8 CASUALTIES GROW AS RIOTCONTINUES [Continued from First Page.] Senate Committee whigh will inves tigate the strike is preparing for its first meeting to-morrow when Joln Fitzpatrick, commander-in-chief of the strikers, will be the principal witness. It wae reported from Washington to-day that this com mittee would also investigate charges that secretary Foster has I. W. W. affiliations and that there are more sinister motives involved in the strike than the question of labor unionism. Rioting and disorder still mark the progress of the struggle, but they are only sporadically. The lat est outbreak occurred to-day at Cleveland, where four men were stabbed in a battle between strikers and non-Strikers, two probably fa tally. At Farrell, where the gravest disturbances to date have been re ported, the town executive, Burgess Moody, is under special guard as li'ilSSSS' Matchless IT positively does not smoke up the FREE kitchen. Mazola comes to cooking heat simpio and , , , ~ , ~ , . . economical when you long before it reaches the smoking point consult the new 68-page I . * Corn Products Cook It does not carry the odor or taste from one food to Book. Recipes by ex another —even fish, onions or garlic. It c*" be used over P*s. Attractive iHus and over again. Try this astonishing test of Mazola uT forTt toda eB—w ru 0 economy and universal use yourself— today. us on t ay. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. P. O. Boa 161 Nmo York City NATIONAL STARCH COMPANY, 135 So. Second St, Philadelphia, Pa. Soles Representative* - Pea Coal! ' • Likely Soon to Advance in Price PUT in your supply of Pea Coal this month. Prices are lower than they will be until next spring. THERE is a possibility of a big change in the price during the month of October. We expect the advance will be 75 cents per ton. • - EGG, Stove and Nut Coal advanced in price 95 cents per ton from July Ist to September Ist, inclusive. In the same period Pea Coal was advanced but 20 cents per ton. | WHEN cold weather comes to stay and the demand for Pea Coal increases you may look for higher prices and a „ scarcity of fuel. Should you have trouble getting coal this winter, you will regret that you did not buy when coal was available and prices down. Don't wait another day. United lee & Coal Co. Forster and Cowden Sts. 7th and Woodbine Sts. 6th and Hamilton Sts. 7th and Reily Sts. 15th and Chestnut Sts. • % ■! . , * WEDNESDAY EVENING, the result of numerous threats against his life, and the streets are 1 patrolled by large forces of State Troopers and deputy sheriffs. Carnegie Encouraged i "We feel very much encouraged," was the word that came from the i Carnegie Steel Company offices a , few hours after the day shift went , to work in the plants of that com pany which are In opefation. At Clairton, it was given out, more de partments were to be placed in operation to-day because of the rc -1 porting of additional men. The company had no early reports from 1 the general superintendent at Home stead. but information came to the offices from the main gate where men check in that more workers passed in on the day shift than yes ; terday. At Braddock, it was said, more foreign-born workers reported to day. Duquesne, which all along has • been reported as working 100 per cent, by the company, was said to be still operating on the same basis. The city mills of the Carnegie 1 Company, it was given out, "look good." According to officials of the West Penn Steel Company up the Alle gheny Valley, an independent con cern, over ninety per cent, or more than 700 American-born employes j there were at work to-day, while but six foreign-born out of approxi mately 450 were on duty. One furnace in the open hearth department of the Allegheny Steel Company in the Allegheny Valley was reported' to have started to-day. | Practically all the carpenters em j ployed in the mill also reported it i was said.' The plate mill was also j in operation. Says Strike Is Spreading William Z. Foster, secretary of the steel workers' national commit tee, did not agree with the reports given out by the Carnegie people. i He reiterated that the strike "was i spreading." He predicted that the i Homestead plant would be closed down by the end of the week. Mr. Foster, commenting on the claims of the Carnegie Interests, said that In the Chicago district the company i Is giving information that they have ■ a twenty per cent, shutdown there, while the union leaders there "know positively that there is a ■ ninety-eight per cent, shutdown." "We closed two large independent plants In Pittsburgh to-day," he added. "They were the plants of the A. M. Byers Company and the Oliver & Snyder Steel Company." Foster Pleased Mr. oster said that he was highly pleased with the strike prog ress in this district. At Duquesne and Clairton he snid men were con tinually walking out. He declare'd that the local steel plants were practically shut down with the ex ception of the Jones & Laughlln works on the South Side. The advance guard of a large number of organizers sent into the district by the United Mine Work ers' Union began to arrive to-day. They are being asigned to Home stead, Braddock and other large steel towns. / Everything was reported quiet around the plant of the National Tube Company here. The plant, which closed down last night, did not reopen this morning because of the portage of men. Operate Without Trouble The National works of the Na- I tional Tube Company in McKees- I port were operating without diffl- I culty to-day, accordidng to an of ficial, while at strike headquarters in McKeeeport it was stated that employes of the plant report tpro blast furnaces banked and that the pipe furnace had been shut down. The union men claim 2.000 men on strike in the works, i Conflicting claims also continue to HASRISBURG SIFSFIIFTS TELEGRXPH come "from small Independent plants. In the Pittsburgh district Many of them are working, but few of them full handed, according to the best Information obtainable. Inquiry at the general offices here of the American Steel and Wire Company as to the situation in Its plants scattered throughout the Pittsburgh district, elicited this gen eral statement: "Little change in the plants In the outlying district; a change for the better In the Pitts burgh field; Shoenberger works of the company in Pittsburgh working full handed; many men who feared to work Monday and Tuesday now returning because of assurance of police protection. Plants in Operation The coroner here is investigating I the death of a watchman early to day at the Munhall plant of the Carnegie Company. According to officials of the company he had been assigned to guard duty on a motor boat and while stepping from one boat to another his shotgun was ac cidentally discharged, killing him. At the offices of the American Steel and Tin Plant Company, an other subsidiary of the United States Steel Corporation, it was announced that a telegram had been sent to J. A. Farrell, New York, president of the corporation, that the follow ing plants were in full operation this morning: Scottdale, Pa.. (two plants): Cambridge, O.; Wellsville, O.; Canal Dover, O.; New Philadelphia, O.; Morgantown, W. Va.; Chester, 'W. Va.; McKeesport, Pa. Four Stabbed, Two Fatally, in Rioting at Cleveland Plant By /Associated Press. Cleveland, Sept. 24. — Four men were stabbed, two prabably fatally, and two others were badly beaten near the entrance of the American Steel and Wire Company, Newburg plant, this morning, in the first seri ous local disorder of the steel strike. The trouble broke out when a street car stopped near the plant to let off men bound for work at the mills. Among those who got oft the car were three negroes. Strike sympa thizers sought to stop them from going into the plant, according to the police, and two of the negroes drew knives. A general fight ensued, In which many men in the vicinity of the plant joined. When a de tail of police reached the scene they found four men had been stabbed, two probably fatally. The negroes returned to the street car for shelter. The car was pur sued by hundreds of strike sympa thizers and bombarded with bricks and stones and the three men seiz ed and beaten. Police rescued two of them and the third escaped. Wheeling Company to Recognize Unions; Mills Will Resume By Associated Press. Martins Ferry. 0., Sept. 24. —Signs of the first break in the ranks of the steel mill operators in this dis trict came yesterday when notices were posted Informing: striking em ployes of, the Wheeling Steel and Iron Company that -its plant would resume operations within a few days under a union agreement. The company's tin plate plant at Yorkville, near here, employing 800 persons, Is working under an Amal gamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers' agreement, but its other furnaces and mills here and at Wheeling, W. Va., employing 3,000 men are idle. DOCTORS TELL OF ' MANY LIVES SAVED [Continued from First Pnge.] > port of the provost marshal general showed that the average ratio of the United States of the physically unfit to the total number of regis trantsexamined was 46.67, the figures were incorrect and were a reflection upon the manhood of the State ,eH said that in the same report statistics showing the number of men accepted and rejected by every board in de tail indicated that the percentage of rejections was only 28.55. This percentage, he said, should not be considered high owing to the regu lations as v they were then inter preted. Under the first regulations the physicians were very strict. Of 226,115 men drafted only 8.65 pet cent. were rejected at camp. "The first report of the provost marshal general shows that during 1917 Camp Lee and Camp Meade to which practically all of Pennsyl vania's men had been sent during that year, rejected respectively only 2.49 per cent, and 6.24 per cent, of the men arriving in camp," said he. The Major paid a tribute to the self sacrifice of the doctors during the early days of the draft examin ations and to the fact that they received a maximum of four dollars a day, while their devotion to duty on draft board work in hours when they should have been resting dur ing the influenza epidemic. In closing Major Murdock said that the figures showed that "the physical condition of the men of the State in spite of the thousands of accidents annually In the indust rial plants is not alarming, but it can undoubtedly be greatly improved by a proper system of health edu cation." ?• The discussion following Major Murdock's address was opened by Dr. Frederick Van Sickle, the re tiring; president of the society. He spoke briefly In appreciation of the efforts of the Pennsylvania doctors in examining men for the draft and declared that no other state in the union made 'such an enviable rec ord. Colonel Martin Talks Colonel Edward Martin, State Commissioner of Health, delivered a short address on "What the Medi cal Reserve Corps of the Army Should Be." Colonel Martin, after briefly telling of the record which Pennsylvania doctors made in the war, read a letter from Surgeon General Ireland, giving a history of the organization of the reserve corps. In 1908 the Medical Reserve Corps was organized with a very limited number of members, con sisting mostly of physicians and surgeons who assisted the regular small medical corps. In succeeding years tfte corps was slightly enlarg ed until the declaration of war in 1914. when the United States be gan to see the necessity for having tan adequate reserve force of doc tors. After several years of the Eu ropean War, when the British Medi cal Corps was reduced to a shadow of its original self, American doctors began to go overseas with the Allies, and the regular Medical Reserve Corps increased mightily. With our own entry into the war, however, the corps came into its own. Hundreds of doctors immediately accepted commissions in the corps and performed yeoman service throughout the entire time our country was In the struggle. The corps was proud to count among its members some of the most distin guished surgeons of this country, whose * reputations were interna tional. The first American unit to go Into the line was a medical uuit, which took the line with the British in May, 1917, and was made up ut most exclusively of civilian doctors who had only been commissioned actively for several weeks. Over a thousand of our officers wore work ing with the British forces, doing work for which .they were unable "to supply sufficient officers. | . Good t. S. Record Colonel Martin concluded by urg ing every physician and surgeon to accept a commission in the reserve corps, and explaining the work which the corps hoped to accom plish. The Health Commissioner was fol lowed by Colonel Reuben Miller of the Surgeon General's Department. Colonel Miller spoke of the work which the medical department had done and expressed the hope that | Colonel Martin's recommendution to j the doctors about joining the corps would be followed. He told his audience that at the beginning of the war the German medical staff was able to return 82 per cent, of the wounded men to the line, while the French and British could bring barely 22 per cent. back. Later the French were able to bring up their percentage to 82. When the United States took up their part in the war, records showed that they were able to return a total of 92 per cent, of our wounded to the firing line; the best record of any nation in t' struggle. Major C. R. Codman, of Phila delphia introduces a resolution which was unanimously passed by the aud ience and forwarded to the Board for approval, urging every Medical Col lege in the state to adopt the system of the Students' Officers Training Corps and institute special courses which would train the students for later service as officers in the Medical Corps. A very Interesting lecture on blood transfusion was delivered by Major Walker Estell Lee, of Philadelphia. Major Lee illustrated his lecture with motion pictures which made his points doubly clear. Colonel Mar tin opened the discussion on this subject, and he was followed by Ma jor George R. Moffitt, of Harrisburg, who is in the city on leave from the Base Hospital at Fort McPherson, Georgia. Major Moffitt told some of liis experiences in two years' service in an Army laboratory and explained the systems of blood transfusion used by the base hospital in several thousand operations of that type. Suggests Campaign Dr. S. Leon Gans, of Philadelphia, delivered a lecture on Pennsylvania's campaign against veneral diseases explaining the attempts of the Health Department to control and eliminate the diseases. Dr. Gans spoke of the prevalence of all man ner of venereal diseases in the State and suggested educational cam paigns as a means of bettering these conditions. He went over the most recent methods of curing different types of diseases," and told which were in use at present in the State. The discussion on this address was opened by Peter P. Mayock, of Wllkes-Barre. The Importance of Reconstruction in Civil Accidents was the theme chosen by Jonathan M. Wainwright, of Scranton. Dr. Wainwrigfit told of many different types of accidents with which medical authorities and industrial organizations were most familiar, and explained the methods of reconstruction in the more ser ious cases. The discussion was op ened by John B. Lowman, of Johns town. . Meetings held this afternoon ln- Alg Lot of Hay Fever Jokes Bat Kentucky Man Says—"Paopla Whc Balong to Hay Fever Colony are Kidding Themselves." Wouldn't Be Any Rose o. Hoy Fever if Simple Home Rem edy Wat Given a Chance. "Yes, there's a real NINTY-NINE per -cent effective remedy for haj or rose fever," frankly states a drug gist In a prosperous Kentucky city. "But I don't ixpect anyone to be lieve me, because the treatment is so easy and the cost not worth mention ing." "The annual crop of hay-fever jokes would he mighty scarce if peoplo would get an ounce of Mentholized Arclne and by just adding water that has been boiled make a pint of liquid that will prove a real help to ail who suffer." "Many of my hay-fever friends tell ne that by starting to gargle and ■nuff or spray the nostrils a few times a day the expected severe attack often fails to appear and In cases whore It does show up Is very mild and does not annoy." "The Better Class of Pharmacists" who dispense Menthollzed Arclne say It will greatly modify any attack even when taken three or four days after hostilities begin. Oo to a real live druggist when yoa get ready to make a pint 71 MI FOB 7 MVS If Your Nerve* Are Bhaky Because of Over-lndulgcnbe In Y o bacoo or Alcohol or by Excess of Any Kind, 810-Ferert Is What You Need Right Away. Pon't grow old before your timet don't let nervousness wreck your hap plneSw or chances in life. The man with strong, steady nerves Is full qf 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 first class shape with mighty 810-Fercn, a new dlsct very, Inexpensive and effi cient. - Men and women who get up so tired In the morning that they have to drag themselves to their dally labor will la just a few days arise with clear mind, definite purpose and loads of ambition. ▲ll you have to do Is to take two BJo-Feren tablets after each meal and one at bedtime—7 a day for 7 days then reduce to one after each meal until nil ore gone. Then If your energy and endurance haven't doubled, If your mind Isn't keener and eyes brighter, If you doni 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 nt all expen sive. All drugglstsolu this city and vicinity have a suppty on hand sell many packages. , eluded the SectloV on Medicine, in the ballroom of the Penn-Harris; the Section on Surgery in the House Caucus Room; the Section on Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Diseases, in the Senate Caucus Room, and the Section on Pediatrics, in Parlor C,' of the hotel. The ladies are being entertained to-day with luncheon at the Colonial Country Club, after which they are to be taken in ma chines for a ride through the city parks and finully to the Capitol, which will be Inspected. Plan Social Events this evening the big social event of the convention will take place in the ballroom of the Penn-Harris when the President's Reception will be held. The general meeting last night was held at 8 o'clock in the ballroom and the feature of the program was an address by Lee K. Frankel, who declared that 40 per cent, of the ill ness existing to-day can be elimi nated and will be within the next de cade. Dr. Frankel said that there ! will no longer be such diseases as I scarlet fever, diseases of childhood i and numerous other diseases, j Dr. Van Sickle also spoke last | evening and stated that the laws of Pennsylvania regarding the practice of medicine .were quite inadequate. Under present conditions, he said, it is alruost impossible to get any law with respect to the medical profes sion passed. At a meeting of the House of Dele gates yesterday afternoon proposed revision of the constitution and by laws was taken up and considered. Several very interesting meetings | are promised for to-morrow, the How Any Woman, Can Remove Hairy Growths (Beauty Culture) It is not longer necessary for a woman to visit a beauty specialist to have superfluous hairs removed, for, with the aid of a plain delatone paste, she can, in the privacy of her own iiome, remove even a stubborn growth in a very few minutes. The paste Is made by mixln- some water with a little powdered delatone. This is applied to the hairs and after 2 or 3 minutes removed and the skin washed, when it will be left clear and hairless. Be sure you buy real delatont;. iix- America Lafayette put aside the pomp and Bvfl ruffles of the French Court, and became a 14 J fighter for your liberty and mine, he brought 188 with him his beautifully chased set of razors. As a soldier, he realized the part they would play in keeping him fit But after he was wounded at Brandywine, the young general found it was not so easy to shave unaided, for in spite of their sweetness of balance and true French temper, his razors lacked the common sense element of safety. What Lafayette needed was the double-edged, detachable, guarded blade of the | URH AM>jg U PLEX% A Real Rqjof—made Safe In general form, exactly the same as laythe long, safe bladeof this real razor Lafayette's own exquisitely balanced with the old-time shape and balance razor, but with these extra mdvan- against your cheek. Youll see why tage3: (1) Absolute safety. (2) Long- thousands of shavers are making the est, strongest, keenest blade on earth. Durham-Duplex their razor every (3) Double-edged, -detachable blade, month in i he year. Seven million have allowing you either a fresh edge or a changed already from other razors to fresh-stropped edge at a moment's this real razor made safe, Malrq notice. Go to your nearest dealer and your change today. THESE LEADING DEALERS SELL THEM: *Hrasln 11" N. 3r.l BOG Alt lIAKDWARE ' HJBK I *.. ivnn- co., me N. 3RD st a MTIK GEORGE A. GORGAS, j-llarrl* Ho- RYDKR HARDWARE C HrMlt'u I rl nnd l*u. STORK, 1218 N. Brd St. m ffVfiVl" J Station. H. 11. ALTHOUSE, 3rd A Month Sta. 3 [fVSfl i* COHEN'S SPORTING J. F. Ml I, I,EH, 1783 N. 6th St. I IB I* GOODS STORE, 431 Market St. C. M. FORNEY. 81 N. 2nd St. Illlb BOGAR'S SPORTING GOLDEN SEAI, d||B li GOODS STORE, 12 N. Market Sq. DRUG STORE, 11 S. 2nd St. W IPi® £ SHENK & TITTLE, 203 Market St. H. M. STALKY, 1417 N. flth St. m lII* K HAKRISBURG HARD- MEHHING'S DRUG J Iriqi Fz WARE CO., D N. 2nd St. STORE, 4th nnd Pefler Sta. J||Em t" W. J. KILLINGER, 37 S. 13th St. W - STEEVEIt, 1324 Walnut St. ' ILH [• W. B. GOODYEAR, 1001 Derrr St. u - "• JENKINS. 2300 N. 6th St. • 198 I • w. F. THOMPSON, 2027 N. Oth St. OUT-OF-TOWN DEALERS fej JPB IAA THOMPSON'S HILL J. A. McCUHDY, Steelton PHARMACY, 13th and Derrr Sta. W. K. MART/,, Steelton TV Iff KIT/MILLER'S H. F. COLEMAN. . Steelton 1/ U , PHARMACY, 1325H Derrr St. PAUL F. ZEIGLER, Steelton • I 1 F. J. ALTHOUSE. 13th A .Market St. !• K - HOLMES, Enola P. || A. U. SPOT/, 7N. 13til St. w * M - SHEAFFER, Lemorne I Jul CLECKNER A J- K. GOOD, New Camberlund - BURKE, 1226 N. 3rd St. HARRY B. KREBB, Mcrcersburg I PI If you are a Durham-Duplex dealer ajid wish to have your name added to Iflp| the above list advertisement, send your name and address to this write the Durham-Duplex Razor Co. for a free window liKu aa display. "rSmSM ONE DOLLAR COMPLETE Greateet Shaving Mileage at Any Price I I This Mt contains a Durham-Duplex Razor with an attracUoa IJ * white handle, safety guoad, stropping attachment and package a t 3 Dnrhaav-Dopleadnidils sdjsd blades(6shavingedgaa)alllaa leather kit. Oet h from your dealer or from us direct. Additional blmdea SO oante for DURHAM-DUPLEX RAZOR CO 100 BALDWIN AVENUE, JERSEY CITY, N. J. CANADA BNQLAND rRANCE ITALY AtVletorisSt. 17 Church St, A. Pioso &C. Andre , Cenetantlno Ettort T "" " u ' ShedieJd M Kuc dr Pare J, a HIM, V..L Maeota khlttro SEPTEMBER 24,1919, 1 first taking place In the afternoon when the general public Is especially invited to attend. A discussion of the "flu" epidemic of last year and methods to be used to prevent a re currence of it will be held. In the evening at 8 o'clock there will be Keeping Fits-, •j BT DR. OAMUBL HAMILTON. \ . . ' r I* w because of the war that /£"*\ the perfect physical' man hae all onoe become the idol of the world. You can make of yourself, rrrea JW| AH h rather late in life, almost anything you \j/\ v \ like. You are not going to get-fit-in noe I f \ day, one month, or, perhaps, a year, i \ unless you take euough outdoorexsraisn to keep the circulation going and'practise y\ the athlete's first principle—to keepthe y, / system clean. He does not give his body MWf a c^anc ® to absorb poisons. He not only takes his cold shower, after exercise, KVf / Ay i but he knows a cleansing of the intestines \cV'; ' 3 important, and he takes occasionally a good regulator and liver cleanser, such V*J 88 a do* °f castor oil, or, what is much vllw tetter, a tiny pill made up of May-apple, Mf VWw aloin and jalap, and sold by almost all \] I druggists in the land as Dr. Pierce'i y \ Pleasant Pellets. , V_) Keep the kidneys in good order also. Avoid too much meat, alcohol or tea. Drink plenty of pure water, preferably hot water, before meals, and drive the uric acid out of the system by taking "Anuric" (anti-uric-acid). This can be obtained at almost any drug store. Send a bottle of water to the chemist at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and you will receive free medical advice as to whether the kidneys are affected. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog, you suffer from backache, sick-headaches, dizzy spells, Or twinges and pains of lumbago, rheumatism or gout; or sleep is dis turbed two or three times a night. Take heed, before too late! Get Anuric (anti-uric-acid), for it will put new life into your kidneys and your entire system. Ask your nearest druggist for it or send Dr. Pierce ten cents for trial package of "Anuric"' lectures on first aid work with pratr" tlcol demonstrations. Dr. John It* Culp said this morning that nobody should miss these lectures as they are of interest Just as much to the public as they are to the medical profession.
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