GENERAL WOOD'S ■ NAME TO BE PUT TO CONVENTION Army Chief Will Be Proposed at Party Gathering by New '* Hampshire, Says Senator Washington, May s.—ln the opin ion of Senator Moses of New Hamp shire, a Browing sentiment is spread ing throughout tne Republican party for the nomination of General Leon ard Wood as the party's candidate for President in 1920. Senator. Moses says New Hampshire will offer Gen. Wood's name at the Republican Con vention as a favoraite son, and he be lieves that the General, if nominated would be elected. Senator Moses says sentiment for General Wood is developing in all the New Kngland states, as well as throughout the West. He finds "more sentiment of the kind that elects Wood than any other who has been mentioned as a nominee in 1020." The only question, he says, is whether the demand among the party's voters can he "transmuted into the kind of sen timent that produces delegates and nominates Presidents." Senator Moses says New Hamp shire has prior claim to General Wood, as he was born in that State, but that Massachusetts also backs him, as he entered the army from that State, while Kansas lias given him her citizenship. "He will go to the convention," de clares the Senator, "like Grant from Appomatox and its famous apple tree, supported by a nation-wide cir cle of friends and, if nominated will 1 be elected." i The drift in the Republican Party toward General Wood the Senator says, "is readily explainable." "The people." he said, "are turning away from Wilson, who will return home sadly diminished in spite of the League of Nations and its initial ses sion to be held in Washington." To Explain Tenets of Christian Science in Lecture at Orpheum The tenets of Christian Science will ho explained in a lecture to lie given by John c. I.athrop, of Brook line, Mass., in the Orpheum Theater to-night. Mr. I.athrop, who holds the degree of liaehelor of Christian Science, is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston. Mass. To-night's lecture will he free and there will be no offering. It is given under the auspices of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, which is located at Front and AVoodhine streets. Jewish Welfare Board Workers to Help Welcome Home Boys of Old Eighth All persons interested in the work of the Jewish Welfare Board are asked by officials to meet at the Board of Trade Hall two hours prior to the parade being arranged to wel come home tho returning Harris burg men of the Twenty-eighth In fantry. Banners and other supplies will he furnished at this place and officials are quite anxious to have > a large representation. The delega- ; tion will march from the Board of . Trade building to the place designat- . ed for it in Front street. Reservoir Golf Club Gets Season Under Way With the opening Saturday at the Flarrisburg Park Golf Club's course of the handicap tournament, the I season was officially gotten under , way. Karl E. Richards is chair- I man of the handicap committee. Under the new ruling all handt- ! caps will be revised every three | weeks and all match play will be > based upon the findings of the com- j mittee. Failure of a player to turn | in his score will prevent his taking . part in competitive match play for . two weeks. The committee has taken off the stroke given at No. 3 | hole to handicap men and given it ! at Xo. 6. A IXII.I tlt Y TO ltl:\|K\Y HOMECOMING or SOI.niHItS j Mrs. Edward F. Doehne. chairman 1 of the St. Andrew's Red Cross ; auxiliary, to-day asked that the ; workers of her auxiliary assemble at Front and Walnut streets as soon as I word concerning tho time of the big ! homecoming parade is received. She I lias asked that they bo in uniform. j The Philadelphia Bulletin will. print Robert W. Chambers' latest' novel. The Dark Star," beginning l to-day Monday, May sth. It is a thrilling story of adven ture, based upon tlie work of the German and Turkish Secret Service and their attempts to recover the lost plans of the fortification of y Gallipoli. Pretty Ruhannah Carcw is a child ! of the Dark Star. An amazing mock j marriage and a hurried escape to! Paris fill her early life with excite-i ment. When the European War breaks! out, she cables Jim Xeeland to bring to her a box her father had origi nally brought from Gallipoli. She unintentionally plunges Xe6- land into intrigue and adventure, the like of which few men have ever experienced. His courage and re sourcefulness enable him to outwit the German and Turkish agents re peatedly. If you enjoy a rare tale of rom ance, adventure, mystery and intrigue, tell your newgearrier to serve you regularly with The Phila delphia Bulletin that you may read the daily installments of this great novel, beginning Monday, May sth. MONDAY EVENING, Girl Wins $1,400 Piano in Contest; Wins Over Six Players [ r~ ' • •- • NAOMI HOWARD BEVARD Playing against six other contest ants, Naomi H. Bevard, of 1323 Green street, won the prize of a grand pianoforte valued at $1,400 in the tenth annual Mason & Hamlin Piano Company at the competition instituted by the New England Con servatory of Music last Thursday afternoon. Word was received here yesterday of the Harrisburg* pian iste's success. Miss Bevard is a sen {ior. The contest was said to have I been one of tlie closest in several years. The judges were Henri Ra baud, Philip Hale and Arthur W. Foote. Eacli contestant was required to play the following numbers: Bach's "Chromatic Fantasie in B Minor" (without fugue); Beethoven's "Sonata in A Flat Major," Op. 110 (first movement as far as Allegro Molto); Chopin's "Scherzo in B Minor," Op. 20 (without repetitions). The seven contestants were as fol lows: Dorothea Ross Blake, Brookline; Viola Myrtle Silver, Brockton: Reta Angelina Pray Slack, Somerville; Helen Natalie Moses, Brookline; Naomi Howard Bevard, Harrisburg, Pa.; Mary Eliz abeth Schenck, Mctuchen, N. J.; Frank Wilson Asper, Salt Lake City, Utah. Previous winners of the Mason & Hamlin prize have been: 1910, Julius Chaloff; 1911, Grace Nichol son; 1912, Charles L. Shepherd; 1913, Sara Helen Littlejohn; 1914, Herbert Ringwall; 1915, Howard M. Coding; 19lti, Fannie M. Levis; 1917, Martha Baird; 1918, Sue Kyle Southwick. When in Harrisburg Miss Bevard studied with Madame Pfuhl-Froelich, graduating from her school in 1912. Miss Bevard is a member of the Wed nesday Club in which she took 'an active part before she left for Bos ton, where she has been studying for two years. She has had her train ing there under George Proctor, one of the best known teachers of that city and a fine exponent of the great master Leschetizsky, with whom he studied in Vienna for many years. Miss Bevard will receive a solist's diploma from the New England Con servatory in June, at which time she will play a concerto with the Oon ; servatory Orchestra. Says Friend "Forgot" to Get Pint of Liquor On a disorderly charge, Charles i Hale and Frank Werner will lie given i hearings in police coutt during the j afternoon. The men were arrested (after a quarrel when Werner charged i Hale with "forgetting" to secure hint (a pint of whisky with the $1.25 j which lie had furnished to him for 'that purpose. | Mary Johnson, charged with lar ceny of $25 from the person of Ches- I ter R. Rhoades, will be given a hear- I ing in police court during the after | noon. Rhoades is being held on a .disorderly practice charge. I John Howards, charged with the I larceny of two inner tubes front the automobile'of Harry Sebold, while ! it was standing in front of the Fry Coal Company in Market street, is scheduled for a hearing before I Mayor Keister. Fears Social Upheaval in England Is Near ! New York, May s.—Mrs. Mary I Mac Arthur, secretary of the British j Women's Trade Union League and | of the National Federation of Worn, en Workers, declared in an address (here last night that England seems to be dangerously near a social un ' heaval. I "I believe that England Is stand | ing at the parting of the ways," site I said. "There is grave doubt in some (quarters ns to whether the question j will be settled by constitutional means or otherwise. It is my belief | that it will tie settled by constitu ! tional means." Paul Houck Heard of For New Place The bill re-organising the Work ! men's Compensation Bureau will be j presented to the Legislature to-night, j It will not make the bureau a sep- I arate department, but will create ! some additional divisions and enlarge its scope. One of the features of the 'bill will he the creation of the of fice of supervisor of referees at *6,600, a year tor which the name of Paul W. Houck, who retires to-mor row as Secretary of Internal Affairs, is being mentioned. ! VIVA VOCE CLUB TO MEET The fourth regular monthly meet j ing of the Viva Voce Club will be held this evening at 8 o'clock. The club meets at 203 State street. The ! following program will be given by club members: (a) "Faith in Spring." Schubert; (b) "It is Spring | Dear Heart," Ashford. Miss Ruth Steinhauer; discussion, "The League of Nations," by Mildred Rudy, Maude Miller and Dewitt Waters; "Liebestraume," (Love Dream) No. 3, Liszt, Miss Frances Sutton. BUILDING PERMITS Building permits were issued to day to Harry M. Cohen, W. L. Grossman contractor, to construct a warehouse of corrugated iron south of Paxton street along the railroad, at a cost of $1,000; and to William Rickbaugh. Joseph Senft, contractor, to build an addition at 1845 Derry street, for SIOO. nnv scouts sei.i, noxns The Roy Scouts to-day had sold 363 bonds for h total of $25,750. Ralph Huston. Troop 6. is first with thirty live bends amounting to $2,400. Ahra-- lu'in Mlchlovitz is second with a sale of teventeen bonds. IGERMAN WRITER SHIVERS UNDER FRENCH FROST Bitter Teuton Expresses Dis gust at Treatment Accorded Huns by the Frenchmen Berlin, May 5. Newspapermen with the German peace delegation at • Versailles are sending generally conser vative accounts of their experiences, but Schuermann. the correspondent of the German Gazette who wielded a bitter pen during the war, does not disguise his disgust nt the treatment given the Germans by the French. He tells of a stenographer who sought to purchase tooth powedr at a drug i store and "nearly caused a diplomatic ! breach," the incident ending with her explusion from the store. The writer | says that American correspondents, "be lieving they could move about as freely I as they do in Berlin," tried to interview I a member of the German delegation on | Its arrival but were sharply denied the privilege. I Schuermann complains of the high | prices, especially since the German mark ; must be transformed in francs, and says " j the charge for making the exchange is 1 ; exorbitant. He closes by saying: t j "Frenchmen are ueither to petty nor , ' proud to to cheap business with enemy , j delegates." l NAMED GUARDIAN The Union Trust company was , appointed guardian for Mrs. Cathe rine S. Fi'jipatriik, minor wife of George W. Pilzpat #)2k, who was - killed in an accident January 16, ; while in army service overseas. Sht 1 will receive monthly insurance pay - mcnts from the government. TIME IS UNCERTAIN FOR RETURN OF BTH J! [Continued from First I'age.] • gether with some casuals made up ! of many widely-scattered regiments. There are a number of men from the city in the 28th divisional or ganizations not connected with the 112 th. Quite a few of these were old Eighth Regiment, National Guard men. Company K has Harrisburg and Central Pennsylvania guardsmen in it. York is well represented, and the following from the city and vicinity are still on the roster: First Sergeant B. O. Moge), whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Mogel, 1513 South Cam eron street, Harrisburg, visited him to-day; Philip London, 1420 North Sixth street; Roy C. Coble and Roy Fortney, New Cumberland. Former Governor's Troop men and others from the city had plenty to > do in the 103 d Mobile Ordnance Re pair shop. Among them are Ser l geant Irwin P. Weaver, Sergeant Paul A. Weaver, Gettysburg; Ser ( geant Thomas L. Durborow, Ser . geant Harry D. Wilson, 1235 Kit t tatinny street: Corporal Edgar D. . Lesher, 1506 Green; Corporal Daniel • J. Crowley, Steelton; Sergeant Rich . ard F. Hamer, 1100 North Second. . Repairing all kinds of guns from small arms to 155-millimeter (6- inch) French guns used by the 28th . Division kept the men busy, and at one time they acted as repairmen i for a whole army corps composed of the 7th, 89th and 91st stationed near Metz at the time. Pershing's Inspection They were talking about General Pershing's inspection of the 28th Division at Company I barracks to day and they told about a little in terview between the commander of '(the A. E. F. and Ralph Garrett, of the company. General Pershing in i speeted every man of the regiment and a number of times when he i I saw boys with wound chevrons on 1 j their sleeves would ask about them. I j Garrett had no overcoat for the .inspection and loaned one belonging ~to Err H. Peterson, Philadelphia. • who was wounded. A red stripe on the sleeve indicated the fact and when General Pershing passed Gar rett he asked where he had been wounded. "I wasn't wounded sir," Garrett . replied. "But you are wearing a stripe," ■ General Pershing remarked. ! "The overcoat isn't mine, sir," i Garrett explained. Private Charles Ryan, 1536 Ver i , non street, wasn't around when they i j told about hint to-day, but his feur j lessness in running messages through j three terrific barrages of artillery and machine gun fire during one of the battles showed to the fellows , jthat he was over there unafraid of ! the Roche and his guns, j Sergeant "Dutch" Bernheisel hap ' I pened to see his father, a sergeant in i the 111 th Regiment, on July 4, last I ' year, just at the time the Huns were • | sending over a barrage. They called ' j it a Fourth of July celebration at > the time, "Dutch" says. Every man in the Supply Com pany of the 112 th was exposed to ■ danger many times while the war ) was on in France as nightly these ) boys had to take food, ammunition i and other necessary supplies to the | I men up front. No Harrisburgers in f the outfit were killed, but often • while bringing up supplies the work was done with the men under heavy bombardment. Harrisburg l.n<ls j Those from the city and vicinity j , i who are in the company and who 'I with the other members kept the 'supplies moving to the men up front jure: Clyde Hopple, 1912 Wallace; (John Rakovsky, 527 Race; Paul I Knox. 620 Kelker; Roy R. Wiley, i 128 Vine; William Pechart. 1027 South Cameron; Charles B. Bowers, 1504 Walnut; Peter Rheam, 663 North Front, Steelton; Charles Walt man, 1330 Cowden; Lester Finney, 132 Dock; M. H. Stephenson, New Cumberland: George Frazer, Herbert A. Shaffer and George F. Sponsler, Camp Hill; Earl I. Wagner, 2007 Kensington; Raymond Michaels, 1309 North Third: Edward Strunge, 934 South Twenty-first; Christ Hiner, ' Camp Hill; Joseph Moody, 1107 ; North Cameron; Sergeant Samuel ; Murlatl. 2307 Jefferson, one of three ; brothers in the 112 th; Cook Paul R. Miller. West Fairview; Harold I Snoddy; Paul J. Kitzmiller, 2534 ' Lexington; Sergeant John Franklin, ! 21 South Sixteenth; Harry Neely, Carlisle. ' Frazer and Lanoe Wallace, of Everts, showed their bravery when they brought back Foster Kammer er, who was wounded, taking him to a first-aid station while the Huns . were sending shells over, others in the company say. t Hopple collected a lot of souvenirs i including some of the German pro- paganda sent over the lines in alr > | planes and dropped. Rakovsky's , I stunt of grabbing a blanket and t thinking it was a gas mask in his excitement during shelling on one | occasion, has been mentioned while the fellows were sitting around in I I the barracks. 1 j Francis Knoble, 1621 North ~| Fourth, and Leroy I.andis, 184? Re- 'gina, are two Harrisburgers in Com- Ipany G, in which there are a num- HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH j Government Asks Supreme Effort !, to Make Victory Loan a Success I I By CARTER. GLASS Secretary of the Treasury Washington, May s.—The Victory Liberty Loan campaign is two thirds over, but subscriptions have been reported for little more than i one-third of the loan. Is it conceivable that the American people, who with heart and ' soul waged the tight for freedom, will permit this loan of victory and I thanksgiving to fail? Our sons gave of their health, of their strength and of their lives i that freedom might not perish. There* are one and a half million American boys in France and Germany. Now that the war is ended, it would be as reasonable for them to dishonor the nation by desert j ing the flag as for the nation to dishonor itself by deserting them. Is it a large thing that we now are asked to lend our money to pay the | cost of victory? Is American money less willing than American man hood ? Let every one of the millions who have bought Liberty Bonds buy- Victory notes and success is sure. i: I her of Carlisle men. This company i ! together with Company H, was cap | tured by the Huns in August and | | until after the armistice was signed j the units were not with the 112 th. lOiiTII MACHINE GUN The 109 th Machine Gun Battalion j Companies have llarrisburgers on j their rosters, among them George ; Beck, 633 Hamilton; J. E. Reed. ' 322 Herr, who was in service in thel Spanish-American War; George Tag- I gert, 510 Woodbine; Joseph S. Rhine. 322 South Fifteenth: Earl J. Swartz, Williams street; Park Nis- j sley. South Cameron; Cook Maurice Yingst, John Triest, Fulton street; j H. H, Chubb, George Isenberger; Enola; James M. Koppenhaver, ! Grat-z, and First Lieutenant Charles j i C. Curtis, Williamstown, a big fa- J vorite with the Company A men. ' The 109 th was in active service much ! i of the time overseas, and as the; Boche didn't like machine gun fire any better than the Yanks did, | things got pretty warm for the unit j quite frequently. Walter McCord, | of Harrisburg, could not return with j the unit as he was suffering from j influenza when the battalion sailed, j Philip T. Meredith, a well-known ; Harrisburg attorney, who entered ! the service as a private and was at- I tached to Headquarters Company, | 112 th, is one of the city men with I that group. "Phil" as he is known by many of them, and they all like ; him, said that he did not think the ! men would think it fair treatment I to be held in camp for a divisional ! parade in Philadelphia, when less j than 100 front that city are in the' regiment. There have been so j many replacements he said, that in I many instances scores of men from aWMliiffi'M MBMtMMßßaWMßißrtlßlftaitiiiM —i —B—M" l fflj|fMWaHli|||||BlßmßWg p a i n f u l p I time of the year there are 1 * | ~many odd jobs about the home i I neglect it! It's easily corrected at first, 1 \/VA WisoStory but delay may encourage gravel, dropsy or dangerous Bright's disease. If your back aches and kidneys are disordered, get Doan's Kidney Pills . Thissuccesful remedy is recommended so strongly by people you know, you can use it with real confidence. Read These Harrisburg Cases; ; North Second Street Swatara Street South Sixteenth Street D. H. Neff, 1328 North Second street, says: Mrs. W. TJ. TCpplncrer, 1808 Swatara street, says: tleruld F. Corlcle, 7 South lfith street, says: "Whenever 1 catch cold it< seems to settle In my j "About four years aso my kidneys were in a bad j "For several years I suffered from severe pains in kidneys causing my back to get weak and ache. Shape. My back was awfully lame and sore and my j tldneya , ind b'adder. 1 could not rest at night The kidney secretions would become too frequent )]* duu' and °and° was annoyed' bJTtho lon account of the pain and my kidneys acted too ' n passage and were highly colored. At such times | „ ucuu.i ..y iciuneys. 1 had attacks of j frequently. I tried several different remedies and I have purchased a box of Doan's Kidney Pills j blurred eyesight and dizzy spells and I felt badly i they did not relieve me. Finally I got to taking I at Kenndy's Drug Store and they have always cured ! a " the time. Hearing Doan s Kidney Pills recom- Doan's Kidney Pills and 1 found them to be the me of the attack lam glad to recommend this ' I"j . e ' , K °. h'ghly by those who had tried them, | )cst remedy I ever used. On ac-count of my work oi ua aiiava. lam giau 10 recom men a mis , j declded to try them also. Four boxes of Doan's r use them occasionally now to rid me of the medicine to others suffering with weak kidneys." , made a complete and lasting cure and I gladly ~olson caused front inhaling the fumes of turpen- endorse this tine, old kidney and backache remedy." tlne- j have Krcat faith ln thl3 medlclne ." Berryhill Street Peffer Street Front Street Mrs. William Fry, 1418 Berryhill street, practical j Daniel Olcss, &16 Peffer street, says: "Whenever Mrs Harriet Sees, 1117 North Front street, says: nurse, sa>s. Doan s Kidney Pills are line for the a cold would settle In my kidneys my back would "I am past seventy years of age and my kidneys kidneys and my advice to any one suffering with . . . ... alal * , them is to try Doan's. Some years ago my kid- become weak and would ache for a long: time. arc in a good, strong, healthy condition. I give neys were in bad shape. Every time 1 moved my orten j thought I could not keep about on account Doan ' s Kidney Pills credit for this. I have used body quickly or stooped over, sharp pains would this medicine for some time, occasionally, and It catch me in my back. My kidneys were congested, of my back hurting so and I was annoyed by the i, as always done me a world of good. At times weak and scanty in action. The kidney secretions frequent action of my kidneys. The secretions when I have suffered from backache, due from a were highly colored and I felt miserable. Head- cold, X have taken Doan's and they have never aches und dizzy spells caused me annoyance, too. of the kidneys were highly colored and burned in failed to flush out the congested kidneys and As one of the family had used Doan s Kidney Pills passage. Every time I have been this way I have strengthen my back. I believe the occasional use with good results a short while ago. I decided to _ ___ of Doan's has prolonged my life and I cannot try them.' This medicine cured me and I-have had used Doan's Kidney Pills and a couple of boxes praise them to strongly, especially to those along no troublfc with my kidneys since." always relieve me." in years." Doan's Kidney Pills I Every Druggist has Doan's, 60c a box. Foster-M ilburn Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. I | points outside Pennsylvania are on the rosters now. With Headquarters Coni|>aiiy j Those front the city are scattered I in the live platoons of Headquarters j Company. The first platoon is cont | posed largely of runners who carry | messages; second platoon, signal; i third, trench mortar; fourth, pton jeers, and fifth, handling the 27-mil limeter guns. First Lieutenant John I Wiestling, Harrisburg, is with the | fifth platoon. Others from the city j in it are Sergeant J. A. Cassell, 2286 i North Sixth; Roland R. Swcnson, 310 Granite; Harry Shimp, 612 Church; Corporal Roy Murlatt, 68 | North Twelfth; John Moreland, 1310 j State. In the other platoons are C. C. Murlatt; J. E. Peters. Enola; Wil iliam Musgrave, Middletown; Waiter Rudy, Hummelstown; George M. | Kutz, Mechanicsburg; Paul t'hris | enter, 162 South Summit; Albert i Reed. 739 South Nineteenth: Wil j liam E. Mower, 441 Market; William |R. Stroup, who re-enlisted; 1. 11. j Whittle, 279 Hamilton; Raymond j Sterner; 59 North Tenth: Oscar Wolf, 909 North Nineteenth; John Mumma, 1 938 Kensington; Corporal IE. A. Fisher, New Cumberland; E. j R. and Bruce Putt, brothers, 124 Evergreen; George Albright, Arthur ; Speas, Park street; William Lacey, j2l North Thirteenth; Ed. Cleckner, j Mechanicsburg; Robert Owen, 1313 i Swatara; .1. L. Swanberry, 2168 j Brook wood; Lewis Straining, 715 j North Nineteenth; J. S. Weisenford, iStcelton; 11. J. Simonton. 629 Harris; I Harry H. Schriver, 325 Hummel; George E. Shearer, R. D. 5; Grover Rainey, John Yingst, Mt. Holly Springs; Russell Bosdorf. Faithful Service i Speas as a runner in the Argonne j Forest did some splendid work the | boys claim, and in telling about it | they agreed unanimously that he ] had one "helluva" job all the time he was assigned to this line of duty. George Shearer made a similar rec ord for faithful service in Heath \ alley, near Fismes, and on one oc i casion saved a large number of | horses for the company. All the platoons had plenty of work to keep them busy, much of it being done under lire. The signal branch throughout the entire time I kept up communications for the I l regiment, a task which kept them I ion the jump every minute of the day I and night at times. The pioneers t | showed their mettle at the Yesle when they built a bridge while under {shell lire and again at Fismes put- I ting up barbed wire entanglements. | The Fifth put over a big barrage |at Fismes. and the trench mortar ■| boys got into the thick of it July i I 6 at Hill 204, when William S. Nagle, IlarrisbiH-g, was killed. It is said he was the first man of the 112tli to I die in action. In the 112 th band at present is 1 Weston W. Ashenfelder, 1319 Bar ■ tine street, a clarinetist. Three Big Seaplanes Try Ocean Flight > Tomorrow Morning' I By Asmociatrd Press. New York. May s.—The three big | ;; seaplanes in which United States' | j Navy aviators will attempt a flight I ; across the Atlantic will "hop off" 'for New Foundland on the lirst leg of their journey at 7 o'clock Tuus- j {|day morning if weather permits, it . I was officially announced at the' ! Rockaway Beach naval training sta- I { J tion. Scranton Is Facing Svnipathetic Strike By Associated Press. ! j Scranton, Pa., May s.—This city ! iis facing a general sympathetic I • strike of all trades unions who re- ' ' sent the rejection by the city of the j award arbitrators made in the re • cent strike of the city employes. At I ; a meeting of the Central 1-abor ; | Union yesterday a resolution was ' adopted giving the city until May I ' to accept the award and calling a I ■ meeting of all representatives of the j various affiliated crafts for next Fri day night for the purpose of mak ' ing a general strike vote. MAY 5, 1919. Physicians in Charge at Rotary Club Lunch; Colonel Martin Speaks Col. Martin, State Health Commis- I sioner; Major Oans, of the State! Health Department, and Major Grant | of the Carlisle Army Hospital, ad- | dressed the Harrisburg Rotary Club ' at luncheon in the Penn-Harris to day. A committee of the physicians of the club. Dr. C. K. L. Keene, Dr. Samuel Z Shope and Dr. H. A. Stine, physicians, had charge of the pro- I grain and they had as their guests | army physicians from camps and hos j pitals roundabout, doctors of the j State Health Department and nunt- ! I erous members of the club had their own family physicians as their guests. During the luncheon a mock oper ation was performed by the physici ans in charge, who appeared togged out in their operating costumes. The "patient" was brought into the room in a closed cabinet, which when opened revealed a very charming I young woman soloist who sang for the Rotarians. Commissioner Martin addressed the club on tlie necessity for a contagious i disease hospital in Harrisburg and Major Cans spoke on the campaign . against social diseases now being staged in Pennsylvania. Major Grant I paid a high compliment to 1 Colonel Keefer, in charge of the Car lisle Hospital, which he said ranks with the best in the country. He in-I vited the club members up to inspect it. The members of the One Hun- I dred and Twelfth Infantry at Car j lisle, with the exception of six who i are confined to their cots, will be j brought to Harrisburg to be enter- J tain ell by the Red Cross when the | Harrisburg companies come homo. F. B. Aldinger Takes Over the Hotel Senate The wholesale liquor license held I by Frederick I!. Aldinger, ill Grace street, was transferred to-day to Harry 1,. Aldinger. A few minutes after the court approved this trana i fee, another was granted giving j Frederick IS. Aldinger authority to \ take over the retail liquor license at I the Senate Hotel held by Frederick ] H. Menger. 151 RDF CLASSES TO MEET The State Federation of Bible ; classes will meet in Parlor Aat the I Penn-Harris, to-morrow. Among the speakers scheduled are representu | tive J. W. Vickerman and W. G. I Landes, general secretary of the Pennsylvania State Sabbath School Assrl.'lation. Approximately 100 people are expected to be present. "Waste Saving" Campaign For Nursery Home Starts Tomorrow at North Street 1 The "Waste Saving*" campaign, for 1 the benefit of the Nursery Home, be- I &ins to-morrow. A big: motor truck 'will start out in the morning:, begin- Ining ut North street and working up town, to gather the baps of waste materials left on the doorsteps. A bugle- will be sounded at each square to give householders time to get the baurs to their front doors. Most of the homes contain the fol lowing things which can help swell the fund: Hogs, large or small; un wearable articles, such as old flannel baby clothes. blankets, petticoats. J women's outing suits, stockings, woolen underwear, shirts, yarn, knit or crocheted articles, such as unwear able house jackets, shawls, sweaters, scarfs, toboggan caps and mittens, and women's, men's and boys' un wearable garments, including over coats, suits, cloth skirts, all kinds of old carpets and rugs, old rubber footwear, automobile tires, hot water bags, and copper, brass, lead, tinfoil, old plated ware, knives, forks, etc. Surety of Peace Suit Against Boughter Dropped The suit has been Withdrawn against W. H. Boughter. of Middle town, who was arrested last week on a surety of peace charge at the instance of his wife and the costs paid. No hearing was given Bough tor. who. after his arrest, spent a total of ten minutes in the borough lockup. <SO\G TO GREET SOI.IERS The AViir Camp Community Service is nrtanging to make singing an im- I ortant feature of the welcome home reception to the returning members of tlie Twenty-eighth Division. A re quest lias been issued to all choirs of the eitv to join in with the delegation at l'rtint and Walnut streets. The I singing will be In charge of Mrs. I ' Florence Ackley Hey, musical director I of the service: Mrs. J. G. Sanders. A. I \V. Ncate. Elmer If. I-ey. 110-.vard K. Oensler. Miss Mildred Conklin, Miss K. I S. Vest and Charles ShafTner. I Girl Scouts have been requested by [ officials of tlie Service to report to Mrs. l,ey at the same place about the time the men return home. WU.DKHMI TIPS TEAM AVINS Tlie golf match between tht mem bers at tlit Colonial Country Club on Saturday resulted as follows: Captain F. M. Hunter det'tated Captain WH dermuth, Owrey defeated Nissley, W. M. Ogelsliy lost to Hamlin. Cawwalla der lost to Bench, Devine lost, to Seel, Pavord lost to Sweeney, Prutt defeat ed Kckenrode, Bishop lost to D'illing er I<inter lost to Bagneli, Burtnett defeated Starkcy, Thompson defeated Bentz. Captain Hunters team won nve matches and Captain Wiltermuth s team won six matches. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers