TO REORGANIZE SCHOOL DEPT. Dr. Becht in Charge of Af fairs; Dr. Finegan . to Return Soon Reorganization j S. \ \ 2 //j of the State Re- > V\\\ Q partment of Pub- j ' x \\\\ lic Instruction is ! liC movements which i •76 w ill be effected | VcmSS9SII immediately up- 1 UjHffllM on the return of t from the * con- | ference of Governors at Salt lAko ■ City. Dr. Thomas E. Finegan, the new superintendent of Public In- ; struction is expected to return tp assume active charge of Pcnnsyl- j • vania's school system on September 1 1, when important rulings concern- ; jng the teacher's salary increase and other school matters will be made, j In the meantime Dr. J. George 1 Becht, recently appointed by Gov- j ernor Sproul as Deputy Superin tendent of Public Instruction is carrying out the detail work of the Department. Governor Sproul un der the acts passed by the recent Legislature will have the appoint ment of a second deputy at a salary of $6,000 a year, but no intimation has been made as to who will get this appointment. Although no official announce- , ment has been made, places have been created for the two former deputy superintendents, Iteed B. Teitrick, of Brookviile. and Cha'les D. Koch, of Phillipsburg. Mr. Teitrich is expected to head the new Bureau of Attendance at a salary of 1 You Need Not Suffer From Catarrh But You Must Drive It Out of " Your Blood to Get Rid of It Permanently. You have probably been in the habit of applying external treat ments, trying to cure your Catarrh. You have used ... rays, washes and lotions and possibly been temporar ily relieved. But after a short time you had another attack and won dered why. You must realize that catarrh is an infection of the blood and to get pe. .—.lent relief the catarrh infection must be driven out of the blood. The quicker you come to understand thie i.._ ,uicker vou will get it out , f your system. The Globe "Keep Your Eye on the Clock" The Globe Buy Clothes Now as You Today rv • i i it * The Clock Did Last Year s ay sB6s ■———— ————————————U When the fuel administrator and coal operators told you that coal would be scarce and high in price, you heeded the warning and filled your bins, didn't you? Well, it's much like that in the matter of clothing now; the reasons are scarcity of wool, shorter hours, higher lafcor costs, and an enormous world "demand for clothes. We haven't any intention to frighten anybody into buying clothes; but all known conditions indicate that he's a wise man who fills his wardrobe now when he can take advantage of the wonderful savings offered during THE GLOBE'S One Thousand Suit Campaign $2O Suits at $14.50 S4Q Suits at $32.50 I $25 Suits at $19.50 $45 Suits at $57.5Q 30 Suits at $24.50 ss ° Suits at $40.50 $35 Suits at $28.50 seo Suits at $48.50 Hot Weather Clothes Reductions $l5 Palm Beach Suits ..§12.50 Sis Breezweve Suits . $11.50 $lB Palm Beach Suits . §14.50 $2O Mohair Suits ..... §17.5Q $2O Flannel Suits §17.50 $25 Silk Pongee Suits . §18.5Q One special lot One lot of Wool of genuine Palms| Q "$| 1-50 Beach Suits at . . . Suits at ! Boys! Ask Your Parents For $7.95 And then come straight to THE GLOBE for one of those special suits we're sell ing now at $7.95. Originally they sold at $lO.OO and $12.50, and next fall they'll be considered good values at $15.00. Smartly styled suits to please any boy for dress or for school —all sizes to 18. | THE GLOBE j WEDNESDAY EVENING, $4,000 a year, and Mr. KoGh wil,l head* a Bureau of. High School In spectors at a sulary of $4,000 a year. It is* understood that Dr. Finegan will establish new bureaus to look , after each separate character of school work which comes under the supervision of the department and that there will be the closest co operation between the school and health authorities relative to the physical condition of pupils in the public schools. Under the provisions of the Lanius act, special schools I are to be established for children ; who are backward in their work on | account of physical or mental ; handicaps. The work of the voca j tional and agricultural schools will also be enlarged and it is likely that the school authorities -will work in ' conjunction with the Department of | Labor and Industry in the rchabili , tation of industrial workers. State Fair Changes Secretary i of Agriculture Frederik Rasmussen I to-day met members of the exccu | ttve committee of the State Fair As | sociation and outlined the plan un- I der which State aid would be nl | lowed county fairs for strictly ugri -1 cultural exhibits. Under a law ! passed by the last Legislature, su i pervision of the State aid to county ! fair associations is placed in the | hands of the Secretary of Agricul j ture and $lOO,OOO was appropriated ! for the purpose. The law limits : payments for exhibits of livestock I and livestock products, horticultural products, cereals, bees and bee pro ducts. The Legislature also passed an appropriation $63,016.88 to re imburse counties for money advanc ed to agricultural associations for the years 1915, 1916 and 1918. Sec- I retary Rasmussen explained to the fair association men that he did rot want to interfere with their present premium lists, but that needle work and other premiums which had formerly been classed in with the I agricultural show would not be in j eluded further. The Secretary cut lined a report that must be mailed 1 not later than November 15 to the I S. S'. S., which has been in constarjt use for over fifty years, will attack | the catarrhal poisons, cleanse and strengthen the blood so it will carry | vigor and health to the mucous j membranes on its Journeys through | your body and nature will soon re | store you to health, you will be re ! lieved of the droppings of mucous ;ir ! your throat, sores in nostrils, bad j breath, hawking and spitting. All reputable druggists carry , S. S. S. in stock and we recommend I you give it a trial at once. The chief medical adviser of the I company will cheerfully answer all ; letters on the subject. There is 110 I charge for the medical advice. Ad ! dress Swift Specific Company. 251 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. I ' Department of Agriculture showing the actual amount expended for agricultural premiums and other records made by the fair for the year. Secretary Rasmussen says that it is the desire of the agricul tural department to help build up the exhibits of farm products so as to educate the producers to the value of greater effort in both the quality and qtianity of farm pro ducts. "The county fair is the ba rometer of the community to de termine the quality of its products j or the spirit of the people" says I Rasmussen. Meeting with the Sec- I retary to-day were: J. F. Seldom- I ridge Lancaster; Harry B. Correl, ! Bloomsburg; Walter R. Buckman, j ;By berry; Morris G. Temple, West j j Chester. Fnoil In vest Ignt lons On. — Robert i M. Simmers, special agent for the j Syite Bureau of Foods in tne Phila- I I delphia district, bus been instructed j ! bv James Foust, head of the Bureau, to give Tod Daniel, the Federal food , ! food investigator there, all informa- ] ; tidn at his disposal concerning the ! hoarding or profiteering of foods in j i that vicinity. Mr. Daniel also has i been placed in possession of the State's detailed information concern -1 ing cold storage warehouses and their j contents. Industrial Conference Planned For Canada Ottawa, Ont., Aug. 13. The in dustrial future of Canada may he in fluenced to a marked degree hy the meeting of the National Industrial Conference* to be held hero Sept. j 11, to discuss labor problems In the I Dominion. | Building contracts said to amount | to millions of dollars have been held ! up pending some action by the fed | eral government or an agreement | between capital and labor which j would tend to restore industrial I tranquility. ! The conference will be attended ! by representatives of the Dominion j and provincial governments, em l ployers and labor leaders from all i branches of industry. * Subjects to be considered will in ; elude the right of employes to or ganize, recognition of labor unions, collective bargaining, and the sug gestion by the Royal Commission on Industrial Relations that a bu reau be established to promote the organization of joint industrial ■ councils. Labor features of the Peace Treaty also will be brought I up for discussion. Yellow Fever Threatens State of Yucatan ,! Mexico City, Aug. 13. Advices from the state of Yucatan are that 1 a threatened epidemic of yellow i fever has been averted by hygienic I measures and a quarantine. lIAHUTSRUUG (&&& TELEGRAPH AMERICAN LEGION IS AID TO ITS MANY MEMBERS | NUT York. Aug. 13.—T0 Inform dls-i I charged soldiers, sailors and marines of the facilities provided by The I American Legion to furnish lnforma r tion and servico in all insurance and I money matters where aid is required I to secure final adjustment and settle l ment from the Government, the fol i lowing statement issued to-day from I National Headquarters of the Legion, 19 West 44th street. New York City, I will be read to every post in the United States, j "In accordance with a resolution I passed at the caucus of the Ameri- I can Legion at St. the Legion ; is giving to its members, and to those {digible for membership, all possible l aid In matters concerning their War | Itlsk Insurance, allotments, liberty ! bonds, bonuses, travel pay, etc. For j the last few months the Legion has ■ been rendering this Service to all of I its members who have had occasion to ask for aid. During that time it has helped hundreds of men to ob tain a final and complete settlement of their accounts. In every section a member of the Legion acquainted with the procedure necessary to ob tain a speedy settlement of any ac count that a discharged soldier may I have witn the Government officials, is available And ready to help. "Delivery of liberty bonds has been expedited. Bonus checks which had been delayed have been obtained. Claims for bonuses presented by the Legion have been settled in record time. Compensation claims have SAYS AMBLER WILL PAY BANK Brother of Former Insurance Commissioner Sees Colonel Pusey By Associated .Press. Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 13.—Stale officials investigating the failure of the North Penn Bank, which closed its doors July 18 with an apparent shortage of $2,114,000, held, a long conference yesterday with represent atives of J. J. Boland, head of the New York National Insurance Com pany and the Seneca Fire Insurance Company, also of New York. Boland is alleged to have had overdrafts in the North Penh Bank aggregating $380,000, and since the failure, the New York National Insurance Com pany has been taken over by the New York State Insurance officials. Representing Boland at the con ference were Frank T. McCormick, i his law -partner, and R. S. Houck. I Mr. Houck is city solicitor of Scran ton and a vice-president of two in | surance companies. After the meet ing Colonel Frederick T. Pusey, in charge of the investigation, said it had not been "particularly produc tive." "As far as I am concerned," Col. Pusey said, "things are just where they were before the two men were called. They did not succcd in clear ing up a single point." . Harry Ambler, a brother of Charles A. Ambler, former Insurance Com missioner of Pennsylvania, who is said to owe the bank more than $lOO,OOO, also called at Colonel Pusey's, -office. Colonel Pusey said Mr. Ambler told him his brother would make setlement this week. MacMMan's Next Arctic Trip to Be in 60-Foot Boat DOMAI/D B MAC MIM/AN. Professor Donald MacMillan, of Bowdoin College, noted as an Arc tic explorer, is planning to start early in the slimmer of 1921 upon his third trip to the northern re gions, according to a report from Portland, Me. Baffin's Bay will be the object of the trip. The trip will be financed by the Bowdoln alumni and the National Geographical So ciety. Bowdoin Museum will be en riched by mineral and animal speci ; mens collected, and photographs and data on topographical condi tions will go to the Geographic So ciety. MacMillan's party will have a special type of boat, costing about $50,000. Every requirement sug gested by previous Arctic trips will be met in the new boat, which will be only sixty feet long. ARE YOU Suffering from CATARRH? For quick relief. The MAN-HEII. In haler. Demonstration at Gorgas' Pharmacy, 16 North Third street. —Adv. been settled and payment secured, j Men who had been discharged from 1 the army or navy, and whose dls- I charge certificates showed thciti to | be in apparent good health, have, i through the American Legion, proved to the Government that they are, as a matter of fact, not in good health, and have had their compensation claims allowed and paid. These re sults have been obtained through full co-operation with the various Gov i eminent Bureaus. "In addition, the Legion is carry i ] log on a general campaign to inform ex-service men of their rights and i I privileges and to assist in obtaining i i them. Compensation is now paid to : I injured soldiers on the basis of $30.00 ■ per month. Legislation has been in i troduccd to make it payable on the ■ j basis of $lOO.OO per month. Govcrn i ment insurance at present is payable ' to the beneficiary in installments i covering a period of 20 years. Most men desire to have their insurance paid in one lump sum. Legislation is now pending to have this done. Al [ so Legislation is pending to enlarge I greatly the class of persons who may • be named as beneficiaries of insur ■ unce. "This "service' has been established for the benefit of ex-service men. It is urgently requested that every i member be informed so that fie may I tvall himself of any assistance neces sary In connection* v. ith his relations > with the Bureau of War Risk lnsur- I anee, the Zone Finance Ofiicer, or i other Government agencies." ANTHRACITE ; SHIPMENTS GROW ; Exceeded Million Tons First Since October, 1918 Philadelphia, Aug. 13. —The ship -3 ments of anthracite for July as re f ported to the Anthracite Bureau of 1 Information at Philadelphia, show t a substantial increase over the pre- ceding month and exceeded a total . of 6,000,000 tons for the first time 3 since October, 1918. The tonnage . sent out last month amounted to ,' 6,052,334 tons, an increase over June 1 of 432,743 tons, or 7.7 per cent. I Compared with July, 1918, when [ production was abnormally stim ulated by war conditions, the ship ments last month showed a decrease of 1,032,441 tons. A large part of this decrease, however, was in the production of steam sizes from washeries that are not in operation this year. Washery production in 1918 averaged 550,000 tons a month, whereas in recent normal years the washery output has amounted to I between 150,000 and 250,000 tons a t month. Compared with July, 1916, the latest normal year in anthracite pro . duction, the shipments last month 3 showed an increase of 619,456 tons. 3 The shipments for the first foutr - months of this coal year, beginning April 1, have amounted to 22,608,555 ; tons, as compared with 21,146,536 . tons for.the corresponding period in 3 1916, an increase of nearly one and , a half million tons. Big Lot of Hay Fever Jokes - But Kentucky Man Say*—"People Who Belong to Hay Fever Colony are Kidding Themielvet." Wouldn't Be Any Rose o. Hay Fever if Simple Home Rem edy Was Given a Chance. "Yes, there's a real NINTY-NINE per cent effective remedy for hay or rose fever," frankly states a drug gist In a prosperous Kentucky city. "But I don't 'fxpcct anyone to be lieve me, becuuse the treatment Is so easy and the cost not worth mention ing." "The annual crop of hay-fever Jokes j would be mighty scarce if people | would get an ounce of Mentliolized I Arcine and by just adding water that has been boiled make a pint of liquid ! that will prove a real help to all who . suffer." I "Many of my hay-fever friends tell j me that by starting to gargle and : snuff or spray the nostrils a few times ' a day the expected severe attack often { fails to appear and in cases where It does show up is very mild and does not annoy." "The Better Class of Pharmacists" who dispense Mentliolized Arcine say It will greatly modify any attack even i when taken three or four days after hostilities begin. Go to a real live druggist when you get ready to make a pint. 7 A DAY FOR 7 MY!) If Your Nerves Are Shaky Because of Over-Indulgence- In Tobacco or Alcohol or by Excess of Any Kind, Bio-Feren is What You Need Right Away. Don't grow old before your time, don't let nervousness wreck your hap piness or chances in life. The man with strong, steady nerves Is full of vigor, energy, ambition and confidence. You can have nerves of steel, firm step, new courage and keen mind by putting your blood and nerves In flrst ! class shape with mighty 810-Fercn, a ' new discovery, inexpensive and efli ; I cient. ! Men and women who get up so tired 1 In the morning that they have to drag themselves to their dally labor will in I Just a few days arise with clear mind, definite purpose and loads of ambition. All you have to do is to take two ; 810-Feren tablets after each meal and II one at bedtime —7 a day for 7 days— I then reduce to one after each meal j until all are gone. • | Then if your energy and endurance : haven't doubled, if your mind Isn't keener and eyes brighter, If you don't feel twice as ambitious as before, any druggist anywhere will return the pur* chase price—gladly and freely. 810-Feren Is without doubt the . grandest remedy for nervous, run down, weak, anaemic men and women • ever offered and is not a! all expen , i slve. AH druggists In this city and j vicinity have a supply on hand—sell I many packages, SURVEY ROUTE FOR AIRSHIPS j Complete First Section Be-1 twecn Sydney and London I Sydney. Australia, Aug. 13. —Sur- . vey of the route of the first section of the projected aerial service be tween Sydney and London was re cently completed. The section ex tends from Sydney to Darwin, which is on the north coast of Australia . and relatively near the Malayan Archipelago. This service will be carried on by a Sydney company. From Darwin the route will cross ■ the sea to the island of Timor, pro : ceed along the Malayan Archipelago to India and thence run to Bagdad i or Port Said—probably the latter. From Port Said it will cross Europe to London. The survey of the sec ond section of the route, from Dar win through Malaya to Delhi, is I now going on. It is expected that the first flight will be made within the next few • months, and it is planned to have the proposed passenger and com t mercial services in full operation in Boston r | Garter j Beau Brummell if" jliaved jeretielyot^ SAU BRUMMELL who "taught V Wales what a coat was like" —inventor of num -1 ii berless niceties of dress —gambled himself into fr—■ '..'jKiLtfM poverty. Publicly cut by the King, he had his last remaining finery laid out preparatory to seeking a friend who might save him from disgrace. With Weston, his faithful valet, keeping the door against the bailiffs, the great beau shaved serenely on. Prince of the Dandies to the last, he finished the job with the utmost care. Then, carefully wiping dry the precious blade and affectionately placing it in its case, he turned to Weston with the command: "Now let the rogues in." The razor that Beau Brummell used was a shaving tool of wonderful balance. Length, temper and correct diagonal stroke were there; all it lacked was the safety and convenience of the double-edged, detachable blade of the 1 RHAM>IUPLEXJ A Real Rctgof— made Sale Heft this wonderfully balanced razor cut yonr face. It's the longest, stronj in your hand —feel the comfort of its est, keenest, best-tempered blade oo 1 long, keen blade on your cheek. Au- earth - with more shavingmilpage than tomatically it lies on your face at the any other razor. Seven million shavers i one-and-only angle for right shaving have changed from other razors to the —because its design is thousands of Durham-Duplex a real raaor made years old. More than that—it can't safe. Make it yonr ranor todvK f THESE LEADING DEALERS SELL THEM: •Bf IBS tS> Ilu \. 3ri nor. ah hardware R| JIB Kb I St.. Pom,- CO., 1310 N. 3rd St. r IK Ft L GEORGE A. GOItGAS, -Karri* JIo- RYDER HARDWARE a NHfOF k, I tel und I'll. STORE, 1218 N\ 3rd St. , ' FlfTtf J," . J Station. 11. 11. ALTHOUSE, 3rd * Muonrh St*. 2 lS® ! " COHEN'S SPOUTING J. K. MILLER, 1733 N. 6th St. • Ijß 3 GOODS STOItE, 431 Mnrkot St. C. M. FORNEY, 31 N. 2nd St. f M I 91 > BORAH'S SPOItTING GOI.DEN SEAL 0 I |H > GOODS STOIIE, 12 N. Market Sq. DRUG STOKE, 11 S, 2nd St.