2-4,000 REQUEST LICENSE TAGS Registrar Brusstar Plans to Sent! Out Many Plates During December Ten thousand $ V \ <p ///t owners of auto- Jt\\\ mobiles in Penn j and black license tration for 1919 { BH|9 UgJOU send applications 30 will run a great chance of missing the numbers they request, according to officials at the automobile registration bureau of the State Highway Department. Registrar George M. Brusstar said to-day that the first tags for next; year would bo shipped out on De- j cember 1 and that ft'orts would be bent to handle the rush of appllca- i tions as rapidly as possible. The ap- j plications filed In December will be j rtiven numbers as they arrive. Issuance of registration tags for i 1918 has passed the 370,000 mark; and there will be a number issued; the remainder of the year. Tags for trucks and motorcycles have been; much in demand. Tags Noc. 1, 2 and 3 will be re- I served for the Governor and High- ! way Commissioner, while Governor elect William i'. Sproul, who has had j Xos. 7, 77,777 and 7777 for several years will be given them again and j County Controller T. J. Underwood j of Washington county, will again get j No. 13 and President pro tern. C. J. I "Nuxated Iron helps put astonishing strength and energy into the veins of men and bring roses to the cheeks of pale, nervous, run-down women," says Dr James Francis Sullivan, formerly physi c;an oi Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor Dept.) X. Y. and Westchester County Hospital. "I prescribe it regularly in'cases of de- t pleted energy, anaemia and lack of -'rcngth and endurance. There is nothing hke organic iron-Xuxatcd iron-to quickly enrich the blood, make beautiful, health* L' women and strong, vigorous, iron men.' • Satisfaction guaranteed or money f I refunded. Talking Machine "Talk" It will pay you to know some thing of the trademark and the reputation of the machine that you are going to purchase When choosing a "talking machine" to-day, the prospective pur chaser is "up in the air" clue to the fact that there are 304 different makes of "talking machines" on the market. He doesn't know just which one will give him the most satisfaction and the best for his With talking machines, as every other widely manufactured ar tide, the trade mark and the manufacturer means a lot to the pro- TOgfpii 11 jJ spective buyer. Fdr instance, when you see the trade mark jSPI ' "Uneeda" or "57 varieties," you know at a glance that they stand fflilfl? 11, vfiljf Kip, j for the best in their line, and that the manufacturer has a national mlPtttttfcff SM' 1 So it is with "talking machines." We handle only those "talking i machines" that have a known trademark, and a known reputation. --"lvftiijf ' V u But like buying any article whose value you want to know before-. JJL. ji • hand and in which you place your confidence through a known trademark, so also do you want to know something of the trademark and the reputation of the "talking machine" you expect to buy. CotionAuuv Se>vo*© §tavi When you see two notes linked As a trade mark the manufac- The Starr is really a "star" together you know they stand for turer of these wonderful talking nniong talklng machlnes . It ha 3 the Columbia Urafanola. This machines have adopted the liell machine will play a!l notes from over an A. The bell denotes the proV '! n * '"ge the lowest to the highest without , ... .. ... number of times. It Is made by a blur. •It has a clear, distinct " possesses a bell' one Qf {he f pjano sound and is the oldest machine tone, these machines have a on the market. It is made by Swiss motor and won the highest ' v\es . Its the largest corporation in the- award at the Panama Pacific Ex- n ess of tone and distinctiveness country and has been tested by position. It plays all records and have won It many a compliment the best known artists. can be adjusted for tone . from musiclovers. Talking Machines to be high-grade, are manufactured and sold by music dealers exclusively. We have just heard of a talking machine being manufactured by a carriage factory. It may be a good machine but we think probably it is one like usually comes with an jrder of soap. The talking machine industry is a business of its own, and we as a music house have taken special efforts to secure the best that money and a wide experience will produce. We are out of the high-rent district and can assure'you complete satisfaction in any machine you may purchase from us, and sell it to you at the lowest possible price. We Carry a Complete Stock of Columbia Records Our Store Can Supply You With Records That You Can Be Assured Will Be the Best and the Latest on the Market "See Our Line Before You Decide" #Spangler's Music House 2112 North Sixth Street SATURDAY EVENING, | Bucknuin, of the State Senate, hold ! er of No. 23 for years, will receive j that number again. The usual nuni ! :>er of requests for numbers corre j sponding to house, post office box ] and room numbers and for figures j approximating college years are be ! ing made to suy nothing of the reser i rations asked of odd combinations. Turkey Calls $25. —It costs $25 to call 'wild turkeys in Pennsylvania. The Slate Game Commission has just received word of the fining of three men who were imitating the call ot' the wild turkey to obtain shots at gobblers in the mounuin regions of ! the Juniata valley. The use of such i calls is forbidden by the game code. l in another instance a man was ; stopped by a game protector as lie was attempting to call a wild turkey j and it was found thadie had shot two I birds, one on each of the preceding j days. He was tinod $25 for each tur i key as the law limits each man to | one. "Watered" Butter—Over a dozen arrests have been ordered in Phila -1 dolphin and vicinity by Dairy and Food Commissioner James Foust as | tile result of taking of samples of ! butter by state food bureau agents. In each case it was found that the butter had been "watered" or that it contained more moisture than the | law allows. This is the third sefles of arrests ordered for this offense. To Cut Accidents—Chiefs of di- I visions and officials of the various bureaus of the State Department of laibor and Industry have been sunt | moned to Harrisburg next week for ! a conference on reduction of acci dents. Commissioner Walter Mc- I Nichols will preside and reports on | accidents the last half year will be discussed. Many of the accidents ! occurred In industries occupied with ' war orders." Protest Closing Line —Protest was tiied to-day with the Public Service i Commission by counsel for the Pass yunk Avenue Businessmen's asso ciation. against the proposed aban donment of the trolley line on Passyunk avenue, Philadelphia, by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Com pany. Its subsidiary company, the| Frankford and South,wark Company] was also made a respondertt. It is declared that the line is well patron-, ized especially in the evening and that the cessation of operations on ; that street would cause much incon-' venience. Residents of New Milford, : including some engaged on govern ment work, have tiled complaint against the new rates of the Susqu^-; hanna County Light and Power J Company and the borough of Am-| bridge has complained against the minimum change of the Ambridge! Gas Compah.v. Berlin Cared For—lt. J. Bowman was to-day appointed justice of the j peace for Berlin borough. Railroad Officer —William H. Har per was to-day appointed a police- 1 man for Dauphin county for the: Pennsylvania railroad. Now Home Rule Cases—State Health Department authorities to day stated that reports of recur- i rences of influenza had come from j Pittsburgh. New Castle. I'niontown ! and other cities, but that the re strictions were, matters for local j authorities. They can now exer-I cise "home rule." Jitney Case—The Mitzel jitney j application is scheduled to be heard by the Public Service Commission, i Lecember is. ' 'Steelton $8,750 Over Top in United War Fund Drive The final figures of the United War ! Fund drive for Steelton were com puted last niglft and placed at $28,- i 750, which amount is $8,750 over and ' above the Steelton quota. The figures {include $4,000 collected by the wont leu of the town, and SIO,OOO sub ( scribed by the Bethlehem Steel Com pany, without which latter subscrip | tion Steelton's final figures would | be short just $250 of the quota. I ANXIVCHSAHY SERVICES West I''airview, Pa., Nov. 23 On Sunday, November 24, the Rev. I Charles A. Lantz will finish his first f years work as pastor of the West I Falrview pastorate of the t'pited ' Lutheran Church in America. A I communion service will be held on I Sunday morning at 10.30. On Sun day eve ling at 7.30 o'clock, the pastor wil 1 preach in St. Mark's from j Neh. 4:6—"The People Had a Mind to Work." A short summary of the year's work will also be given at the evening service. rxio XSERVICE West l"airYk'w, Pa., Nov. 23. —A union Thanksgiving service of the United Brethren and St. Mark's Lu | theran Churches ' will be held on Thursday in tjie U. B. Church. The Rev. Lantz and Rev. Kohler, the i local pastors, will both speak at this service. COMMUNION SERVICE AT GRACE Lemoync, Pa., Nov. 23. —Rev. H. T. Searle will hold communion services at both the morning and evening services to-morrow. Plans are also being formed at Grace U. E. Church for the revival services to start the second Sunday in De cember. Unusual Cases to Be Heard Next Week Hearings are scheduled for Phila ] delphia, Pittsburgh. Wilkes-Barre, j Pottsville, Lancaster and Harrls ! burg by the Public Service Com -1 mission for next week and on Mon day a series of arguments in unusual i cases will be heard here to be fol , lowed by an executive session at I which action may be taken on the | fire main charges of the Springfield i Consolidated Water Company. In i the argument list are the cases of the j United Businessmen's Association, of ! Philadelphia, against the Union • Traction and other companies in the ; Philadelphia trolley system in which ! a valuation is sought; a complaint : against discontinuance of service of | natural gas by the South Penn Oil Company, in Butler county; an ap plication of the Bellefonte Central railroad to abandon a three and a i half mile line in Center county; the ; application of the borough of Mid j dleburg for state permission to buy the water company in'that town and | an action between electric companies i operating in Lebanon county over | refusal of one to pay the other for 1 current under an advanced sched j ule. Tuesday the "coal clause" in the &ARRISBURG Gd§|TELEGRAPH contracts of electric compunles will bo argued. All complaints against the Luzerne County Gas and Elec tric Company, will bo heard at WAtt WICKKI.Y Cut Out anil Mnll to Your Solillrr WAIt WICEIv I. V HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Vol. I, No. IX II Alt It I Mil I KG, I#A.,1 # A., NOV. 16-82 Our Yank Edition He'll Have to Take His Place in the Line I ■ BEST TELEGRAPH WAR CARTOON OF WEEK NEWS OF WEEK BOILED DOWN FOR OUR BUSY SOLDIERS Saturday, November 16 Bread made of whole wheat flour | appears on local market for iirst time in many months. Selinsgrove boasts of state's oldest j and most experienced bundmaster in i person of Professor Joseph H. Feehr- | er. Bernard Schmidt sells Harrisburg Baking Company to K. S. Manbeck. j Will of late Dr. H. R. Wiener pro- j bated; written on back of preserip- 1 tion blank. Although sugar is scarce confei;- j tioners have made great supply of candies by using nuts and fruits. I Clear toys, time-honored gifts of Santa Claus, will not be available this year because of sugar shortage. • ' i Six hundred college boys from Get- j tysburg and Buckneil here for annual j i football game. Memorial service held in Steelton for Father H. G. Ludes, later chap lain of St. Joseph's hospital, Lancas ter. Charles W. Hartwick, foreman of a street repair gang, drops dead at work. Two million bars of chocolates be ing prepared at Hershey for soldiers in France. Consignment will lill lif teen freight cars. Howard L. Burkholder, employed at C. I. & S. Company, kills self by drinking carbolic acid. Monday, November 18 Scores of properties wrecked and several totally destroyed in cyclone that sweeps over Riverside. Several families made miraculous escapes from death. Immediate steps are taken by city to provide for relief of stricken Harrisburgers. No other part of city is touched by storm. Plans are made to have Keystone Division march in Philadelphia for grand parade when the unit comes home from France. Harrisburg pre pares for great parade for local men serving in France. Philadelphia, Bal timore and Washington put in bids for parade of 79th Division. Donald McCormick. food adminis trator, rules conservation of food is necessary despite war's end and tines dealer SIOO for not obeying rules. Pipe Bending Company loses con tract to make 800,000 shells for the N'avy and plans to put shop back on peace basis after four years of muni tions making. Millersburg raises SI,OOO for United War Work fund. Samuel Koplovitz, 112 th Infantry, again reported wounded. Sister Carnielitq, formerly Miss Anna Hartnett, Lebanon, dies in con vent. of Sisters of Mercy. Senator William E. Crow named chairman of committee to arrange for Governor Sproul's inauguration. Harry S. McDevitt, sluted to become new Governor's private secretary. Philadelphia proposes o build great bridge across the Delaware to Cam den as memorial to Pennsylvania sol diers. Steelton plant of Bethlehem Steel Company gets back to normal work ing conditions but. still needs skilled workmen. John Shakespeare, Oberlin, died in trolley car. All physicial examinations under the draft stopped. Tuesday, November 19 Jacob M. Alvord, Millersburg, form er businessman and marriage license clerk, died after long illness. Lieutenant Alexander Rodgers, Jr., grandsop of late Senatotr J. D. Cam eron. dies In France of pneumonia af ter being passed. Council passes resolution thanking Secretary Daniels for naming great military transport "Harrisburg." Fifty thousand children left orphans by influohza epidemic, committee es timates in planning to look after des titute youngsters. Mayor Keister plans to rcinstai the Bertilluo linger print system of iden tifying criminals. Edgar Metzger, 11, had leg broken when run down by automobile. Food situation will remain un changed during winter, wholesale grocers announce. Call for conserva tion must be heeded. Congressman Focht asks for 100 captured German cannon to be distri buted in 'cross-river counties. Rev. H. N. Fcgley celebrates 70th birthday and 46 years as pastor of St. Mark's Lutheran Church, .Mechanics burg. Sentence is suspended by Perry county court on John Skane who acci dentally shot to death Frank Tlppery, a boy companion, while camping. Penn-Harris to be partly opened December 20. Mrs. Frederick E. Downes Is re elected president of Sunshine Society, Senator Beldleman, iteutenant-gov ernor-elect, addresses University Club. Miles Nichols, 7, run down and kill ed by auomoblle. Major General C. M. Clement, former commander of the Keystone Division, volunteers to serve as scout master for Sunbury troops of Boy Scouts. Sergeant Frederick Kent, Pax tang, 7th Infantry, reported killed in iFrance, Wilkes-Burre Tuesday and the same day Pittsburgh will have a long list of jitney cases and Philadelphia Uio New Jersey and Pennsylvania Kail- I way Company faro schedules. | Wednesday, November 20 ' " urcs "I 1 again in many I id He rin J S state, M'\o,ui cities cull- I qifaranUne? a uI ••"*•* | ina "^f 6 n l ,B I T lirumba ? Kh Ul 'K° B lun d- I Pifn.H VSi " n t'i division at Inm v f a ' I w ' lere 11 tS'eat purade bauieri" " U1 ut l " u Pe "" 8 >'- ' iu I 'uni( Cup,U I,|a> ' B 'iuer pranks when | " v niurnaae Hubert M. fciui uauah i°sn" alul Mv * 4 Hmuline SU'as i .rV'; l i; a lL ' :l ; u ' r ' . BtU'Keun's son ana | tnc bride s daughter were inarried some months ago. marneu ; vu, oh ," i l ' Waynesboro, con -1 , "if Be " ous cliurges growing out i nSJI . ? doctoring. Keckler is ai i {..? J?, i ttVe treated a tanner una hl daiijthters tor enchantments. Thanksgiving turkeys are selling for sixty ana sixty-eight cents a pound, the highest price on record. Plans inadu tor annual Thanksgiv ing donations to ilurrisburg Hospital. i lain for making the Musquchannu river navigablo from t|de water to bunbury by means of dams ana dredging, given great impetus at big mass meeting ot businessmen, Major Gray, who built warehouses tor Uar department, estimates cost to be be tween $150,000,000 and $200,000,000. i alls. Jane Hudson sangree, tvideiy known woman, died, aged 85. Fe nH *. Vo " ~K - Three Hundred and Forty-first Field Artillery, dies in i',la Muri y. Due Hundred and Sixteenth isupply Train, reported wounded. Sergeant William H. Felix. Mechan | lesburg, wounded in the battle ot the Marne, is invalided home. Governor Brumbaugh issues Thanks ' giving Proclamation, i Mrs- J. E. Garner, former organist at Pino Street Presbyterian Church, • dies. i Thursday, November 21 > 1 hree Hinull flies keep city firemen busy. I Three employes of State Draft Bu | reau take advantage of war's end aud take part in double wedding. Y. M. C. A. plans a woodehopping bee to take kinks out of muscles of tired businessmen. Big gains made In resources and de posits of the city's ten trust com panies show Harrlsburg's workers are laying aside a bit for u rainy day. Katph Cbloiato. Scranton. asks State Pardon Board for clemency because he shot man who wouldn't stop sing lug. I „ Henr >' J - Steigor named receiver for I Pennsylvania Deduction Company, j former collectors of the city's ashes and garbage.' Mrs. Miles Bower, a bride of Blaln dies of pneumonia. Mlfllln county expended $13,000 to light influenza; 300 deaths occurred in the epidemic. S. A. Robison. veteran of the Civil War and the oldest and best-known man in Liverpool, dies suddenly, aged Alexander D. Oyier, Civil War vet eran of Gettysburg, dies aged 82. Carlisle Civil War veterans, in spec ial meeting, tell of hearing Lincoln's famous Gettysburg address. Governor and Mrs. Brumbaugh dine members of the Governor's military staff. Intlucnza renews its appearance here, claiming five new victims. Friday, November 22 Mayor Keister and Councllmen In spect new water works at Lancaster. Camp Fire Girls begin campaign to buy chocolate for soldiers In France. Private C. L. Mcllhenny, One Hun dred and Twelfth Infantry, readies Staten Island hospital with contingent of wounded Yanks. Funds for relief of windswept ltlv i ersido urgently needed to relieve dis tress. W. T. Stoddart, architect for new Penn-Harrls, here to supervise interior decorating. Seven hundred . Christmas parcels mailed through Red Cross to soldiers In France. Final figures for United War Work Fund show Central Pennsylvania oversubscribed its quota of SBOO,OOO by more than SIOO,OOO. Harrlshurg Railways Company de cides to retain "skip-stops" with the coming of peace because of improved service. Druggists who sell alcohol with out medicating it to make It unlit to drink, warned they face arrest. William Weibel, alleged I. W. W. and slacker, arrested in Chambersburg for cursing American Army. Vandals enter summer homes of Willim Pearson, Supreme Court Pro thonotary. and ex-Senator John E. Fox, on the Yellow Breeches, and de stroy property valued at SI,OOO. "Llghtleas nights" go with the com ing of peace, merchants to-day per mitted to use unlimited Illumination. City patrolmen ask Mayor for In crease of $25 a month in salary, and plan for establishment of old nge pen sion fund. Matter to be pieced be fore Council and the Legislature. Harry M Mumina. Mlllersburg. vol untary worker at emergency Influenza hosnltal dies of he disease. Mrs. Lenten D. Gilbert re-elected heed of Red Cross Chapter, mutual re port shows half million articles wore made for soldiers by loyal women. TRANSFER NOW BIG PROBLEM Plenty of Men to Work, but Opportunities Are Chang ing Very Rapidly The State Department of Labor and Industry has undertaken the problem of adjusting the labor needs of the state so that communities which require men can get them from districts where cessation of war activities has made men idle. The Pottsville and liazleton mining districts are calling for thousands of men and Cameron and other counties where explosives and mu nitions have been made are com mencing to curtail activities and have men idle, in the reports com ing here It is shown that central counties need men and that in ad dition to the mines, the railroads, steel mills which are turning from war material and ship shapes and farmers are asking for hands. Director Jacob Ltghtner, of the Uureau of employment, says that in the forty-four central counties of the state there is a present, labor shortage in spite of the fact that men are being released; that the problem to-day is mainly one of immediate transfer of workers to their old trades and as near their home coi'im unities as it is possible to transfer them. A plan by which the central of fice at liarrisburg may keep in al most constant touch with employ ment conditions throughout cen tral Pennsylvania has been develop ed by Acting Commissioner Walter MrNichols of the Deivrtinent of Lubor and Industry and Director Lightner of the Uureau of Employ ment. In the operation of that plan the primary purpose is to learn from what communities released muni tion workers, originally cam 6, and, so far as is possible, to place every worker in a plant at or near his original home locality. Hundreds of men have been transferred with in the last week in the central Penn sylvania district in accordance with tiiat plan. A virtual barometer of actual or labor fluctuations, in the centrul section of the state, is presented on twenty charts covering one entire wall of the clearance house in the Bureau of Employment at Harris burg. Each chart daily bears the fj The Live Store" " | )] STYLE HEADQUARTERS f[ | wh,rc ffirqnfl (ftotlira | Is the Quality Right? That's a vitally important question Jjßr you'll want to ask yourself when you jl buy your new fall suit. In normal times this question didn't bother folks so much. But times have changed. A good many cloth- JHErS M ing manufacturers and retail mer- &|jl| E chants are lowering quality to meet jHffiM lift price demands. That's really a serious matter from your standpoint. You want your IjKft\ A;\ r- I money's worth and no matter how lIMf low the price it is impossible to get satisfaction without getting quality. Buy your suit at this store and you can be sure that both quality and price are right because we feature I Society Brand Clothes I You don't have to be told much about these clothes. I , You know them well. W§ KMFj| I They're all-wool, of course, and ex -111 - JB pertly tailored of the latest patterns. IJpM® And style a'plenty. Lots of "pep" and "go" in every model, but with B r. ' ••• - §yjs| dignity always present. &arlrsy Bntnu Ciirtfcia 1 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. I Don't Miss the "Overcoat Fair" £ NOVEMBER 23; 1918. report of demands for. or releases of men In the community Immediate ly surrounding each of the twenty central stato employment oltlces. Each of these twenty local otllees is keeping in close dully contact with every employer in its district and at each indication of a lay off of men, or probable demand for employes, the news is telegraphed to the central clearance house at Har rlsburg—ln the event that the shift of labor in any local district is too great to be properly bundled within that district. When one.district reports a sur plus of workers, due to cessation of war contracts, and another district is requesting workers for recon struction products, tlie district need ing men is at once notified, by wire. Where a 'Surplus exists and is in structed to get in immediate com munication with the district where fnen are available. This work iH all conducted on a strict arithmeti cal basis in order that any district having a surplus of men will not be swamped by orders, from other districts, for more than arc avail able. If any district office reports that men are being released ut n war plant at some distance from the dis trict ofllcc, a scout is immediately sent from tHe Bureau of Employment CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You Jul All I want is your nuine and address so I con send you J. C. Huu*n, R. p. a free trial treatment. 1 want-you just to try this treut- oruooist ment—that's all — Jimt try it. That's my only argument. I've been In the ltetuil Drug Business for 20 years. X am a member of the Indiana State Board of Pharmacy and President of the Retail Druggists' Association. Nearly everyone in Port Wayne knows me and knows about my successful treatment. Over eight thousand seven hundred Men. Women and Children outside of Fort Wayne have, according to their own statements, been cured by this treatment since I iirst. made this oiler public. if you have Ecaeitin, Itch, Salt Itticum. Tetter —never mind how bad— my treatment hus cured the worst cases 1 ever saw— give me a eliaaee to prove my Claim. Send me your name and address on the coupon below and get the trial treatment I want to send you FREE. The wonders accomplished In your own ease will be proof. • ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■l CUr AND MAIL TODAV J. C. HUTZELL, Druggist, 31S1 West Main St., Fort Wayno Ind. Please send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment. Post Office - - ... -- gt Street and No. , . to the point where the men are be ing released and arrangmonls ar® perfected for transferring those wm-kers to employment nearest thoir original home communities. Tito twenty ottlces thus endeavor ing to-duy to stabilize labor condi tions in central Pennsylvania are located in the following cities: Ilar risburg clearance house, Altoonn, lirudford. Duliois, Emporium, Ha. slcton, Johnstown, Lancaster, Leb anon, Lewistown, l.ock Haven. Alt, Union, Pottsvllle, Pay re, Shamokin, Wellsboro, Wilkes-Ba'rre, Williams port and York. Harmless Means of Rcduc ii!j> Fat Many fat people fern rdinary means for reducing th weight. Here is an extraordinary in thod. Ex traordinary because whll erfectly harmless no dieting or exercise ure necessary. Miirmola Prescription Tablets are made exactly In accord ance with the famous Marmola Pre scription. A reduction of two, three or four pounds a wfek is the rale. Procure tliein from any druggist or It I you prefer send "5 cents to the Mar mola Co., S4 Woodward Ave., De -1 troit. Mich., for a large case.—Adver tise ment. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers