Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 28, 1919, Page 9, Image 9

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    MTUMINOUS COAL
\ DEMANDS LESS
Eduction Cut 35 Per Cent,
to Keep Market prices
Firm
AUono, Pa., Jan. 28. —Bituminous
•oal roduction in the Ceitral Penn
lylvaia field has been educed ap
jfoxiiitely 35 per cent, b.cause of a
ack odemand for coal. lather than
lemorijze the market b> cutting
jrices, perators are closing down the
nines mporarily. A litth coal has
jeen scj under the government price
it 32.91 but it had already been
nined ad was loaded on cirs await
ng shißent. Coal operatob say the
supply i long all over the country,
sspeciall in New Rnglans, where
nany orhe large consumeis have a
stock on and sufficient to ast them
rom fouto seven months. At tide
water pots the demand las also
suddenly ropped.
The outok for both minei and op
'rator in \e central coal fiells is be
soming dfeer each day ard many
■nlners wi be out of empoyment.
\bout ten iy s ago two operations in
•his eectioi closed down, one at
iVoodland t d the other at Kersey,
21k Countj since that time the
lumber ha.continued, until to-day
t is estimad that fully 25( mines
n this terrhy are at a sttbdstill.
these are mall mines, employing
rom ten ttifty men. Nine of the
argcr minest the district has clos
:d.
It is estimed that there, were
iOO wagon-loiing mines in this sec
ion, and of at number compara
ively few ar w orking In the vi
inity of Phillsburg production has
alien off alaiingly and the- few
nines now opet.ing have only a few
nen at work. t Reynoldsville pro
luction is at a andstill, and at Kit
anning many m have been dis
harged for lac or orders.
All of the lai. mines of Cambria
Jounty are woing, but a score of
he small ones be shut down com
iletely and probty forty others are
vorking only hatime. These shut
lowns are, in tl main, due to the
act that only thjest quality of-coal
s in demand andiat the small pro
ucer, who could .1 any kind of coal
>efore the war end, has no market
or his product i this time. The
aild weather also, responsible for
lie falling off in -eduction of the
mailer mines in tg section of the
tate.
■ \ As a, loitive, and for stomach trouble, Dr. ■
K \ Caldwcs; Syrup Pepsin is a wonderful ■
\ remedy J suffered greatly from indigestion ■
■B r ■ \ a ' l d f oi d relief after using one bottle." T 1
H| \ U r ? m letter to Dr. Caldwell written by ■
jH \ Cecil F gerald, 829 14th St., Parkersburg, ■
ask 1 yV. Va. ■
I Constipatiq is a condition that should
9 never be negated. The eliminative process
H | is an essentiafactor in digestion and on its
proper functining depends the welfare of the
H entire system. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin
Hi relieves constijtion without griping or other
H discomfort.
■ DR&ALDWELL'S
I Syrup Pepsin
ThtPerfect Laxative
Sold by lruggists Everywhere
50 ts. (S.) $l.OO
A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OTAINED. FREE OF CHARGE, BY WRITING TO
Da W. B. CALDWELL, 459 f ABHINGTOK STREET. MONTICELLO, ILLINOIS
IAFE7GINtirREMEDY
I BUNGS SURE RELIEF
or 200 years GOLD MH)AL or four every day. The healing oil
Oil has enabled suffing soaks into the cells and lining of the
to withstand attack of kidneys and drives out the poisons,
liver, bladder and stoiach New life and health will surely fol-
and all diseases conniited low. When your normal vigor has
the urhary organs, ant to been restored continue treatment
up and restore to healthor- for a while to keep yourself in con
weakened by disease. Tese dition and prevent a return of the
lmportant organs must be disease.
B,7 ed tl,e lK bUod; do 7°" '7" U " tU f°" inCaPttb,e
work you' arc doomed. fighting. Start taking GOLD
sfeeplessness, nervos- DAL Haarlem Oil ( apsules to-
Bs, despondercy, backache, sttn- da >- Your druggist will cheerfully
trouble, pans In the loins ltd refund your money if you are not
abdomen, gravel, rheumatim, satisfied with results. But be sure
and lunbago all warn j>u to get the original imported GOLD
with /our kidneys. GO:D MEDAL and accept no substitutes.
Haarlem Oil Capsules i-e In three sizes." Sealed packages.
remedy you need. Take thiie At all drug stores.
ißretz Bros. Hardware Stand
209-211 CHESTNUT ST.
H NOW OPEN 7 OR BUSINESS
1 Full line of hardware, aluninumware, cutlery, paints, oils,
H&lsss, farm implements, tool:, gasoline and Auto Oils.
Will be known hereafter at the
■CHESTNUT STREET HARDWARE AND
MOTOR TRUCK SUPPLY CO.
J. E. DARE, Proprietor
l^srr7
ill *7 latest IMIHT.I apptt-
■LIL.MSBWCT aacea, laelndlac em ntyni- /v A
■■ fffimHUHf aßparttna, aaakea gSf
;>: ■ tXmZEmtm tn<tiM and Ul deatal JF
I wk yoaltlvdr palaWaa X AT k.
■ K/MINATION X. RW
I FREE • XACX SIS
aaawaa and
r— — X Vv X
Mitt OF" dally aSo
■ ctraam X !•• w Jaadar. Wed.
T •"Ml dCy • ""m? ••***•* ttu
■£ raoxa sszs-n.
j f m a*rr nui or
Jr FATHISTT fl^nn
Wr /
(Oear the Bah)
PA. „ d.t . Mt
TUESDAY EVENING, HAHRISBURG W&&S& TELEGRAPH JANUARY 28, 1919.
Millerstown Soldier in
Army Five Years, Killed
Sergeant Edward
Wmm s - Knight, of Mil
lerstown, after five
aHMMpI years' army ser
vice, was killed in
France with the
American Expedi
* tionary Forces on
September 27, 1918,
IWBMraf advices recently re
k celved by his sis
> tlUHft. ' ® Miss Laura
Knight, 1116 North
Third street, tell.
Sgt. Ed. S. Knight Only 21 years old
at the time of his death, he enlisted
when sixteen years old. He was dis
charged at the completion of his
term, but was called for reserve ser
vice on June 5, 1917.
R. F. WEBSTER IS
HONORED BY OWLS
R. F. Webster. 223 South Four
teenth street, state organizer of the
Order of Owls, has just been notified
by the supreme officers of this order
that he has been promoted to the
third degree. This degree is but one
removed from the supreme degree of
the order, and is confined to fifty
members of the entire organization,
who have distinguished themselves in
its interests. Mr. Webster previously
held the second degree, which was
conferred upon him at South Bend,
Ind. He holds the record of organi
zation work. His present headquar
ters are at Philadelphia. He was
formerly assistant manager of the
New Idea Hosiery Company, of this
city.
POSTAL TELEGRAPH
PROTESTS HIGH RATES
The Postal Telegraph Company is
prepared to put into effect, but not
without protest, the telephone rate
increases, which were to go into ef
fect lats Tuesday, Clarence H.
Mackey, president, says in a letter
addressed to Union R. Bethell, chair
man of the operating board of the
United States .Telegraph and Tele
phone Administration.
Mr. Property owner! List with us
and hurry the sale. Backonstoss
Bros., Real Estate, Russ Bldg.
APPEALS BOARDS
DO GREAT WORK
Act 0n327,742 Petitions; Grant
the Greater Number
Filed
Major W. G.
t\ V //I Murdock, the
.x\\ state's chief draft
XVvX.SIcTv offlcer.today com
pleted data which
jjxefnKro&L-! shows that the
ninc district ap
-11 jßwltlatf Pennsylvania act-
S@9UREJBJKK ed on 327,742 ap-
BaßjßMUat peals and claims.
Wp—*g3fcl Of this numben
227,065 were
granted and 100,677 denied.
These figures represent an immense
amount of work by the boards and
a great deal of investigation and
time spent in hearings, "said the
major. "There were 56,558 appeals
and 271,184 agricultural or indus
trial claims."
Under the old system of fhe first
registration there were 29,262 con
sidered of which 17,000 were de
nied; under the questionnaires of
the first regsltratlon there were 171',-
517 considered 50,000 being denied;
under the second and third registra
tions there were 21,852, over 8,000
being denied; while under the fourth
registration there were 105,110 con
sidered. in this latter number 1,-
871 appeals which were granted and
2,601 rejected; 77,465 industrial and
agricultural claims, granted and 23,
173 dented.
In addition to these figures there
were 1,058 appeals from physical ex
aminations acted upon. •
Can Shoot Hoodies. The State
Game Commission has received word
that the federal authorities have de
cided that reed birds may be shot in
Pennsylvania and adjoining states in
September and October. A few
years ago under a treaty with Can
ada the shooting of these birds,
which are known as rice birds in the
south, was forbidden.
Wclmer Numed.—Governor Sproul
to-day sent to the Senate the appoint
ment of Albert B. Weimer, of Phila-'
deiphla, t<r be reporter of the deci
sions of the Supreme court. He suc
ceeds Attorney General William I.
Schaffer. The governor also sent the
appointment of Robert S. Gawthrop,
of West Chester, to be first deputy
attorney general, and William M.
Hargest. Harrisburg; Emerson Col
lins. Williamsport; Bernard J.
Myers, Lancaster and William I.
Swoope, Cleartield, to be deputy
attorneys general.
Proposes Organization
of Discharged Soldiers
Into One Organization
The first annual convention of the
American Army Association, to be
composed of the members of the
armies stationed in America and
overseas during the war, will begin
Sunday, April 6, with memorial ser
vices, and continue five days. Mayor
Keister has received notification
from Haywood H. Hill, Jr., secretary
of the National Association, of the
proposed organization of discharged
soldiers all over the country into an
association similar to the G. A. R.,
and has been asked to co-operate in
bringing the soldiers of the county
together into an organization.
The local county unit will elect
Its officers and delegates to the na
tional convention, where the officers
of the association will be elected.
State Governors, Senators, Mayors
and army officers ranging from gen
erals to privates, are already mem
bers of the association, which now
reaches into 41 states.
Methodist Churches to
Maintain "Good Will''
Schools For Soldiers
By Associated Press
New York, Jan. 28. —"Good will,"
schools to provide industrial re-edu
cation for soldiers and sailors will be
maintained in thirty cities through
out the country by the Methodist
Episcopal Church with its share of
the 310,000,000 to be raised next
month for reconstruction work by
fourteen Protestant denominations.
This announcement is made here by
the Interchurch Emergency Cam
paign Committee, which will direct
the drive.
"Good will" schools have been es
tablished at San Francisco. Los An
geles, Denver, St. Louis, Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Boston and Brooklyn.
Steps are under way to establish
soon other schools in New York, Jer
sey City, Wilmington, Baltimore,
Syracuse, Providence, Newark, . hil
•idelphia,- Pittsburgh, Buffalo, St.
Uaul and Dayton.
N. Y. Republicans
Make Prohibition
a Party Measure
Albany, N. Y., Jan. 28.—-Ratifica
tion by the New York Legislature
of the federal prohibition Itmendment
is assured because the Republican
members of the Senate by a vote of
25 to 4 made it a matter of party
politics last night.
The decision to make ratification
a party measure was reached at the
end of a meeting of the Republican
Senators which lasted more than
three hours.
The Thompson-McNab ratification
resolution will come up in the Sen
ate on the general order calendar
to-day and if not finally disposed of
before the end of the day, will go
over to to-morrow when its adopt
ion on third reading will be a cer
tainty.
OPPOSE POOL
Cleveland, 0., Jan. 28.—Lake coal
producers, shippers and upper lake
dock operators, at u meeting here,
unanimously opposed the continu
ance of pooling lake coal. The con
ference was called by the Oreand
coal exchange.
Mechanicsburg Lad Home
After Serving in Navy
After serving on
Wf lhe Un®!". P1 y -
gt mouth, since May,
lit , ;• John R. Mountz,
,on ot Mr ° and
I Mrs. S. J. Mountz,
of Mechanicsburg,
I has been diacharg
-9 ed from the United
States service, and
returned his
fjßikdpliHHl home in the Cum
-1 " berland county
John R. Mounts town.
Why pay rent! Own your home.
Backenstoss Bros., Real Estate, Russ
Bldg.
Sgt Dineley Says Marne
River Fight Was Bloody
The heaviest
fighting seen by the
103 rd Ammunition
Train, of the Key
stone Division,
made up largely of
youths of this ter
ritory, was at the
Marne River, Ser
geant S. P. Dtfte
ley, of Company F,
writes to his fath
er, Samuel Dineley,
lll Chestnut street.
Sgt. S. P. Dineley The fighting was
so hard, he s&ys, that "there was so
much bloodshed that the river was'
stained with blood from bank to
bank. But the Dutch sure had to
move; we drove them about 35 miles
in about seven weeks, so you can
imagine how fast they retreated and
the Americans were right on their
heels," he adds in describing the re
treat of the German forces.
Flizabethtown Five Beat
Commonwealth Travelers
The Elizabethtown Big Five took
the Commonwealth Travelers into
camp by the score of 18-15, although
Commonwealth had a lead of 8-4
at the end of the first half. The
game was very fast. The lineup;
COMMONWEALTH
F. G. Fouls. I
T. Crane, f 1 Oj
Reed, f 3 0 1
Frank, c 0 5
W. Smith, g. ... 1 0 |
Millef, g. 0 0 !
Bell, 0 0
ELIZABETHTOWN
F. G. Fouls.
Sherk, f 0 0
S. Crane, f 2 0
Yoder, 2 0
Shank, g % 1 6
Sshleman, g 1 0
FALSE' FIRE ALARM
Several companies responded to a
false alarm turned In from box 234,
Hummel and Swatara street, at 12:45
o'clock last night.
The community has a higher regard
for you if you own your home. Back
enstoss Bros., Real Estate, Russ Bldg.
CORNS Lin OUT!
COSTS FEW CENTS
Drops of magic! Doesn't
hurt one bit! Drop a little
Freezone on a touchy corn,
instantly that, corn stops hurt--
ing, then you lift it off with
the fingers. No pain! Try it!
A
/
IQJJ
Why wait? Your druggist sells
a tiny bottle of Freezone for a
few cents, sufficient to rid your
feel of every hard corn, soft corn
or corn between the toes, and
calluses, without soreness or irri
tation. Freezone is the much
talked of discovery of the Cincin
nati genius.
HARRISBURG EVIDENCE FOR~
HARRIS* PEOPLE
Tlic Statements of Harrisburg Resi
dents Are Surely More Reliable
Than Those of Utter Strangers.
Home testimony is real proof.
Public statements of Harrisburg
people carry real weight.
What a frlond or-neighbor says
compels respect.
The word of one whose home is
far away invites your doubts.
Here's a Harrisburg man's state
ment. '
And it's for Harrisburg people's
benefit.
Such evidence is convincing.
That's the kind of proof that
backs Doan's Kidney Pills.
M.. B. Havlland, railroad engineer,
313 Boas St., says: "I have used
Doan's Kidney Pills several times
in the past few years and I sincerely
advise their use to anyone troubled
with their kidneys. Whenever my
back has been weak or lame and
has ached, or the kidney secretions
have been irregular in passage, t
have bought a box or so of Doan's
Kidney Pills at J. Nelson Clark's
Drug Store. Doan's have never
failed to rid me of the complaint."
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy
get Doan's Kidney Pills the same
that Mr. Havlland had. Foster-
Mllburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
BRONCHIAL ASTHMA
Mrs. Graf Says Vlnol Cured Her
Darlington, Pa.—"l suffered from
brouchial Asthma so badly I would
often have to sit up half of the night
or lean over the back of a chair, and
so weak I could hardly walk across
the floor. I had spent lots of money
for different Asthma medicines
without help—but Vlnol helped me
so I sleep well, and am so well and
strong I Am doing all my work on
the farm."—Mrs. Emma Graf.
Vinol is a constitutional remedy
which contains beef and cod liver
peptones, iron g.nd manganese pep
tonates and glycerophosphates. We
strongly recommend Vlnol.
George A. Gorgas, druggist: Ken
nedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market
St.; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad
Sts.; Kitzmlller's pharmacy, 1326
Derry St.; J. Nelson Clark, and
druggists everywhere.
P. S.—Stop scratching; 6ur Saxol
Salve stops itching. We guarantee it.
I "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" . I
r H
wr
-IB' Jmm Jm f pP
" ""■'.'' !!I 'jl'M folVli |
***^* < *** < **" , "**^^,——* >,,, ** , ** , ** , *** , * , *^**fra>W><iMmimm^aM—■—— *********" '■■ .... '.•X ■ >■■■■•. ••' Asv^^^v Y'^' : 111' <S ~ >'ii ""• i t
Copyright 1918. Ikt How* of Kuppafctlat ,
Selling I
Dependable Merchandise I
Will never keep customers out of your
store, but it will do for any store what it has done for
this "Live Store" That is, build up an enormous business. But
you must sell dependable merchandise and prove it every day
you are in business It won't do to start off with good intentions
and then loosen up on your methods until the buying public loose
confidence in you. #
I" " Always
It's worth noticing the progress of this "Live Store,"
although Doutrichs has been in Harrisburg but a few years and had a
"Big" Handicap to overcome —We are now enjoying the distinction of having a
greater volume of business than ALL the other clothing storCfe in Harrisburg, so you
can easily see that we have the confidence of the people, through square-dealing,
honest representation, greater values and the complete satisfaction you get here with
every purchase. <
This Is the Store Everybody Is Talking About
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Kuppenheimer &
Society Brand Clothes
IfcWlliUlSiiUif
ij . Pl^^^^&Stffi9BUsßEs9BSH|22J
ri— Reliable
I 304 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa.
9