I AUTOCRACY ENEMY TO (. S.JNDUSTRY Professor Declares locracy Must Rule in Business id, May 9.—America's na tkness as revealed by the war "is discovered to tie Bccure and bad industrial said Earl Dean Howard, on, 111., professor of eco d finance In Northwestern , In an address to-day be- Federal Council of the of Christ in America. "In utocracy, whether in the omination by corporations ms is our enemy at home erman autocracy was our er there," continued Pro srard. ,ea of democracy as a f adjusting human rela both politically and indus s Hairy Growths thout Pain or Bother Modes of' Today) : necessary to use a pain l-to remove hairy growths, delatone handy you he skin entirely free from ity destroyers. To remove s a. stiff paste with a little elatone and water. Spread e hairy surface and in linuaes rub off, wash the the hairs are gone. To iSnst disappointment, be giet real delatone. PECIAL THIS WEEK Special $68.00 3-Piece Solid Oak Bed Room Suite (Dressing Table, Chiffonier, Bed) 9x12 Wool Fiber Rugs $lO.OO up 9x12 Matting Rugs, $5.50 Scrim Curtains, 05£ pair up Other " Goods at Proportionate Prices FORMWALD FURNITURE house 1321 N. Sixth St. REFRIGERATOR TIME MThis is refrigerator month. We have just recently received a car of real re- Regular cold storage and ice saving kind. Serviceable and priced I a way that will save you money. to gßlf you need one, don't lose time. Come right here come right now. Our -■rices will be the cheapest—cash or credit. I SPECIAL SALE NOW ON OF THE FAMOUS McDOUGALL KITCHEN CABINET Li co. 1215-1217-1219 North Third Street The Big Uptown Home Furnishers FRIDAY EVENING, * HARRIBBURG telegrxph MAY 9,1919. trially, has taken deep root in the world, and this country may not hope to escape the logical conse quences of the development of their tendency. The masses of people who dcpertd upon industry for their entire livelihood are losing confi dence in the system of free enter prise which is still largely auto cratic in its methods. "Unless the government and busi ness management unite to restore general confidence in our industrial system, it is inevitable that social forces which are already in exist ence will find our country as unpre pared to meet the supreme test as we were to face the war with Ger many, and with much less hope of a satisfactory outcome. All of the constructive forces whether on the side of management or organized la bor must join to satisfactorily adapt our industrial relations to the needs of the post-war conditions so as to deprive the racial and destructive forces of their power. "If employers." by collective action or otherwise, are unwilling to as sume responsibility for meeting the human needs of workers within in dustrial management itself, then as suredly responsibility will be as sumed by organized labor or by the government, or at the very worst, by the proletariat in a Bolsevik form of government. " 'nomocracy in industry' is even now becoming the foremost topic in economic discussion. It may be translated 'righteousness in business relations.' " University of Liege Honors Belgian Queen Brussels, May 9.—Queen Elizabeth of Belgium has been nominated Doc tor of Medicine by the University of I.iege, in recognition of her work as nurse throughout the war. The rec tor of the university handed the di ploma to the Queen and read an ad dress from the faculty in her honor. WILL REORGANIZE SCHOOL SYSTEM ! Governor Arranges For Dis j • cussion of Important Plans j General educational conditions in 1 the State were discussed for an hour with Governor William C. Sproul ] late yesterday by a committee of I some of the prominent educators of , the State, the meeting having been | arranged for an interchange of j views. The whole situation was gone over at length and numerous sug gestions were made by the educators for improvement of conditions. As a result of the meeting it is probable the legislative committee to investigate the school system will confer with educators and probably adopt as a report a bill on which the combined thought will be cen tered. This bill will reorganize the Department of Public Instruction. During the conference with the educators a committee of the Phila i delphia Real Estate Board, of which ! William H. Ball, secretary to Dr. j Martin G. Brumbaugh, when Gover j nor, is executive secretary, waited in the reception room. The appoint i ment for this board was for after ' 2 o'clock to discuss the profiteering i charges against real estate owners | and owing to the time taken by the j educators, Mr. Ball and his party I decided not to wait and took a train 1 soon after 3 o'clock. The fact that the former secretary, who bad kept I many an important man waiting in I his time, could not wait was much ' commented upon. | The educators committee consist- I ed of Dr. F. E. Downes, president of ithe State Educational Association; IH. W. Dodd, Allentown; Dr. W. G. i Chambers, Pittsburgh; Fred W. Rob bins, Williamsport; George L. Om wake, president of Ursinus College; | Miss Margaret Maguire, Philadel j phia; Dr. J. L. Eisenberg. president | of Slippery Rock Normal School, and ! Dr. Charles S. Davis, Steelton, form jer president of the State Associa i tion. Dr. Samuel Hamilton, Pitts j burgh, and Dr. ,T. W. Snoke, Leb j anon, were unable to be here. Governor Sproul discussed the ' Philadelphia bridge with John T. 1 Windrim, the Philadelphia archi ■ tect, and saw a number of promi ,! nent men and conferred with legis i lators about pending bills. He also i lot it be known that he would not ' have the State Art Commission bill i recalled so that railroad bridges would be expected from its provi sions and that he would sign the bill. Willys-Overland Plant Closes After Clash of Strikers Toledo, Ohio, May 9.—The plant •of tho Willys-Overland Company j was closed late yesterday afternoon by Clarence A. Earl, vice president j oi' the'company, following a clash ; between strikers and police in which j bricks, stones and clubs were used ! as weapons. I Tlie trouble resulted when several hundred strikers attempted to talk with employes who had refused to join their ranks. CHANGES FOR TRACTOR BILL Highway Department Would Except Agricultural Machines The State Highway Department has recommended certain changes in Senate Bill No. 796, which amends the traction engine law of June 8, 1915. These changes correct objec tions to the measure raised by agri cultural interests at a hearing held by the House roads committee Tues day. The Highway Department suggests that agricultural implements be ex cepted in the clause which provides that "no traction engine, trailer or other vehicle shall be moved over any highway or bridge in excess of 14 tons * . • vehicle and load com bined, nor shall any such engine, vehicle or contrivance * * * be moved * * • which has any flange, revolving belts or chains, ribs, clamps and cleats." Tho changes suggested by the Highway Department would except from the provisions of this clause all 'agricultural implements, sucli as grass mowers, binders, manure spreaders, hay loaders, bay rakes grain drills, potato planters, etc." Another change would permit the operation of caterpillar tractors, an added provision declaring that "the caterpillar or crawler type of trac tors may operate with such modifi cations as the State Highway Com missioner may prescribe, with cleats at right angles to the axis of the machine five or more cleats to bo in road contact at the same time." The bill excludes from the pro visions of the act all agricultural trailers, such as farm machinery, water or coal wagons, or similar ve hicles, insofar as charges for li censes are concerned. It is suggested that the provision that all tractors not equipped so as to conform with the requirements of the act must comply with regulations prior to November 1, 1919, be changed so as to extend the time to January 1, 1920, the Highway De partment believing that this exten sion is only fair to the interests in volved. Fifteen Persons Meet Death in Texas Tornado 39}^Associated Press. Corpus Christ!, Tex., May 9.—Fif teen persons were killed Wednesday night when one of the worst torna does experienced in southwest Texas swept the lower Rio Grande Valley, demolishing farm houses and doing great damage to growing crops, ac cording to telegrams received here from the storm area. "Harrisburg's Dependable Store" THE returning soldiers tell us they don't understand why Wm. Strouse prices are only $25 —$30 —$35 for suits of the SAME QUAEI IT that other stores are selling at much higher £^3®^ We can only give them the same explanation that we gave the citi zens of Harrisburg in one of our last week's advertisements. ' A That some merchants stocked 100 heavily with clothing at "begin- lij ning of season prices" and cannot afford to go into the market weekly \\ to buy at present lower prices—and that Wm. Strouse did not do this —for he managed bis business so that the public can buy the most ex- If* cellently tailored, sleeve lined, quarter trimmed, waist seam suits *25-*3O-*35 'mm Stratford Clothes —America's Finest Young |l||K' BB Men's Line Is Sold Exclusively By SUmy' Straws! Straws! Straws! prices and styles tl . are right too! w iim. g'troua? 310 Marke Street Harrisburg, Pa. ,'itO Markel Street MAKE FORTUNES IN FISH TRADE Skippers Operating Out of Hull Are Doing Big Business Hull, England, May 9.—Fortunes ; from fish are being piled up by; skippers operating out of Hull. All ' through the war their profits were ' so tremendous that they now consti- j tute a kind of local plutocracy. : They have town houses and country houses and garages filled with mo- j tor cars. There are about ninety skippers working their vessels out of this port. The majority are rough sail- ! ors, with a rule-of-thumb knowledge of navigation, and curious Ideas about the best way to spend their huge earnings. For several years many of them have been netting from $40,000 to' $50,000 annually. One is said to 1 have averaged close on to $60,000. A record is held by the skipper of a trawler which last fall made the Iceland voyage twice within six weeks, returning from the first trip UFT OFF CORNS! Drop Freezone on a touchy ' corn, then lift that corn off with fingers | J j Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little i Freezone on an aching corn, instant- j ly that corn stops hurting, then you j lift it right out. Yes, magic! No ! humbug! A tiny bottle of Freezone costs but a few cents at any drug store, j but is sufficient to remove every hard ! corn, soft, corn, or corn between the j toes, and the callouses, without sore-i ness or irritation. Freezone is the sensational discov- I ery of a Cincinnati genius. It is wonderful. 1 with a little less than $lOO,OOO 1 worth of fish, and from the second ! with a little more than that amount. Tlie skipper's net profits from the i two trips was something like $20.- 000. The second voyage lasted only seventeen days. Owners of t lie fishing craft, who take none of the risks the skippers lace, make oven more money. A boat which hardly would have been thought worth sending to sea before A Wonderful Sale of Up-to-the Minute Models in Suits, Dresses, Capes, Dolmans, f Waists and Skirts At Big Savings, Appealing to Thrifty Buyers This money-savins opportunity, coming; practically at the opening; of the season, is an important event—means you re-outfit, or add to your Summer's wardrobe and enjoy the price reductions when they mean more to you, rather than at the season's end, when you must keep what you then buy until next season. Come in early tomorrow—Early Selections Arc Better. Beautiful Charming Dresses Ponlin • j For Street and Evening Wear 1 "pi'li II From this assortment you can easily p n | Ij sclec-t a dress that will suit your most Oerfife li particular whim, and the savings aro CITITO A 1 lot Of Serge and Taffeta Presses at O 1 3. JL 1) Silk Dresses, comfortable and very 1 *y For the Young Girl Graduate, Beauti *|) X Ld . 7s oJ ful Georgette Commencement Dresses at These suits iBIm! will Printed Georgette Presses, lovely in are of the tin- M' |' design and just the thing for Summer, made. Suitable for all occasions. A wonder- K%! -v /ffltSht fulvu.ue at the price M DolmailS M English, Mixed, Tweed ft>'Jr ! , \--s, Tailored Suits Bffl $ p <111(1 $22.95 to $32.95 S [■■ Capes k y l )\ Besides English Tweeds, 'his assortment (Hi /'— / NtV \ includes a number of Silvertone garments. (HI Jl This assortment in- ,f, t\ These models are finely tfiilored, have i'or- /'/ dudes the season's prct- 11 II tasene silk lining and the belt is of latest flHaWl tiest shades for Spring /i\ HID \ design. In fact, they are very chic in style hKI!/ and materials, and of- \ CBIB&l \ and particularly attractive to those who ANFtHlli fers a wide range of so- I HWE) \ want a dainty garment. HB/JVAV lection. You can surely \ Hit Syl \ Other Suits Tailored and Fancy MKIhJ be suited aL from Ml Trimmed, Values, $59.95 to $75.00. [J , _ _ - , \ iffnl Specially Priced at $49.95. $10.95 to $24.95 \ ' 1 g Georgette Waists, $2.95 Silk Plaid Skirts, $4.95 UuML | Six South Fourth Street the war can be counted on now to t bring in net prolits at the rate of more than $lOO,OOO a year. Wild speculations are going on in traw lers, the boats changing hands at ridiculous prices. It is a gamble against time, for when the trawlers now engaged in mine-sweeping tire released from that work the fishing licet hero will be tripled and tish profits will drop accordingly. McNeil's rain Exterminator—Adtr t MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Certain Kclicf for Fevcrlshncss.l Constipation, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders aud Traao Mark ""'roy Worms. They Break np TradoMarlc folds In 24 hours. Atalldrngria™ Don jnoooj Pomnle mailed FREE Address any oubaututa. BROTHER URAV CO.UROV.N.V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers