DAUPHIN MEN ARE SELECTED Physicians Appointed For Medical Inspection of Schools —Upper Enders Named Medical inspec i\\ 9 // J ! tors of schools to \ \\ go on immediate yy\\\|frjk duty in the State f school inspection work, were ap pointed for more than a. score of 11 -nwlWltfftWtf districts by Col. Edward Martin, jya"" \ State. Commis sioner of Health, The inspectors named and their districts, follow: Dauphin county, Paxtang borough, Dr. G. G. Snyder; Elizabethville, Jackson and Wash ington townships. Dr. C. J. B. Flow ers; Schuylkill county, Tower City, Dr. O- M. Knauber; Tremont borough and Frailey township, Dr. A. E. Simonie; East Union and North Union townships, Dr. Harry K. Hobbs; Pine Grove borough, Pine Grove township, West Pine Grove district, Dr. R. W. Lenker; Girardville borough, Reilley and Tremont townships, Dr. J. F. Murphy, Pottsville; Washington county. Cokeburg, Dr. W. L. Bot kin; Marianna, Dr. Jr. F. Cobb; McDonald borough and Cecil town- THE GLOBE We Are Not in Business for Our Health We want to make money and know full well that it's better business for us to sell 500 ! Suits at $35, S4O, $45 than 300 suits at S7O. Even though we would do SI,OOO less busi ness it's better for us to satisfy 500 men than 300. Men who want / the most value and style for their clothing dollars ' should see the wonder ful Suits and Overcoats we offer at $35, S4O and $45. f The Globe ' Mint Jell tTry Mint Jiffy-Jell with roast lamb or cold meats. It is vastly better than mint sauce. Try Jiffy-Jell desserts with their real fruit flavors in essence form, in vials. Each is so rich in condensed fruit juice that it makes* a real fruit dainty. Yet they cost no more than old-style gelatine desserts. JO Flavor*, at Your Croeor'v 2 Pachagov for 25 Cant* TUESDAY EVENING, I ship, Dr. W. A. LaUoss; Blaine township. Dr. K. W. Wolf. TUylor town; West Brownsville, Dr. W. D. Crawford; Union township, Dr. G. B. Lamp; Lebanon county, Lebanon Independent, Dr. John L. Groh, Jr.; Tioga county. Liberty borough and Bloss township, Dr. J. K. Davics; Berk's county, Lower and South Heidelburg townships, Dr. C. S. Reber, West Handing; Beaver coun ty, Harmony nnd Economy town ships. Dr. John H. Boal, Freedom: Clearfield county, Burnside borough and Greenwood township. Dr. W. C. Brown; Lancaster county, Christi ana borough and Sadsbury town ship. Dr. T. S. Irwin; Lycoming county, Nippenose, PiAtt, Porter nnd Watson townships. Dr. L. M. Good man, Jersey Shore; Somerset coun ' ty, Somerset township, Dr. James E. Dull; Tioga county, Liberty town ship, Dr. G. D. Castlebury. Health officers have been namen us follows: Lancaster county, Little Britain and Fulton townships, John C. Fulton; Dauphin county. Lykens township, Thomas G. Lentz, Eliza bet hville. I. M. Bulfington, of Gratz, has been appointed registrar for Gratz and Lykens township, Dauphin county. Dr. W. J. Ezickman has been ap pointed chief of the genito-urinary dispensary, Phipps Institute. Phila delphia, and Dr. Clifford H. Arnold as first assistant at the Chester City Dispensary. Pius Glessner, Somerset, has been appointed manager- of farms at the Hamburg Sanitorium. The State Highway Department has turned into the State Treasury $6,000 realized from the fees for | sets of plans and specifications lor I State roads. For years the State furnished such plans for nothing or required a deposit fee. Recently a fee of $2.60 for all plans was es tablished, the plans to be the prop erty of the contractor paying for ' them. The big demand for plans is reflected in the payment made to- I day. i Slate experts nre investigating re ports of the appearance of the dreaded European corn borer in northern counties. Some samples of borers have been obtained, but it is not certain whether they are t*he de i slructive pest or some native borers. J i Permission was granted by the j Public Service Commission last II night for the Southern Pennsylvania |! Traetion Company, operating in 111 Deleware county, to reduce a rate | of trolley fare from eight to seven • | eents on one day's notice. The 11 company some time ago announced i! nn advance in fares from six to I { eight cents, effecttve October 26. ! I Complaints were filed from people '! living on the Darby and Media Di | ■ vision and the company applied for permission to reduce the new fare ,j to seven cents. C. L. S. Tingley. i president of the company, appeared 1 in person. i Ex-Attorney General \V. S. Kirk | patrick, of Easton, and several at- I torneys from Easton, Bethlehem | and Allentown, appeared before the ; Public Service Commission to argue i the complaint of the Lehigh Valley | Transit Company against the tolls \ on what is known as the New Street I Bridge. The transit company, rais- I ed its fares to meet the tolls and | complaint was filed agjainst it. The ! Commission also heard the attor ; iieys for the North Branch Transit ] Company, the complainant not ap- I pearing. The Commission gave ,' considerable time to the Johnson , | complaint that the Philadelphia I Suburban Gas and Electric Com j pany had refused to extend gas | mains in Springfield township, Dele j ware county. The Shubert theater i complaint against installation charges of the Philadelphia Electric j Company was continued. State Market officials were to-day | making some inquiries about the ; charge of twenty-five and twenty L eight cents made for brown sugar in j Harrisburg. The sugar situation has ! been a subject of interest at the ,' Capitol in view of the possibility I that the steady increases here"may | conflict with some State laws. The State Board of Pardons lias | started listing cases for the Novem ! ber meeting. At least one first de ! gree case will be on the calendar. A of change* has taken place in the Department of Public Grounds | , and Buildings the last few days, I which affect people connected with I I the Capitol and the Eecutive Mansion |as well. R. L. Gilchrist, one of the : clerks, has been transferred to the ! resident engineers office which is in ! charge of bridge and other construc tion; Claude Thomas, of Scranton. has 1 been appointed a stenographer, suc | ceeding Miss Mary Mark, stenograph i er, who takes a position with the Public Service Commission, where she ' was formerly employed; Stephen W. I Cross, of Pottsville, has been named ias file clerk. These charmen have j been named: Fred W. Darrow, De j Witt Franklin, Thomas Gosney, Al i bert C. Johnson and Edward Tate, of ! this city. Lucy Ray has been ap l pointed cook at the Executive Man | sion and Ottiia Grant appointed ■ housemaid. 1 ( hnrlrs Johnson, Deputy Auditor ! General. Is being congratulated by i his friends upon his election to the I presidency of the People's National I Bank, of Norristown, of which he has been long a stockholders. 1 The Hnrrtsburg Railways Company I yesterday paid the State $28,671.09 j as State tax. I The' State Game Commission lius | authorized persons securing hunt | ers" licenses in counties where no arm tags are available owing to the | demand having exhausted the supply ,to make their own tags. Such per • sons must display on the tag the county and serial number and have their receipt for payment of the license at hand when asked Lieutenant-Governor E. E. J'.(idle man will speak to-night at Cham bersburg and at Pittsburgh on Sat urday. Insurance Commissioner Donald son is in New York in connection with the Pittsburgh Life and Trust Company affairs. Karl B. I/ohmiui. engineer in the Town Planning Division of the Bureau of Municipalities of the De partment of Internal Affairs, has returned from Renovo where he made a preliminary study of a ploi of ground which will be developed for park purposes. The Public Service Commission to , day cleared up hearings in short or der and went into executive session on the jitney regulation enforcement. Reports on hearings held last week ir: Philadelphia and Pittsburgh and an outline of the situation in those citieß and also in Scranton, Reading, Erie and other places was presented. The .first applications under the new regulations will be acted upon to-day and some announcement regarding the plans for enforcement outside of the two large cities is expected. Governor William C. Sproul, who Is in Massachusetts making speeches foy the Republican gubernatorial can didate, will arrange within a short time for a conference of mayors and district attorneys similar to that held in Massachusetts recently to discuss means to end profiteering. Attorney General A.' Mitchell Palmer is to be the chief speaker. GifTpril I'ineliol. who was here for the Roosevelt meeting, spent some time at the Capitol, going into the Slate Forestry situation. He is pre paring a report of the way he be lieves the timber cutting operations shell hi bj h ■■ : wb.U'Jl b^ub i mittcd at the meeting of the State Forest Commission next month. Commissioner of Health Kduoril Martin, accompanied by Assistant En gineer Stephenson and Dr. Dorothy Childs, left to-day for Scranton, to attend the series of meetings sched uled for that city medical man and others. Secretary of Interaal Affairs James F. Woodward was in Philadelphia to day. Owing to the funeral of Judge J. Henry Williams in Philadelphia to day the appellate courts suspended sittings. 11. A. McKrndry. nn Acker follower and an anti-Vare man, has been nam ! Ed as the chief clerk tp the Phlladel i phia registration commission to suc ceed the late Hampton S. Thomas. tin vo rll or Sprout yesterday named the State Board of Public Charities to make the investigation demanded by Philadelphia people into the af fairs of the Eastern Penitentiary.* It will begin at once. Considerable Interest was manifest ed at the Capitol to-day in the test I suit in Philadelphia' to-day over the | right of Osteopathic practitioners to I prescribe drugs. It is in the Phila i delphia Common Pleas Court, and 1 State Boards are represented. Insurance Ratings Will Be Announced The Pennsylvania Compensation Rating and insurance Bureau, has sent out to all members of the Bureau the following letter received from In surance Commissioner Thomas B. Donaldson in reference to experience rating: -The experience rating plan here tofore in use is based upon the rates container in the Pennsylvania Man ual in 1918 and is not applicable in certain respects to the manual of rates which becomes effective Janu ary 1, 1920. Experience rates are I calculated prospectively, so that all experience rates calculated hereafter will be concomitant in effective date with the new manual of rates. At the earliest practicable date you will kindly call a meeting of the act uarial committee to make such fur ther modification as may be neces sary. "Second. In calculating the experi ence rates, until such time as the actuarial committee may have form ally established splits between death and permanent, on the one hand, and medical and temporary, on the other hand, you will follow the splits indicated by the Pennsylvania sched. ule Z experience recently compiled for the policy years 1916 and 1917. "Third. Jn calculating the experi ence rate upon any risk which has developed losses of SIOO,OOO or more, during 'the experience period, both the schedule and manual rate shall be ignored." Claim New Rates Break Contracts Complaints that new rates of the Metropolitan Edison Electric Com pany. of Reading, violate long-time contracts and are discriminatory have been filed with the Public Ser vice Commission by a number of Berks and Lebanon county iron and steel concerns. The new rates were recently announced. The complain ants are the Bethlehem Steel Com pany, Carpenter Steel Company, Reading Steel Casting Company, Parish Manufacturing Company, Dives, Pomeroy and Stewart, and A. Wilhelm and Company, of Reading; Bethlehem Steel Company, Lebanon Valley Iron and Steel Company, Lebanon Steel Foundry Company and Luria Brothers and Company, of Lebanon; E. and G. Brooke Iron Company, and Birdsboro Steel Foun dry and Machine Company, of Birds boro. fIiBELLION | IN STOMACH | "Pape's Diapepsin" at once ends Indigestion and | • Sour, Acrd Stomach Lumps of undigested food cause pain. If your stomach is :n a re volt; if sick, gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented and turned sour; head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate undigested food—just take a tablet or two of Pape's Diapepsin to help neutralize acidity and in five mirr utes you wonder what became of the pain, acidity, indigestion and dis tress. If your stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebel lion; if your food is a damage in stead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless stomach antacid is Rape's Diapepsin, which costs so little at drug Giilii. 1 Tells How to Stop a 1 P Bad Cough K Surprising results from this famous *5 old home-made syrup. Easily 0 prepared and coats Httle. e If you have a severe cough or chest cold accompanied with soreness, throat tickle, hoarseness, or difficult breath ing, or if your child wakes up during the night with croup and you want quirk help, try this reliable old home made cough remedy. Any druggist can supply you with iy f ounces of Pinex. •Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. Or you can use clarified mo lasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup, if desired. This recipe makes a pint of really remarkable cough remedy. It tastes good, and in spite of its low cost, it can be depended upon to give quick and lasting relief. You can feel this take hold of a cough in a way that means business. It loosens and raises the phlegm, stops throat tickle and soothes and heals the irritated membranes that line the throat and bronchial tubes with euch promptness, ease and certainty that it is really eitonishing. Pinex iB a special and highly concen trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, and is probably the best known means of overcoming severe coughs, throat and chest colds. There arc many worthless imita tions of this mixture. To avoid dis appointment, ask for "2y 2 ounces of Pinex" with full directions and don't accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or mo nay Qromptly refunded. The Pinex Oos Ft. Wayne, Ind. ASTHMA? Hellef nnnranteed • I Or No I*n>- See Man-Heil Automatic Inhaler Aftk Demonstrator Gorgas' Drug Store j jO XfU'tll Xbfl'tl EKRIOSBURG TELEOK&PS! WELCOME HOME BY ANARCHISTS Emma Goldman and Alexan der Berkman Given a Dinner By Associated Press New York, Oct. 28.—Anarchists attended a "welcome home" dinner here last night to Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman, which marked the first public appearance of the two anarchists since their re lease from prison. Most of the" speakers declared they preferred de portation to being sent to prison in the Philippines, which they charac terized as the "American Siberia." A bill was recently introduced in Congress to make an island of the Philippine group a penal colony. Emma Goldman appeared before the Emigration authorities at Ellis Island yesterday to show cause why she should not.be deported under the anti-anarchist law. In her de fense she filed citizenship papers of her father and the cancelled citizen ship papers of her husband. §1 "The Live "Always Reliable" I I "Be Sure of Your Store'' | I A Good One~Or I j Two Poor Ones-Which? I Ask the men who have had both kinds of clothes. They know the difference in economy be -5 tween the unknown, unheard of brands that are sold in orcfi nary stores and the nationally advertised high standards, such r I Hart Schaffner & Marx, I | Kuppenheimer & 9 | Society Brand Clothes I I There are all kinds of clothes these 1 days. Plenty of good and great quantities of very VM poor ones; but remember this in buying your new suit or over- l/jf 'it. | \ (j coat, that "two poor ones will not equal a good one," for the \tffli I I poor ones are troublesome from the very start, they need \ WIM ,■ -WMWA I I more care and worry to keep them in shape and they begin to mWI f || \ show signs of wear almost the first day you put them on.' It's %■> -21 iui UJ i| 1 no wonder your clothing costs you so much more than the man jlmr 1 ■ > who buys a "good suit." It's bad judgment to spend money MM I carelessly, and that's exactly what is being done by those who I are buying goods for a low price only. There are other impor- IH\s\ \ tant matters to be considered besides the price, and if you >' \ au-e interested in having your suit or overcoat wear longest and j W W \ look best, go where they sell good clothes. / /■'}§■ § fM j|p§j || 'fj ] I You know the guarantee that this "Live Jf> V I 1 [ Store" gives with every purchase made Here—lt's a 19,9 •"•rtschanner&MMt. money back guarantee in case you don't get all the satisfaction you think you should have. „ I Try the Dependable Doutrich Service That Everybody is Talking About Freighter Launched; Williamsport Girl Acts as Sponsor Bp Associated Press Philadelphia, Oct. 28. The freighter Lycoming, named in honor of Lycoming county, Pennsylvania, for the work of its citizens in the Liberty loan campaigns, was launch ed at the shipyard in Bristol yesterday. Miss Margaret Beever, "daughter of William P. Beever, chairman of the Liberty Loan Committee for the Williams port district, was the sponsor. After the launching the Williams port delegation tvaa entertained at luncheon by the company. Permits Women to Sit in Upper House • of British Parliament By Associated Press lxmdou, Oct. 28.—The House of Commons adopted an amendment to the pending bill for the removal of sex disqualifications, permitting women to sit and vote in the House of Lords. The amendment was adopted by a vote of 171 to 84. GETS HOME OF ARCHBISHOP Richard Crane, Minister to Czecho-Slovakia, Given • Handsome Quarters Prague, Oct. 23.—When Richard ' Crane, the newly appointed United States Minister to Czecho-Slovukiii,' formerly secretary to Secretary of State Lansing, took up hii post in Prague, the government of the new Republic assigned to him the mag- I nificent palace of the Cardinal 1 Archbishop of Prague, on the heights of Hradcany overlooking the city, directly across the way j from the national capital, j The palace was vacant because [the Cardinal Archbishop had been an Austrian prince, and when the j revolution of October 28, 1918, — the Czech Fourth of July—took place, he was invited to leave along with all the rest of the Austro | Hungarian nobility, and complied. . Mr. Crane found around the if.tate dining robm, pictures of tho former Cardinal Archiblshopa in OCTOBER 28, 1919/ I all the vermillion and purple of their robes. In the audience cham ber was a great throne, above Which hung a large and splendid J portrait of Pope Benedict XVI. It seems that the Gobelins had | originally been ordered and deliv ered to the then Empress Maria- Theresa of Aiustria. 'They were sent *0 Prague C. O. D., and the price of the bill staggered even her Im perial majesty. Being somewhat lishort of fuxrls. she was about to 'send them back, when the then | Cardinal Archbishop, being u noble of ample private means, offered to ' take them off her hands. The , Empress gladly assented and the ; Gobelins have remained a part of [ the furnishings of the handsome j old house. i So the United States Minister re j ceives his guests and .gives his in | terviews with the eighteenth cen i tury Fremch conceptions of the j "original Americans" looking down | upon him from the walls. | f Ciiiicura Soap ISM Ideal for the I hsMli Complexion iDRY CLEAN ALL j | FAMILY CLOTHES ! j FOR FEW CENTS Any woman can clean and renew? waists, dresses, suits, coats, gloves, ribbons, furs, slippers, shawls, belts, ties, veils, men's clothes, lace cur-, tains, woolens, rugs, draperies— everything that would be ruined by? soap and water. Place a gallon or more of gaso" line in a dishpan or wash boiler, put in the things to be dry cleaned, thea i wash them with Solvite soap. Short ly everything comes out looking like new. Nothing fades, shrinks or wrin kles. N8 pressing needed. Do not attempt to dry clean without S'oN vite Soap. This gasoline soap is tho secret of all dry cleaning. A package of Solvite soap contain ing directions for home dry cleaning costs little at any drug, grocery or department store. Dry clean out doors or away from flame. 13