RAILROADS FACE SOMEBIG FINES Fail to File Reports as Re quired For State Bureau of Railways; Are Certified Names of eight k\ \ 9 //) railroads and Vx\\ ifiz/ street railways of AVkWia Pen nsy 1 v anla which have failed with the State Bureau of Rail ll MuSrawHw ways, a branch of iUUkJIOIII llle Internal Af -13 WEd EE falrs Department, fled%y Chief F1 C. Gerberich, to the Attorney General's office for' prosecution. These com panies are liable for a fine of $5,000 for failing to comply with the law. j Under acts creating the bureau ; every company must file a report of , business with the bureau. Lately ■ these reports have been made unt- j form with those required by the , Public Service Commission and other bodies. Eight companies, however, have ignored all notices to present their statements. Institutes Start Farmers' insti tutes are reported to have had a very successful beginning for the winter season yesterday. There will be ses sions held except for the usual holi day intermission until March 1. The state has been divided into five dis tricts and the Institutes started In Lancaster, Greene, Susquehanna and 1 Clearfield counties. Special attention j Is to be given to grain conditions. j To Discuss Plan—Plans of the ! State Commission of Agriculture to j aid soldiers in the purchase of farms after they return from Europe >vlll be considered at a meeting of the State Commission of Agriculture at j a meeting to be held late this month. , The proposal will be put into con crete form after being passed upon by bankers and men who have studied the land situation. Dauphin to Got Deer—Plans for the purchase of a number of deer in Michigan and other northern states for stocking state game pre- i serves this fall after the hunting ] season ends are being made by the State Game Commission. Attention , will be given to the new preserves, , including those of Dauphin, Union | and Forest counties. If possible quail will be purchased for stocking. Wheat Away Up—State Agricul tural Department officials believe t that the acreage in wheat this year I will go over a million and a half and , beat the figures of each of the last j two years when a drive to secure j more wheat was made. Reports are ; coming in of extensive fall planting and of plans for spring wheat. Big acreages for rye and buckwheat are also expected next year. Springfield Case Up—The com plaints of almost a score of boroughs and townships of Delaware and Montgomery counties against the new fire hydrant regulations of the Springfield Consolidated AA'ater Co. fixed in accordance with the recent decision of the Public Service Com mission, were heard by the commis sion this afternoon. There were about twelve lawyers present. "Board Duy"—This was "Board day" at the Capitol and the various financial and boards of control held their monthly meetings. Buller Complimented—Fishermen -FINE FOR HMU Musterole Loosens Up Those Stiff Joints —Drives Out Pain You'll know why thousands use Musterole once you experience the glad relief it gives. Get a jar at once from the nearest drug rtore. It is a clean, white oint ment, made with the oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Brings ease and comfort while it is being rubbed on! Musterole is recommended by many doctors and nurses. Millionsof jars are used annually for bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, pleurisy, rheu matism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50. A Tonic and Health Builder Take CALCERPS to rid yourself of that weakening, persistent cough, which is threatening you with throat or lung troubles. Even in acute cases affecting throat and lungs. UAL CERBS have given much relief in many cases helping to restore health. They give strength to combat ill ness. Contain calcium (a lime salt) so compounded as to be easily ab sorbed. Calcerbs. 50 cents n Dox. At nil druggists or from manufacturer, postpaid. ECKMAN LABORATORY. Philadelphia. Makera'of Eckiunn's Alterative ™—!!■■■ 1 ' Play Safe- Stick to KING OSCAR CIGARS • Because the quality is as good as ever it was. They will please and satisfy you 7c—worth it JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers TUESDAY EVENING, {/. S. General So Speedy Americans Capture Him BRJG-GLN"' DOUGL ASS Brigadier-General Douglas Mac- Arthur has hail the unique experi ence of being captured by United States troops. General Mac Arthur, who had to fight to get away front Washington because of his keenness i and ability to tell newspaper men | just what they ought to know, was a | brigadier commander of the Forty- I second division. The First and Forty- I second divisions were advancing rap i idly toward Sedan and the Forty second outstripped the First. Near ; Autrecourt General Mac Arthur was i taken prisoner by soldiers of the | First Division who could not believe that any Americans were ahead of them. There were explanations and General Mac Arthur went ahead with | the Forty-second. in a number of sections of the state ' have sent letters of congratulation to Commissioner of Fisheries Bultor upon the manner in which ho has kept the iish distribution moving. The trout "planting" for this year will be notable in view of w6rk don£ in spite of the interruption caused by the influenza outbreak which prostrated field men and j workers at hatcheries. Commission er Butler went out himself to ex pedite matters. Mr. Clark Here. —B. M. Clark, i