FIRST HOLIDAY IN FIVE YEARS Marshal Foch "Wearing Civil ian Clothes on Estate Near Brest Raris, Sept. B.—Marshal Foch is enjoying the first holiday he has had In five years. On his estate at oiorlaix, near Brest, the General- Sssumo of the Allied armies is living j£.e simple life, dressed in loose >Weeds and wearing a cap, only re gaining his leather leggings as a re minder of his uniform. The Marshal is a great lover of "•unting and partridges are thick in tiie woods of Birtany. But the Marshal disconsolately watches them flutter about with impunity. It will not be open season for hunting in France until Scptombor 15. It was open season for the enemy for live years and the Commander-in-Chief of the Allied armies never missed a day. Some newspapers are asking that an exception be made in favor of Foch, one of them adding naively that "as he has rendered slight serv ice to his country, in ridding it of the Germans, he might be allowed to deprive its wpods of a few par tridges." When it became known that Foch was going to Morlaix, the mayor and city councilors at once made elabo rate plans for the reception. They assembled at the house of the mayor ahd commenced marching down to the station when some one remarked that the hourt at which the train was due had passed. National Forest Policy Is Needed, Pack So Declares Washington, Sept. 8. Standing against anything except co-opera tion on the part of the National Government in a National forest policy, through George H. Wirt, chief forest fire warden seconded by Robert S. Conklln, commissioner of forestry, expresses her official position on this great economic question in the first of a series of articles in the American Forestry Magazine. Charles Lathrop Pack, president of the American Forestry Association, has called for a Nation wide expression as to the best fea tures a National forest policy should comprise. "All agree a National forest policy is needed" says Mr. Pack, "for the new growth of tim ber Is not more than one third the amount being used or destroyed each year." Why you need Resinol Ointment The same soothing, healing, antisep tic properties thst make Reeinol Oint ment ao effective for skin eruptions, also make it the ideal household remedy for Bums Ulcer* Scalds Felons Cuts Pimples Scratches Cold sores Wounds Chafing* Bruises Stings Sore* Piles Boils Irritations And s score of other troubles which constantly arise in every home, espe cially where there are children. That is why Resinol Ointment should be on your medicine aheif, ready for imme diate use. C-mnla froo- Your druggist sells oampie rree. i t , butgenerous sample and s miniature cake oI Resinol Soap, erritc to Dept. UN, Resinol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. Asserts New Discovery Brings Blessed Relief to Rose and Hay Fever Sufferers Can Make It Yourself at Home at Trifling Expense In spite of ull i . doubters and scoffers a man in Kentucky, who changed his annoying and distressing hay fever into less than a mild cold, claims most emphatically that if taken in time hay " "cr can be con quered or at least made so harmless that it is not even bothersome. He gave his disci • •• to scores of other sufferers with the most re markable result and has recently beenr prevailed upon to dispense it through pharmacists to all hay fever sufferers who still have faith that nature has provided an effec tive remedy for this common yet miserable disease. And, best of all, tl is remedy costs 5 ' ■ ■ •p Put Value Into Buildings IT IS JUST as important that you use good lumber for framing and joists as it is to select good material for inside trim, hard-wood floors, etc. True the framing is not visible to the eye, but its quality tells as time goes on. It never pays to let price influence you when buying lumber. The "cheap" Lumber often turns out most expensive. United Ice & Coal Co. Lumber Department Forster & Cowden Sts. MONDAY EVENING, STRIKERS IN ITALY STE STATESMEN Government Agencies Fail to Function, It Is Charged; "Rule Without Rule" Rome, Sept. B.—lntermitent and ] sporadic strikes, which has pro duced thorughout Italy conditions in some instances approximating bolshe' ism, in others a kind of so cialism and in still others localized anarchy, have given Italian political economists and statesmen new spurs to study and remedial action. There has been "rule without rule," according to foreign observ ers. The government agencies long established for the administration of public affairs existed but failed to function. Municipal authorities, communal officials and representa tives of the state admitted they were helpless to deal with the unusual situations which rendered inactive the prerogatives of those in power. Striking workmen forced demands upon a helpless commercial class, It is pointed, while tho authorities merely looked on "in obedience to the will of the disturbers." Tho organizations throughout Italy that planned the newest departure in governmental and economic ad ministration were styled Camera del Lavoro. A literal translation would define them as Chambers of lo.bor, but their functions went much be- I yond the province of labor, as one i ordinarily conceives that province, j and extended so far that prices were I arbitrarily fixed and the sale of com modities ordered. The merchant seems to have been the one who has suffered most by the "adventure."' His stocks were, commandeered by the Camara del ' Lavoro, if he did not show the dis position to sell at the prices fixed by that organization. In most I ruses, the arbitrary reduction of 50 ' per cent was exacted on all com : moditics regardless of the cost of the goods, the condition of the ; I market or the rate of foreign ex- J j change or any of the factors which ! | determine selling prices. Garden Cities to Be Built Around London Iyomlon, Sept. 8. Millions of pounds are to be spent in the crea i tlon of a system of industrial garden j cities which ultimately will rim met | ropolitan London. The scheme, just I outlined, is the most elaborate city- I building project ever undertaken in ' England and is an adaptation of ' the model industrial town idea origi- I nated some years ago in the United States. Building on the first of these "flower garden" suburb cities is to I begin next year north of London, ac j cording to newspaper announce ments. The town will be self-sup porting and will cover several thou i sand acres. Within its precincts will he an agricultural area. Its popu -1 lace will be supported by several en gineering industries to bo located | there. The project is an attempt not only to solve London's housing problem, which has become a grievous one, but to prevent an overwhelming con gestion of the city's industries and other commercial activities. Krupp Plant to Turn Out Locomotives Cologne, Sept. 8. The great Krupp firm of armament manufac turers has begun to center Its atten tion on preparations for government j contracts for the construction of lo- I comotives and railway cars, accord ing to German trade journals. The j firm has agreed to give the govern ! ment part pontrol of the superin [ tending. One of the first contracts I calls for 100 locomotives and 2,000 i cars. Directors of the Krupp works are also endeavoring to obtain con tracts In other branches of iron con struction in order to bring all of its factories up to at least a part of its activities during the war. • Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv. almost nothing. Get a one-ounce bottle of Mentholized Arcir.e at any drug store, pour the contents into a Pint bottle a. 1 fill the pint bottle with water that hns been boiled. Then gargle as directed and twice di.ily snuff or spray each nostril thoroughly. TJiut s all there is to it; so simple that a lot of peo; low " say that it can't do the work; but ~ "tentimes simple natural remedies are the best as you will find after using. If you will icako up a pint and use it for a week or ten days you need not bo surprised if your un welcome yearly visitor fails to ap pear. MEDICAL MEN IN SCHOOL WORK More Inspectors Named to Carry Out the Examinations of the Public School Pupil the public schools ma ny < * Btr,ctß I partment officials. In several coun ties schools will open this week, in stitutes having been held for the teachers last week. The following additional medical inspectors have been appointed: Drs. C. C. Ross, for Frankford Springs, Georgetown and Hooks town boroughs and Raccoon, Potter, Hanover, Independence and Greene townships, Beaver county; W. W. Carrier, Beaver township, Jefferson county; William C. Brown, Bum side and Westover boroughs, Clear field county; Dr. Adelbert D. Dye. Horton township. Elk county; A. F. Sherwood, Union City, Wattburg and Mill Village boroughs; Union, Leßoeuf, Amity and Venango town ships, Erie county; George H. Rob inson, Marleysburg borough; Whar ton township and Wharton Inde pendent district. Fayette county; R. A. Gans, Greensboro and Monon gahela township, Greene county; E. M. McLean, Lewis Run borough; Bradford, Corydon and Foster town ships, McKean county; L. W. Dolan, Hamilton and Wetmore townships, | McKean county; J. C. Borland, Falls Creek borough and Washing ton township, Jefferson county; I.' D. Bowser, Winslow township, Jef ferson county; C. N. Mills, McCal mont township, Jefferson county, and W. A. Ostrander, who recently returned from the army, will have charge in Smethport borough and Keating and Norwich townships, McKcan county. Can Not Sit—Commissioners of about half of the counties of Penn sylvania have been notified that they can not sit as judges of the returns of the primary election this month because they are candidates for re election. As a result the count will be supervised by a judge of the courts. Notice to this effect has been issued by the State Depart ment. In Phihulclpliin—Governor Sproul and a number of State officials are in Philadelphia for the Knights Templar conclave. The Governor is expected here to-morrow. Tugs Mnst Be Clean—Automobile owners who display license tags which cannot be easily read make themselves liable to arrest. State Highway Department officials an nounced to-day. There have been complaints lately that tags which were covered with dirt and some which had been smeared with grease so that dust would adhere have been noted in various cities. Such tags will furnish cause for prosecution. To Start Survey—Secretary of Agriculture Frederick Rasmussen is planning to send men to make sur veys of market conditions in half a dozen cities of the State within a month in accordance with his plan to get first hand information about the marketing facilities. The State authorities will also give their aid where it is proposed to establish wholesale produce markets to help farmers dispose of produce in cities where the retail market is uncer tain. Scliaffer To Return Attorney General William I. Schaffer is ex pected to return to Harrisburg from his vacation within a few days and it is probable that a number of the problems which have arisen over new laws, including the teachers' salary questions, may be taken up with him by the heads of depart ments. Decision will also be reached regarding the course of the State In the equity action against payment of appropriations to cer tain hospitals. Potato Disease in Western County Alarmed by reports of the potato wart disease, which ruined the po tiito crop in portions of the anthra cite coal field, in Cambria county mining regions, agents of the State Department of Agriculture's bureau of plant indlstry, including Govern ment experts, will begin an immedi ate investigation of the potato crop in Allegheny and other counties in the southwestern bituminous re gion. For more than a year federal and State experts have been fight ing the disease in the lower anthra cite field where a laboratory has been established and a quarantine placed on the movement of pota toes from one community to an other. Recently reports of the disease came from Cambria county and it is feared that either some in fected potatoes from the anthracite district had been bought by store companies from eastern counties or from other States and possibly may be some of those which were im ported a long time ago and carried the disease. W. A. McCubbln, the acting direc tor of the bureau in the absence of Dr. J. P. Sanders, who is studying mbans of fighting, the potato dis eases in Great Britain, will direct the southwestern survey with head quarters at Pittsburgh. The inspec tion will cover Allegheny, Washing ton, Greene, Westmoreland and Fayette counties, especially the min ing districts. Future steps will be undertaken in connection with the United States Government in case the disease is found. Military Training at Lehigh This Fall Bethlehem, Sept. B.—Dehigh Uni versity will have a unit of the Re serve Officers Training Corps, begin ning thiß fall. President H. S. Drinker, in a letter to students and their parents and guardians an nouncing the unit, endorses military training as an educational and pa triotic movement. Unforms, to be worn at drill only, and all equip ment will be supplied by the Gov ernment without cost to students. Dr. Drinker states that the military work "will promote rather than in terfere with athletics." Claims Father Was Soldier in Revolution Ontario, Calif., Sept. B.—Francis Demmon, 86 years old, said to be the only living man whose father was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, has arrived here to make his home with his son. His father, James Lemmon, born in 1763, enter ed the Continental Army when 16 years old. BXRIUUCRG inlAl THDGJCHni Many Letters For Yanks in Siberia Are Going Astray Vladivostok, Sept. B.—Hundreds of letters Intended for American sol diers In Siberia havo gone astray be cause of Incorrect addresses, accord ing to S. A. Clsler, United Stales pos tal agent in Siberia, who was sent here with the American Expedition ary Forces to look after the mail for the doughboy. Many letters in tended for Siberia were sent to Arch angel when American troops were j there, and many letters intended for j 'Archangel were sent to Vladivostok.! The correct address for letters to! Siberia is: Name, unit, A. E. F., Siboria, via Ban Francisco. Writing j the unit to which the soldier belongs in the address saves at least 2 4 hours in delivery of mail upon reach ing the A. E. F. base in Siberia. Mall addressed to units is delivered from the ship at Vladivostok with out being redistributed at the main United States Postoffice here. WTLU RAISE CAPITA!/ Ix>ndon, Sept. B.—A trade devel opment reflecting the extraordinary prosperity of the British shoe indus try and calling to mind recent news paper reports of combinations with in the industry forecasting a Britisn monopoly of this business, is the proposal of the British United Shoe Machinery Company to raise its cap ital to $6,000,000. Most of the ma chinery now used in English foot wear factories is purchased from this concern. "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" I "Be Sure of Your Store" I New Fall Stetsons Getting Fitted in a hat is a small matter— Finding a hat that feels right and looks right is another W problem. When you buy a hat it's worth a lot to know in advance that the style and quality are unquestioned. That's why so many men depend on this "Live Store" to take care of their wants. Men 9 have confidence in Doutrichs because we sell standardized, nation- fjMg jf \ 9 I Style may be your first requirement in a Hat—or good service may be your particular want. Then Imtßjjl (/. Jf\ your wishes can be fully satisfied if you come for your tW /wS '' A new Stetson. This season's models include an unusually wide range riPPy \ of Soft Hats and Derbys. Many of our well-dressed customers sell m I \ lect a pair—Derby and Soft Hat—an excellent combination for all ||, Hi H occasions. Stop in and look at yourself in one of our H | j|j I New Fall Hats || I I s Headquarters for the Popular j Mif I 1 ilNtf Mallory Velours Jij I I bC/t/ This "Live Store" put Velour Hats j E! ,j I JMk j / on the map throughout Central Pennsylvania, i j j 1 /99 / / They'll be more popular than ever this year. Beautiful shades I GIRLS TO MARCH WITH OLD UNIT Three Pcnnsylvanians Will Take Last Hike on Wednesday New York, Sept. 8. —Three Penn sylvania girls have been especially requested to march with their old unit, the victorious First Division, in its great home coming parade up Fifth avenue Wednesday. They are Miss Mary H. Stcen, of Philadelphia; Miss Cassandra Small, of York, and Miss Vivian Aston, of Mansfield, all of them "regular First t Division girhi," who, under the sign of the KoJl Triangle, fed and amused the division throughout its hardest days abroad. As a mark of honor these "vcleranettes" of the First are to march with the soldiers in their last hike. Miss Aston returned to New York last week. Sho was a .teacher of voice at the Pennsylvania State Normal School at Mansfield before she entered the service of the Y. M. C. A. She was especially fitted for Y. M. C. A. work, having done Sun day school. Red Cross and Y. W. C. A. work previously. Miss Small went abroad in Feb ruary, 1918, for an indefinite period, but, owing to the death of her brother, she was compelled to return to the United States in September of the same year. After her return she was particularly valuable to the "Y" in recruiting overseas workers. Miss Steen served the "Y" in Ger many from March, 1919, to August, and was stationed both at Holler and Heimaeh with the Army of Oc cupation. American Mobile ' Hospital at Budapest For Wounded Soldiers Bucharest, Sept. 8. Rumanian and Hungarian wounded in the re cent fighting around Budapest have been treated in an American mo bile hospital of the most modern type—the lust word in war hospit als for use in the field with a rupid ly moving army. The type of mobile hospital be ing used, is that known as the I "autochlr." It is a hospital on wheels, —eighteen huge automobile ' trucks equipped with everything j needful for war-time medicine and surgery. There are automobile I operating rooms, automobile stcri j Using equipment, an automobile laboratory, a pure-water machine with ice-making attachment, an X-ray car, electric light plant, steam heating plant, a blacksmith's repair shop and a complete tent hospital which can be set up anywhere in about two hours so as to accom modate more than 400 wounded men. The hospital is a gift from the American Red Cross to Queen Marie of Rumania. It arrived here about a fortnight ago, and is now being used for the first time under the command of Major J. B. Bayne, of Chicago, a physician attached to the American Red Cross Commis sion to' the Balkans. It was built by the Red Cross for use on the West front, but did not arrive in Europe until after the armistice. SEPTEMBER 8, 1919. Wife Aids Soldier in His Re-Education Washington, Sept. 8. The Fed eral Board for Vocational Educa tion attempts to make a man self dependent; but in at least one case it has been found necessary- in order to accomplish this, (o get the assistance of the wife of the dis abled man. A seaman because of injuries received in service, develop ed a form of epilepsy. Not able, on account of these seizures to return to his old trade, the Board's officers were at a loss as to how to place him. It was discovered that dur ing- his leisure hours at sea, he hnd learned to embroider and strange as it mny seem, enjoyed it. A course in embroidery designing was arranged for him at the Rhode Island School jof Design. While the course is giv en to the disabled soldier, his wife is allowed to attend the lessons, and \ Flor DE JVTO\ MELBA \ - \ The Cigar Supreme Vl At P r ' Ce rt-OR DE, MELBA" IS t, f better, bigger and more pleasing than any mild Havana^cigar'. OR IfjC 'OTHER Sties J -V A SCLECTOS SIZE 1U DIFFERENT Puces TTv' ff Ask your -dealer (or your favorite size. "" ror 8 &wmt " y° ur *' ea ' er c * nt supply you. write us. Xttjja I.LEWIS CIGAR MFG. CO. Newark.N.J. \& Largeet Independent Cigar factory m the World, in this way gets the full benefit. Be tween them both. It is hoped they will be able to support themselves in spite of his very eerious disa bility. ?l . ———re=S=' For Skin Tortures Don't worry about eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy akin by using Zemo, obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at SI.OO. . Zemo generally removes pimples, blackheads, Botches, eczema and ring worm and makes the akin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is always dependable. The E. W. Rose' Co., Cleveland, O.' 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers