16 VAST AMOUNT OF WORK BEFORE NATION'S CHIEF EXECUTIVE Important Conferences Are Being Held at White House After His Absence of Four Months; Hopes to Get Away Soon on Speechmaking Tour of Country; May Sign Important Appropriation Measures. By Associated Press. Washington, July 9.—Refreshed after a night's rest, the first he has spent In the White House In four months, President Wilson early to day began what promised to be one of the busiest days of bis career as Chief Executive of the United States. In addition to the vase amount of work which had accumulated dur ling his long stay at the Peace Con ference at Paris, and which ineluri led the signing of a number of im portant appropriation measures i passed recently by Congress, the President bad planned conferences 'throughout the day with eongression ial leaders and members of his Cab inet and Executive Staff. It also was expected that if time was available, later in the day the members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee ißesinol I will heal those A touch of Resinol takes the H itch and smart right out of mos- Kjl quito-bites, and soothes and cools , sun-burned, wind-burned skin. Tilts gentie healing ointment seems to get right at the root ol skin-troubles like eczema, ivy- i poisoning, hfat-rash, and hives, clearing them away in a sur prisingly short time. Resinol is soid by all druggists. MAKE-MAN TABLETS MAKE YOU STRONG For many years Make-Man Tab let.. have helped thousands to in crease their strength and vigor. It will certainly do the same for you. No injurious drugs or habit-form ing medicines are used in its manu facture. Everything to do you good and get you back on the road to your accustomed health. When tired out and run down lake Make- Man Tablets and find your old vim and ambition returning. Test your strength after two weeks' trial 'and see how much you have gained. Make-Man Tablets will positively increase your strength. Be sure you see our monogram, M-M-T on the package before you accept it. Price. 50c. Your drug gist sells it: if fio't order direct from ! Ashland Supply House, 325 W. Madi- ' son St., Chicago, 111. I AT 80 YEARS GETS FIRMER LIFE GRIP fnfi Mflfcc ' ' * '*> t '■ • * > ' <' Lewis 13. Lee, 80 years old, of 1142 South G2d street Philadelphia, who retired from business some years ago, said: "I suffered from stomach trouble. After my wife's death 1 just seemed to so rapidly down hill. I lost appetite and weight and had a regular stomach attack. Nothing seemed to help me until I tried Tanlac. I've felt, and my daughter also feels, it has kept me alive. I respond quickly to the tonic effect and it keeps me in health and vigor." The genuine J. 1. Gore Co. Tanlac is sold here by Kramer's and Steev er's and other leading druggists. Your voir unit Influmre nollritril J. B. OCKER Hepuhllcan Candidate for County ConiiiiißMloner of Cumberland Co. Primary Election Sept. 17 th t ' A COUNs w m W UGMONH CAI.I GORGAS DRUG STORES VL t HAVE YOUR LAWN MOWER PUT IN FIRST CLASS SHAPE Hedge Clippers—Grass Shears—Sides and Edge Tools Sharpened All Kinds of Machinery Repaired FEDERAL MACHINE SHOP Court and Cranberry Streets *•t WEDNESDAY EVENING, would be received at the White House for a conference on the l'eace Treaty. Busy Every Minute The President found that every thing had been arranged so that practically every minute of his time would be taken up and rapid pro gress in clearing up routine made possible. The speech he plans to deliver before the Senate Thursday was completed before he landed at New York yesterday from the George Washington and the chief matter in connection with the League of Na tions to be discussed to-day was the proposed speech-making tour over the country on which Mr. Wilson hopes to be able to leave Washing ton about the middle of next week. The return of the President and his party to the capital last night was marked by one of the greatest demonstrations in point of the num ber of those participating that ever greeted a President on his return from a trip. District officials fa miliar with big crowds estimated the throng that greeted the Presiden tial party at the Union Station and along Pennylvania avenue at fully 100.000. Absent Four Months The ceremonies of welcome were brief. Responding to an address of welcome from a committee of dis trict citizens, Mr. Wilson said ho came home confident that the peo l pi e of the United States were for | the I.eague ot' Nations. The unex l pected welcome, he said, was partic jularly pleasing, because he felt it was "immediate assurance of his ! feeling." It was after midnight when Mr. J and Mrs. Wilson reached the White i House from which they, had been | absent more than four months. The triy from New York to Wash ington was • made without incident, j the Presidential train ariving here a few minutes before midnight. No | stops were made until Washington j was reached, although there were crowds at the stations in Philadel phia ,and Baltimore. Calls It a "Just Peace" j President Wilson returned to the i United States yesterday and, in his ! first speech delivered on American I soil since the Peace Treaty was i signed, declared that the peace con cluded at Paris was "a Just peace which, if it can be preserved, will sufeguard the world from unneces sary bloodshed." The only reference the President made to his political opponents was when in referring to the negotiations at Paris, he said: "l am afraid some people, some persons, do not understand that vision. They do not see it. They have looked too much upon the ground. They have thought too much of the interests that were near them, and they have not listened to the voices of their neighbors. I have never had a moment's doubt as to where the heart and purpose of this people lay." The President arrived at the Ho boken Army pier, shortly before .1 o'clock. The Army transport George Washington, on which he sailed from Brest, was escorted up the bay by the battleship Pennsylvania and more than a score of destroyers and smaller Naval craft. On the New Jersey shore were massed 10,000 school children who welcomed the Uhiet' Executive of the Nation with the strains of the national anthem. Lancaster Industries Are Showing Great Prosperity I.ancaster. Pa., July 9.—Prosperity of local industry is reflected in ex pensive enlargements now being "made to two factories, the erection of a building to accommodate a new concern and plans, that have just been announced for the addition of two more. LOSES BOTH LEGS James Leonard, 22 years old, of Highspire, had both legs amputated in the Harrisburg Hospital late yes terday after falling beneath the wheels of a freight car at the Mid dletown Car. Works. Leonard, a brakenian on a draft of cars being shunted about, was thrown beneath the wheels by a heavy jarring of the train. I DANDRUFF YEAR] CUTICURA EALS Very Scaly. Hair Fell Out In Great Quantities. "I was troubled with dandruff very badly and my hair fell out. The dandruff was very scaly and there was an Irritation when I scratched. My hair fell out in great quantities and became very thin. This trouble lasted about a year. "Then some one recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I found them a great success, and I used two cakes of Sosp with one box of Ointment when I was heeled." (Signed) Wm. Marnock, i 2SS2 Orianna St., Phi la., Dec. 13,1918. Daily use of Cuticura Soap, Oint i ment and Talcum uaually prevent skin troubles. Soap 28c, Ointaaont 28 aod 80c, Talcum 25c. Sold throughout the world. For ■ample each free address : "Cuticura Lab oratories, Dept. H. Maiden, Maaa." Soap .hare, without mug. Wilson's New York Speech By Associated Press. New York, July 8. —The full text of President Wilson's speech at Carnegie Hall yesterday follows: "Fellow countrymen: "I am not going to try this after noon to make you a real speech. I am a bit alarmed to find how many speeches I have in my system un delivered, but they are all speeches that come from the mind and I want to say to you this afternoon only a few words from the heart. "You have made me deeply happy by the generous welcome you huve extended to me, but I do not believe thut the welcome you extend to me is half as great as that which I ex tend to you. Why, Jerseyman though I am, this is the first time I ever thought that Hoboken was beautiful. "I have really, though I ha\le tried on the other side of the water to conceal it, been the most home sick man in the American Expedi tionery Fore*, and it is with feelings that it would be vain for me to try to express that I find myself in this beloved country again. I do not say that because 1 lack in admira tion of other countries. Homesick For America "There have been many things that softened my homesickness. One of the chief things that softened it was the very generous welcome that they extended to me as your repre sentative on the other side ot the water. And it was still more soft ened by the pride that I had in dis covering that America had at last convinced the world of her true character. "I was welcomed because they had seen with their own eyes what America had done for the world. They had deemed her selfish. They had deemed her devoted to material interests. And they had seen her boys come across the water with a vision even more beautiful than that which they conceived when they had efltertuined dreams of liberty and of peace. "And then I had the added pride of finding out by personal observa tion the kind of men we had sent over. 1 had crossed the seas with the kind of men who had taken them over, without whom they could not have got to Europe and then when I got there 1 saw that army of men, that army of clean men, that army of men devoted to the high interests of humanity, that army that one was glad to xtoint out and say —'These are my fellow countrymen." Praises Soldiers "It softens the homesickness a good deal to have so much of home along with you, and these boys were constantly reminding tue of home. They did not walk the streets like anybody else. I do not mean that they walked the streets self-assertive l.v. They did not. They walked the streets as fi they knew that they be longed wherever free men lived, that they were welcome in the great r public of France and were com rades with the other armies that had helped to win the great battle and to show the great sacrifice. Be cause it is a wonderful thing for this Nation, hitherto isolated from the large affairs of the world, to win not only the universal confi dence of the people of the world, but their universal affections. "And that, and nothing less than that, is what lias happened. Wher ever it was suggested, that troops should be sent and it was desired that troops of occupation should ex cite no prejudice, no uneasiness on the part of those to whom they Were sent, the men who represented the other nations came to me and asked me to send American sold diers. They not only implied, but they said, that the presence ol' American soldiers would be known not to mean anything except friendly protection and assistance. Do you wonder that it made our hearts swell with pride to realize these things? DEBATE ADMISSION OF WOMEN TO PRIESTHOOD Would Mean a Revolution, Says the Rev. A. G. Magee, Who Is Staunch Opponent of the Scheme Ijoikloii, July 9. Excitement at tended a debate in a public meet ing held the other day in Church House, Westminster, the headquar ters of the Church of England, over the question whether women should be admitted to the priesthood. The principal debaters were Miss Maude Royden, a leader of the movement here for womet. clergy, and the Rev. A. G. Magee, a staunch opponent of the scheme. Clergymen joined with laymen and women in hissing, booing and cheering, according to the side they took. "To admit women to the priest hood," the Rev. Mr. Magee declared "would lie a revolution, not an evo lution. They cannot have a revo lution of that character until the whole church has set its seal upon it and God has approved of it." Hissing and cries of "shame"! greeted his discussion of the moral relationships likely to rise between man and women in the church If the latter were admitted. "You can not get away from the sex question," he said. "We arq made as we are, and that fact remains." Amid applause from his friends he said he believed the granting of Foreign Food Does Not Satisfy Palate T.i strange, unfamiliar food satisfy ing to the palate? Elizabeth Dunning, Y. W. C. A. secretary in Tokyo, Japan, saya that it is not, even though it la good. Miss Dunning has been in Japan almost a year. She writes that it is the custom for the secretaries to go to the Y. W. C. A. dormitories, where Japanese girls who are attending schools in the city or the Y. W. C. A. training classes live, on Sunday night to have dinner with the girls. "We go to the dining room and eat flsh, rice and other things that are very good with the girls eating with chop-sticks, of course, which Is great fun. We always go home to our own Sunday evening supper after-, wards though, as the little Japanese food we eat only makes us hungrier for our own supper, as they no doubt would bo If they were dining In America. "I am learning to have great sym pathy for the little Hindoo girl who attended my own American college once upon n time and got pretty thin trying to subsist on American food. It isn't that the food is not good; It Is the strangeness of It." Miss Dunning says that the girls talk very little at meals, as it is not customary to converts much at lbs , ttOttUHBTTROIMMITEEEGKXPM "But while these things in some degrei softened my homesickness, they made me all the more eager to get home, where the rest of the folks lived, to get home where the great dynamo of national energy was situated, to get home where the great purposes of national action were formed, and to be allowed to take part in the counsels and in the actions which were formed, and to be taken by this great nation which from first to last has followed the vision of the men who set it up and created it. We have had our eyes very close to our tasks at times, but whenever we lifted them, as we were accustomed to lift them to a distant horizon, we were aware that all the peoples of the earth had turned their faces toward us as those who were the friends of freedom and of right, and whenever we thought of national policy and of its re lation upon the affairs of the world, we knew we were under bonds to do the large thing and the right thing. "It is a privilege, therefore, be yond all computation for a man, whether in a great capacity or a small, to take part in the counsels and in the resolution of a people like this. I am afraid some people, some persons, do not understand that vision. They do not see it. They have looked too much upon the ground-. They have thought too much of the interests that were near them, and they have not listened to the voices of their neighbors. Never Was Dubious "I have never had a moment's doubt as to where the heart and purpose of this people lay. When any'one on the other side of the water has raised the question 'Will America come in and liellp?' I have said, .'Of course, America will come in and help.' • She cannot do any thing else. She will not disappoint any high hope that has been formed of her. Least of all will she in this day of new-born liberty all over the world fail to extend her hand of support and assistance to those who have been made free. "1 wonder if at. this distance you can have got any conception of the tragic intensity of the feeling of those peoples in Europe who have just had yokes thrown off them. Have you reckoned up in your mind how many peoples, how many na tidns, were held unwillingly under the yoke of the Austro-Hungarian empire, under the yoke of Turkey, under the yoke of Germany? "These yokes have been thrown off. These peoples breathe the air and look around to see a new day dawn about them, and whenever they think of what is going to fill that day with action, they think first of us. They think first of the friends who throughout the long years have spoken for them, who were privileged to declare that they came into the war to release them, who said that they would not make peace upon any other terms than their liberty, and they have known that America's presence in the war and in the conference was the guar antee of the result. New Task Begins "The Governor has spoken of a great task ended. Yes, the formu lation of the peace is ended, but it creates only a new task just begun. 1 believe that if you will study the peace, you will see that it is a just peace and a peace which, if it can be preserved, will save the world from unnecessary bloodshed. "And now the great task is to preserve it. I have come back with my heart full of enthusiasm for throwing everything that I can, by way of influence or action, in with you to see that the peace is pre served, that when the long reckoning comes, men may look back upon this generation of America and say 'They were true to the vision which they saw at their birth.' " the priesthood to woman "would make her false to her Master and false to her sex." "Women." argued Miss Royden, "desire women as priests, and their admission to the priesthood would make It much easier for women to get help from the church." After quoting the New Testament to show that the commission of the priesthood was given to men and women alike in the "Upper Room" at Jerusalem, she continued: "The head of the Church of Eng land has not always been a man. Queen Elizabeth, Queen Anne and Queen Victoiia were all supreme heads of the church." "No! No!" shouted many voices. "X am sorry if you don't like it," Miss Royden told the protesting element, "but it is so." She went on to affirm that the fundamental differences between men and women were not a bar to women's entry into the priesthood ' Women," she concluded, "desire to conform more nearly to the Ideal laid down by Christ. He laid down nothing and suggested nothing that divided men and women in the vo cation of priesthood." No vote was taken on the subject. table in Japan, but that girls in the Y. W C. A. dormitories are learning American dinner table sociability. Two Young Women Are Knocked Down by Auto Reading, Pa., July 9.—Mis Cece lia Bailey, aged 22, and Miss I-aura Whalen, aged 24, both of Pottsville, Pa., were struck and knocked down by the automobile of H. Ross Cadow. of 134 Broad Htreet, Harrlsburg, Pa. The young women had been visit ing in Reading and had Just stepped from a street car when they were struck. " It Is said they became con fused in the street traffic and ran In front of the machine. They were taken to the Homeopathic Hospital where Miss Whalen was found to be the more seriously injured. She suffered a torn llgument in her right leg. a two-Inch gush In the cheek and numerous other cuts and bruises Miss Bailey was considerably cut and bruised about the body. Cadow was driving home to Hnr rtsburg with his family after visit, ing the mountains around Reading. He assisted in caring for the young women, and after giving his name and address to the police was a|. lowed to continue his Journey. Police Ball Players Will Try For Revenge on York Tomorrow Tsland Park to-morrow will-stage a lively intercity baseball event in the contemplated furious battle between Hkrrisburg's finest and the police force of York. The latter city promises to send a delegation with brass band and base hits which will so overwhelm the local cops, backed up by the entire city government, that crepe will be seen all over the capital city. After a procession, and a dinner at the Penn-Harrls in honor of the guests, the contest will get under way at the Island about 3 o'clock and Harrisburg will have Big John Hess, one time of the New England League, in the box. The line-up will show many a familiar face, includ ing the motorcycle speed king, George Fetrow; "Pat" Hyland, Rom ich, Lowrie and half a dozen other husky men of the local force. Ten thousand tickets have been sold and if the weather does not, interfere the Tsland field will see the largeot crowd it has entertained in years. In the last battle several weeks a D o York policemen won. HEM) FOR FORGERY Charged with forgery in Mifflin county, Harry Russeler, of Lewis town, was arrested here yesterday by Detective Sliuler, of the Harris burg police department. Russler had registered at a- local hotel as H. B. Johnspn. FALL FROM ROXCAR Edmund S. Hess, of Progress, suf fered severe bruises and a sprained wrist when he fell from a boxcar in the Harrisburg yards of the Penn sylvania Railroad. Dives, Pomeroy Stewart Mill and Factory Sale Specials For Thursday Morning-Store Closes at Noon fMen, Union Suit, The Mill and Factory Sale Offers Lace Specials > $2.50 athletic Union Rare Savings in the Basement I 29c cotton cluny lace, 3 I suits. sleeveless knee Lower prkes than obtain to _ day at Mills and Factories Zlt , length. Special I are orov j ded j n tbe savings shown in the Basement. . ' - '- • } ard> morning SI.OO $l;o All-Metal Carpet Sweepers, finished in mahogany. Mill & * al lace. Special Factory Sale Price - si.in I hursday only, dozen Dives, Stewart, $14.00 Gliding Lawn Settees for four persons. Mill & Factory 3'ards, 60f Sale Price $12.75 r ... • r y ■/ 75c Dustless Floor Mops. Mill and Factory Sale Price .... 59c clu 1/c _ al - torchon 75c Kleeno Mop and 25c can of Cedar Oil Polish, complete in and cluny insertions. Spe the sale for ®* c cial Thursday only vard 69c Work Stands, lined with cretonne. Mill & Factory Sale J ■" •>""> f Price ,r, ® c ly Uncornont Snocin/s Gas an(l Electric Lamps for table use. All are new designs and DJ Pomerov & tiasement specials finishes, with straight or vase-shaped base and art glass shades, Streit Floor finished in brass, antique bronze, copper, verde green, Dutch blue For Thursday Morning I and old ivory— ■* I $35.00 Lamps $28.00 $1.50 thin blown table $21.00 Lamps $18.20 , tumblers, bell shape. Spe- • •■ J; •— ■■ ""J ( ~ > cial Thursday morning, $16.00 Lamps $12.50 Boys Hats dozen ... sl-20 $15.00 Lamps $12.00 $4.50 crystal goblets. 12.b0 limps •—— sloo ° $1.49 soft white cordu- Special I hursdav morning, i oallon Size, special 15c rov hats. Special T hurs •dozen • $3.50 2 Gallon size. Special 29c day morning SI.OO Two 8-foot clothes line Ga || on ize - * pec ! a ! j'*' Cloth hats, odd sizes, ~ . , r „, , 4 Gallon Size. Special >9c , , ' JC „ , ' props. . Special I hursday 5 Gallon size. Special "ic formerly to $1.98. Special morning 21< 6 Gallon Size. Special 89c I Thursday morning .. 50<f 499: tralvanizcrl wash 8 Gallon Size. Special $1.19 7 galtaniztu \d. 10 Gallon 81ze Special $1.19 Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart, boilers. Special i hursday 35c Gold Band China Cups and Saucers. Mill & Factory* Sale Second Floor. morning $1.98 Price 2:scl 98c fibre brooms. Spe- cial Thursday morning, 69<* " ~ f $2.50 nickel frame cas- Silk Pongee, Crepe de Chine, Cretonne Remnants seroles with green and 0 7 x 7 Thursday'monting fi.oß Shanghai and Other Fine siSC, °i„ 65c da l£ 83c 8-qt. granite cooking WoflTOfl colorings. Special Thurs kettles. Special Thursday ' ' tJctvtJo 1 VtivA LIUt/U. day morning, yard .. 50c morning 09£ EXTRA SPECIAL SAVINGS IN THE SALE Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart, Third Floor. Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart, $2.00 Khaki Colored Pongee, 40 inches, yard $1.39 Basement. J $2 White Wash 3fi inches> yar( j $ 169 v $2.25 Crepe de Chine, limited quantity, 40 ins., yd., $1.69 $1.75 Flesh Colored Crepe de Chine, 40 inches, yd., $1.29 f \ N $3.50 Fancy White Fiber Silk, 39 inches, yard $2.59 S/Wnor/ Donint C $2.50 Black Satin for Skirts and Dresses, yard $1.6>9 r $1.50 White Shanghai, 36 inches, yard sl.lO SI.OO heavy striped Georgette Crepe $2.25 Black Crepe Georgette, 31 inches, yard $1.75 denim in green, blue and $3.95 Ruff-a-Nuff Sport Silk, yard $1.95 brown for porch coverings $1.25 black cotton net, I Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor. . and pillows. Special „ . , ... . . , r . Thursday morning, yard, 72 inches. Special I hurs- J daV morning, yard, SI.OO 1-| t-, TTT DlVes, Pomeroy Sr. Stewart, Pumps and Oxfords For Women, Third lioor Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, IH/r T"kl 1* 1 r< 1 ——' street Floor. Boys and Men Reduced m the Sale Vj . Women's $5.00 Black Kid Colonial Pumps $3.95 Women's $4.50 Brown and Black Kid Pumps $3.25 Curtain Nets j "\ Women's $2.00 White Canvas Oxfords $1.45 I , „ ~ , Brown Canvas Tennis Shoes, sizes 6to W omen S Kerchiefs Brown Canvas Tennis Shoes, sizes 11 to 2 95£ • c curtain nets in allover , _ . Boys' $2.50 Athletic Duck Shoes $1.78 patterns, white and ecru. Women s /c nanciker- Boys' $2.00 White Tennis Oxfords $1.25 Special Thursday morning. chiefs. Special I hursday Boys' $2.00 and $2.50 Gun Metal Calf Shoes $1.85 yard 25£ morning Men's $3.50 Gun Metal Calf Oxfords $2.75 Dlvea, Pomeroy & Stewart, Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart, Men's $4.50 and $5.00 Dark Tan Oxfords $3.45 Third Floor. Street Floor. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor, Bear. v y Men's Hose Summer Underwear For Men '' ,que Hn,s d 5" lor" Special"Th'urs- LOWered in Price in the Mi'.l haS , |frmcHy W 5 h (fc C - P no!;! and colors. Special l nurs exchanged. Special Thurs day morning f / and Factory Sale da y m °ming 19f Dived, ,St ' wart ' . __ _ j. . c I nr J Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, noor. 00 g blrtß 75- Union Suits, 65f Second Floor. —————— SI,OO Egyptian Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers 75<f V v 50c Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers 12<* f N 75c White Nainsook Athletic Union Suits r a , r/ . $2.00 White Porosknit Union Suits $1.50 rrv li nart Women s Vests $1 00 White Cotton R j b bed Union Suits 75<f Women s Hose 35c Dink vests in bodice f 2 00 Wh | te Cotton Ribbed Union Suits $1.50 6Sc white fibre 9ilk hoße stvle Special Thursday $175 Wh,te Nainsook Athletic Union Suits $1.30 seam l es s. Special Thurs htjle '. * l 25& s l - 25 White Nainsook Athletic Union Suits sl.lO , mornintr ... 50tf morning $2 00 p Striped Athletic Un ion Suits $1.05 Uay B Dive*. Pomeroy & Stewart, Boys' 50c and 59c White Nainsook Union Suits 394* nivea. Pomeroy * HWwsr, Htroet ' qo . Dv©, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor. *- ' > —i s ■ 'J, —■ 1 ■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ - ■ =g——y* B\ I Each jl Y. man has jl \ his own y \ answer. /jr See Thursday's Papers —NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR ANY PARTICULAR CIGARETTE —lt may even make you like your present cigarette better JULY 9, 1919.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers