2 REYNARD GETS AWAY | FROM NEWPORT CLUB After Hard Ride Members Enjoy Fine Turkey Dinner at Town Hotel St filial to The Telegraph Newport, Pa., Jan. 15.—Tuesday last wan a great day In the life of the Juni ata Valley Hunt Club. For the after noon a hunt hftd been arranged and in order that riders and hounds might be given an especially fine chase, a fox had been imported fro hi Kentucky. The fox was dropped on the main highway, midway between this place and New Bloomfleld. Because of the I cold weather, however, and the icy; condition of the ground, very hard on j both man and beast, pursuers could| not overtake the pursued, und at last accounts Reynard is still running. In the evening the members of the club held a banquet, tendered pri marily to the landowners of this vi cinity. About seventy-flve men sat dbwn to an elaborate turkey dinner, served in the diuingroom of Hotel Mingle. The Newport Orchestra dis coursed during the meal, which was followed by toasts, the ruler of the feast being J. Emery FLeisher. A most kindly feeling exists be tween the members of the club and the farmers of the neighborhood, over, whose fields the club is accustomed to i hunt. The officers of the club for the year are Edward E. Marshall, presi dent; William S. Borgner, secretary; Dr. J. Harry McCulloch, treasurer, with a membership of forty. COMMUNION SERVICES SUNDAY Special to The Telegraph Blain, Pa., Jan. 15. Communion services will bo held on Sunday at 10.80 a. nr. in Zion Lutheran Church, conducted by the Rev. J. C. Reighard, pastor of the Blain Zion charge. On Sunday at 10.30 a. m. commun ion services will be held in the Buf falo Reformed Church, and at 2 o'clock in the Reformed Church at Jckeaburg. The services will be in charge of the Rev. P. H. Hoover, who is pastor of the Blain Zion Reformed charge. SERIES OF ENTERTAINMENTS Special to The Telegraph Meohanlcsburg, Pa., Jan. 15.—Dur ing the months of January, February and March a series of entertainments' known as the Chautauqua and lyceum) attractions, five in number, will be| given here. The first number, the l Hess, Wohlforth, Lea Company, will j be presented to-morrow evening. I Don't Eyes Around! F* u t Them On the \| | V* WRIGL jyand enjoy jmmm 1/ delicious, beneficial \ w mint leaf juice and - \ "springy" Mexican chicle. To get the clean, pure, healthful gum Be SURE wW^™" s f\ Chew it after CAUTION ! every meal Dishonest persons are wrapping rank imitations to look like clean, pure, J x \ healthful WRIGLEY'S. \ A \ . These will be offered principally \ by street fakirs, peddlers and \° the candy departments of some 5 V) yfllV and 10 cent stores. Refuse them! lN Be SURE ifs WRIGLEY'S. ffflitl BUY IT BY THE BOX •# mo mt 83 cm(« ' ill uml r Smch hmn contain* twenty 5 cent packmgnm f THURSDAY EVENING, News Items From Towns in Central Pennsylvania Special to The Telegraph Columbia.—John Edgar Moore and Emily Katherlne Fisher, both of near Columbia, were married at the par sonage of the First Reformed Church, in Lancaster, by the pastor, the Rev. W. Stuart Cramer. dance was held at the home of Mrs.* Josephine Mertz, at Center, on Tuesday evening. Refresh ments were served, consisting of cof fee, sandwlohes, oysters, cake and ice cream. Marietta.—An Anti-saloon League has been organized In this section by electing Barr Spangler, president; the Rev. E. Elmer Sensenlg. secretary treasurer. There is considerable In terest being shown, and the oldest man In the town, ased 91 years, is at the head. He Is one qf the leading mer chants. Lancaster.—A wedding was solem nized yesterday at the home of Mrs. Elizaebth Shenk, when her daughter. Miss Emma H. Shenk, was married to William A. Nolt, of Strasburg, the ceremony being performed by the Rev. J. W. Meminger, of the Reformed Church. Marietta.—The Susquehanna river Is Icebound from shore to shore for sev eral miles down the stream, and at Pequea they are driving across the Ice with four-horse teams. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Special to The Telegraph Columbia. —Adam K. Snyder, one of Columbia's oldest and best known citizens, died at his home last night. He was 79 years old and was a tin smith by trade. For fifty years he was in the employ of the Wilson Hardware Company, retiring about ten years ago. Among the surviving chil dren Is Captain H. W. Snyder, of Company C, Fourth Infantry, Pennsyl vania National Oua.rd. Lewistown.—Dr. D. C. Nipple, of Mt. Union, well known here, died at his home of cancer. For some time he practiced at Newton Hamilton, this county, removing to Mt. Union about two years ago. lie was born in Mll lerstown, Perry county, Pa., and was about 62 years old. Grantville. One of the largest! funerals held at this place for a long j time wan that for the late Mrs. Wll- j liam Hetrlck (nee Look), from her late home at Shellsvllle, on Tuesday | afternoon. Funeral services were con-1 ducted by the Rev. Messrs. Bittner and I Reiter in the Shellsville Church, where | Airs. Hetrick was a member of the Lutheran congregation. Burial took! place in the adjoining cemetery. Un-j dertaker H. A. Boyer had charge. Mrs.! Hetrick was aged 4 3 years and Is sur vived by her husband, one daughter, j there brothers and three sisters. i MANUAL TRAINING AT ODD FELLOWS' HOME Orphans' Association WiO Intro duce Trades For Boys and Do mestic Science For Girls J. WILLIAM STROH, President Odd Fellows' Home Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., Jan. 15. —Thirty di rectors of the Odd Fellows' Central Pennsylvania Orphanage, representing 4 5,000 members, gathered In half yearly meeting at the home, near here Tuesday afternoon. It was decided to introduce manual training for the boys and domestic science for the girls who are being educated at the home. Carpentering, bia-ksmithlng, sewing, cooking and the care of a home will be the first things taught, after which more will be introduced. J. William Stroh, of Sunbury, pres ident of the Central Pennsylvania Odd Fellows' Orphans' Home Associa tion, reported that a farm had been bought during the last six months, and that more than $5,000 has be#>n voluntarily contributed by lodges and individuals to be used for rebuilding a barn that was destroyed by fire. He said that there are 137 children in the Institute, sixty-seven of whom are boys. The school was reported to be in the HARRISBURG frfEjftil TELEGRAPH THE SECBETOF SUCCESS Genuine Merit Required (o Win the Peeple's Confidence Have you ever stopped to reason' why It la that bo many products that i are extensively advertised, all at once drop out at sight and are soon for gotten 7 The reason is plain—the ar , tlole did not fulfil the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more par ticularly to a medicine. .A medicinal preparation that has real curative ' value almost sells Itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy la recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are In need of it. A prominent druggist says, "Take for example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many I years and never hesitate to reconi i mend, for in almost every case it : shows excellent results, as many of Imy customers testify. No other kid ney remedy that I know of has so large a sale." According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the suc ' ce»« of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Is due to the fact that it fulfils almost I every wish in overcoming kidney, j liver and bladder diseases, corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcels Post. Ad dress Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y„ and enclose ten cents; also mention the Harrisburg Telegraph.— A dvertisement. best of shape, and with the exception of two cases of typhoid fever the gen eral health Is good. The cost of main tenance during the laat six months was a trifle more than $7,000. | WEST SHORE NEWS NEIGHBORS ASSIST : MOTHER AND BABES i ; Lemoyne Woman in Need of Help : Since Her Husband Abandoned Her a Month Ago With only the food which neighbors in the vcinity have sent to them and a half ton of coal which a benevolent person delivered yesterday, Mrs. Roy C. Peters and her two children, of Le moyne, ft boy, aged two years, and a j girl fours years older, are anxiously awaiting the return of the husband i and father who abandoned them on December 16. Until the coal was de ! livered the house was like an icebox, ! there being no fire to give them warmth. Mrs. Peters is in very deli cate health just at present and on the verge of a spell of sickness. She is too weak to be moved to the home of her parents back of Mt. Holly, her parents offering to take her home. On December 16 Peters, who-was a lineman in the employ of the Harris burg Light and Power Company, sent a note to his wife, saying he was going away. Immediately the woman made an effort to locate him, but she failed. Two weeks ago she received a card from him, mailed in Massachu setts, on which he stated he was "going on, good-by." Since then she has re ceived no word from him except through friends, who say that he Is In Portlaud, Maine. Mrs. Peters made out. an information before a justice of the peace in Lemoyne to compel him to retuijp to his family. She does not want him prosecuted, but simply asks tht he come home and provide for his family. Relatives Try to Assist At present Mrs. Peters' mother is with her, nursing her and looking after the household duties. The woman's parents and her four brothers are do ing all they can to help her, but are not meeting with mtich success. The father and one brother are out of work at present. Another brother has some spinal trouble and can work only part time. Two other brothers with fami lies of their own are working part time because of the lack of work in their places of employment. The Peters home is cleanly and nice ly furnished, giving evidence of the welldoing ofi the father and husband at some time. Mrs. Peters says that in two or three other occasions he had gone away without telling her, but he only stayed a few days. Strange Man Appears To add more to her trouble, Mrs. Peters said to-day that a strange man called at her home about 10 o'clock a few nights ago and asked her and her little son to accompany him and he would take her to Peters. She de clined and closing the door, bolted It. The next night the man returned again and stood near the house for more tlia nan hour. Mrs. Peters is unable to understand his actions and since then has not left the home. Residents of Lemoyne and members of the various church societies of the i town are to-day volunteering their services to help Mrs. Peters and her children until the dark clouds pass. Efforts Made to Get Hall For Basketball Professor William Bowman, of the Lemoyne High School, who is an ar dent basketball fan, is endeavoring to secure a hall for the Lemoyne ex-High School team for the present season. The team, which last year made an ex cellent record, has not played this sea son because of the inability to procure adequate quartern Last year the games were played in a room in the school building but the place was so small that it was "nick-named" the "cigar box" by visiting teams. There is a large storage building along the Cumberland Valley Railroad a short distance above the Lemoyne bridge and it is this place that Professor Bowman is endeavoring to secure. If a lease is gotten on the building the basketball team will make an effort to raise money by public subscription to put the floor in condition and build beats. Men's Chorus Will Attend Baltimore Dedication On Sunday the Men's • Chorus of Trinity United Brethren Church, New Cumberland, will go to Baltimore to assist in the dedication of the Frank lin and Monroe Street United Brethren Church, which has just been com pleted. The Rev. Edward W. Leach, a former pastor at New Cumberland, is the minister of the church whtch has just been completed. MAN* TAKE OUT CARDS A large number have taken out cards for the Christine* savings fund at the New Cumberland Bank. »7W CUMBERLAND BAND ELECTS 1 At a meeting of the members of tJi* Buy Your Piano •/ —remain to be sold on our or rlayer-Jriano at the store you think can serve you best mor e on this offer— The store that has the finest variety and the best Pay Cash Only For makes, the store that treats you most liberally, and Your Records leaves the most money in your pocket. It is easy • enough to see how we can have the finest variety, and ~ i i „ the Best Makes —but not so easy to see how we can sell y ic * ro a 3O days later, No at lower prices. The secret is; interest. No extras. The price is the same as if you Business Policy j- 11 h a Ve «/ choice of these styles— —buying for cash in large quantities—eliminating S4O, SSO, $75, SIOO, needless expense and being content with little profit $1.50, s2oo—but it's un and more business. Perhaps you are not aware how safe to put off making great this policy benefits YOU. Investigate pianos, your selection, prices and payments—here and elsewhere—and the Come in to-day—or this benefit to YOU will be plain. evening. The J. H. TROUP Music House Troup Building, 15 S. Market Square New Cumberland Band, the following officers were elected for the year: President and director, Herman Derrick; assistant director, Edgar Wire; secretary, Paul Relff; treasurer, Edward Fisher; manager, Harry Ar nold. The band is reported to be In excellent condltLon financially. The manager is said to have a number of engagements in view for the future. DWELLING BURNED AT KNOLA About 7 o'clock last Wednesday evening the home of Anthony Sebas tian, of Enola, was completely de stroyed by Are from an overheated stove during Sebastian's absence while at work as a track walker for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Mrs. Sebastian and three small children, being alone in the house, narrowly es caped being burned, as their home is located about two squares from Sum merdale Park and not near the road. The employes of the local yard suc ceeded in saving a very small amount of furniture from the building which was taken to Overview where the fam ily will reside. The building was own ed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany and was completely destroyed. Sebastian's loss on furniture will amount to about SSOO. MRS. SHARP BURIED Funeral services over the body of Mrs. Harry W. Sharp, aged 41, who died at her home in Lemoyne, were held on Tuesday afternoon. The body was taken to Newport for burial. FUNERAL OF MRS. YOST The funeral services of Mrs. Yost, of Shiremanstown, who died at her home on Monday evening at the ase of 41 years, were held this afternoon at her late residence. Burial was made in St. John's Cemetery. Young Man's Arm Badly Scalded by Boiling Water Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., Jan. 15. Albert Kuntz, 17 years old, an employe in the nickeling department of the Keeley Stove Works, slipped and fell while walking through a room atthe plant, and, grasping the side of a tank of boiling water in an effort to save him- I self, his right arm became submerged j and was frightfully scalded, all the I skin peeling off from'the elbow to the j ends of the fingers. He was given first aid treatment at the plant and later conveyed to his home, where a physician relieved his sufferings. EVES FROZEN SHUT Special to The Telegraph Selinsgrove, Pa., Jan. 15.—George Flanders, postmaster at Port Trevor ton, reached \ Selinsgrove Tuesday morning, suffering painfully from the j seven-mile drive along the river. When | he reached here and alighted at the i local station he could not walk. Hei was taken into the express office, where an examination showed that his eyes were frozen shut. GERMS MADE HARMLESS j Rich red blood is the power that i keeps the human body in order. Every day many germs of disease-enter our bodies but they are made harmless and passed off if the fighting forces of the body are in good condition. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills build up the blood, enable it to absorb more oxy- | gen, the agent which burns up the body poisons. In this way Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills are hot only a tonic, but a specific for the host of diseases that come as a result of thin blood and that can get a foot-hold only when the tone of the body is low. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills make the blood rich and red, and strengthen the nerves. Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, nerv ousness. sciatica. Build up your blood and note how the purer and richer blood lights your battle against the disease. Take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a tonic if you are nqt in the best physical condition and cultivate a resistance that with the observance of ordinary rules of health will keep you well and strong. Get a box from the nearest drug store and begin this treatment now. A booklet, "Common Ailments. How to Treat Them" is free for the asking. 1 Address: The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. T. Advertise ment. JANUARY 15,1914. Elmer Craumer, Prominent Attorney, Buried at Lebanon Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., Jan. 15. Funeral services were held here to-day over the body of the late Elmer Craumer, a prominent Pittsburgh attorney, for mer grand master of the Odd Fel lows of Pennsylvania and also promi nent as an Elk and Free Mason. Of ficers of the grand lodge of Pennsyl vania, Independent Order of Odd Fel lows, were here from Philadelphia, and the body was burled at Mt. Leba non Cemetery with impressive frater nal ceremonies. The funeral was held from the home of A. S. Craumer, a brother of the deceased. The Rev. Dr. D. W. Happel, pastor of the First Re formed Church, and the Rev. Dr. B. F. Daugherty. pastor of Trinity United Brethren Church, officiated at the serv ices at the house. The funeral was largely attended by relatives and friends, as the departed attorney was a native of this city and was widely known. J. F. Milliken, law partner of the late Mr. Craumer, brought the body to Lebanon, and headed a dele gation of Pittsburgh friends who at tended the obsequies. ROAST GOOSE DINNER Mechanicsburg, Pa., Jan. 15. —Mrs. John Brandt was hostess at an infor mal dinner at her home in West Lo cust street, last evening, when the principal .feature of the menu was roast goose and oysters. The guests included A. B. Harnish, Mr. and Mrs. Clair Harnish, ( Mrs. J. P. Brandt, Mr. and Mrs. Guy M. Eberly and son, I. S. Eberly. REASON WHY NO. 18. I UCDCLICV a PP roac hing change HtKontl of the seasons naturally ——————J presents this question to j your mind. What are you going to do about i a home? Will you stay in the same old over crowded city, or will you get out in the open where you will get all of the best out of life? urDcurv actt^iat y° ur wor k ilbKonLl happens to be in the city need not in any way prevent you from enjoying the pleasures of this suburban town with its city conve niences. Hershey enjoys excellent train and trolley service which will take' you to j and from your business within a few min utes. UUDCUCV From the economical nLKOiICiI viewpoint, Hershey af ——————— fords more than any other suburban town. Farms outlying the town supply the market direct, and reduce the cost of living. Employment is here "if you want it. Taxes on property are low. . I UrDClirV Ever ything you want I nUROriL I and need is here for you. All of the conveniences of the city to which you have become accus tomed are here—and the great added advan tage of suburban freedom and joy of living. Lots range in price from S6OO upward for 40 feet frontage. Reasonable restrictions for building—protect your home. Representative always on the ground. Phone or write. Hershey Improvement Co. HERSHEY, PA. ; Boys' Good Habit League Organized at Columbia Sptcial to Tilt Ttlt graph Columbia, Fa., Jan. 15.—This bor ough has taken the initiative in organ izing a "Boys' Good Habit League,'' after the form of organization recently adopted in Kansas, and will be under tli© direction of the Rev. George Wells Ely, pastor of the Presbyterian Church. It Is the first leaguo of the kind In the State and last night elected officers, as follows: President, Arthur R. Campbell: vice-president, William Purple; secretary and treasurer, John Miller. Boys who Join are pledged to abstain from liquor, tobacco and pro fanity. r ' OM| JnC»Ttt Band ikould •how IMIBHHIIiHH here : ARROW ■