10 TEMPLARS ADOPT 500WARORPHANS Prizes For Competitive Drills Were Awarded Today in Philadelphia By Associated Press. Philadelphia, Sept 11. — Competi tive drills, an executive session of the Grand Encampment and a visit to the Hog Island shipyard were features of yesterday's program of the triennial conclave of the Knights Templar of the United States. At the meeting of the Grand En campment it was announced that five hundred war orphans of Ma sonic parentage have been "adopt ed" by the Knights Templar of the United States. The French govern ment is to supplement the Knights expenditure by paying dollar for dollar with them for the education and maintenance of the orphana It was recommended that $5,000 be contributed from the grand mas ters war relief fund for the rebuild ing of the Hospital of St. John at Jerusalem. Invitations for the con clave in 1922 were presented from New Orleans, Seattle, Chicago and St. Louis. Prizes for the drills were awarded to-day. An elaborate fireworks display was held last night. FINANCIAL WISDOM **l can't raise $50 —that's all there Is to that! I got a notice from my bank this morning that I had over drawn!" "Well, try some other bank. They can't all be overdrawn." Vanity Fair. i Carter's Little liver Pills You Cannot be Alßeinedy .That Constipated Makes Life and Happy Worth, Living y A , i pARTER'S IRON PILLS many colorless facet but wlfl greatly help most pale-faced people I VACATIONS I f For Everybody. Come in and ,► I Let Tell You About It | J Our Vacation Club I jT Opens Week of Sept. 8 | * -*• See How Easy it Works. v jf \ | Pay in 25c, 50c or SI.OO Weekly. > b Matures in 40 Weeks. I | The more classes you join the more money you > < will have for your vacation. f I UNION TRUST COMPANY T J OF PENNSYLVANIA 1 1 -Vfr* 1 M VI/' 1 Bustleas VV| figure-outlines: Fashion's latest decree. A model for every figure, W' J (each exclusive for its pur- V i • M pose) combining Slenderness, B Grace and Suppleness, with W' \ufjL W long-wear, W. B. Nuform v ' ' Corsets provide "Much Corset \\ _for Little Money." I u 1 I lon llunt ' '' It "| '* **^| (Sea left-hand I I llluatration > v B Hi ' right |j|| While W. B. Nuform Coraeta are popular JTU priced corsets, they are not in any aense fd /? cheap corsets, but combine In Fit, Style, l\ Material, Workmanship and Trimming, all * dualities of much higher priced corsets. For Sale by BOWMAN & CO. THURSDAY EVENING, HUN LOSSES AS OBITUARIES Are Gradually Being Made Known Through the Newspapers Berlin, Sept. 11. —Belated news of the losses incurred by German families and organizations, military or civilian, as it is verified, is be ing placed in the newspapers in the form of obituaries. The Baron von Wangenheim family recalls its dead in a great black-bordered advertisement in which are named twenty-two mem bers of the family have fallen for the Fatherland, all except two of them, officers. Similarly the family Baron von Puttkamer, little known in Ger many and not as large a family as the Wangenheim, announces the loss of nineteen members, ranging from non-commissioned officers to lieutenant colonel. Individual regiments, divisions and naval units, are daily letting their individual losses be known, an,d they make a formidable appear ance, and attest to the bitter se verity of the war. In this connection it is interest ing to note estimates of the Ministry of Finance about the cost ot the war to Germany. It amounts to about $36,500,000,000, according to the peace-time rate of exchange. Magnanimous The head waiter (fishing) I dreamed last night, sir. that you grave me a £5 note. Stingy patron lndeed, James! That's a bit steep for a tip, but— you may keep It!— Passing Show. PERKINS FAVORS PROFIT SHARING ON FAIR BASIS Only Solution to Industrial Unrest, He Tells Civic Federation New York, Sept. IL—Profit-sharing on a frank and fair basis was de clared to be the only solution of the present Industrial unrest in a speech delivered at the annual meeting of the National Civic Federation here to-day by George W. Perkins. Mr. Perkins said he was convinced that labor was entirely willing that capital should have Its "fair reward and proper protection," but that there were too many Instances In which capital nad demanded "improper pro tection and had taken exorbitant re ward." At the same time Mr. Perkins de nounced boous systems as doing more harm than good and as stirring up trouble rather than alleviating It. The giving of bonuses, he claimed, caused employes to feol that the employers were making vast sums of money out cf which a sop was thrown to them to bribe them Into feeling kindly dis posed or to ward off a demand for a general Increase in wages. Proposes ThU Scheme As an alternaUve Mr. Perkins pro posed a definite detailed scheme of profit-sharing which he said had been adopted by some companies with which he was connected and had proved most successful. He described this plan as follows: "First—Every business has. first of all, to earn operating expenses, de preciation, and fair returns on hon est capitalization. "Second—l believe that every busi ness should consider that the com pensation paid employes Is for the purpose of earning a snm of money sufficient to pay the above-mentioned Items. "Third—l believe that any profits over and above such sum should, on some percentage basis, be divided be tween the capital used In the busi ness and the employes engaged In the business. "Fourth—l believe that In neither case should these profits be Imme diately withdrawn from the busi ness; that they should be left In the business for a reasonable length of time, to protect and increase Its finan cial strength and safety; that. In the case of capital, its share of these profits should be carried to surplus; that, in the case of employes, their share of these profits should be dis tributed to them In some form of security representing an interest in the business, and that each employe should be tequlred to hold such se curity for a reasonable length of time, say three to five years. "Fifth:—l believe that the em ployes' share of these profits should be allotted to them as nearly as pos sible on the basis of the compensa tion they receive. Up to date, this has proved to be the best method." The employer who objects to profit-sharing because he la making so much money "that he is afraid to let even his own employes know how much money he Is making" was declared by the speaker to be "more than any ether, responsible for the serious differences to-day existing be tween capital and labor foi, with the growing Intelligence of the masses, how can he expect such a situation to continue? Every year, yes, every day. it becomes clearer and clearer that such a condition will no longer be tolerated and must speedily pass pass away. Would it not be better for him to use some intelligent fore sight and meet what clearly are to be the Immediate future demands of public opinion?" Co-operation Needed Perkins said that the history of the relations between labor and cap ital could be traced through the term successively used to denote the man who worked for a wage and the man who paid the wage. First it was "owner and slave," then it became "master and man." to-day it is "em ployer and employ" and to-morrow, Mr. Perkins declared he believed It mutt be 'partners,'" in conclusion he said: "Since the beginning of time no country has ever haa such an oppor tunity to extend its trade, increase its prosperity and better the ma terial condition of every one of its ptoplo as nas the United States of America at this hour. The only fac tor missing is that cf close co-opera tion hero at home among ourselves. It seems Inconceivable that we will fall to realize where our weakness lies and fail to adopt the one and only remedy for It. In the strenu ous competition with the rest of the world that this country Is on the eve of facing could we have a stronger weapon than complete co-operation between capital and labor at homer' JUMPING INTO THE MOVIES One hears the most astonishing things about the prices that are paid to moving-picture stars, when one discovers that they are true. A pretty girl worker on a Los Angeles "lot" for $lO a day as an extra woman. A studio needed a woman to do a particular bit, and found that she filmed well. So It was decided to make her a star. Her contract call ed for $l5O weekly for the first six months, rising to SSOO at the end of the second year. After the sec ond picture she demanded SSOO at once and SI,OOO weekly at the year's end. A "type" hired a tarlcab to hurry him to a lot on which a picture was being "shot." Ordinarily types ride on street cars, for the best of them are rarely paid more that sls a day. The United States Senatorial type can be i.ad In quanities at $lO for the day's work. But this type was late and feared to lose his Job. A bawling manager met him at the door. "Ton—you—** began the manager. Then his eyes fell upon the chauf feur. "TWr Just the type I wmxrtJ~'he Shouted. Ttome with me!** Eventually the chauffeur con sented to rat* his cab hack to the garage and walk on in a scene as a type of something or other. The chauffeur filmed well. There fore he is now being paid SIOO weekly, though his heart Is said to be with the taxlcab. A bartender made a few dollars one day shaking up cocktails before the camera. His features came out with cameo clear ness. and he followed the director's orders with the careful obedience of a good child. That made him a film actor. Now he can depend on an income of $16,000 a year.—Herbert Corey, In Everybody"a THAT HOBBLE EFFECT "My dressmaker assured me that I had the latest thing. But those women have skirts much tighter than mine." "Tour lorgnette might enable your beautiful eyes to see better." "Eh?" 1 "They are lining up for the sack inWi" —Louisville Courier-Journal. HAHRIBBURO FLJIJAL TECBQKXPB LACLEDE TO PAY TRIBUTE To "JOHNNY" PERSHING UPON HIS VISIT THERE Entertainment Will Include Reunions With His Old School mates, Trips to the Old Swimmin' Hole on Muddy Creek and to the Old Pershing Farm Laclede, Mo., Sept. 11.—General Pershing ,is coming back to his boy hood home here. He will return a full-fledged gen eral, the hero of America, but to the boyhood companions with whom he stole apples, and played at the old swimmin' hole, it will be the "Johnny" Pershing who spent his early life here before going away to West Point to embark on a military career. * A cablegram received by Mayor Edmund B. Allen premises a visit by the General shortly after bis ar rival in the United States. Some time ago, when Laclede learned that General Pershing was returning from Europe, the follow ing cablegram was dispatched to him by Mayor Allen: "Laclede, your old hom, your boyhood friends and Linn county ■ollars For nk Dealers • he Soft Drink dealer—grocers and all—may ca-Cola Bottling Works, Inc. points the way. allowing Pure Food Soft Drinks, each to fill its Ale, I I Birch Beer, I Sarsaparilla, I Cherry Blossoms 1 faith with the dealer means disaster. Keeping this fact uppermost in r you, through these new products—not a substitute or counterfeit ts own sphere, something FAR SUPERIOR. Visit the Plant I we bottle Coca-Cola and our newer products. Note the sanitary con plant—the care with which ingredients are compounded-the purity of arts. BE OUR TASTER.. Try these delicious drinks right where they're ou'll know how, and why, this same deliciousness stays in the bottle until li 5 consumer. If hether you be DEALER or CONSUMER. I, Mr. Dealer, will do well to get in touch with us by Telephone or Mail, ■ be prepared to meet the demand for these newer Soft Drinks, . rrisburg Bottling Works Inc. Bell 860 Dial 2414 . A are calling you. When may we ex pect you home?" General Pershing cabled in reply: "I have heard the call. Will be there soon after my arrival in- the United States. Can't give you defi nite date now, but will let you know later." Laclede will pay tribute to Gen eral Pershing on his arrival, not with the pomp and ceremony that, marked his reception in European capitals, but with a "good old-faßh ioned Missouri home-coming," ac cording to the committee arranging for his reception. Plans for the Geneial's entertain ment include reunions with old schoolmates and chums, trips to the old swimmin' hole on Muddy creek and to the old Pershing farm. The homecoming will also mark a reunion of the Pershing family. James Pershing; of Chicago, the General's brother, and Miss May Pershing and Mrs. Bessie Butler, of Lincoln, Neb., his two sisters, will gather at the former Pershing home during the General's stay. The reception will not be without a military side. Decorated heroes of Missouri will form sui honor guard. Adjutant General H. C. Clark, of Missouri, will have charge of the military reception. Governor Frederick D. Gardner will deliver an address at the cele bration and other State and national officials have been invited to attend. Among old acquaintances who will greet General Pershing are "Aunt" an Hewett, who made pies for .n when he romped barefoot around the countryside, and "Aunt" Louisa Warren, who claims to have been present when the future mili tary leader was born in a railroad section house several miles from here. Both are negroes. Knights Templars Witness Launching at Hog Island Yard Py Associated Press. Philadelphia, Sept. 11—The cargo carrier Chickashaw, named in honor of the work of citizens of Memphis, Tenn., in the Liberty Loan drives, was launched at Hog Island yester SEPTEMBER 11, 1919. day. Miss Elizabeth Jordan, daugh ter of Robert L. Jordan, of Mem phis, state chairman of the Tennes see Liberty Loan Committee, was the sponsor. More than two thou sand Knights Templar, who are holding their triennial conclave here, witnessed the launching. The Chickashaw is the fifty-third ship launched at Hog Island, mak Preserve plums, apples, W peaches, pears— they're delicious nK T mm desserts for winter days. •gj But be sure they are safely Parowax will keep them safe —BIS —the air all out and the good- Hi M ness all in. vll It's easy to use—very econom . V)|B ical—and your grocer sells it. ATLANTIC REFINING ing a total of 414,725 deadweight tons of ships turned out at the plant since August 8, 1918. HOPE AND IMAGINATION "Pop, what are the duties of a campaign manager?" "Principally, my son, to count chicks before they are hatched." —■ Judge.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers