Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, February 02, 1914, Page 5, Image 5
33PPR*-';;. • • - • • . • ■ .-r- ? ■■v.* ■ -■;< MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG $&&&£ TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 2, 1914. COD LIVER OIL AND IRON Two Most World-Famed Tonics Combined in Vinol. Cod Liver oil and Iron have proved to be the two most successful tonics the world has ever known—iron for the blood and the medicinal curative elements of cod liver oil as a strength and tissue builder for body and nerves, and for the successful treat ment of throat and lung troubles. Two eminent French chemists dis covered a method of separating the curative medicinal elements of the cods' livers from the oil or grease which Is thrown away, but to these medicinal elements tonic iron is now Jtdded, thus combining in Vinol the two most world famed tonics. I As a body-builder and strength ere-' ntor for weak, run-down people, for feeble old people, delicate children, 1o restore strength after sickness; and for chronic coughs, colds, bron chitis or pulmonary troubles we ask you to try Vinol with the understand ing that your money will be returned It it docs not help you.—George A. Gorgas. Druggist, Harrisburg Penna. ' Inol Is sold In Steelton by T. Prowell. P. S. For pimples and blotches try our Saxo Salve. We guarantee it.— Advertisement. EDKCATIOX\L MAKET NEW YEAR RESOLUTION to enroll next Monday in Day or Night School. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. Market Square, Harrisburg, Pa. Harrisburg Business College Day and Night. Business, Shorthand and Civil Service. In dividual Instruction. 28th year. 329 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. FUNERAL DIRECTOR HARRY M. HOFFMANNI (Successor to J. J. OgFlaby) UNDERTAKER 810 NORTH SECOND STREET ONLY 5 DAYS It's getting pretty close to the LAST CALL now and those " who have been waiting until to-morrow had better hurry— i there are only FIVE DAYS MORE and every day leaves less books. So act quickly. You want this book—you NEED it—and for these few days you can get it for A Certificate and (as explained therein) the small expense amount of expense Greatly Reduced Illustration—The Big Book Is 9x12 Inches "Panama and the Canal in Picture and Prose" intelligently sets forth the true purpose of the wonderful waterway. It not only gives its history, but foretells its future; suggests its policy; explains its possibilities. Don't Wait Another Minute Where is there a more useful book to "> put in the hands of school children? It MAIL ORDERS adds to their knowledge of history; it Those residing at a . . . , distance can have puts them in touch with the world's the book on the great progress; it teaches them to do big same terms b y in * , . eluding the amount tilings. named in the certifi cate to cover the ex- OFFER ENDS co " of NEXT SATURDAY i-'-V-v;. L_—' ■ ... Excellent Program by High School Literary Society Special to The Telegraph Willi&mstown, Pa., Feb. 2. Wil liamstown High School Literary So ciety rendered a program in the hljh school room on Friday evening to & large audience. There was included; I Music, high school choir; re&tatlon, j Miss Estella Moffett: discussion, "New j York Water Supply," Alva Barnes; oration. Norma.n Bolton; historical jtclection. Clair Row; vocal duet. Miss 'Clco Haller and Florence Hoffman; j debate, "Kesolved, That the pulpit has ! been ft greater factor in the world's | history than the school teacher's desk," affirmative, George Bond, Miss | Mary Griffith, negative, Arthur Kllng er, .Miss Ruth Mason, judges. Profes sor A. B. Crook, John Dyer and Mrs. Benjamin Holler, decided in favor of tile affirmative; humorous selection, Jacob Mellon; Instrumental duet, Mildred rook and Elizabeth Watkens; extracts, Olive Boyer. Ham Haas, .Margaret Budd, Gordon Shuttels worth, Charles Ivllnger, Margaret VVatklns. Margaret Dinger and Hattle Williard; solo. Miss Annie Bhadel, chorus by high school choir. The next public program will be rendered in two weeks. KINDIG-MILLICR WEDDING Spttial to The Telegraph Marietta, Pa., Feb. 2.—Miss Kath ryn K. Miller, of Millersvllle, was mar ried yesterday to Chester M. Kindig, by tlie Rev. H. S. Shelley, pastor of the Reformed Church at Willow Street. Think what Is stopping Itl Think of 9U the terms and diseased tissues which poison every breath! Here la the bis point in the treatment by (.- Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly. It purifies the air U. as ft enters the nosf, throat and mouth. Its V action ia simple, soothing and scientific. No I harmful druga. <juaranta*d right and we firove it by a big free sample. 2&c and 60c m. übes-all druggists or direct. konden Hit. Co.. Minneapolis, Minn. X\ l/ONDON'S II Catarrhal Jelly \\ One Leg It Crushed by Falling Tree and Other Fractured by Fall on Ice Special to The Telegraph Miffllnbur*, Pa., Feb. 2.—While at work In the mountains a few miles from Mifflinburg 1 , several months ago, William Stahlnacker, a man with a wif® and Ave small children, while outtln* down a tree, was struck by one of the large limbs and pinned to the earth, badly crushing and breaking hi* left leg In several places and other wise terribly injuring him. He was taken to University Hospital, Philadel phia, where he was compelled to un dergo a very critical and painful oper ation —that of taking, or rather, saw ing, a large piece of bone from his good leg, placing it In the Injured one where the bones were crushed. The operation was a success and he re turned from the hospital several days ago. Arriving in Mifflinburg on the late evening train, he remained all night with his brother-in-law and sis ter, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Gaunt. The following day he was conveyed to his home, a few miles southwest of Mif flinburg. Yesterday, wni'.e assisting his wife at some light work at the home he slipped and fell on the Ice and had his right log broken between the knee and ankle. Mr. Stahlnacker is a wor thy man of good moral habits and has no means to maintain his family. Financial assistance will be needed for weeks to come. •WIMi MANUFACTURE HCE CREAM Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa.. Feb. 2.—At a meeting of the board of directors of the Run bury Ice and Storage Company here this week, it was decided to Install machinery for the making of ice cream, butter, etc. Fully 1,000 gal lons of ice cream per day will be manufactured and a large number of additional hands will be given employ ment. REVIVAL AT NEW GKRMANTOWN Special to The Telegraph Blain, Pa., Feb. 2.—The Rev. G. P. Servls, pastor of the Plain Methodist Episcopal charge, is holding an in teresting revival at New Germantown. The meeting has been in progress for three weeks. ENDEAVORS HOLD ANNUAL RALLIES Anniversary Week Being Cele brated Throughout City and County by Thousands Christian Endeavor week, beginning yes terday and ending next Sunday, started with special services in many churches of Dauphin county and this city. Christian Endeavor, one of the greatest movements in the church and world, is now thirty -three years old, having been founded Febru ary 2, 1881, by Dr. Francis E. Clark, pastor of the Williston Congregational i.hurch in Portland, Maine; it now has 80,000 societies scattered throughout the world. At the international convention the slogan, "A Saloonless Nation in 1920" was suggested by Dr. Clark and this society is supporting the great tem perance movement. Threo big district rallies will be held, one at Lemoyne this evening and two in this city to-morrow even ing. West Shore Bally The rally at Lemoyne will be held In Trinity Lutheran Church, I. W. Ap pier, presiding, who will also give a short talk on "The Progress C. E. Has Made in This District"; addresses will be delivered by the Rev. M. S. Sharp, pastor Lutheran Church, Enola, on A Christian Endeavor Soldier" and M. A. Hoff, a prominent business man of New Cumberland, on the subject, "Christian Endeavor The Training School of the Church." The llarris burg C. E. choral union will render excellent music. Central District The big central district rally will be held in the Trinity Lutheran t hurch, South Ninth street, 10-mor row evening. John Harder, vice-presi dent, will preside. The principal ad dress or the evening will be delivered by the Rev. E. E. Snyder, pastor of St. Matthew's Lutheran Church, sub ject, "The C. E. at Work." A duet will be sung by Mr. and Miss McKel vey. The Rev. W. N. Vates, pastor Fourth Street Church of God, will of fer prayer. Allison 1111 l Rally A big rally will also be held in the Fourth Reformed Church. Sixteenth and Market streets, to-morrow even ing. This district is composed of four teen societies and will be presided over by Paul D. March, vice-presi dent. The Rev. Homer Skyles May, pastor of the Fourth Reformed Church, will conduct the devotional exercises. Mrs. J. A. Sellers will sing a solo and E. J. Muggins, president ofi the Harrisburg C. E. Union, will' make important announcements. O. P. Beckley, ex-president of the Har risburg union, will speak on "C. E. Work." The Christ Lutheran male quartet will sing special music after which responses to roll call will be given by fourteen pastors. Mrs. Ada Culp Bowman will render a solo. Big Rally Thursday Night The most important rally will he held in the large auditorium of Beth lehem Lutheran Church. Green and Cumberland streets, on Thursday evening. William G. Landes, of Phil adelphia, general secretary of the State Sabbath School Association, will deliver the address of the evening on the subject, "A Housetop Vision." Two banners will be awarded to the societies having the largest percent age of their membership present. It is estimated that the church will be filled to its utmost capacity as great preparations is being made by nearlv every society in this city and vicinity to have all the members present. Sev eral societies have a membership of nearly 200 and many societies have a membership of 100. Sunday Talks Via Hart. —The Rev. "Billy" Sunday talked to 2,500 people yesterday by proxy when the Rev. B. H. Hart read two of his sermons at morning and evening services in the Fifth Street Methodist Episcopal Church. At the morning service, the Rev. Mr. Hart read Sunday's "Mother" sermon to a crowded house. In the evening he read the great temperance sermon "Get on the Water Wagon." The Rev. Mr. Hart made the assertion that Sunday has created the greatest Impression in religious life since the preaching of the Apostle Paul. M. E. Conference Here.—Prepara tions are being made for the enter tainment of several hundred ministers and laymen who will visit this city for the forty-sixth annual convention of the Central Pennsylvania conference of the Methodist Episcopal church to be held in Grace Methodist Episcopal church, starting March 18. The Rev. Dr. John D. Fox. pastor of Grace church, is supervising the arrange ments assisted by several committees. Most of the delegates will be enter tained in the homes of local Metho dists. Bishop Earl Cranston, of Washington, will preside at the ses sions which will last several days. Great luter«st in Bevivals. —inter- est in revival services in the city grows. At the Pleasant Sunday after noon meeting in Lenney's theater yes terday men and women were turned away. The Rev. Dr. 1. W. Bagley. of Camden. N. J., who is conducting re vival services in Olivet Presbyterian church was the speaker. His sub ject was "The Cross." Revival serv ices started in two city churches yes terday In Olivet Presbyterian and the Ridge Avenue Methodist Episcopal churches. They will be continued for two weeks. The Rev. John H. Daugherty, the pastor, is conducting the services at Ridge Avenue Metho dist church. The Rev. Dr. I. W. Bag ley, of Camden, N. J., has charge of the services at Olivet Presbyterian church. Missionary Meeting.—The Women's Union Missionary Society of Harris burg will hold its regular monthly meeting In tho First United Brethren Church, Myrtle and Boas streets, to morrow afternoon at S o'clock. Dr. Smith Attacks the Religious Fad The Rev. Dr. Smith preached two sermons at Market Square Presby terian Church yesterday which at tacked the fads and theories of pres ent-day religion. Dr. Smith was particularly "severe upon that class of people who believe that instead of a redemption through washing in the blood of the Lamb a bathtub is all that is necessary; that Instead of a tendency toward evil man is constantly looking upward. He de clared that wealth or residence In a particular street or the kind of clothes a man wears are no indication of character; that God is ready and will ing to forgive all who come to Him, and that no particular sensation is necessary as a prerequisite to convic tion and conversion. In the evening sermon, which was in the nature of an after study of the text of the morning—"Man Must Be Born Again"—Dr. Smith gave a num ber of striking illustrations of the con- I version of men who ware regarded as | hopelessly los*. . . I . I '; * ' I'l lIIIIIIBIMIIIIIIIIBHIIIIIIIIIIBIjIIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIMIm alCertain-teeM ROOFING «»i nim *•» "ry t T7j^\i ■«—■f*TS» / Potting the Modern Roofing / Industry on the Map The General says: Oeoroe *»*» Whether it's roll roofing you're buy- j -hM P come to stay. th ?t "Si'th? natural • m \ » • T • ■ • mm* result of the needs of modern buainaas ing, for a business or industrial build- *« ' _ _|_ • 1 C • 1 . | the "scientific management" of building. ing—or shingles for a residence—the „j»» TS»«SrBSSsar "S? '»•!:; most important thing is, get this aglinst 1 the'^Siia 14 w»n p of gn, • fill 7 © li prejudice at the very start. C ertain-teed label on every roll or ■— a fsoea before It gets under way. But this crate and know that you're getting Certain-teed, the guaranteed-for-flf wo teen-years roofing. mm The quality capable of making good on W m m Mi flfteen-year guarantee established the K —J- , M ■ ? alth , °/ th ® Public in the modern roof m V ln K industry on its H m M M M M M m ttM M V And Certain-teed roofing—with the tre- K LL&LI S, ■_ mendouß momentum of its broadcast ad- HBU W vertislng, its aggressive sales policy, its enormous of production, tha three biggest mills in th« Oualitv n i„;,„ rooflng Industry behind its guarantee , , Rnnfllltf Durability —is chiefly responsible for this great Cert- tried 111K Guaran-feerf and rapid success with which the pre- JJ® red roll and shingle rooflng industry When yon buy rooting bliyinSf final nrO- . Every manufacturer of modern roof . • t 1 *1 J' »-r<l • i ,nff —every dealer who sells roofing and tection for your building. 1 here is no advance VL ery user °, f p: o 2. te * b >- , I*l 1 6 , . the unprecedented success of Certain test by which you can know the wearing quality "ftousands upon t. n « of thou™*. of that's in the roofing you buy, and how long it ?£""£? h t^ e s^^^ d o b .^in e^^ £& will last. Proof on the roof is the only test. I roofing, users of all good roll or shingle roofings. i'"or, while we con- Look to the manufacturer for the protection of your pur- i!-yea?f^?f£g ,< to b h e e thHeJt^nn* chase. Certain-teed Roofing is guaranteed for 15 years— W h a rmany &van*age!™ve£ e tiX it will last longer. Roofs do not near out—they dry out. 01 And yl Vhiie savin* thousands upon , thousands of dollars for roofing owaui, r— ——————— i Lertain-teed, built on a soft center asphalt the sun-ess of certain-teed rooflng has , T", ■ / , . . ; made thousands upon thousands of dol- A Certain-teeA Contraction base With hardcrasphalt protecting surface, lnrs in profits for roofing dealers— not Aurtamtecd construction y r ..V • ' only the dealers In Ceitain-teed rooflng. Roof ones Very MOW iy, indeed. Asphalt, a mIII- but the dealers in all good modern root tor buildings of the most perma- eral, never having been a gas, will not ln S»- For the success of Certain-tMd nent type appeals to architects. »„ , r roofing lias meant the very large suo engineers and builders as well return to gaseous torm. cess of the entire roll rooflngf industry, as to owners. . . - . , Modeni roofing has come to stay. It A Certain-teed Construction Roof The three biggest mills in the roofing industry is a gigantic and successful industry— is a buiu-uproof and is the mod- are behind the 15-year guarantee on every roll thanks to t lie success of Certaln-tMft ein scientific process of cover- and crate of Certain-teed —that responsibility is is based on modern, scientific ing—whether a aable roof or a .1 t „ j , - ,11 methods, efficiency, economy and better flat roof \viUi jx>or drainage thc best ad<l^ ncf test there is as lo llow long service. It means the truest economy for A Certain-teed Constructiorcßoof jour roof will last. the rooflng user—the best protection d™>« 11 w, v with >ii» mniv _ . I? 1 " ,s buildings and a better protec pot and as no gravel is used.does Certain-teed is always sold at a reasonable price j'°n f °r hif3 investment than he has ever eve'y°raiu 9 - by everywhere There are roofings time it means a good. It is a sanitary roof you can buy as low as one-third less in price. Your fair proflt to the rooflng dealer and blg- Co*ti more, but worth more. Ap- saving, however, is but a few dollars at most, e j: and better business than he ever did plied only by respousible roofers. and it is poor economy. Certain-teed is always OertalS^Md^roofng 06 Istabfilhed least expensive in the end. modern rooflng as one of the longest steps In the scientific management of f f mm f • building—the Introduction of modern General Roofing Manufacturing Co. fntTnSSs!" 01 '^^^^^^: World's largest manufacturers uf roofing and building papers teed roofing in this respect has meant Buccess to all good prepared roofings. It E. St.Louis,lll. York.Pa. Maneillai, 111. 'NewYorkClty Boston Kansas City has put the modern rooflng industry on Minneapolis Sai. Francisco Seattle London, England Hamburg. Germany the map. Cer<nln-teed Construction Roofing ~ CertgUn-teed Shingles tor Certnln-teed Booflns for Skvsrrnpers and Factories Bungalows and Residences I for Farm Horn e» and Dutldlnga ■ REVIVAL AT WILLIAMSTOWN Sfecial to The Telegraph Williamstown, Pa., Feb. 2. —A spiritual revival meeting is in prog ress in the United Brethren Church with the Rev. E. Ethan Bender, pas tor as the evangelist. Gospel sermons are preached and old-time hymns sung. Personal workers are on duty every evening one hour before meet ing tiine. Twenty-six have been to the altar of prayer thus far. The United Brethren Church has taken a new lease of life. All departments of work ore in fine order. The Sunday school attendance last Sunday passed its enrollment mark by five. FRUIT GROWERS TO. MEET Special lo The Telegraph New Bloomfield, Pa., Feb. 2.—Sat urday next the annual meeting of the Perry County Fruit Growers' Associa tion will be held in the grand jury room in the courthouse at which time the annual election of officers for the ensuing year will be held and busi ness of importance in regard to the next annual fruit show will be dis cussed. To Restore Good Health The first thing to do is to cor rect the minor ailments caused by defective or irregular action of the organs of digestion and elimination. After these ©r gans have been put in good working order by timely use of BEECHAM'S PILLS (Hm Lu|iil Sal* *1 Any MHMm ta Mm WmM) better digestion results, and then the food really nourishes and strengthens the body. The first dose gives relief and sounder Bleep, quieter nerves, and improved action of all the bodily organs are caused by an occasional use of Beecham's Pills. They giver universal satisfac tion and in safety, sureness and quickness of action Beecham's Pilld Have No Known Equal ** .fT" "•* i hot an tut valuable. Two Coal Yards We have one coal yard and office on the Pennsylvania Railroad at Forster and Cow den streets. The second yard is at Fifteenth and Chest 11 ui streets on the Reading Railroad. Having one yard in town and another one on the Hill enables us to make quicker de liveries. You always get your coal soon when you give ns the order and the coal is good, too. United Ice & Coal Co. Korater A ton drn Third A Boas I .-Hi & Chpilnut Hummel A Mulberry ALSO STEELTON, PA. I JOS.S. POULTON I »"» " 307 Market St What Shall I Do? with my money to keep it safe? is a question with people who keep their money at home, and as a temp tation to thieves or burglars. Why not deposit it in a good safe bank where it will be invested at three per cent, interest and safe at the same time. You can do this now by putting it in the First National Bank 224 MARKET STREET 5