PLAN ONE SEAL FOR ALL FILMS Chairman Knapp Putting the State Censor Board on a More Efficient Basis weeks of study of the operations of the Board. * According to the plan put into effect by Chairman Knapp each film approved by the Board will here after have one approval seal instead of two, thereby saving the State many dollars in costs. Through this plan it is expected that the Board will be able to issue approval seals and certificates of approval for pic tures immediately after they are ap proved and also from the Pittsburgh office. On and after December 1, a numbered seal will be used. The Board is also arranging to issue a monthly bulletin containing a list of changes ordered by the Board for the preceding month to gether with a list of subjects dis approved. Mr. Knapp was for years dramatic editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer and has taken hold of the work of the Board with vigor and plans to speed up its administration consid erably. State Game Commission officials say that from reports received here there will be more rabbits when the rabbit season opens on Saturday than for the last two years. The shortage due to a disease which pre vailed during the spring of 1918 has been overcome in some districts and it is expected that there will be good rabbit hunting in many counties. Reports on small game continue to be favorable. The bird season will run until the end of November. State Agricultural exports have been sent to parts of New Jersey to make tin investigation and report upon the campaign being waged against the Japanese shrubbery beetle, an unusually annoying* pest which has been appearing in that section this fall. Close inspection has been ordered on everything coming from New Jersey. Recommendations for approval of charters for ten electric companies to operate in counties on the Sus quehanna river between Sunbury and Danville have been made by the Public Service Commission. The papers are now in the Governor's hands. The Public Service Commission has sent to the Metropolitan Edison Constipation Biliousness-Headache Dr. Chase's Liver Tablets Mkkflhe liver active, bewela regular, without pain or griping. relieve aiclt headache ana that bloated feeling otter eating, purify the hlood end clear the compleiioa. Large box, enough to last ■ month , 30c. UNITED MEDICINE CO., Philadelphia. Pa THE GLOBE We ATe Opposed to . Higjh Priced Clothing Just As Much As You Are! Why- Because we can sell more Suits and Overcoats at $35, S4O and $45 than we can at S7O. And for this reason we have scoured the markets and secured the great est values it is pos sible for any store to sell at $35, S4O and $45. See our windows— then come in and try them on—we know you'll buy them. THE GLOBE WEDNESDAY EVENING, Company, of Reading, for answer the complaint of several iron and steel companies of Heading. Leban on and llirdsboro against the pro posed new rates of the company. It is one of the largest electric cases outside of Philadelphia and Pitts burgh to come up. The Commission will sjt in Harrisburg, Wllllamsport and Philadelphia to-morrow. The State PoliA' Department will enlist twelve men for the live troops at an examination to be held here Saturday. Members of the Public Service Commission last night approved the preliminary report of Commission ers Samuel M. Clement, Jr., and James S. Benn on the hearing held in Philadelphia on the taxicab and jitney situation and have authorized the making of arrangements for ex peditious handling of applications for certificates under the new regu lations. Reports have also been made and approved on the hearings held in jitney cases in Pittsburgh. The Commission is expecting that the proposed ordinance in Philadel phia and the new regulations in Pittsburgh will materially lessen the number of illegal operators of such vehicles. Governor .Sprout lias sent the fol lowing telegram to the White House upon the President's statement on the threatened coal strike: "The President's statement on the coal strike situation is superb. You may count upon the complete co-opera tion of Pennsylvania in such plans as he may decide are necessary in this great emergency. Public senti ment in this industrial State will back him up in his courageous and patriotic stand. Command us when we may be of service." State Health authorities have called attention to the dangers of mistaken diagnosis in smallpox cases in the situation in the Goddard family at Parnassus. Three persons who had not been vaccinated are down with the disease, a quarantine for chicken pox having been estab lished. Five others are under quar antine because of contact. Street railways operating at Jer sey Shore and at Williamsport en tered protests before the Public Service Commission against grant ing certificates to operate jitneys to R. C. Shadle, who wants a route from Jersey Shore to Antes Fort and C. J. Kahler, who wants to run be tween Williamsport and Picture Rocks. Tlje point made was that trolley service is sufficient. Officers of the Auditor General's department believe that something like a million dollars has been re ported by Pennsylvania banks and trust companies as liable to escheat to the State as unclaimed bank de posits. The constitutionality of the act for escheating has been upheld by the courts and the procedure will cdlfnc up for hearing in the Dauphin county court next month. It is thought that more will be discov ered. The Public Service Commission in an opinion by Chairman Ainey has directed the Home Heating Com pany, of Erie, to make an extension of mains and also if it desires tem porary assistance to accept loans for the purpose of making the extension from IT. N. Fleming, the complain ant. The Commission says that the company's obligation to render pub lic service requires this extension to be made and that the laying of mains "should be accompanied by some assurance of continued patron age and consequent revenues." It is suggested that the guaranty be not less than $1,600 annually. This is the first order of the kind to be made. Governor Sproul finished his speech-making in Massachusetts with many complimentary things said about him. He has been invit ed to speak in Philadelphia. Propagation and preservation of fish during the winter were taken up yesterday afternoon at a meeting of the Board of Fish Commissioners in Philadelphia Monday.* The impor tance of the various fish hatcheries ; scattered throughout the State was ! the subject of several addresses, i These hatcheries are located at Torresdale. Corry, Union City, Bellus I fonte and Pleasant Mount. Their yearly capacity is the breeding of 100,000 fish. Fish hatched are not ! put out immediately, but held for a j year in order that there may be greater chance of their surviving. The distribution of these different species of fish hatched and put out in the State waters was also dis cussed. Nathan R. Buller, Commis sioner of Fisheries, stated that all streams and lakes in the State have been stocked with trout, bass, cat fish, bluegills and yellow perch. Redemption of the rebate slips Is sued by the, Seranton Railway com pany to its patrons when it in creased its fare first to six and later to eight cents, previous to the ruling of the Public Service Commission last May, is asked for by the city of Seranton in its paper book in "the appeal from the Commission's de cree, filed with the Superior Court in Philadelphia. Different Schemes For Daily Foods Now In a statement, Dairy and Food Commissioner James Foust con trasts the way people managed their food supply a generation ago and the conditions now. Except in the big cities 40 years ago practically every home of the State,of Penißfylvania was a food producing establishment. The people raised their own pork, there were few without chickens to furnish an .lbundant supply of eggs. All had their home gardens where they rais ed their own vegetables and berries and fruits, and it was not uncom mon to see buried cabbage and apples for winter use. Fruits and vegetables were canned i,n large quantities and put away for winter consumption. Flour was purchased in the fall. There was the butcher ing day, hogs were butchered and pork pickled and smoked. Those homes bought very few groceries; in fact, the grocery store in those days was a small Institution. All these things have been chang ed and the small communities have turned their attention from the bomb garden to the large pay re ceived in Ihe industrial establish ments. Many persons thought it useless to worry along with the garden with money plentiful and food purchasable. In fact, many homes have gone out of the food producing business, ahd the con sumers have become more numer ous. Grocery storesto-day are big, thriving institutions. They are the storage room and refrigerators of the homes. The baking of bread is almost a thing of the past, for the housewife and . everything for the meal is bought in the can, package or in bulk form. PASTOR'S SALARY INCREASED >ver. Pa., Oct. 29.—At the lirst quarterly conference of the Dover circuit. United Brethren Church, held in Ottorbein Church, Dover, yesterday morning, the salary of the pastor, the Rev. 11. P. Raker, was increased from $862 to $1,000.35. The 35 cents in the interest on an endowment contributed to the pas tor's salary. I M iddtetown ARE MARRIED FORTY YEARS Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Kurtz Observe Their Wedding Anniversary A family reunion was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Kurtz, ■ Swatara Street, last evening in ! honor of the fortieth wedding an- Jniversary and at the same time Mr. 'an-d Mrs. Robert Gross were invited guests in honor of their fifth wed | ding anniversary. Supper was [served to the following: Mr. and [Mrs. B. W. Kurtz, Mr. and Mrs. [John Groupe and Miss Mabel Kurtz and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gross. Golden Star Council, No. 6, Sons and Daughters of America, will hold a masquerade party in the lodge room in the Odd Fellows' Hall, Ewain Street, on next Monday eve ning. The Ladies' Aid Society of the Methodist Church, held a masquer ade party at the parsonage, >l2O North Union Street last evening. Games were indulged in and re freshments were served. Miss Reba Hendriekson, of Wash ington, D. C., is spending several days •in town, having come to at tend the funeral of the late H. L. Hendriekson, which was held this afternoon, from ' the undertaking establishment of H. S. Roth, South Union Street at 3 o'clock. The Rev. T. C. McCarrell, pastor of the Presbyterian Church officiated. Burial was made in the Middletowir cemetery. The funeral of the late Mrs. Eliza Shireman, was held at her late home at Hillsdale, this after jnoon at 1 o'clock and further ser vices in Geyer Church at 2 o'clock. The Rev. Edwin Rhoads and the Rev. Solomon Brinser officiated. Burial was made in the cemetery adjoining the church. The funeral was largely attended, for Mrs. Shire man was well known. Miss Clara Beck will entertain a number of her friends at her home Spring and High Streets, Thursday evening to a masquerade party. Samuel Napier sold his property on Fisher Avenue to Eugene Cas tiga, residing Ann and Lawrence Streets. Jacob Sanders, who is employed on the new building of J. C. Landis, North Union Street, fell from the scaffold. Miss Mary Croll, has returned home from a several weeks' visit to relatives at Y'ork. Miss Blanche Arnold, who was the guest of Miss Ann Heiman, of Ann Street, returned to her home at York. W. D. Matheson, who spent several weeks irr the State of Maine, has returned to town and is spend ing some time as -the guest of his daughter, Mrs. Walter Shellenber ger, Emaus street, and succeeded in shooting a deer which he brought to town with him. Mrs. Matheson, of Morris Plain, N. J., is spending some time with her daughter. Boston Garter : When CHOOSING A WIFE I)il you nsk that she have money; friends; social standing; no former lovers; vvonderi'id per- j sonallty; etc. See this production at the COLONIAL Thurs., Fri., and Sat. Thin, Weak Folks Need j Blood-Iron Phosphate If you are thin, weak and emaciat ed and lack strength, energy, vigor and endurance; if you have that worn out. all gone, tired feeling, the chances are that it's because your nerves need phosphate and your blood needs iron. Either phosphate or iron by itself is insufficient; both must be supplied at the same time. For this purpose pure Blood Iron Phosphate is unequaled. A 5-grain tablet taken at meal times three times daily re stores nervous energy, enriches the blood and helps you to put on pounds of good stay-there flesh in a man ner that is little short of marvelous. Get enough pure Blood-Iron Phos phate from George A. Gorgas or any other good druggist for a three weeks' treatment —it costs only $1.50 5O cents a week —and take as directed. If at the end of three weeks you have not gained several pounds in weight and don't feet stronger and better than you have for months; if your eyes aren't brighter and your nerves steadier; if you don't sleep better, and your vim. vigor and vitality aren't more than doubled, you can have your money back for the asking and Blood-Iron Phosphate will cost you nothing. Telephone Your "OFFICES. 0. S." Bell 8-2-5 From B—to—s PUBLIC STENOGRAPHERS. NO- I TARY PUBLIC, MULTIGItAPH ING, CIRCULARIZING AND j OTHER OFFICE WORK. Promptness and Efficiency OFFICE SERVICE CO. Room Oil, Kunkel Bldg. HIBIUSBURO TELEGRAPH! Increase Reward For Finding Billy Dansey Hninmonton, N. J., Oct. 29.—The reward for information leading to I "The Live Store"Always Reliable" I "Be Sure of Your " I This Store Should Be Better—And It Is I ! Better than an ordinary store, we try I to make it that way by selling better merchandise the kind that will give you more satisfaction and service, and when you guarantee to such a reality as this ''Live Store" does its very necessary to be careful to sell only de pendable merchandise. That's why we go after the best prod ucts in the land, such as ' / iiX Hart Schaffner & Marx, || f 1 V L • 0 %'*£**. Mr nil - Ivuppenheimer (x. j- |1 fjf I | Society Brand Clothes jffkjof I I There are many stores which do not f 1 handle nationally known products, in some cases \ 'f&kl WpPI it's because there's not quite so much profit for the merchant. if * I S. Hi " i There's a fixed price, and of course they cost the dealer more Sthan "ordinary clothes" yet they sell for abo\it the same price as unknown brands. There's another reason, however, why every store does not have-high standard known quality goods and that's because some manufacturers are very care- ful about the store that distributes the merchandise, they ! H I They prefer a store that pleases its I 1f 1 customers best, does more to satisfy them and in fgftjM that way they themselves get larger orders and enjoy the |j|fjy!Jß r|*i 1 good will of those who buy their products, so you see it's F LL mutual and works to an advantage to all concerned—when J you want good clothes come to this "Live Store" and I Try the Dependable Doutrich Service I That Everybody is Talking About I | Boys' " Doubblebilt" 'and" Wearp j C Have you heard of these popular Boys' Clothes? They are finding their way into many homes this 7 t Fall. You'll be agreeably surprised at the prices when you see the good fabrics and heavy, well-seweck 2 | linings that are used in the suits we are showing at 2 I} 5/2.75 ■ $74.75 #7 6.75 1 the recovery of three-year-old Billy Dansey, who disappeared on Octo ber 8, has been increased to $2,000. Twenty newspapers in this section have made a combined offer of $1 ,- 000 in addition to the SI,OOO raised by the town council. Plan Tribute to Unknown War Dead London. Oct. 29.—A national funeral service and the interment of the body of one unknown British soldier in the crypt of St. Paul's Cathedral has OCTOBER 29, 1919. been suggested ns a fitting tribute to the unknown dead who fell while serving with the British forces in the war. It is recalled that the French have erected a monument, in scribed: "To the Unburied Dead.". BUYS UP TOBACCO CROP 1 Saginaw, Pa., Oct. 29. Frank Lehman, buyer for Otto Eisenlohr 8$ Brothers, has been through this locality and bought up several cropa of 1919 tobacco, at 16 cents for wrapper, and G cents for filler. Men who sold their crops are Edward Mohr, 4 acres; John Mohr, 6 acres; Paul Bear, 4 acres; and William Grayblll, 4 acres. 13