10 MANNING COMING TO TELL HOW TO DEVELOP RIVER Planning Expert to Attend the Meeting of Greater Harris burg Navy Oct. 16 Comprehensive plana for develop ment of the SuiKiuehanna rivor baaln by the city will bo outlined by War ren H. Manning, the city planning expert, and prominent, citizens at the annual meeting of the Greater Har rlsburg Navy at the T. M. C. A. on October 16. Luncheon will be served and models presented the winners of all the contests during the Klpona on Labor Day. All the winners of medals or other trophies will be guests of the Navy. At a meting of the Executive Com mittee held last evening In the Park A Big fire Sale of Exceptional Bargains For the Coming Week Also Ail Essex Inner Tube at 50 Per Cent Off jfir Idst Price With the Purchase of Any Tire / \V A SPECIAL SALE, GUARANTEED <5? 7en V //ft®*? \ V! TIRES, SOxSt*. AT II Hi A* 5 jf \\ FIRST QUALITY —GUARANTEED MILEAGE If ffl %yW I' ' jf' 111 \\ :J "xti $10.98 31x4 $19.98 |i| Si 31*1 817.48 38x4 H $28.98 87x5 $34.98 i| 11 fI Fabric Tires—First Qnality—Guaranteed 6000 Miles y jj Ij Poiinsylvanla Vacnum Cup, Mason, Eisk. Goodrich, Dia \\ yBKaSBa / jj moml and Other leading Makes at 0 cijfl / / f Specially low ibices xV ft'nSgkß./ // W'C Also Carry Slightly Blemished and Rosewed Tires at W. V Specially Low Prices New York Cut Rate Tire Co. —l9 Y'"- ' Botli Stores Open Evenings Dial Phone 6261 11737 N. Third St.—Corner Kelker St. Branch Store at Harrisburg Storage Battery Co., JEBm&lwdtMXir f j', II 4tli and Cliestnut Sts. A Business Getter A REO "SPEED WAGON" is HE WHO HAS the best delivery | more than a mere adjunct to service—the quickest and the | your business. most dependable—has the call. I IT DOES MORE than merely NOT SPEED ALONE—though supplant the old time, slow, ex- its speed possibilities have | pensive, uncertain horse equip- proven its greatest advantage, 111 ment. hence the name; — IT DOES MORE than merely BUT RELIABILITY—that relia hold the trade you have. bility is Reo;— IT IS A SALESMAN in its own THESE QUALITIES have so way, for in these days when thoroughly demonstrated them "time is the essence of every selves that our one problem is contract, and the one big con- tQ obta in enough "Speed sideration in every transaction Wagons" to supply all those between men, the speedy service wbo want Reos. performed by this Reo brings the trade to you. FOR REMEMBER THIS: you . , , can't always get a Reo on the I IT DOESN'T MATTER whether minute. Demand is tremendous you are a farmer, or a truck- —always has been for Reos. gardener dealing in perishable articles; or a merchant —either wholesale or retail—competing SO ONLY WAY is to place your for trade with alert rivals;— order at once—then we can give you a definite delivery date. HOURS COUNT—yes and min utes! —and the difference be- BUT DON'T DELAY —there are I tween profit and loss frequently not, can not be, enough Reos to i depends upon your delivery go 'round. system. 11 111 HARRISBURG AUTOMOBILE COMPANY f niSTRIKCTORS Fourth and Kelker Sts., Harrisburg, Pa. George G. MeFarland, President and General Manager. I H I J 111 I Pricm uF.O. B. Lanmint, and thm Spatial Ftdmrml Tmx matt fc mddmd i |"THE GOLD STANDARD OF SATURDAY EVENING, Commission offices plans wero made 'for this event which it Is believed will result In a much stronger organ ization of canoeists and others inter ested in development of Harrisburg's unsurpassed boating and bathing fa- i cilitles. Other big improvement projects; and the war have held back plans for establishing bathing beaches, ; municipal boat pavilions and such de velopment work as biasing chan nels through the rocks for several years. River enthusiasts now feel a start should be made towards de veloping Harrisburg's natural ad vantages. To this end the Navy Committee last evening passed resolutions strongly endorsing the proposed loan , of $411,006 for establishment of bath- : ing beaches and fuvoring construe- ! "lion of these beaches In the river where the greatest good could be accomplished for the money. Committees t,o plan the annual ban quet ind to formulate plans for strengthening the Navy and making it a permanent organization for fur- ; therlng river development were se- ■ looted. They Include: Banquet, Ira C. Klndler. chairman; organization' and membership, Ray E. Steward; contestants, W. R. Lutz; nominations. Ray E. Steward. V. Grant Forrer, L. R. Neefe, Ira C. Kindler and A. R. Mlchener; constitution and by-laws, V. Grant Forrer, chairman; program and publicity. A. R. Mlchener. Another meeting of the commltteo | will be held next Friday evening. Yardmaster Held For Cigaret Theft Hugerstown, Ud., Oct. 4 —C. M. Robinson, yardmaster for the Cum berland Valley Railroad here, was arrested by railroad detectives charged with connection with the ' theft of $5,500 worth of clgarets from cars in the railroad yards at 1 Shippensburg some time ago. At , that time George Forry and Charles I Custer, this city, and Herbert Taylor, of Harrisburg, were arrest ed, it is alleged, as they were un loading goods on a truck. The ot ! fleers suspected an accomplice at the time. Robinson is said to have given the men Information concern the movement of cars. Robinson . was taken to Shippensburg. and he ; is Raid to have confessed to his com i plicity. Ho will be tried in the fed -1 eral court at Rcranton on October ti along with the other men. KAJUUSBVRG TEXEGRXPH PEERLESS SPECIAL RECENTLY DELIVERED BY KEYSTONE MOTOR CAR CO. *>/■.? IPlliP ' t , The above reproduction showsa view of the Peerless Special, the property of Dr. A. E. Lebo, that was recently delivered to him by the Keystone Motor Car Company, local distributors for tho Peerless car. This car was built especially for Dr. Lebo and was designed by the Keystone Motor Car Company. U has disc wheels and is built especially low. A standard chassis with 12 5-inch wheel base forms the asls of the car. It has special gears ratio. BITTER ATTACK ON WILSON MADE IN PEACE DEBATE j Charged With Undermining Government; to Take Up Shantung Monday Washington. Oct. 4. After a I three-hour discussion of the Peace Treaty, the dominant note of which was a sharp attack on President ' Wilson, the Senate late yesterday decided on a breathing spell until Monday, with indications that the debate soon would embrace the pro vision under which the Chinese I province of Shantung was awarded : to Japan. The attack on the President was made by Senator Jones, Republican, of Washington, who had expected to ! speak two days ago. 1 The President's action, "in at ! tempting to coerce" a co-ordinate legislative branch of the government to do his will regardless of its own judgment and conviction of duty, | Senator Jones said, "was a more { dangerous assault upon democracy and the Integrity of this republic than any armed attack could be." "It embodies the spirit of the mob and justifies lawlessness," he charg ed. Blamed For Delay Senator Jones said he did not question the President's sincerity, and however much he might con demn his methods, it would not in fluence his decision in voting on the Treaty. In studying it, he told the Senate, he had sought to find rea sons to Justify his support, rather than to sustain a vote against it The main controversy over the Treaty, Senator Jones declared, was the Covenant for a League of Na tions, "which will not be rejected but so ratified that the vital inter ests of the United States will be pro tected and Its Independence and sov ereignty preserved." "The league Covenant should not be In the Treaty." he said. "Months ago the Treaty with Germany should have been made and ratified. Who is to blame for the delay? No one but the President. He and he alone Insisted on the two things being put together. If the world's heart is broken, he will break it. If the world's hope of peace shall die, he will kill It." The Uresldent's friends should tell him plainly and bluntly and prompt i ly that the Treaty has no chance i of ratification In Its present form, said the Senator, who added, "and ! they will do so when he Is able to I receive it." Discuss Voting Power j Senator Thomas, Democrat, of j Colorado, discussed the amendment | of Senator Johnson, Republican, of i California, designed to equalize the | voting power of the United States l and Great Rritain. He opposed this j change in the League of Nations as I proposed by Senator Johnson, he ; said, because the same point was covered in the McCumber reserva tion for which he would vote. While not willing to vote for the Treaty without reservations. Senator Thomas sold he could see no great danger to this country through the distribution of votes in the league Assembly. England Would Control '"The Institutions of the United States harmonize so thoroughly with those of Canada. New Zealand and other British lands." he declared, "that in all probability the repre sentatives of each will be found more frequently acting together than in opnositfon to each other in the assembly. The only difference be tween the American and the Cana dian is that, one pays tribute to the British crown." In the permanent labor council, however. Senator Thomas pointed ont that Great Britain, Inclusive of her colonies, would have 2 4 votes against four for the United States. With one-third of the entire coun cil voting strength, Senator Thomas argued tbnt Great Britain might be able to dictate or control far-reach ing policies affecting the United States. Labor Leader Admits Men Are Streaming Back Bethlehem, Pa., Oct. 4.—For the first time since the strike started last Monday morning at the Bethle- ! hem Steel plant, David Williams, i the strike leader, conceded his men were streaming back to work and that ho "had scarcely fifty per cent, of the company's employes on the street." Mr. Williams said the com pany was offering special induce- ' ments and tho men were fast desert- i ing his ranks. According to his ad- . mission he has lost thirty-five per | cent, of his numbers since the start of the strike. Bethlehem Kteel officials assert the strike is virtually over. The , 400 men whom they still admit are : 1 on strike, they say, come from un ! important units. The drive made to have electric | ians and bricklayers Join the strike failed. All the blast furnaces are running, j MARRIAGE I,ICE BIBBS John D. Troy and Clara Rudy, Har-, i ishurg. David D. Snavely and Daura M.: Miller. iHarrisburg. William Freed, Canton, Ohio, and! Mary E. Howard, York. Ralph R Yontz, Elizabethtown, and Emma E. Knouae. Hershey. Raymond K. Hoover, Enola, and Tilla M. Alhrlght.. Harrisburg. William E. Mumma, Lttitz, and | Anna C. Wertman, Hummelstown. Personal-Social J CENTRAL HIGH NOTES j ; A rumor has recently been clrcu- j lated persistently around the school j to the effect that several members j of the D. 8. Society belonged to a i mysterious society known as the A. I W., which is against the rules of the ! organisation. No member of the D. j S. may belong to another secret so- ] ciety as long as she is in High school, j It was conclusively. proved at a' meeting of the D. S'crs on Thursday \ evening at the home of Miss Mary ' Bevard, 1323 Green street, that none j of the girls belonged to the A. W. | and that no such society even exist ed. At a meeting of the Junior class Thursday evening with Miss Virginia Wallis, president, presiding, a dance committee was appointed which in- ; eludes the following girls: The i Misses Mary Frances Rockefeller, I Florence Burtnett, Helen DeWalt and Margaret Zeiders. The B. F. Society met last evening i and elected officers. At the same > time six new members were initi ated into the society. The members are: The Misses Evelyn Dußree, j Florence Burtnett, Amy Botts, Anna ! Beaver, Vivian Showers and Mil- | dred Erdling. The old members are: i The Misses Ida Myers, president; | Elva Myers, secretary; Katharine , Lytle, treasurer; Dorothy Rankin, i Doris Stuart and Edith Hockley. Gl ESTS OF MRS. K ASM Mrs. J. H. Kase had as guests re- j eently at her summer home, Mr. and i Mrs. Reynolds, of Williamsport; Mrs. i P. A. Hers and daughter, of Paxtang. | and Mrs. Bailey, of this city. Yester- ! day Mrs. Kase was hostess for the j Embroide.ry Club, of which she is a; member. A NEW SEDAN Exceptionally easy to enter and leave, the new Oakland four door Sedan is sensibly designed and most attractively furnished. The windows in all four doors are regulated by a convenient automatic controller; the side rear and back panel windows are fitted with roller curtains of grey ! silk; every essential convenience is included in its standard | appointment. Like all Oakland models it is a thrifty and able car, suited alike to country and city driving. Touring Car, $1075; Roadster, 81075; Coupe, $1650} Four Door Sedan, $1740. P.O. D. Pontiac. Mich. Additional for wire wheel equipment* $75 DAUPHIN MOTOR CAR CO. ED. C. ALLEN, Mgr. 28 South River Street Both Phones j Speaking of Service— we aim, always to give the same prompt and courteous treatment to every piece of work that comes into our shop—no matter whether it is 7 o'clock in the morning or 8 o'clock in the even ing—whether it may be a tube to patch or a tire to retread. And we will turn it out guaranteed to outlast the tire or tube. You Will Find This Out as Soon as You Give Us a Trial Black's Garage "Not ( ly a name but an institution" Tire and Tube Vulcanizing and Retreading 205 S. 17th Strcot Horrfsbiirg, Pa. BELL PHONE FAMILY MEET HERE j Mrs. Andrew Bluir, lornierly of j Chamberf burg, who is living in this i city at 403 North Second street, had ! the pleasure of having her three sons 'and their wives here for a few days j for the first time in several years. | The party included Dr. and Mrs. Wil- I liam Blair, of Ann Arbor, Mich.; Mr. ; and Mrs. Sloan Blair, of Baltimore; jDr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Blair and j Miss Mary S. Blair, of this city* | RETURN FROM NEW YORK Mrs. Philip German and daugh ter, Miss Anna German, have re ! turned to their home, 2 5 North j Fourth street, after spending tho I summer at New York City, Lake . George and I.ake Champlaln. While I at the latter place they motored to : the old historical fort at Ticon- I deroga. TEA FOR MISS STAMM ! Among the many pre-nuptial ' events for Miss Julia Stamm, whose i marriage to George Comyns ' Thomas, Jr., of Elizabeth, N. J., will i be solemnized next week, will be a I tea given Tuesday, October 7, from ; 3 until 5 o'clock, by Mrs. Joseph K. White at their home, "Sylvania House," North Front street. (Other Sociu News on Page 4) Daughter Stabs Father | When Told to Leave Home j Beowming angry when ordered to I leave home last evening: after she had I been reprimanded several times for keeping- late hours, Mary Carberry, 18 j years old, last evening, is alleged to i have stabbed her father, Joseph L. ! Carberry. at the Carberry home, at i 2K:' Fourth street. She is being held J by the police. The father was given immediate 1 medical attention at the office of a nearby physician, after which he was ! taken to the Harrishurg Hospital for | further treatment. His condition to ; day was said to be favorable. According to the story told at the OCTOBER 4, 1919. police ntation, the father had remon strated several times with the daugh ter about the late hours she kept. Last evening he ordered her from his home. She was to take nothing except her personal effects, he told her. This remark is snid to have an gered the girl to such an extent that she picked up a pair of scissors and •rr'T. t'KJVF !SAI CAR The Ford Factory has not yet reached normal production. It will take some time, after being entirely given over to war work. We are get ting a few cars right along, and sug gest that you leave your order with us as soon as possible and we will de liver as soon as possible. Runabout, $500; Touring Car, $525; Coupe, $650; Sedan, $775; One Ton Truck Chassis, $550. These prices f. o. b. Detroit. Don't forget the service we give in our shops, genuine Ford Parts, Ford skill and Ford prices. New Cumberland Motor Co. NEW CUMBERLAND, PA. Bell 3458-R Dial 3317 Be Comfortable All Winter in Your Open Car gives you all the advantages of a car enclosed in wood and glass. No extra top or body is necessary. It enables you to open the door and step in or out just as you would if your car had a costly closed body. There are no buttons to unfasten—no curtains to fuss with We attach them on short notice. WOODWORKING—BTiACK SMITHING—TRIMMING AUTO PAINTING C. A. Fair Carriage and Auto Works East End Mulberry St. Bridge. Ic Wiiim 31 "T. R." | Insulation Beats M Re-insulation ' ■ "T. R." stands for "Threaded Rubber" of course —the insula- H tion found only in Willard Bat teries with the red trade-mark. nW The insulation that lasts as long NV as the plates, so that 90% of H| those who buy The Red Trade- Marked Willard have no re-insula tion bills to pay. There's a lot more of interest to H you on this battery question, mm Come in and talk it over. MS Motor Electric Sales Co., Rgd. Front Near Forster Streets BELL 2830-J DIAL 6056 The only official representative of the H Willard storage Battery Company in Dau pliin, Cumberland and Perry County. a heavy piece of Iron with which sh deiied her purent. latter, picking up a butcher knife, she plunged it into his side. The girl for a number of vears had been an inmate at the Children's llome at Reading. The parents had been separated for a number of years, according to the police.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers