10 DESIGN RULES TO MAKE GOOD ARMY Court Martial System is not For the Individual Soldier Woslilngton. April IS. —The sys-; tem of military jurisdiction is do-: signed to. produce an efficient, de- ! pendable lighting army, not to do j exact justice to individual soldiers, • according to the views vigorously | presented yesterday to the commit- ! tee of the American Bar Association j by army officers of Held experience, ! including Major General Edwin F. I Glenn, organizer and commander of i the 83rd division and now again in I command of Camp Sherman. In at- i taining that objective, the officers I contended, the present machinery j Beautify Skin and Hair By i Daily Use Of Cuticura Let Cuticura be your beauty doc- ! tor, one that really does something j to purify and beautify your hair ana skin. Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water to cleanse the pores. If j signs of redness, roughness or pirn- j pi esare present, or dandruff onscalp, touch gently with Cuticura Ointment before bathing or shampooing, j They are ideal for alf toilet uses. B, nr. to toot the foaclooUni frajruiro of Call •mrm T&leun f*r pcrfimlng ik iklo. "FAKE" ASPIRIN WAS MM Counterfeiter Caught! The New York health authorities had a Brook lyn manufacturer sentenced to the penitentiary for selling throughout the United States millions of "Talcum powder" tablets as Aspirin Tablets. Don't ask for Aspirin Tablets—Always say "Bayer." Don't buy Aspirin in a pill box! Get Bayer package! s N. Always say, "Give me genuine / , \ 'Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.'" Insist RAYFf^ you want only the' Bayer package with the "Bayer Cross" on the package and on the tablets. The genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" have been | proved safe by millions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism. Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal Colds, Joint Pains, Neuritis. Proper dose in every "Bayer" package. American owned! Boxes of 12 tablets—Bottles of 24—Bottles of 100—Also Capsules. Attrfrin U the trtde mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaccticaddester of Salicylieaeid 25c jte.. "Twenty-five Cents" II It ST PAYMENT J&> \ v _jJ. „ ]L~ Delivers to you a K1& 'WHITE'AUTO LIFT baking, I SEWING MACHINE During Our I'roKrCNlve Sale unt * er Simple HWln. wm automatic lever CLUB IS FILLING FAST control. No Thr opportune time to buy— urtr smoky wcks to iih wrll an knit nml wire—pay- dean,forasbes -"J-t.ao arranged that you don't tOS kindlers re -535.00 IQ/> A Kreat saving fea- _ tut o of this plan is Come in end order your the saving of 100 on each Florence Oil Stove FINAL paymen* paid In ad vance of its duo date. COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS Furniture, nPTB f SmS K" WW m jf> Talking Carpets Machines Stoves Records 312 JIAItKET STIIEET FRIDAY EVENING, Harrisbtjrg TELEGRAPH APRIL 18, 1919. for enforcing military discipline hud proved both efficient and fair, the final product of the system closely I approximating justice to the indi | vidua! in addition to producing what i General Glenn described as the best ; disciplined army in France. I Cases of courts martial sentences I so excessive in the penalty awarded !as to be ridiculous were freely ad j mitted by the officers. Such sen- I tences only served. General Glenn ! insisted, to prove that even in the j early stage of the military legal pro i ceedings, the action of the courts in j no case being final, to prove that j fairness was the general .rule, j Judge Gregory, chairman of the 'committee, and General Glenn en- I gaged in considerable argument; j which brought out that the officer J speaking botli from his military ex i perience and his special training in | civil law as a graduate of the law ; school of the University of Minne ! sota, saw little in common between | the purposes of civil justice and its ! military equivalent. Major Charles H. Mac Donald, General Glenn's di visional judge advocate at Camp ' Sherman, but who is a temporary j officer and before the war was coun | sel for the Federal Trade Commis sion. followed his chief and express |ed the same views. "When exact justice interferes | with the building up of the army, exact justice must be sacrificed," I Major Mac Donald said. Denies Alleged Misconduct of U. S. Missionaries New York, April 18.—Dr. George T. Scott, speaking in behalf of the : Presbyterian Board of Foreign Mis : sions denies that any of the mission ; aries representing the board in Per | sia had interfered in local affairs i there as represented to the State : Department. He said that instead of j strife between Persians and Assyr | ians, as alleged, the Presbyterian j missionaries had on the contrary i sought to use their utmost efforts to j allay troubles between the various ! races in Persia. He said that eight j missionaries had died in taking care | of refugees of various races driven ' from the district around Urumiah | in northwestern Persia by the Turks | and Kurds and others had suffered | untold privation. One who had died j was Dr. William A. Shedd, appointed I acting t'nited States consul at t'r. ' umiah. NORTHCLIFFE : ATTACKS GEORGE , His Newspapers Accuses j British Premier of Failing in Promises | lxnuloii, April IS.— (By the 4 s "'' I sociatcd Press) — L Open warfare be- j j tween David Lloyd George, the Brit- i I ish prime minister, and Lord North-' |eliffe, England's foremost publisher, I j is to the political world the most in- 1 j tercsting result of the premier's fly jing visit to London from the Paris : peace conference and his speech be > fore parliament Wednesday, si Lord Northclift'e and Baron Bea i jverbrook who served as the official i "eye witness" l'or the Canadian gov i 1 eminent at the front in 1916 and r | later became chancellor of the • | Duchy of Lancaster and minister of - j information, always have been cred ■ | ited with being the. powers behind j the scenes who brought about the re sjtirement of Premier Asquith and .itlie succession of Lloyd George as ' head of the cabinet. Northcliffe's newspapers gave Lloyd George gen jcral support throughout his man ] agemcnt of the war, .but when the j general election followed the armis tice they shifted somewhat to the ; attitude of friendly critics. Only . j during the latest developments of ' j tho peace conference have they be | come sharply critical of Mr. Lloyd ! | George's leadership. ! | The premier in his speech in the . i House of Commons credited this fact jto the "disease of vanity," and 1 pointedly hinted that it was due to ' , disappointment on Lord Northcliffe's Cpart that he had not been appointed .j on the peace delegation. The pre , j mier referred to the peace terms ! Lord Notlicliffe recommended in the " Times before tho peace conference i | began, saying: r | "I am prepared to make some al , loivance wlicn a man is laboring i under a keen sense of disappoint ment. However unjustified and how . ever ridiculous the expectations may i he, under those circumstances he al , ways is apt to think the world is s badly run." I The Times today replied with a [ slashing attack, accusing Lloyd I George of overlooking reports pre . pared by experts. "It is currently said by his col leagues ill Paris," the Times de clares. "that while he is able to read and write he does neither." After saying that the record of the Times during the war speaks for itself the newspaper apparently threatens a future attack, saying "some points of his war records re quire to be more fully known." The Evening News, a Nortlicliffe publication to-day prints a cartoon of the premier hovering over West minster in an airplane labeled "Hot air," with bombs for the Northcliffe papers. Mr. Lloyd George and Lord North cliffe probably are'the two most in j fiuential personal forces in British j politics, and now that they are f fiercely and publicly joined in battle, I the effect upon Mr. Lloyd George's | political fortunes and the test of the influence of the Northcliffe press which is expected to follow will mark the beginning of a new poli tical chapter the developments of which are being discussed with the liveliest interest. Each man is an eager fighter, and the battle between the little Welsh "giant" and the newspaper Napoleon is not likely to be a tame one. Investigate Books of Black Diamond Oil Co., Now Bankrupt Chicago. April 18.—An investiga tion into the affairs of the Black Diamond Oil Company, capitalized for $25,000,000, was begun yesterday by Federal Judge Landis. A volun tary petition in bankruptcy was filed in Washington, D. C., by officials of the company last December. It is asserted that $70,000 assets are in tho hands of the Rev. Hart ley O. Chambers and A. D. O'Neill, of Chicago. Attorney J. Korvis, representing the Washington" trustee, said he was attempting to trace assets valued at between $20,000,000 and sfo,- 000,000, which were scheduled in a sworn statement to the Secretary of State of Illinois in an application for a "blue sky license. Arthur C. McLaughry. treasurer of the company, testified he had re- I ceived $6,000 from sales of stock. New York Gunmen Admit Guilt; Given Sentences Philadelphia, April 18.—Fjve of the alleged gunmen from New York, arrested in connection with the kill ing of a policeman on the Fifth ward election row in September, 1917, yes terday changed their pleas of not guilty to guilty on the charge of manslaughter. Louis Brunelli, An thony Coiangelo and Nicholas Con onico were sentenced to two years each and Nicholas Ritt and Vincen zo Leono to 22 months each. All of the sentences date from the com mitments. The man who fired the shot that killed the policeman is serving fif teen years. Mrs. W. ATMurdock, of Ladies' Auxiliary to B. of L. E., Dies Chicago, April 18. —Mrs. W. A. j Murdock, founder and president ever I since its organization thirty-two | years ago of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Grand International Brother- J hood of Locomotive Engineers, died at her home yesterday after a brief .illness. She was born at Clinton, J lowa, and had lived in Chicago since 1882. Mrs. Murdock is known in Har risburg, having visited here several times during the meetings of the railroad engineers and the auxiliary. Fishermen Find Philadelphia Man in Creek Near Lewistown Lewistown, Pa., April 18,—Trout fishermen yesterday found the body of D. C. Kaseman, of Philadelphia, in a creek nine miles west of Lewis town. Kaseman was here looking over a lumber tract in which he was Interested. He was last seen Tues day In Lewistown when he com plained of not feeling well. Heart trouble is believed to have caused his death. Valuables on his person were not disturbed. ""What were you saying about Ger many?" "I say there seems to be the ut most willingness to concede us the championship if we'll just forego the stakes." —Louisville Courier. British Used 4,000,000 Rounds of Artillery Ammunition in Somme Washington, April 18.—During the battle of the Somme in 1916, the British army used four million rounds of artillery ammunition, ac cording to a statistical announce ment published by the War Depart ment. This is the largest number of shells used in any single engage ment so far as records show. For a single, hour, however, the American forces in the battle of the St. Mihiel salient in 1918 far sur passed this record, using 1,098,217 shells in four hours. fif ~^ re Ready 1 EASTER II ff>j| Our Easter Display of fine footwear for ill Iflt Men, Women and Children is now com- W*l If plete. Thousands of pairs of the season's newest and most exclusive models are Era|] KJ I | awaiting your selection. gljß SS Y\ Pumps, Oxfords and Ladies' fM fij White Canvas and Kid Boots J£B I I 11 | jjjj|j l All Are Here in a Profusion of Shades and Styles Not IK I l' '/ sipjl Being the largest retail shoe dealer in the world and buy- , ?f/ H ing direct from the leading manufacturers in the United A J SHM•• ///> ft&hiT ffiA\ States, We can, and do, give you greater values than mm Jm Sti nifcrL sf*t-s elsewhere. Cash buying and up-to-date retailing meth ods enable us to EM| For Men For Women For Children |># We have the greatest values We have made every provi- Their little wants for Easter r3f /-H • of up-to-date Men's Oxfords sion in the Ladies' Depart- have not been overlooked by fL> j ' in all leathers and styles ever ment - Pum P s and Oxfords the big Kinney Stores. A HI/' bill SI shown in Harrisburg. Also ,n du "' and . w ? ite " r !° ad °i children's Easy Wk ; ffjHjfgfiSt . ® canvas in endless varieties. Walkers, Emmy Lous, Sister J4l 1 a substantia ' ' ine °f Men 9 Canvas and Kid White Sues, Canvas Baby Dolls, P®T ' HI Work Shoes for hard wear Boots —in fact, anything ' and a large line of Patent ' n p,k > Blucher, Button and you might suggest will be and Dull Baby Dolls, along 1$ A I Scouts, and our prices are found here for your Easter with White Canvas and Vta ifb> Jfl t m the lowest in the county- ne ?. ds . A large extra force Leather Shoes for the ||^Kg JmA .. . 3 will be in attendance from youngest to the oldest. ffiilffi W rfl nothin S ov cr $5.98. now until Easter> SQ yQur 6 J* 'lll delay will not be lons< We give just as much attention to wr" uSm Hi ?k Say / ha * t u t I ,ia " However, we admit this will be the ' selecting the proper footwear for t\l\l 11$ 6 •" c y 1 can busiest store in town, so shop early children as we do the highest priced j\ ti^' If 11 make this assertion. as possible, please. senior shoe in our store. j Bl Ladies' Hosiery in Silk and Cotton to match your new Shoes and Oxfords war ljs| The Cotton Sell at 49c to 79c The Silk Sell from 98c to $2.98 '#>>"•] IIS G. R.Kinney Conine. HI IE Shoe Bargains 19 and 21 N. 4til Street With th J]LUUe*PHces APPOINTMENTS MAKE BUSY DAY President Wilson Held Conference with Chinese Peace Delegation Paris, April 18.—With no meeting of the Council of Four yesterday, President Wilson devoted the entire i day to a series of appointments, be ginning at ten o'clock with the I Chinese delegation to the peace conference and ending after five o'clock with Frank P. Walsh, a j member of the delegation sent by ; Irish societies in America to plead j the cause of Ireland. I The program .for the day had been ' planned carefully, the President re ceiving some one every fifteen min utes. Among those received were a French delegation which wanted I to see the President about the left j bank of the Rhine; the foreign min i ister of Switzerland; a delegate from Chuldea, two American women labor j leaders, the Patriarch of Constan ' tinople, Premier Bratiano, of Ru -1 mania. Premier Pachitch, of Serbia, i the Portuguese minister of foreign |affairs, and many others who desired jto dismiss the problems of their I countries. SOMKSTIM.ES GOES WRONG "I told her' that she and her daughter might well be taken for sisters." "That stuff goes good." "Yes, it went good with mother, and COUGHERiT! SureSds as I 1070 Shiloh 3o bftOPS-STOPS COUGHS but I lest out with the glrL-"—touls vllle Courler^Jeurnal; Trncksj | Continuous Service 1 and Long Run Economy ffGet Cs Give You Full Details! Overland-Harrisbnrg Co.| 212-214 North Second Street! i Ta^iwiiimtn]i:iiiimiHmiin;iiiuinL';;iiiiiUiiii)imiiiini:iiiiniiiaiiiuiffliit)^
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers