10 SALVATION ARMY OPENS ITS FIRST "HUTMN PARK Will Entertain and Lodge American Soldiers in The French Capital Parts, April 19.—T0 (five the American soldiers a center where they can both lodge and spend their time profitably throughout the day, the Salvation Army has Just opened i JWFTEEDk JjSjf. | * CttRBUHETOH: | PoWER \ fifty T"vOES your car lack the power to take ugl ijM) L/ the hills on high? Do you have to NsA flyty shift sears on lulls that she used to WyJ take on high ? ugj Install a Rayfield carburetor and you j||| will add real power to the engine. And jgj Jran 1 Rayfield power means more miles per Kji gallon. You'll find you get 25% more y) N&d mites per gallon after installing a Ray- j And with the added POWER you'll Y/A| get more speed, pull, pep, endurance and JW economy. Drive around tomorrow. We ®y/ will tell vou in detail just what a Rayfield will do for that car of yours. frTjj Federick's Garage | 1 hot -os jjonTn seventh t. Distributor* General Automobile Repairing Hupmobile Service Station Ready for the Great* ON TIRES Leading Standard Makes We are offering Brands now most popular with motor ists the country over at special prices that will save you from 25 to 40 % Immense stocks of guaranteed, selected "seconds" in cluded. Anticipate your Spring and Summer Tire needs—selec tion made now will be held for future delivery. Fisk Marathon General McGraw McLean Kokomo Batavia Firestone Globe A FEW OF OUR PRICES Plain. Non-Skid. Tubes. 30x3 $lO.OO $11.75 $2.10 512.85 $14.95 $2.45 31x4 $20.15 $23.50 $3.40 32x4 ■>. $20.50 $24.00 $3.50 34x4 . —522.10 $26.00 $3.60 34x4J4 $29.50 $34.45 $4.60 530.80 $35.75 $4.75 35x5 $36.40 $42.25 $5.70 These are "seconds" and that term is applied to any new tires that are not firsts—which are blemished or shop worn, but for all practical purposes, these tires are as good as firsts. None bear any imperfections that will affect their service giving qualities. ALL TIRES GUARANTEED • Sale Will Be Continued Throughout the Month. Agency For Keystone Tires Keystone Tires are built to meet the demand for more economical tire service and yield the maximum of uninter rupted eerviefsat-therminimum cost price. Fair Tire & Rubber Co. 317 Chestnut Street HARRISBURG, PA. FORMERLY TROUP BROS. PIANO HOUSE OPEN EVENINGS. SATURDAY EVENING, ' HAHRISBUHO TELEGR3tPH APRIL 19, 1919. its first "hut" in Paris proper. It is situated on the Rue Clignancourt, and was formerly the barracks of the 76th French Infantry regiment. The "hut" accommodates 3,000 men. Several welfare organizations which operate among the American soldiers, including the Young Men's Christian Association, Salvation Army, Jewish Welfare League, Knights of Columbus and the Ameri can Library Association have com bined to offer the boys here both instruction and entertainment. Doughnuts, pies, flapjacks and cook ies "as mother makes them," are provided for all comers. Athletic meetings alternate with singing and lectures, and there is much interest in a course of fencing bouts, which has Just started. Similar institutions are being opened at the big seaports such as Brest, Bordeaux and: St. Nazaire, where the American authorities have placed 25 hangars at the disposal of the Salvation Army. To minister to the comforts of lonely American units In the de vasted districts of Belgium and northern France, where the. accom modation Is one of the most primi tive description and where social centers are few and far between. Colonel William A. Mclntyre of New York, has organized a system of traveling kitchens where the men will be able to obtain well-cooked food and cat it in comfort instead of in a haphazard fashion on the doorstep of some half-demolished dwelling house, as is now the rule rather than the exception. Tradesmen Threaten to Strike Unless the Boat Owners Yield New York, April 19.—A strike of all the trades unionists In the bor oughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn is threatened unless private boat owners make "reasonable conces sions" to their men in an effort to end the strike of the Marine Work ers' Affiliation. The declaration that a general strike was imminent was made by Edward I. Hannah, president of the Central Federated Union, which in cludes all the trades in Manhattan, after a conference at the city hall presided over by Mayor Hyland at which the armistice granted by the harbor workers was extended an other 24 hours. The truce was pro longed to give the mayor another opportunity to confer with private boat owners regarding acceptance of an arbitration offer made by their, employes. I ROWE HBS! TRUCK [ Before yon buy any truck, stop in at the Sunshine Garage and investigate tills wonderful truck. Built up to a standard that assures real service under all conditions, 2 to 5-ton capacity solid or pncuinntic tires; 2 !£-tou special—B-eylinder. Tired with j giant pneumatics. SUNSHINE GARAGE J. L. RIGGIO, Prop. 27 N. Cameron St. *' To Car Owners Asked and Answered J > ! Is your car in tiptop condition, spic and span, with a ; * I new coat of paint for summer use? < ( If not, have us estimate your job of painting and trim -1 , ming. We will take your wrecked car and make it like 1 t • a new one. Having one of the most modern shops of the j i kind in Central Pennsylvania, we are prepared to render , you a service that pleases. * Truck owners should see about that new body for their I truck. We have specialists in the art of building "bodies | > 1 that endure." It will pay you to get our prices. * First-Class Auto Painting, Metal Bumping and Trimming, Fenders straightened, Spring and Axle work, Welding and I J 1 t Brazing a specialty. ' , ® POIiICY: "Satisfied Customers" <i f A Fair CARRIAGE AND < V* rv. 1 CXI I AUTO WORKS : , 1135 MULBERRY STREET ' ' 1 ' East End Mulberry Street Bridge , Makers of Truck Bodies That Endure • A Car That Doesn't "Eat its Head Off" You won't believe, until you've tried it out, how many miles the wonderful Briscoe motor will squeeze out of a gallon of gas. About the time when the average motorist would begin to wonder whether he had enough gas to get back home, you'll have plenty left far a good long spin. And incidentally, you'll have a good many dollars that the other chap will have spent for gas and oil. Ask us to prove it. $BB5 Jadloo Toormgand Roadster Models Ctak mm DtfNNi-Tmu M. Brenner & Sons' Motor Co., Third and Hamilton Sts. i ite TO SUBMIT PLEA TO COL. HOUSE Irish Delegates Will Present All Papers on Their Request Today Parts, April 19.—Former Governor Edward F. Dunne, of Illinois, Frank P. Walsh, former chairman of the National War Labor Board, and Michael J. Ryan, of Philadelphia, sent to Paris by the Irish Societies in America to plead Ireland's cause before the Peace Conference, will have a meeting with Colonel House to-day, when they will submit all papers relating to their requests on the Irish question. The meetings with Colonel House are the result of Mr. Walsh's call on President Wil son yesterday, as the President re ferred the delegation to Colonel House. It is understood to bo the desire of the party to secure permission for three Irish delegates, including Pro fessor Edward De Valera and Count Plunkett, to come from Ireland for a hearing, but it is not known what attitude Colonel House will take con cerning the request. Col. McConkey Found Dead in Camp With Pistol by His Side Ran Aiyonlo, Tex., April 19. Lieutenant Colonel Clyde J. McCon key, Camp inspector at Camp Travis, was found dead in his quarters yes terday with a bullet hole through his head. His pistol was found be side the body. Colonel McConkey was unmarried and his 'home was at Brevator, Minn. He was 32 year old and had seen service in France. MIX 'EM UP AT SALONIKI I Salonlkl. April 19.—The Amert- Ican visitor finds here an extra ordinary mixture of races, tongues, • beliefs and customs. Salonlki is literally a melting-pot of human ity. No other city In the world, unless it be one of the great Amer ican centers, is so thoroughly cos mopolitan. Greeks, Mongols, Turks, r Slavs, Teutons, Italians and Eu -1 ropeans mingle and each under -0 stands the language of the other. 1 The market place is a babel of tongues. The lowest street ped * ler speaks at least four languages. 9 But these diverse races nssoclate b together only for business pur -1 poses. In their religious beliefs, 9 aspirations and sentiments a great 1 gulf separates them. Each has a 1 different Ideal and a distinct view -9 point of 'life. In Macedonia all re * llgions are tolerated. Salonlkl, or Thessalonica, as it was called in j early times, Is said to have been the door by which Christianity en , tered Europe. Indeed, devout res p idents relate with pride that It was here the Apostle Paul, after having evangelized Syria and Asia p Minor, came to preach the gospel t to tho unbelievers of Macedonia. GERMANS MUST REALIZE CRIME Columbia University Head Makes Reply to Protest of German Professors New York, Apri, 19. —Acknowledg- ment of Germany's wrongdoing' and contrition by her scholnrs and sa | vants for the "thirty-one kinds of | crime" committed by the Germans i during the war must be indicated ' before German scholarship and Ger i man science can be rehabilitated in the eyes of univeristy men of France, England and America, Nicholas I Murray Butler, president of Colum bia University, says in reply to a recent protest made by German pro fessors against "the outrageous ac tion" of the French high command in ordering German educators to leave the University of Strasborug, I within 2 4 hours. Dr. Butler's letter was sent to the ' rector of the University of Upsala, Sweden, who had transmitted an open letter of protest from the fac ulty of the University of Leipzig, ad dressed to the universities of Swit zerland, Holland, Denmark, Norway I and Sweden, together with a letter from the University of Heidelberg Heidelberg Academy, stating that those institutions joined in their ob- I jections to the treatment accorded their fellow savants. The neutral nations were requested to forward the German protest to scholars in allied countries. Clean Hands Necessary Reminding the protesters that "it is an established principle in Eng land and the United States that any one who comes into a court of equity seeking relief must come with clean hands," Dr. Butler declared that the allied peoples have not forgotten Germany's "amazing prostitution of scholarship and science to national lust," and that before public sympa thy can be expected the people of the allied nations want to know what measure of protest, if any, the rec tor and Senate of the University of Leipzig recorded against "the in human treatment of the scholars of the University of Louvain and against the wanton and barbarous destruction of the liberty of that university. , . Dr Butler cites "31 atrocious of fenses" committed by German arm ies and German agents during the war, indisputably proved by inter national commissions, such as en slavement of women, putting to death of hostages, starvation of civilians, pillage, wanton devasta- I tion, poisoning of wells, bombard ment of hospitals, sinking of hos pital ships and destruction of relig ious, charitable, educational and his toric buildings and monuments. "Acknowledgment of wrongdoing on the part of the German govern ment, the German armies and the German people, and contrition for that wrongdoing, are the first and necessary steps in the rehabilita tion before the world of German scholarship and Gorman science," says Dr. Butler's letter. Await Sonic Action "It is probably within the truth to say that the universities of France, England and the United States are awaiting with deep in terest and no small measure of anx iety, some sign that German scholars anil men of science realize the en ormity of the offenses, public and private, that have been committed by Germans and in the name of Germany during the war now end ing, and some evidence that these scholars and men of science feel sincere regret for them. "We have not forgotten the amaz ing prostitution of scholarship and science to national ludt marked by the formal appeal to the civilized world made by German professors in September, 1914. That appeal was an unmixed mass of untruths, and tho strain which it placed upon the intellectual and moral integrity of German scholars and men of sci ence will forever remain one of the events of the war which German militarism and Prussian autocracy forced upon the peaceful and liberty loving nations of the world." Distribute 2 3-4 P. C. Beer; Is Labeled Nonintoxicating New York, April 19. —Brewers of the New York district took action yesterday intended to speed court determination of their claim that beer of 3% per cent, alcoholic con tent may be produced without vio lating the food conservation regula tions, when two of their number be gan distribution of & brew of the strength specified in barrels bearing labels describing it aa a nonintoxi cating beverage. The kegs, sent out without revenue stamps, which the collector had re fused, carried tags announcing that sums equivalent to the cost of the stamps had been deposited in banks to await the claim of the govern ment. Attorneys for the brewers, who advised their aotlon, declared that other manufacturers, in New York and elsewhere throughout the country, alee would begin diatrtbut- 1 BODIES THROWN INTO CESSPOOLS Russian Soldier Tells What He Saw in the Village of Kouvchine Omsk, Siberia, April 19. —A Rus sian volunteer soldier who took part In the battle of Perm, gives the fol lowing narrative of what ho saw in the village of Kouvchine, not far from Perm, where he was stationed during the fighting which resulted in the complete defeat of the Bol sheviki. He was ordered to clean out three cesspools which were filled with the corpses of people who apparently belonged to the intellectual or cul tivated class of the community. Many of the bodies bore wounds with swords. He removed thirty corpses from the first pit, the ages of the victims ranging from 16 to 60 years. There were several women among the victims. All the bodies were naked. Thero was rea son to believe, in the soldier's opin ion, that many of the people were thrown into the pits still alive and they died by slow suffocation and from the effects of their wounds. The inhabitants of the village were so terrified that they acted like in san persons. When the Siberians came as victors and the town bells rang out, the people Jumped for Joy, clasping hands and skipping around in circles. In the neighboring village of Gor nozavodsk, situated on a railroad, the people were found to be abso lutely without nourishment, and the condition of the children was piti able to witness. BLACK'S GARAGE 205 S. 17th St. We have a real tire hospital —every kind of vulcanizing work done on short notice, and every piece of wdrk guar anteed. VULCANIZING We carry a complete line of accessories, gasoline, etc. Our store is open day and night. This means real service. 205 S. 17th St. BLACK'S GARAGE ,jfijl\ W 1 rfUfT... * INMHI Powerful and economical *£llixsl it is also unusually quiet f%l/hfcf fVn fb fib/111 | Its nation-wide performance in the hands of owners has now estab- ! ' 1 ' lished beyond question the un- touh", ciTuioo usual power of the Nash Six with Seven . Passenger Perfected Valve-In-Head Motor. Six- Passenger . • * * _ • Sedan • • • $2250 it is pleasing in appearance, com- Four- Passenger 1 fortable, quiet and economical of Prices f. o. b. fuel It has more than fulfilled the cno " expectations of those familiar with the high manufacturing abil ity of the Nash organization. > Myers Motor Sales Co. Sales and Service 1210 Penn Street Below Broad Street Harrisburg, Pa. rmmm r - i I Ifg M p EUVERY TOREKEEPERS who care to keep trade know that they must give the beat service at the loweat costs. Women will give their business to the merchant who sells the finest goods at the lowest prices—and who keeps his deli v- | ery promises. 1) The VIM Delivery Car is the most 9 economical delivery unit on the market. It saves money for the storekeeper and | H| serves his customers efficiently. 9 Auk jour competitor down the block wbnt g IS® he think* of hi* VIM. llc'll tell yon that It I* the one big renxon why hi* business I* In creaslng *o rapidly. g I.et tell YOU Junt what n VIM will mean In YOUR bunlne**. There are 14 body type* to cboone from. Call, write or phone |l ANDREW REDMOND ( Dlatribntor Third and Reily Sts., Harrisburg, Pa. Bell 2133 nial 418 ARE YOU SURE THAT NEW BATTERY? G Maybe we can tlx up your old one and save you money. That's what O we're here for. We have the QOULD QUALITY parts of the right type, arid we have the skill and experience. UYes, we would make more money selling you a NKW battery but we are Lin the business to stay. If a good re pair job that saves you money will Dmake you a permanent customer, that's good business for us and for you. Automobile Electrical Repairing THE BATTERY >' ou have trouble with your wittt rrww lighting system, motor, gen iin * rll ' erator or storage battery—Call DREADNAUGHT US ' w have Expert Mechan nr .mi •<_. ,cs - who can remedy your trou- I tolc. ELECTRA GARAGE Evergreen and Thompson Bla.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers