Engage Joseph Bailey to Fight Prohibition; Chicago. July I".—Announcement j of the appointment of Joseph W. ; Bailey, of Washington, former ' Vnited States senator from Texas, j as chief counsel to conduct an early ■ fight against the prohibition con- j stitutional amendment, and of the intention to oppose for re-election every state legislator who voted to ratify the amendment, was made ; yesterday from the Western head- j quarters of the Association opposed to National Prohibition. ••It is just possible that Senator I Bailey may decide to join forces with I the Attorney General of the State of ] Rhode Island." said a statement is- i sued by James Arthur Seavey, man- ! aging director of the association, re- j ferring to the Rhode Island Regis- , lature's resolution directing the At- j torney General to test the validity I of the amendment in the Supreme I Court. ' i , Lemon Juice For Freckles Glrlsl Make beaut/ lotion at homo for a few cent#. Try Itl Squeeze the Juice of two lemons Into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and com- : plexlon beautifier, at very, very email cost. Your grocer has the lemons and t any drug store or toilet counter will aupply three ounces of orchard ' white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, amis and hands each day and see how freckles and blem ishes disappear and how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin becomes., Tes! It is harmless and never lrrt tte. A Splendid Hair Grower and Wonderful Beautifier Found at Last! Shows Results at Once, or Nothing to Pay. Women Delighted—All Surprised by Quick Action of Pnrlslnn Sage Here's good, news for men and wo men whose hhlr Is falling out, who are growing bald, and whose scalps are covered with dandruff, and Itch clear currant jelly! They make the simplest meal delicious. Preserve all you possibly can now —they'll take the place of fresh fruits and other costly winter foods. The cost of your sugar is a small part of the value of your preserves, but the importance of the right cane sugar is great. Franklin Granulated Sugar is packed clean and dust proof safe from flies and ants in sturdy cartons and strong cotton bags. SAVE THE'FRUIT CROP The Franklin Sugar Refining Company ''A Franklin Cane Sugar for every use' * Granulated, Dainty Lumps, Powdered. Confectioners, Brown IV jKwrwt3 JjxhdhC £ Jgl FRANKLIN lifll: ISSeSfSF| CANE SUGARS I ■sSS? mm I ■ L. HSssr" {. BBS* | THURSDAY EVENING, Toledo Trolley Company Raises Fare; Ordered to Take Tracks Off Streets Toledo, July 17.—With the Toledo ' i Railways and Light Company order- I ; ed to vacate the streets here July • 30, Mayor Sehreiber and the Council ' 1 are considering a proposal to ,re- ! place street cars with motor busses. A company has offered to promote i a J 2,000,00b corporation to furnish | street transportation. The Rail-Light was ordered off i I the streets When it raised the fare j i from live cents and one cent for a j J transfer to six cents and two cents 1 ; for a transfer. ! The street car company has an- j i nounced it is preparing to comply t : with the ouster order, which compels i removal of tracks from the streets. Governor Using His Big Veto Ax Governor Sproul has vetoed the \ bill providing a method of letting contracts for street and highway lighting in townships and villages on the ground that the plan pro posed would be unfair "perhaps, un constitutional and not conducive to j a proper relation between the gov erning authorities and those gov • erned." The Governor vetoed on the ground that acts already approved 1 covered the subjects bills relative to appointment of detectives by dis i trict attorneys in counties having j between 150.000 and 250,000 popu- I lation; empowering duly qualified [ soldiers and sailors to register as J law and dental students and au- 1 | thorizing school boards to permit use j i of grounds for recreation purposes, i | He also disapproved the bill to in- j • crease salaries of county commis- J j .-'ioners of all counties except Phila- j I delphia and Allegheny on the ground ' j that the commissioners generally do ! not devote all of their time to their j j official duties and that they are suf- j ' riclentlv compensated. . like mad. Kennedy's drug store or! any good druggist can now supply ; you with the genuine Parisian sage ' (liquid form), which is guaranteed to quickly and safely abolish every sign of dandruff, stop itching scalp and falling hair and promote a new growth or the cost, small as it is. will be refunded. Thousands can ; testify to the excellent results from ; its use some who feared becoming ..airless now glory in their abund ant hair, while others who suffered for years with dandruff and itching head got a clean, cool scalp after Just a few day's use of this simple treat- ' i ment. No matter whether bothered with ■ falling hair. gray hair. matted, j stringy hair, dandrufT, itching scalp . or any form of hair trouble, try I Parisian sage—you will not be dis- ! appointed. It's a scientific prepara tion that supplies all hair needs —an 1 antiseptic liquid free from dangerous ! Ingredients neither sticky nor i greasy—easy to apply and delicately perfumed. The first application will . make your hair and scalp look and feel 100 per cent, better. If you want i thick, lustrous hair and lots of It. use i Parisian sage. Don't delay—begin to- j night. A little attention now insures ; abundant hair for years to come. I In Heart of Trucking District They Pay More For Food Than Phila. j Palmyra, N. J.. July 17. Stirred ; by many protests from citizens, the township committee of Palmyra has j begun a war on the high cost of living. 1 It is charged by consumers that local : merchants charge more for the same I article than is paid in Philadelphia. ! and that even produce raised on nearby I farms is held for "outrageous" prices. \ : Tomatoes, for which the farmers have i ! been getting something over $2 a bas- ; ket are sold for 20 cents a pound, or i I $6.60 a basket. Similar or higher j • profits are demanded for cabbage, po- ! j tatoes. lettuce and other produce, some I iof which is grown within the town | | limits. In addition to exposing the situation 1 through the newspapers, the township chairman. John M. Davies. and Com ! mitteemen Hill and Cook have decided i to open a curb market. Freeholder Win field I-and. who is also a township of • flcial. to-day went on a tour of nearby farming districts to make arrange -1 ments with farmers to bring produce di -1 rect to the market. It is proposed that the farmer and consumer share the l profit made by the middlemen as well as \ the costs of duplicated transportation. Plan to Check Radicals of Prohibition in House I Washington, July 17.—Conserva , tive members of the prohibition i faction in the House set out to-day to curb what they described as radi ' cal attempts to make the pending j enforcement bill so drastic that it i might create a revulsion of feeling throughout the country on the whole | question of liquor drinking. | Warning was given by the eon ; servatives that if the radical ele j ment went too far and added other severe restrictions they would be ] certain to invite defeat in the Senate ! and possibly find all of their work I thrown out by a presidential veto. The need of wise counsel was point ] ed out by the conservative prohibi tionists in view of the published an ; nouncement that Representative ; Morgan. Republican, of Oklahoma, j and a member of the Judiciary I Committee, had given notice that he | would endeavor to make it a viola ; tion of law for a man to keep a jug j of liquor in his own home for his j own use. , Increases Guaranteed Price of 1919 Wheat Washington, July 17. President Wilson has signed an executive order ; increasing the guaranteed price of j the 1919 wheat crop to 12.30 per bushel at Galveston and New Orleans. At the same time a presidential 1 proclamation was issued declaring ' that in order "to protect the United States against undue enhancement 1 of its liabilities" under the law guar anteeing wheat prices, that on and after Jujv 1. no wheat or wheat flour should be imported into or exported , from the United States except under prescribed limitations to be fixed by Wheut Administrator Julius H. Barnes. CANT TESTIFY AGAINST PARENTS Manoon. Ind.—Judge J. Frank Charles, of the Grant Circuit Court, I has announced he would not permit i children to testify against parents in ! open court. A suit was on trial in | volving the custody of two children, j A nine-year-old boy was called to the | stand to testify. "We will not com pel or permit boys and girls to testify j in this court against their parents," i said the judge as he left the bench, ! his arms around the boy. going into j his private chambers, where the two ! engaged in earnest conversation for | a long time. \ HAJRRJSBTTRG QfiSk TELEGRAPH 1 NEW LICENSES ALMOST READY IHunters Will Bo Able to Buy J Them in Time For the New Blackbird Season | for .shooting the ii'i-ls I will begin. Heretofore these birds j i have not been legal game until Sep tember 1. j The 1919 tags will be green in color. It is the idea to send them to county treasurers as rapidly as possible so that they can be issued promptly. Last year there were over ] 300,000 hunters' licenses taken out in spite of the number of men who j had entered the army or navy and I it is believed that this number will be exceeded in 1919. New Uottcn Egg Law The Bu reau of Foods of the State Depart - I ment of Agriculture Is getting ready j to enforce the new law governing i ; handling of rotten eggs, which are extensively used in this State for tanning operations. Under the new law no rotten eggs can be opened in buildings where good eggs are j handled or where food products are j manufactured. Rotten eggs when I removed from the shell for manu facturing purposes must be placed in containers painted bright red and ' such containers cannot be used for | wholesome eggs under any circum- I stances. Old Age Pensions—Governor Wil liam C. Sproul has been asked to take early action in regard to the State Commission on Old Age Pen sions, which was authorized by the recent Legislature to be continued. A series of new studies of systems in | foreign countries and as tried in I this State will be undertaken, ac cording to plans made. New Castle Complains.—The city of New Castle to-day filed a formal complaint signed by Mayor A. P. Newell with the Public Service Com mission against the seven cent fare and service of the Mahoning and She nango Railway and Light Company in that city. The Company advanced the fares from five to six cents early in the year and announced a seven cent fare effective August 5. It is J charged that the increase is unreas- ' enable and that the company is run- ! ning cars that are in a dangerous J condition because of lack of proper i brakes and flat wheels and also de clared that the service Is inadequate. Complaint was filed by the Pitts burgh Taxicab Co., against John J. I Gerlach. Jr.. and by A. I. Fulltngton, j Clearfield, against James Spingola. alleging operation of jitneys without certificates from the commission. Object to Cloning.— Residents of | Cheltenham township, Montgomery j county to-day protested before Com missioner John S. Rilling against j closing of the Ashbourne road and j the making of a passenger subway near Klkins Park station of the Phil adelphia and Reading Railway. Two j other protests were made, but not pushed. The protestants represented i by N. M. Lazarle and Montgomery Evans, of Norristown, claimed that they had no notice of proceedings j launched some time ago which re- I suited in an order abolishing the I crossing. It was finally agreed by j counsel for the Reading that a hear ing should be held. To Take Over Company. —The ap- I plication of the Cumberland Valley I Telephone Company, for the taking j over of the 95,200 of stock of the Tri- County Telephone Company, of So- | iinsgrove, which the Cumberland j Valley has been operating in Snyder and adjoining counties, was heard at j I the Public Service Commission to-. . day. No action was taken. Governor Returns To-night.—G DV ernor Sproul plans to return to Har- I risburg to-night to resume work on ! legislative bills. The Governor has I arranged to stay here Friday and j Saturday, but will not give any hear- I Ings, having requested that briefs ! be filed. Harry McDevitt, secretary | to the Governor, has been ill ut his j home in Philadelphia. Fear of Temptation to Escape Keeps Convicts From Taking Camp Jobs Auburn. X. V., July 16.—"Convicts in the oldest prison in use in New York State prefer to stay behind the bars rather than enjoy life in the open as workers in road camps." That is the strange announcement made to-day by State Superintendent of Prisons Charles F. Kattigan. who j I declared that the moral fear of the I temptation to escape keeps prison ers at Auburn State Prison from accepting the free life of the road instead of the drab monotony inside the walls. Auburn Prison is located in the Finger Lakes region and the gangs of convict highway builders are sta tioned at wild spots along the im proved roads linking and circling the inland lakes. Many/have made acquaintances in the summer col onies. Chances for a getaway are numerous. In this environ, the ex ceptional lure of the lake country to freedom, to independence and to recreation in the zone which was the playground of the Indian, ac tuates the men in declining to take a chance on resisting the temptation to flee, according to Superintendent Rattigan. In virtually all cases where es capes have been effected from road camps, the convicts have later been apprehended. Their sentences were then extended. It is the grim fear of this possibility which the super intedent asserts is keeping the men In gray from the woods and glens and limpid waters of the Finger Lakes. Movement to Free Toll Roads Remaining Begins Lancaster. July 17.—The State has appropriated a certain amount of funds for the freeing toll roads, and the Free Highways Association of Lancaster county is preparing to assist in getting Lancaster's share. A large mileage in Lancaster county is still toll bound. A definite plan of action for the association will be worked out at the meeting of the Executive Committee next week. The residents of Lancaster county must show where funds are needed and deserved. The members of the Executive Committee are C. A. B. Zook, chairman; Richard M. Reilly, Alfred H. Myers. Benjamin C. Atlee Milton H. Ranck and A. J. Knappi 'secretary. M I "The Live Stor V H ., "Always Reliable" I Who Wants to Know? I Why Everybody! Wants to know how any J store could possibly display "Ten Thousand Dollars" worth of "Silk Shirts" in one window, but when they come to this Live Store" and see for themselves this remarkable showing of the choicest "Silk Shirts" that have ever graced the windows of any store, they are firmly convinced that Doutrichs are "leaders" who are up and doing, setting the pace for Harrisburg. I This Is the Last Week J I Of our great "Shirt Sale" a sale which has I keen generously patronized by thousands of people throughout Central Pennsylvania. What a multitude of eager buy ers have been here not only one day, but day after day. Many of our customers who made their purchases here and after going home examined the shirts they bought and found them so much better than they really thought they were that they "came back" for more them that's what is keeping up the enthusiasm and interest in J Doutrichs "Shirt Sale" 1 But Saturday will be the "last day" and the time is very short. You had better get busy if you want your share of these splendid values that are waiting for you. The patterns couldn tbe more attractive or the fabrics better. The color ings are beautifully blended into the most pleasing effects. You'll 9 see high grade silk shirts, woven madras, percale, and mercerized shirts in such an endless variety that you will wonder where they all came from, but they're here and ' 1 Every Shirt Reduced | ' (Except Manhattans) j 9 g SStJg All $1.50 Shirts jg / 9 H / All $2.00 Shirts <jj | gg* ( j 9 - \i L All $2.50 Shirts <jjj 89? i 3 If $3.50 Shirts <j*2 g0 g S All $5.00 Shirts g9 <4 I I All $6.85 Silk Shirts $S*gQ /, 1 !1 57.85 Silk Shirts <Jjg gg / 9 - All $8.85 Silk Shirts gg J/ jpj SIO.OO Silk Shirts jjjg gg / P J/ fPJ All $12.00 Silk Shirts <jjg gg m lwl f oys ' "Kaynee" Shirts 79) c I I I All Signal Shirts (Only 2to Customer). .<ftl 4Q I j|® I July Clothing Reductions K 8 Iff IP ' All $25.00 Suits s2l 50 9 tilui- f All $30.00 Suits $24 50 H All $35.00 Suits S2B 50 I All $40.00 Suits Rn Every Suit Reduced Except Palm Beaches / ■ 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. JULY 17, 1919. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers