80,000 SACKS OF PADDY SAVED FOR RICE FLOI'R San Francisco —Taking a tip given by the grain corporation. California millers last week began accepting the 450.000 sacks of damaged paddy stored in this state and grinding it into rice flour for export. This means a salvage of from $1,000,000 to $1,200.- 000 for the growers who were un certain of disposing of the paddy. Export trade in rice lias opened and prices are advancing steadily. Scan dinavia continues to buy in largest quantities, but Africa. Chile and Cuba are the market. On account of the heavy foreign buying, local dealers are becoming solicitous about home needs. How Thin Folks Can Put On Flesh If you are weak, thin and emaciat ed and can't put on flesh or pet atrong. no matter how much you eat. So to Geo. A. Gorgas and pet enough lood-lron Phosphate for a three weeks' treatment and take it as di rected. If at the end of three weeks j you don't feel stronger and better I than you have for months: if your eyes aren't brighter and your nerves steadier: if you don't sleep better, and your vim. vigor and vitality aren't more than doubled, or if you haven't put on several pounds of Stood stay-there flesh, you can have your money back for the asking" and Blood- Iron Phosphate will cost you nothing, f IMPORTANT Blood-Iron Phos phate is sold only in original pnek afces. containing enough for three weeks* trentinent, at 91*50 per pnek age only 50c a week. foot misery /jpi| Burning Puffing - SwafinSofCaliouses* ,,, | Special Plasters in Each Rjckoge I Banish Nervousness Put Vigor and Ambition into Run-Down, Tired Out People If you feel tired out. out of sorts, despondent, mentally or physically depressed, and luck the desire to ac complish things. Get a 50-oent box of Wendell's Ambition Pills today and take the first-big step toward feeling better right away. if you drink too much, smoke 100 much, or are nervous because of overwork of any kind, Wendell's Ambition Pills will make you fee: better in three days or mony burg from your dealer on the first box purchased. For all affections of the nervous! system, constipation, loss of appe tite. lack of commence, trembling, I kidney or liver complaints, sleep- I lessne'ss, exhausted vitality or weak ness of any kind get a box of Wen- j dell's Ambition Pills today on the | money-hack plan. 1 WOMAN WHO FAINTED FROM PAIN AMAZED AT RELIEF T had no idea that I would be benefited the way 1 have by Xat onex," declared Mrs. William Mack, 46 Sambourne street. Wilkes-Barre, as she told why she was amased at the quick relief this splendid Nature medicine brought in her serious case. "I was favorably impressed with all the praise I heard for Natonex, but I was in a very had way. My system was all out of order and I did not think Natonex could relieve me so. "I had a poor appetite and when I did force myself to eat I would be wretched with gas and a suffocating feeling. Some times the pain would be so bad I would faint dead away. "I had a numb feeling in my limbs. I suffered from constipation and had to take physics always. I was so nervous it seemed as if I would jump out of rrhb skin. As to sleep. I got so little thai I walked the floor night after night, not only losing my own sleep, but keeping others awake. "I doctored and doctored and I *-as told I would have to outgrow I I jjj JJIj jj *jffi DO YOU KNOW "THE TRIANGLE RUN"? TV"O. It isn't a play. It's a sea trip on the Canadian . J-' Pacific "Princess" steamers with Seattle at one cor- fi . ,■„ * nerof it, Vancouverat the second, and Victoria laughing I ••. beyond Juan de Fnca Strait, ready with tea and cakes I • ~/ : —-'a trip included in your ticket without extra charge. D vatol ,, a \ f SEATTLE—the metropolis of the Pacific Northwest L J .f with 200 miles of beautiful motor roads within the E jpJ'J City limits. B ■ VANCOUVER—is Canada Vest, from its bustling * - . _J harbor under the Cauchant Lions, to the roof garden of its tallest hotel. And VICTORIA— as English as clotted cream, with more roses than you ever saw at once, behind hedges glossier than anythingain Devonshire. Victoria has time enough to play golf whenever you like it —or give you a spin on the Malahat Drive. FURTHER INFORMATION? ITS WSITING FOR YOU AT The Canadian Pacific Railway Ticket Office 1231 BROADWAY Ask ,OT Rcsorl Tour Book .Vo.l 10 p hon . Madlaon Square 8840 TUESDAY EVENING, TOOK 4TS YEARS TO DISPOSE OF LAWSUIT t London A lawsuit regarding Rhodesian mining rights, which has : reached the house of lords in Its j fourth year, is quite a legal inf.int j when compared with some that have I preceded it. The Thellusson will case, for exam- j pie. dragged out in the courts from j 1767 to 1857. Another similar action at law, known as the Bishop-Pemetra will case, lasted 122 years. Even this, however, is not a record, savs London Tid-Bits. For in 1908. there was settled at Friemar a law suit that had been in progress since . 1430. Tne raising of a dam was the ] point at issue, and it occupied the J courts for exactly 478 years. THIRTY" CHILDREN OF NEGRO IN' EUROPEAN" WAR j A negro who prehaps merits a dis- I tinguished service cross for his in- ■ direct assistance in winning the war | is John Ward, of Goldsborough. N. j C. His achievement is described in , the Daily Express. Thirteen of his j eighteen sons were reported as in the | Ninth and Tenth United States cav- | airy, while his seventeen daughters j were busily engaged in war work. ; Thirty representatives of one family i helping to win the war! Among this man's thirty-five children were, it : is stated, two sets of quadruplets and j five 'pairs of twins. ONE BARRAGE FIRE COST JOHN BILL 54Ut.000.000 London. Barrage fire, used ex- I : tcnslvely throughout the war, con- | 1 centratins hundreds and thousands j |of pieces apainst an objective. . trenches or other defensive works, j - in order to batter them to pieces, was j ; very expensive, both to the ajrgrres- . sor and the target. One British bar- | I rage, whien lasted only three days j cost $63,000,000. • J JPSS Willard is writing his "Own Story" for "The Philadel phia Press"—every d#y and Sunday. How Fat Folks May Become Thin If you are suddenly becoming stout. I or if you have been putting on flesh l for vears. the cause is generally the same—lack of oxygen carrying power of the blood. This trouble occurs I mostlv in men and women over thirty. ; but it may be easily treated and with | out any "of the privations most fat i people imagine necessary to reduce j their weight. Simply go to your drug- I gist and get a box of Phynola. Take ' five grains after each meal and at ! bedtime. Wonderful results should be i quickly accomplished by this simple treatment. Be sure however you get the genu ine Phynola. It is put up in original j sealed packages, is pleasant to take j and gives prompt results. Gorgas. the ! druggist, stores 16 N. 3rd St., Third and Walnut Sts., and Penna. R. R. ; Station, can supply you. m nerves in the active form in which it normally oc- I I curs in tfce living cells of tbe body. It replaces 1 I nerve waste, creates new strength, builds firm I I healthy flesh. Sold by druggists under a definite I 1 guarantee of results or mor.ey back. Get the gen- I 1 uine BITRO-PHOSPHATE—the kind that phy- I my suffering, but thanks to Natonex 1 did not have to wait. Soon after starting this Nature medicine I be gan to' feel better. I had a fine appetite and good digestion. I have not had a dizzy or fainting spell since I began Nutonex. "My boweis are regular now and the numbness has left my hands and legs. My nerves are improved so that I would not know I had any and my sleep is sound and refresh ing and oh. what a relief it is. "To think that Natonex costs so little, after all, the money I had spent in vain. I hope that my ex perience will be the means of other people getting the same wonderful relief that I have." Any one can learn all about Nat onex how it is taken and the results that may be expected from its use. Just call on the Natonex representa tive at the Gorgas drug store, 16 North Third street. You can even test Natonex free. Natonex is sold by leading drug gists in every town. Look for the name. Don't take a substitute. VALLEY RAILWAY CASES ARE OVER Commission Will Consider the Matter and Render Deci sion Later in Summer The complaints V. \ \ Syy J of various bor-' ou K hs > as so c ia-j yNNXAfU' tions and people 1 f in Cumberland county towns j against the fares and service of j SfcwWWWw the Valley Rail-j qBhUODBI ways Company is I EsL———J now in the hands of the Pul:, li c Ser -< vice Commission ! for decision, the final arguments! having been heard yesterday after-' noon and the briefs are ready for! the study. The complaints are the outcome of the advance of fares to! seven cents and complaints against j crowded cars and the service on j lines which were scheduled to be-' come effective on October 1. Excess I fare checks were issued for the fares. 1 as was done here in the complaints! against the Harrisburg Railways' Company's six-cent fare, also be- | fore the Commission for decision. | The Valley complaints were filed l on September IS and the company, is said to have spent In the neigh- j borhood of $20,000 for a physical! valuation of its properties, one of the! most complete studies of the kinda ever made in this part of the State"] in which everything from a power \ house to a spike was taken into ac count. Charles H. Bergner closed the ar-1 guir.ent for the company, following E. M. Biddle, Jr.. of Carlisle, for the 1 complainants. Mr. Biddle attacked many items in the valuation and! also the bridge toll contract. Mr. j Bergner rejoined that the bridge l contract was a very advantageous i one and that the company would! have trouble getting into Harrisburg | now without spending a couple of i hundreds of thousands of dollars. Old Tollhouse Goes. —The ancient | log tollhouse on the Lincoln High-, way, at Glenloch, has at last been removed by the march of progress.! It was probably the oldest between! Philadelphia and Harrisburg and| was built far beyond the recollection I of any living resident. It had been j occupied for some time by an Italian family, but they have been evicted and the building destroyed. Northumberland Cases. The! Northumberland county grade cross-1 ing oases will be heard by the Pub lic Service Commission to-morrow. Ex-Speaker Elected—Ex-Speaker I Henry F. Walton, of Philadelphia, was elected chairman of the Board | of Trustees at the State Hospital for i the Criminal Insane, at Farview. He ! succeeds ex-Senator Walter Mc -1 Nichol. who was not reappointed to the Board. Henry Ashmead. of! Philadelphia, was named secretary. I Mr. Walton returns to the position! from which he was removed a year ago. • Tliree-oornorod Eight.—A three-1 cornered argument was heard by! the Public Service Commissioners! yesterday in protests by the Pitts-| I burgh Railways Company, and an; |auto bus company against issuance] i of certificates of convenience to ap- j plicants for right to engage in jitney service between East Liberty and | the downtown business section of, Pittsburgh. George A. Dale, the Du-i quesne Auto Transportation Com pany and the Pittsburgh Bus Com pany asked the rights. The rail ways opposed all three, contending that the service should not be au thorized under conditions prevailing. The Packard Auto Transportation Company also opposed one applica tion. The railways company was represented bv A. W. Robertson, while other attorneys for various parties were H. K. Siebenack, C. K. Robinson. E. A. Rarchfeld. R. T. Holden and Jacob Seligsohrt, all of| Pittsburgh. Y'eto on Salary.—Governor Sproul has announced his veto of the Sen ate bill increasing the salary of bor ough controllers. "Considering the amount of work that controllers in boroughs have to do and the re sponsibilities which they are called upon to assume, it is my opinion that the present salaries are ample and for that reason I can not ap prove this measure," says the Gov ernor. Cnusnnl Contract. —Public Service Commissioners heard an unusual ap plication from Saegertown, Craw ford county, during the session for arguments. F. Fox. owner of an electric lighting plant and fran chises in the town applied for sale of the property and rights to Harley D Carpenter, who also asked ap proval of the Commission for exten sion and continuation of the munici pal lighting contract. It was one of the few instances wherein individu als figured in a borough contract Hunter Moves Up Frank N. Hunter. Allegheny county, for four years law clerk to the Attorney General, was appointed deputy at torney general by Governor Sproul and immediately sworn in. He suc ceeds Edmund K. Trent. Allegheny, who resigned and was named special deputy for Allegheny county. More Appropriations—The House appropriations committee reported the following appropriation bills: Hazelton State Hospital. $14,000; Institution for Deaf. Overbrook, $131,250; Glen Mills, $425,000; Scranton State Hospital, $206,000; Coaldale State Hospital, $123,000; Pyamtuning swamp (re-appropria tion), $400,000: salary of commis sioner of labor and industry increase from SB,OOO to SIO,OOO. AUI For Firemen—The Senate committee on appropriations last reported out Senator Smith's bill ap pelating $5,600 to the fire companies of Harrisburg. The money is to be equally distributed among the four teen organiations. The measure was up for first reading this morning. Children Find Their Parents Dead By Associated Press. Philadelphia. June 10. —George N.~ Eby, recently discharged from the Army, and his wife were found dead by their 9-year-old son and a younger brother at their home here yesterday. According to the police. Eby shot his wife and then ended his own life. The children discov ered the bodies when they went to see why their parents had not arisen at their usual time. HIS IMPRESSION Lady Customer The parrot I bought of you swears dreadfully. Dealer l'm surprised at that, ma'am. I thought he was quite an expert. —Boston Transcript. Sunday In New York S33HI —Hound Trip—*3.oo Special Excursion Pennsylvania Railroad, next Sunday, June 15, to the ' great metropolis, the most interesting l city on the American continent. Spe cial train leaves Harrisburg b A. 51. * BABIUSBURO TELEGRAPH IMITATION PEARLS MADE OF FISH SCALES I'arta—Pearls are not always the product of oysters. The imitation of these gews has been reduced to a fine art. Their manufacture embraces two processes the making of a glass sphere and filling it with a substance resembling the luster of the pearl. For 300 years mercury was used for the latter purpose, but in 1680 I "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" I I " Be Sure of Your Store" I I Manhattan & Candy Stripe Shirts I Seems like all the "Manhattan" wearers are coming to this "Live Store" for their shirts for we certainly are traveling at a great speed in our shirt department. We are wondering if you have seen our big win dow display of Candy Stripe Shirts? They are the best selling shirts in the market. You can imagine how well they sell and how easy they are to dispose of when our purchase for this one style only was more than one hundred dozen shirts. Some of our customers buy as many as a half dozen—others two or three shirts. It's a hard matter to resist buying every color when you see the entire range of patterns displayed before you but everybody is especially attracted to the blue and white alternate stripes—then the helio and brown and the green, besides being the most durable H fabrics made they are comfortable and have the unique feature of not showing the soil so readily. A more pleasing feature about them is the correct sleeve lengths—we are able to fit the short, medium and long arm men so that they can eliminate any extra fixings. We have these popular "candy stripe" shirts iA all colors and sizes— s2.so & $3.50 I | Underwear f&'yfk \ I I r Knee lengths B. V. D.—Munsing Cooper's f I j and Varsity Union Suits have the first call for they are XILL^ —5 \ supreme when it comes to comfort, then the light weight, their / 1 I | fabrics of cotton and lisle; also fine mercerized garments in union I t I ® S and two-piece styles—regular and stout sizes—prices consistent 1 V i/fw lIV i H with our usual standard of better service and greater values, \ \|l II T I I Pajamas I | In every good style, fabric and color—There'll 4 be no sleepless nights if you buy i r comfortable pajamas UHIONMIJTS 1 IJ> I RR/FIN 11A *I I **l "* *" V* ** a substitute was found which was both harmless and more successful. This is made from the scales of a little white fish which abounds in certain French rivers. The fish are rubbed rather roughly in pure water in a large basin. The water is then drained carefully, and the residue allowed to settle. The fish are so small that 17,000 or IS,OOO are re quired to furnish one pound of the essence of orient, as It is called. A genuine pearl may be distin guished from an artificial one by va rious methods. First, the real gem lr- much heavier than the Imitation. Again, the case, very small, and with a sharp edge: while in the others they are larger, and have a blunt edge. 'I'SiCLE LEVI' CALVERT, It.t VICARS OI.D, DEAD Hickman, Ky.. "Uncle Levi" I JUNE 10, 1919. Calvert. 115 years old. oldest person i in western Kentucky, is dead. He was a resident of this cunty all his life and was fifteen years olde r than Hickman. He was a very remarkable figure, claiming always he was still young, being able to Jump up and click his heels together until three | or four years ago. Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv. <M| a Three ' Fats? ■■ Particulars mailed free to any address. Hall Cbcra. Co. Dept. B-50 Si. Louie. Ms.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers