/THE OTHER MAN' PLAYS PART IN DIVORCE TRIALS Husbands Seeking to Break Marital Chains Allege Indiscretions Both husband and wife alleged marital disloyalty in a divorce act v heard by Judge S. J. M. McCurrell I in Courtroom No. 2, M. Qrover Green appearing against J Irs. Olive M. Green. Both parties were represent ed by counsel. Mr. Green claimed his wife had been seen frequently with a soldier and that he had called to see her. Other witnesses called for the libel lant made similar statements. Mrs. Green, when on the stand, admitted she had been out walking with the "other man," And that he came to see her three times, but when others were at her home. She said she was corresponding now with the soldier, who is in service in France. When asked if she had any I of the letters with her, she said she had not. .Three sisters of Mrs. Green also testified for her. They were Mrs. Raymond HO4>|>CS, 1908 state Street; Mrs. Edna ("locker. 1926 Kensington j street, and Mrs. William Sheet*/, 1022 •'atherine street. Mrs. Hoppes and; Mrs. ("locker both said that Mr. I POSLAM QUICK 10 CONTROL WORST ECZEMA' i Just call on Poslam to bring voui the comfort your suffering skin • craves. Let it help you to be free ; from eruptions and all disorders ! which mark your skin as needing an- 1 tiseptic. healing treatment. Unless you have actually seen Pos- ! lam's work and know how readily it ! lakes hold, stopping the itching at I once, you will hardly believe its ef fects possible in so short a time. In Eczema, Poslam's action appears i all the more remarkable when the I trouble is persistently stubborn and ! nothing else seems to bring lasting relief. Poslam is harmless always. >ola everywhere. For free sample j write to Emergency Laboratories, 242 ' Most 47th St.. New York City. Lumber's Place In World Readjustment 'TMIE great work of reconstruction that must be undertaken in France and Bel gium to build up areas destroyed during the war must very largely rely upon our forest products. Long deferred operations in Argentine and other South American Countries due to the war must soon be resumed. Other outlets for our products will be provided in South Africa, Australia, China and Japan that will ultimately consume enormous quantities of lumber. Already negotiations have begun that contem plate purchases of upward of one hundred million feet of lumber for shipment to South American ports. At home farming communities everywhere have eagerly awaited the time when building restrictions would be retaxed. In large commercial centers there arc indications of building operations upon a large scale. The need for homes and apartments is apparent. Now is the time to build, the sooner you begin the better able you will be to secure prompt deliveries of material . United Ice & Coal Co. I.limber Department For.stcr & Cowclctt Sts. '*■ ~ - ~ " " """ = 432 MARKET STREET License No. G-35305 Specials For Dec. 11, 1918 MORNING SPECIALS STEAKS ROASTS SIRLOIN aai CHUCK BI'MP... ykp HW.,. I'INBOXE ENGLISH faIMV INDIVIDUAL CUT Compound, used as lard 250 Sliced Bacon, the best 450 Knot worst, smoked sausage ..' IS? MARKETS IX FIFTY-SIX PRINCIPAL CITIES OF 14 STATES MAIN OFFICE, PACKING PLANT, CHICAGO. ILL. PEORIA. ILL * Carter's Little Liver Pills You Cannot be A Remedy That Constipated Makes Life and Happy JkWw i!™-i Worth Living Small Pill WV SPILLS. Geeuln* BANS i*n*tor Small l>an ~ &■££}£ pARTER'S IRON PILLS many colorless faces out will greatly help most pale-faced people TUESDAY EVENING. HAKRISBURG %$&&& TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 10, 1918. Green did not properly provide for I his wife and that on one occasion she | and her children were taken in by j them when they were without food. I Yesterday afternoon Hurry Bankes, j who is asking for u divorce from Mrs. j Mary Bankes. testified that his wife ■ I had not been true to him. He told . the court she left him three times I and returned again. On one ocea j sion, when one of their two small I sons was seriously ill, she refused to ; I listen to the child's pleading and re jturn, and when she did come back, j Mr. Bankes said, the boy had died. I A bartender was named as core- I spondent. The other child when ' called as a witness said his mother .land the other man went out in an : itonioblle together. The boy said '.j wondered why "mamma would I kiss the other man and not papa." Forlna Increases Lead in War Stamp Contest | R. K. Fortna, who has been in the ' lead during practicaly the whole eon -1 test, has increased his lead to almost | $7,000 in th William M. Donaldson [ priz contest for the sale of War Sav i ings Stamps by llurrisburg letter i carriers. Until December 7, he had I sold a total of $29,223.09 of "Baby ■ j Bonds" and War Savings Stamps. G. II A. Hollinger is the runner up with a 11 sales record of $22,540.97. • I Carriers with sales records of more (than SIO,OOO and their records are: R. K. Fortna, $29,223.09; G. A. Hol ■ I linger, $22,546.97; J. A. Geiger, $21,- 532.97: E. R. Gault, $18,316.10; C. j W. CI ess. $16,230.15: G. L. Ebersole, >514,450.92; C. A. Fortna. $14,348.03; C. E. Rea, $12,276.71; G R. Pritch ! nrd, $12,092.63; T. J. Carpenter, sll.- 1633.62; W. R. Manley, $11,513.99; |W. W. Dwil, $11,130.0$; G L. Ehler, j $10,143.36. Wilson to Visit Pope on Dec. 23, Page Announces j Paris. Dec. 10. Thomas Nelson I Page, American Ambassador to Italy, I visited the Vatican on Sunday and nn j pounced that President Wilson would I pay an official visit to Pope Ben edit l anil Cardinal Gasparrl, papal secre i tary of state, on December 23, accord i ing to a dispatch of the Temps from ; Rome. fcAN/T FIND* DANDRUFF I L-.-.-.-. Every bit of dandruff disappears ! after one or two applications of Dan ; dcrine rubbed well into the scalp, jwTth the linger tips. Get a small 1 bottle of Danderinc at any drug i' store for a few cents and save your hair. After several applications you can't find a particle of dandruff or any falling hair, and the scalp will never itch. WAR LOSSES ARE HEAVY IN CITY AND SUBURBS Many Local Fighting Men Arc Reported Killed, Gassed and Wounded ,v, ■ ■ "■ ■ . ' y. ■ I .uiiwaux. I iHEnr J HARRY C. BECHTEL To-day's casualty lists carries the names of a number of men from this vicinity, among them two Har risburgers. Privute Oscar F. Wolfe, who is reported as wounded, de gree undetermined, is a member of the 112 th Infantry. He was gassed October 20 and wounded the same day, according to a telegram to Mrs. Mary L. Wolfe, his mother, who re sides at 1820 Fulton street. He is ut present in a base hospital in France. Before entering the service, Private Wolfe was employed by the City Transfer Company. Private James B. Smith, who is reported severely wounded, is a member of Company E, 324 th in fantry. He was wounded November 9, according to word received by his sisters, the Misses Bessie and Hose Smith, 1 432 North Third street. The official dispatch did not state the nature of Private Smith's wounds. Prior to his enlistment he was an employe of the Ffick Company, of Waynesboro. i Private Harry C. Bechtel. of near Millersburg, serving with Company M, 314 th Infantry, was severely wounded in action November 10, the day before the cessation of hos tilities, a War Department telegram informs his mother, Mrs. Kate Bech tel, R. J*\ D., Millersburg. Private Bechtel left Elizabethvile with a draft contingent on May 27. • After training at Camp Meade, Md„ he sailed for France. The official report of Corporal David M. Thornton's death, who was killed in action some time in No vember, is given to-day among the list of casualties. Corporal Thorn ton is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David M. Thornton who reside near Shire manstown. lie was a member of the .Machine Gun Company of the 316 th Infantry. A lull account of his being killed appeared in the Telegraph last week. Word has been received by Mrs. Jacob Hain through the Red Cross, that her husband. Private Jacob I Hain, was wounded in action in the arm and is confined to a hospital in I'aris. Private Hain is a member of Company G, 146 th .Infantry. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Hain, 150 North Fl'itcentli street, i His brother, Ross B. Hain, is also in ' the service and is stutioned' at the Embarkation Station, at Newport News. An official dispatch from Wash ington states that Bugler Luther G. Smith, a member of Company I*', 103 d Ammunition Train, 28th Divi sion, was slightly wounded Septem ber 24. Bugler Smith is the son of Mrs. C. H. Smith, 210 Liberty street. In a letter received recently from her son, Mrs. Smith learned that he is rapidly recovering. Among the names of men appear ing in to-day's casualty lists who re side in this vicinity are the follow ing; Private Paul H. Gulden, wounded. Boiling Springs; Private Daniel F. Bluist, wounded slightly, R. F. D. No. 4, Mechanicsburg; Oscar G. Glouser, wounded severely, \\ illiamstown; Private Eugene N. Emswiler, wounded severely, Colum bia; Corporal Joseph H. Hoover, wounded severely, Chambersburg, and Corporal Maximillian Schwarz, wounded severely, Chambersburg. Captain Dietrick to Speak Before Y. M. C. A. Captain Will Arthur Dietrick, com manding officer of the S. A. T. C.. at j Temple University, Philadelphia, will address the men's mas meeting to be held in Fahnestock Hall, Sunday afternoon at 3.30 o'clock. Captain Dietrick will speak on "Where We Go and Why We Go." Captain Dietrick was formerly a clergyman, serving as pastor of a large London church. BRIEFS FROM THE ' BIG NEWS EVENTS By Associated Press Chicago. The high percentage of men rejected as physically unfit for military service was taken as the basis for a demand for compulsory physical examination of school chil dren and their compulsory physical training, before the American Public Health Association by Dr. J. A. Nydegger, of Baltimore. Bnlt Lake City. Although he con trolled millions of dollars while president of the Mormon Chuureh, Joseph Smith left an estate of less than $70,000. Cleveland, O. —Personal injury suits should l>c brought against ruilrotd companies and not against the di lector general, according to u ruling by Judge Willis Vitkery, of iho Common Picas Court here. Washington. Official summary of the results of the influenza epidemic In army camps and military centers made public by the War Department, shows there were 338,257 cases up to December 1, with approximately 17,- 000 deaths. Oakland, Cat, After having been out for two weeks because of dlffer < nces with the company, three thous and striking bnllorinakers. pending mediation, returned to work yester day at the plant of the Beth!eh"m Shipbuilding Corporation. Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad • Delegates From Forty | Red Cross Chapters to Hold Conference Here Bruce King, head of the Bureau of I Information, Home Service Section, i American Red Cross will be one of the speakers at a conference of 150 delegates from 40 chapters to be held at the Civic Clubhouse beginning to morrow morning. Mr. King is one of the most prominent men in the [ entire organisation. The conference will open to-in: r row morning at 9.30 o'clock with an address by Mr. King and a discus sion will follow, in the afternoon a meeting on co-operation will be bold, the discussion covering co-operations i between chapters and other orga'nza- I tlons; stranded men, Camp Commu nity Service and work with the dis- ! abled soldier. In the evening there; will be a round-table with Miss IRlon | V. Walte. Taft Calls on Five Nations to Police the World Atlantic City, Dee. 10. Former President William Howard Taft do-1 signates England. France, Italy, the l I nited States and Japan as the na-j .tlons to maintain the international police force of the future. He presented this list in his League of Nations plan before the reeon-j' f truction convention of the Invest-1 ntent Bankers' Association of Amerl- J ca at the Traymore, yesterday. "lon cannot overcome lawless vio lence except by lawful violence. \ league of nations among other things must keep the fceace 0 f t.he 1 world." declared Mr. Taft, Mr. Taft told of the necessity of a 1 league of nations: i "How are you to enforce the terms' < of the peace treaty unless you havei ' a league of nations and thus clinch i 111 purposes of the war," he declared.]' Carmen's of Quality The Ladies' Bazaar's Great Pre-Christmas Clearance of Ladies' S, Coats, Dresses At Prices Averaging Half of Actual Values Sale Begins Tomorrow, Wednesday, Doors Open at 10 O'clock This clearance is a radical departure from the usual custom of holding such events after Christmas. But an unusually large stock has determined us to give you the opportunity now to have your new outfit for the holidays, at after-Christmas prices. Come Early-—Quantities Are In Many Instances Limited—-The Only Way To Profit Is To Be Here When The Doors Open SUITS AT A SONG DRESSES 33 I 6 10 10 13 All-wool Serge AU-wool Misses' Serge Dresses Serge Dresses Poplin and Broadcloth Serge Suits Silvertone Suits Q 5 $1295 ' $4.95 $19.95 t,,\ LiL ir All-around box-pleated mod- Fine quality all-wool French Values to H-U.115 Value* to $14.1>5 tallies to $211,115 e |- )> e lt: silk braid and button sorgo; variety of models; one All-wool materials silk and Norfolk model, .satin lined; Silk lined, pleated back. , , H , u , h i,„ ilk ~,,.,1:,, and two of a kind; .sizes lfi to a SJ2 a - Sft:*'-" 11 "' 1 ' u™~N.""nd'"LCr 16 14 W ' Chiton , Silvertone Velvet Dresses Se ' e Dresses Broadcloth Suits Su,ts - - $24.95 ' $32.95 $7.95 $14.95 " American all-wool poplin; • • Values to 91N.P5 Values to 921M15 Value* to 910 detachable plush collar, ad- , tt . *Hlie* to 9.0 Lined with Belding's guaran- justahle collar: belt, pockets, High-grade material; yll silk Belted models, In brown. All-wool serge, in three dif teed satin; detachable collar of pleated back, button trimmed; lined, smart, semi-tailored or- Navv and Burirundv ferent models; in Navy, plum, SUK: """ 53S,MrMSS?" ! % —Hpr SILK DRESSES Coats! Coats! Coats! ~ 21 I I 22 I Gh 't O Q\ pZ ff\ tffc O 0 Satin, Taffeta and Satin, Taffeta and yjj -J- L/ •t/ L/ Ll/ fjj KJ t/ •t/ Crepe de Chine Dresses Crepe de Chine Dresses , Values $18.95 to $79.95 $12.95 $17.95 Coats of every desired model and sh adc, in every wanted fabric, plain and fur- Values io $24,115 ( value* to $211.05 trimmed—coats among which you are sure to find what you want at your price. Variety of smart models, in .wide range of models and 1 Navy, black and brown. shades. All Other Suits • T t© Plush Coats I actios JjQZddr ia $24957 color tones of the season, in values * from SSO to $79.95. ~ Values to $35.00 A ~ „ . . A-10-19 S POITRTFI ST One-piece hack Coats; lined At Corresponding Reductions O IV/ o.rVUlVlll Ul. throughout—an exceptional buy. COMEDIANS WIN MUCH APPLAUSE Majestic Audiences Enjoy Bill of Unusual Offerings and Show Appreciation Howard and Sadler, the popular comedians received an enthusiastic reception at the Majestic last night. After the singing o'f their clever "Wedding Bells, Will You Ever Ring For Me?" they .wore given an ovation, the applause lasting fully two min utes. This popular pair offers some very good songs and humor. The ex citement at the second show last night, when they were given such lengthy applause, was unusual. Homer Mason and Marguerite Kec>- er, In their travesty on the eternal triangle, offer an intensely interest ing one-act play. For one who Is seeking the unusual in plays here is the opportunity. Yet it is perfect ly natural. The eternal triangle this time centers about husband and wife and "the other man." The members of the company display a judicious treatment of their parts which is sel dom exhibited in pieces on the vaude ville stage. The most novel offering seen in Harrlsburg in years is by the Spanish Goidinis in their heavy and light juggling, and acrobatic stunts. The unusual runs rampant through the performance and surprises await the audience from first to last. How one Is able to juggle a rug large enough for the largest-sized room wo.uld halt the imagination—unless you've seen the Spanish Goidinis. Too much praise cannot be given Gillen and Mulcahy as artists. The one is an excellent pianist, while the other has a voice whose qualities rec ommend it to higher professional en deavors. The imitation of John Mc- Cormaek's singing of "Macushla" did not escape the approval and appre ciation even of a vaudeville audience. Mcßae and Clegg do some cycle stunts that are clever, funny, and skillful. This act serves as a fitting end to the strong bill at the Majestic this part of the week. Plan to Extend the Rural Parcel Post Washington.—Plans for an assault on the high cost of living by exten i sion of the rural parcel post through ; the use of army motor trucks, were ' explained by Assistant Postmaster | General Blakslee to the House Post I Office Committee, which is franijng ! the 1920 Postal Appropriation Bill. In asking for $8,000,000 fqr the ! rural service for the year beginning ! July 1. next, he said trucks for the proposed service would be turned over by the War Department without 'ONLY POWERFUL r MEDICINE WILL END RHEUMATISM • ! It matters.not whether you have [ had agonizing pains from rheuma tism for 20 years or distressing ' twitchings for 20 weeks, llheuma is ! strong enough and mighty and pow erful enough to drive rheumatic poisons from your body and abolish all misery or money back. ! Kennedy's Drug . Store and nil ; druggists are authorized to sell | Rheutna on a no-cure-no-pay basis. A large bottle is inexpensive, and af ! ter you take the small dose as direct ed once a day for two days you I should know that at la'st you have I obtained a remedy that will conquer rheumatism. For over seven years throughout | America Rheuma' lias been proserib- I ed, and has released thousands from agony, pain and despair. charge. Truck trains of one tractor and six or more trailers, he added, SHOE WBIETAILEK **% m Mahogany BOOT n ]< m.inship and '55.98 ' dark brawn Kid, \liSj23 l' \?|L *' both l.otilH ami \Q military heels. G. R. KINNEY CO., Inc. 19 and 21 North Fourth Street jo j Id 1 make postal ratoa compote Willi freight rates. 9