Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 24, 1919, Page 13, Image 13

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    * 1,500 TROOPS
BROUGHT HOME
Passengers on the Santa Bar
bara Are Mostly
Casuals £
By djeeiated Press.
Philadelphia, July 24. Fifteen
hundred troops, mostly casuals, ar
rived here last flight on the trans
port" Santa Barbara from Brest.
The trip across thq Atlantic was
without incident. An official re
ception committee representing the
city of Philadelphia met the return
ing soldiers who expressed great
pleasure in being back in the United
f States.
, The —♦-> 'a-.--
IS YOUR BLO Ji) HUNGRY
rr\ O T n \T O Who Should Take
r
Modern Methods of Cooking and
Jilving Have Made An Alarming ln
crca.se in Iron Deficiency n Blood
of American Men and Women
iMUAATED IRON
Helps Make Red Blood
The Kind Tlint Puts Roses Into the
Cheeks of Women and Force
Strength and Coinage Into Veins
of Men.
"Is-~your blood starving ——
for want of iron? Iron is The Tired i
red blood food. If you were Nervous
to go without eating until Housewife
you became weak, thin
emaciated, you could not do a more
serious harm to yourself than when
you let your blood literally go hun
gry for want of iron—iron that gives
it strength and power to change food
into living tissue," says Dr. James
Francis Sullivan, formerly physician
of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor Dept.),
New York, and the Westchester
County Hospital.
"Modern methods of cooking and
the rapid pace at which people of this
country live has made such an alarm
ing increase in iron deficiency in the
blood of American men and
women that I have often mar
veled at the large number of
people who lack iron in the
blood—and who never suspect
the cause of their weak, nerv
ous, run-down state. But
irt my opinion, you can't
make strong, sturdy men
and women by feeding
them on metallic iron. The
old forms of metallic iron
must go through a diges
tive process to transform
them into organic iron—
Nuxated Iron before
they are to be taken
up and assimilated by
the human system.
Notwithstanding all that
has been said and written
on this subject by well
known physicians, thou
sands of people still insist
In dosing themselves with
metallic iron simply. I
suppose, because it costs a few cents
less. I strongly advise readers in all
cases to get a physician's prescrip
tion for organic iron—Nuxated Iron—
or if you don't want to go to this
trouble, then purchase only Nuxated
Iron in its original packages and see
that this particular name (Nuxated
Iron) appears on the packages. If
you hate taken preparations such as
Nux and Iron and other similar iron
products and failed to get results, re-
figure-outlines: Fashion's latest
decree. *X.
A model for every figure} " m,. no*ki
(each exclusive for its pur- | , .i. A
pose) combining Slenderness, ri+rif fl
Grace and Suppleness, with ■
long-wear, W. B. Nuform \/|yji//ji^^i^H
Corsets provide "Much Corset BK&Sj \'..
IIUKt , , ( ii|||
JsBH (See
~ Illustration) I
®H EKJ! |B
Ml -• sjfflggK hand
5: : M !PwpHs.T While W. B. Nuform Corsets are popular
ft W' liljßß priced corsets, they are not In any sense
I|K2^9'< UTU cheap corsets, but combine in Kit, Style,
Material. Workmanship and Trimming, nil
l uu "tlen of much higher priced corset*.
" Tor Sale by BOWMAN & CO.
F*Y T m ■
; K'P(LC£- A Quart of A
g 1 Grade-A-Milk fi?K
| & Each Day— X> y
1 WiU Keep All Bills For m
JBv- ' Ills Away >^>l
|K Look for this name on cap
Chas. A. Hoak ygf
PEXBROOK Both
THURSDAY EVENING,
bara included the 541 st Engineers
Service Battalion, headquarters and
medical detachment and companies
A and D. 301 st Water Tank Train.
Company E; Third Company Trans
portation Corps, 318 th Salvage
Squad. 309 th Mobile Laundry, 103 rd
St. Xazaire Casual Detachment, Cas
ual Companies 166, 1,671, 1,673, 1,-
674 and 1,676, Marine discharges,
Special Casual Company 1,684, a
casual officer, casual chaplain and
casual Army field clerks.
Gilbert A. Spencer, Sumner.
Mich., was the only one on the ship
who wore the D. S. C. Grover C.
Davis, a newspaper man of Muncie.
Tnd.. who was editor of the Guard
Gazette, a Marine Corps publication
at St. Nazaire, was among the arri
vals.
GFT RID OF YOUR OT.D PTAXO
Exchange it for a high-grade talk
ing machine. Tt can be done. See
us about it. TROUP BROS., 8 N.
Market Square. Bell 4781; Dial
tThe Elderly
Inactive Man
The Exhftunted
lIUMIneHS Mnn
The Hun-iloirn
Buainua Woman
member that such
w products are an en
f tirely different thing
from Nuxated Iron."
" If you are not strong
or well you owe it to
yourself to make the fol
lowing test: See how
long you can work or
how far you can walk
without becoming tired. Next take
two five-grain tablets of ordinary
Nuxated Iron three times per day
after meals for two weeks. Then test
your strength again and see how
much you have gained. Numbers'of
nervous, run-down people who were
ailing all the while have- increased
their strength and endurance In two
weeks' time while taking iron in the
proper form. Sold by Croll Keller,
G. A. Gorgas and J. Nelson Clark.
MOSQUITO BILL
DRAWS A VETO
Governor Says That the Meth
od of Assessment Is Too
Radical a Departure
has vetoed the bill
W\\\ A providing a
f method of getting
rid of mosquito
breeding places on
l Jfcl99§£t' tlie B r °und that
1 it would make a
P sessment laws of
the State. The
| measure was urged by health offi
cials and was designed to enable
spots found to favor propagation of
the pests to be drained or treated,
the counties, municipalities and in
terested property owners to be as
sessed for tho cost.
The Governor says that the divi
sion of the assessment is not clear
in some places and that instead of
viewers being named as is usual
when benefits are assessed the Com
missioner of Health is to determine
the benefits. The Governor also ob
jects to the fact that only after the
Commissioner determines the amount
is notice given to the property own
ers and then only by advertisement
in tho newspapers. ' "I know of no
instance of the assessment of ben
efits upon property where notice is
not first given of the proceedings
and an opportunity given the own
ers to be heard before the assess
ment is made. I doubt also the
legal power of the Commissioner
of Health to assess damages or ben
fits upon private property," con
eludes the Governor.
Ready For Preserves Prepara
tions to take over several tracts for
establishment of game preserves be
fore the opening of the fall hunting
season are being made by State
Game Commission officials. Thev
have . arranged for surveys and
search of titles on a dozen or more
properties and groups of properties
and it may be possible that in west
ern counties they may purchase only
surface rights. Some of the pre
serves will be of large sie and will
be stocked with game this year if
conditions permit. Scores of in
j quiries regarding the provisions of
the game preserve bills are being
sent here.
Send Engineers Sanitary engi
neers have been sent to Wellsboro
in response to an urgent appeal
to Commissioner of Health Ed
ward Martin by residents of that
place which was visited by. a cloud- i
burst on Tuesday afternoon. The j
conditions were said to be so serious i
that expert assistance was needed. ■
this is the only place that has asked '
for aid of the Health Department as I
a result of the heavy rains.
ComiHjnsation Board —The State
Compensation Board, whose mem
bers were reappointed bv the Gov
ernor, organized yesterday by re
electing Harry A. Mackey. Philadel
phia, chairman; Lee Solomon, Phil
adelphia, secretary, and J. C. Det
weiler, Huntingdon, assistant secre
tary.
Commissioner of Labor C. B. Con
nelley ex-officio a member of the
° ar |*' announced the reappointment
of all of the present compensation
referees. There are four new places,
created by the act just approved, to
be named.
Heavy Loss on Roads—State High
way Department reports indicate
heavy loss by contractors on new
state highways as a result of the!
tremendous fall of rain the last fort
night and serious interference with
traffic and the Highway Depart
ment s own oiling and surfacing
operations. The reports received are
to the effect that the rainfall was
heaviest east of Huntingdon, Centre,
Clinton and Potter counties and that
in some eastern counties work on the
roads was stopped and grading ex
cavations seriously washed. In some
lnstanaes cement supplies were
flooded while the dead loss to con
tracts because of idle labor will be
heavy. The department maintenance
forces have lost almost two weeks
in what is ordinarily the busiest
time of the year.
Unique Case Up—The first appli
cation from an individual to sell a
telephone system to a company has
been received by the Public Service
.Commission hnd will be acted upon
next week. Jay A. Putnam, of Rome
Crawford county, asked the right to
sell his system known as the Rome
Telephone Co., to the Rome Tele
phone Co., Ltd. The Smithfield
Rural Telephone Co., operating in
Monroe county, has filed notice of an
increase of rates.
Printing Branch
Is Reorganized
Reorganization of the State De
partment of Printing and its division
of distribution of documents have
been authorized by Governor Sprout's
approval of the Murdoch Senate bills.
Under terms of one tlfere have been
established numerous definitions and
regulations governing the printing
are made. One is that bids may be
received for a State printing contract
for four or six years in 1921 and
thereafter; the bidder's bond in
creased to $50,000; that the State
printer must do all printing except
when the superintendent of public
printing and binding shall give an
emergency order; place of deputy
at $3,000 Is crcatedj new schedule
of prices arranged and additional
clerks provided.
The second bill provides a new
system of distribution of documents
with the number to be supplied for
each branch of the Government.
Pershing Compliments
Units of First Division
H. N. Morgan, a sergeant in the I
First Division, has sent home a let- •
ter written to Major General Mc- !
Glachli'n, commanding the division
from General Pershing.
General Pershing in his letter
pays a splendid tribute to the ap
pearance of the First in its review
at Montabauer last March. Ha
compliments the units on their fight
ing qualities and the way in which
they conducted themselves through
out the campaigns. The First Divi
sion is the original division of the
American Expeditionary Force in
Franco.
GNAT AND CAMEL
Ohio permitted the prizefight to
take place within its borders.
But the chairman of the Ohio
board of censors says that moving
pictures of the fight may not be snown !
within the State because they ore I
demoralising.
The gnat and the camel again!—
Buffalo Express. J
HABRISBURG TES2GKXPO
Senate Passes
Agricultural Bill
Without Rider
• By Associated Press.
Washington, July 2 4.—The Sen
I" The Live Store " "Always Reliable" *
"Be Sure of Your Store'' I
I Hot—Hotter—Hottest—and 'the warmer it gets the
more it disturbs a man's temperament. There's no need to swelter in hot
clothes these days. Ample provision has been made for every man's comfort in light
weight wearing apparel and the good news this week at Doutrichs is that we are sell-
I All $15 —$18 —$20 Palm Beach Suits |
As well as all Mohair and Kool Clothes, Not a
mere handful but lots of them, all we have in stock. You know we ISIF
carry tremendous stocks —Have to, for we have such a large clientele to provide
for that it's necessary We can't afford to disappoint you and your friends. Don't
leave the week "go by" without coming to this "Live Store" and taking a look at /Aj\ W y f
the excellent styles, the splendid quality, the complete color range of Palm Beach \
Mohair and Kool Cloth Suits that we have sold Hundreds of, at sls, $lB and S2O. y jf
But now you can buy them at our clean up price—a lower price than you can buy mV"fr3 JSSjy
them in the wholesale markets for next season. Wj&j /1
_ Remember this week is half gone—lf you haven't If I *f§ I
been here already you should make every possible effort to see these /
"Palm Beach Suits" that this "Live Store" is selling at such a tempting price Most # \\| \i\ %
men who get thoroughly familiar with the comfort derived from wearing a Palm t|\ 1
Beach Suit are not satisfied unless they have two or three suits—but be sure that vljp i\ \ \ I,
you own at least one of these sls, $lB and S2O - \\ \
I Mohair Kool Cloth and Jlpfc |
I Palm Beach Suits I
|| $J J Srmd.ffiMjgs I
I All Boys' Palm Beach & Wash Suits Reduced 9
1% All Straw Hats \ % jj. g
Price and Panamas I
All $3.00 Straw Hats $1.50 All $5.00 Straw Hats 2.50
a u *o end vv . ci 7c All $6.50 Straw Hats and Panamas $3.25
All $3.50 Straw Hats $1.75 M $? 50 Straw Hatg and Panamag $3 . 75
All $4.00 Straw Hats $2.00 | AH SIO.OO Panamas $5.00
ate has passed the $34,000,000 agri- j
cultural appropriation, bill, which
recently was vetoed by President
Wilson because of the rider for re
peal of the daylight saving law.
No effort to restore the rider' was
made In the Senate.
Secures Revolver to
Play Wild West Show
Boy Kills Playmate
By Associated Press.
Warren, Pa., July 24.—Fired into I
JULY 24, 1919.
a spirit of emulation of -wild west
stunts by a medicine show playing
in their home town, Allen Engman
and Mllford Nordine played to-day
with fatal results. They secured an
automatic revolver to use in their
i play and Mllford Nordine, 13, shot
and Instantly killed Allen Engman,
I aged 10.
- ' <
City (Fire) Insurance Co.
of Penna.
Incorporated 1870
A. Sylva, Agent
27 SOUTH THIKI) STREET
Bell I'ltono 2148
13