Fair Food Prices The following statement revised to November 26, regarding fair prices for food necessities. Is issued by the local Federal Food Administration. Consumer prices are figured on a quotation of "cash-and-carry" basis. j Credit and delivery prices may be j higher. The Federal Food Admlnla- | tration baa no authority to fix prices. | It may, however, determine what are j fair prices, based on reasonable profits • to the wholesaler and retailer. If your retailer charges more on a "cash-and-carry" basis than the prices named below, report him by letter to the Federal Food Administration. Chamber of Commerce. Consumer should pay i Henna I Navy, (pea) 13 t0 Gray (marrow), lb. ...... i£ Lima, lb 1. t.. ISc \v into (marrow). !b 16 to lie Butter Creamery, 1-lb. prints, Tb.. 62 to >oc City Market. 1 lb M to 60c Oleomargarine, lb 30 to 39c ■ (ornraril Package of three ths. w .. 20 to 23c llulk, lb I c City Maiket, lb Fluor Victory Mixed. 12-lb. hags. 70 to Rio. Winter Wheat. 12-Tb. bags. .0 to .ic Spring Wheat. 12-th. bags. ij_to 97c Corn Flour, th 0 to ,? c Rice Flour, th 10. to 14c Barley Flour, th n to sc **** Kl- Storage, . ?* c Freeh, to . Country, doz 6 to mcj l.nril I Country, lb „„ 3 r c Pure, fh *2 to o6e I • Compound, tb - • to .Sc I Potatoes Per half peck 22 to 30c soaar t Granulated, per cwt $9.50 | Granulated, th lOtJc Cereals Oatmeal and rolled oata- lb; 7 to 8c ' Itiee (whole), lb 13 to 14c j Edible starch, lb 27 to 28c j Cheese York state. Ih 37 to 42c Evaporated Milk Small can ?c j •Large can Ho ' Wheat Hour may now be purchased without having to take any substi- , tutes. Sugar allotment is now three pounds j per person per month. ! Consumers may now purchase a half I or a full month's sugar supply at one i time. Standing of the Crews lIARKISBI RG SIDE Philadelphia Division The 122 crew first to go after 4 o'clock: 124, 133. 113, 103, 111. Conductor for 124. Brakemen for 122, 133. 113, 103. Engineers up: Hogentogler, Gaeck- Pr, Ryan. Myers, Brodacher, McCurdy, Brown. Andrews. Rutherford, Bickel, Grace, Roath, McDonald. Firemen up: Barclay. Martin, Byer, Sorge, Kurtz, Kennedy, A ogle song, Wilhide. Webb. Johns, Criss we'l. 1 ikemen up: Petyean, Cross, Mur . phy, Lescliner, Blair. Dare. Bolton, Yoke. Singleton, Poff, Christ. Alex ander. Hughes. Middle Division —The 20 crew first to go after 1 o'clock: 32. 39, 31, 29. 33. 38. 35. 34. 31, 22, 16, 27, 227, 19. Engineers for 20. 32, 21, 29, 33. 38, . 22. 16. 27. Firemen for 20, 32, 29. 53, 35, 34, 22. | 19. Conductors for 21, 34, 22, 27. Brakemen for 29, 33, 38. 35 (2), 22, 16. Sngineers up: Hawk. Dunkle, ROW 46 (I Loper, Heisoy, Rathfon, Krepps, Beverlin, Gray. Mortz, Gladhlll,- Strickler, Shelly, Pee, Rathfon, Smith. Leppard, Snyder, Fisher. Firemen up: Siegfried, Stemler, Kiner, Markel. Burkhtmer, Over, Jones. Turnbaugh, Gutshall, Bonsell, Hoover, Seveck, Reeser, Kiner. Camp bell. Myers. Swartz, Shellenberger, Leschke, Welsh, Kauffman, Smith. Bower, Bell. Thomas, Wright, Dolin, Miller, Snyder, Buff, Denk, Hump hreys. Conductors up: Ross, Klotz. Braktmen up: Turnbaugh, Glad-1 fetter. Depew, Linn, Howell, Bow- [ man. McAlphin, Kreps, Lentz, Line baugh, Roush, Dennis, Clouser, Baker, j Gross. Baker, Woodward, Crane. ! Beers. Romberger, P.aff, Walker, j HWK Yard Board Engineers for 6C, 1 10C. 2-14 C, 2-15 C, oOC, 61C. Firemen for 6C, 5-7 C, 1-14 C, 3-15 C,! 4-15 C, 16C, 26C. Engineers up: Snell. Bartolet, I Gett", Barkey, Sheets, Bair, Eyde, j ICeever. Ford, Crawford. Boyer, Ham- j Eton, Miller, R. B. Miller, Riffert, McCartney, Waltz. Hall, Desch. Firemen up: Heckman, Dewis. Lauv er, Soles. Wovodan, Manning, Ellen berger, Hampton, Yost, Cordes, Lynn, Bolan, Shoeman. • EBOLA SIDE Philadelphia Division The 220 I crew first to go after 3.45 o'clock: | 209, 211, 204,. 238. 240, 224, 218, 221, 223. 227. 239. 203, 2(6, 232. Engineer for 203. Firemen for 218. 223, 227. Conductors for 20. 24. 03. • j Brakemen for 20, 40, 24, 18, 21, 23, j 39. 03. Conductors up: Ebner. Dewees. Brakeman up: Miller. Middle Division The 106 crew j first to go after 1 o'clock: 117, 108. 115, 111, 125, 103, 123, 112, 234, 305. Engineers for 106, 108. Firemen for 106, 115, 111, 126, 103, [ 112., Brakemen for 106, 10S (2). 125, 103, 412. Yard Board Engineers for 149, j 162. Firemen for Ist 12C, 2d 126, 3(1 126.1 ( 3.1 129. Ist 12. 2d 132. 137, 149. PASSENGER SERY ICE | Philadelphia Division Engineers ' up: Osmond, Davis. Welsh, Gilliums. j Firemen up': Huston, Althouse, I Tover, Floyd. Everhart, Bleich, Spring, I Shaffner. Middle Division Engineers up: Crane, Delozier, Graham, Smith, Keane, Jas. Keane. Crum, Schreek, Buck, Kelley, Miller, Crlmmel. Firemen up: Howard, Bruker, Col-) yer. Smith. Steele, Johnson, Beisei, Horning, Stephens. Kuntz, Hunter, i Connor. Forsythe„ Kohr, Hoffman, Kunltle, Hummer. Boriel, Sheats, Reisch, Stauffer, Craig. THE READING The 11 crew first to go after 10.25 * o'clock: 64, 52, 24, 72, 66, 6. 8, 3, 62, 1, C 7. 57, 68, 23, 21, 71, 20, 69. Engineers for 64 66, 67, 6. 20. Firemen for 72, 1. 3, 8, 21. 23, 24, | Flagmen for 66, 24. Brakemen for 52, 54, 64, 66, 5, 20, j *2l. 24. Engineers up: Hammeratein, Lac key, Walton, Crawford, Barnhart, Motter. Firemen up: Putman. Relnesch, Dare, Burkholder, Yingst, Sheflter, > •Saul, aul, Clark, Burtnett; Myers, Eberlv, Plough. Conductors up: Shower, Hall, Mertz er. Orris. Hetrick. Flagmen up: Schwartz. Gravitz. Lehman: Graty, Spongier. Bowman. Brakemen up: Dlffendafer. Rhine hart, Yelngst. Rasehore, iierr,,■ Wilt, . Weaver. Troupe, "Rish. 'Pnrthemore, , Kendricka, Apler, Nessal, Anderson, Ryan. ' • IUESDAYf EVENING, UAHHISBtTRG TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 26, 1918. , LITTLE TALKS BY - BE A TRICE FAIRFAX They have told you that forty is a "dangerous age.' But there are more dangers tjian one that beset the belated love affairs is not the chief, woman of forty. A susceptibility to nor, indeed, the worst of them. I'm not thinking of the woman who has a profession and'is ab sorbed in it. She can take good care of herself. And I haven't in mind the woman vrho married late and whose children are still young and clamorous. It's the normal, av erage woman .for whom forty is in so many senses a dangerous age— the woman who married happily at twenty and whose children are in college or engaged, or newly mar rfed, and whose contented and pros perous husband is deeply absorbed in whatever it mav happen to be that pays the family bills. Now, It is very rarely that women of this sort see their own situation. They aren't eagerly concerned about making the right decision as they were a score of years earlier. They feel that they have made their de cisions and arranged their lives, and they are sure they have done it remarkably well. T{iey know that life has gone smoothly and that their husbands are devoted and their children promising and their households competently conducted, and they thinlc they have done their part. They are more than willing, just complacently, to go to seed. And at forty! Or. perhaps, it's forty-five, which is just as bad. For, if a woman slumps in this fashion at forty, she is not likely to I "The live store " Help Sales People Get Rest Buy Xmas Gifts Now "Always Reliable • I I Another Thanksgiving, this time 1 P With a deeper meaning A / a feast of joy for strong hearts H | Thanksgiving of gratitude and appre- ' a "d strong souls of our fearless and 9 ... ' ** *' *i by their unselfish sacrifice, brought the "Land of the Free" and the ' J „ ~ ~ . V ' 1 "Home of the Brave." honor to our beloved land. . ~ g What a debt of gratitude we owe to the courageous men who were arrayed against and dethroned the demon So that WE might LIVE on and perpetuate the principles instilled in us by our forefathers. Let this year be a real Thanksgiving year for everyone of US The noise of battle has died away "Those who won" and "those who lost" are preparing to go home for the well-earned rest Are we ready to receive the victors? Well 1 guess we are! • This "Live Store" also has every reason to be We will be closed Thanksgiving day, you can thankful to the buying public for the very generous patronage be assured that we will be busy tomorrow, Wednesday, and after of the people for past years, and particularly this year We have accom- the festivities are over Thursday, we'll be ready to serve you again Our plished much with YOUR help and co-operation and as we draw near to the hearts and minds will then turn toward Christmas and the way this "Live close of our most successful year we feel that we want to show YOU and Store" has been favored in the past gives us every hope that this will be the YOUR friends our appreciation by publicly thanking you in this way. greatest Christmas we have ever had. I This Is the Store Everybody Is Talking About J Don't Miss the "Overcoat-Fair" ' • ' '' ' . . "... '■ ; r •' fifttnl-ir ■ 1 ..W V. be in the least interesting when she Is sixty, and there is no chance whatever of her being active, bril liant and beloved at eighty, as the Julia Ward Howes of this world succeed in being. It's my own notion that there is no period of life, even the great grandmotherly, when a healthy woman is justified in sitting com fortably down in the big rocking chair and thinking of herself as a "has-been." Two Opjiosed Type's And I'm quite unable to see why any woman in the prime of life should be willing to range herself with the class that is going to seed instead of with those to whom life is still a reality. It's so easy to tell at a glance which type a woman be longs to. If her walk and the way she wears her clothes "didn't betray her, there's an unmistakable some thing in the look of her eyes that will tell you whether she is an in dividual person with a life of her own or merely the resigned and de caying relative of an obstreperous younger generation. And no one in search of compan ionship or friendship or help of any sort would hesitate long, I imagine, as to which sort of woman to ap proach. But there are middle-aged women too vital and energetic,to accept the ignominious fate of passive decay and too lacking in wisdom to pro vide themselves with a suitable out let for their energy. It is women of this sort who unintentionally cause a vast deal of unhapplness. Any human being with strength. resource and administrative capacl-i tv is a source of positive danger | unless he or she has made a con-1 neetion with something to which ] these talents can be applied. Professional Motlier-in-Law The ov.er-adniinistrative woman whose children have outgrown the j home and who has herself no leglti . mate outside interests can, as we j all know, destroy her husband's do j mestic peace, cause the washer j woman to wish she had never been born and make or the suffering grocer's boy a woman hater. Or. if ! her children have married, she can ! begin the baleful career of a pro ; fessional mother-in-law. j And of all dangers that menace the woman of forty 1 wonder if j this isn't the most serious? Inasmuch as of all lawful ways of making a nyisance of oneself, this wears the most disarming cloak of unselfishness and virtue. We all know what a sense of re ; lief we feel when a charming girl j in whom we are interested tells us that the man she is to marry has been an orphan since child hood, poor boy, or that his entire family lives in California and has I never been known to take jour i neys. And this is because so many j wonien cannot be trusted not to ! abuse the privilege of being a mother-in-law. The woman in the forties is rest ed from the efforts of her first ten years of married life. More or less consciously she is yearning for something to do. In all matters of baby-raising and housekeeping she regards herself as an expert. And nothing could make her see that in coming into her son's home and j personally tackling its problems she | isn't doing the young wife a kind ! ness. Perhaps she does not wholly base | her interference on the ground of | her greater age and experience. 1 Perhaps she is a mother who loves her son too well, loves him, I meart, in a jealous, possessive way, "and insists on acting as though she were still the guardian of her boy's comfort and happiness and the dis tracted wife an unsuccessful pro bationer. A miserable chapter is beginning in a young man's life when ha dis covers that his wife and mother arq tearfully at war over the holes in his socks or the way he likes to have the bread baked. And it's an unhappiness that could be totally avoided if mothers-in-law would only learn to keep their hands off. The harm that a mother may do by interfering in her daughter's married life Is perhaps less obvious, but it is just as real. Here there is less cash of domestic standards, because the mother and daughter are in this respect already adjusted. But the. professional mother-in-law is willing to tamper with more deli cate matters than cookery and washday. She doesn't hesitate to tell her daughter how to "manage" her husband. Husbaml "Managing' Hasn't she herself successfully "managed" a man for a quarter of a century and doesn't she know? And wouldn't it be disrespectful on her daughter's part uot to heed her advice? But as soon as this outside influence makes itself felt in the life of the yqung lovers, mis understandings and quarrels follow. I wish that such mothers-in-law were ever repentant for the misery they cause. But they are so thor oughly in love with their own wis dom and authority that they do not feel the slightest twinge of remorse. All of which is merely a preface to my appeal to middle-aged wo men to find an occupation for them selves. Something, if possible, out side their own homes. SometliJng that they can take seriously and care deeply about and to which they can usefully apply that wis- dom and energy and experience of theirs. Something to make the world cheerfuller and themselves happier; something to keep them young and lovable and alive. Fortunately, there are at this moment many more outlets for a mature woman's energy than there ever were before. Can it he that you, you women of forty, do not j know of any? How about school! lunches, and baby welfare stations, j and Montessorl classes? How about j community kitchens and a district; nurse service and proper play-1 grounds and the public health gen- l erally? And suffrage isn't won yet, ex-| cept in spots. You see, there isn't a shred of; xcuse for you! SOLDIER WANTS R FARM Minneapolis, Minn. —The first ap plication for a farm in the North west has been received from Private Adolpli Gold, Company D, Nine teenth Railway Engineers. A. E. F. . Private Gold, in his letter, suys that I in a Paris newspaper of recent date | he saw nn announcement to the ef- j feet that Minneapolis was making j arrangements to supply returned sol- j diers with pieces of land. "I have j learned to live the outdoor life." j writes Gold, 'and when I come back j I want a farm." The mayor referred ; the request to a committee of the ; Civic and Commerce Association I having tlie form question under su- j pervision. POLICE COURT IS BUSY Charged with insulting a woman, John Kaufman, who was arrested in ! Verbeko street last evening, receiv ed a preliminary hearing in police court this afternoon. Charles Taylor nnd George Thomas received a hear- I ing on she charge of being drunk and disorderly in Market street. John Taylor, who is charged with stealing $3 from Joseph Griffin, also receiv ed a hearing. Catharine Newmyer, •barged with disorderly conduct, at Third and Cherry, where, it is said, she threw a brick through the win dow of the Friendship Fire Company 'Club rooms, aired her case before the, Mayor. SCHOOL BUILDING PROGRAM WILL BE COMPLETED Reports Awaited From Ex perts Before Final Step Is Taken As soon as reports are received from Dr. J. H. VanSlckle, of Spring field, Mass., and Dr. Henry Snyder, Jersey City, N. J., the two experts who made surveys of the city high school situation during the summer so that they could amend former rec ommendations, the School Board will take action to out the building project provided for when a loan,of $1,250,000 was authorized.. This statement was made to-day by President Robert A. Enders in re ply to iquirlcs about plans of the directorate to go on with the build ing program. During the summer Drs. VanSiekle and Snyder were called to the city again. Both had made a complete study of school con ditions here and had made reports of their surveys. When they came here again they were asked to make a report on the situation as it is at present. This should be received soon officials said, and as soon as pos slble after it is presented to the board action will be taken. Only two of the five building oper ations originally planned have been started because of the war. These are the new Edison Junior High school at Nineteenth and Chestnut streets, and the big addition to tho Camp Curtln building, Sixth and Woodbine streets. The other pro jects were remod%Mng of the Central High school, erection of an addition to Technical High school and erec- lion of a now high school for girls. It Is not known whether any of these proposed developments will not be advocated In the report which Is to be made by the experts, as they did not express any opinions on tho pres ent sttuutlon or the possihle nedds of the city in the future. The city School Board will hold a reorganization meeting next Monday afternoon when a president and vice president will be elected. It was said in official circles that President hin ders will likely be unopposed should he bo nominated to succeed himself. Harry M. Bretz Is vice-president of the board. HORSEWHIPPED BY WOMEN Grand Ruplds, Mich.—Accused of . having struck his daughter Edith, fifteen years of age. In the eye, Edwin Brooks, forty-six years of age, of Rockford, was escorted to the public square in Rockford, near here, Monday, stripped of his coat and vest and horsewhipped by a dozen women while a crowd esti mated at 300, Including men, women and children, jeered and urged the women on. Brooks, badly bruised, has con sulted county officers. Ho declares he merely attempted to box his daughter's ears when she was Impu dent to her stepmother apd that when the girl threw up her hand it deflected the blow to her eye. MOTORIZING APPARATUS Columbia, Pa., Nov. 36.—Colum bia Eire Company, No. 1, the oldest |ln Columbia, will motorize their i apparatus and the work Is expected to be completed in n few weeks. | This makes four of tho five com panies in the borough equipped in this way. MOTHER SEEKS SON The local police department has been requested by Mrs. R. W. Arn- I helm. 432 Henry Clay Avenue, New | Orleans, to be on the watch for her I son, who left home sixteen years ago and has never since been heard from, lie would be 33 years old now. Mrs. I Arnheim said in her letter to the chief of police. She said her husband |is sick, anil the help of the son is needed. 9