Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 07, 1919, Page 5, Image 5

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    Wilson Has Appointment
With Army Chief Today;
to Assure France Protection
By Associated Press.
Paris, May 7.—President Wilson
lias an appointment with General
Pershing the American commander
in-chief, for 2 o'clock this after
hlioon. The conference probaly is in
* relation to the three power pact or
agreement under discussion for safe
guarding France against renewed
German aggression.
Funeral Services Held
For Edwin G. Brady
St. Patrick's Cathedral was the
scene of funeral services yesterday
morning for Edwin Garrish Brady,
211 South Front street, who died at
Baltimore Sunday morning. Burial
was made in the Mt. Calvary ceme
tery.
Mr. Brady was widely known here.
He was a member of the Country
Club, and Maintenance of Way clerk
in the Pennsylvania Kailroad otflees.
"DANDERINE" FOR
FALLING HAIR
Stop dandruff and double
beauty of your hair
for few cents.
Dandruff causes a feverish irrita
tion of the scalp, the hair roots
shrink, loosen and then the hair
comes out fast. To stop falling hair 1
at once and rid the scalp of every
particle of dandruff, get a small
bottle of "Dunderine" at any drug
store for a few cents, pour a little
in your hand and rub it into the
scalp. After several applications the
hair stops coming out and you can't j
tind any dandruff. Your hair ap
pears soft, glossy and twice as thick
and abundant. Try it
HARD" RED, ML
PIMPLESONFACE |
Was Itchyand Disfigured. At Night j
Could Not Sleep. CuticuraHeals.
"My face broke out in pimples that
were hard, red, and large. They were
f scattered and my face was
so itchy that I had to keep
scratching all the time, and
I was disfigured. At night
I could not sleep.
"Then I read about Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment,
and I sent for a free sam
ple. It relieved the soreness so
I bought more, and my face was
healed." (Signed) Miss Sophie E.
Barnett, 3843 Terrace St., Philadel
phia, Pa.
Cuticura Soap to cleanse, purify
and beautify, Cuticura Ointment to
soften, soothe and heal, are ideal for
every-day toilet purposes.
Do not fail to include the exquisitely scented
Cuticura Talcum in your toilet preparation*
for perfuming the skin. 26c everywhere.
rS~~L,
28TH \ n .?? /DIVISION
—— \ Division / • -
\
We have been able to secure a
limited supply of the
Pictorial History
of tlie
110 th and 112 th Regiments
Price, $2.50; by Mail, $2.60
Call at the Business Office of the
Telegraph and get a copy before
the supply is exhausted.
WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MAY 7. 1919.
Civic and Welfare Bodies
to Meet With Chamber of
Commerce on 15th of May
A number of local civic and pub
lic welfare organizations which were
invited by the Harrlsburg Chamber
of Commerce to ' take part in the
meeting the evening of May 15, in
the offices of the Chamber of Com
merce, for the purpose of organiz
ing a permanent committee to take
charge of the campaign for making
Harrisburg a model city, already
have named their representatives.
Other bodies have notified the
Chamber of their intention to do so
at once.
Col. Edward Martin, head of the
State Department of Health, who
started the campaign for bettering
sanitary conditions here at a public
meeting in the Capitol several weeks
ago, will attend the meeting to out
line what the various organizations
represented at the meeting, can do
toward carrying out the program
for city sanitation.
The organizations which have an
nounced their representatives are
as follows:
ICiwanis Club, Al. K. Thomas and
Frank G. Fahnestock; Municipal
League of Harrisburg, William Jen
nings and J. Horace Mc.Farland;
Rotary Club, R. E. Caliill and Frank
C. Sites: Y. M. C. A„ Arthur D. Ba
con and Robert B. Reeves; Civic
Club of Harrisburg, Mrs. Solomon
Hiney and Mrs. William Henderson.
The various organizations which
have been invited to participate in
the conference, have expressed their
desire to take an active part in the
Chamber's intention to carry out
Colonel Martin's plan for a model
city. It is likely that the permanent
committee formed at the meeting
will map out an aggressive program
for improving the sanitary condi
tions of Harrisburg.
Odd Fellows to Conduct
Services For Dr. Emerick
Members of Fountain Dodge No.
1120, of which he was a Past Grand,
will hold services this evening in
memory of Dr. Charles E. Emerick
at his home, 2155 North Fifth street.
Funeral services will be held to
morrow afternoon at 3.30 o'clock.
The Itev. H. W. A. Hanson, pastor
of the Messiah Duthcran church will
olllciate. Dr. Emerick, who died
Sunday, was active in civic and in
dustrial and religious activities of
the city for many years. He was
prominent in political circles and had
a host of friends.
FRANCE VOTED CONFIDENCE
By Associated Brass•
Paris, May 7.—ln the Chamber
of Deputies yesterday there was a
discussion of the incidents which
arose during the May Day demon
strations in this city. Following an
explanation of the measures taken
by the government for the main
tenance of order by Jules Pams,
Minister of the Interior, the cham
ber adopted by a vote of 356 to 1 a
resolution of confidence in the gov
ernment.
PRETTY
N Hsaltty
y i Catarrh 1 the great
\ \taefXT t - JSP drstrewer of health and
. XffirC? V firood J™**- It is re-
LV7 x ■Poosible for most bu-
ILT r M. !? an ,lU ' .Catarrh of
the nose and throat is a
vr dirty, filthy, dmnrerotis
M disease. A catarrhal in
-9 V of th
9 sfIKL ®tomach. bowels or other
1 organs is not a condW |
fS/Jjlii \flk " on , to ncsrlcrt. Most
People so afflicted dc
j. *1 pend upon
||SM\ PE-RU-NA
Alt - For Catarrh and
ajwjfe. ' Catarrhal Conditions
mSS&fl* • ® ffo . r( Js prompt relief
■jWygV lor coucha and oolda and
Efcggffiwi i disorders due to a
■ Ji tnickcninfir and oonjrestion
ISffiSy' * A mucous. lininca.
lac3S'V£\ T ?.V en In tune TE-RU-NA
will ward off the Grip or
Spanish Flu and a&sista
H'Wtx# greatly in complete return
; to health after an attaek.
WZmImLY wMe family.
nS? 6 ? it in the house.
That is the safe way.
TABLETS OR LIQUID
SOU>
Dauphin County Men Are Anxious to Get Back Home
j? '• e4MttjUL -St |
Standing From Left to Right—Sergeant Walter Goucher. Philadelphia;
Sergeant James lJelvinc. Chester; Sergeant. Lenus Sanders, Waynesboro. Sit
ting, Reft to Right—Sergeant Nelson Adams, Reading; Sergeant John R. Mo-
Neal, ilarrisburg; Sergeant Karl Hanshaw, Oberlin.
I Sergeant Karl Hanshaw, of Ober
| lin, and Sergeant John R. McNeal, of
I this city, together with several other
members of Company C, 316 th Infan
try, Seventy-ninth Division, in a let-
I ter to the Harrisburg Telegraph tell
I that they are quite anxious to return
I home. Hanshaw was a member of
I the Oberlin football team and McNeal
I was a prominent member of the Bel-
I mont Athletic Club.
They were in some of the hardest
lighting in France they say, being
among the first draftees to leave
Dauphin county for camp. On April
9, at the time of writing, they were
located in the village of Leuville, but
expected to start during the follow
ing week on the lirst lap of the home
ward trip, going first to LeMans.
Prize-Winners in Sachs
Ad-Writing Contest Named
The board of judges, comprised of
New York advertising men, who
passed upon the various advertise
ments submitted in the ad-writing
contest recently conducted by the
Mary Sachs Shop have announced
thei- decision in the matter of the
i various awards. Mrs. H. E. Gay
! man, 312 North Second street, was
i awarded first prize on millinery, and
[ Mrs. John Brinton, Camp Hill, see
! ond prize. In the suit class, lirst
first prize, Dorothy E. Haynes, 312
Hummel street, Harrisburg; second
prize, Mrs. G. C.i Myers, 150 South
Pitt street, Carlisle. In the dress
class, lirst prize, Rachacl G. Knier,
19 South Second treet, city; second j
prize, Anna M. Bratten, 1632 North
Sixth street, city. In the store serv- |
ice class, first prize, Mrs. M. Dec ;
Goldsmith, 243 Woodbine street,
city; second prize, Miss F. M. Jones, !
Enola, Pa.
The various prize winning adver- I
tisemcnts will be published in the
course of the next day or two. j
Dauphin County Medical
Society Holds Meeting
At a well attended meeting of the
Dauphin County Medical Society held
last evening Dr. William L. Clark, of
Philadelphia, made the principal ad
dress. Dr. Clark spoke on cancer and
methods other than surgery for its
treatment.
The talk was illustrated by means
of lantern slides showing how treat
ment is given with X-ray combined
with electricity. The meeting was
well attended.
Apartment House
Fire Total Reaches
Nine; One New Death
By Associated press.
Columbus, 0., May 7.—The death
last night of Mrs. Ada Belle Joyce,
.IS years old, brought the number
of death In Monday night's apart
ment building lire to nine. Mrs.
Joyce was the lirst of the injured in
hospitals to die, although Charles
Speakman, whose wife leaped to her
death, cannot live, physicians say.
"Absolute negligence," was re
sponsible for the fire, according to
State Marshal T. Alfred Fleming,
i who has started an inquiry for the
State.
Dunne and Ryan
Visiting in Ireland
Dublin, May 7.—Edward F.
! Dunne, of Illinois, who is in Ireland
j as a representative of the Irish So-
I cietics in the United States, yester
| day visited Trinity College where he
I was educated. Afterwards he drove
jin a motor car, accompanied by
I Professor Edward De Vulera, Ar- I
I thur Griffiths and Count Plunkett,
| the Sinn Fein leaders, to St. Pat
| rick's College at Mayooth.
Michael J. Ryan, of Philadelphia,
| who is on the same mission as for
mer Governor Dunne, spent the
morning near Carlow, his parental
home, going thence by motor to
| Mayooth.
1 $5,000 Reward for
Terrorist Crooks
Resolutions directing that $3,000
be placed at the disposal of the
Auditor General and State Treasurer
for "payment of rewards for the
arrest and conviction of the person
or persons guilty of sending through
the mails deadly instruments and
devices and letters threatening the
lives of prominent citizens and the
destruction of property" were pre
sented in the House at the opening
of the evening session by John Davis,
| Indiana. The measure went to the
appropriations committee. The reso
lutions recite that several attempts
I have been made upon lives of pro-
I minent citizens by sending devices
| through the mails and that "numer
ous threatening letters have been
mailed within the last few days to
[ prominent citizens threatening the
i lives of these citizens and the de
j struction of property."
j STEVEDORE STRIKE BROKEN
By .Associated Press*
Panama, May 7.—The strike of
stevedores at the Atlantic terminus
of the Panama canal has been part
[ ly broken by the use of laborers
brought from the Pacific end of the
I waterway. Emergency shipments
I are being handled and there is
| prospect (that work on all ships
! will be resumed soon.
The New Member of
County Poor Directors
JACOB S. FARVER
I Jacob S. Farver, Conewago town-
I ship, formerly chief clerk to the
county commissioners, has taken the
j oath of office as a member of the
I Board of Poor Directors, and will
attend the session held by the board
i May 14. Mr. Farver is widely known
I in the lower end of Dauphin county.
|ln the township in which he has
i resided for years, he has held prac-
I tically all the important local offices.
I He was named as poor director by
I the other members to succeed Levi j
| Miller, late of Hummelstown.
Canada Aids Farmers
In Home Building
Canada's appropriation of $25,000,-
000 for home building, though pri
marily intended for municipalities,
will in some provinces at least, ex
tend its aid to the farmers.
Ontario's program provides that
any person owning land may borrow
to the full value of the proposed new
dwelling, not to exceed $2,500, and
extends the privilege to the farmer
as well as to the city man.
Besides its pro rata share of the
Federal loan, based upon the rela
tion of its population to that of the
Dominion, Ontario will also expend.
1 ißmsssie
I Put This
I InY ourNoteßook
! On Friday
| We wai Hold a
|Big*|^ 75 £ale
I Women's and Misses*
Spring Suits
Constituting
1 A Special Purchase
1 Together With
1 All Our Own Best
I Regular Size Suits
I Consisting of
$45.00, $39.50, $35.00, $32.50,
$29.50 and $25.00 Suits
Choice of $ | 0-75
Any at.. j| ©
Best Colors, Best Materials
i All Sizes
I None on Sale Until Friday
I Full Particulars and
1 Complete Description in
This Paper Tomorrow
much more money. The provincial
government has of itself appropriat
ed $2,000,000 to be loaned to muni
cipalities on condition that the latter
raise one-fourth of the principal
sum desired.
This means that the province will
have approximately $2,500,000 of its
own money to loan to municipalities,
and thereby, perhaps, leave a much
larger margin of (he Federal loan
to be extended to farmers.
Each individual loan will consti
tute a lien upon the property, to be
repaid in a maximum period of
twenty years with interest at five per
cent. All or any part of the principal
may be repaid at any time the indi
vidual desires.
200-Pound Man, Drowning,
Saved by One-Armed Man
Now York —Thomas Covhan, a
one-armed watchman employed by
the Booth Steamship Company at
the foot of Fulton Street, Brooklyn,
saved the life of David Curtin, forty
four, who weighs more than 200
| Attention! Those Who 1
I Need Spring I
1 We Have Made I
1 I
| Another Purchase!
I From The ||
I Harrisburg Shoe ®
i i
I Manufacturing Co.!
!Of This City i
OVER 500 PAIRS!
I Women's and Children's |
1 Oxfords & Pumps 1
1 m
| This new purchase is now being
U arranged for easy selling and will be i
M ready at 9 o'clock sharp next Friday M
| morning. D
| ~ |
Those who were not fortunate fcj
ly enough to secure the Shoe Specials S
1 which we had in last week's sale will K
W be glad to have this opportunity to !|
|j procure fine footwear this week in IS
1 this sale. ||
1 Over 500 Pairs of I
i Canceled Orders i
| Go On Sale Friday |
|| New Lot of Women's Ox-j t|]
|| fords and Pumps Worth m
bi up to $3.50, will be sold Fri- a t • nl
i day for J A Pair P
b| New lA)t of Women's Ox-1 rf* ||]
bj fords and Pumps Worth M
a* up to $4.50, will be sold Fri- A !>„!.. nil
IjU day for A 1
Is New Lot of Women's Ox-' m
Sj fords and Pumps Worth y/i Qk ||j
St up to $5.50, will be sold Fri- • A Sj
jjn day for J , ®
Si New Lot of Children's Ox- |||
St fords and Pumps Worth fl? |
IS up to $3,00, will be sold Fri- A- L.
m day for [|
1 New Lot of Misses' Ox- s!
S fords and Pumps Worth nl
l|j up to $4,00, will be sold Fri- j|l
m See Shoe Display in Our Window ||
imeijijisssgsigi
pounds and lives at No. 249 Hull
street. .
Curtin fell overboard from a tug
and was tloundering in the water
when his cries attrauted Covhan.
The watchman picked up a rope
and threw one end to Curtin, who
was pulled to the pier. The rescued
man was taken to the Long Island
College Hospital.
Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv.
5