y PROCEDURE TO BE FOLLOWED Compensation Board Lays Down the Law to Lehigh Valley R. R. Co. Because of the ' n compenßat ' on case, the "State Compensation Board has made an order that the compensation stands even though the company contended that as the accident on which com pensation was based occurred in inter-state commerce. The railroad company had filed an affidavit in stead of an answer setting forth the lnter-state commerce feature, but did not appear at the hearing. Then an appeal was taken to the Luzerne HAVE YOU SEEN "THE HOODLUM" When last seen she was sliding down a coal shute No More Mustard Plasters or Liniments That ■ Stain and Blister ll \\oiitici iui i-or Kclicvin I'ain, Stiff or Swollen Joints. Tired, Aching Feet and Muscles, Sharp Rheumatic Twinges, Neuritis, Neuralgia, Lum bago, Colds in Head. Throat and Clicst "Joint-Ease" is better than mussy old plasters and liniments —it will not stain or blister! Has a delightful odor and leaves skin soft and smooth! Rub it in or inhale it, then watch your troubles quickly disappear Sold in small, convenient tubes in this city by Geo. A. Gorgas. Kennedy's Drug store and all good druggists. |||||^'■g k Sporn Overcoat of Leather Cloth $25 to SSO You See Them Everywhere In the Auto— On the Street— On the Football Field. The Popular Coat with the Sporty Air for the Sporty Fellow. Some Are Reversible Oil English Tweed Cloth- Others on Knit-tex— Some Plain- But Nearly Every Fellow Will Want One , The Globe TUESDAY EVENING, county court when the Board grant ed a rehearing, but dismissed. The Board says that the company was "notified as provided for by the act of assembly of all the various steps in the proceedings, that it had full notice of the referee's award and that it failed to take an appeal within the proper time and ignored the proper methods of procedure, relying upon the affidavit which it had filed." The Compensation Board refused to grant compensation in Hutno vs. Lehigh Coal and Navigation Co., Coaldale case, where a claim was made that the husband of the claim ant had been fatally injured while driving a team of company horses in a parade. The Board holds that no one "could carry the liability of this corporation into a patriotic pa rade which had no connection with the charter purposes of the cor porTUloa. Com'pensation was disallowed in Sendrowski vs. Mt. Lookout Coal [Co., Exeter case, on the ground that X-ray photographs failed to show any injury to bones claimed. The Commission holds it has no juris diction because of inter-state com merce in Reilly vs. Erie Railroad. Susquehanna, and Knorr vs. Central Railroad of New Jersey, Mountain Top. and dismisses appeals on the ground of no grounds shown, Mc- Nulty vs. Lackawanna Railroad, Scranton; Banish vs. Lehigh Coal and Navigation Co., Lansford, and orders payment made through Ital ian consul in Diano vs. American Sheet and Tin Plate Co., Pittsburgh. Arguments in complaint of the city of New Castle against the in creased fare and the service of the Mahoning and Shenango railway and light company and the company's application for approval of a ten cent fare were consolidated before the Public Service Commission. City Solicitor James A. Gardner, of New Castle, objected to the ten-cent fare and attacked the company's service. Ralph J. Baker appeared for the company. Medical officers have been sent by the State Department of Health to aid in the fight against spread of diphtheria in the Shamokin-Mt. Carmel and Monessen districts where large supplies of anti-toxin have been sent. Fewer eases of liog cholera hate been reported to the State Depart ment of Agriculture's bureau of ani mal industry this fall than usual, ac cording to State officials. The quar antine against any shipments of hogs from seventeen eastern counties which was in force during fhn greater part of the summer is be lieved to have been the cause of the few reports this fall. The State Board of Pardons will have three pleas for commutation of the death sentence before it when it holds its October session to-mor row. Those cases were tontinued from the September meeting. They [are from Northampton. Dauphin and Fayette counties. Although the season for Ashing with spears anil gigs in Pennsyl vania streams under the "special de vices" license expires on October 31 numerous applications for the li censes are being received daily at the Department of Fisheries. The department will require returns from the fishermen within two weeks of the close of the season. Attorney Genernl \> lllinni I. Setinf fet- has named J. B. Colahan. Jr.. Phil- I adelphia attorney and former presi dent of the State Bar Association, to act as special deputy attorney gen eral to assist the State Welfare Com mission in the investigation into al legations of rent profiteering in l Philadelphia. Mr. Colahan served as j a member of the Tener Workmen's | Compensation Investigation Commis sion and has had much experience in j legal matters pertaining to real | estate in Philadelphia. Dr. A. J. Gerxon, one of the I'hll | idelpbia educators well known here, has been selected as head of the Wil j liatn Penn Higli School in Philadel phia. to succeed Dr. W. D. Lewis, ap pointed second deputy superintendent of public instruction. Tlie latest story Is that Col. John C. Groome is to be director of pub lic safety in Philadelphia. The head of the State Police is mentioned for the office whenever a new mayor is I about to make up his cabinet. | General John IV. Sehnll. of Xor- I rtslown, former head of the Xa | ticnal Guard, is ill at his home. The Superior Court has upheld ; judgment of the Public Service Com | mission in dismissing the petition of | the Consolidated Telephone Company | for an order to be made by the com mission for connection of its lines | with the Palmerton Telephone Com- I pany. The opinion pointed out that ! while the Public Service Commission has the power to order telephone companies to connect their respec tive lines in order that a continu ous line of communication may be j formed between different localities ! not reached by either company alone, i j nevertheless, the Public Service Com -1 pany law of Pennsylvania clearly ln ! dicates that it was not the legisla j tive intention that all telephone com | panles should be compelled to connect I their lines so that every subscriber j of each of the companies could freely communicate with the subscribers of | the other companies. Governor Sproul returned Inst | night from Philadelphia,'" where he i spent the week end. Public Service Can Not Determine j Considerable interest has been | aroused at the Capitol by the mak- \ I ing permanent of an injunction re- ! ; straining the borough of Sunbur.v j j from buying part of the system of i the Northumberland Gas and Elec- 1 | trie Company with its limits in the ; Northumberland county courts } Judge H. A. Fuller, of Willses- Barre, specially presiding, held that the Borough of Sunbury could not [ proceed to purchase such portion of [the electric system of the plaintiff i as lay within the borough limits, in | that the Borough Code of 1915, au : thorizing a borough to purcnase elec | trie plants, should not be construed jto mean that such purchase could I be made without t he consent of the I vendor nor by means of condemnu tion proceedings; and that in any . cuse the Act contemplated the pur ; chase of an electric plant in its [ entirety and not its dismemberment i by purchasing a part only of a large ] unified system transacting business ' in several counties. In reaching this conclusion Judge j Fuller decided that the Public Ser j vice Commission did not have ex clusive, original jurisdiction in such cases as the matter involved is purely legal question. Its jurisdie- J tion in such cases is to be distin guished from those involving rates or I service. In the latter cases the | Commission as an administrative body has undoubted, exclusive and | original jurisdiction but in the ab | sence of such elements the jtirisdic | tion of the Court to prevent intended wrong to the plaintiff must be j maintained. TOWN HAM, LAC.S York Haven, p a „ Oct. 14. Al though work on the new town hall lis slowly progressing, it will be ! spring before it is completed, it is I said, owing to the difficulty in se ! curing the material. j MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION' J The Suburb Unparalleled.—Adv k House Passes Bill to Bar Policemen From Labor Unions Washington, Oct. 14. Under a I bill passed by the House yesterday j members of the District of Columbia j police force would be forbidden to | join labor organizations. Members of the force last week j voted to give up the charter grant- ' ing their local union a membership i in the American Federation of La- j bor. City to Buy Coal For Fire Houses in Open Market Because no bids were received for j furnishing coal for use in the city tire houses, Commissioner E. Z. Gross secured permission from Council to | buy coal in the open market at least until the tirst of the year. The Commissioners approved the j contract and bond of S. W. Shoe maker and Son, contractor for the I construction of concrete steps ot Summit street, south of Market, j Commissioner W. H. Lynch intro duced an ordinance placing Harvey alley. 90 feet east of Nineteenth street, between Chestnut and Zarker streets, on the city map. and author izing the paving and curbing of Wal nut street, from Ninth to Tenth streets. Council passed finally the ordinance providing for construction of a sewer in Paxton street, Nineteenth to Twen tieth, and awarded contracts to Wil liam H. Opperman for laying water pipes in the following streets; Rolles ten, ?426; Bellevue road, $485; Berk eeley Place, ?256.75. Bernard R. Mausert Is Honored by Dickinson Bernard R. Mausert, new organist of Grace M. E. Church, has just been appointed to the chair of music at Dickinson College in Carlisle. The duties connected with the professor ship will be to conduct an elective courso in the history and art of music, organize and conduct a choral union, direct the Men's Glee Club and organize and conduct a woman's vocal club. The mixed chorus and club for women's voices arc new departures. Professor Mausert has had a wide and successful experience in train ing vocal organizations. Although here only a short time, his work at Grace Church is being favorably commented upon. He has re-or ganize the choir and enlarge it to a membership of nearly fifty singers. Ho also is organizing a male chorus iat the Central Y. M. C. A.. The first [ rehearsal is being held to-night. Thirty men already are enrolled. French Naval Losses Are 27 War Vessels Paris, Oct. 14. (Havas) Twenty-seven war vessels were lost by France during the period of hos tilities, it is shown by an order of the day issued by Georges Leyguos. the minister of marine, citing this number of war craft destroyedw. In cluded in the list are three battle ships, the Danton, the Gaulois and the Suffren. The Danton. of 18.000 tons, was sunk by a German submarine in the Mediterranean on March 19, 1917, with the loss of 296 men. The Gau lois of 11.000 tons, which aided in the Dardanelles bombardment, dur ing which she was damaged but re paired, was likewise torpedoed in the Mediterranean by a German U-boat, on December 27, 1916. The Suffren of 12,500 tons, another of the French fleet at the Dardanelles, was lost with all on board during the engagement, in December, 1916, the German Admiralty announcing that she had been torpedoed and sunk. You'll Say of Pyramid ,r WUat Blessed Relief From the Suffering of Itching, Bleeding or Protruding I'lln." WRITE FOR FREE TIUAE. If you are suffering dreadfully and cannot wait fos the free trial, go to any drug store and get a 60 cent box of Pyramid Pile Treat ment. Take no substitute. Use coupon i for free trial and be convinced. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PTRjUQP rniUQ COMPANY. 677 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Hlcb. ICindlr send me a Free sample of pyramid Pile Treatment, In plain wrapper. Name Street City State Increases Strength ud Vitality ! For mint jeirs. medical authorities here reroanired the wonderful results ob tained by the use of Parto-Glory—"The I Master Nerro Food"—for strengthen- I ing and building up the nerrons srstem arid helping to Impart renewed vitality and energy to the whole body. This moat efficacious nerre food and tonic baa been i used aiicceaafully by thousands of ner- I tous, run down, weakened men and I | women all oyer ths conntry. Comment- I i ing on the results obtained by using Parto-fJlory. Dr. C. M. Jordan, of New > York, formerly TJ. 8. Examining Sur geon for Pensions, saya: "By nourishing, ( soothing and atrrngthening the delicate nerroua ayatera, Parto-Glory inrigoratea the whole body, increases physical pow era and giyca renewed energy and rital ity to run down, nerroua men and wo men, young and old. In my practice I hare prescribed Parto-Glory with moat surprising success for run down condi tions, neryous prostration, nerrous dys pepsia. and other disorders due to weak ened conditions. I know of nothing equal to Parto-Glory." Parto-Glory it for sale hy all good druggists and is guaranteed I I E to gire satisfactory results to every pur- . i I chaser or money refnnded. Partola Mfg. I L Co.. New York. N. Y. 1 3SARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Republican Club Plans For Political Rally 1 Plans are being made for a big supper and candidates' meeting to be ! held by the Harrisburg Republican Club 011 Thursday evening, October ' j 33. 1 | Committees have been appointed to j "77 te Live Store" I "Be Sure of Your Store" Try the Dependable I Doutrich Service I Everybody is Talking About I It's being tried every hour in the day at this "Live Store" by new customers who are anxious to be identified with this "Always Reliable" store, w^ere y° u are always assured of getting greater values, hon est and a hundred per cent satisfaction—lt's so PSBHraf eas y t° r us to please our customers because we have the right jffsgWM of merchandise, plenty of it; then we have the confidence people; earned this lasting good will by square-dealing j| A 1 1 at times. I 1 We know how well it pays, we have § been operating on this basis from the very beginning /k€'M of our business career —There's a lot of people who talk about 3! doing things, but don't get much farther than just talk—We kave the evidence of our better service in the great multitude of satisfied customers who are ready to testify of the growing popularity of this "Always Reliable" Store. jj| I When you want good clothes at more 1 I reasonable prices than you can get anywhere else in I larger selections and more numerous models and fabrics, come 1 tC> Doutrichs; you wiU save time and money, for our immense I stocks contain enough to please the most critical buyer—That's j why most men and young men prefer Doutrichs first, last and i I M I Hart Schaffner & Marx, j j /MM MB Kuppenheimer and I | i| M Society Brand Clothes I I'l Jfe|- Manhattan Shirts I Ail "Stetson Hats" I Copyright 1919, Ilart Schaffner & Marx I arrange for speakers, the supper and I music for the occasion. Members of the club and all candidates on the Republican ticket will die entertain ed. If possible Governor William C. Sproul will be present and arrange ments are being made for addresses by Lieutenant Governor Edward E. Beidlemaji. Secretary of Internal Af fairs, James F. Woodward, Attorney General William 1. Schafter and Au- j | ditor General Charles A. Snyder. I 32-Foot Giant Skeleton Is Reported Found in Mexico Mexico City, Oct. It.—The fossil ized remains of a giant measuring more than 32 feet 10 inches in 1 height were, according to report, re OCTOBER 14, 1919. cently discovered by workers near the little village of Nanacaoß'pa, State of Vera Cruz. The natives, who still cling to many of the traditions of their In dian ancesters, declared the giant was related to the gods of their fore fathers. They erected a catafalque in the plaza upon which the giant rested In state for many days. The discovery attracted the at- 1 13 tention of scientists here. Manuel Gamio, director of anthropology at the National Museum, expects to leave soon for Nanacamilpa to In vestigate. He is inclined to believe the fossil is that of a prehistoric ver tebrate not human. MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION The Suburb Unparalleled.—Adv. ■* if •u
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers