Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 02, 1919, Page 5, Image 5

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    CONGRESS ENACTS
BILLS TO FINANCE
THE GOVERNMENT
Adjourns Until Tuesday, After
Passing Appropriation
Measures
By Associated Press
Washington, July 2. Congress
adjourned at midnight until next
Tuesday, July 8. after enacting all
appropriation bills needed by gov
ernment agencies for the new fiscal
year.
Success crowned the efforts of Re
publican leaders to complete the
necessary appropriation measurea
but only after hours of delay which
at, times threatened to block their
plans. •
The final bill, the army measure,
carrying $775,000,000; the sundry
civil bill, carrying $003,000,000, the
District of Columbia's annual budget
of $15,000,000 and a deficiency
measure of $25,000,000, all were
completed last night and to-day will
be sent to the White House. Pres
ident Wilson will be unable to ap
prove the bills until he returns but
embarrassment to government de
partments owing to delay in making
funds available is anticipated.
The recess of Congress was accom- |
plished after many delays to-day ,
with controversies centered upon the
sundry civil and army measures.
The recess gives Congress a rest over :
July 4 holiday and when It returns j
it is expected that President Wil- :
son will submit the treaty negotiated j
with Germany. legislation for
more strict enforcement of war
time prohibition also is to be taken j
up Immediately upon reconvening.
The army bill as adopted repre- I
sents a decrease of $114,000,000 1
from the amount carried in the Sen- j
ate bill, and provides for mainten- ,
ance of an average army of 325,000
men during the fiscal year which be
gan to-day. The conference report
was approved in the Senate with- j
out a record vote and after brief de
bate.
Additional Observers
to Keep Tabs on Sale
of Liquor in Jersey
By Associated Press
Trenton. N. J., July 2.—Additional ,
men were added to the force of j
United States Marshal Albert C.
Bollschweiler yesterday for the pur- ,
pose of observing throughout the
state just how closely the war-time i
prohibition act is adhered to. The :
observers were instructed to watch I
closely all sales of intoxicants and '
these reports, it was stated, would i
be kept pending the court decision.
concerning two and three-quarters
per cent. beer.
Saloons and hotel bars here gen- >
orally sold the mild beer and stop- i
ped entirely the sale of whisky, gin, j
etc. A small number of saloon- j
keepers unwilling to risk prosecution !
closed their places.
Penn State Alumni
Plan For Outing
Pcnn State Alumni of Harrisburg |
and vicinity will start the ball roll
ing for the big college outing at I
Hershey August 9 at a meeting of ;
the general committee on arrange- j
ments to-morrow night in the John- j
son building. Elaborate plans are :
already on foot to make the Her
-6 hey picnic the largest summer
gathering of Penn State men ever
held. A thousand or more graduates
and students, with their families
and friends, are expected to attend, j
The day's program and means of j
advertising the picnic in all parts
of the State will form the prin- |
cipal work for the committee at to
morrow's meeting An attempt will
to get advance notice to
every member of the general alumni
association within the next ten days.
J. T. Harris, president of the Cen
tral Pennsylvania branch of Penn
State Alumni, last night announced
the personnel of the general com
mittee as follows: J. B. Landis, 'O3,
chairman: J. A. Bechtold. 'O9; S. E.
■Miller, 'O3: William Webber. 'ls: (K.
B. I-ohman, '10; L. >l. Entriken,
'l3; Bruce McCamant. 'O4: George
K. Erb, 'ls: J. C. Reed. '99: H. G.
N'eisley, 'l7: W. P. Loomis. '10; J.
W. Fortenbaugh, 'l2; C. K. Weigle,
'08: A A. Wirt, 'O3; J. W. Houde
shell, 'lB, and C. K. Denny, '2O.
ENGINEER OFFICER HOME
Waynesboro. Pa., July 2.—Merle
Bender, a lieutenant in the 308 th
Engineers. Third Army, is home on
a fifteen-day furlough from Camp
T ackson. Ya., where he has been
stationed. after arriving from
jl" • ii iiiiißMacgaßßiiiiiri i^cr-^|y
V -* |
lry io Raise Bread
Without Yeast.
ybu Cant Do It!
And you cant build and maintain
a strong body unless you put a//
the required material into it.
You must have something be
sides mere flesh-forming food.
That 's why
Grape-Nuts
is an ideal food, for besides ordi
nary nourishment, it contains the
mineral elements of the grains
material absolutely required for
building and maintaining the
kind of nerves and bone and blood
and brain and brawn.
Some foods lack these elements.
Grape-Nuts provides them.
No raise in price to consumers
during or since the war.
WEDNESDAY EVENING,
The Milkman's View of the Worh--~4:30 A. M.
I - /.XV ■■■ •WfY iT U Jpys.
[,X%p
CHAOS REIGNS IN
EASTERN EUROPE
Writer Says Conditions Favor
Reproduction of Middle
Ages Epidemics
Ixnidon. July 2.—ln the condition
of chaos in which Eastern Europe
is at present, famine and fatigue
have produced a condition of low
ered resistance to infection which
favors the reproduction of the epi
demic of the Middle Ages," says a
writer in the Lausanne, (Switzer
land), Gazette.
"Prisoners are wandering in East
ern Europe on their way to their
hemes, innumerable Russians on
their way to the East from Germany,
Germans. Austrians and Hungarians
passing from Russia to the West,
erbs and Croats striking South,
Poles going to the North, crossing
one another in indescribable confu
sion in Poland, the Ukraine and
Hungary. The absence of linen and
clothing forced these prisoners to
clothe themselves in rags of skins
in the same way as the civilian pop
uation.
"The fight against typhus consists
mainly in bathing the men and
sterilizing their clothing. The Hun
garians possess ovens, but no coal;
the Czecho-Slovaks have coal but no
ovens. Soap and body linen are
absent everywhere. Linen when put
into the oven is so wretched as to be
unwearable afterwards and the own
er has to be sent away clad in his
sheepskin. Prisoners and wandering
civilians know this so well that they
take every means to avoid disinfec
tion more than anything else to
avoid being stoved at a station they
get out of the trains when they stop
at the smaller stations and enter
the town in small scattered groups
which attract less attention."
HUNGARY'S SOVIET
RULERS DEFY PACT
TERMS OF ENTENTE
Say Army Will Not Lay Down Its Rifles Nor Retire Before
Mercenary Troops of Czechoslovak Imperialists
By Associated Press.
Copenhagen, July 2.—Defiance to
the Entente powers is expressed in
a proclamation to the Red army is
sued by the Hungarian Soviet gov
ernment, according to a Budapest
dispatch received here. After re
ferring to "the great sacrifice de
manded by the proletarian father
land i asking the army to evacu
ate pa.', f the territory conquered
in gloriou? battle," and proceed to |
another territory occupied by Ru
manian troops, the proclamation
continues:
"We are not retiring before the
mercinary troops of the Czecho
slovak imperialists. We have to do
with the entire power of the great
est exploiters of the world—the •
French. British and American money I
kings, labor oppressors and peasant '
plunderers * • • *. We know a j
dictated peace is no peace, and we I
PROTEST USE OF !
GERMAN JARGON
!
Members of Lutheran Congre
gation Not Pleased With
Choice of Language
Waynesboro, Pa., July 2.—The
.committee on the thirty-third an- r
nual Lutheran reunion at Pen Mar, j
for July 24, the Rev. G. W. Enders,
York, chairman, has sent out post
cards announcing the event and in
j viting all the pastors and congrega-
I tions, Sunday schools and church
| societies to turn out and bring their
! friends along. The orators selected
i for the day are the Rev. Robert D. j
j Clare, of St. Mark's Lutheran church,'
jof Baltimore, and the Rev. A. R. 1
.Wentz, of the Lutheran Theological
Seminary, at Gettysburg.
! In concluding the call, the com
! mittee requests all to come and say,
j "Hier Stehe Ich," and sing "Ein
Keste Burg." This.latter appeal is I
| said to have had a "grating" effect
I on the nerves of some of the local'
J members, whose anti-German sensi
j bilities are yet quite acute. They re
| gard this flaunting of the kaiser's
! jargon in their faces as being ex
! ceedingly ill-timed and indiscreet
; and it is said that sharp letters of j
; protest have gone or will go to the ,
1 committee from some of the local '
brethren. It is unfortunate that justi
at this time the English language;
could not have been found sufficient j
to cover all the purposes of the com- j
mittee. As the case now stands,'
taking local sentiment as an index, j
many will not be inclined to go!
| where they have to "Hier Stehe Ich" j
! and sing "Ein Keste Burg," or any-,
thing else that is technically Ger- j
man.
AMERICANS ELECT OFFICERS j
Mechanlcsburg, Pa., July 2. I
Officers for the ensuing term were;
elected at a recent meeting of the
Commonwealth Council, No. 597,
Order of Indpendent Americans, as
follows; Councilor, A. H. Pentz; vice
councilor, A. IV. Kleckner: record
ing secretary, George M. Clark;
financial secretary. A. H. Barnes:
assistant recording secretary, Clark 1
Smith: warden. Hale Trego: chap
lain, A. C. Rich; trustee. Edward
Klerhner; representative, G. A. Kink
enbinder: alternate. George B. Clark;
janitor, W. E. Ftnkenbinder.
HAKB-WBURG telegraph
shall not lay down our rifles because
we are defending to the last drop
of blood the proletarian dictator
ship."
Paris, July 2.—The Turkish situa
tion is giving the Peace Conference
much uneasiness. Reports received
here indicate that there have been
organized in Asiatic Turkey three
Turkish armies whose generals re
-1 fuse to obey orders from Constan
tinople. These armies are concen
trated at Amasia, Balikesri and
Konia. The Trusk at Konia are
threatening the Italians while those
at Balikesri are opposing the Greeks.
As the position of Constantinople
has been much weakened by the re
■ fusal of the Conference to consider
proposals from the Turkish dele
gates immediately, it is feared that
independent movements will develop
throughout Asia Minor.
BOYS ESCAPE
FROM LOCKUP
Mechanicsburg Youths Arrest-
I cd For Drunkenness Walk
Out as Lock Is Broken
Mechanicsburg, Pa., July 2.
! Fourteen young men of Methanics-1
j burg, not out of the 'teen age, are
i in the limelight here, because of a
; night of revelry following the de-<
1 parture of John Barleycorn. It is
j said the young men drank beyond
j their capacity and after becoming
! disorderly on the streets, were ar
; rested by the State Police and,
j placed in the borough lockup, loiter
| some one came to their aid, broke
| the lock and set them free.
Yesterday they were called upon
jto pay for their fun when the police
| rounded them up and took them be
| fore Squire H. S. Mohler, where each
was called to pay a tine of Jio and
'costs, making a total of $12.50.
j LOST ME DAI/ RETURNED
Waynesboro, Pa., July 2. Ser-i
gcant Harold Bumberger, who lost'
the Croix de Guerre presented to himi
by the French government, yesterday!
received the much prized medal back
, again. John Boone, of Greencastle,
I having found and restored it to its
owner .This decoration awarded Ser
igeant Bumberger, together with the
' Distinguished Service Cross for ex
•treme bravery, was lost the night he
came home, a month a KO . it was
found in Greencastle. near the sta
tion of that town, slightlv dented at
one place where a vehicle of some
; kind passed over it, but otherwise in
fine shape.
KNEW THEY'D XEED ONE
There rushed Into a police sta
tion a youngster very much out of
breath, who gasped out to an offl- I
cer:
"You're —wanted —down— down
in our street—an'— an' bring an
ambulance!"
"What's the trouble?" demanded
i the policeman. "And why bring an
I atuhu'ance?"
Because." the kiddie explained
when he had recovered his breath,
'mother's found the lady that
pinched cur doormat!"- Sydnev (K
S. V.) Bulletin. y 1 'J
SCHOOL BOARD
WILL CONSIDER
PROPOSED SITE
Ground Is Needed For Con
stantly Growing Needs
of City
City school directors postponed
until the speciul meeting next Mon
day action of the proposed plan to
purchase about* forty acres of
ground owned by the MeKee-Gra
ham estates from Third to Sixth.
Division to Katherine streets,, known
as Hoffman's Woods.
Director George A. Werner sub
mitted the motion that the board
should make the purchase and Di
rector John F. Dapp seconded it.
The move to postpone action came
when Director A. Carson Stamm
said he desired more time to con
sider the plan and that he thought
the public should he given an op
portunity to express its opinion.
The School Board members earlier
in the afternoon had attended the
luncheon at which the City Planning
Commission explained to them and
to City Councilmen the plans for
developing the site for school and
park purposes.
Horn Favors Plot
As a special meeting of the hoard
must be held next Monday, accord
ing to the rules, to elect the admin
istration force in the offices for an
other year, the directors all agreed
to let the motion to purchase the
ground undisposed of until that
meeting. It was evident that prac
tically every member of the board
favored the plan, and it was pre
dicted by officials that there is little
possibility of the board refusing
to make the purchase
Director C. E. L. Keen declared
that he knew of no other site so
well adapted for school extension
purposes. He told the other direc
tors that he had made a study of
tracts in the Allison H'll district
and could name none that would be
as suitable as the one which has
been proposed. He also warned the
board members that they must soon
take action toward the purchase of
additional ground for school facili
ties in the Thirteenth ward.
Now Development
"This district is rapidly develop
ing toward Paxtang and now is the
time to act," Dr. Keen said
"Scores of new houses are being
built or have been completed re
cently and they are selling as fast
as they are going up. The popula
tion in the ward as a result is in
creasing with the erection of the
new dwellings, bringing more people
to that section to reside. Then, too.
Paxtang is getting closer to the citv
and we must look to the near future
when it is almost a certainty that
this borough will become a part of
the c'ty." . .
Similar remarks were made b>
other directors about the expansion
of the citv in Riverside and the need
for ground in the Fourteenth ward.
Secretary P. D. Hammelbaugh ex
plained to the board that it will cost
the citv district about $3,500 more
than had been anticipated in the
usual increases of teachers salaries
' because of the approval of the 'Wood
ruff salary bill. When the. 1919-
1920 budget was made up and ap
proved about $19,000 was allowed
for the increase under the city sal
ary schedule.
Salary Increases
According to the new law in
creases totaling $74,535 will he naid
to citv teachers, of which the State
will pay $63,412.50 and the city
| must make up the balance. sll,-
j 122.50. In addition to this amount
the new law repeals the refund pro
i vision of the former school code,
j adding an additional loss of sll.-
j 452.25 to the city. This makes the
! total amount to he met $22,574.75.
! of which about $19,000 had been in
| eluded in the new budget.
Four teachers were appointed by
I the board upon the recommenda
i tion of Dr. F. E. Downes, 6uperin
| tendent.
I Charles W. Thomas, for a number
i of years employed in the composing
! room of the Harrtsburg Telegraph.
! and first lieutenant. Company I. One
| Hundred and Twelfth Infantry, in
I service overseas with the Twenty -
1 eighth Division, was named as a
teacher of printing at a salary of
$1,200.
John W. Snyder, at present in the
employ of the Elliott-Fisher Com
pany. was elected a teacher in elec
tric shop work. Miss Miriam A.
"loyer, Gratz, was named a teacher
v irawing, and Miss Helen J. My
ers. Pittsburgh, was named a teach
er in commercial work. Other
teachers may be needed. Dr. Downes
reported, and they will be named
for the approval of the board at a
later meeting.
Purchasing Agent Frank C. Foose
and a committee including President
Robert A. Enders. Secretary Ham
melbaugh and Director W. Frank
Witman were given authority to
contract for school supplies, bids
having been received a day or two
ago. but too late to tabulate to be
presented to the board yesterday.
The purchase of a Ford truck and
Ford touring car also was ap
proved.
That the tuition charges are too
low in the school district for non
resident pupils was pointed out by
President Enders, and Secretary
Hammelbaugh was instructed to
make an investigation and report
to the board.
The Vigorous Man
"is Sj^reme
Mxate&v
IRON 1
i\ 3,00 o.oooPboplo Use It /. |
I \ As a
I• V (and 6 /
Builder^/
BUSINESS IN
BR AZIL SHOWS
IMPROVEMENT
Marked Indications of Up
ward Trend Since
April
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, July 2.
Business in Brazil, which had been
stagnated since the first of October,
1918—a month before the signature
of the armistice —has, since the first
of April shown marked indications
of an upward trend and a well mani
fested optimism has taken the place
among business men here interested
in trade with the United States, of
the forebodings which many of
them expressed one or two months
ago.
A canvass of the leading bankers
and Americans commercial repre
sentatives in Kio de Janeiro recently
has brought out the fact that the
old order of transactions on a free
and unpanicky basis has begun. Im
porters are placing orders for new
stocks in limited quantities and a
fair share of them arc going to
American firms and factories.
Brazilian commerce, both domestic
and foreign, has just weathered one
of the most severe storms in its
history and the very few business
failures which resulted was con
sidered remarkable by both local
and foreign business men. The crisis
was due to a number of calamities
which followed one another in rapid
succession. The freezing of about 60
per cent, of the mature coffee trees
was the first, followed closely by the
appointment of a Government Food
Commission which was obliged to
arbitarily fix prices upon certain
raw materials for industry, notably
cotton. The textile industry was
hard hit by this action and the loss
of confidence among distributors of
their product.
Early in October the infiuenze
epidemic clo—•(! mills and paralyzed
trade and this was followed by the
signature of the armistice, with a
general anticipat oi of a drop in
prices in all stap'a tommooities.
Hair Under Arms
ik^lliracfc
FOP removing fcnlr from UMLER
(he arms there la uothlng as sani
tary us DeMivaole, the original
liquid. It la ready for Instant use
and la the quickest and most con
venient to apply. DeMlracle la
equally efficacious for removing;
hair from face, neck, arras or
llmha.
Only prenulne DeMlmcle lias a
raoney-hacU punrantee In each
package. At nil toilet counters
In 00c, $1 and 92 sices, or by mntl
from us In plain vrrapper on re
ceipt of price.
FREE liook mailed la plain I
.enled envelope on reqneat.
DeMlracle, Park Ave. and 120 th
St. New York.
Fathers and Mothers
W Sisters and Brothers if
MB , contains no capsicum H
Braa I *tTM GENUINE JAMAICA G'NGl* HUH
Eral *S?tJ' cs **3 T " ut FRU,T ftAV £. I Cyder A Psy e C** s- Li
J *** ct £NEo WITH PUREST CANC SUGAR S*UP V/ / UC I s\ Q. S C O€FX t itOTTXC
JULY 2. 1919.
More Pennsylvania Boys
at Carlisle Hospital
Cnrlsle, Pa., July 2.—Amons the
following overseas convalescent sol- |
diers, who have arrived at the Army
TELEPHONE YOUR ORDERS FOR
CLOVERDALE GINGER ALE
Frfirihfro' WHOI,Ks.\LK
I LEIUUERG & IHSTHIIUTOHS
Bell 2212 Second A Cherry Sts. Dial 3519
Prompt Deliveries Both Phones
NOTICE!
I Store Open All Day 1
| Thursday I
I Closed AU 41
1 Open All Day Saturday |
I Until 9P. M. I
| hospital hero from the debarkation
hospital in New York, Camp Merritt,
| Camp Dix, Hoboken, N. J., and Camp
Meade arc: Walter Williams, Ty
| rone; William Rrilhart, York;
j Charles K. Hard, Tyrone; William
! Snyder, Altoona; Ralph McCord,
Harrisburß; Prank Miller, Tyrone.
5