TELL OF POLICIES IN FORD PLANT Employes on Stand to Dis prove Tribune's Anarchis tic Charges By Associated Press. Mount Clemens. Mich., May 27. Witnesses for Henry Ford, who is euing tho Chicago Daily Tribune for 51,000.000 damages on a charge of iibei. gave glimpses of the routine of the bis Ford plant yesterday, erpernlng testimony was along the line of refutation of the assertion in the Tribune's alleged libelous editorial, headed, "Ford Is An Anarchist," that at the time the National Guard was called out for service on the Mexican border. Mr. Ford would not hold his employes' jobs open for them while absent. The witnesses, wero John J. Henkel, head of tho employment department; Harry Rommsrs. his assistant, and Norman Baker, a fore man in the plant, who for seven years has been a member of the Michigan National Guard. Baker testified that during his military servico he was always re instated and never discriminated against because of his activity in the National Guard. Tho substance of tho testimony of tho witnesses \Bettei* j A great many people who have been trading with us for years tell us that our pay as you earn plan works out a great deal better than expected, because they can clothe themselves and always be dressecf in the height of fashion and still never miss the small weekly payments that are made. We Clothe The Family There is nothing gained by paying out S2O, S3O or S4O for a new outfit when you can get tha* very same outfit here by paying for it in weekly or monthly amounts. This plan is pleasing everybody and have every reason to believe that it will appeal to you. Come in and see how easy it is to Open an Account here SUh&3lfeaje€*> 36 N. Second St., Cor. Walnut St. Order For Decoration Day / Thorley's Three Layer the Cream Chocolate Cake UJXJ\* half No need to go through the worries of cake baking when such delicious cake can be had—right at #This Label is your guide to the right package. Thor ley's cakes always please. THORLEY BAKING CO. Harrisburg, Pa. TUESDAY EVENING, "> HJtRMSBTTRG TELEGKAPS MAY 27, 1919 was that for years it has been the | Ford policy to reinstate men who ceased employment for reasons be- j ybnd their control, such as sick- - neas or military service, and that this policy was in full operation 1 when the National Ouard was called I out in 191t. Date For Rose Show Moved Up to June 6-7 Because of the unusual weather j conditions, the Woman's Advisory j Beard of the Y. M. C. A., at a meeting i >esterday afternoon, advanced the. date for the Second Annual Rose | Show to Friday and Saturday, June: £ and 7. It was explained that the cool, damp weather of the last few j weeks will cause the period of rose! bloom to be eurllor in the season. j J. Horace McFarland will lecture on I the eveuing of June 10 on "Roses in i America." The address will be given In Fahnertock Hall and will be lllus- I trated by colored slides, showing; some of the largest rose gardens Inj the country. Mr. McFarland Is editor ! of the American Rose Manual. No [ entry fee will ho charged for the rose show, but tickets of admission will) be sold which will also Include admia- j slon to the lecture. BIBLE CLASS ENTERTAINS York Haven, Pa., May 27.--Mcm-| bers of the thirties' Adult Bible class: of St. Paul's Lutheran Church, taught by Postmaster J. 11. Kline, j were entertained on Friday night at! tho Kline home. More than 201 members wero present. Refresh ments followed a social period. Men oif the 28th Division of Harrisburg and Vicinity Whose pnre. ta are NOT members of the Home Folks Victory Asso ciation, you are invited to send thia coupon to H. W. Lor.g, chairman, 1113 North Front street. Harrisburg, and receive in return a ticket to the banqn-' to be I—id on the evening of May 29 at 6 o'clock at the Penn-Harris Hotel. Fame Address By Order of the Home Folks "latorv Association. Penna. Committee in New York to Greet Troops Home By Associated Press. New York, May 27.—Throe hun i drcd and fifty Penneylvanians ar rived here to greet the Three Hun l dren and Eleventh Field Artillery, ! Threo Hundred and Fourteenth Ma chine Gun Battalion and other Pennsylvania troops due here with in the next few days on the Ed ward Luckenback and several other transports. The delegation, headed by M. J. Ilealoy. of Luzerne coun ty, has chartered two steamers to moot the troop ships down the bay. Liverpool Has Several Candidates For Office Liverpool, Pa-, May 27. —Liver- pool voters are taking particular in terest in the coming fall election of Perry county. Three Liverpool men have announced themselves for nomination, I. N. Barnes on the Democratic ticket for County Com missioner, George C. Hoffman, for County Commissioner on the Demo cratic ticket and S. Maurice Shuler, County Game Warden, on the P.e publican ticket for County Auditor, which office Mr. £huter has held for several terms. CON EW AGO TIUP The Harrisburg Natural History So ciety will go to Conewago on Me morial Day by Pennsylvania Railroad train, leaving at 7:50 a. m. Front there the party will walk to t al mouth, exploring on the way the "Governor's Stables" and visiting a colonv of black crowned herons. Re turning. the party will leave Fai mouth on the 6:34 p. m. train. Out siders desiring to make the trip with the society will be granted the privi lege. They have been requested to get into communication with Dr. George C. Potts, 1100 North Third street. 30 GIRI.S SEEDED Qt'ICKLY Experienced in operating power ma chines Good wages and bonus. See our large advertisement, page 7. Jennings' Manufacturing Co. —Adv. MC GRAW TIRES Ribbed Non-Skid Cord Guaranteed 5,000 Miles Special "Imperial 30x3 sll.oo' Call on phone for prices. WITMAN BROTHERS 40 N. 10th St., Harrisburg, Pa. MONUMENTS TO THREE SOLDIERS State of Pennsylvania Will Transfer Memorials at Get- j tysburg to Government Gettysburg, Pa., May 27. —Dedl-! 1 cations of the three monuments on : j tlie Gettysburg battlefield, one to j ! General Humphreys, one to General j ; Geary and one to General Hayes, has | (•been changed from the Fourth of i | July to the first, the change being | ; made because of the inability of j I Governor William C. Bproul to be 1 I present on the Fourth. According j to plans announced by Judge Chas. | F. McKenna,, of Pittsburgh, one of j the three surviving members of the ! original committee of nine appoint jed as the Pennsylvania Memorial j I Commission by Governor Edwin S ' j Stuart, the dedication will be a not inblo event. Tue formal transfer of I these three monuments by the State to the National Government was I authorized under Governor Stuart | and an appropriation for the event ! passed two years ago, but the cere i mony has never taken place on ac | count of war conditions. Instead of moving from one mon ! umcnt to another on different parte jof the battlefield, the entire cere ] mony will take place at the historic I rostrum in the National Cemetery I and a separate speaker will make a dedicatory address for each of the three monuments. Hampton L. Carson, of Philadel phia, author of historic sketches of Major General Humphreys and oth er notable military figures, will prob ably be the orator for the Hum phreys monument, senator Andrew C. Williams, of Butler, who served under Major General Hayes in the battle of Gettysburg, has been asked to deliver the Hayes Monument ded icatory oration, but thus far the speaker for the Geary monument has not been selected. On behalf of the State of Penn sylvania Governor William C. Sproul will present the three monuments to the National Government, and they will be accepted by the Secretary of War Newton D. Baker. Families and descendants of the three late generals will be present at the exercises, and a battery of I artillery from Fort Meyer, Va., will be detailed by the War Department to come to Gettysburg to participate in the ceremonies. The Grand Army of the Republic of Pennsylvania has also been Invited and plans are un der way to furnish transportation to one hundred veterans of the Civil W'ar from all parts Of the State. When these one hundred veterans come to Gettysburg, with their old battle flags flying and attended by a guard of honor, it will most likely mark the last Civil War dedication, and the final large gathering of the j Pennsylvania boys of 1863. Girl Burns Self to Death; Sweetheart Dies by Bullet ! Allcntown, Pa., May 27. Nava I Newhard. 16 years old, and Palmer I Lilly, aged 19, of Northampton, near (here, died in a tragic manner yester day afternoon as the result, It is asserted, of a suicide pact, because the parents oi the girl refused to j permit her to accept the attentions ! of Lilly. Niss Newhard, is is said, was recently chastised by her moth er because she persisted in keeping company with young Lilly. The young people evaded their pa rents and walked to Howertown, a mile away, where they sat down by the roadside and ended their lives. The girl, with the assistance of her lover. It Is thought, set fire to her dress and was burned to death, every bit of clothing on her body Except j her shoes being destroyed. Then young Lilly, according to the theory | of the Coroner, shot himself several times through the head, dying in a few minutes. They left a note on the ground in which they told of | their purpose to die, as they could .not live apart. The bodies were found soon after, and were turned 1 over to the parents. Black Hand Secrets Bared by Members in Open Court Grcensbursr, Pa., May 27.—Start ling revelations have marked the trial here of Dominiek Domico, who its charged with the murder of Tony .Cordlllo, at Mount Pleasant, Janu ary 6. For the first time in the an- Inals of the country witnesses are re-i veallng workings of the Black Hand i Society. A price of 11,000 Is alleged to have been set on the head of Cor dlllo, the killing having been deter mined upon at a meeting of the so cloty In Mount Pleasant. When the hearing was resumed yesterday witnesses testified that Frank Mialli, Italian, wanted Cor dlllo killed or injured. At a meet ing of the Black Hand Society it was determined that M&illi would have to put up 31,000 If he wanted Cordillo killed, and JIOO If he want ed him maimed. A detailed state ment of the activities of the lawless gang was given by Joe Gross and Josina Dermot, members of the so ciety, who have made a clean breast of the affair. % WAR HERO I.IOM7Kn New York. May 27.—Sergeant Alvln C. York, Tennessee's famous World War hero, to-day had his "subway" ambition fulfilled when. In the private car of President Theodore P. Shonts of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company, and accompanied by the road's superintendent, construction engineer, signal engineer, treasurer and director of welfare, he toured the great undrground transportation sys tem like a king. Before the trip he telegraphed .Senator Miles Polndexter acceptance of nomination to honorary membership in the Red Cross Club, of Spokane, wash. ENGLISH TO BURY FTtYATT London, May 27. —The body of Captain Charles Fryatt, the British merchant officer executed by the Germans In 1916, will be brought to England and given a burial similar to that of Miss Edith Cavell. This was announced In the House of Commons yesterday by Andrew Bonar Law, government spokesman. JEWS APPEAL TO PRESIDENT Call Upon Him to Take Steps' to End Massacres in For eign Lands By Associated Press. I Atlantic City, N. J., May 27. j Resolutions calling upon President Wilson and the delegates of all other] countries attending the Peace Con-1 ferenco to tako proper and effective j measures to "stop tho uiassacro and pogroms of Jews in foreign coun- j tries" wero adopted by the lndepen-j dent Order H'Flith Abraham In sos-1 slon here yesterday. The resolution, the text of which was cabled to President Wilson, fur-, ther declared that no nation bo rec-, ognized by tfio Peace Conference: which does not givo full religious j freedom and full civic equality to its Jewish inhabitants. A message] was also sent to tho Peace Confer- ; ence urging that a Jewish state be 1 created in Palestine, as homo for members of tho race who care to; iivo there. A lengthy discussion followed the: report of tho committee on the] grandmaster's recommendations, and , it was finally decided to charge each ; member ten cents a month extra as] a tax to help meet the endowment] fund. The recommendation of the com-j mission of fifteen to establish fratcr-i nal rates on an age basis was voted j down. Three candidates were nominated, for grandmaster, the present iticum- j bent, Leon Sanders, of New York,! who has been in office eleven years: | former Judge George Hurtman. New] York, and Morris Steinberg, Urook- j lyn. I Compare the New Standardized Net Prices of Pennsylvania Vacuum Cup 6,000 Mile Fabric and Cord Tires with prevailing schedules of ordinary 3,500 mile tires and those of any other make carrying equal mileage warranties. Price Schedule Effective May 12th: Vacuum Cup Vacuum Cup Size 6,000 Mile 6,000 Mile T,!W~ Fabric Tires Cord Tires * 30 x 3 16.55 2.70 30 x ZVi 21.20 26.85 3.15 32 x 3Zt 24.95 38.35 3.45 31 x 4 33.35 4.70 32 x 4 33.95 48.70 4.75 33x4 35.85 50.05 4.90 34x4 36.50 51.35 5.05 - 32 x 4/, 47.20 54.90 6.10 33 x 4/2 49.10 56.35 6.20 34 x 4Y* 49.50 57.85 6.30 35 x 4V% 51.50 59.20 s 6.35 36 x 4Vx 52.05 60.70 6.50 33 x 5 60.30 68.55 7.25 35 x 5 63.45 71.90 7.60 36 x 5 64.65 7.70 37x5 66.75 75.20 7.90 0 Pennsylvania Vacuum Cup Tires and "Ton Tested" Tubes, under an economical and perfected zone selling system, are marketed by responsible dealers at Standardized Net Prices Uniform wiPsik, Throughout the United' States #IH - Pennsylvania \ W VACUUM CUP ® PH® 6000 MILE-TIRES I I PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER COMPANY, JEANNETTE, PA. I PHILADELPHIA BRANCH: 207-09 N. Broad Street \ We Have on Hand a Large Sock of Pennsylvania Tires and Tubes to Take Care of Your Requirements. ALFRED H. SHAFFER, Distributor 88 South Cameron St. I 1 Would Have Royal Arcanum Hans Flag j in Each Lodge Room By Associated J*rsss. Atlantic City, N. J„ May 27. Resolutions calling upon the 1,588 subordinate councils of the Royal Arcanum to have as part of their paraphernalia the Stars and Stripes, which shall be conspicuously dis played at each meeting and thut ev-| ery one of the 1(0,000 members of the fraternity salute the NaUon's flag upon entering the council cham bers, were presented by a special committee at the convention of the. Supreme Council of the Royal Ar canum here. The resolutions alto called for the singing of the nutlorrul anthem at each sesalon. Tribute to the work done by W. Ilolt Apgar, examiner of claims, of Trenton, N. J., was paid In appro priate resolutions passed. During the last year the payment of more than 56,000.000 has been directed; by Mr. Apgar. Chinese Delegates Are Authorized to Sign Peace Treaty By Associated Press. Parts. May 27.— The President of ! China has notified the Chinese del i egatinn by cable that a meeting of ' the Chinese cabinet and the speak ers of. both houses authorized the ! delegation to sign the peace treaty | with reservations regarding Shan -1 tung. WELL, EVKN THAT WII.I. HBI.P "They say food Is going to be cheap ] pretty soon." remarked the hopeful j chap. "No," said the man who loves to j look on the dark side; "It Isn't going |to be cheap—it will merely seem cheap by comparison."—Boston Trans- I cript. With or Without? Tetley's Tea —whether with cream or without —is the tea that particular people drink. Why? Because of its cheering, delightful flavor, an expert blend of teas from 15 or more tea gardens. Because of its refreshing fragrance .—makes you forget you were tired. Tea is the drink that relaxes you fand cheers you but— Until you have tried a cup of Tetley's clear, amber colored Orange Pekoe Tea, you don't know what a cup of tea can mean! TETLEY'S TEA 17
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers