"WETS" TRY TO HAMSTRING "DRY" ENFORCEMENT Make Bill So Drastic They Hope It Will Be Unpopu lar and Inoperative Despite the efforts that have been made to banish it from continued serious consideration in the Legisla ture, the liquor question now pre sents itself as one of the most pres ent and important matters of next week because of "the search and seizure" amendment made to the Fox Enforcement Bill by the liquor interests. This provides that any persons having a stock of liquors on their promises will he liabe to a visit from the authorities and a search for liquors made and con sequent seizure if any arc found. There is no lofty thought of en forcing prohibition in the amend ment but the idea of making the bill unpopular. Paradoxically, the "dry" leader. Representative John W. Vickerman and his lieutenants are against the amendment declaring that (hey are for prosecution of of fenders and not persecution. The "wet" leaders hoped to make the Fox hill so unpopular that the. Governor would veto it and now are flabbergasted to learn that the Ex eeutive will sign it when it reaches him. Wanting to he fair the "drys" will continue their opposition to the DOCTORSHAND OUTJJVE TIPS rake PubliG Into Confidence Prominent physicians claim people fail in life because of "nerve hunger" that it is the active brighi-eyed, strong nerved man or woman who is "there" at work or play. Strong, well nourished nerves is the great secret of success, health and hap piness. Men and women try to live regardless of health, strength, ambition, energy and hope, they exeeed the speed limits, wasting nerve strength and energy and fail to store up reserve force, after wards they only exist, life has no joys. Without energy, ambition, strong nerves, and pure blood one cannot hope to enjoy the fullest measure of success and happiness. A noted specialist says. "Phosp'iated Iron brings strength to the blood, nerves and brain, that it is a pet-feet combination of vital elements of great tonic qualities when taken by 'Nerve sick humans', that it will increase body and nerve energy, restore ambition and staying powers". He also says: "Tf you are the victim of overwork, worry, excess of mental and physical forces, have the blues, and the pleasures of life are no longer en joyable, that you need rhosphated Iron to brace, build you up and put you on your feet again". Ppeelal Notice—To Insure physicians ~"d their patients getting the genuine I'hosphated Iron we put up in capsules ■nly, so do not allow dealers to jsubsti lute any piVa or tablets. Geo. A. Gorgas, the Drttgg'st. an 1 j leading Druggists everywhere. "IT DID MOTS," IS THIS UK'S REPOIIT / Mrs. Susun Hankele, 14 W. Rock- Jj-nd street, Philadelphia, is enthusi astic over the splendid results she obtained in Ihe use of Tanlac. "For "any >tears T suffered from stomach trouble, indigestion and nervous ness," she says. "I got so I couldn't steer at night. I tried all kinds of me. cine without relief, until one <! I heard, about a lady who had ti.o same trouble and was relieved by Tanlac. I thought I would try Tanlac as a last resort. It proved to be the very thing I wanted. Thank goodness, Tanlac lias done wonders for me and I gladly recom mend it." The genuine J. I. Gore Co. Tanlac •is sold here hy George's, Gorgas', Kramer's, Kennedy's and Steever's, and other leading druggists in every community. Schell's Quality LAWN GRASS SEED We sell hundreds of bushels of i this, our own high quality lawn seed. We mix it ourselves, using Ihe very best fancy grades of I grasses suitable to produce a rich velvet lawn. You have never seen j as beautiful grass in Capitol Park as you have seen there the last tiiree years, which time we have been 'furnishing it. Renew your lawn by sowing seed now —Cover the bare spots. For new lawns sow one quart to each 1 ten by ten feet square. Sow seed evenly and heavy and you will have a beautiful lawn. Pt., 15c; Qt., 25c; 2 Qts., 45c; 4 Qts., 80c; Peck, $1.40; Bushel, $4,50 To Make Grass Grow I,'se Wizard llrnnd Pulverized SHEEP MANURE It is Nature's bezt food for xrnsa. "Wizard Brand" la (he original, pure Weedless, dried and pulver ized Sheep Manure. 5 lbs., SSci 10 lbs., SOei 25 lbs., |1.25| 50 lbs., 91.75) 100 lbs., 9:1.00: 000 lbs., 912.00) 1,000 lbs., 922.00) ton, 943.00. Put it on NOW. Walter S. Schell Quality Seeds 1907-1800 MARKET ST. CltT ■"* suburban town delivery THURSDAY EVENING, BDLRRISBTTRG I TELEGRZKPH MAY 8, 1919. BAVARIAN TROOPS SLA Y 20, THINKING THEM SPARTACANS Court-Martial Ordered and Offenders Are Adjudged to Be Shot; Soldiers Break Into Prison at Munich and Exe cute Score of Persons Detained, Dispatch Reveals By Associated. Press. j Copenhagen, May 8. —A Munich | dispatch received here states that ! following the arrest of some thirty (citizens here for holding a prohibit jed meeting, a party of Bavarian sol jdiers broke into the prison last Isearch and seizure idea. They re frained from placing those features in the Fox bill when it was drafted and see that the attitude gf the wets is merely to becloud the issue and drag the subject out. It ik likely that the amendment will be eliminated from the bill in the Senate. The question came up in the Law and Order Committee yesterday when Mr. Vickerman, by a 13 to 9 vote, had the amendment declared eliminated from the bill. William T. Ramsey took the stand that the com mittee could not eliminate an amendment inserted by the House of Representatives. It is a tine par jliamentary point and will be heard i from later. j The committee negatived the i Hough Sunday baseball bill; the bill to allow certain establishments open a part of Sunday and the bill for amateur sports on Sunday. Rater in the day two concert bills, permit ting that kind of entertainment on Sunday. Rater in the day two con cert bills, permitting that kind of entertainment on Sunday, were in troduced in the House. Those bills ■will have little chance in this Reg islature as the Sabbath Observance watchdogs are eonstant'y on the alert. The Rev. Dr. T. T. Mutehler is the leader of the Sabbath Observ ance cohorts and has never lost a tight in the legislature. PENROSE WANTS DEBATES PUBLIC [Continued from First Page.] formation regarding the extent was lacking. "It remaine to be seen how far we are called upon to assume the ,-inanoial and economic responsibili ties and how far public sentiment in the I'nitcd States will tolerate such assumption," said he. "Except in the fact that the menace of German militarism is re moved. the American people do not seem to be getting any substantial results out of the treaty in the way of indemnities, reparation or other compensation," continued the Sen ator. who said that the article in the Dengue of Nations covenant which stands out "most prominently as a source of trouble," is article ten guaranteeing the present, boun daries and integrity of nations. "That the geography of the world should be fixed on an inflexible and unalterable basis is open to grave question as being opposed to i the progress and development of ! civilization," conCnued the Senator. "Moreover such a proposition de stroys all hope for oppressed peo ples or dissatisfied peoples, such as those in Korea and Ireland, whose grievances, real or alleged, do not secure any consideration or relief j from the Peace Conference and I whose case does not seem to be | technically before the conference. "Such an international doctrine at ; the time of the American Revolu tion would have prevented the in dependence of the United States i without which event having hap i pened, perhaps, the present Peace i Conference would never have oc | curred. Harmony in Senate The Senator said that the Rcpitb -1 lican Senators would caucus, and j remarked: "The Republicans have I two majority in the Senate and the j expectation is that the majority will i act harmoniously and in a spirit of ' patriotism, realizing the importance | in the present crisis of united ac ' tion." "As far as I am personally con ' cerned." said the Senator. "I favor ' any arrangements that will diminish | the chances of war. At the same : time I do not believe we have any i where near reached the stage of hu : man development when wars may not occur at any time. Recent events lin Paris when Belgium. Italy and ( Japan were on the verge of remain ing permanently out of the confer ence. illustrate this danger. The United States must have adequate preparedness, both military and na val. T shall not vote for any treaty or Reague of Nations which impose unreasonable or undesirable obliga tions on the United States or which infringes on the Monroe Doctrine or even makes it dependent on a treaty or acquiescence of other na tions. "I cannot approve of any stipula tion infringing our right to regulate immigration. Above all I cannot approve of any stipulation or cove nant which affects in any way the | absolute independence of the United I States. Ours is a federal govern | ment and the Presidents and Oon- I gress only have powers delegated to I them by the States. The President [ and Congress have no power under I these circumstances .to barter away | such powers entrusted to them for any consideration or to any group of nations." Lee Company Relinquishes Option on Upper End Mines The George F. Ree Coal Company, of Wilkes-Bnrre, has relinquished it 9 option on the lands of the Susque hanna Collieries Company in the Ry kens Valley, and the Susquehanna Company announces that there are no buyers for the properties at the figure offered. $1,300,000. The company announces that it will extend the time in which prospective purchasers may accept the offer, hut [not unreasonably for the reason that if no buyer comes forward it must resume its improvements, whereby it hopes to make the mines profitable. It being the contention of the com pany that the mines as operated are a losing proposition. CHORAR UNION TO SING Haydn's "Creation" will be sung by a chorus of a hundred voices of the Harrlsburg Christian Endeavor Choral Union, in the Technical High school auditorium this evening. The oratorio will be the annual presen tation by the choral union, Soloists will be Mrs. Roy G. Cox, M. D. Hol lenbaugh and Elmer H. Rey. Ad mission Is by ticket which may be secured without charge. A noffering will be taken. night and killed twenty-one of the persons under detention. It is said that the soldiers believed the prisoners were Sparticides. A court martial has been ordered and a command has been issued that the soldiers found guilty of causing the death of the persons held in jail be shot. Germany Silent on Pact; Hun Courier Is on Way j to Berlin With the Text By Associated Press• Paris, May 8. —Germany has not yet submitted any communication with regard to the peace treaty. All the exchanges between the delega tion at Versailles and the home gov ernment are being kept secret. A copy of the treaty is well on its way to Berlin. A German courier left at 9 o'clock last night bearing it with Count Von Brockdorff-Ran tau's first report on the negotiations. Intimations reaching the Peace Conference from Versailles lead to the belief that two or three mem bers of the German peace delega tion will probably return to Ger many to consult their government, the others remaining at Versailles. THE FINAR PRANS Final plans for the new State of fice building to be erected in Cap itol Park will be laid before the Board of Public Grounds and Build ings next week by Arnold W. Brun ner, the architect commissioned for the work. The bill authorizing con struction is now in the hands of a legislative committee and will be reported out soon. 'jGet's-It "Peels My Corns Off! Any Corn or Cnllous Comes Off Peace fully, PninlcHsly. Never Knits. It's almost a picnic to get rid of a corn or callous the "Gets-It" way. Vou spend 2 or 3 seconds putting on 2 or 3 drops of "Gets-It," about as 1 so "Gcls-lt," pool ofT corn fhis way, simple as putting on your hat. "Gets- It" does away forever with "con traptiens," "wrappy" piasters, greasy ointments that rub off, blood-letting knives, and scissors that snip into the "quick," "Gets-It" eases pain. Your 'jumpy" corn shrinks, dies, loosens from the toe. You peel the corn painlessly from your toe in one complete piece. That's where the Picnic ccmes in—you peel it off as you would a hanana peel. Nothing else but "Gets-lt" can do it. Get peaceful, coinrnon-sense "Gets-It," "Gets-It," the guaranteed, money back corn-remover, the only sure way. costs but a trifle at any drug store. M'f'd by E. Rawrence & Co., Chicago, 111. Sold in Harrisburg and recommended as the world's best com remedy by Clark's Medicine Stores, H. C. Kennedy, George A. Gorgas, Keller's Drug Store, Frank K. Kitz miller, C. M. Forney, Golden Seal Drug Company. GOODBYT WOMEN'S TROUBLES The torturps and discomforts of weak, lame and aching back, swollen feet and limbs, weakpess, dizziness, nausea, as a rule have their origin in kulney trouble, not "female complaints," These general symptoms of kidney and madder disease are well known—so is tberemedy. . Next time you feel a twinge of pain in the back or are troubled with head ache, indigestion, insomnia, irritation in the bladder or pain in the loins and lower abdomen, you will find quick and sure relief in GORD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. This old and tried rem edy for kidney trouble and allied de rangements has stood the test for hun dreds of years. It does the work. 1 a ins and troubles vanish and new life aud health will rome as you continue their use. When eompletely restored to your usual vigor, continue taking a capsule or two each day. GOLD MEDAL Haariem Oil Cap sules are imported from the laborato ries at Haarlem, Holland. Do not ac cept a substitute. In sealed boxes, three sizes. Speedy relief for rheumatism Rheumatism j neuralgia, or soreness of the ' muscle* lelieved quickly if a bottle of DILL'S Balm of Life (For Internal or External Use) is in the family medicine closet. Can abo be used internally,as directed on the bottle, fut internal pains. Prepared by the DiD Co,, Norrittown, Pa. A lit ma ufacturera of Dill's Liver Pllla Dill's Cough Syrup Dill's Ln Grippe and Cold Tablets Dill's Kidney Pills Aik your druggist or dealer ln medicine. The kind mother mtwmy* kmpi NATION SOON TO FACE A SERIOUS LABORSHORTAGE Kiwanis Club Hears Federal Expert Tell of Pros perity to Come "America is going to face the greatest labor shortage she has ever known. Great.things are ahead. We need to prepare at once by build ing, regardless of the cost!" Leslie Willis Sprague of the Divi sion of Information, United States Department of Labor and Industry, made this assertion in an address THE STORE THAT CLOSES fiffSfT/T it THE STORE THAT CLOSES SATURDAYS AT SIX SATURDAYS AT SIX BEI.L I!l—2!ffi6 UNITED HARRIS BURG, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 10l. FOUNDED 18TS. Read this 1 NO MORE || advertise- H (m ! EVENING SHOPPING I appeared m M —————- .■ York news- *| RETAIL STORES CLOSE '9 papers |g WeekDays, 5:30 P. M. M SATURDAYS, 6:00 P.M. 3ft 8 I 1 ™ RETAIL STORES of this city in their efforts /II || to lessen the labor of their many employes || g|| will hereafter close at 6P. M. Saturdays of each week. y ||j Uj This is done voluntarily on the part of the different jjjj H! employers who firmly believe that it will receive the jjgg H the unqualified support of the shopping public, and <j§£ M that those persons who heretofore have planned their li M shopping for Saturday evenings' will hereafter confine M p their purchases to mornings and afternoons through- |§ || out the week. g 11 You are asked to assist in this movement that II fS means so much to the several thousand employes || || of York's foremost stores, many of whom, no doubt, || jjgj! are personal friends of yours, and all of them will m if be given only what so many others are now enjoying <|g X an evening of rest and recreation after a long day's H M work. This you can easily do by simply confining M jH your shopping to the daytime. . jjjj II Shop Where You WilU But Shop Early §jj If Retail Merchants Bureau, York Chamber of Commerce "York Typographical Union has endorsed the |g> ||g movement of the retail merchants to close the vanced that any movement tending to reduce the , hours of labor for anv rm- * Beginning to-day the Saturday night closing of stores That the shoppers of the city are inclined to co-operate iui any cm Roes Jnto effect in this cityi and wm continue all the year, heartily with local merchants in the Saturday night clos ployes, wnetner organized and not merely for the summer season, as many persons ing movement inaugurated last Saturday evening was the or not should have the sup- have supposed. The closing agreement, it is stated, has opinion expressed by several of -the leading merchants of r.r>rt nf anv n l 'Pen entered into by 98 per cent, of the dealers in non- the city this morning, u j v 1 . Or o anlzea perishable goods, department stores, retail dealers in dry body. York Dispatch. goods, shoes, millinery, etc. The shopper, as well as the merchant and his employes, Marching to the cadence of martial music furnished by will benefit by the change according to a statement made two bands, more than tiOO clerks, employed in the local by the head of one of the leading department stores of stores, paraded last evening through the principal streets the clty The more enual distribution of trade which is of the city, to publicly show their appreciation of the con- bound to result from the Saturday closing movement, he cession made to them by their employers in entering into said, will be productive of better service and better buy the movement. • * * j nK _ Since a satistied customer is always a returning cus- Several thousand interested spectators lined the ct"' h tomer, this will eventually result in increased business for along the route of march and viewed the parade. The the local merchants, ho averred, fact that most of the marchers were women attracted the Interest of the onlookers. * * * "Heretofore," this merchant said, "shoppers waited un- That the clerks are greatly pleased with the prospect of j ' '' , ' ' having the stores closed Saturday nights was indicated by ,atc Saturday afternoon and Saturday evening to do the expressions of pleasure heard on pvery hand. One their shopping. This plan resulted in a btg rush which young woman was heard to say, "Just think of it. We'll could not be adequately handled even with augmented be able to walk up and down (seorg. street on Saturday forces of employea . i mpa i rme nt of the efficiency of the evening just like regular human beings. Numerous other , . . . .. .. . .. A expressions of a similar character were heard from the sales forces and general dissatisfaction to the customer liberated clerks. —The York Dispatch. were the results of this condition." —York Dispatch. / 'it . • • ' ' N-S • - r- ■ • - '• r- • J ; i Why Isn't Harrisburg a . s Progressive as York • before the Kiwanis Club of Harris burg in their noon-day luncheon at the Penn-Harris Hotel. He urged better housing conditions and call ed upon the businessmen of this State to get behind the great recon struction program that America is opening. At the opening of his address Mr. Sprague paid tribute to Governor Sproul and his cabinet who he de clared had "set an example to the rest of the nation hy opening their immense road building program." He urged that public school build ings, offices and private structures be begun at once, despite the pres ent high cost. Common labor of the wheelbar row class, he said, is plentiful now but there will be a shortage in the very near future. "We are face to face with this inevitable shortage, and our industries will be sorely tax ed by the demands from home and abroad. Prosperity is ahead." In the absence the president, R. F. Neefe, who is in Birmingham, Ala bama, attending the national con vention, A 1 K. Thomas, vice-presi dent, presided and offered the open ing prayer. Ernest B. Eppley won the attendance prize, a "surprise," donated by Charles R. Schmidt. Irving E. Robinson announced that the Municipal Band will play for the soldiers at the Carlisle Mili tary Hospital a week from Sunday and asked members to offer their automobiles to transport the musi cians. It was moved to send a telegram of greeting to President Neefe while he is at the convention. Bell Telephone Folks Are Big Bond Buyers The Bell Telephone employes ->f Harrisburg have subscribed a total of $82,400. having just bought $17,950 worth of Victory bonds. In the first lear. they subscribed $12,800, the sec ond 81 1,250. the third $22,500 und the fourth $14,900. Funeral Services Are Held For Miss Bigler l — Many prominent people were present at the funeral services for Mrs. Annie Haldeman Bigler, daughter of 'the former United States Minister to Norway and Sweden, held at her late home, 215 South Front street, this afternoon. The Rev. George Edward Hawes, pastor of the Market Square Pres byterian Church, officiated. Bur ial was made in the Harrlsburg cemetery. Mrs. Bigler was long a resident of Harrlsburg and had a host of •friends here. She was educated in Paris and spent a year with her par ents in Stockholm before they re turned to America. She was a teach er in the Market Square Presbyte rian Sunday school and was promi nent in civic and religious work for many years. TO REDUCE DANGEROUS VARICOSE VEINS People who have swollen veins or bunches should not wait until they reach the bursting point, which means much suffering and loss of time, but should at once secure from any re liable druggist a two-ounce original bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil (full strength). By using this powerful, yet harm- Jess germicide treatment improve ment is noticed in a few days and by its regular use swollen veins will re turn to their normal size and suffer ers will cease to worry. Moone's Em erald Oil treatment is used by physi cians and in hospitals and is guaran teed t.o accomplish results or money returned It reduces all kinds of enlarged glands, goiters and wens and is used exclusively in many large factories as an unfailing first aid to the injur ed antiseptic. Your druggist can so;-- ply you. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers