8 ROTARY LOAN LUNCHEON WILL BE BIG EVENT Governor and Lieutenant* Governor to Be Asked, as Well as W. H. Manning Announcement was made to-day [that the Rotary Club's municipal loan luncheon will be held Friday Inoon, October 17, at the Penn-Har irts Hotel, and that In addition to i Warren H. Manning, Governor Sproul and Dleutenant Governor Beldlemanwill be Invited to address I the meeting on the bridge loan of :$300,000. Mr. Manning, who knows jinore about the engineering prob jlems of Harrlsburg than any other ; one man. will speak on all four [loans. Members of the Chamber of Commerce and the Kiwanls Club "Will be Invited to attend. Flavel D. Wright, member of the >Clty Memorial committee, addressed [a life time and extra bottles of Hy iomel can be obtained from druggists 'for a few cents. 4. . RHEUMATIC PAINS DISAPPEAR BLISS NATIVE HERB TABLETS PRAISED BY MANY "Twenty years ago I was bother ed with rheumatic pains through my shoulders and lungs to such an extent that my head was drawn down on my chest causing great suffering After trying different medicines. I was flnaily persuaded to try Bliss Native Herb Tablets. After taking this remedy for a week I could move my head, and after continuing treatment for a short time was able to work." Mrs. S. Crump, Bridgeport. 111. "I can cheerfully say that Bliss Native Herb Tablets have done me a world of good, and I would not be without them. I have not had rheumatism for the past four years. I can also say they are tine for la grippe. "MRS. DIDDIE T. VAN VIDET. "Stroudsburg. Pa." A rheumatic condition is one of the results of constipation, which Asserts New Discovery Brings Blessed Relief to Rose and Hay Fever Sufferers Can Make It Yourself At Home At Trifling Expense In spite of all the doubters and scoffers, a man in Kentucky, who changed his annoying and distress ing hay fever into less than a mild cold, claims most emphatically that If taken in time hay fever can be conquered or at least made so harm less that jt is not even bothersome. He gave his discovery to scores of other sufferers with the most re markable reviults and has recently been prevailed upon to dispense it through pharmacists to all hay fever sufferers who still have faith that nature has provided an effective remedy for thisscommon yet miser able disease. \ FLOR DE rSu\ MELBA IV \ The Cigar Supreme I V_.- 3== ===^S^^^^< At price FLOR DE MELBA'is Jbetter, bigger and more pleasing 1 ' t^an an V m,lc ' Havana cigar! IOC OTHER SIZES . , V I SELECTOS SIZE 1 v-f DIFFERENT PRICES . 1 § Ask your-dealer for your favorite alxe. I 1 nUKI 1 LEWIS CIGAR MFC. CO." Newark. N*J. Lerjest Independent Qger Factory in the Maid. l< Just Lumber" TO a lot of people lumber is still "just lumber." This class of people can't see anything but the price. Buying lumber by the "price method" is syre to make lots of trouble in the end. In lumber, quality is the thing that counts. Long life is expected—anything short of this will result in dissatisfaction. Dissatisfaction will kill any business. You will find our lumber clean, bright and thoroughly seasoned. It will not be case-hardened, checked, honeycombed or stained. United Ice & Coal Co. Lumber Department Forster and Cowdcn Streets * MONDAY; EVENING, flag, and twice S2O for the gold star member, Robert A. 8011, who died In the service. | Robert B. Reeves and Dr. J. George Becht addressed the club on the commercial courses now being offered by the Harrlsburg T. M. C. A., and a number of members agreed to take out memberships for employes or to assist employee to pay for their Instruction In one or more of the classes. The club heard Informally from a number of members who had visited the strike around Pittsburgh and who complimented Captain George F. Dumb on the excellent or der maintained there since the State Police took charge. They said there is absolutely no truth In stories of mistreatment of civilians by State Police and the club went on record na expressing Its confi dence In the force and Captain Dumb, Its commander. The members and their wives will be guests to-morrow afternoon after 4.30 o'clock of Herman P. Miller, who will take them to Bellevue Park where they will he entertained at supper. From there they will go to the store of "Witmer, Balr & Witmer, in Walnut street, where they will be the guests of David Witmer for the evening. John H. Glass Made Chief Inspector John H. Glass, prominent In Repub lican county politics in Central Penn sylvania and for several yeara coun ty treasurer of Northumberland coun ly has been appointed chief Inspector in the automobile division of the State Highway Department. He will have charge of enforcement of the new automobile code regulations In the State. SEEKS TO BREAK MOTHER'S WILL Charles W. Thomas. 1408 Zarker street, is about to Institute proceed ings in an effort to change the will of his mother, who returned to her home in Germany in 1914 and died there in 1915. In her will she left nothing to her son. as he declined to accompany her to Germany. DIRECTORS TO MEET The annual meeting of the stock holders of the West H&rrisburg Mar ket House, for the election of direc tors and the transaction of other busi ness, will be held on Tuesday, October 14, In the Market buildings in Ver beke street, between 10 and 11 a. m. Notice of the meeting is issued over the name of J. N. Kinnard, superin tendent and treasurer. is also a forerunner of biliousness, sick headache, and indigestion. Unless attended to promptly the system becomes so clogged up that serious consequences are sure to follow. Bliss Native Herb Tablets are a most effective remedy for the re lief of this condition. They act gently but firmly on the liver and bowels, drive out Impurities, tone up the system, and restore good health. One tablet at night will make the next day bright. Old and young find them indispensable. Bliss Native Herb Tablets are f>ut up In a yellow box of 200 tab ets. The portrait of Alonzo / O. Bliss is on every box. (jR) Each tablet is stamped with \3' our trade mark. Price $1 per box. Dook for our money-back guaran tee on every box. Sold by leading druggists and local agents every- I where. And best of all this remedy costs | almost nothing. Get a one ounce I bottle of Menthollzed Arcine at any | drug store, pour the contents into j a pint bottle and fill the pint bot tle with water that has been boiled. Then gargle as directed and twice l daily snuff or spray each nostril S thoroughly. That's all there Is to it; so simple that a lot of people will say that it can't do the work; but oftentimes simple natural remedies are the best as you will find after using. If you will make up a pint and i use it for a week or ten days you need not be surprised If your unwel i come yearly visitor fails to appear. "Erection of Memorial a Duty," Says Pastor By The REV. DR. LEWIS S. MUDGE Pastor Pine Street Presbyterian Cliurch The erection of a permanent memorial to the soldiers and sailors of Harrlsburg who served In the World War is clearly our duty. It is, moreover, a duty which should be performed with enthusiasm and eagerness. It is also a duty which should be fulfilled at once. Now, when the precious memory of the boys who gave their lives for country and humanity is fresh, and while the splendid deeds and heroic sacrifices of those who have returned to us are clear in our minds, we should give expression to our deep appreci ation in substantial and enduring form. The memorial proposed is highly suitable and the method sug gested for the raising of the necessary funds is beyond criticism. We have no doubt whatever that the sum suggested will be fully sub scribed. Det us each, however, show the sincerity of our regard for our heroic men by being among the first to give. Det us see to it that the proud story of Harrlsburg's participation in the World War is brought to a glorious climax by the completion of this memorial fund with unrivaled promptness. ROBBERIES GROW IN NUMBER [Continued from First Page.] uraily result In an increase In thefts, police say. Many Reeeut Thefts Police records snow that the exact number of robberies and larcenies during the first nine months of this year was 280. with 111 of them being reported within the last three months. The first half-year of 1918 showed 114 robberlei with 52 being reported between July 1 and Septem ber 30„ for a total of 166. The value of the goods stolen In the period this year is $40,627 as com pared to $34,890 last year. Even though more goods has been reported stolen this year, less has been recov ered than in last year. Police au thorities this year located $28,331 of the material stolen while last year they located $31,477. Police account for the recovery of such a large percentage of stolen goods last year, by the fact that a large number of stolen automobiles were recovered. In numerous In stances, cars were taken for joy-rid ing purposes and later found aban- 1 doned nearby. Clashes Do Not Deter Steel Heads in Attempt to Resume Operations By Auociated Br tit. Chicago, Oct. 6.—Clashes between strike sympathizers and police and special deputies during the last 36 hours In the Chicago district did not deter heads of steel mills from attempting to start additional plants to-day, the beginning of the third week of the walkout. Company of ficials claimed they had assurance that large numbers of men who have been on strike for two weeks would return to work during the day and that many plants which have been Idle for two weeks would begin dp era tions. Union leaders Increased the picket lines early to-day In an effort to prevent desertions and assorted that they looked for no material reduc tion in their ranks. The rioting by strike sympathiz ers In the Calumet district, which includes Gary, Indiana Harbor and East Chicagp, Ind., and South Chi cago, Ills., while being put under control by the police resulted In call ing out of 12 companies of Indiana National Guardsmen, who to-day were prepared to suppress any fur ther disorders at those places. Many clashes took place with the police, but only a few shots were fired dur ing the two nights. Efforts to Reopen Plants Mark Third Week of Steel Strike By Auoeiated Frtss. Pittsburgh, Oct. 6.—An effort by employers to open additional plants in the Pittsburgh district to-day marked the beginning of the third week of the steel workers' strike. Representatives of the steel com panies say that hundreds of men re turned to work in the mills last week and they declare that suffi cient workers will desert the strik ers' ranks to-day to assure the re opening of plants which have been tied up by the walkout. Union leaders were emphatic in their declarations that plans of the employers to start operations In the mills will fail. They said that the strikers will 3tay out and that the I end of the day will show few If any I of the men back on he job. Heavy rain fell during the morn i ing. All was quiet throughout the ! district. Hundreds of deputy sheriffs, ! mill guards and police patrolled the j streets at the various plants. Officials of steel plants In Rankin and Braddock to-day said that there was no material change in the strike situation In this place. They report a shortage of labor but as serted that each day results in ad ditional men returning to work. Steel company sources reported gains ft Donora and Monessen. 1 was said the American Steel and i Wire Company started a rod and a 1 blooming mills at Donora and that ! the Donora zinc works, operated by I the American Steel and Wire Com- I pany, also started up, but not in I full. Plants at Monossen which are said to have made a start in varying degrees are the Pittsburgh Steel Company, Pittsburgh Steel Products Company, Page Woven Wire Fence Company, and the Monessen found dry Company. No attempt was made, it is said, to start the Carnegie plant or the small works of the American Sheet and Tin Plate Company in that vicinity. Few reports had been received at strike headquarters in the after noon. One report' stated that the strikers at the Bethlehem jSteel Works in Bethlehem were holding firm. State Troops Are Called to Gary Following New Riots By Associated Press. Gary, Ind.. Oct. 6. State troops to-day patrolled the avenues lead ing to steel plants and parts of the city where disorders were'liable to develop, four companies having been brought here late last night from Indiana Harbor and Fast Chi cago. Ind., where 12 companies were quartered, after rioting was resum ed here by strike sympathisers. Late last night hundreds of strik ers began to congregate before the gates of the United States Steel Cor poration plant and the mill of the American Sheet and Tin Plate Com pany. Police and special deputies clashed with the crowd of strikers HXMBafIBPRO WiSl TKUflUlCgg and many bricks and stones were thrown. Finally the situation be came so threatening that Mayor William F. Hodges called on Adju tant General Harry B. Smith, of Indiana, who is in command of the troops ordered into the district by ! Governor Goodrich when rioting broke out Saturday night, to send several companies of soldiers, as jhe believed affairs had gotten be yond control of the police. While the troops were on the way here in street cars, the police suc ceeded in dispersing the crowds af ter using their club freely and mak ing more than a dozen arrests. Later guardsmen were distributed at vari ous points where it was believed dis orders might occur. A foreman of the United States Steel Corporation was shot and seriously injured early this morning while standing in his own doorway. Two shots were fired at several members of the citizens' police when they drove a crowd from the vicinity of the foreman's home. No one was hit. PORESTALLER FINED Harry Phillips, merchant, of 1001 North Sixth street, was fined $25 in police court on Saturday afternoon cn the charge of having violated the anti-fores tailing ordinance. He was charged with having purchased for resale, apples, corn. etc.. in Broad street market on Saturday. Are You, Too Paying I l^j^ r E all seek life's comforts and I account that brings sickness and en common penalty. Daily backache, dizzy spells, headaches, rheumatic pains and kidney irregularities are warnings of kidney weakness. Don't wait! Neglect may lead to gravel, dropsy or Bright's disease. For quick relief avoid over-eating, over-drinking, over-working and other excesses and help the weakened kidneys with Doan's Kidney Pills . Doan's have brought new health and happiness to thousands of sufferers. Many of them live right here in Harrisburg. Ask your neighbor! These Are Harrisburg People: North Front Street Peffer Street ' North Fifth Street Andrew R. Conklln. 1128 N. Front St.. says: Mrs. J. F. Sweigert, 330 Peffer St., Bays: "I wai s H .... N .,„ H a . "when -Some time ago I suffered with a severa pain in bothered considerably several years ago witlj pains ® m Alx *b der . 15 *< N. Fifth St., .. , . . . . . . . . across the muscles of my back. I used Doan a ever my back has been weak or I have had a my back. I could not sleep at night and I had Kidney Pills and it was only a short time before my dull, constant ache through the small of my back to get up several times to pass the kidney secre- Hons, which were often acanty. Through an adver- Ir I ever do have any trouble of that Kind I would u T <(- fv.ss n .n. p T Usmarf mrm* hrmiff-h* ÜBe Doan 8 - ' or 1 know there ia no better remedy would always relieve me In a short time. I have tlsement in the paper I learned of the cure, brought for that complaint" not had any trouble of that kind for about a year by Doan s Kidney Pills so I purchased a box at The above statement was given August 29 191t and x ean „ edu Doar ,.. Kldney Pllll for thl ,." Pott's Drug Store and the first few doses relieved !"d on February 29, 1919, Mrs. gwelgiert said: ™. or,A three hoxes cured mc n T have not been Kidney trouble and all Its annoying symptoms (Statement given January 31, 1816.) me and three boxes cured me. so Iha e not been are things of the paßt cver gince Doan's Kidney On February 22. 1919, Mr.. Alexander added: troubled since. P,,,. cured Myadv suffering with have had no trouble wtth my kldneyß 8l „ce -————————————— Doan's Kidney Pills cured me some years ago. D']„ Strppt —— j am only too glad to testify to the merits of J Doan's and confirm my former statements." suffered from severe pains in my back and kidneys. Peffer Street had. I was so run down that life was miserable Bfl|i and I had swelling of the limbs and puffy sacs be- lAfd B MBBHfi'vll Harry Foust, 228 Peffer St.. says: v. , ...... .1.. T ■■ ~V M leWltig.'TOllHwl v\ years ago I was In an awful shape with kidney neath my eyes. My body was also bloated and I Mil > 1 < trouble, which I think was brought on by heavy was dizzy and had blurred eyesight. I was very lifting and stooping. My back ached nearly all the nervous too. Two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills KfU/Cr<(fmßSftime and was lame and sore and I could hardly . .. _„ , „„ j. get up when I was down. Sharp pains would rid me of the attack and made me feel better | n nackaee of Doan's Kidnev Pills is catch me in my back when I lerst expected every way. I have great faith In this medicine M package oi Doan . iviant} rills IS them. My kldneyg were weak ln a ,. t |on. causing and will use it In preference to any other kidney 11 genuine unless It bears the maple- me trouble and I was all out of shape in generul. remedy." leaf trademark and the signature-"James iS£\ ™ * nd ' Doan." Doan's Kidney Pills B Every Druggist has Doan's, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. 17 IN ONE HOUSE WAS TOO MANY [ Continued from First denied on cross-examination that seventeen persons were living in tlio house at one time, although she ad mitted that there were' more than ten. She said that since their mar riage until in June when they sepa rated they had been living at her home, 193 9 North Seventh street. Judge Kunkel told the couple that they should bo living together and said he would not make an order un til he learned whether Kelly meant to provide a home for her. Mrs. Kelly said that she was afraid to live alone with her husband because he had beaten her and had threat ened her, but Judge Kunkel termed these "Idle threats" and continued the case. "Use your own way and meth ods to get her back," the court ad vised Kelly. "You know what you did to win her, now get her back again. We'll leave It to him now and get his real attitude by what he does and the way he treats her." Dunbar Eberts was directed to pay his wife J5 a week after a lengthy hearing before Judge Kun kel this morning. Eberts was mar ried in February, this year, in New Haven, Connecticut, while a student at Yale. His wife returned to New Haven in May. after living in this city with Mr. Eberts at the homo of his parents, 120 Market street. Counsel for Mike Munjas, whose wife, Eva Munjas died since suit was brought against him for sup port, asked the court whether the county could he directed to pay the costs, amounting to $65. Judge S. J. M. McCarrell replied that Munjas would have to pay them. He was in Greensburg at the time the action started, and the alderman'sc costs totaled more than SSO because of the constable's traveling expenses. Joseph S. Wagner, whose wife complained that he did not gtve her enough to maintain the family was directed to continue paying the rent, $27 a month, and pay his wife sls a week. He told the court that she never had his meals ready for him, but she denied this and claim ed that he would never be there when she had them ready, and many times she was compelled to throw the food into the ffcrbage can. James L. McCorralck was ordered to pay his wife $lO a week, by agree ment, and Charles Kreitzer, who had been in Jail on an attachment, was released and directed to make up his shortage in payments and continue giving his wife $6 a week. Two Balloons Are to Be Heard From in Race By Associated Press, St. Ixmls. Oct. 6.—Ttvo balloon crews in the national champion ship race have boen missing for four days and a half. The craft to ba heard from are the St. Louis V, and the Wichita, Kansas, entry, both of which took a northeasterly course with eight other competitors upon taking the air here last Wednesday night. Two of the balloons report ing so far landed in the Parry Sound region and race officials are confi dent that the pilots yet to be heard from have landed safely and now are making their way to some point : of communication with the outside [ world. A WARM, NOURISHING MEAL FOR FIVE CENTS Dosen't seem possible in these days of profiteering and high cost of living, does it? Prove it for yourself. Two SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUITS (little loaves of baked whole wheat) will cost you in most stores a fraction over two cents. Serve them with three cents* worth of hot milk and you will have a warm, nourishing, satisfying meal for five cents. All the nutriment you need for a half day's work. The most real food for the least money. OCTOBER-6; 1919. * Protest Contract to Purchase Army Supplies Tty Associated Press, Parts, Oct. 6.—The contract for the purchase of American Army supplies in France has moved the budget committee of the Chamber of Deputies to protest that Parlia ment's financial rights have boen disregarded as the expenditure of $400,000,000 has been agreed to without previous parliamentary authorization. ' As a result of the protest, the gov | ernment has introduced a bill for ratification of the contract specify ing that the $400,000,000 shall be represented by bonds dated August 1, 1919, and bearing interest at five per cent, from August, 1920. They would mature In ten years. Interest nnd capital being payable In dol lars. The budget committee has ap-| proved the bill, but demands that the first Interest coupon be paid In • February, 1921, so that the budgets of 1919 and 1920 will not be called upon to support any burden. The committee also asks that the Inter est and capital be paid In dollars at the rate of exchange on the day of payment ALFONSO TO VISIT ENGLAND 1 By Associated Press. Madrid, Sunday, Oct. s.—King Al fonso will visit England the latter part of the present month. Accompan ied by Queen Victoria he will leave Madrid on October 20 for London. The visit of the royal couple will last about fifteen days.