FINDS BOULDER FOR MEMORIAL Massive, Moss-Covered Roek to Bear Bronze Plates With Names of Veterans Dauphin, Pa., Oct. 10. —Daniel F. Seller, chairman of the "marker" committee of the recently-organized Dauphin Memorial Association re ported to-day that he had located a huge, rugged boulder along the slopes of Short Mountain and that it will be brought into the borough next week. The boulder weighs nearly ten tons. Mr. Seiler believes and is par ticularly suitable for a memorial shaft. It is massive and covered with moss. As nearly as possible, it will be allowed to remain in its nat ural state. It is planned to smooth three sides to allow bronze tablets, bearing the names of Dauphin and nearby veterans of the Great War, veterans of the Civil War and a rec ord of welfare and Liberty Loan contributions on the third. By the time the boulder is brought to the borough, it is be lieved that the tablet committee, consisting of F. C. Gerberich and Charles E. Shaffer, will have secured estimates on the approximate cost of 1 bronze with the inscriptions. From these the budget can be estimated and a drive for funds launched. It iis believed that the canvass for i funds will be started about the mid dle of next week. The names of all nearby veterans will be on it. ! A INDIGESTION A |i ♦ il j "Pape's Diapepsin" instantly relieves Dyspepsia, I j 1 or a Sour, Acid, Gassy Stomach—quick I Surel j | ♦! Food souring, gas, acidity! Won- j gestion, dyspepsia or a disordered j der what upset your stomach? Well, : stomach. A few tablets of Pape's j don't bother! The momen-t vou eat i Diape P sin neutralize acidity and j o . „ . " . ! give relief at once—no waiting! Buy a tablet or two of Pape s Diapepsin a box of Pape . s Dlapep , in now! ; all the lumps of indigestion pain, the Don't stay miserable! - Try to reg sourness, heartburn and belching of ulate your stomach so you can eat I gases, due to acidity, vanish —truly favorite foods without causing dis- i wonderful! {tress. The cost is so little. The Millions of people know that it is; reneflts so groa*. Vou, too, will he I needless to be bothered with indi-j a Diapepsin enthusiast after.vards i ~ I Are you always successful on baking day? Are your cakes light and spongy and your biscuits white and flaky? If not, let lis help you with RUMFORDS THE WHOLESOME SkSS BAKING POWDER ! THE GLOBE THE GLOBE GENTLEMEN— f]Iioose the Right Store THE GLOBE been, the dominant idea in our principle of giving the utmost satisfy, completely, those who entrust their apparel wants to our care are two essentials ~ scarce," if you will step into THE Our Showing of GLOBE we will immediately con- d r T , 'CTttf r ~fcTV "|"T ATO vince you that we have GOOD l 1 lIA 1 CLOTHES aplenty—and that our Is Complete prices for qualities shown are sur prisingly low. Every new Stetson shade. Every new Stetson shape. S3O, $33, S4O, $43 THE GLOBE FRIDAY EVENING, Stories of World Heroes Arouse School Enthusiasm j at the Camp Curtin High j During the home room festivities j periods this week the hero story Is • the (dominant theme. Tuesday the student presidents asked the mem bers of their respective classes "Who are your heroes? Why do you choose these men and women? What qualities in your heroes and ; heroines do you admire?" As usual the names of Washing- 1 ton and Lincoln were given, but i names associated with heroic service in the World War were often men- I tioned. In passing the bulletin in the halt. ' the boys and girls selected from the j list: Roland. Robin Hood. Sir Gala- i bad, William Tell, Robert Bruce, j Pocohontas, Nathan Hale or Hobson, , to honor in story on Wednesday aft- ! ernoon. Program planning in preparation for Monday and Tuesday of next ! week is another feature of the home j room festivities periods. Monday j and Thursday, the home rooms ar- | ranged programs in honor of Chris- j topher Columbus and William Penn. j In several rooms the students have decided upon dramatization and | have nominated program commit tees. Upon these committees rests j the responsibility of gathering ref- j erenee books, writing the plays, and 1 selecting the participants. The pro- ( gram committees are happily and ' enthusiastically .delving into home j resources and besieging the ever- j helpful Public Library for dramatic material which they will assemble and recombine for the pleasure and instruction of their appreciative au- , diences. GREAT SCHOOL j BUILDING AHEAD Dr. Finegan Says That Great est Construction Year in School History Is Due As the result \\\ a prices for school \\\X\A house building materials after and at present necessitated b y ] -fawWilWtifv the nnusual num "• EalvlSUijßl her P'nns for j new construction of schools being i submitted to the I Department of Public Instruction, Dr. Thomas E. Finegan, the new | State Superintendent, says that he i feels justified in assuring school 'boards and school officials generally ! that where additional school hous- I ing accommodations are necessary in 1 order not to interfere with the work 1 of the schools or not to delay the I progressive educational activities of j a school district, the new building | should not be delayed on account of i prevailing prices. Studies of prices i and conditions have led to the con ! elusion that present prices will in all probability continue to domi- I nate the situation indefinitely. In going over the situation Dr. j Finegan and his experts went into the situation at the end of the Civil ! War and now when the demand for | export is very heavy and prices in this country are low in many in stances compared with prices else where. Plans and specifications for new and reconstructed school buildings amounting to over $5,000,000 in value have been submitted to the department for examination and ap proval since the signing of the ar- J Imistice almost a year ago, a re markable impetus in new building projects having been noted. During j the war building operations were virtually suspended by school dis tricts and as a result what is termed "an abnormal, over-crowded condi ' tion" now exists in many districts. : Dr. Finegan says that the numerous j requests for a State survey of local . school conditions, the large number {of applications for recommenda i tions and suggestive plans for new j buildings and the plans being re- I eeived almost daily indicate one of i the largest school building years In j the history of the State is at hand j regardless of the prices now pre i vailing. The State school authori : ties do not regard the conditions at ; the end of the Civil War and now | as analogous. Plans for 00-opcration of the j State of Pennsylvania with the State j of New Jersey in purchasing of the ! remaining toll bridges across the ! Delaware river are to be submitted ,to the State Board of Public ! Grounds and Buildings at the meet ing scheduled for Tuesday. It is probable that similar steps will be taken in regard to New York. •I. Lee Plummer, former member of the House from Blair county, Y'as at the Capitol yesterday. First beaver to be distributed in j the State game preserves will be re i ceived next month, according to i j plans being made by the game of- I ficials. Several colonies have been bought and the animals will be ! turned loose in what are considered ideal surroundings. Test will be made during the first year. Hearings in the complaints of several communities against the Panther Valley Water Company have been scheduled by the Public Service Commission for October 16. The Commission will resume the EtUUUSBURGE. tS&f&SL TELEGRAPH Bell Telephone rate Increase hear ing next week. Experts from the State Depart ment of Health have been detailed to attend teachers' institutes and similar educational gatherings in the State this fall to explain plans for State health instruction. The plans call for simple daily exercises and for instruction in care of the health. State food agents are trying to locate the source of some "bleached flour" being sold in Pennsylvania, one' sample in seventy-seven taken recently having been found to be "bleached" by some process which State food agents would like to know more about. No plant has been lo cated in this State which is equipped with the apparatus and it is thought that it came from outside. Ever since the veto of the bill to permit the sale of flour chemically treated, the State food agents have been on the trail of the flour sales and nu merous samples have been taken without finding any "bleached" product until recently when seventy seven were taken within forty-eight hours and one sample discovered to be treated against the law. Award of the contract for the con struction of the State Memorial Bridge is scheduled to be made by the Board of Grounds and Build ings when it meets here on Tuesday. The papers are now being prepared by the Attorney General's depart ment and a bond will be submitted for 25 per cent of the cost at the same time. State raids on concerns soiling eggs have developed the fact that attempts have been made to violate the recent law forbidding the sale of stale eggs as fresh. Fifteen ar rests for such attempted sales have been made in Pittsburgh, Philadel phia and Erie. The first conviction under the new law was obtained in Philadelphia. The eggs were tested by State chemists after being bought by agents. William H. Kucler, a Stato high way inspector long connected with the State Highway Department, died at his home in Norristown. Friends of Major General W. G. Price, Jr., to-day sent him their congratulations on being awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. The Philadelphia Record says that ex-Judge Mayer Sulzberger, of that city, has been invited to become a member of the new State Constitu tion Revisjon Commission. Colonel Edward Martin, commis sioner of health, has returned from Franklin county where yesterday he dedicated the tablet of honor to Dr. J. T. Rotlirocß, the "Father of Pennsylvania Forestry." Arguing in Pittsburgh yesterday before the Supreme Court Joseph E. Kun, former deputy attorney gen eral, declared that the new charter bill was a measure which would pre vent various things being inflicted upon the city and that it was a nota ble advance In municipal legislation. The argument was made in a tax payer's action relative to some loan items. | The Philadelphia rent gouging in vestigation is becoming interesting Ex-Lieutenant Governor Frank B. McClain in his practical manner has detailed investigators to look into the matter at first hand, while peo ple connected with the Real Estate Board and the Tenants Association have taken to punching each other. Vickerman Lauds Governor Sproul J. "W. Vickerman, of Allegheny county, the legislative "dry" leader in the last session of the Pennsylva nia legislation and who sponsored bill No. 1 for the ratification of the Federal prohibition amendment was elected president of the Bible Class Federation at the State Sunday school convention in "Wilkes-Barre. succeeding J. W. Kinnear, of Pitts burgh. The federation consists of over thirteen thousand Bible classes a membership of 330,000 men. Mr. Vickerman in his address praised Governor Sproul for his stand on ratification during the last session of the State legislature, say ing that Pennsylvania would never have ratified the prohibition Federal amendment, but for the support given by the Governor. He also pre sented to the federation a plan which contemplates the active par ticipation of every churchman in the State through the federation in the elecion of "dry" members to the House and Senate for the next ses sion. Lafayette's Honor to Noted Keystone Men Herman L. Collins has this in teresting note in Girard's column of the Philadelphia Press about two eminent college cronies who are still close friends: "Still running strong in parallel grooves, Governor Sproul and United States Attorney General A. M. Palmer will next week be summoned to Lafayette to get what is coming to them and what is their due to wit, a degree of doctor of laws. It is no use once more to call attention to the Castor-Pollux roles played by these eminent Quaker sons of Swarthmore College. They were classmates and fraternity brothers. One was best man at the other's wedding, but whether on that occasion it was "Bill" or "Mitch" who was the groom I've now for gotten. One a State Senator for over twenty years and the other a Con gressman, one a Governor of his State and the other Attorney General of the United States, both big men tally as well as stalwart physically, alike as Damon and Pythias in all save politics, Sproul and Palmer have come down the race course in fine style and right together. Presi dent? Well, all I can say is that both the Republican and the Demo cratic party has had candiflates who did not match either of them in brain or principle." Bonus and Mileage For Old Timers Men enlisted before April 2, 1917, who are discharged from that en listment, in order to sign up again, will be glad to know that now they are entitled to the bonus and mile age money which has been paid to the so-called emergency soldiers. The recruiting officer at Harrisburg is in receipt of a telegram from the adjutant general of the army, as follows: "Tou are informed that telegraphic instructions have been issued this date (Oct. 4, 1919) di recting finance officer to pay bonus and mileage to men who enlisted before April 2, 1917, and who are discharged to re-enlist. Give wide publicity." COUNTY AGENTS TO MEET IN CITY County farm agents and repre sentatives from nine farm bureaus in the Central Pennsylvania section, will meet at the Penn-Harris next Tuesday in a group conference. Agricultural extension experts from Pennsylvania State College, will at tend. Dauphin, Cumberland, Leba- Inon, York, Adams, Franklin, Mifflin, 1 Juniata and Schuylkill will be the counties represented. BRITISH PREFER AMERICAN CARS Generously Admitted There Is No Better Value For the Money I.ondon,. Oct. 10.—Premier Lloyd George's announcement of the sus pension of Board of Trade licensing restrictions on the importation of American automobiles was the result of an increasing preference on the part of English motorists for the American cars quite as much as the urgency of increased motor transport to supplement other means of con veyance. Formerly in England there was considerable prejudice against Ameri can made motor cars. This prejudice is now ascribed either to ignorance of their true worth or to snobbery. One contributor to a British motor trade Journal declares: "Quite honestly, there is no better value for money in the motor world than the average American car. The point at the moment, however, is not exactly one of sheer value, but Whether, in our own best interests in the long run, we should admit the vehicles freely, ration their import, or bar them altogether. "At the present time there is a desperate shortage of motors in this country. Our own manufacturers, owing chiefly to circumstances over which they have no control, are un able to meet the demand and so, to some extent, we benefit immediately by importing motor vehicles from the L'nited States. "At the same time, the fact remains that the American factories cannot, for a considerable time, meet even their own demands, yet they are will ing to keep their own market short in their attempt to consolidate and increase their foreign ' markets. There is ample food for thought in this fact." When questioned by a deputation of British automobile manufacturers on September 22, Sir Auckland Geddes, Minister for National Service and Reconstruction, gave them no hope that a tariff would be imposed on American motor cars. ill HIHHUI The poTe-cleansing, purifying and sterilizing properties of this wonder ful skin soap, using plenty of hot water and soap, best applied with the hands, will prove a revelation to those who use it for the first time. Touch pimples, redness, roughness or itching, if any, with Cuticura Oint ment before bathing. Dry and dust lightly with Cuticura Talcum, a fas cinating fragrance for powdering and perfuming the akin. The cost of these ideal skin purifiers is 25 cents each everywhere. Soap 25c, Ointment 28 and 50e. Talcum 25c. Sold throughout the world. For sample each free address: "Cuticroa Lab. oratories. Dapt. 22F, Maiden, Macs." without n. Simple Home Remefiy Advised For Rose And Hay Fever Anyone Can Make a Pint For Trifling Sum and Ued In Time May Prevent Annual Attack "No matter how severe your yearly attack be, No matter how distressing or hu miliating— Its intensity can be reduced to a harm less, mildness," says a Kentucky druggist who believe* from what he has seen that this simpla home made remedy is a most im portant discovery. He has seen the most severe and apparently unconquerable cases re duced to what might be called a mild cold In twenty-four hours. In many cases where the patleut started treatment a week or ten days before the expected attack the unwel come yearly visitor failed to appear with anything like Its usual Intensity. People who want to try this new treatment can make a pint In a few minutes. Pour one ounce of Menthollzed Ar cine into a pint bottle then fill the bottle with water that has been boiled. Gargle dally as directed and snuff of spray the nostrils twice dally. That's all there Is to the treatment which so many sufferers have found ts be a true friend. Menthollzed Arcine in one ounce via is is dispensed by all the better pharmacies. FASCINATING TEETH How Every Woman Can Quick* ly Charm Her Friends With Lovely Teeth, Clean, White and Brilliant If you want the cleanest of white teeth and healthy gums free from dis ease, an easy and quick way to get both is to use a tooth paste so effective and perfect that astonishing results usually come In a week's time. And the cost Is so little. Just go to any drug or department.store, and get a large tube of SENHECO TOOTH PASTE for 85 cents. Not only will It make your teeth clean and white, but It will at once remove any filmy coating, help to check the ravages of Pyorrhea and banish acidity In the mouth. It is used by thousands of dentists BDv_ its sale has been remarkablew When you visit your dentist, which you should do at least twice a year* ask him abont SENRECO. It'a a most delightful and refreshing tooth pastes . 3 / mJ .. r$ r Are You Watching ; J? the Bread Your f Family Eats? r# You will probably say to yourself: "well, no, not in particular." $ wm As a matter of fact you should be very particu lar to keep strict account of the quality of the bread your family eats. "V All bread is not alike. All bread cannot be alike because all bakers do not bake bread alike, nor do they use the same kind of materials. ./ V For your health, as well as for our business, ;* we make the best bread possible to make. In the first place a baker owes it to the community in which he lives to give the people the best bread possible to make. In the second place it is good business to make the finest quality bread, because, after all, the housewife is the judge of the bread eaten by her family and she naturally will stick to the kind I of bread that is the best quality. ' It is, of course, obvious that you cannot tell what the quality of bread is by looking at it or by tasting it. You must depend upon the in tegrity of the baker who makes the bread. .. There is nothing in but what you would put into bread yourself if you baked your own bread. We do not use any kind of flour at all, nor do we base our decision upon the price of that flour. We know what is the best flour and we pay the price to get it. We buy the best grade of yeast, the best quality of milk and we mix our dough in the proper proportions to make bread that is recognized as the best from all points of view. Bricker's O. K. Bread is delicious, it does not dry out quickly, it is nutritious, it is baked thoroughly on the outside and baked thoroughly on the inside. Bricker's O. K. Bread is a good size family loaf. It is as large as possibly can be made with the flour we use at the popular price per loaf. Its flavor pleases, its quality satisfies; You get more bread satisfaction and nutrition from Bricker's O. K. Bread than from any other kind. Bricker's West Shore Bakery OCTOBER 10, 1919. 21