ITALIAN PARR DEVELOPMENT IS UP TO COUNCIL City Must First Take Action Concerning Street Lines Progress on the plans for the Italian Park improvement and the laying out the grounds planned for the new high school is a standstill until the city council takes some action on the new rtrcet lines, as laid out by the city engineer. According to the general plans, Third street and Pi-Oh street from Division to Catherine must lie laid along different lines from those which they now follow. The new plans bring Third street farther east and swing Sixth slightly to the south. Inasmuch as the original plans as submitted called for all land be tween Sixth and Italian Park, the : acreage included would have heen if , 0 ? ' " ? 1 "I Shall Watch • 3 j the Papers— o 0 ? : 2 for at her last Twlce-a- i p Twelvemonth' Sale I saved o a thirty dollars on a suit. 6 i 1 ' 1 "Of course, she's said A " nothing about it, but my .j j : husband knows a man on j ! the paper and he says 0 - 'no has seen the ad that's 5 • to appear August 2nd. 0 ! I ? ® "It will mean a lot to me. j j f Oh, I do hope It's true. jj j ?. It's just six months from 0 V the last one. I believe 0 ; | there's something in it." 0 | 1 I! c| /A TMSM'et# HO j j The Hard man Autotone Player Pianos contain wonderful expression devices, including the Ac centor, Transposor and Selector. The Autotone can be instantaneously changed to the usual type of hand-played piano. Built completely, both basic piano and player action in one factory and guaranteed by the Hardman, Peck & Co. Player-Piano catalog mailed free on request. YOHN BROS. 13 N. FOURTH STREET. Political Printing No printing office in this city or vicinity is bet ter equipped than ice to make your cuts and print your political announcements. The Telegraph Printing Co. Printing Binding Designing Photo Engraving Die Stamping Plate Printing Harrisburg, Penna. W ' c tE r J A delicious confection / that refreshens the mouth and leaves that delightful, lingering jpjygL Carefully packed In tinfoil lined JWJir' with wax paper. JwM-E verywhere Easily carried in your pocket u _ .. Peppermints are^^k Everlastingly /MM made from the finest r"• 99 MM: s pulverized sugar and (JOOQ„ jp I I^rrr THURSDAY EVENING, much greater than the present num ber of acres between the two streets extended to Catherine street. It will be necessary for the city council to adopt the street lines as laid out by Engineer Cowden, and then the school board will bo free to go ahead with its purchases and further plans. It is the intention as soon as possible to present the plans to an expert educationalist of na tional reputation, in order that the board may profit by his knowledge in their construction of the new grounds. As soon as the plans for the buildings are completed the heavier planting of groups of trees, and the like, may Vie completed, so that by the time the buildings arc completed the grounds may present! a much more finished appearance] than would be the case if this plant ing was delayed until later. Want High Court Trial For French Traitor | Paris. July 31. Trial by a high I court of Joseph CalUaux, the former ; premier, who has been under nr ] rest a year and a half charged with j having had treasonable dealings with j the enemy, is rrcommended in the conclusions of Theodore Leseouve, attorney general of the republic. M. Lcscouve's report has been filed with the commission of inquiry which is just closing its long investigation, i It is understood that the attorney J general finds no grounds for prose ! eution of the accused Deputy Louis i I.oustalot, who was involved with ! Caillaux. Captain Mornct. who prosecuted 51. Duval, who was sentenced to death and executed in connection with the. Bonnet Rouge case, and Pierre Lenoir, who also was sen tenced to death on a charge of trad ing with the enemy, will M. Leseouve in the prosecution of Cail~ laux if the commission of the high court adopts the conclusions in the attorney general's report. Businessmen Enjoy Fourth Annual Outing The Fourth Annual Picnic of the Al. K. Thomas Orchestra was held to-day at Cold Spring Cottage, Wil liams Grove. About forty-five mem bers of the orchestra went over to the grove in automobiles and spent the day in games and stunts of all sorts. The big stunt of the picnic was the boxing contest put on between At a late hour it was unknown who "Johnny" Affleck and "Al" Thomas, had to be carried out, but betting was high on both sides. The even ing was to be devoted to a chicken and waffle dinner, if the events of the afternoon have not laid every body low. BLAST FURNACES GOING STRONGER Unfilled Orders Pile Up in Midsummer Month Usually Marked ' by Slackening New York, July 31. Increasing j operation of blast furnaces and steel plants is still the rule, and the ten dency is rather emphasized in the | Pittsburgh district, according to the Iron Age to-day. The Carnegie j Steel Company is now operating l forty-six out of fifty-nine blast fur ! naces, having started up fifteen in I the past month. Its steel ingot ca ' pacity is now operating at 5 and j SO per cent. What is notable throughout the Industry is that unfilled orders are accumulating in a midsummer I month often marked by slacken i ing. ! Higher prices have become elfec i tive iri a few lines. Most of the mills have announced a $5 per ton ad vance on all wire products for ex ! port, but in the case of Canada ! have confined the advance to wire rods, which are now $57. Several independent sheet mills advanced | black sheets $2 per ton on July 28 j and galvanized sheets $4. Three ' other sheet mills are practically 1 sold up for the year. On some automobile sheet sales for the first half of next year one or two mills realized $5 per ton over to-day's prices. The sold-up condition of i bar mills is emphasized, but prices stay where they were. While some steel companies have j sold about 150 per cent, of their i capacity in July, their bookings con tinue unbalanced, being less than capacity in plates, the larger size I bars and in all railroad products. ! Meanwhile the inevitable day of rail road buying is nearer, with indica tions that on some products prices will he higher than at the time the Railroad Administration's great refusal. Labor t'nions Active The activities of the labor unions have been most marked lately at Cleveland, Chicago and in western Pennsylvania outside of Pittsburgh. ] At Cleveland a strike on a steel works railroad for an actual 8-hour day with the same 11 hours pay now given for 10 hours work caused a partial shutting down of mills and a banking of furnaces. At Chicago the building trades lockout con tinues, but its early termination is expected. A canvass of the actual returnings of common laborers to Europe shows some exaggerations of this factor. But the scarcity of skilled labor in metal-working shops in New England and some other districts continues. Our cable Indicates but little ad vance out of the chaotic conditions in British and Continental steel trades. The seven-hour day has cut down Welsh coal output and steel producers are further at sea over uncertainty as to costs. Some steel plants have closed down. Ja pan is buying Welsh tinplate freely. Belgian rods have been sold at £l7 ss. f. o. b. Antwerp. Germans Hampered German works are greatly ham- Tmrßir 15 SHARP'S VERDICT C. F. Sharp, 1243 S. 49th St.. Phila., a contractor and builder, said: "I suffered from stomach trouble, gas tritis and Indigestion. At times I would so fill up with gas that I could hardly get my breath. My heart' would seem to stop—then would be- I gin to hammer. I saw where a man | similarly affected had used Tanlac to advantage. I bought some and thj symptoms I had passed away quick ly under the Tanlac treatment." The genuine J. I. Gore Co. Tanlac is sold here by Kramer's, Steevers' and other leading druggists. HAJttUSBURG TELEGRAPH! | pered by lack of raw materials ar.d Iby rising labor costs. It is ar- I '' an gcd that Sweden shall provide i' ai "S>® Quantities of ore in future, ] out the coal scarcity is marked and i jail road facilities almost at the I bieaking point. Many rolling mills arc down to a 25 per cent, opera - 1 i° n l , h ' e 'viens-Halako and other I electrical works have been closed by impossible demands of workers. For tnin sheets the syndicate price of Gorman mills is 900 marks per ton, !?" t .„ ' st °o