Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, March 10, 1919, Page 11, Image 11

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    TWELVE MILLION !
WOMEN TO VOTE
iN 1920 ELECTION
Twenty-three States Have
JHrven Tliein Right to
Cast Ballot
New York, March 10. —More than
12,000,000 women in the United
Statef over 21 years of age are
cligihl to vote for the next Presi
dent r twenty-three States where
women f*ey vote, according tp an
estimatier, Ny Mrs. Carrie Chapman
V'att, preset nt of the National Wo
"aan Suffrai J Association and pres
ident of the International Suffrage
Alliance.
This estimate was given in a call
to the women voters of the United
States to join forces with the Na- ,
tional American Woman Suffrage
Association at its Golden Jubiled
Convention to be held in St. Bouis,
March 21—29. Fifty delegates from
each voting state are invited to join
the delegations at St. Louis from the
2,000,000 members of the National
American Woman Suffrage Associa
tion.
"The National American Woman
Suffrage Association has invited
women voters to a national conven
tion in order that they may organ
ize nationally and unite their forces !
with those of other lands," said Mrs.
Catt.
The biggest Bureau of Suffrage
Propaganda in the world has been
organized by Mrs. Catt with funds |
she was bequeathed by Mrs. Frank I
Leslie, widow of a widely known !
editor and publisher. When Mrs. j
Leslie died a few years ago she left t
the bulk of her fortune to Mrs. Catt
to be used for the advancement of
the suffrage cause. The actual fig
ures are in the neighborhood of
$750,000.
SEATTLE STRIKE ENDS
Seattle, Wash., March 10. The
strike of forty thousand shipyard
workers in effect since January 21
in Seattle, Tacoma and Aberdeen was
formally declared off last night by
strike leaders, following a canvass
of votes cast in a referendum taken
during the last three days.
The joy of feeling fit and
fresh rewards those who
heed the laws of health,
and keep the habits regu
lar with
PIECHMS
I) PILLS
Larieat SaU of Any Medicine in the World.
Sold Everywhere, in boxes, 10c„ 25c.
V 1
Piles and Rupture
Treated By
Philadelphia Specialist
l>lt. W. 8. VODER
PILES.
Every person so all'lioted should
investigate our painless, dissolv
ing method of treuting these trou
blesome affections. This dissolv
ent treatment is one of the great
est discoveries of the age and no
person has any excuse for suffer
ing with Piles while this treat
ment is so easy to obtain.
We absolutely guarantee to cure
every case we undertake, and we
further guarantee to do so with
out giving ether or chloroform
and without putting the patient to
sleep, und that the treatment must
be painless. We do not see the
knife, and no acid injections or
salves, if you are suffering from
piles of any kind do not fall to
take advantage of this wonderful
treatment These treatments are
given every other Wednesday by a
specialist from Philadelphia.
RUPTURE.
It Is not necessary for you to
wear a truss all your life and to
he in constant danger of having a
strangulated rupture, which Is
nearly ..Iwayn fatal. Our method
of treating rupture gives results In.
eight out of every ten cases. It
closes up the opening permanently
and you can throw your truss
away and ugain feel like a real
man. Our fees for these treat
ments are very small and are
within the rcacii of every one.
DH. W. S. YODEK, PHILADEL
PHIA SPECIALIST AT HOTKI,
IIOLTON, Wednesday, March 12,
from 2 (n II p. nl.
M
fbml QUAINT
EGYPTIAN LINES
"of this monumental design are
striking, and there is an air of
solidity and permanence aboa
it which well expresses the lm
mortality of the soul that ha
passed. Other expressive Be
signs which we will submit *o
your approval Include the class
ical, the Renaissance, etc.
I. B. DICKINSON
Granite. Marble aad Tile
505-13 N. THIRTEENTH ST.
HarrUburg, Pa.
MONDAY EVENING.
NINETEEN WIN
CERTIFICATES
State Board of Pharmacy An
nounces Results of
Examinations
At the examinations given In the
Technical High School on March 1 by
the Pennsylvania Board of Pharmacy,
twenty-six persons applied for registra
tion as pharmacist, of which nineteen
were successful, and forty-four for as
sistant pharmacist of which twenty-nine
passed. The next examinations will be
given in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia
on Juno 6 and 7. Those granted cer
tificates of registration were as follows:
Pharmacists
Barnctt Berman, Edward It. Chap
man, Solomon H. Dormpf, Reuben Elf
man, Moses Feinstein, Herman Finkel
stcin, Bessie C. B. Fox. Louis Powell,
Herman Rosenwald, Milton Stein, Alvin
L. Schlegei and Robert Seltzer, all of
Philadelphia. Henry Bluestone, Pitts
burgh : Philip Hoffman. California; Lily
Duvoisin, Clifton Heights; John E.
Reed, Cailitizin; Albert G. Kessel,
Jeannette; William M. Edwards,
Wilkes-Barre; William T. Conwell,
Lewes, Del.
Assistant Pharmacists
Harry G. Aument, Pauline Beregol
sky, Morris Bloomfleld, Barnet Budin.
Edward E. Glayman, Bernard Goodis,
Maurice Grossman, Abraham Hanowitz,
Mary L. Vogel. Henry S. Raymond. Jo
seph W. Schaefer and Philip Spiers, all
of Philadelphia. Hans J. Strauch,
Pittsburgh; Lewis O. Freeman, Allen
town ; Katherine M. May, Centralis;
Oliver H. Antes and Robert W. Shenk,
of Coatesville; Jennings B. Hartman,
j Dallastown : William R. Kurtz, Denver ;
I Burton L. Craig. Emsworth ; Alexander
, Schampan, Harrisburg; Carl E. Zook,
1 Lek'istown ; William J. Kooser, Manor;
' Eugene Coldsmith, Mt. Pleasant; Miles
L. Rupert, McKeesport; Clair Moore
and Luther E. Spangler, of York.
State Preparing
For Another Test
The first intra-state railroad rate
case in which the United States gov
ernment Railroad Administration
has declined to appear or to have
any of the railroads involved parti
cipate to reach the completed stage
as far as evidence is concerned will
be argued before the Pennsylvania
Public Service Commission here next
Monday, March 17, at the Capitol it
is held that the litigation presents all
of x the elements upon which a test
of the jurisdiction of a State com
mission in such matters can be made.
It will be of more than ordinary
interest because the Attorney Gen
eral as representative of the Gover
nor has the Bell Telephone
Company v into court as a part of the
effort of the Commonwealth to es
tablish its right to pass upon intra
state telephone rate increases pro
mulgated by order of the Postmaster
General and word has come here that
the Legislature of the State of Wash
ington has appropriated SIO,OOO to
secure a final court ruling on the
big question.
In the case to be argued the Pitts
burgh Steel Company filed complaint
against the rates for an intra-state
haul of the Monongahela Railroad
and the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie
Railroad. The jurisdiction of the
Public Service Commission of Penn
sylvania was promptly challenged
and the late Commissioner Harold
M. McClure in a forceful opinion
held that the State had authority
over intra-state rate 3 notwithstand
ing the federal control, asserting
that the war emergency in transpor
tation had passed and ordering the
respondents to appear and go on
with their side of the case. When
the time came for a hearing the
steel company resented its testimony
against the reasonableness of the
rates and neither the Railroad Ad
ministration or the railroads involved
made an appearance. Now argu
ment has been ordered for next Mon
day on the reasonableness of the
rates and will be held as though
testimony had been presented by
both sides.
Many Hearings For
State Highway Head
Delegations from eleven counties
will-have hearings before Highway
Commissioner Lewis S. Sadler this
week in regard to proposed road
construction and it is expected that
additional offers for co-operation
with the State in the construction of
the secondary highways will be
made. The Commissioner will con
sult with Governor William C. Sproul
regarding the problems which have
arisen in connection with some of
the routes.
The hearings have been extended
over three days and will be as fol
lows:
Monday • Washington county
commissioners and delegation from
Hyndman.
Tuesday Northampton county
commissioners, delegations from
Columbia, Schuylkill, Tioga, Lehigh
and Montgomery counties; super
visors of Cowanshannoek township.
Armstrong county and Senator H. W.
Schantz and Representatives A. C.
Schaeffer and C. A. Shaffer..
Wednesday Delegations from
Rissiter and Millvlllo boroughs with
officers.
Contractors are showing consid
erable interest in the plans and speci
fications for the contracts to be let
next month, the first on which bids
have been asked by Commissioner!
Sadler. These contracts include some 1
work approved for construction last
year, but on which bids were not
invited because of price and general
conditions due to the war.
Many Wounded Men Are
Entertained in Theaters
Market street motion picture the
aters have been hsts during the
past week to scores of wounded sol
diers from Carlisle and other hos
pitals. At the Colonial during the
past week soldiers wearing pajamas |
were among the visitors. The Ki
wanis Club of Harrisburg has taken
up the idea and will give a theater
party in the next few weeks at the
Regent theater with manager Peter
Magaro as the host.
Much work in helping the soldiers
has been accomplished by the can
teen committee of the Harrisburg
Chapter, American' Red Cross, which
has cared for 6,500 men in the
service during the past week. Many
of the workers served late into the
night. The past week was a record
breaker for the committee.
IN STATE OF COMA IS DAYS
ifittsburg, Kan., March 10.—A. C.
Coleman, of Pittsburg, has been
asleep practically continuously for
thirteen days and physicians are baf
fled by his case. Coleman suffered
two days from a tei rifle headache.
Then he went to sleep and except
for brief periods daily, when he
could be half aroused to take food
he has not been awake since.
MURDOCK STAYS
AT STATE DESK
Chief Draft Officer Declines
an Appointment as
Army Major
Major William
NXVV M,Mon ' the °' mc l !J ,
vanla for almost
ffWRaSsV; aII of the t,me 11
iJHBBWBtew was in force, has
: been offered and
IS declined appotnt
ment as a major
7*in the Judge Ad
vocate General's Department of the
united States army. The offer ol
appointment was made by General
K. H. Crowdter. the head of the draft
system, personally at Washington.
As the offer would have required
immediate acceptance, Major Mur
doch declined it owing to the fact
that the work of properly closing
the records of the State's local and
appeal boards is under way and dis
position of government property
used in the numerous offices of the
draft system in the State is about
to begin. The major lias been giving
personal attention to these matters
and also to the important task of
clearing the records of all non wilful
delinquents and completing the re
cords nf .1
J New Hearings—The State Com
i pensation Board has awarded new
hearings for further determination
,of questions raised in the cases of
Sorrentino and Zanda vs. Pennsyl
vania Coal Co., Scranton; Kempinskl
vs. Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal
I Co., Wilkes-Barre; Sondrowski vs.
| Mt. Lookout Coal Co., Scranton, and
Zabilsky vs. Elk Brook Coal Co., ;
Scranton.
Increases Pile—The Public Serv- I
ice Commission has given notice of,
the tiling of certificates of notiflca-;
tion by the Luzerne County Gas and
Electric Co., Kingston, bonds $484,-
000; and Eastern Pennsylvania Light,
Heat and Power Co., bonds $302,-:
000. The first lot are five per cent,
refunding and the second six per;
cent Koid bonds.
Electric Case Decided—The Boy-!
ertown Electric company is directed
by the Public Service Commission in
an opinion by Commissioner Wilton I
J. Brecht to cancel within thirty
days ail contracts which conflict with
its schedule of rates and charge!
all consumers only the rates estab- j
lished, as a result of complaint by I
residents of that place that the com- t
pany was discriminating by holding
to contracts made before the sched-'
ule of rates was filed. It is said j
that apparently the company filed j
the tariff to provide an emergency
rate to continue in effect at least!
during the period of the high prices
recently prevailing. The opinion!
says: "This in substance is implying,
that when the costs of labor and ma- \
terials resume a normal and stabil- I
ized level there will be a revision j
of rates." The complaint is dismis
sed with leave to renew later on.
Nineteen Listed—Nineteen cases
have been listed for the March meet
ing of the State Board of Pardons
which is scheduled for March 19.
There are no capital cases on the
list.
Bolsheviki Put Four
Russ Grand Dukes to Death
Copenhagen, March 10.—Four more
Russian grand dukes have been exe
cuted at Petrograd by the Bolshe
viki during the past fornight on the
charge of being Involved in a mon
archist plot, according to advices to
the Berlinske Tldende.
Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad
CAN'T BEAT "lIT
WHEN FEEI HURT
"Tiz" for sore, tired, puffed-up,
aching, calloused feet
or corns
You can be happy-footed in a
moment. Use "Tiz" and never suf
fer with tender, raw, burning, blist
ered, swollen, tired, smelly feet.
"Tiz" and only "Tiz" takes the pain
and soreness out of oorns, callouses
and bunions.
As soon as you put your feet in a
"Hiz" bath, you just feel the happi
ness soaking in. How good your
poor, old feet feel. They want to
dance for Joy. "Tiz" Is grand. "Tis"
instantly draws out all the poison
ous exudations which puff up your
feet and cause sore, inflamed,
aching, smelly feet.
Get a ?5-cent box of "Tiz" at any
drug store or department store. Get
instant foot relief. Laugh at foot
sufferers who complain. Because
your feet are never, never going to)
bother or make you limp any more j
BETTER INAN CALOMEL
Thousands Have Discovered
. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets
\ are aHarmlessSubstitute
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—the sub
stitute for calomel—are a mild but sure
laxative, and their effect on the liver is
almost instantaneous. They are the re
sult of Dr. Edwards's determination not
to treat liver and bowel complaints with
calomel. His efforts to banish it brought
out these little olive-colored tablets.
The pleasant little tablets do the good
that calomel does, but have no bad after
effects. They don't injure the teeth like
strong liquids or calomel. They take
hold of the troubleand quickly correct it.
Why cure the liver at the expense of the
teeth? Calomel sometimes plays havoc
with the gums. So do strong liquids. It
is best not to take calomel, but to let Dr.
Edwards' Olive Tablets take its place.
Most headaches, "dullness" and that
lazy feeling come from constipation and
a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edwards'
Olive Tablets when you feel "loggy"and
"heavy." Note how they "clear"clouded
brain and how they "perk up" the spirits.
10c and 25c a box. All druggists.
r 1 "" "
corns
W W bunions
CALLUSES
GORGAS DRUG STORES
\ ' . *
HARRISBURG TEEEGTOCPH!
"77 le Live Reliable" I
'V ■ ■' " H
■■■
r*. . * \
The Last Week
*, ■ m
\ m , n
I Of Our I
Semi-Annual Clearance Sale I
Where Everything Is Reduced Except Arrow Collars, Interwoven Hose and Manhattan Shirts
I Every day this week will be a busy day at Doutrichs, 1
If or this is the finish of the greatest sale we have held. You'll see some active
buying at this "Live Store" during the next few days, because our customers appreciate
the fact that not for a long time will they be able to save so much money on such high-grade
merchandise as we are selling. R
Our business is showing a remarkable increase this year—that TA
alone is an achievement and speaks well for the standing of this "Live Store" —While we 4 ■
are surpassing all previous records we are going to set a new pace; there's no complaining about poor busi"
ness at Doutrichs as you are hearing from quite a few other stores—but that's because Doutrichs sell de- iff
pendable merchandise that gives complete satisfaction to the wearer. j I
On Saturday we had a customer who actually came I
"all the way" from Philadelphia to buy his suit from this "Live Store."
He had no other shopping to do—made no visit anywhere else, but told us why he pre
ferred to pay his car fare from the big city to come here. It's a great satisfaction to feel H
that those who buy here know they can depend on any salesman we have, for there's
only one kind of merchandise to sell—We don't carry a lot of undesirables that nobody
wants; we are getting the business because we always have what we advertise. If you
want your share of the big money savings on dependable quality goods, come here this
week and buy at our extremely low prices.
I Hart Schaffner & Marx I
v
Kuppenheimer & I
Society Brand Clothes
Shirts, Hosiery,. Underwear, Gloves, Pajamas, Night Shirts, Sweaters, Hats,
Caps, Neckwear and all Boys' Clothing and Furnishings Reduced
I The Last Week of the Sale
I Only Five More Days
I 304 Market Harrisburg,
I St J" w m*A' M VfiiU*! , pa.
Cr Reliable pi -i3
MARCH 10, 1919.
11