HUN SEAMEN BOLT U-BOAT WARFARE; 50 SUBS MISSING Ring Leaders of Revolt Sen tenced to Death; Many Arrests at Kiel By Associated Press London, Aug. 7.—Rumors of a re volt by Gorman sailors at WUhelm ehaven in protest against continua tion of the submarine war are in cir culation, according to a dispatch to the Express from Amsterdam. It Is reported that propagandists among the men incited sailors about to leave on submarine cruises to at tack their officers and surrender their ships or seek an opportunity to Druggists Price Advance For over a year now we have succeeded in main taining our old prices, principally by virtue of a big increase in sales, which reduced our over head cost. For our fiscal year end ing July 1, 1918, our sales amounted to over a mil lion dollars—an increase of 58% over the preced ing year. We had hoped to bridge the war period without a change in prices on Vick's Vapoßub but we find that our econ omies do not keep pace with our rising costs. It is with sincere regiet, there fore, that we are forced to announce an increase, ef fective August 1, which will make it necessary to retail Vapoßub at 30C, & $1.20 THE VICK CHEMICAL CO. Greensboro, N. C. i ...3 1 I Better Furniture at August Sale Prices ~ - ■ ___ . r turns' Values Mean More to Every Home . . _ well finished. August Sale ; PrKe Tapestry Living' Room Suitesl Qfl $3.75 August Sale Price T | T The lounging Davenport is six feet long. The arm chair and rocker matvh the davenport. All three pieces are attractively covered with excellent grade tapestry. , Oak Dresser jj —well finished, three large r~ __ h\ l j I drawers, solid construe- . ' " ==== H , i I j tion. August Sale Price, ;| j __ || jl I fl !jj Library Table "nfll °I | r —finished duil mahog- I - i ■'f'TTK ~ j |i any, shaped French legs. I j 0 0 ] ; [-9 roomy drawer. August K m-. ■ | $14.50 f r^T' Solid Oak Buffet 4s> •I Unusually Fine Bed Room Furniture I it; roomy closet in base. I August Sale Prlce - Tempting August Sale Prices x-l-v . Artistically designed along lines of the Louis period, with unique U* • ILJ 'touches of ornamentation. Finished in American walnut, a wood becom f ins scarcer every year. Select whatever pieces best suit your room re- j quiremcnis. Dresser $44 Chiffonier $42 I -Wood Seat chair Toilet Tablet $37 Bed S4O Ijj —the back is braced and —————————— "H the seat is shaped. August . a Sale Price, and have thl plWHri while paying I \oTTZ I American Walnut Dining Room Suite intervals. ——————— We have the largest s-\ w Z ck lM hl : n TT<£ August Sale Price S| UK thing is of the high standard which has T this the largest Take into consideration the style, quality and price of this suite and furniture house in this 11 is one ct the best August Sale offers to be found in our large stock part of Pennsylvania. ot dining room furniture. The convenient arrangement of the large linen drawer in the buffet will Interest every housewife. Note the attractive extension table and china cabinet of the suite. WEDNESDAY EVENING, sink them and get themselves Intern ed In neutral harbors. More than rtfty submarines are said to have disappeared. Twenty-thr*o of the ring leaders of the revolt re reported to have been arrested and sentenced to death. Many others have been arrested at Kiel and elsewhere. It is added. The correspondent who sends the reports admits that the stories are conflicting and the facts to ascertain. The men behind the movement, the accounts state, are revolutionary sail ors who for sometime past have been conducting propaganda with tho ob ject of stopping the submarine war because of the Increased dangers. The recent resignation of Admiral Von HoltsendorlT as chief of the naval staff is declared to have been con nected with the scandal. Emperor William, it Is added, has abandoned an intended visit to the tleet at Wil helmshaven this week because of tho ferment there. Too Hot to Continue Manslaughter Trial Xr Bloomlleld, Pa., Aug. 7. Be cause of the Intense heat Perry county court this morning ordered continued the case of Jacob Sterner 7S-yer-old constable of Duncannon. who was indicted bv a Perry county grand Jury on Monday on counts of voluntary manslaughter and involun tary manslaughter. The motion was made by ex-Judge James \V. Shuil Sterner's attorney. The case will come up for trial at the November session of court. Paper-Taped Window at Burns & Co. Torpedoed! Paris has windows taped with paper representing the effect of a shell burst. Harrlsburg is risht up with Paris in this respect. The big display windows of Burns & Co's. furniture store, 28 South Second street, is fairly "torpedoed" with streaks of paper showing the frag mentary effects of the contact. Leave it to a Harrisburg store to keep pace with the live things that are going on along the western front. MALVY GUILTY. BIT ESCAPES JAIL TERM l'arls, Aug. 7.—Louis J. Malvy, former minister of the interior, was found guilty yesterday of holding communication with the enemy and sentenced to live years' banishment. The sentence does not carry civic degration. KIWANIS CLUB HEARS OF LIFE IN CANTONMENTS Livo Rusiness Organization May Increase Member ship During Fall Almost 55,000 letters were mailed from one mailbox in Camp Dix last month. The highest number of let ters mailed from thi.-s box in a day wns 1.575. The lowe.it number was 1,3 25. These facts illustrating the tre mendous task confronting the Y. M. C. A., were brought out in an ad dress by L. C. Baer, Y, M. C. A. secretary at Camp Dlx, who spoke before the weekly luncheon of tho Kiwanis Club at noon to-day. The meeting was held in the assembly room of the Central Y, M. C. A. building. Baer paid high tribute to the spirit of the boys in his camp. At the present time there are more than 70 000 men in Dlx. "They are the kind that go over the top only once." he said. "When they go over, they'll never stop." The luncheon began at 13.16. Sam uel W. Bair. of the Dauphin Elec trical Supplies Company, won the attendance prise, a silk dress given by Irving B. Robinson, of Robinson's Woman's Shop. Bair was the silent hooster, giving electric light bulbs. J. R. Gibson, tenor soloist at Bethle him Lutheran Church, and a mem ber of the P. R. R. Glee Club, sang a number of solos. May open Campaign It Is probable that a campaign will be launched by the membership com mittee to et more members for the club. Efforts will be made. It was stated, to jnake the Kiwanls the big gest and best man's club in the city. Charles E. Reeser, a member of the board of directors of the Indus trial Baseball Leasue. announced that the Kiwanls Club's team will meet the Suburbanites to-morrow night on the AVest End grounds at Fourth and Seneca streets. A large attendance of Kiwanlans is expected. "General Pershing is the world's greatest salesmanager," declared Hay Nolan, of the Scott Paper Company, who addressed the assemblage. Mr. Nolan was the guest of Samuel Tay lor, of the Johnston Paper Company. "His salesmen are his million sol diers. They have a proposition they HABJRISBDRG TELEGRAPH Senator Beidleman's New Summer Home I ,y * •; /•. *• . . • • •••... >' ' !"■ .. -• : \ % YV;:- , Senator Edward E. Beidlem.m and family have taken possession of their attractive summer home on the hillside overlooking the Dauphin Narrows. It Is located most advantageoualy on the outskirts of Dauphin and a short walk from the railroad station at that place. The bungalow has been much admired. are going to sell the kaiser. They' will use airplanes and cold steel to sell their goods. The goodd Is Dem ocracy and the rights of civilization." j Mr. Nolan told of the work of his firm and explained various phases of papermaking. Dr. Harry B. Walter, a prominent local medical practitioner, spoke on "Anesthesia," telling of many things which occur in the life of a physi cian. He gave a very interesting ad dress which received much favorable comment. This week's meeting was in charge of the professional men. A. Roes Walter, attorney, was acting chair man. Next week the professional men will again be in charge and Al. | K. Thomas will speak on "Banking." First of Perry County's Drafted Men Posted on U. S. Casualty List Newport. Pa., . Aug. 7. John W. j Carl, of Newport, mentioned in to -1 day's casualty lists as missing in ac j tion, is a member of Company C, 110 th J Infantry, Keystone Division. Carl, | 28 years old. is a son of Mr, and Mrs. Michael Carl. East Newport. He has a wife living here. One brother and three sisters are also residents of Newport. Carl left for Camp Meade, Md., last October and is the first Perry county drafted man to be mentioned in the casualty lists. After being at Camp Meade some -time, he was transferred to Camp Hancock. Ga. In France for the past two months, the last letter was received from him about Ave weeks ago. Before entering the United States service, Carl was employed at the Marshall furnace. He had previously ! been employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad. 'LIGHTSHIP SUNK OFF HATTERAS [Continued from First Page.] mile of shore, according to the brief report which reached the Navy De partment. U-hoat Daring The Diamond Shoals light station | is one of the most famous guides Ito navigation in the world. Such ' \essels usually are manned by gray beards and ft re of such a type as to i be utterly helpless in the face of an ; enemy attack. The attacking submarine probab- I ly was the one that sank the Amer ! lean tank steamer O. B. Jennings, j one hundred miles off the Virginia j coast several days ago. Her exploit , in showing berself above water with ' in half a mile of the Carolina coast, | in an important shipping lane where | innumerable patrol boats are sup | posed to be plying, is one of the most daring since the undersea craft made their appearance on tnis side of the Atlantic. The Navy received only mea ger information when the statement was issued. The Diamond Shoal ship I guards the out thrust reefs of storm ; swept Cape Hatteras, known as the j graveyard of the Atlantic coast. The attack upon the light ship may represent a new phase of engmy sub marine operations off the American 1 coast, designed to hamper shipping i by destruction of important naviga | tion signals. A Canadian Atlantic Port, Aug. 7. —An American schooner arrived here to-day with sixty-five members of the crew of a Japanese freight steamer which had been torpedoed off the Nova Scotia coast. MUST GIVE NAME TO PURCHASE SUGAR [Continued from First Page.] enabling him to serve his regular trade according to the regulations of the food administration. The records will contain the name and address of each pur chaser. number of persons in family of purchaser, amount of sugar and date of purchase and amount of sugar on hand. Each entry is to be made as the sale is made and the reports are to be mailed to the Dau phin county food administrator, Room 203, Dauphin building, Har risburg. at the close of business on 1 Saturday night of t.ach week. The record so kept will furnish a basis on which the grocer can obtain additional sugar supplies as needed from time to time and will clear up the difficulties encountered in the issue of sugar distribution certifi cates as required. It will also permit of an accurate checking process by federal agents, who are now engaged ! in locating hoarded sugar. Blank record forms will be sup plied grocers at the food adminis tration office. Room 203, Dauphin building BRITISH CASUALTIES LESS London. Aug. 7.—British casualties reported in the Week ended to-day totalled 9,866. compared wltlr an ag gregate of 12,893 reported in the previous week. There are divided as follows: Killed or died of wounds: Officers. 105; men. 1,609. Wounded or missing: Officers, 374; men, 7,778. 5,000,000 MEN IS U. S. NEED FOR ARMY [Continued from First Page.] viding the bill could be reported at that time. About July 30, General March said, the United States reached a de cision to enlarge its military pro gram to carry out the policies agreed upon at the recent interallied con ference at Paris to speed up prose cution of the war and brihg it to an early conclusion. General March said the shipment of men overseas would be continued according to the program now in ef fect for the present. Questioned by senators regarding the apparent'"change of front" of the War Department in its war pro gram, March told of the government's ("cision in accord with the Paris conference. For the new program Secretary Baker and other officials concluded that there must be an extension of the draft ages. While about three million now are under arms, army officials think there should be approximately five million men at home and in France. In order not to disturb the present draft system and to avoid calling men who had been given exemption, extension of the draft ages is neces sary. From General March's testimony and other information received the committee has gained the impression that while all men between the ages of 18 and 45 would be subject to military duty under the new law it is proposed that those between 18 and 20 years of age shall be kept in this country until the last. Upon the suggestion of Senator Wadsworth that the draft system be extended to the Navy, Senator Chamberlain announced that either Secretary Daniels or Admiral Ben son would Jt>e asked to appear to morrow before the committee to dis cuss the advisability of the subject. I Farmers! Another Big Demonstration 1 Of the Plowman Tractor 1 and 3 Bottom Oliver ow Thursday, August 8, at 10 A. M. to 4P. M. I ' On E. B. Betser's Farm-' o^o^' . I 3 Miles East of Linglestown—On the Main Road to Shellsville A Few Good Territories Open For Live Dealers THE OVERLAND-HARRISBURG CO. I 212-214 North Second Street. Harrisburg, Pa. Husband in France, Wife Killed by Powder Worker Penn* Grove, N. J., Aug. 7.—Mrs. Margurite Pilcher, of Washington, D. C., was killed by George H. Smith, a powder worker here to-day when she refused to marry him, according to the police and then ended his own life. Mrs. Pilcher, who was 19 years old, was visiting her mother here. The dead woman's husband, who was formerly a secretary to a United States senator, is in France with the American forces. Salvation Army Cap tain Praises Tanlac Says It Brought Back His Old-Time Vim and Vigor "Thanks to Tanlac I am back to my old energetic self and can once more do my work with enthusiasm " exclaims Captain M. Neilson, of 2218 Atlas St., Harrisburg, Pa., head of the Harrisburg Salvation Army Unit. "I was all run down from work ing night and day. "Something seemed to tell me to take Taniac and it has done so much for me and brought about a com plete restoration of my health and strength that I feel that it is an evi dence of God's love towards man kind to endow men with the tal ents to bring forth such a wonder ful help to mankind as Tanlac. "1 want you to spread the news of my recovery broadcast for I feel that it is my duty to let every suf ferer know of the wonderful results that Tanlac obtained for me." Tanlac is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drugstore.—adv. AUGUST 7, 1918. Y. M. C. A. to Direct Boys' Camp on City Island A. H. Dtnamor®, secretary of boyS" work, and C. W. Miller, physical di rector at the Central Y. M. C. A_ will be in charge of the boys' playground camp at McCormick's Island, park de partment officials announced to-day. The camp for the boys opens to-mor row morning as soon as the girls now camping there, leave. Unable to secure a suitable direc tor to take charge of the camp, the city authorities appealed to Robert B. Reeves, secretary of the Y. M_ O, A-, and an arrangement was made at once to have Mr. Dlnsmore and Mr. Miller, both known to hundreds of boys In the city, to take charge with out any coat to the park department. The action received the approval of the board of directors of the Central Y. "M. C. A. at their luncheon in the Harrisburg Club yesterday. Both Mr. Dlnsmore and Mr. Miller were given full liberty by the board, to proceed with the care of the camp under J. K. Staples, supervisor of the city playgrounds. The Y. M. C. A. board left details to be arranged be tween Mr. Dlnsmore and representa tives of the park department. When approached by a reporter, Mr. Dlnsmore. in commenting on the plan, said there is little to be given out from his ofilce. "It has all come about very suddenly. It will neces sarily mean some changes In our an nounced program for ii camp for older boys. This camp was to open within a very few days. No announce ment can be made as to what will be come of these plans. We will first have to go over the entire situation with the park department officials, as we are going to put our plans Into the background wherever It conflicts with their arrangements. Mr. Miller and I are glad to be able to sacrifice our own plans in order to co-operate in this larger city-wide work. Any thing further should come from Mr. Staples or some other park depart ment official." Class of 1918 Is to Be Called Here to Meet August Draft Calls Draft board officials this morning said that the call for 10,000 men to be sent from Pennsylvania to Camp Play Safe — Stick to KING OSCAR CIGARS because the quality is as good as ever it was. They will please and satisfy you. 6c—-worth it JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers I-ee, Petersburg, Va.. durln* the day movement beginning August 16 will take the first quota of 1918 regis trants. Half of the men In their quotas will be from the 1918 regis trants. they said. To Illustrate, City Board No. 1. said this morning that based on previous proportions the call for 10,000 men will make their quota about forty men. This board has but eighteen first-class men of the 1917 registra tion. The remainder must be 1918 registrants. The Remaining 1917 colored regis trants will leave during the three-day movement beginning August 22. The call is for 892 men from the state. Both calls are for general military service. Local boards are awaiting their train schedules and quotas before completing their lists. Young Men Use Cuticvni To Prevent Baldness The cause of premature baldness is usually dandruff. Shampoos with Cuticura Soap and hot water followed by occasional dressings of Cuticura Ointment do much to remove the worst dandrufft allay itching and irri tation and arrest falling hair. IftmpU bch Ftm by Mall Addreu poet-card "Catlcira, Dpl 3J A. Botoa " Sold everywhere. Soap 26c. Ointment SS and 50c Talcum 26c. UNDERTAKER IT 4* Chas. H. Mauk N boTH I, I'KIVATK AMItDUNOE PHONES 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers