trans form them into organic iron—Nux ated iron—before they are ready to be taken up and assimilated by the human system. Notwithstanding all that has been said and written on this subject by well-known physi cians, thousands of people still Insist on dosing themselves with metallic iron, simply. 1 suppose, because it costa a few cents less. I strongly advise • readers in all cases to get a physi cian's prescription for organic iron— Nuxated Iron—or If you don't want to go to this trouble then purchase Nuxated Iron in Its original packages and see that this particular name (Nuxated Iron) appears on the pack age. If you have taken preparations such as Nux and Iron and other simi lar iron products and failed to get re sults, remember that such products are an entirely different thing from Nuxated Iron. J Iron which ts used by Dr. Sullivan BUlts, and which is prescribed and not a secret remedy, but one which ere. Unlike the older inorganic iron does not, Injure the teeth, make them anufacturers guarantee successful and ' purchaser or they will refund your y Croll Keller, G. A. Gorgae, J. Nelsoe 168,575 SENT INTO THE ARMY State Draft Headquarters Makes an Unusual Showing in Forwarding Fighters Pennsylvania sent approxi mately 168,676 men Into the United States military service through cith er general or special calls made un der the draft In a little more than a year according to figures compiled at state draft headquarters. Of this number 16,000 were Individual In ductions; 28,731 were sent to Camp Meadet, 18,292 to Camp Lee and 4, 309 to Camp Sherman before calls were numbered. The remainder have been sent or will be sent before Au gUEt 15 under a series of calls rang ing from the big call whereby 11,- 700 white men were sent to Camp Lee last month for general military service to special calls for one pile driver foreman for Vancouver. The* men have been sent from Pennsylvania to Camps Lee, Meade, Sherman, Sevier, Greene, Humph reys, McArthur, Vail, Hancock, Dix, Johnston, Greenleaf, Wadsworth, Schriven, Custer and Forest; Colum bus, Washington and Vancouver Barracks; Forts Leavenworth, Ogel thorpe, Harrison, Slocum, Thomas, Wayne and Myer; Kelley Field, El lington Field, Syracuse recruit camp; Rochester, Washington, Laurel, Md., and Hoboken and educational insti tuptions' in Philadelphia, State Col lege, Easton, Lancaster, Pittsburgh, Erie, Cambridge Springs, South Bethlehem and Erie in Pennsylva nia and Delaware College and Uni versity of North Carolina. The men called for under special calls included gas mask inspectors, canvasworkers, accountants, brick layers, meteerologists, wireless opera tors, stenographers, chemists, lum bermen, quarrymen, railroad men, locomotive repairmen, blacksmiths, chauffeurs, bargemen, yardmaste~s, dispatchers, gas plant workers, sur veyors, gunsmiths, instrument mak ers, carpenters, machinists air brakemen, plumbers, teamsters, wa ganmakers, steam shovel workers, cooks, axmen, concrete workers, powdermen, millwrights and litho graphers. Transit system to Hog Island and Chester. Attended Launching. Chairman Ainey and Investigator Dohoney, of the Public Service Commission, at tended the Hog Island launching yesterday. ~ • Kirkpatrick Wounded. Accord ing to word from Easton Lieutenant Donald M. Kirkpatrick, son of Wil liam S. Kirkpatrick, formerly attor ney general, has been wounded in action. The lieutenant was an archi tect in Philadelphia and was a mem ber of the City Planning Commis sion of Easton. He was graduated from Lafayette and the University of Pennsylvania. Going to Pittsburgh—Auditor Gen eral Snyder will address the County Commissioners' convention at Pitts burgh. To Take Position—Miss Margaret E. Seltzer, lately with the Internal Affairs Department, will go to Wash ington to take a federal position. Shreiner Returns—Superintendent Shreiner is home from Now York where ho had a discussion of the park and bridge plans and when the drawings are made they will be submitted to the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings, likely next month. M' Henry Named—H. H. McHenry. of Punxsutawney, was appointed chief of the Bureau of Information at the Capitol guides' office to-dav. Adjutant Resigns—Philip Web ster, of Bradford, battalion adju tant, Third Infantry, has resigned. To Speak at Altoona. —Auditor General Snyder and Gabriel H. Moy er will speak to-night at a patriotic meeting in Altoona. Not Enough Water —Complaint was filed wiUi the Public Service Commission to-day that the Mam moth Spring Water Company,oper ating in Muhlenberg township, Berks county, does not furnish an adequate supply of water, one man charging that it Is not enough for him to se cure fire insurance protection-from companies. New Clerk—W. F. Porter, form erly In the First National bank of Sharon, has been appointed a clerk in the State Treasury. Increases Filed—The Litltz, Man heim and Ephrata Gas Company, operating in Lancaster county, has Hied notice of an increase in rates effective September 1 in its district. Other notices filed with the Public Service Commission were by the Lu zerne County Gas and Electric Com pany, for gas in the Hazleton, Kings ton, Plymouth and adjoining dis tricts; Plainfleld Water and Pompeii Water Companies, Northampton county; amounting to 30 per cent, on flat rates; Weatherley Water and Dempseytown Gas companies. Fair Food Prices The following statement, revised to August 6, regarding fair prices for food necessities, was issued to-day by the local Federal Administration. Consumer prices are figured on a quotation of "cash-and-carry" basis Credit and delivery prices may be higher. The Federal Food Adminis tration has no authority to fix prices If your retailer charges more on a "cash-and-carry" basis than the prices named below, report "him by letter to the Federal Food Administration Chamber of Commerce. Consumer should pay Beans Navy (pea), lb 16 to 16c Gray (marrow), lb l 2c I.lma. tl> 17 to 18e White (marrow), lb *-17p flutter Creamery, lb 50 to BKc Creamery. 1-lb. prints, lb.. 48 to 63c City Market. 1 lb 45 to 60c Oleomargarine, lb 30 to 35c Cornmeal Package of 2% lbs., pkg... 18 to 20c Bulk, lb 6V6 to 7c City Market, lb 7 C Eglta Fresh, doz 43 to 45c City Market, doz 43 to 45c Flour Wheat Flour. 12-lb. bags.. 80 to 88c Corn Flour 7 to 9c 50-50 War Flour (12%-lb. bag) 80 to 86c Rice flour, lb 13 to 14e , Cereal* Oatmeal and rolled oats, lb. 7 to 8c Itice (whole, lb 12 to 14c Rice (broken). Tb 10c Edible starch, lb 10 to 12c Milk Evaporated, small cans ... 6 to*7c Evaporated, largo cans.... 12 to 14c Chevne York State, lb 30 to S3c I.ord Pure, lb 29 to 33c Substitute lb 26 to 28c I'otatoen New, per half peck 30 to 36c Siignr Granulated, per lb 9 to 9%c The following are the authorized substitutes for wheat flour: Hominy, corn grits, cornmeal, corn flour, edible cornstarch, barley flour, Tolled oats, oatmeal, rice, rice flour, buckwheat j flour, potato flour, sweet potato floui , and soya bean flour HAJtRISBURG TELEGRAPH I "The Live Store" ' "Always Reliable" ' I Doutrichs Mark-Down Sale Everything Reduced—Exc I It seems the hotter the weather the greater our busi hess in this "Live Store" This week started out with a rush and you can expect to see great activity HERE during this Semi-annual Clearance Sale. I Manufacturers tell us we had better "close our doors" than to 1 attempt to sell it the low prices we are quoting on high-grade merchandise; but many ! manufacturers are not in the enviable position that this "Live Store" is to-day Never have we been better prepared with immense stocks than at this time and we feel very much gratified that we are able to offer our loyal patrons such a splendid money-saving opportunity lt's only by buying in tremendous quantities, having an enormous output and selling for "cash" during times like this that we are able to offer you these advantages. | Ever hear of a store offering Hart, Schaffner & Marx, i Kuppenheimer Clothes, in fact all our high-grade clothes—Munsing Under wear, Shirts, Hats, Hosiery, Neckwear, Etc., at mark-down prices right in the midst of the season? Well that's what Doutrichs are doing, tell your friends this is the sale everybody is going to. * , I All s 2(M2 Suits • s ls= All s 3s= Suits . s I I All Suits . s l9= All *4o Suits . $ 1 I All s 3o= Suits . *23£§ All s4s= Suits . i 111 —Boys' Suits Reduced~~—j | jj All $6.50 Boys' Suits <£4 gg \ 5 i: All $7,50 Boys' Suits ! gg 1 ; j ;; All $8.50 Boys' Suits • |g 95 \ I All SIO.OO Boys' Suits $7.95 * 1 p All $12.00 Boys' Suits $9.75 jj I i: All $15.00 Boys' Suits .' $11.75 I i| All SIB.OO Boys' Suits $14.75 j 1 Hosiery | Shirts I All .20c Hosiery 14c ij All SI.OO Shirts .. 79c All 25c Hosrery / 19c- ;i Allsl.soShirts '51.19 I All 35c Hosiery 29c || All $1.85 Shirts ... $1.59 All 50c Hosiery .. 39c f All $2.50 Shirts sl*B9 All 60c Hosiery 49c All $3.50 Shirts $2.89 All 75c Hosiery 69c J All $5.00 Shirts $3.89 I All SI.OO Hosiery 79c All $5.85 Shirts $4.89 All $6.85 Shirts • $5.89 All 50c Neckwear 39c j! All $7.85 Shirts $6.89 All SI.OO Neckwear 79c j All $8.85 Shirts $7.89 I All Straw Hats and I AUGUST 6, 1918. 9