24 PENNSYLVANIA 1 SOLDIERS 0F'343 ON BATTLE LISTS f f "Three State Fighters Fall in War With the Germans in Pershing's Army Washington, Sept. 17.—0n the Arm..' casualty list made public by i the War Department to-day there ' are 343 names. Of these twenty eight were killed in action, two of r onic-Upbuilder For Throat ■ and Lungs In many cases of serious illness, af fecting the throat and lungs. ECK- ' MAN'S ALTERATIVE has been very; beneficial. This is due largely to its j readily soluble ealcium content (a ! lime salt!, so combined with other i ingredients that it is easily assimi-i lated. No alcohol, narcotic or habit- ! forming drugs. Twenty years' sue- j eessful use. SOe and gl.hfl nettles at all druggists or nianufaeturer, postpaid. ECKMAN LABORATORY. Philadelphia if Ever There Was • j a Time to Test Values War Time is the Time Try Our New Fall Suits $l5 to $3O ■_uits made to order and guaranteed to fit, wear and prove satis factory. $2O to $5O —_________ New Fall Shirts 1 New Fall Ties New Fall Underwear New Fall Hosiery HOLMAN f* AESELER CO. 228 Market Street L tlo We Give Individual Instruction? I §y DO WE ADVANCE A STUDENT AS RAPIDLY AS HE Olt SHE IS AUI.E TO GOt H YES, ALWAYS. Some finished in half the time required by others. |H Ja Records have been made recently as tollowa: Shorthand—Typewriting Course, 4J4 mos. jg Stenotype—Typewriting Course, 3 mos., 10 days. M i Bookkeeping Course, 3 mos., 1 week. U Bookkeeping and Stenotype Course, 6 mos., 3 weeks. I NAMES and ADDRESSES on application. The course finished by I these record students is not a HALF-course, but a STANDARD | ACCREDITED Course. APFROVED by the National Association H ot Accented Commercial Schools. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 1 Harrisburg Business College I Troup Building 15 South Market Square E ENTER ANY MONDAY Bell 4*5 Dial 4303 jS As Age Advances the Liver Reqnires -ppcT oCCMional slight , t ; mu |ation. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS correct CONSTIPATION. 4%"*1 ™ Genuine signature Colorless or Pale Faces :^^:^L"wh!'ch•l^n o r';;?l 1 ; n her^d o< b; Carter's Iron Pfc 1 Absolutely No Pain f I la teat Improved appll- JHRKHu anoea, Including nn oieygea- J? /- d fiSffflkllvj Ued air apparatna. makes eS vWvIS-SJEUtIiJ extraetlag and all dental . c*p wtijmvil wark paaltlvelv painless Vy to JjT and la perfactlv barm- . A. r . /■> leas. (Age mm a Ask En 11 set ef I EXAMINATION X. X FREE X AVy S oo A X r Gold crowns and •. \ y bridge work, ra, P4, pa A yr BK gold crown, $3.00 I Registered AA V Oglce open dally aSo B n.sSs.ts . to •P. m.l Monday, Wed- I Bandar and Saturday. tR| BH>L£ PHONR ttS-R. BAST TERMS OF | 120 Market SL (Ovar the Hub) 8 HARRISBURG, PA. H smun im a bit J 'TUESDAY EVENING, n~ttviSL,<_rftG SEPTEMBER 17, 1918, ! whom were sergeants, one a master I engineer and the remaining twenty live privates. Three Pennsylvanians fell in battle, as follows: Master En ' glneer Robert E. Marsh, Bristol; I Privates Vitold Tarassuck, Burgetts ! town, and Pioter Wanieki, Ford I City. Of the 164 missing in action, ! ten are Pennsylvanians. Of 109 I wounded severely twelve are Penn | sylvaAians. among them being Cap ! tain ruul R. Umberger, Columbia, j and Corporals William Switzer, Ty | rone, and Vt'illium Henry Hess. I Huntingdon. Another Huntingdon I soldier, Private Wilbur Fillmore i Corbin, is among the wounded se i verely. Private Norman L. Zim ! merman, of Meyersdale. is reported | a prisoner. Twenty-four Pennsylva ! nians are reported. The casualties j divided as follows: ; Killed in action 2S ! Missing in action 164 : Wounded severely 109 Died of wounds 9 Died of disease 0 Died of accident and other causes 1 Wounded, degree undetermined. 17 | Wounded slightly 3 Prisoners 4 ! Total 343 I The list follows: KILLED IX ACTION Sergeant Master Engineer Robert E. Marsh, j Bristol. Pa. Privates j Vitold Tarassuck, Burgettstown. Pioter Wanieki, Ford City. WOUNDED SEVERELY Captain Paul R. Umberger, Columbia. Corporal William Switzer. Tyrone. William Henry Hess, Huntingdon. Privates Lewis Casern. Wilkes-Barre. 1 John Miller, Jessup. | Thomas Joseph Voss, Bristol. Norman C. Carl. Emaus. Murray John Colledge. Everett. Wilbur Fillmore, Huntingdon. William B. Furlong. Philadelphia, i James H. Redding. Wimmers. i WOUNDED (DEGREE UNDE TERMINED) Private ' Howard C. Stephens. Dorranceton. MISSING IN ACTION Privates Henry S. Kiefer. Philadelphia. George Washington Lentes, Bryn Mawr. Stiney C. Martinavage, Shenan ' doah. ' Joseph C. May, Scranton. Anthony Paleski, Scranton. Emil A. Edlund, Winburne. William E. Gaus. Braddock. Joseph G. Greiner, Lancaster. Erwin T. Grider, Allentown. William F. O'Donnell. Philadel phia. PRISONER Private ' Norman L. Zimmerman. Meyers dalb. PREVIOUSLY HEPOIITF.n MISSING IX ACTION. NOW REPORTED WOUNDED Private George R. Moore. Philadelphia. PREVIOUSLY REPORTED MISSING IN ACTION. NOW REPORTED KILLED IN ACTION Private Edward H. Bair. Jr., Greensburg. | j. !l to manufac j ture supplies and ;! ammunition on a great er scale than Germany, and coal to transport these supplies and mil lions of men is the first essential of success. Saving coal is the big op portunity for every house holder to help win the war. United Ice & Coal Co. FOREIGNERS TO GET FAIR DEAL . • | Commissioner Leech Raps Men Who Take Advantage of Their Ignorance ; The State Coni- Jk \\J /// pensation Boartl \\Y\ an opinion issued to-day sets aside the termlna- tion °' a COIU P en " I SciWWWtsaJ sation agreement " between Peter 'SI J ' )laftei antl . " 1<! tunning, with criticism of the"way the transaction was handled. The claim ant, it is stated, "could neither read nor spe ik the English language and should not have been asked to sign such a paper without its having been thoroughly and properly interpreted and explained to him." The claim ant, it is held, is not concluded by the execution of the final receipt. The defendant is ordered to make payments, the Board saying, "The Board can not approve this method of terminating compensation agree ments." Increases Filed. The Hazard Mfg. Co., of tVilkes-Barre, has tiled notice at the Capitol of increase of stock from $1,000,000 to $2,000,000. Other increase notices tiled are: Keystone Stocking Mills, Philadel phia, stock. $25,000 to $50,000; Kaufman Furniture Co., Reading, stock, $35,000 to $55,000; Thomas Spacing Machine Co., Pittsburgh, stock, $250,000 to $350,000; Schwartz Motor Truck Co., Reading, stock, $5,000 to $300,000; Drovers' and Merchants' Bank, Pittsburgh, stock, $lOO,OOO to $200,000; Adams County Preserving Co.,' Grantham, debt, $15,000. Big Payment.—The largest pay ment to be made at the State Treas ury in months was entered to-day. It was for $212,000 from the Pitts burgh Coal Company. Important Cases. —A series of im portant hearings will be held here by the Public Service Commission to morrow. They include the Way re Sewerage Company rates, the West Chester Board of Trade complaint against the Philadelphia Suburban! Gas and Electric Company, the Berks county grade crossing cases and a! number of others. The Lancaster and Ephrata turnpike case will hg j heard at Lancaster. Beary Returns.—Adjutant General! Beary has returned from Washington I where he went on matters connected! with the draft" and militia affairs. Middle-town Water Case.—The con- ' troversy between the borough of Middletown and the Middletown and I Swatara Consolidated Water Com- 1 j pany, over service which has been! going on for months was argued be-1 t fore the Public Service Commission • j to-day, John R. Geyer appearing for! the borough and George R. Heisev | for the company. The hearing in j the Progress water complaints, which I | involve service, has been postponed., i 1 Ickcrman Here.— Representative j | John W. Vickerman, leader of the! I 'dry' forces in the House, was at! | the Capitol to-day. He is verv ar-1 dently for Sproul. Dr. I. K. Ulrioh. 1 I Lebanon legislator, was also a Hill i visitor. j Many Cases.—The calendar of the ! , State Board of Pardons for to-mor-j ; row contains thirty-nine new eases,' j including three appeals for commu ( tation; seven petitions for rehearing \ i and five held-over cases. Must Wash Vessels. —Persons who ; fail to wash glasses, cups and dishes • used by the public at fairs and simi- j j lar exhibitions will be prosecuted by ] ! agents of the State Department of Health, according to a statement is sued to-day by Dr. B. F. Royer. the | 1 acting commissioner, who says that: all legal provisions for cleansing i must be complied with. Inspectors' i caused the first arrest as the result of I t lefusal of a man at the Arden fair| to with state regulations. A! ! tine of $5 ynd costs amounting to' $25 resulted and the defendant was ; compelled to make provisions to comply with the law. To Discuss Draft. Col. Easby-i Smith of the provost marshal gen- > eral s office, will be here to-morrow ' to discuss the relation of the draft i to the personnel of the staffs and forces of state institutions with state 1 health and institutional officials. Judge Bouton Idles.—Judge J. W. 1 Bouton, of the McKean county courts, to-day signed his nomination j papers to tun for Suprame Court-1 He is the fourth to file. William M.' Hartman was to-day named for Con-' stress in the Twenty-fourth district and J. W. Manon for the House in the Washington county district in' substitution papers filed by the Dem ocratic state executive committee. i No Lease Dp.—The Public Service Commission held a prolonged execu tive session to-day but the Philadel phia Rapid Transit lease was not taken up. Member Hero. —Representative E. R. Smith, of Bedford, was in Harris burg yesterday for a time. Board to Meet—The State Board of Pardons will meet to-morrow to| consider the first list since June. Buller Returns. Commissioner Buller has returned from attending the meeting of the American Fisher ies Society at New York. There were present delegates from forty-two states and from Canada and China. No Action Taken. —No action lias been taken b> the Public Service Commission on the applications for approval of water company reor ganizations :n York and Dauphin countians. Further consideration is to be given. Godcharlcs a Captain.—People on Capitol Hill heard*to-day with much pleasure that a commission as a cap-; [ tain of ordnance in the Army had I come to Frederick A. Godcharlcs. j deputy secretary of the Common wealth. Mr. Codcharles will be given : leave to go into the Army as have I Major John Price Jackson and oth ! ers connected with the administra tion. He will report in a short time i The new captain Is one of the best) I known marksmen and trapshooters in the count.rv, an authority on weap ons of almost every kind, former Na tional Guard officer and all-around athlete, football referee and philate list. He likewise publishes The Mil tonlan, a newspaper which has only missed one edition in a century. Un-' der the law Chief Clerk George D. Thorn automatically becomes deputy. Trouble at Renovo.—State health inspectors have been sent to Renovo to make an inquiry into some out breaks of disease in that community. Preparing For Court.—Deputy At torney General Hargest Is preparing the state's side of cases for the Ru nreme Court session at Pittsburgh. Rerne H. Evans, counsel of the Pub lic Service Commission. Is busy on the public service cases which have been appealed. Building Is Down.—The old Capi tol Park conservatory Is now a thing of the past. The building has been razed and the foundations will he torn up nnJ the materials used for building operations. MOTHER OF BOY GASSED IN WAR PLANS BENEFIT ; Block Party Program Ar-1 ranged For Hill District to Buy ComfoYt Kits For the benefit of a fund to pur chase Red Cross- comfort kits for | i Harrisburg men in the service a ! block party will be held at Four j foenth and Market streets next I Thursday evening, September 26, it j was announced to-day. Mrs. A. I. Eekert, 36 Balm street, whose son was gassed in France. Is one of the chief organizers of the event. Mrs. J. D. j Carkle is chairman. Through the j courtesy of William M. Hoerner, a number of market tables have been I loaned to the workers and on these Ice cream, cake and other articles j will be sold. It is planned to have a band concert in connection with the party. How much the comfort kits of the Red Cross are appreciated is shown in a leterj signed by a number of boys in Ambulance Company A, Sec tion B, Camp Greenleaf, Georgia, in which they write: "We the undersigned who left hotpe September 5, wisrh to thank you for the excellent kits and sweat i ers we received from you. "The completeness and utility of tne outfits is only appreciated by those who receive them. ' "As a few of the boys who re ceived them, we wish to say that they have already proved their worth to us, and the meaning of the Red Cross has been deeply impressed upon us." The letter is signed by Ward E. Fishel, William F. Gelling, James D. Miller. Bardley Haynes, Emory J. Cauftman, Claude E. Hummer. Paul S. Balmer, William Cassel, Roy Mul ligan. Matthew Bastardi, Norman M. Arnold. Ira J. Charles. Orra D. Denny, Arthur G. Bruaw. Grant O. i Renn, Roland Whisler, Theodore ! Pietzrch, E. Ross Gruver, John C. j Maurn, Claude H. Rettinger, O. E. j | Moore, H. W. Houck, A. R. Parker. I H. Russell Smith, Roscoe E. Stakley, | Jim Lencison. RHEUMATISM J Physician Relieves a Genuine Rem edy For the Disease Has Been Fomul; Rheuma, the wonderful rheuma-1 I tism remedy sold by Kennedy's drug I store and all druggists, gives quicker! 'and more lasting relief than other! ! remedies costing many times as I much. j Rheuma passes the deadly poison- i j ous secretions into the bowels and | ! kidneys, from which they are quick-j| iy thrown oft in a natural, healthy way. Read what a reputable physician | ! says about Rheuma: "I have made a ] ■ most careful investigation of the ' formula employed in the manufac ture of Rheuma and heartily rec ! ommend it as a remedy for all forms; of rheumatism. I find Rheuma far j i in advance of the methods generally [employed in the treatment of rheu matism, and altogether different in! composition from the remedies' usually prescribed."—Dr. M. C. Ly- J I ! ons. This should give any sufferer from j ' rheumatism confidence to try Rheu ! ma.—Adv. CATARRH Quickly Ended by a Pleasant, Grrui killing Antiseptic The little Hyomei inhaler is made of hard rubber and can easily be carried in pocket or purse. It will last a life time. Into this inhaler you pour a few drops of magical Hyomei. This is absorbed by the antiseptic gauze within and now you are ready to breathe it in over the germ in fested membrane where it will speed ily begin its work of killing catarrhal germs. Hyomei is made of Australian eucalyptol combined with other anti septics and is very pleasant to | breathe. It is guaranteed to banish catarrh, bronchitis, sore throat, croup, coughs and colds or money back. It cleans out a stuffed up head in two minutes. I Sold by H. C. Kennedy and drug- I gists everywhere. Complete outfit. Including inhaler 1 and one bottle of Hyomei, costs but | £ little, whils extra bottles, if afterward | needed, may be obtained of any drug gist.—Advertisement. J formation] I ASK US | Some how or other there 8 / are some folks who are 8 puzzled as to how they 8 can get their NEW FALL CLOTHIS. If you only knew how easy and convenient it is to out fit yourself here on our Pay As You Earn Plan you would top worrying; about the high coat of living, H because the amall weekly or 8 monthly payments you would make would never be missed by you. WE CLOTHE the FAMILY on the most liberal credit tcrma. Sfl N, Second St. Corner Walnut 'The Live Store" "Always | We Are Answering the Clothes Question The clothes question merits the deepest consideration to-day—There are several places where you can buy clothes in Harrisburg, but the point we want to indelibly impress in your mind is THAT THIS IS THE STORE OF STAND ARDIZED MERCHANDISE. A store where goods of nationally known reputation and quality are sold You can't possibly make a mistake HERE. The manufacturers whom we are associated with have spent millions of dollars in putting their products before the public, and they cannot afford to sacrifice their good name and good will because of temporary wartime conditions; neither could we lower the standards of this "Live Store" that has made the name DOUTRICH synonomous with dependable mer chandise, greater values and better service. * /< Hart Schaffner & Marx AND Kuppenheimer Clothes For fall are here in greater assortments than ever before evidence of our growing service that triumphs over adverse times and conditions —ln regard to clothes this season we won't talk style to you particularly because you know us well enough to know that you will get that; our important mes sage is "maintained quality standards," "dependable clothes." These dependable clothes are merchandised on the same close margin of profit that has made DOUTRICH values unsur passed The new fall models are beautifully blended with timely colorings and make you appreciate the designers' and weavers' skill in producing such pleasing fabrics. "Manhattan Shirts" "Stetson Hats" See the New "Mallory Velours" 304 MARKET STREET HARRISBURG, PA. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers