18 Cannon's Charge Delays Final Vote on Rehabilitation Bill Washington. Oct. 17.—Declaration by Representative Cannon. Republi can. Illinois, during debate yesterday in the House on the vocational re habilitation bill that Chairman Hays, of the Republican National Commit tee. had "ordered" Republican leaders to pass the measure, stirred up a political row which coupled with -ex tended discussion postponed a final vote. Representative Cannon declared that word was passed out among the HELP YOUR DIGESTION When acid-distressed, relieve the indigestion with kI'MOIDS Dissolve easily on tongue—as pleasant to take as candy. Keep your storrach sweet, try Ki-moids. MADE BY SCOTT A BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTTS EMULSION ROMAN AUTOMOBILE CO. MOVES INTO ITS OWN NEW HOME 231 N. Broad St ROADSTERS TOURINGS ENCLOSED CARS 1.000 to Select From. $250 Up. Easy Terms. See Us and Save Money Roman Auto Co. 231 N. BROAD ST. PHILADELPHIA Catalogue Sent Vpon Request Live Agents Wanted I' Absolutely No Pain JH' My latest lrspi-OTrd appli \amt- men, Including aa oi)Brn- - *V.^ lard air apparatus, makes v\ extracting and all dental .t\ ffitr'U work paattlrcly palnleaa aJ * ■O' " nd *■ perfectly harm- (Axe no abler tlon^^^T EXAMINATION J? ui^Ti TJOrT Fllllog IB allTer rKiilli A alloy 50e _______ TGold frowm and ,y bridge work, CK IJ& A _ . . . Office open dally, &30 ?lS . to 6 P. M.J Monday, Graduate Wedaeadny and Sat- BELL J p ,t ". * P " *' HARRISBURG, PA. It jtjnt bnrt a bit j l ulled suites lood Administration License No. G35305 I 432 MARKET STREET Specials for Saturday, Oct. 18,1919. Morning Specials until 12 noon. I Picnic Hams, any size, lb 22c I Sliced Bacon, lb 35c £ Choice Veal Chops, lb 22c I Choice Lamb Chops, lb 20c I Fresh Sausage Links, lb 25c I Fresh Pudding, lb 20c B. B. Butterine, 2 lb. rolls, 65c lb. ... 33c Choice Chuck Roast, lb 18c All Day Specials Top Ribs and fleshy boil, lb 16c Sliced Liver, 2 lb. for 15c lb 8c Small Fresh Hearts, lb 12c Club or Pin Steak, lb. 24c I Compound used as Lard, lb 25c English Corned Beef, lb 1254 c Neck Bones and Pig Snouts, lb. .... 15c Garlic Links, Smoked Sausage and Butchers* Bologna, lb. ! 22c Fresh fish direct from net, lb 1254 c 65 Markets in Principal Cities of 15 States Main Office—Chicago. 111. Packing' House—Peoria, 111. ? All Meals If. S. Government Inspected All Goods Purchased Guaranteed or Money Refunded FRIDAY EVENING* Republicans that "you must vote for this measure; Hays wants it." Republican Leader Mondell denied the former Speaker's assertion and explained that Mr. Hays when his opinion was asked regarding: the bill, said it was an "excellent measure but did not "volunteer any sugges tions." Detective Wounded in Battle Among Striking Employes By Associated Press Cincinnati. 0., Oct. 17.—Former I Chief of Detectives William L. 1 Ximmo, of Cincinnati, was shot in 1 the left arm and right leg. and at ; least three others were wounded 1 during a fierce battle among strik , ing employes of the Andrews Steel : Company. Newport, Ky., a suburb of ' Cincinnati, and strike-breakers and : guards who were leaving the plant i at the close of the day's work late yesterday. Rifles, shotguns and pistols were 1 used and more than 100 shots were exchanged. In addition to Nimmo. Newport authorities have obtained the names of the following wounded: William L. Fields. Ccvington. shot through right leg; Carl Brusehaber, Clifton. Ky.. shot in face and thigh, and John Duroth, Cincinnati, shot in head, not serious. Strikers, it is said, had been as sembled along the Licking Pike for several hours before the affray with the intention of intercepting the men working at the plant. Witnesses were unable to say who fired the first shot. Are you rS having yyy trouble J with your skin? If you have eczema, ringworm or sim ilar itching, burning, sleep-destroying skin-eruption, try Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and see how quickly the gching stops and the trouble disappears. Resincl Soap iod Resinol Ointment are sold br all dmsjisis. For samples, free, write to Dept. J-R, Resiac:, Bauimnre, bid. Xt wsdrr (An/ ResinolH makes tick skins well STATE CORN CROP SMASHES RECORDS Goes Over 74,000,000 Bushels, 1 According to Official Fig ures Compiled Pennsylvania has gotten into the corn state class. Figures compiled at 1 the statistical bureau of the State j ' | Department of Agriculture indicate a - , i yield that will smash all previous Key- ] i I stone State records and approximate ( | 74.176,000 bushels. This figure is ; • l away beyond any hopes last spring, j i and at the prevailing prices of corn j will mean big sums of money to the!- farmers. } , While the corn is thus a bumper I crop, the acreage yield of wheat has j , gone below the ten year average, and , there has also been a slump in oats | J but potatoes have been sising up bet- 1 . ter than last year, and buckwheat i i will go beyond the high mark of J9IS. j The official statements on the i crops are: Wheat—The average yield of wheat Its estimated at 17.7 bushels as com pared with 15.3 bushels last year and a 10-year average of IS.I bush j els per acre. The total production is estimated at 28,011,000 as compared with 26.023.500 bushels last year. The increase in acreage accounts for | the difference in the total. Condi tions for wheat were ideal and a record crop was expected until May when excessive rains prevented j proper fertilization. Then insect pests and plant diseases, together with storms before harvest and while the grain was in shock, blasted the | hopes of the Pennsylvania farmers. Last year conditions improved as harvest approached and this year it | was the reverse. The quality of j wheat is estimated at 91 per cent compared with 103 per cent one year ago. Rye—lt appears that the yield of rye is 17.0 bushels per acre. The average yield last year was 17.5 bushels and the 10-year average is 17.4 bushels per acre. The total production amounts to 4.736.800 bushels as against 4,676.500 bushels last year. Oats—The average yield of oats !is 29.6 bushels per acre, making a -total production of 33.546,500 bush- I els. Last year's yield was 39 bush els per acre, and the total produc tion 44,103.000 bushels. The 10-year I average is 32.6 bushels per acre. ! Quality of oats this year is S9 per i cent. Barley—The average afield of bar ley is estimated at 24.9 bushels per acre and the total production 348,600 bushels. Corn—Present indications are that - the average yield of corn will reach 4 7 bushels per acre, and. considering the larg:e acreage, the total produc tion will approximate 74.176,000 bushels. This is the largest corn crop ever produced in Pennsylvania. Weather conditions were very favor- 1 able during the growing season, and < the crop has matured without dam- ' age by frost. i Buckwheat The conditions of |. buckwheat is 92 per cent and is in- . dicative of a yield of 21.0 bushels per acre. On this basis the total production will approximate 6,662,- 000 bushels. Last year's crop was estimated at 6,191.600 bushels. Potatoes—The condition of pota toes on October 1 is SO per cent and | forecasts an average yield of 94 I bushels per acre and a total produc tion of 26.863,000 bushels. The average yield last year was 83.5 i bushels per acre and the total pro duction 24.733.000 bushels. The late | potatoes are a better yield than the J early ones. Considerable rot has j been reported, more particularly in j the northern part of the State, due j to blight and wet weather. - Tobacco—The acreage of tobacco I is S per cent below last year. Con- I dition is 85 per cent of a normal ( and indicates a yield of 1,343 pounds per acre and a total production of 50,832,500 pounds. The crop last year was estimated at 58,007,000 pounds. Pasture—The condition of pasture | is 98 per cent compared with a nor mal and indicates that pastures and j meadows are in very good condition, j America Suffers 553 Casualties in Archangel Fighting By Associated Press Washington. Oct. 17.—American ■ participation in Northern Russian i hostilities in nd around Archangel ; resulted in a total of 553 casualties, j according to a complete record j ! which the War Department give out. . Of the total casualties given. 109 ; were due to deaths in battle: thirty- ; five to deaths from wounds; eighty- [ cne from disease, and nineteen from i accidents and other causes. There j were 305 wounded, and four pris- | oners, all of whom were released. Goethals Heads New Corporation to Promote U. S. Foreign Trade New York. Oct. 17. General ! George W. Goethals, builder of the Panama Canal, was elected president of the American Ship and Commerce Corporation, recently organized for the promotion of foreign trade un der the American flag. The cor poration has acquired a majority in terest in the William Crap Ship and Engine Building Company of Phila delphia and the Kerr Navigation i Corporation of this city. Kermit Roosevelt, son of the former Presi dent, was secretary of the corpora tion. Loses Fight For Corner Lot in Cemetery Judge C. V. Henry, who presided i at the hearing of the equity suit brought by S. S. Pick, of Millersburg, j against the Oak Hill Cemetery As- : sociation, handed down an opinion yesterday afternoon. Mr. Pick asked i the court for an order to compel j the cemetery association to reopen I certain streets in the cemetery which j had been closed and laid out in lots - to be sold for burial purposes. He ; contended he had purchased a corner lot, but by closing a t treet I running beside it he lost the ad- i vantage of the corner. The cemetery association con- ! tended it had the right to close j streets, so long as it did not deprive | any owner from reasonable access ; to his lot. Judge Henry ruled in 1 favor of the cemetery association | and dismissed the bill of complaint. The court said the right to change ] the plan of lots was properly exer cised by the board of managers and ; that it had the right to close streets if owners of lots were wot deprived of acpess to them. TO HAVE SEWING FACTORY Glen Rock. Pa., Oct. 17. Glen Rock is to have its third sewing factory, another plant to be located by Oppenheim, ObendorlT. a Balti more concern, which has lease J the Wambaugh building. Forty ma chines will be installed. HABRISBURO TELEGRAPE TREATY DELAY 1 BARSAMERICA U. S. Not Allowed on Co-ordi- i nation Commission Until Pact Is Ratified By Associated Press Paris, Thursday, Oct. 16.—Imme diately after formal ratification of the Treaty of Peace with Germany, j the Supreme Council of the Peace Conference will probably name a co- ! ordination commission, the duties of j which will be to decide what bodies ; shall have jurisdiction over matters i | not definitely assigned by the Treaty, j This commission will, in a wav, i carry on part of the work which has been performed by the Supreme ! Council, which is expected to close i i within weeks. Manifestly, the United States can- I . not be represented on this co-ordi- i nation committee until she ratifies i i the Treaty. General regret is ap- J parent over the impossibility to start , off all the commissions created un- I der the Treaty with a full niembor- I ship from the great powers, as it | would be much simpler if all the j permanent members of the various commissions could begin work simultaneously. Civil Administration In the Rhineland, the Belgian, French and British members of the inter-allied commission, of which an | ! American will he the fourth mem- j ] her, will be probably empowered I j by their governments to proceed with civil adminlstratioaJn spite of | the fact the Rhiaeland convention t j requires American co-operation. In ! j American occupied territory, mili- ! j tary control will be continued by ! I common consent until the United j j States Senate ratifies the Treaty and i makes the establishment of civil ! government possible. The co-ordination commission will ! have lesser powers than those held ! by the Supreme Council. Its mem- | hers will not be plenipotentiaries, j but will be required to refer tm- ! portant matters to their various for- ! eign offices for decision. This com- j mission will deal only with matters i relating to the German Treaty,#and j will not indulge in the general dis- ; cussion of Russian. Turkish and i other international problems. The i creation of the co-ordination com- I mission will end the "international j I foreign office." as the Supreme | Council has been termed. The va- j rious foreign offices will function as usual. The work of the American dele- i gation will be largely advisory, but j there is a general disposition to con- ' suit American representatives on all i important matters relative to the I execution of the Treaty terms. FALLS ILL IX STREET An Australian, identified only us [ "Steve," is in the Harrisburg Hos- i pital in a serious condition from ' convulsions. He was picked up bv I the ambulance at Second and Pine I streets. r-I A Dlf'C 300 MARKET ST. O 306 BROAD ST. Sample Sachet Djer-Kiss 10c Azurea 10c Garden Fragrance ...10c Fiancee 10c Ointments $l.OO Resinol Ointment ...37c, 73c 50c Mentholatum 17c, 33c Musterine 19c, 39c 25c Sassafola 18c Mustard Ointment 18c 60c Musterine J 9c, 39c 50c Armstrong's Croup Oint ment 39c 60c Doan's Ointment 49c 50c lodex 3'Jc 50c Hobson's Eczema Ointment, 40c Vick's Vapo Rub 19c, 5-Jc Palmer's Skin Success 19c Cuticura Ointment 42c Musterole 19c, 39c Poslam Ointment 40c Cuticura Ointment 19c, 39c Toilet Waters Djer-Kiss Toilette $1.45 Djer-Kiss Toilet Vegetale ... .$1.19 Mavis Toilet Water $1.19 Pinaud's Lilac Toilet Water ...75c Mary Garden Toilet Water .. .$3.59 Special Sale of Drugs F. E. Cascara Sagrada Aromatic, 3-oz. bottle 25c Cascara Sagrada •. 25c Aromatic Spirits Ammonia, 2-oz. bottle 35c Sweet Spirits of Nitre, 2-oz. bottle 35c Spirits Camphor, 3-oz. bottle, .55c Tine. Arnica, 3-oz. bottle 55c Tine. lodine, 2-oz. bottle 35c Comp. Licorice Powder, 1-0z... .10c Ess. Pepsin, 3 ozs 40c Camphorated Oil, 3 ozs 45c Soap Liniment, 3 ozs 45c Special Sale of Tooth Brushes 25c Tooth Brush 20c 35c Tooth Brush 28c 45c Tooth Brush 33c 50c Tooth Brush 40c 60c Tooth Brush 50c WRITING PAPER 20c Rajah Paper 14c 45c Aurevoir Paper 37c 85c Spirea Lawn 65c 35c Robin's Lawn 28c Clarence R. Lewis, Prominent Clubman, Victim of Apoplexy Philadelphia. Oct. 17.—Clarence R. Lewis, prominent in Philadelphia business circles and a notable fig ure in club life here, died sudden ly late yesterday afternoon in the Rittenhouse Club. Apoplexy Is thought to hye been the cause of death. He \\Ws 60 years of age, and was.a bachelor. Although an active memoer of a number of clubs, he spent most of his time at the Rittenhouse. and it was there, surrounded by a circle of intimate friends, that the end came. Clarence R. Lewis was senior member of the firm of C. R. Lewis & Co., wine merchants. Ho had been a member of the First City Troop since ISSO. He served in the Spanish-American War as lieuten ant of Battery A and also saw active service in Porto Rico. Secretary Glass Signs Check For $2,648,309,171 Washington, Oct. 17.—Secretary Glass yesterday put his name to a check for $2,648,309,171.53, said to have been the largest ever drawn. It was made payable to the treasurer of the United States, but did not in volve a transfer of that amount of money. It was made necessary to account for redemptions of certifi cates of indebtedness and other ob ligations in June. The largest check ever drawn on the treasury for outgoing money was $200,000,000, which was loaned to Great Britain. USES COMMON YELLOW MUSTARD FOR CHEST COLDS AND SORETHROAT Old Fashioned Simple Home Remedy Much Used by Doc tcis and Nurses for Inflam mation, Congestion. Aches, Pains and Swellings. Mustard, real yellow mustard, the ; kind you use at home, is being used more than ever to banish distress and 1 misery and free mankind from agony and suffering. Not very ions ago people used to make yellow mustard into a paste, t pread it on a cloth and apply it to that part of the body where pain or inflammation was present. It surely did do the work it was expected to do. but it was mussy and bothersome and often blistered the skin. People still use yellow mustard when they get a cold in the chest or 1 have pleurisy, lumbago or rheumatic pains and swellings. But nowadays they buy this yellow mustard in condensed form aU'reajv for use for something like 30 cents a box one tind it much better, cheaper and cleaner than mustard plasters. This yellow mustard preparation, which is known to millions as Begv's i CIGARS AT USUAL CUT PRICES Baby Foods Nestle's Food 45c Horliclj's Malted Milk, 38c, 73c, s $2.75 Imperial Granum 21c, 58c 75c Mellin's Food 55c 75c Peptogenic Milk Powder...s9c 4 Can Eagle Brand Condensed Milk 98c Sugar of Milk, 1 lb., Merck's. . .77c Anti-Colic Nipple 5c Toilet Creams Pompeian Nigh Cream 27c De Meridor Cream v .. 33c Pond's Vanishing Cream 32c Othine, Double Strength 67c Sanitol Cold Cream 24c Pompeian Day Cream 39c Mercolized Wax 69c Hind's Honey & Almond Cream, 39c Frostilla 19c Oriental Cream $1.09 Orchard White 28c De Meridor Liquid Powder ... 37c Mum Deodorant 19c Delatone Hair Remover 69c Toilet Soap Packer Tar Soap 19c Jergen's Violet Glycerine, 3 for 25c Germicidal Soap 17c Resin<il t 19c Johnson's Foot Soap 19c Pear's Scented Soap 22c Pear's Unscented Soap 14c Palmolive Soap, 3 for 25c Shaving Items $5.00 Gillette Razor $3.75 $l.OO Gem Razor 83c 6 Gillette Blades 40c Violet Toilet Water 42c Mennen's Shaving Cream 42c 1 Pt. Best Witch Hazel 38c 1 Pt. Imported Bay Rum 89c Lather Brushes 35c Styptic Pencils 5c German Budget Body Indignant When They Learn Allied Army Costs By Associated Press Iterlln, Wednesday, Oct. 10.—Indig. nation was expressed to-day by mem- j bors of the budget commission of the i national assembly when the national | treasurer announced the cost of! maintaining Entente armies of occu pation and various control commls- ' sions would be from 2.500.000,000 to j 3.000,000,000 marks annually. The j : minister added that the drain on the I national defenses would "eventually j reaction the Entente." and expressed I the hope that the size of the occu ! pying armies would be gradually re | duced. ! Socialist and Democratic deputies declared the Entente demands "ex-| cocded all limits of moderation," and charged the troops were indulging in "extravagances at Germany's ex pense." Four leading Berlin hotels have been requisitioned for the ac i commodation of Inter-Allied missions I which are expected to arrive next' j week. A government official told the budget commission to-day that efforts j to induce the Entente to reduce the j size of these missions had been futile. POST TO MEET I The Harrisburg Post of the Travel ] ers' Protective Association, will be organized on Saturday evening. Octo ber 25. in the Penn-Harris Hotel. Alex McQuilkin. secretary of the Pennsylvania division, will deliver the charter. The Penn-Harris will be the headquarters of the new post. MEMORIAL PARK ADDITION The Suburb Unparalleled.—Adv. Muctatlne. is sold at drug stores all over America and one box will do the' | work of 5o mustard plasters and it ] cannot blister the tenderest skin. i Begy's Mustarine is the original : ' mustard preparation used to take the i place of blistering mustard plasters' : and is known among druggists as the' | quickest painkiller on earth. l lt will pay you to keep a box of : Begy s Mustarine in the house, for it ; !is good for so many ailments thai i Son will need it often. Just rub it on. that's all you have' to do and headache, backache, ear-1 ache and toothache will disappear ai- I | most instantly. Don't fail to use it for neuritis, neu j ralgia. sciatica, lumbago, gout and' sheumatie pains and swellings. Vou will quickly find that there is i nothing so good for sprains and | strains, sore muscles, stiff neck and; cramps in leg. ' Heat eases pain and Begy's Mus tarine made of real yellow mustard I with other helpful ingredients added contains more concentrated, non-I bliftiring heat than can be found in' any licx the same size. Just try a 30-cent box—vou 11! ; praise it to the skies as millions are I noing every day. Always in the yel-' i low tox. I Face Powders Lov-Me Face Powder 58c Mary Garden Face Powder ....75c Garden Fragrance Powder .... 68c Laßlache Face Powder 42c L'Me Face Powder 19c, 39c Mavis Face Powder 37c ♦ Pompeian Face Powder 39c Carmen Face Powder 33c Woodbury's Face Powder 18c Mtlbaline Face Powder 21c Melba Face Powder 43c Dorin's Rouge 1249 39c J.arge Ripe Cordial Cherries prepar ed by master confectioners, so tliat the full, rich flavor is retained, anil cover ed with famous Lady Helen Chocolate. A month-melting, tempting confection. Kqual to any .$1.25 per pound chocolates made in the world. Our Special Candy Sale Price, the full pound, 64c Talcums Mennen's Talcum 19c Waltz Dream Talcum 28c Riveris Talcum ...7 19c Colgate Talcum 18c Mavis Talcum ....*, 19c Mary Garden Talcum 45c Squibb's Talcum 17c Williams' Talcum 18c Hudnut's Talcum 18c Melba Talcum 21c Johnson's Baby Talcum 15c Babcock's Butterfly Talcum ... 19c Love Me Talcum 21c Pills and Tablets $l.OO Nuxated Iron Tablets . .• 69c $l.OO Nature Remedy Tablets . .73c 75c Bell-Ans 45c 50c Williams' Pink Pills 37c 50c Cascarets 39c 25c Edwards' Olive Tablets .. 17c 25c Beecham's Pills 17c 60c Doan's Kidney Pills 42c 25c Miles' Pain Pills 19c 100 5-grain Cascara Tablets .. .39c 100 5-grain Aspirin Tablets ... 85c 100 5-grain Blaud's Iron Pills.. 19c 100 Alophen Pills . 55c $l.OO Dewitt's Kidney Pills ...67c 30c Grove's Bromo Quinine .. 19c OCTOBER 17, 1919. :r REAL "INSIDE" INFORMATION When Constipated, Bilious, Headachy, Take "Cascarets" for Liver and Bowels—No "Shake Up" Are you keeping your bowels, liver, and stomach clean, pure, and fresh with Cascarets. or merely whipping them into action every few days with Salts. Cathartic Pills, Oil. or Purga tive Waters? Stop having a bowel washday, l.et Cascarets gently cleanse and regu late the stomach, remove the sour and fermenting food and foul gases. is a difference * in price between a good used car and a poor one, but that difference is your protection ■ && Cadillac-Hinton Co. 315 S. Cameron St. Harrisburg, Pa. One 1919 New Haines Seven Passenger—Excellent Value PHONE 3392 take the excess bile from the liver , and carry out of the colon and j bowels all the constipated waste mat - I ter and poisons so you can straighten ■ up. j Cascarets to-night will make you feel great by morning They work ■while you s'eep—never gripe, sicken, or cause any Inconvenience, ths£ ! cost so little too. Dental Preparations Suprema Tooth Paste 18c Pepsodent Tooth Paste 37c Pyrrocide Powder 73c Lyon's Tooth Powder 17c Colgate's Tooth Powder 15c Calox Tooth Powder 18c Euthymol Tooth Paste 17c Colgate's Tooth Paste. .10c and 25c Forhan's Tooth Past. .. 20c and 39c Kolynos Tooth Paste 19c S. S. White Tooth Paste 17c Senreco Tooth Paste 23c Kalpheno Tooth Paste 21c Peroxide Tooth Paste 21c Hair Preparations Herpicide 39c, 79c Hay's Hair Health 34c, 67c 75c Q-Ban Hair Restorer 49c $1.25 Goldman's Hair Restorer, 98c 50c Emulsified Cocoanut 0i1...38c Danderine 21c, 41c, 69c $l.OO Wyeth Sage and Sulphur, 45c, 67c 60c Parisian Sage 39c Packer's Tar Shampoo 41c Sage and Sulphur 79c 75c Damschinsky's Dye 65c 50c Beta-Quinol 39c • ' Patent Medicines $l.OO Syrup of Pepsin 39c Swamp-Root 39c, 71c 60c California Syrup of Figs...37c Glyco Thymoline ...19c, 39c, 79c $1.20 Sal Hepatica 75c 85c Jad Salts 53c $1.20 Bromo Seltzer 75c Scott's Emulsion 45c, 89c $l.OO Wampole's C. L. Extract, 65c Sloan's Liniment 39c, 77c 50c Usoline Oil 38c $l.OO Vinol. 79c Father John's Medicine .. 39c, 79c $l.lO Miles' Nervine ...-, 79c $1.25 Pierce's Medicines 78c $1.50 Fellow's Hypophosphites, $1.05 60c St. Jacob's Oil 39c Tanlac 79c Home Needs Lavoris 19c, 37c, 77c 2 Packages Lux 23c Boric Acid, J/ 2 -lb 11c Aladdin Dyes 8c Witch Hazel, 1 Pint 38c Nichols Cleaning Fluid 21c Ice Caps 89c Seidlitz Powder 22c Listerine 19c, 37c, 69c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers