Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, March 02, 1914, Page 2, Image 2

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" 1 . ===—ll
IE SENTENCED FOR
KILLING GEO. SPIID
Man Convicted of Manslaughter in
Selinsgrove Riot Go to
Prison
Special to The Telegraph
Sunbury, Pa..,' March 2. Judge
Johnson, of the Snyder county court,
at Middleburg on Saturday, after Har
vey 'Willow, Martin Luther Krataer,
his father-in-law, and tl ? latter's son.
Ralph, of Jackson township. Snyder
county, were found guilty of man
slaughter, the result of Willow striking
George Spald, TO years old. on the
head, at Selinsgrove 011 New Year's
day, tho latter dylug from the affects
of the blow, sentenced the men as fol
lows: Martin Luther Kratzer, SIOO
tine, the costs and two years in the
Eastern Penitentiary; Willow and
Ralph Kratzer, each S2f> line, the costs
and One year in the Snyder county
jail. Tho elder Kratzer, nearly 60
years old, had a pugnacious disposi
tion and his fighting proclivities
prompted him to go to Selinsgrove on
!Vew Year's day and get drunk, start
ing a riot. Willow accompanied him
{because Kratzer threatened to beat
him up if he didn't. Willow struck
Spaid when the lattrr hr.c 1 pushed
Kratzer out of a hotel, the testimony
showed. The elder Kratzer, accord
ing to the testimony, boasted that he
had never been licked by any man and
offered a dollar to Ills son every time
he would come home and say that he
had beaten another man.
SiifilT
oui or SORE nuns
i
the Moment You Rub the Pain
and Soreness Is Gone
OLD TIME STTJACCBS OIL
Get a Small Trial Bottle Now and
Go to Work Without Suffer
ing Any Pain
Count fifty! Pain gone.
Rheumatism is "pain only." Not 1
one cacs in fifty requires internal '
treatment. Stop drugging! Kuol
soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs
OH" directly upon the "tender spot," j
and relief comes instantly. "St. Ja- i
cobs Oil" is a harmless rheumatism !
cure which never disapjioints and can !
not burn or discolor the skin.
Umber up! Quit complaining. Get
o small trial bottle of "St. Jacobs
Oil." from any drug store and
in just a moment you'll be
free from rheumatic pain, soreness,
stiffness and swelling. Don't suffer!
Relief and a cure awaits you. "St.
Jacobs Oil" has cured millions of
rheumatism sufferers in the last half
century, and is Just as good for
sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, back
ache and sprains.—Advertisement.
MEAT WE OF
KILNOJiOUBLE
Take Salts to flush Kidneys if
Back hurts or Bladder
bothers
If you must have your meat every
day. eat it, but flush your kidneys with
Baits occasionally, says a noted au
thority who tells us that meat forms
tine acid, which almost paralyzes the
kidneys in their efforts to oxpei it .from
the blood. They become sluggish and
weaken, then you suffer with a dull
misery in the kidney region, sharp
pains in the back or sick headache,
dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue
5-i coated and when the weather is bad
you have rheumatic twinges. The
urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the
channels often get sore ana irritated,
obliging you to seek relief two or three
times during the night.
To neutralize these irritating acid*,
to cleanse the kidneys and lius)i ofi
the body's urinous waste, get four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar
macy here; take a tablespoonful in a
Klass'of water before brfikfapt lor a
lew days, and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acid of grapes and lemon
Juice, combined with lithla, and has
been used l'or generations to flush and
stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to
neutralize the acids in urine, so it no
longer irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in
jure, and makes a delightful effer
vescent litliia-water drink. —Adv.
SAGE TEH PUTS LIFE ~
AND COW 111 HI
Don't Stay Gray! Sage Tea and
Sulphur Darkens Hair So
Naturally That Nobody
Can Tell
You can turn gray, faded hair
teautifully dark and lustrous almost
vcr night if you'll get a JO-cent bottle
H" "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair
Remedy" at any drug store. .Millions
of bottles of this old, famous Sage Tea
Recipe are sold annually, says a well
known druggist liere, because it dark-
Ens the hair so naturally and evenly
that no one can tell it has been ap
plied. ' i
Those whose hair is turning gray,
becoming taded, dry, seraggly and
thin have a surpnse awaiting them,
because after one or two applications
:he gray hair vanishes and your locks
Decomo luxuriantly dark and beautiful
—all dandruff goes, scalp itching and
falling hair stops.
This is the age of youth. Gray
haired. unattractive folks aren'
wanted around, so get busy with
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur to-night
tnd you'll be delighted with your dark,
aandsome hair and your youthful ap
pearance within a few days.—Adver
lisement. _
MONDAY EVENING,
Burgesses of Towns in
Central Pennsylvania
JONAS G. STEHMAN J"" 1
I MOIXTVILLE J
Special to The Telegraph
j Columbia, Pn., March 2. —Jonas G.
I Siehman. who has become burgess of
I Mountvlllc, is a Republican and is the
j third man to hold that office in that
I borough. He has been prominently
i identified with the affairs of the bor
ough and is superintendent of St.
[Paul's I'nited Brethren Sunday School,
which is the largest in the town, lie
comes from a family long known and
prominently connected in that section
and he is known as a substantial and
progressive citizen.
The borough of Mountville is one
of tho newest in the county, having
been incorporated May 15, 1906. It is
ft wide-awake and prosperous town and
is rapidly forging to a place among
the big boroughs in Lancaster county.
Burgess Stehman was elected by a big
majority, being popular with all
parties.
Sermons and Addresses at
Evangelical Conference
Special to The Telegraph
Elizabethville, Pa., March 2. The
Evangelical Association of the East
Pennsylvania Conference, in session
here, held an important meeting yes
terdoj. The morning service was
opened with devotional exercises by
Bisnop Thomas Bowman, of Allen
town. followed by a male quartet com
posed of the Rev. B. W. Luckenbill,
Pottstown; the Rev. J. A. Wiegand,
Lancaster; the Rev. C. C. Moyer,
Reading; the Rev. A. W. Buck, Hel-1
Icrtown.
KNIGHTS ATTEND SERVICES
Special to The Telegraph
Marietta, Pa.. March 2.~ Marietta
Commandery, No 139, Ancient and
Illustrious Order Knights of Malta, at
tended services Inst night in Zion's Re
formed church when the pastor, the
Rev. E. Elmer Sensenig, delivered a
special sermon, taking for his suHect,
"The Man With Hair on His Hand."
MAR LEV
ARROW
COLLAR
* "JETT PEABODYfrCO.TROYNY
Sore Throat
neglected, may develop into scri
| ous ailments. Remove the inflam
| matioa with
! SLOANS
[LINIMENT ;
which easily conquers croup,
asthma, tsnsi.itis, und other j
troubles of tho throat and chest. !
Mrs. L. X. Bragdoti, Sorrento, Me.,
writes: ' Enclosed find ts cents, for
which send bottle of Sloan's Liniment,
which is the only thing I can get to
stop w.re throat for me. It also works
wonderfully on my flesh, stopping
rams of ail kinds." ;
At all dealers. Price 25c., 50c. & SI.OO 5
Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc., Boston, Mass.
Beware of Boils-THEIR
Very Appearance Denotes a
Blood Condition That Requires
Prompt Action
At the first appearance of pimples
and boils the blood should be given a
good searching internal bath with
S. S. S., the greatest blood purifier
Known to man.
This remarkable remedy has the pe
culiar action of soaking through the
intestines diredtly Into the blood. In
a few minutes its influence is at work
ityevery artery, vein and tiny capil
lary. livery membrane, every organ
of tho body, every emunctory becomes
in effect a filter to strain the blood
of impurities. The stimulating prop
erties of S. S. S. compel the skin,
liver, bowels, kidneys, bladder, to all
work to the one end of casting out
every irritating, every pain-inflicting
atom of poison; it dislodges by irriga
tion all accumulations in the joints,
causes acid accretions to dissolve, ren
ders them neutral and scatters thoso
peculiar formations in the skin that
cause boils and other skin eruptions.
An«l nest of all this remarkable remedy
is welcome to the weakest atomacb. In a very
brief time S. S. S. has the reconstructive
process so under control that remarkable changes
ure observed. Ali eruptive places heal, lays,
terlous pains and aches have disappeared, aud
from bend to foot there is a conscious sensation
of renewed health. That strange moody, morbid
feeling of depression j lifted and the entire
syßtem responds with surprising energy.
Yon can get 8. S. S. at any drug store.
Beware of any efTort to sell yon something
claimed 1o be "just as good." If yours is a
peculiar ease and you desire expert advice, write
to| The Swift Specific Co., ill'O Swltt lildg.,
Atlanta, Cist, i
SUPERVISORS WILL
TAKE IIP flll MS
Taxpayers in Upper End of East
Pennsboro Township Want
Half-mile Stretch Built
' ' ■
Special to The Telegraph
1 Enola, Pa., March 2.—When the
j supervisors of East Pennsboro town
ship meet in the Midway Fire Com
pany building here this evening, a big
delegation of township taxpayers is
expected to be present. The supervis
ors will take up the question of build
ing a new road from Pyne'a corner of
the borough limits of West-Falrvlew,
to Mann's Woods, a stretch of about
one-half mile. A representative of
the State Highway Department will be
present and sign the necessary papers
giving State aid if the supervisors will
agree to pay for their portion of the
road. The question has been pending
for some time, the supervisors fearing
to build the road because of the debt
which may be incurred if tho case
, pending in the Cumberland county
courts . which grew out Of the build
' ing of the road between the river and
I Camp Hill, should be decided against
I the township. The supervisors would
then have to pay several thousand dol-
I lars for the construction of that thor
j oughfare. Many of the taxpayers in
j tho upper end of the county, however,
i are dissatisfied with this arrangement
iand are demanding that the supervis
-1 ors draw up the papers for the build
ing of the road between Pyne's corner I
and Mann's Woods. If this stretch
is built there will be a new road from
the Northern Central bridge in West
Fail-view to' Mann's Woods, the bor
| ugh council in AVest Fairview decld
-1 ing; with State aid, to build a road
from the bridge to Pyne's corner.
To Cure a Cohl in One Day
I Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE
I Tablets. Druggists refund money if it
; fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signa-
Pure Is on each box. 25c.—Advertise
im-rv»
iMflLoir
I WRITTEN ELK PLAY
Musician Shows Talent That May
Lead H!m Into Fig Things
in Theatrical World
np
AraHp
? 4 fill
mk 1
\ —— —
LEO MCDONALD.
It is to the ingenuity and remarkt
ble artistic ability of Leo McDonald,
a Carlisle lawyer and member of the I
• Elks of that city, that a large amount |
j of credit should go to for the manner
! in which the Carlisle Elks have pput
| over an amateur show that is the equal
• of many professional musical come
-1 dies.
Mr. McDonald is a musician of con
| siderable ability, but in addition to
I this, he has the gift of wwrlting plots
and arranging numbers that few mu-
I sicians possess. Harrisburgers who
I will witness "George Brady's Dream"
( at the Majectic Theatre tomorrow or
I Wednesdaw, when this piece will be
given under the auspices of the Har
] risburgElks, will be quick to predict
I a future for Mr. McDonald in the the
theatrical line.
j While Mr. McDonald has had a I
hand in arranging several of the pieces
that have been given annually by the
Carlisle Elks in their home town, this
v ears production is more pretentious
han any of its predecessors, and may
irove to be the stepping stone upon
which Mr. McDonald will rise to
higher things in the theatrical world
The sale of tickets for "George
Brady's Dream," at the Majectic
Theater has been bery encouraging
ilthough there are plenty of good
j seats for each performance. Governor
' Ti ner has been iinvited to attend the
j play as a guest of honor.
Soutter Now OWNIS the
1 to 25 Cent Store
Beginning to-day John C. Soutter
will assume full ownreship of the lc
to 25c department store, which up to
this time has been a corporation char
tered under the laws of Delaware.
Mr. Soutter, under whose active su
pervision, the store has been conduct
d ever since it was opened in Har
'isburg, has from time to time been
■icquiring the outstanding stock of the
orporation, and with the consent of
tockholders and officers takes over
he business after March 1, 1914, un
r hif- so!e ownership, thus doing
away with the many legal require
ments. expenses and t ixes incident
io the mantcname of corporations.
The business will hereafter be con
ducted under the name of "Soutter's
lc to 25c Department Store." at the
:an.e locution, 215 Market street. Mr.
.Soutter, prior to coming to Harris
burg, was connected with the firm of
Soutter, Buchanan and Young, who
operated a large department store in
Lancaster. He has put into his local
! enterprise all the knowledge gained
by his many years of experience in
merchandising, and It is to his careful
managerhent and effort that the grati
fying growth of tho business which ,
lie now owns, must be credited.
HARRISBURG t&S&Sp. TELEGRAPH
GUTELY & FITMID
IHUGE STORE
Firm Hat Remarkable Growth Un
der Able Direction of Frank
R. Downey
\
' I'JUNK K. liOWNin,
| Back in ISS9 the Gately & Fitzger
! aid Supply Company began business,
l in u small way in I-larrisburg. The
progressive management buck ol' the
store was responsible lor the rappid
gratifying growth in business and in
tho year 1896, Frank B. Downey, was
made manager of the store. Mr.
Downey's enterprise and able direc-!
tion of tho business have been respon-
I slble for a constantly increasing pa
tronage which has made necessary
from time to time the addition of tloor
space to accommodate growing de
partments and others which have been
added at various times.
In this manner space was acquired
in pproperties Nos. 29, 31 and 33 J
South Second street and it now be-'
tonus necessary to take the entire
third floor of the building at Second
and Chestnut streets, known to many
as tho Bell estate. This will give the
Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Comppany
600 square feet additional floor space
or a total of 20,000 square feet floor
space in buildings Nos. 29, 31, 33 and
35 South Second street. i
Since 1896 Mr. Downey has been in
charge of the local store and several
years ago he was taken into the firm,
giving him wider scope for his pro
gressive business ideas. He has sur
rounded himself with an efliificient
sales organization to which he gives
i much credit for the rapid strides made
I in business.
The property just acquired is now :
undergoing extensive remodeling and
when completed will permit of en
largement of several important de
partments The business is devoted to
sale of clothing and house furnishing
goods of all descriptions.
Recent Deaths in
Central Pennsylvania
New Germantown.—George Alexan
der Shields,»son of William A. Shields,
died at his home in Shelby, Ohio, on
February 15. He was born in this
place May 4, 1879 and left here with
his parents for Orblsonia, Huntingdon
county, in January, 1888, and with
them moved to Shelby about twenty
years ago. He enlisted in Battery L,
Sixth United States Heavy Artillery, in
1898, and served three years in the
Philippine insurrection, where he con
tracted Asiatic malarial poisoning and
bronchitis, which undermined his
health. He is survived by his wife,
two sons, Winfield Scott and Charles
Sylvester, his father, and four broth
ers.
A Tonic For th? Nerv J
Nervous people who ha-e not yet
developed a disease that can be rec-1
\ ognized and treated by the medical i
profession have the, greatest trouble
in finding relief. Irritation, headache,
sleeplessness, nervous dyspepsia, all
these discomforts make life miserable
but are endured rather than run a doc
tor's bill without definite hope of re
covery.
Every such sufferer should know
the danger or such a condition of the
■ nervous system. Nervous debility and
I even paralysis may easily result if
I the tone of the nerves is not restored.
The one big fact that bring-s hope
and relief is that the nerves can be
restored by building up the blood. It
cannot be too often repeated that only
through the blood can nourishment
and medicine reach the nerves. Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills make the blood
rich and red and quickly restore vi
tality and energy to a weak .nervous
j system. A nervous person who gives
these pills a trial is almost certain to
see good results and, what is more,
the benefit will be lasting because the
trouble is attacked at its root. Thin
blood makes weak nerves. Building up
the blood restores the nerve force.
Get a box of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills to-day and write the Dr. Wil- j
llams Medicine Co., Schenectady,!
N. Y., for a free copy of "Diseases of |
1 the Nervous System."—Advertisement, j
R| ■ ■ BB are curable. All kinds
fill M [1 mean suffering and
WM | ■ bh| danger. The CAUSE
B If H ■ '• always Internal.
■ fl IhlbU Dr. Leonhardt'l
" HEM-^OID
tablets produce amazing results by attacking the
INI ERNAL CAUSE. The piles are dried bp and
r'rmanently cured. 24 days' treatment. SI.OO.
R. LEONHARDT CO.. Buffalo. N.Y. (free book)
i Bold by Kennedy Medicine Store. Hairlabua,
J. A. MoCurdy ateelton. and dtalera.
BAD BREATH
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get
at the Cause and Remove it
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub- |
stltuto for calomel, act gently on the.
bowels and positively do the work.
People afflicted with bad breath find'
quick relief through Dr. Edwards' Olive
Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated
tablets are taken for bad breath by all
«ho know them.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gently
but firmly on the bowels and liver,
stimulating them to natural action,
clearing. the bl iod and gently purifying
the entire system.
1 hey do that which dangerous calo
mel does without any of the l>ad after
effects.
All the benefits of nasty, sickening,
griping cathartics are derived from Dr. ,
Edwards' Olive Tablets without grip- ;
ing, naln or disagreeable effects of any f
kind.
Dr. P. M Edwards- discovered the
formula after seyent n years of prau- I
tice among patients aifltcted with bowel.
and liver complaint with the attendant I
bad breath.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are pure
ly a vegetable compound mixed with
olive oil, you will know them by their
olive color.
Take one or two every night for a
week and note the effect. 10c and 26c
per box. The Olive Tablet Company,
Columbus, O. At all druggists.—AU
ver' *>cmcnt. ,
*
Girard, whose column illumi
nates the editorial page of the
Public Ledger, is a habit—a sort
i
of breakfast cocktail to help digest
the morning's news. Acquire the
habit and you will soon find your
self possessed of a sympathetic and
charitable interest in a great deal
of the world with which you have
not hitherto been brought in
contact.
[WEST SHORE NEWS
Lewisberry Sleighing Party
Goes to New Cumberland
New Cumberland, Pa., March 2.
On Friday night a sleighing party from
Lewisberry was entertained at the
home of Mrs. Margaret Glass in
Bridge street, New Cumberland. Vari
ous games were played during tho
evening, after which refreshments
were served to the following:
Mr. and Mrs. Logan Reiff, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Gray, 7 Tr. and Mrs.
Lewis Wise, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wise,
Mrs. E. N. Laird, Mrs. Homer Het
riek, Mrs. Marlin Potts, Mrs. G. J.
Strayer, Misses Ora E. Miller. Sallie
Fetrow, Lillie Crumlich. Lena Her
man. Kathryn Strayer, Zelma Byers,
Bessie Kunkle, Mabel Ylncer, Ethel
Laird, Julia Sutton, Glenn Yinger,
Scott Erney, Oscar Kister, Park Mc-
Clure, Franklin Fetrow, Aaron Miller,
M. Hollinger, R. M. Spangler, of Lew
isberry; Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Sutton,
Robert and Anna Sutton, of Lemoyne;
Hiram Starr, Harrlsburg; Charles
I A Musical Evening With
The Victor
j and tiresome evening «... f
to one of pleasure. Ti v i vs2c oBU t
~ j* Other itylci liutotiso
I While You Sit
| All the World's Great Singers and Musicians
1 Await your command, ready to sing or play for you, what-
J ever music you may wish to hear. And hearing them on the
|| Victrola is all so real that you enjoy it just as much as though you were at-
Jjß tending a performance in an opera house
1 Come in and Hear
We'll gladly play for you and explain how you can easily have one in
i your home. Our display consists of all styles—sls to S2O0 —in different
i 1 colors of wood.
I And be sure to he?.r the new Ediso i Diamond Disc and Columbia Grafa
i nola. This is the only stor- in the city where you can hear and compare
• these different instruments side-by-side.
The J. H. Troup Music House
Troup Building, 15 South Market Square
MARCH 2,1914.
Kunkle, _ Miss Lizzie Kunkle and Mrs.
Glass, New Cumberland.
CROSS RIIVER ON ICE
New Cuniberla. 1, Pa., March 2.
Workmen from Now Cumberland who
are employed at Steelton crossed the
river on the ice on Suturuay morning
and some at noon. j\t 2 o'clock the
ice moved.
CLASS ON SLETGHRIDE
New Cumberland, Pa., March 2.
Miss Ida Kreiger's Sunday school class
of Trinity United Brethren Church,
New Cumberland, took a slelghride
to Mechanicsburg and spent the even
ing at the Hollinger farm.
TRIP TO DUNCANNON
Marysville, Pa., March 2. On
Thursday evening a Jolly party of the
town's younger set held a very pleas
ant sleighing trip to Duncannon.Those
in the party were Miss Carrie Mes
singer. Miss Jennie Fliekinger, Miss
Barbara Rousli, Miss Olga Keei, Miss
Ruth Kennedy, Miss Carrie -Smith,
Lester Mutch, V. T. Dissinger, Edgar
Smith and Paul L. Ellenberger.
WILL CONFER DEGREES
New Cumberland, Pa., March 2.
Riverside Council, No. 87, Order In
dependent Americans, of New Cum
berland, will confer degrees on twelve
candidates Tuesday evening, March 3.
By reason of the fact that this is tins
iirst initiation under the new ritual, a
largo attendance is expected. The de
gree work Mvlll bo followed by a
smoker.
SAUERKRAUT SUPPER
New Cumberland, Pa., March 2.
Mrs. John Rosenberger's Sunday
school class, composed of young men,
will hold a sauerkraut supper In the
basement of tho Methodist Church on
Saturday, March 14.
STUDENTS ENJOY RIDE
Marysville, Pa., March 2.—A group
of High School students held a very
pleasant sleighing party to tho home
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Allendar, o£
Duncannon, on Friday evening. Re
freshments were served to Miss lto
malne Clendcnin, Miss Martha Boyer,
Miss Mary Boyer, Miss Marguerite
Glass, Miss Margaret Ellen berger.
Miss Esther White, Miss Hazel Hain,
Miss Marie Harrold, James Morelaml,
Joseph Boyer, Lester Jones, Linn
Lightner, Paul Anspach, Russell
Kocher, Herman Hippie and Gordon
Skivington.