BOROUGH LAWS BEING LISTED Chief Moore Is Making Up an Unusually Important Code of Municipal Statutes A compendium XAA Pennsylvania re latlve Reference I statute boks from ••:de the list. This work has been .inder xvay for weeks and will in- ' elude the borough laws of 150 years and more ago and those passed prior :o and repealed by the borough code and those passed as amendments to the code. The code will also be given in full. The compilation of the laws rela- j tive to trades, occupations and pro fessions issued a short Ume ago by Director James X. Moore for criti-! cisms has brought nothing but let-! ters of commendation, say people at the bureau. It was the tirst of the ■ kind made by the state government, i Survey of Plants—A survey of fuel efficiency of the heating plants, n the State Capitol and other state buildings in this city and at various' state institutions is to be made by I HE DARKENED HIS GRAY HAIR They Used to Call Him Grand pa: Now They Call Him Kid. Tells How He Did It. Mr. J. A. McCrea. a well known resident of San Francisco, who was railed Daddy and Grandpa on ac- , count of his white hair, and who darkened it with a simple home made mixture, recently made the fol lowing statement: "Anyone can perpare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, ! that will darken gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. To a half pint ■ of water add 1 ounce of bay rum, a j small box of Barbo Compound and ounce of glycerine. These in- t gredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to \ the hair twice a week until the de sired shade is obtained. This is not a dye, it does not color the most j delicate scalp, is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off. My friends now call me 'Kid.' " Stomach Dead Man Stili Lives Peop.c who suffer from sour stom ach, fermentation of food, distress after eating and indigestion, and seek relief in large chunks of artificial di gestors. are killing their stomachs by inaction just as surely as the victim of morphine is deadening and injuring beyond repair every nerve in his body. What the stomach of every sufferer from indigestion needs is a good pre scription that will build up his stom ach. put strength, energy and elas ticity into it, and make it sturdy enough to digest a hearty meal with out artificial aid. The best prescription for indigestion ever written is sold by druggists everywhere and by H. C. Kennedy and is rigidly guaranteed to build up the , stomach and cure indigestion, or I money back. This prescription is named Mi-o-na. and is sold in small tablet form in large boxes, for only a few cents. Re member the name. Mi-o-na stomach tablets. They never fail. —Advertise ment. I THE GLOBE THE GLOBE \ iW The Woman Who Wears a x " :: | GLOBE COAT W\ I Can Feel Confident That It Is Smart mP ? | All the Time and in Place Anywhere '"^p^L | Note Our Superior Values | At S2B- 50 At $32- 50 At H2- 50 \ t and" Warm Cheviots e 'S Coats of Wool Velours in Of Suede Velour with + % extra quality Kit Coney fur ncw l°° s c ripple-back convertible Hudson Seal £ * collars smart belted mod- hung from yoke, with belted „n,_ - £ t els with novel pockets and front, large convertible col- C °"" ~ e " % cuffs all leading shades— lar and distinctively stvled pocket effect and . * also the much - wanted patch pockets, button trim- crossed belt make it a very * •> Trench models in regulation med Taupe, Navy, Green, smart model—elegantly silk * .> .Army Cloth. Burgundy and Brown. lined and interlined. + t „ x \ t i 11 Among the Higher Grade Coats Are- I i * 1 ♦ < * The new loose, swagger coats with new style sleeves and inverted pleated % ' J backs and full shirred backs on yokes—the newest creations of the country's best + J <* makers various sized buttons together with fancy stitchings and sham buttonholes * : ,t distinguish these garments—many with large self collars, others with collars and £ ! cufts ot Hudson Seal and Beaver—all handsomelv lined and interlined with silk— * all the wanted shades in Velours, Kerseys, Crystal Cloths and Bolivias. % i i $50.00, $57.50, $65.00 to $87.50 ! **" • ■'■ *" ■■— ■— l ■' ■ i-■■ - i ...I Ji * _ * ❖■■ ■ + * Trench Coats For Girls Be Comfortable— f *X No other style of coat appeals as Wpat a .Qsxrpa+ar t * strongly to young girls as a Trench Coat. ™ eaX a oweaier . X * Regulation Army models—of unfinished A sweater is a necessity these cold days % X Serges (Khaki) full lined and inter- —choose yours here from our big collec- % * lined. Specially priced. tion of all the newest weaves every I* j * Sizes 6to 10 ... $15.00 wanted shade —of Brushed Wool, Sax- % I + Sizes 12 to 16 $19.50 ony and Zephyr yarns—many with fancy % X Many other beautiful coats of Burella knitted collars, cuffs and poqkets to * •> Cloth, Corduroy, Velveta and Cheviots, at match. X I SIO.OO to $32.50 $8.50 to $14.50 | ! THE GLOBE | + * THURSDAY EVENING ja committee named by Supertntend j ent George A. Shrelner, of Public ! Grounds and Buildings at the re quest of the fuel administration. The i committee is headed by L. R. Pal ' mer. Commissioner of I.abor and In dustry and includes C. P. Turner, Steelton. and John C. Reed, Bethle hem, and T. F. Folt*. of the Depart ment of Labor and Industry. All are mechanical engineers. Qeustlonnaires will be be made out for each plant. Somewhat Late —The State De partment has certified substitute nominations for tho Legislature to Washington county, although the commissioners of that county insist that the ballots are printed and no changes can be made. The substi tutions first sent were found de fective. Agency Changes Allowed—The Public Service Commission has handed down an order granting per mission to the United States Rail read Administration acting for the New York Central Railroad Com pany and Buffalo and Susquehanna ■ Railroad Corporation to abolish agency stations at Osceola and Pot ter Brook, Tioga county .and Mills, Potter county, and to substitute non agency stations for the duration of the war. This is the first order of 'the kind made and a protest had been entered by residents of the dis -1 tricts affected. The decision says that the chief inconvenience will be ; that tickets will not be sold and in coming freight be prepaid and no notices given, adding "Under nor mal conditions the commission | would hesitate and perhaps refuse to permit such a change in agency service, but measured in terms of ' the inconvenience which the entire American public are called upon to bear because of war we feel con strained in the national interest and at the request of the United States Railroad administration to grant this , petition at least for the period of I the war." Loss in Bees—Warning that forty jper cent, of the bees in Pennsylvania! I were killed during the severe j ;weather of last winter by failure to! properly care for them has been is (sued by the State Department of i Agriculture. The average winter! loss of bees is declared to be about j 1 -6.000 colonies, half of which die from cold or starvation. Granu liated sugar is urged as a substitute j where honey can not be provided. The department has announced prizes for tobacco and various Penn-; sylvania grown vegetables for the mid-winter show to be held here j under state auspices. Hearings Called Off—All hearings scheduled by the Public Service Com- ; mission for next week have been 'canceled owing to the orders of the. State Department of Health against ; 'meetings. Boards Are Busy—No less than j 15.686 claims were acted upon by ! A CLEAR COMPLEXION ■* RuddyCheeks—SparklingEyes —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Weil-Known | Ohio Physician Dr. F.M. Edwards for 17yearstreated j scores of women for liver and bowel ail ments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. You will j know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for ! a time and ncte the pleasing results Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets—the successful substitute for calomel—now and then just tokeepin thepink of condi tion. 10c and 25c per box. All druggist; ' |the Pennsylvania district draft ap peal boards during the week of Oc tober 19 according to figures issued at State Draft headquarters. Of this number 4903 were placed in class 11. There were 12.509 industrial appeals 3524 being placed in class 1 and 2610 agricultural of which 725 were put in class 4 1. Pittsburgh led jin industrial claims with 2759, Phila delphia being next with 2173. while I-ancaster and Harrisburg were very 'close on agricultural claims, the for mer having 694. Of a total of 567 !. ; :>eals, 353 were placed in class 1. More Back at Work.—More peo ple came back to Capitol Hill de partments to-day and for the first j time since the influenza outbreak i most of the departments had near- ' i ly complete forces. Business is in full swing in departments which were partially closed. Samples Taken Here.—Samples of ' milk and cream sold in Dauphin county have been taken lately by ! agents of the dairy and food com missioner and are now being analy- j zed. The restaurants and hotels were the places mainly visited. All Hearings Off. — The Harris-' burg Railways and other traction hearings involving increases of fares which were scheduled by the Public Services Commission for next week hat'e been canceled as have the various Dauphin county water com plaints. Hard to Run Now. Candidates substituted for the Prohibition legis lative nominees in the Washington county district may have a rough time of it at the election. After they had been certified word came that the ballots had been printed. Says Royer Acted Without Advisory Board Charges that Dr. B. F. Royer, the ' acting commissioner of health, act ed without the knowledge or ap ' ] proval of the members of the ad 'visory board of the State Department 'lof Health, in his Influenza "closing ; orders" are made by the Philadel phia Inquirer in a first page article • to-day. | The Inquirer says, in part: "A j canvass of the members of the ad visory board of the State Health Department, two of whom live in j Philadelphia, with a view to remedy- | ing the conditions which are work- I ing such hardships on the poorer classes now suffering from the epi demic. has brought to light the ■ astounding fact that the order for bidding the sale of liquor was issued j without the approval of the state ad visory board, and was the mere per sonal act of Acting Health Commis sioner Royer. j "Dr. Charles B. Penrose, one of members of the state advisory 'board, yesterday unequivocally ad mitted that Dr. Royer had not con | suited him. nor indeed the other members of the board, before issuing ithe order relative to the cutting off of the liquor supply; that it was en tirely the personal act of Dr. Royer and that it had been taken without the approval of the advisory board." 'Germans Stagger on Under Loads of Loot 1 tVlth the Allied Armies In France and Belgium, Oct 24. The entire county between Valenciennes and Tournai is as barren as a desert as • far as the personal property of the French inhabitants is concerned. Liberated civilians 6ay that the ■ retreating Germans carry so much loot that they stagger under the loads. Apparently the alleged in ; structions given the German troops to take the most strict care as re ; gards the property of civilians are not observed at the front. Evacuation of Ghent Reported Under Way Amsterdam, Oct 224. The evacu ation by the Germans of Ghent. Bel gium. is in full swing, according to I a dispatch to the Telegraaf from Basvan-Gent The last boats in I Ghent are being hastily towed i toward Selraete. near the Dutch | frontier, south of Sasvan-Gent, the dispatch adds. HARJRISBURG TELEGRAPH Central Pa. Counties Raise Bulk of State's Great Yield of Wheat J a LL of the six "million bushel" | I /A wheat raising: counties of | Pennsylvania are within fifty I miles of Harrisburg and Dauphin I county with a yield of 587.961 bush els this year is entitled to a place in | the grreat "wheat belt" of the Key- I stone State. This Commonwealth, famous for coal and iron and oil and railroads und other products ] raised over 26,000.000 bushels of wheat this year in the fact of adverse labor conditions and more than half was grown within fifty miles of the State Capitol. And in producing the 44.000.000 bushels of oats which gave the state such a fine record in 191S Dauphin county turned in over 832,000 bushels, while Cumberland, York and Perry did mighty well. York is one of the million bushel counties. The wheat yield shows splendid work in Lancaster county where la bor conditions were bad and forced j a decline from the 3,000,000 bushel mark of 1917. Lancaster leads the state with close to two and three quarter million bushels with York, | Berks, Cumberland, Franklin and j Adams in the "million bushel" ' class. Adams went over the million j mark this year. The figures Issued by the State Wheat Oats Counties. —- 1918. 1917. 1918. 1917. , Adams 1,004,872 963,230 473,622 444,068 Allegheny 268,757 278,462 903,716 852,568 ! Armstrong 302.923 822,922 823,375 817,783 Beaver 158 363 217,046 480,352 533,241 Bedford 492,39* 483,157 597,927 548,793 Berks 1 673 804 1.375.991 1,971,855 1,659,177 Blair 291 992 278,709 429,940 381,812 Bradford 84 228 101,123 1,355,716 1,487,300 Bucks 746*°74 631,660 1,246,282 906,000 Butler 325*002 347,993 1,123,524 1,011,395 Cambria Cameron 476 21,690 18,112 Carbon 27,895 ..4,528 179,250 150,216 Center 612.013 664,547 797,979 826,308 Chester 888,880 1.040,706 1,165,560 817,673 Clarion 289,430 279,682 929,628 754,367 Clearfield •••••••••••••• 79.199 76,419 672,152 602,571 Clinton 189,561 ISf'Hl 276,897 291,462 Columbia 418,135 aSS'f'l 689,329 654,670 Crawford 236,723 229,612 1,242.166 861,452 Cumberland 1,201,522 949,428 901,196 Dauphin 587,961 826,452 Delaware 142,287 136,563 100,108 70,704 Elk 4 120 4 -°< B 201,825 153,895 r r ia 141 430 131,845 1,449,508 867,850 Fayette*':::::::;:::'.'.:: 2is:i66 541,729 Forest 7 192 i,599 98,035 68,939 Franklin''.'::.'.*:::.".*.'.':: 1,626:465 Fulton 271,061 *50,350 80,820 80,050 Greene 279 418 292,600 458.184 471,671 Huntingdon"'.'.'.".':::::::: 401:557 ui'HS Indiana. 865 365,398 907,970 678,300 Jefferson 122 796 135 - 57 2 684.079 ' 645,355 junfafa . >•. give voq plllj or tablet:. Inr! n npsutcs, G. A. Gorgas an'd leading drug gists everywhere First Lyceum Entertainment Postponed by Epidemic The first entertainment -scheduled on the Capital City Lyceum Course program haa been postponed. After the quarantine ban placed upon the churches—on account of the Influ enzza epidemic—has been lifted the date for the appearance of the "Ply mouth Singing Party" will be made public. Tentative plans to begin the course of nine extraordinary attrac tions early in November are now be ing made. Patrons who hold season seats are asked to use their tickets for the dates for which they are is sued. Stevens Memorial Methodist Church, Thirteenth and Vernon streets, with its high-roof and well ventilated auditorium and Sunday school room is to be the meeting place for the crowds that will attend these hlghgrade entertainments furnished by the Red path-Brock wav Lyceum Bureau of Pittsburgh. "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" 9MM Looking the Part and Being the Part [ Go Hand in Hand I To dress immaculately is a a strong recommendation of yourself ln | these busy times, first impressions count more than ever Don't set up a resistance to your progress by wearing characterless clothes lf you dress that way you will often go unnoticed no matter how much ability you may have Buy the best and avoid regrets, for there is nothing better in fabric, fit and workmanship than "Society Brand Clothes" I Ambition wears Society Brand be cause these Overcoats and Suits make a man's pro gress quicker and easier He goes farther and so does his clothes-money Come in and see the new attractions Look for the label Society Brand the maker's pledge. "Manhatton Shirts" "Stetson Hats" Try the Dependable Doutrich Service That Everybody Is Talking About 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. "Style Headquarters"—Where Society Brand Clothes Are Sold OCfOBER 24, 1918. PROMOTED FROM RANKS TO SECOND LIEUTENANT Edward A. Selway, who left the city with Company D, of the old Eighth Bcgiment. lias been made a lieutenant in France, according to word received by his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Selway, 2220 Logan street. Ho was taken out of tho front line tranches August 8, sent to an of ficers training school in Paris, and back to the front OOctobcr after re ceiving his commission. He served on the Mexican border during the trouble with Mexico. FIGHTS IN SIBERIA John H. Adley, 27th United States Infantry, son of Mrs. George A. Oyl er, 1734 Walnut street, is fighting in Siberia, according to word Just re ceived here. He landed in Vladivo stok, August 14. He served on the Mexican border aa a member of thf 6th United States Cavalry, and wa later transferred to the 17th Intan* try at his own request. 1 Our First Thought i Wilt to make * BUIWINUR UP Toole o rood that poop la would continue tnuea ilwhoww needed | and now an yaaro ao by the ctuldran of our Or* customer* ara ntinr DR. CHASE'S > Blood islNerve Tablets Which Contain Iron, Nux Vomica. Gentian * We think no much of them oorwhw that wo kacp them on our table juat ao roaularly a tho •alt and pppr to t hat any member of tho family can take them. They mint have martt whoa a doctor take* hia own medicina Weigh Yourself Before Taking I '• Pries 60 crate lptal 8lfA a United Medlctnc Co- 224 W. 10th St, Philadelphia, Pa. 9