prominent Jeffrons county lawyer, j was a Harrisburg visitor yesterday. | Commission to Meet —The Old | Age Pension Commission will have | a meeting shortly to its re port. The investigations are well un der way in most of the cities. To Go Ahead—The State Depart ment of Health will go ahead with its building program now that fed eral restrictions on certain classes of j construction have been raised. There will be a new heating and lighting plant and possibly an open air school built at Mont Alto Sanatorium: a 180-bed addition at Hamburg and! various buildings at Cresson. Bids will be aked soon and it is believed that the construction will approxi mate 8250,000. Engineers Investigate State Health Department engineers have gone to Blairsvilie to inquire into the typhoid fever outbreak. There have been about twenty-five coses and milk is suspected. Follow Soldier Vote.—The prog ress of the soldier vote tiling is be ing closely watched here by peo ple from Lackawanna, Luzerne and Greene counties. Not only con- j gressional. but legislative contests I may be affected by these figures. Influenza Deaths. During the forty-eight hour period up to noon ' yesterday a total of 537 deaths front j influenza and pneumonia had been | reported to the State Department of Health. This includes a total of six teen deaths in the city of Erie, 89 I deaths in the city of Pittsburgh, 33 deaths in Philadelphia and 20 in Wilkes-Barre. * The latest death re ports bring the total number of deaths from influenza and pneumo nia throughout the state since Octo ber 1 to 42,096. New Trustees. Representative elect I. P. Harvey, of Bellefonte, was appointed a trustee of Lock Haven State Normal School. Mr. Woodward Here. —Represen- tative Jatnes F. Woodward, of Mc- Keesport, secretary of internal af fairs-elect, was here last evening on his way home after a visit to the seashore. In Indiana County.— i Dr. J. George Becht, secretary of the State Board of Education, went to Indiana coun ty to-day. Ask Charter.—The application has been filed for a charter for the Har risburg Shale Brick Company of this | city, by J. H. Foreman, H. E. Dewalt and Arthur Root. , * NI3W STEAM STATION In order to insure uptown residents plenty of heat this winter, the Har risburg Light and Power Company has esablished a new steam service substation in the basement of the new Evangelical Publishing House Build ing. Third and Reily streets. Man ager C. M. Kaltwasser stated that everything is in readiness to turn on the steam. Pressure amounting to 300 horsepower can be developed at the new substation. Child Killed When Run Down by Auto J. R., Horning, 1739 North Third street, who run down and fatally in jured Miles Nichols, the seven-year old adopted son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Nichols, 1508 Hi\nter street, was allowed to go on his own recognizance after he had told his story to police last night. He was told *to hold him self in readiness to appear before . Coroner Eckinger or the police when wanted. According to Homing's story, cor roborated By several witnesses, it is said, he was driving cast on Derry street at a moderate speed. When he was about half way between fourteenth and Fifteenth streets, the . little boy ran to the street in front I of the auomobile. Horning quickly applied the brakes, bat not in tttne i to prevent the fender from striking the child and knocking him under the right wheels. He was taken to the I hospital In Homing's machine, where he died about an hour later of a frac tured skull. Highest Officer of Red Men to Visit Here"! James T. Rodgers, of Blnghamton. j New York. Great Incohonee of the I Great Council, Improved Order of Red Men, will come to this city this week and while here will be the guest of j Past Great Sachem Charles K. Pass, 1601 Derry street. This Is the sec- ; ond time the highest official of the or- | der has mude a visit to Harrisburg, , anil on Saturday night Mr. Rodgers will speak ut a special meeting of Pokoson Tribe, No. 331. at Siblc and ! Clark's Hall. Third and Cumberland streets. ! Mr. Rodgers is making a tour of | ! Pennsylvania and while in this dis- | ! trict will go to Hanover to preside, |at a serviceflag ceremony there. The I | Hanover Tribe has 379 members, of I whom seventy-nine aro In service and seventy of the seventy-nine are in France. — Beaver town Citizens March Eight Miles I\ . Lcwlstown, Pa., Nov. 19.—Several j hundred citizens of Beavertown, two thirds of them women, marched eight miles several days ago from Beaver town to Mlller3burg, to celebrate the armistice and accompany Mrs. Ned Feese, a woman at least 50 years old, who rolled a barrel the distance of i eight miles in payment of a wager made with her husband that the war would not end by Christmas. Led by the Troxelville band and met by a committee of Middlebure citizens and the Red Cross, the pa rade arrived at the county seat at 3 o'clock, having marched the distance in two and one-half hours. Mrs. i Feese wore a banner across her breast, inscribed with the words, "United We Stand." She has a son, J. B. Feese, in the United States i service in France. Trucks and autos i ; hauled the party back to Beaver | town.. The Feese family have many friends here. Y. M. C. A. Proposed as Memorial to Soldiers Chambersburg, Pa.. Nov. 19. I Ch'umbersburg's Chamber of Com merce is working out a plan to estab lish a Y. M. C. A. in town as a mem orial for the soldier boys. There is none now here. A building to cost ,$75,000, with an endowment of $125.- 000, is proposed. A committee is now i working out the details. FORTSA INCREASES LEAD A list showing the amounts of War Saving Stamps sold by city letter car riers in the race for the William M. Donaldson prize, shows R. K. Fortna in the lead with G. A. Hollinger a , close second. The standing for -the period ending November 16 follows for the men over the SIO,OOO mark. | R. K. Fortna $25,309.25 G. A. Hollinger 21,786.03 J. A. Geiger 19,274.96 E. R. Gault 1 6.487.71 C. W. Cless 15,267.11 | G. L. Kberso'e •*••• 13.400.95 I C. A. Fortna 12.074.22 I C. E. ltea 11.700.19 i T. J. Carpenter 11,418.19 G. R. Pritchard 11,162.18 W. R. Manley 10,305.27 | W. W. Dum 10,189.23 i DAUPHIN OVER QUOTA I Dauphin, Pa., Nov. 19.—Last eve- I ning the committee in the-United; AA'ar AVork Campaign met in the: P. O. S. of A. Hall to make their 1 report on the drive. As In all ! other drives Dauphin has gone "over I the top," the quota being SSOO, and j the committee reporting $750. Spe- i cial mention should be made of Speeceville. Dauphin and Red Hill j schools each contributed sl4. The committee consisted of J. Lewis: Heck, chairman; S. M. Fertig, : Charles AVelker, Wliliam Strieker, | Clyde McNeely, Charles A.' Shaffer, t D. A\'. Seiler, G. M. Kinter and Dr. i AV. P. Clark. MRS. MILES BOWER DIES Bluiii,' Pa., Nov. 19. —Mrs. Miles' Bower died yesterday morning at 1 the home of her parents, Mr. and j Mrs. Foster AV. Dimm, from pneu monia, following an attack of in-1 fluenza. She was twenty-six years , old and Is survived by her husband. ! who is ill with influenza. par- | ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. AV. Dimm, are I living and one brother, Harvey C. Dimm, and one sister. Miss Golda Dimm, at home. Mrs. Bowers was formerly Miss! Frankie F. Dimm. She was a well- j known schoolteacher and taught In Jacktson township. SUIT FOR DIVORCE Siuibury, Pa* Nov. 19.—Mrs. Ar thur E. Coup, of Sunbury, a former resident, of Milton, has brought suit in the Northumberland county | courts, seeking an absolute divorce on the grounds of desertion. Her | husband is said to be living in Union ■ county. It was for love of Mrs. Coup, according to testimony, that Thomas Thompson, a young Phila-1 delphla man, shot and killed Homy I Reynolds, at Milton more than a year ago. YOUNG SOLDIER WEDS Liverpool, Pa., Nov.- 19.—Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Seller, of Liverpool, have received word that their son, NotMun Seiler, was married on Oc tober 5 to Miss Jessie Purie, of Lu ber, Va.. by the Rev. Mr. Battles, of CliarlottesviUe. Young Seiler is at Camp Lee, Petersburg, Va. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS Announcement has been made by the United States Civil Service Com mission that examinations will be i given in this city as follows: Railway mail clerk: departmental I clerk; field service clerk, first grade; rural carrier. Dauphin county; steno grapher and-typewriter, departmental, I every Tuesday ; stenographer and I typewriter, first and third Thursdays of each month. SUCCESSFUL HUNTERS Thoinpsoiitowii, Pa., Nov. 19. Hunting parties on the mountain succeeded in getting four wild tur keys and one gray fox. The lucky hunters were George Hopple, Cluy ton Rhodes and WUllam Bardoe, who each shot a turkey and Clayton Fry shot a gray fox. TOWN GOES OVER QUOTA TTiompsoutown, Pa., Nov. 19. i Thonipsontown has again gqne over the top In the United War Work campaign. The quota for the bor ough was S2OO, while $27 4 was raised. The High school, which num bers fourteen students contributed $62. ESKRISBUHG SSS!SSd TELEGRAPH | I Everybody Goes To I i The "Overcoat Fair" The reason business is so good at Doutrichs is because we have the merchandise and we're sure we have the kind of merchandise YOU WANT, plenty of it, and that's saying a great deal these days, for I . many stores find it hard to obtain desirable merchandise, due in most cases to their neglect of placing early orders, and then again a great many merchants were "on the fence" afraid to take a chance, thinking probably there would be favorable changes in the mar kets, but alas—they were found wanting when the demand came upon them. I We received a communication from one 1 of our largest and most reputable clothing manu facturers to-day, in which they size up the wool situation as it pre sents itself to-day After you read it, draw your own conclusions as to whether YOU should buy YOUR Clothing NOW or wait for , 1 higher prices. I Supplies of fabric for civilian use are, and will be inadequate; for sometime past no wool has been f | allotted for civilian purposes, and only very gradually will this condition be changed and the neces- J J sary labor be forthcoming to meet the demand? not only of this country, but of the entire world at large. # J In all probability prices for the next season, the Fall and Winter of 1919 will be somewhat higher than J I this Fall season. • - | i Thisr friendly advice is given to you and your friends so that you might be guided right regarding the clothing situation lf < you take it kindly and are desirous of saving money, come here and take advantage of the greater values made possible through our enormous purchasing power and tremen dous output. Don't Miss The Overcoat Fair !* hhl NOVEMBER 19, 1918. 9