PROVIDING FOR THE NEW TROOP Legislative Appropriations to Be Made During This Week mediate reeruit sylvania State Po-j |rrfqPop6c; lice authorized byi mm act approveci ' House appropria tions committee which is in charge of the financial end of the session. The new troop is .to be the same size as the exist ing units. It is to be located in this city. Items will be placed in the gen eral appropriation bill, which is toj be reported to the House of Reprc-j sentatives this week, for the salaries! and horses and equipment of the! new troopers and an item will also! be carried for the erection of bar- j racks and stables on property own-! Ed by the State and udjoining the! State Arsenal. The barracks will: be nothing elaborate, 1 but a plain! serviceable structure and close to I main highway routes. The location j will enable details to be made at| very short notice for the guarding | of the State Capitol and other State i property as well as the arsenal i where large quantities of equipment: for the reorganization of the Na-I tional Guard will be stored whenj N w#T*S wf Alii 1 nl I K V Bi (0 I S5 O fIMBHMUBHMMn , Check that cough or cold quickly Extreme and rapid changes of temperature are apt to result in a sudden cold. Check it promptly. Prudent people always have DILL'S Cough Syrup on the family medicine helf, ready for j any ailments of the respiratory organs. Soothing, pleasant to take. Take accord- j ing to directions that come with the bottle. Prepared by the Dill Co., Norristown, Pa. Also manufacturers of Dili's Liver Pills Dill's Balm of Life Dill's La Grippe end' Cold Tablets I Dill's Kidney Pills , y Ask your druggist or dealer in medicine. - I j The kind mother atwaym kept Skirt j If your doctor said to use Reai- bined advice of all these wise med nol Ointment for that skin-trouble ical men and let Resinol Ointment you'd try it without % second make your skin well ? It usually thought! Well, thousands of doc- stops itching at once, makes sleep tors throughout the country ire possible, and speedily heals the prescribing Resinol Ointment to eruption. heal sick skins, and have been Resinol Ointment is an excellent healing doing SO constantly ioXdytr twenty dressing, too, for burns, scalds, cats and ~ , . . , ~ ' stubborn little sores. Sold by all druggists. years, so why not take the oat" Utiinal Heap clean pour complexions. MONDAY EVENING, received from tho Federal Govern ment later in the year. \ Notices Filed —Notices of Increase . of stock and debt have been filed 9 at the State Department by the fol lowing: Lycoming Foundry and Machine Co.. Williamsport. stock, J480,000 to $700,000; Chester Emer gency Housing Co., debt $2,500,000 to $3,500,000. Pittsburgh-Erio Saw Co., Pittsburgh, debt $75,000; M. T. Garvin Co.. Lancaster, stock, $'150,000 to $300,000; Penn Public Service Co., Johnstown, debt $2,- - 612,000 to $2,873,000; Citizens Light, - Heat and Power Co., of Pennsyl " vania, Johnstown, debt, $2,500,000 - to $2,571,000; Pen Argyl Silk Co., 1 Pen Argyl, stock, $50,000 to $250,-J " 000; Roesslng-Ernest Co.. Pitts-j " burgh, stock, $50,000 to $100,000; £! The Bellefield Co., Pittsburgh, stock. 1 ! $500,000 to $700,000. H. J. Hitter j ® Co., Philadelphia, stock, $500,000 to! B $700,000; Heern Bros Co.. Pitts- j "1 burgh, debt $175,000; Hookless Tas -1 tener Co., Pittsburgh, stock, SIOO,- 000 to $200,000; Juruiek Engineering ** Corp., Allentown, demt $23,000; | - stock, SIO,OOO to $75,000; Central; i ltealtv Corporation of Philadelphia,: stock, $50,000 to $500,000; James E. i Mitchell Co.. Philadelphia, stock.! " $700,000 to $900,0.00. Seranton Lace, 5j Co., Seranton, stock, $1,000,000 toj -j $1,200,000. s ; Hog Cholera —Stringent qunran-l 5 1 tine measures, which forbade the| ': shipment of hogs except for immedi- ( "late slaughter to have checked the "'spread of hog cholera which was ! I affecting thousands of hogs in six ; teen counties of the State. This *1 quarantine which was ordered sev . oral weeks ago followed an invest igation which showed that the herds , | which had been materially increased ''in tho lower Susquehanna and ■ I high valleys through war demands . ! for pork and pork products. There | will probably be an abatement or j i dered before very long if the condl ,'tions continue satisfactory. Many Berries —Pennsylvania will have no cause to complain of its small fruit crop this year, according to reports which have been coming to the State Department of Agricul ture. In spite of weather conditions strawberry yields have been report ed as large in many localities, al j though in some instances local condi ! tions caused loss. Other small t fruits are reported in good condi | tion and in spite of some outbreaks of pests the general situation in the j big apple and peach orchards is fair. Will Clean Decks—The Legisla ture, which enters to-day upon the twenty-first week of actual sessions, , will this week commence to clean up all bills in committee. The appro priation committees plan to finish '.their task by Thursday morning and | to-morrow* evening the members of the House committee will give a I I dinner in honor of Chairman W. J.: iMcCaig, which will be attended by legislative and State officials. Most of the committees are scheduled for committee sessions Tuesday after noon to clear their lists. Increased Capital The Hershey Creamery Co., of this city, has filed i notice of increase of its stock from ! SIOO,OOO to $125,000. i Attended Meeting—Secretary of j Agriculture Rasmussen attended the : meeting of men interested in cold! | storage legislation in Philadelphia. I i Valley Cnse Up—'The Valley Rail ! ways complaints go to the final j stage before the Public Service Com ! mission to-day. Tho arguments j will be followed by filing of briefs, j Attended Sessions—Commissioner 1 of Banking John S. Fisher attended j the meeting of the State Bankers' ' Association at Seranton. j Governor Invited—Governor Sproul j has been invited to attend ! the dinner of the Young Men's Tar iff Club in Pittsburgh on June 19. , Detours Announced The State j Highway Department yesterday an j nounced the first approvals of de i tours of roads, where construction I work is under way. Investigate Offers—State Forestry ! Department engineers are working j in Jefferson and adjoining counties ' investigating sonic lands which have been offered for purchase by the State. Iload Routes Changed—The Legis lature has consolidated Into two bills all This has been a wonderful season, but for the past week or more The men's clothing and furnishing business at this "Live Store" has shown the most re markable increase. We can safely say that Saturday was one of the biggest days in the history of the store. Thousands of customers came Here, but the most interesting happening and worthy of particular mention was the enormous crowds who thronged Doutrichs Saturday night during the hours from 7 to 10 P. M. " . / * ' r "' , • This is a public service institution which tries hard to do the things our customers like to have us do and by selling dependable merchandise that we can fully guarantee to give satisfaction makes this "Live Store" a favor ite among the buying public. We have never seen such eager crowds or more ac tive buying and feel well repaid for handling good merchandise that brings the people Here from far and near. Harrisburg has become a great buying center and a good store like this "Live Store" is a big thing for Harrisburg. We have created confidence and lasting good will among the people throughout Central Penn sylvania by square dealing, honest representation and giving greater values and bet ter service. . 9 Try This Dependable Doutrich Service jl That Everybody Is Talking About - I Hart Schaffner & Marx Kuppenheimer & I Society Brand Clothes ■ * ■ College Students Guard Sproul and Palmer Swartlunorc, June 9. Quaker Swarthmorc armed itself yesterday to protect United States Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, a mem ber of its alumni and baccalaureate speaker at the service held yesterday morning in the college. The Attorney General was the guest of Governor Sproul, who has been so constantly under guard since the bomb outrages o fa fev days ago that he ie tired of it, and doesn't mind in the least saying so. The students formed an armed guard of honor during the day. Not Anxious to Fly, Pershing Informs A. P. By Associated Press. Paris, June 9.—General Pershing, the 9ommander-in-chief of the American Expeditionary Forces, in formed the Associated Press that there was no truth in the report in circulation here that he had asked to be taken as a passenger on the contemplated trans-Atlantic flight of the British airship R-34. When Is a Waist a Blouse? Manufacturers Puzzled New York, June 9,—A perplexing; problem has -risen in the waist manufacturing trade. It has come about aa the result of the movement started by the United Waist League of America for a "National Blouse Weok," which L to begin November 10. The problem centers on the ques tion, "When Is a waist not a waist and when is a waist a blouse?" There is considerable discussion in the trade on this question. One manufacturer says if it costs $3 or less it's a waist, and if it costs more than $3 it is a blouse. This manu facturer made the point that he de rived his solution to the problem from a prominent clothing manu facturer, who told him that the dif ference between "pants and trous ers is that the former cost less than 32 a pair, with no limit to the price of the latter. WELCOME FOR SOLDIERS Columbia, Pa., June 9.—A citi zens' meeting was held in Keystone Hall to decide on a suitable demon stration for Columbia's returr.-ed sol diers. H. M. North, Jr., presided and a committee was named to fix the time and make arrangements. JUNE 9, 1919/ I Brands Nations' League as "Infamous Bargain" Syracuse, N. Y„ June 9. Chan : cellor James R. Day, of Syracuse i University, condemned the League of ■ Nations as "an infamous bargain" ' in his commencement address yes • terday. The fear that should seize the . hearts of every red-blooded citizen of this country to-duy, the chancellor said, is the position of the constl l tution of the United States that is , threatened in the settlement of world controversies at Paris. "I would re ject ar/d overthrow everything be fore I reject the constitution of the United States," the chancellor con tinued. HOME FROM HONOLULU Chain bcrsburg, Pa.. June 9. —Seba J C. Huber, United States District At ' i torney at Honolulu, Hawaiian Terrl ! j tory, is spending a short time here with his mother, Mrs. Naomi Huber, widow of the Rev. B. G. Huber, well known minister of the United Breth ren Church. Mr. Huber was ap pointed three years ago by Presi dent Wilson to his present post and I has four more years to serve. He is now on his way to Washington on an official visit. Long and Roomy Skirts Decreed For Milady in Fall Cleveland, 0., June 9.—Straight fronts, straight backs, broader hips for misses, straight, classic lines fos women. These are fall and winter styles de creed Saturday at the National Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers 1 meet ing here. Skirts will be long—ln step length—with room enough ta step comfortably. Bright colors, with snappy reda and browns are vleing for favor. And then come high rolling collars, buttons and more buttons, not mere ly for ornament but for real use, since most suits will fasten clear to the chin: pockets, tucks, stltchery and cording; coats, longer anLmore l voluminous, with enormous arm • holes: big collars of fur or Bhirred ■ material. '■ 1 d : t COLUMBUS CAFE Club Plate Dinner, 50£ 11.30 to 2.30 ! Sea Food Plate Dinner, $1 > o to s V— I