Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 08, 1919, Page 11, Image 11

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    BOND INTEREST
DUE NEXT WEEK
2otal of Seventy-Eight Mil
ken Dollars Will Be Paid
on Second Loan Issue
Philadelphia, May B.—On Thurs
day, May 15, America will have an
other great payday, when $78,000,-
000 interest will be paid on the Sec
ond Liberty Loan bonds bearing 4
per cent, and on the 4 ,i per cent,
bonds into which some of the Sec
ond Loan bonds were converted, ac
cording to a statement received at
W. S. S. headquarters to-day.
If every bondholder clips his in
terest coupons promptly and re
invests them in War Savings Stamps
at any post office or W. S. S. agency,
the interest will grow fifteen mil
lions of dollars by January 1, 1924.
The statement received to-day
from the Savings Division of the
Treasury Department by E. McLaln
Watters, Director of tho W. S. S. in
the Third Federal Reserve District,
reacts:
"May 15th is the day the Govern
ment pays $78,000,000 interest on
the 4 per cent- and 4ft per cent.
Counterfeiter Caught! The NeVc 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.
Beware! Counterfeits!
Don't buy Aspirin in a pill box! Get Bayer package!
[SBAlways say, "Give me a package
f A \of 'Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.'"
lr^ pac^a^e " Bayer Cross"
on the package and on the tablets.
Bayer-Tablets
of Aspirin
The genuine American owned "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 dosage on every "Bayer" package.
Boxes of 12 tablets—Bottles of 24 — Bottles of 100— Also Capsules.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Manoaceticacidester of Salicylieaeld
MOTHER'S DAY, SUNDAY, MAY 11
riowersforHother
Anywhere in U. S. Florist
or Canada. lIVIIL/ 1 313 Market Street.
Pure, Maine Grown, Fancy
SEED POTATOES
They Grow Better—They Yield Better
My Seed Potatoes are grown especially tor me in the State of
Maine by one of the most widely-known Seed Potato specialists In |
the country. Every year we receive many carloads of this high- j
yielding stock direct from his Seed Potato Farms In sealed cars.
Not & hand touches them until they reach us. By actual test
made by many potato growers in every section of Pennsylvania,
these high-yielding Seed Potatoes have produced from two to
three times as many bushels to the acre or baskets to the row as
home-grown stock will produce under the same conditions.
WE PAY MORE FOR THEM than ordinary planting potatoes
would cost—they are worth more—and it will PAY YOU WELL,
as It does hundreds of others In bigger crops, to plant
Shell's High Yielding Seed Potatoes
Mr. George Smith, Harrisbnrg R. D. 4, market gardener, says:
"Never again will I plant my own potatoes. I planted what I got j
from you alongside of my own of the same variety and gave them
| the same attention, yet the plants of yours were much stronger j
I and healthier, and produoed THREE times as many potatoes."
Denlson Bros., JD&uphin, said: "We honestly believed that our i
i own potatoes, very carefully selected, would yield as many
bushels to the acre as your Maine seed potatoes, and two years
ago w planted them side by side to prove them—we must
acknowledge yours produced two bnshels to every on* bushel
our own produced. Now we plant all yours."
George Davis, market gardener, says: "I am convinced by
actual test that It pays to pay the price and plant your MAINE
GROWN SEED POTATOES. Planted side by side, in the same !
Held on the same day, cultivated and sprayed in the same way.
yours produced nine baskets to the row and mine only three." '
1 Don't save at the wrong end. when to do so means a loss—
Plant ScheU's Bigger Crop Maine Grown Seed Potatoes and
dCM,hie your crop.
Irish Cobbler, Green Mountain
Rural New Yorker
i i i-ldßaifcs, at SB.OO per sack (105 pounds or 9ft bushels).
I • ri-fflwta, at $7.85 per sack.
M to iOO Sacks, at $7.75 per sack.
flfaMla Buahflt, $3.50; ft Bushel, $1.75; ft Bushel, *0 cents;
ft Feck, 4 5-cents.
WALTER S. SCHELL
Quality Seeds
IgOT-tSOS Market fit. Harrisburg, Pa.
r Deliveries In the city and suburban towns
Shipments made everywhere
>
~ I
HAVE YOUR
Lawn Mowers Sharpened
AT THE
FEDERAL MACHINE SHOP
Court and Cranberry Sts.
THURSDAY EVENING. Habbisburg MAY 8, 1919.
bonds converted of the Second Lib-!
erty Loan.
"Liberty Bond holders are offered
an opportunity to place their Inter
est immediately at work for the
Government at a lucrative interest
rate. Liberty Bond interest cou
pons, as such, do not earn Interest,
but, invested in War Savings Stamps,
they earn 4 per cent, compounded
quarterly, are safely invested and
will always be available for any
emergency in ten days" time.
"Two SIOO bond coupons of the
Second Loan, which pay six months'
interest at the rate of 4 per cent,
and sixteen cents additional, will
purchase one War Savings Stamp.
Two SIOO bond interest coupons of
the Second Loan converted, which
call for $2.12 each, will pay for one
War Savings Stamp and leave six
cents extra, which can be used to
start on a new Thrift Stamp.
"Thriftless money is of no bene
fit to the individual. It should be
placed where it can earn more
monev in a safe way, and there is
no safer way than investing in Wat-
Savings Stamps."
FTREMAN AN INCENDIARY
Corry, Pa., May B.—By a confes
sion made yesterday by Claude
ICelly, a member of the fire depart
ment, he is said to admit being the
mysterious iirebug who has baffled
a score of detectives for a year.
Kelly is alleged to have confessed
setting fourteen fires, aggregating a
loss of many thousand dollars. He
denies starting the city hall fire,
where a lifo was lost.
NEWS OF THE LEGISLATURE
BROOKS SEEKS
MORE REVENUE
Would Tax Artificial Gas
Companies—Many Bills in
House Closing Period
Two new revenue raising bills,
based upon recommendations of the
Joint Legislative Revenue Commis
sion of several years ago, were in
troduced into tho House by Mr.
Brooks, York. They provide a tax
of five mills on the capital stock
of artificial gas companies and eight
mills tax on the gross receipts of
artificial gas, water and water power
companies, which are now held to
bo exempt under the manufacturing
capital exemption decisions. It is
believed that they will raise many
thousands of dollars which the York
member desires to see used for in
crease of teachers' salaries.
The commission was composed of
tho late Senators J. P. McNichol and
W. 11. Keyser, Governor William C.
Sproul, Secretary of Internal Affairs
James F. Woodward, Ex-Speaker
George E. Alter and Congressman
M. W. Shreve. It recommended that
gas companies should be taxed as
indicated in the bills presented,
holding that they were "a natural
subject of taxation."
These bills appeared among the
final list of House bills, the time for
presentation of new legislation in
the lower branch ending last night.
Among the bills passed by the
House were thoso reorganizing the
Department of Internal Affairs and
also providing that county commis
sioners, tax collectors and assessors
shall furnish to the secretary statis
tics relative to assessment of taxes.
This is in addition to the require
ment for statistics of production,
etc., covered by other bills approved
or pending. The bulk of the bills
relative to the Department have
been passed and the reorganization
will take place in a month or so.
Important Ix-gislation
Two important bills in the final
hour included: A scale of salaries
for borough councilmen to date
from January 1 in a bill introduced
by Mr. Ruddy, Lackawanna. The
list is: Boroughs having less than
1,000 population, SSO per year; 1,000
to 5,000 population, $100; to
10,000, $250, and over 10,000, SSOO.
The other was a resolution to create
a commission of eleven to investi
gate rates paid to hospitals, etc.,
in the various States for treatment
of persons unable to pay, presented
by Mr. Wallace, Philadelphia. Tho
commission is given $15,000 to make
the investigation and is to report
to the next Legislature suggestions
for changes in the Pennsylvania
system.
The new Bureau of Markets bill
of tho Department of Agriculture
was presented by Chairman Hol
lingsworth, of the committee on
agriculture, re-enacting many pro
visions of the present act and pro
viding for a system of licenses, new
classifications and appeals from
them. Plans for extensive reports
are also outlined. The bill is de
signed to be a companion to the
Jordan co-operative association bill
presented a few days ago.
New Health Bill
A bill making a new codification
of the laws of the State relative to
contagious diseases and broadening
the powers of the State Commis
sioner of Health was presented by
Chairman Gans, of the Health and
sanitation committee. The bill,
which was drawn by Colonel Ed
ward Martin, State Commissioner of
Health, not only extends powers dur
ing epidemics, with particular at
tention to conditions such as arose
in the course of the influenza out
break, but gives control of venereal
diseases.
Mr. Zanders, Carbon, presented a
bill to provide comfort arrange
ments at all railroad crossing watch
boxes. The railroads are to pay
for them.
A bill declaring wilful and unlaw
ful mining and removal of coal to
be larceny was introduced by Mr.
Jones, Lackawanna, who also pre
sented a bill for registration as law
students of honorably discharged
soldiers who may apply.
Mr. Clutton, Somerset, introduced
a bill regulating collection of taxes
in counties containing less than
125,000 population and requiring
notices to bo given.
Mr. Golder, Philadelphia, intro
duced a bill fixing license fees for
brokers and others engaged in the
insurance business.
Other bills presented were:
Mr. Miller, Luzerne —Extending
charters of manufacturing corpora
tions Incorporated for 25 years to
5 0 years.
Mr. Baldl, Philadelphia—Appro
priating SBO,OOO to the trustees of
the Third armory, Phila
delphia, for debt, repairs, etc.
Mr. Comerer, Fulton—Regulating
rights of way through unenclosed
woodlands.
Mr. Vickerman, Allegheny—Em
powering counties to make contracts
with municipalities for maintenance
of free bridges.
Mr. Home, Cambria—Abolishing
requirements for publication of
mercantile appraisers' list.
Mr. Sinclair, Fayette—A new
county officers' fee bill; placing
clerks of quarter session in charge
of issuance of hunters' licenses and
dog and kennel licenses.
Mr. Wallace, Lackawanna—ln
cluding chief sanitary officers, san
itary police, food Inspectors and
superintendent of garage in third
class city civil service.
Mr. Vickerman, Allegheny—Reg
ulating building along streets be
tween two boroughs.
Mr. Ramsey, Delaware —Fixing
$5,000 as s lary of county commis
sioners in counties having between
150,000 and 250.000 population.
Mr. Crum, Huntingdon—Placing
tho red squirrel on the unprotected
list.
Mr. Marcus. Allegheny—Forbid
ding false labels and misrepresen
tation in food products.
Mr. Ramsey, Delaware—Provid
ing for sale of State live stock farm
in Delaware county.
Mr. Willson, Allegheny—Requir
ing notice to be given when an in
quiry is sustained on public proper
ty and that there can be no recovery
if none is given.
Mr. Shaffer, Columbia—Forbid
ding branch banks except in cities
of over 600,000 population.
Mr. Franklin, Philadelphia, in
troduced a new personal property
tax bill which reriaals thA act of
1913. The bill
In application. This JflWHEftst bill.
SPANGLER AFTER
BIG POWER DAM
Wants Either Fish or Suit
Started By State and
House Supports Him
After a speech by Speaker Spang
ler, in which he declared the owners
of tho McCall's Ferry dam had no
more right to erect their dam in
the Susquehanna than in Capitol
Park, the House late yesterday
passed the Spangler bill providing
that the Attorney General enter suit
if fish cannot pass tho dam. Tho
speaker gave the history of tho dam
and declared that shad fishing above
the dam had been destroyed and
that other fish could not pass tho
structure.
The "search and seizure" clause
added to the Fox prohibition en
forcement bill while under consider
ation in tlie House on Tuesday, was
stricken out by the House law and
order committee during: redrafting
of tho bill at a session held during
the legislative recess. Other amend
ments presented by Mr. Alexander,
Delaware, to the bill, were also elim
inated. The bill now goes back to
the Senate, where it will take its
place with the Vickerman bill. They
may be made special orders later on,
the Vickerman bill having been
postponed when reached on the cal
endar to-day to allow the Fox bill
to bo acted upon in committee.
The "near beer" bill, which would
legalize beverages with half of one
per cent of alcohol, was referred to
a sub-committee with instructions
to report next Tuesday.
The Hough and Sowers Sunday
baseball bills and the Sowers bill to
allow business places to keep open
part of Sunday, were negatively re
ported.
The bill regulating the manufac
ture of ethyl alcohol for medicinal,
scientific and other lawful purposes
under State license, was laid over.
The bill for discharge of defendants
where indictments are not found in
six months was also laid over.
The House passed the Golder bill
providing for annual registration by
dentists.
Bills passed finally included:
Establishing Bureau of Topo
graphical and Geological Survey in
Internal Affairs Department.
Creating an orphans' court for
Washington county.
Erie county district attorney bills.
Authorizing boroughs to make
debts for monuments to soldiers.
Regulating fees of notaries.
Establishing procedure for pay of
deputy constables.
Regulating cancellation of certifi
cates issued to firms doing business
under assumed names.
Authorizing first-class school dis
tricts to levy taxes for recreation
grounds.
Giving building and loan associa
tions right to enter the Federal home
loan bank system.
Allowing Federal or State bonds
to be deposited as bail.
The House passed finally the
Davis bill to pay Jurors $3 and wit
nesses $2, which had been recalled
from the Governor.
After clearing thb greater part of!
tho third reading calendar, the
House postponed the Philadelphia
District Attorney, Daix cold storage
and Miller cemetery bills and ad
journed at 5 p. m.
$5,000 Reward for
Terrorist Crooks
Resolutions directing that $5,000
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
have been made upon lives of pro
minent citizens by sending devices
through the mails and that "numer
ous threatening letters have been
mailed within tho last few days to
prominent citizens threatening the
lives of these citizens and the de
struction of property."
Found at Last!
Real Hair Saver
And Beautifier
Quickly Makes Dull, Harsh, Unat
tractive llair Doubly Beautiful,
Abundant, Soft and Fluffy—
or Nothing to Pay.
Ilenntlful llntr anil I.ots of 11 If You
I fie Parisian Sage.
Here's good news for men and wo
men whose hair is falling out, whose
scalps are covered with dandruff and
itch like mad.
Kennedy's Drug Store or any good
druggist can now supply you with
the genuine Parisian sage (liquid
form), which is guaranteed, to quick
ly, surely and safely abolish every
sign of dandruff, stop itching scalp
and falling hair and promote a new
growth, or money refunded.
Thousands can testify to the excel
lent results from its use; some who
feared baldness now glory in their
abundant hair, while others who suf
fered for years with dandruff and
itching head got a clean, cool scalp
after Just a few days' uso of this sim
ple home treatment.
No matter whether bothered with
tailing hair, gray hair, matted,
stringy hair, dandruff or itching scalp
try Parisian sage—you will not be
disappointed. It's a scientific prepara
tion that supplies all hair needs.
The first application will make your
hair and scalp look and feel 100 per
cent, better. If you want thick, lus
trous hair and lots of It, by 0,11 means
use Parisian sage. Don't delay—begin
to-night. A little attention now In
sures abundant-• hair ■ for years -to
coma, f ~ i
COMPENSATION
BILLS IN HAND
Attorney General Drafts a
Bill Which it is Hoped to
Make Basis for Changes
Four bills making radical changes
in the State workmen's compensa-,
tion laws were presented to the
Senate just before it adjourned for
the week by Senator Frank A. Smith,
Dauphin. One of them is a meas
ure drafted by Attorney General
William I. Schaffer after consulta
tion with employers and employes
and various persons Interested, 1
which has been olfered as a basis i
for an agreement. The joint com
mittee, named three weeks ago to
consider suggested amendments, ■
failed to reach any agreement. Mr. I
Schaffer said that the bill was given
to Mr. Smith to present so that some
thing would bo at hand upon which
to work.
The bill provides for an increase
in the rate of compensation from
fifty to sixty per cent of wages; cuts
the waiting period from fourteen
days to ten; provides for payments
to dependents under certain regu-
JaUons; wipes out distinction be
tween major and minor operations;
makes tho period of free medical
attendance thirty days instead of
fourteen, and establishes a limit of
SIOO in addition to hospital charges,
operations to be at prevailing rates
and makes a number of other
changes.
A second bill reorganizes the
Bureau of Compensation, but does
not make it a separate department.
The third bill provides the pro
posed system of rehabilitation which
has been outlined by Chairman
Harry A. Mackey.
The fourth bill establishes a two
per cent tax oh self insurers, the tax
to bo based upon the premium that
would have been charged against
the pay roll in case insurance pol
icies were taken out.
Steel Trade Not Excited
by Today's Meeting in
New York on Prices
New York, May B.—The steel trade
is taking only a mild interest in the
meeting of Railroad Administration
representatives, with the steel mak
ers' committee in New York to-day.
That a $2 concession on rails would
meet the situation is a persistent re
port, but such a reduction has been
once refused by the rail mills, with
an accompanying exhibit of costs, and
to-day, witli output still falling, over
head, as the producers may show on
Thursday, has brought costs up
higher.
If this week's meeting can only
bring the cutting of the knot and
leave the industry free from deadly
Government paltering, there are
signs that betterment will be seen.
Whatever its results in the way of
railroad buying, the interview is not.
expected to influence greatly, if at
all. the general price level.
The fact that the steel market is
Tastes differ, of course!
When you want the
old reliable quality _ * -
in bread the whole / f J sfo/
family likes, you f (M/V/
s im ply cannot res ist,
the old fashioned
To
a/?c^
serve bread that meets
Bread! —77 77 7
f wlth a duality and
test---be
" 11 ~
AT ALL GROCERS
Bricker's West Shore Bakery
so sharply at variance with mercan
tile conditions throughout the coun
try, coupled with the steady deple
tion of ultimate stocks in all forms,
Is bringing out reminders of other
periods in which contraction was
overdone.
| Liquor Dealers Appeal to
I Wilson to Suspend Dry Law
Atlantic City, May 8. —A protest to
President Wilson against the en
forcement of the July 1 dry execu
tive order was adopted yesterday by
the National Liquor Dealers' Asso
ciation, in session hero.
, The association requests the Pres
ident to suspend the order which
• "would add 2,000,000 men to the
I army of the unemployed In the na
tion." It is set forth sthat there are
85,000 liquor dealers "who would be
subjected to an unexcusable injus
tice, a sacrilegious and tyrannical
crucifixion of their business rights,
and besides the government would
Home
SET YOUR MONEY TO WORK,
Jlpf ON BUILDING A HOME
OF YOUR OWN
I! u * s * DEPLOF LABOR
ic ri'la^J
Si llll' IS 11 I We have a beautiful book of designs of Homes
I ||ll R that you can build at a cost that is a real surprise.
I |l We will furnish the plans of any home in our Plan
|, Book ABSOLUTELY FREE. Drop us a postcard
| II fl and we will mail you our catalog entitled the
||r | "Home Builders' Plan Book"—without any obliga-
L H Ha 1J 1 tion whatsoever on your part.
LUMBER , MILLWORK
SHINGLES and ASPHALT ROOFING
PROMPT DELIVERY PRICES REASONABLE
GUARANTEED GRADES LET US QUOTE YOU
JOHN D. BOGAR & SON ~
FREDERICK-FRANKLIN STS. STEELTQN, Pa.
lorfe the taxes on 50,000,000 gallons
of stock on hand."
MOTMER'S DAY ADRESS
Iliurimclstowii, Pa., May 8. —A de
lightful program is being arranged
by the members of the Methodist
Carter's Little Liver Pills
You Cannot be A Remedy That
Constipated Makes Life
and Happy JeShlwer Worth Living
Small PiU I I DILI g Genuine bear* signature
Small Doae B Si
A'gKS.'SiSiS BARTER'S IRON PILLS
many colorles* face* but will greatly help moat pale-faced people
Episcopal Church In commemoration
of Mother's Day next Sunday. Spe
cial music will be rendered by the
choir, besides a number of recita
tions. The morning- address will be
delivered at 10.30 o'clock by Frank
G. Black, of Dickenson College.
11