DOWN RIVER DAM ! TO BE STUDIED Speaker Spangler Takes l'p Subject "With Attorney General Schaffer K (■■■■■■■l Conditions sur-' \\A Call's Ferry dam j .lating to the .Sus-' struction and op- j r H33aSs oration of dams! 4*'■ fuicSllWifi an< * requirements I jriiil as *° fisliways I .HI T. will be studied ' InlßiaMaJ by Attorney Gen- I eral Schaffer and j a personal inspection of the dam and the stream probably made within a short time as the result of! „ conference held with the State's i chief law officer by Speaker Spang-j ler and a committee of York coun- | ty people. The speaker called attention of I | Use Cocoanut Oil For Washing Hair If you want to keep your hair in good condition, be careful what you ! wash it with. Most soaps and prepared sham -' poos contain too much alkali. This 1 driM the scalp, makes the hair brit- | tie and is very harmful. Just plain 1 inulsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and entirely greaseless) is much bet- ! ter than the most expensive soap or anything else you can use for sham-j pacing, as this can't possibly injure the hair. I Simply moisten your hair with f wiyer and rub it in. One or two i teaspoonfuls will make an abundance of rich creamy lather and cleanses ] the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather rinses out easily, and removes i every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff j and excessive oil. The hair dries ) quickly and evenly, and it leaves it j line and silky, bright, fluffy and easy j .to manage. You can get. inulsified cocoanut oil 1 at most any drug store* It is very ; cheap, and a few ounces is enough to last e\eryone in the family for j months. 'CATARRHAL DEAFNESS:-: MAY BE OVERCOME If you have Catarrhal Deafness or are even just a little hard of hearing; or have head noises go to your drug- j gist and get 1 ounce of Farmint (double strength), and add to it U ; pint of hot water and a little gran-j lilatcd sugar. Take 1 tablespoont'u! four times a day. This will often bring, quicl> relief ! from the 'distressing head noises. I Clogged nostrils should open, breath- j ing become easy and the mucus stop dropping into the throat. It is easy j to prepare, costs little and is pleas ant to take. Anyone losing hearing' or who has Catarrhal Deafness or i 1 •ad noises should give this pre scription a trial. j SUPERFLUOUS PJJFIi WHY IT IHCREtiZS Hair Kioarfk Is Xlimht l 4 its tiraorat kbwval is n< eaaary when meMIT removed ' tm the mrtiifr of the ah.li-. the .ity logi cal and ganiih l \.n-- > ronott hair Is t attack It at Ar akin. , DeMiraele, the oitgiaal sanitary liquid. doer this by absorption. Only fn, tar DeMtiaelr has a mowy-tarC" guarantee In each PsefciS". A' jtlet counters tu SOe, SI sod $2 ta a, or by nsnil from us tn ptatn v -ar per on receipt of prior. PBKI' -ooh. maltedln pints sealed enoeloi s request. DeMlrneie. and Fnrfc Am— New York i 7 -red, Overworked Men ' hat You Need is Vinolj Vinol creates strength because it is a non-secret I combination of the most famous body-building and r i ength-creating elements known Beef and Cod Peptones, Iron and Manganese and Glycero phosphates. You who are run down, nervous, lack energy and working strength, we know that Vinol is what you need. Try it at our risk. Here is Proof: Sandford, Maine. Springfield, Man. "I suffered so much from a run- "I am a night operator—was all down, nervous condition and stomach run-down, couldn't sleep, had no trouble that I never felt like working, ambition, all tired out—l had, tried j and had tried almost everything with- blood and.cerve tonics without help out rriief. The first bottle of Vinol. —and thought I would try Vinol and ! however, helped me, and it has finally I must say it has built me up so I j bofit ma up so I feel better now than feel better, look better and sleep I have for a longtime " ('. D.Haines, better."—Charles T. Harder. Tor all run-down, nervous, anaemic condition*, weak women, overworked men, o'.i j11. Kiitl delicate child r-en, t here i- no remedy like Vinol. George A. O organ, Druggist; Kennedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market street; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad streets; Ki'tzmiller's Pharmacy, 1325 Decry street; J. Nelson Clark, and druggists everywhere. • Our Divided Mortgage Plan Takes care of loans where Monthly Payments on the whole loan are larger than it is conveni ent to make. On sums of $3,000 and upwards one-half may be carried on Monthly Payments and on the other half interest alone may be paid. This plan gradually extinguishes half of your debt and when that is out of the way you can tackle the other half. Come in and ask us about it. No commission, no renewals, small expense, participation in profits. If you had realized how easy it is to pay for a Home you would have had one long ago. Pennsylvania's Largest Savings and Loan Association . . Twenty-second Year; Resources $4,365,000.00 Office Open Daily and* Saturday Night—Both Phones 108 North Second Street, Harrisburg, Pa. State Capital Savings & Loan Association WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARIUSBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 19, 1919 I the attorney general to the situation in regard to shad fisheries in the I Susquehanna and the general fishing ' conditions and went over the history 1 of the efforts to obtain some relief. Mr. Schaffer said that ho would igo into the legal proposition at j length. New Plan Bill—Senator E. E. ! Jones, of Susquehanna, has pre j seated a bill requiring that all plans j for buildings, public works and | highways for boroughs, townships i and the smaller school districts to tilled in quarter siysions courts. Vp|K>lntnu'iics—Sylvester M. San ] dors has been appointed alderman jof the Fifth Ward of Oarbondale and Frederick R. Bauseh coroner I of Lehigh county. Chairman ltecd Here —Major Da- I vid A. Reed, Jr., of Pittsburgh, who ] was chairman of the commission ] which drafted the Compensation act | and one of the noted lawyers who ' have studied that subject was here j yesterday to visit the governor. Major Reed is just home from army service in France. Took Out Commissions—Repre | sentative W. H. Dithrich took to ! Pittsburgh the Commissions of I Judges Stephen Stare and Charles |H. Kline, just appointed. He is a ; personal friend of the judges. The j Commissions were prepared on parchment at the State Department. Mr. Snowdon Return-—Represen tative John F. Snowden, of Phila delphia, who suffered an injury to ; one of his is back at liis desk, j Want Improvement—The State Highway Department today received I a communication from the Farm ers Union of Cedarville, in which a Committee asked that ttie State road from West Chester to Potts- I ville be placed in a more permanent condition. This proposition is re ceiving careful consideration in the studies which the Department is conducting relative to a system of main arterial highways. I\-Members Here —Ex-Represen- ' tatives XL. F. Shannon, of Luzerne, f and John F. I-. Morris and Jefferson jW. Smith, of Philadelphia,' were ! here yesterday. B<Ht Sadler's Work—The State Highway Department today received j a letter from C. Forrest Tofft, Bur | gess of Darlirtgton. Beaver county. ! Burgess Tofft said: "At recent meet | ings of the Council and of ptiblie i spy-itpd citizens of this borough, it I was voted that the writer send you a letter thanking you most heartily for your proposed plan of road : building, which includes the im- I provement of Route No. 204 from I the Ohio State line to Beaver Falls. The great need for the building of this road has been felt so keenly by the residents of this community ' that you will find them all eager to ! support you in this undertaking." Potato Quarantine —Districts in 1 Luzerne, Carbon and Schuylkill ! counties where infection by the po ■ tato wart disease has been found have been placed under quarantine | by Economic Zoologist J. G. San | ders, of'the Department of Agri culture. The quarantine prohibits j the shipment or removal from quar | anttned areas of potatoes, root crop | vegetables, manure, garbage, soil or I plants with soil about their roots or i potato stalks and refuse or any | other material capable of carrying i the disease. In the quarantined areas there will be established pro [Boston I Garter | y/ifl ToneYballp! liibited areas in which it will be pro hibited to plant, grow or permit to grow the common white potato and occupants and owners of premises are ordered to destroy all potato plants growing accidentally. The ' quarantine permits the shipment I through the territory of potatoes, vegetables crops or plants originat ing outside the areas under quaran tine or having been shipped info the district for immediate reshipment. The district under quarantine in cludes Mazle and Foster townships in Luzerne county; Banks and Lau sanne townships and Mauch Chunk borough in Carbon county and Sheppton and Jackson villages in Schuylkill counties. Springfield Again.—What several attorneys said they hoped would be the last appearance in the Spring field Consolidated Water Company case occurred at the Public Service Commission otllce yesterday when counsel for municipalities and the company argued the application for approval of the .distribution of the Contested tire main charge in what was called a temporary scale. At torney General William I. Schafter, and Montgomery Evans, counsel for the company, urged the commission to speedily act on the case, Mr. Scliaft'er saying that it was vital im portance to the financial standing of the company for early action. Wil liam Rigliter Fisher, Charles Sink ler, Jr., Edwin M. Abbott and others appeared for municipalities and urged determination, although they differed with the position of the company. Assistant City Solicitors Ernest Lowengrund and Joseph S. Magee represented the city of Phila delphia as the 'Oak district is served by the company. Chairman Ainey announced that the commis sion would act as soon as possible. Mr. Schaffer had been counsel for the company front the start of the litigation several years ago. Municipal .Music. —The bill to au thorize third class cities to make ap propriations for municipal band con certs was reported favorably to the House by the municipal affairs com mittee. It came from Mercer county. . New Supenin tendon t. Highway Commissioner Sadler has named Heber 11. Thompson, of Pottsville, as county road superintendent for Schuylkill and Carbon counties suc ceeding D. O. Stackpol'e, promoted to be engineer in charge of district No. 1 at Bellefonte. l'ish Basket Bill.—The Stark hill to legalize the use of fish baskets under regulations by the State Fish eries Department has been favorably recommended by the House fisheries committee. Sarig Hill Lost—The House health and sanitation committee has nega tively reported the Sarig bill to make appropriations to charitable institutions on a system to be based upon the service rendered free; Mc- Curdy bill reducing retail and other licenses to sell oleomargarine and Franklin bill relative to preservation of liens of first mortgages in sale of lands for taxes. Resolutions For Commissions Out Resolution for State Commission ers to be named by the Governor to continue the investigations started by .the State Workmen's Compen sation Commission in 1911 and to re port to the session of 1921 and for continuance of the Old Age Pension Commission to report at the next legislative session were favorably re ported to the House. Other bills j which came out included the McKay bill allowing juries in first degree murder, convictions to fix penalty at j death or life imprisonment; requir- ] ; ing traction engines to have spark i 1 arresters; establishing new bureaus ] Sin the Internal Affairs Department j and establishing eight hour day for j I employes of prisons. \MERICAXI7.E MOTHERS IS ADVICE TO FOREIGN BOR\ j To make a success of Americani- i ; nation work among the foreign born j lesidents it should begin with the mothers in the homes. Miss Mary | Ituth Fisher, director of Home Eco- j nomics of the Extension Department of the Dauphin County Farm Bureau j said when she returned from a visit j in the Lykens Valley district. This , evening she will speak at Berrys-j burg giving a demonstration on the! food value of milk and vegetables. Tomorrow afternoon and evening she will give a smaller demonstration at | Ivillinger. H. G. Niesley, county farm | agent, will speak to farmers at Grange Hall on the importance of having a sufficient number of silos. DEFEATS BUND PLAN Trenton. X. ,J„ March 19. The ! Senate yesterday, after a two hours' I debate, defeated a bill by Senator j Edward 1. Edwards, of Hudson j county, for a 112.000,000 bond issue, | to be used equally for constructing | the New York, Jersey City tunnel under the Hudson and the Camden- Philadelphia bridge over the Dela ware river. The bill was lost by a vote of 11 to 6. FURNITURE DEALERS TO EXHIBIT LATEST DESIGN I Tentative plana for a home furnish- I ing exhibition were made at a meet- j ing of the Harrisburg Furniture I Dealers' Association, following a dinner at the Senate Hotel last eve- ! nlng. Representatives were present I from the princpal furniture stores of I the city. Middletown School Board Sets Commencement Dates —■ The school board nipt In special ses sion on Mond#y evening with four mem bers being present. The bills ordered paid amounted to $507.68. The Hatz oratorial contest will be held Friday evening. April 4, in the High school room; Grammar school exercises in the High school building, Friday evening. May 23 ; baccalaureate services, gun day, May 25 ; High school commence ment exercises Thursday evening, May 29. in the Realty theater. The schools will close on Good Friday. The schools closed down this afternoon In respect of the funeral of the late Dr. N. C. Sehaeffer. The funeral of the late_ John H. Nlt rauer was held from the home of his son, William Nitrauer. Highspire, this afternoon, with services at 2 o'clock. The Rev. James Cunningham, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church, of town, and the Rev. Mr. Pee, of Highspire, of ficiated. The pallbearers were Cornelius, Ambrose and William Nitrauer, three sons, and George Nauss. Burial was made in the Middletown cemetery. Over $2OO was realized by the dance given by the mothers of the Jitney Club Girls in the Luna rink on Monday even ing, and will be used towards the com munity club fund started sometime ago by the club. T.he Ladies' Aid Society of the Metho dist church will hold a parcel sale at the store of A. G. Banks, on Saturday, | March 29. Mitchell Taswell was given a hearing , before Squire \V. J. Kifinard charged j with stealing a pair of shoes from the j I store of Harry Deimler. Emaus street The shoes belonged to John Boyey. He ■ pleaded guilty and was taken to the Harrisburg Jail for court. I Sergeant William Hippie, of Carlisle, jis spending several days' furlough in town with his wife at the Washington House, and lie experts to be mustered out of service in about two weeks. Mrs. Anna March, who had been the guest of her sister. Mrs. H. B. Garver, | >TkeUVe | | Great Moving j —Going on in Harrisburg these days—but the "Big" moving is at DQUTRICHS where you can buy from the remainder of our Winter Suits and Overcoats ranging in price from $25, $3O, $35, $4O to $45 at the lowest rock-bottom price ever placed on good clothing. Suits 5 Overcoats | Now don't make a mistake and think they will last | for we don't want to retain a single garment They "must go" quickly, and when they are gone we know there will be at least five hundred men who own a "Suit" or "Overcoat" at a great deal less than they could buy clothes at wholesale prices—We had "three" customers yesterday who bought S "Five" Garments Each —I 1 You know they must look pretty good when they are I being bought in quantities like this—Perhaps you can find one or more among this B lot that will please you—However, come in and look them over—No harm done if you don't buy— g| But we rather doubt if you will be able to resist the temptation when you see what's here at 517.75 t The Store Everybody Is Talking About I 304 fa BfrV (j£j|B fji Harrisburg, | Market St., p a . East Mater street, for the past two weeks, returned to her home at Hamp ton. Pa. The funeral of the late Walter Buck ingham was held from the home of his sister. MrS. Charles Shaub, Ann street, this afternoon. The Middletown Praying Band met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jncob Kinsey, Swatara street, last evening. William Myers, who had been over seas for the past year and a half, but recently returned home and stationed at Camp Merritt, N. J.. spent the past several days in Royalton, as the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Myers. He expects to be mustered out of service In two weeks. The St. Patrick's party held by the Ladies' Aid on Monday evening at the home of Mrs. I>. \Y. Huntzberger, North Union street, proved a suets ss and a nice sum was realized. The rooms were decorated for the occasion, Joseph Schaeffer left yesterday for Xorristown. wliere lie has secured a po sition. The regular monthly meeting of the Sunday school class of J. It. Martin, of the Church of God, was held at the home of Mrs. K. C. Urinser, North Union street, last evening. Get Rid of That Persistent Cough Stop that weakening, persistent coughi or cold, threatening throat or lunc affections, with Eckman's Alterative, the tonic and upbullder of 20 years'' successful use. 80c and 11.50 Dottles from druggists, or from ECKMAN LABORATORY. Philadelphia 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers