Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, April 07, 1914, Page 7, Image 7

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    MUSTEROLEJheGreat
Remedy for flheumtism
It stops the twinges, loosens up
those stiffened joints and muscles —
makes you feel Rood all over.
Thousands who use MUBTEROLE
I will tell what relief it gives from Sore
, Throat. Bronchitis, Tonsilitis, Croup,
Stiff Neck, Asthma. Neuralgia, Head
ache, Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheuma
tism. Lumbago, Pains and Aches of
the Back or Joints, Sprains, Sore Mus
cles, Bruises, Chilblains. Frosted Feet
and Colds (it prevents Pneumonia).
Doctors and nurses frankly recom
mend MUSTEROLE as a substitute
for the old messy mustard plaster.
Large hospitals use it.
At your druggist's, in 25c and 50c
► liars, a special large hospital size for
$2.50.
Accept no substitute. If your drug
gist cannot supply you, send 25c or
60c to the MUSTEROLE Company,
Cleveland, Ohio, and we will mail you
B jar. postage prepaid. (01)
JOSEPH F. SWORDS, Sulphur, Okla.,
says:
"Your Musterole is very efficacious.
It has done away with my Rheumatic
pains and aches in a wonderfully
ehort space of time."
Makes Backache
Quickly Disappear
A Few Doses Relieves All Such
Miseries. Bladder Weakness,
Kidney Trouble and Rheu
matism Promptly Vanish
It is no longer necessary for any
one to suffer with backachlng, kid
ney trouble, have disagreeable blad
der and urinary disorders to contend
with, or be tortured with rheuma
tism, stiff joints, and its heart
wrenching pains, for the now discov
ery, Croxone, Quickly and surely re
lieves all such troubles.
Croxone is the most wonderful
remedy yet devised for ridding the
system of uric acid and driving out
4 all the poisonous impurities which
cause such troubles. It is entirely
different from all other remedies. It
is not like anything else ever used
for the purpose. It acts on the prin
ciple of cleaning out the poisons and
removing the cause.
Tt soaks right in through the walls,
membranes and linings, like water in
a sponge, neutralizes, dissolves, and
makes the kidneys sift out and filter
away, all the uric acid and poisons
from the blood, and leaves the kid
neys and urinary organs clean,
strong, healthy and well.
It maters not how long you have
suffered, how old you are, or what
you have used, the very principle of
L'roxone is such, that it is practically
impossible to take It into the human
system without results. There is
nothing else on earth like it. It
starts to work the minute you take it
and relieves you the first time you
use it.
If you suffer with pains in your
back and side, or have any signs of
kidney, bladder troubles, or rheuma
tism, such as puffy swellings under
the eyes or in the feet and ankles, if
1 ou are nervous, tired and run down,
or bothered with urinary disorders,
Uroxono will quickly relievo you of
kour misery. You can secure an orig
inal package of Croxone at trifling
eost from any first-class druggist.
All druggists are authorized to per
sonally return the purchase price if it
fails in a single case.—Advertisement.
An Easy Way to Get
Fat and Be Strong
The trouble with most thin folks who
tvish to gain weight is that they insist
en drugging their stomach or stuffing |
it with greasy foods; rubbing on use
less "flesh creams," or following some
foolish physical culture stunt, while
the real cause of thinness goes un
touched. You cannot get fat until your
Sigestive tract assimilates the food you
»at.
Thanks to a remarkable new scien
tific discovery, it is now possible to
»ombine into simple.form the very ele
ments needed by the digestive organs to
help them convert food into rich, fat
laden blood. Tills master-stroke ot
ttiodern chemistry is called Sargol and
has been termed the greatest of flesh
hullders. Sargol aims through Its re
fcenerative, reconstructive powers to
foax the stomach and intestines to lit
trally soak up the fattening elements
t>f your food and pass them into the
fclood, where they are carried to every
Itilrved, broken-down cell and tissue
if your body. You can readily picture
{he result when this amazing transfor
mation has taken place and you notice
(low your cheeks fill out, hollows about
four neck, shoulders and bust disap
pear and you take on from 10 to 20
pounds of solid, healthy flesh. Sargol
is absolutely harmless, inexpensive, ef
{leient. George A. Gorgas and other
oading druggists of Harrisburg and
riclnlty have it and will refund your
jnoney if you are not satisfied, as per
the guarantee found iu every pack
tge.
Caution i—While Sargol has given ex
cellent results in overcoming nervous
lyspepsia and general stomach troubles
rt should not be taken by those who do
Hot wish to gain ten pounds or more.—
Advertisement.
Drug Clerk Tells How
To Cure Indigestion
AMommciila to Sufferer, the Heat
Stomach Remedy In Harrlnlturg
To-daj.
! "It is a wonder some of us have
Stomachs left," remarked a well-known
rug clerk recently. "While all drug
,tores &ell a score or more of stomach i
remedies for which there is a wide de
mand, most of them are Just pepsin
fills whicn digest toe food that Is in
he stomach at the time. They have
no curative or strengthening effect on
the stomach at all, and of course do
not reach or cure the cause. So the
lame people keep on coming here and
buvlng and using them until they are
Peal chronic dyspeptics. When anyone
really asks my advice, I swear by and
recommend ordinary blsurated mag
nesia, which doesn't digest the food at
all but just acts as an antacid and
sweetens the sour fermenting con
tents of the stomach. That stops the
pain, heart-burn, sour rising, wind,
bloating, fullness, etc., in Just a few
minutes, and the stomach digests its
food without help or trouble, which Is
the proper way."
"Doctors make mistakes sometimes,
too," he continued. "My own aunt had
kll kinds of trouble with her stom
pch for years. She bought and used
several styles, of digestive pills but
fot worse right along, as naturally
he would. Finally she went to a doc
tor, who nearly scared her to death by
telling her she had cancer of the
(lomach. She came to mo with his
prescription and told mo what he said.
I thought it was nonsense. I sent her
to another doctor whom I knew very
well and ho didn't tell her aything,
but Just gave her this same thing, bls
urated magnesia. She took it two
weeks and never has had any stom
since and that's three
irears ago. St.e'3 my own aunt and I
icnow this for tu. fact. Yes. a lot of
blsurated magnesia Is sold In Harris
burg. All the druggists have It, I sup
pose, and all you take is a teaspoon
ful after every meal. It's all right."
>— Advertisement
TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 7, 1914.
LEDGER TELLS OF
COMMERCE CHAMBER
New Policy Responsible For Re
newed Interest of Harrisburg
Business Men
In an extensive article the Public
Ledger of Philadelphia to-day tells
about Harrisburg's new Chamber of
Commerce, and of the many advan
tages this city holds as a distributing
center for large industries.
The article was written by a staff
correspondent who is visiting various
cities throughout Pennsylvania, and
under the heading "Harrisburg Seeks
Trade Expansion," the article In part
is as follows:
"The Harrisburg Chamber of Com
merce, formerly the Harrisburg
Board of Trade, has celebrated its re
christening by adopting a new finan
cial policy and by inaugurating a cam
paign of publicity which is at once ag
gressive and intelligent.
"When the board sold its building
at the corner of Front and Market
streets for $50,350, there were pessi
mists who predicted an early and a
complete collapse; but they are no
longer heard.
"Under the old regime the annual
dues were $8 a year: under the new
$25 is fixed as the minimum, and
there are concerns in Harrisburg that
pay SIOO or more.
What Luncheons Do
"The Chamber of Commerce has re
cently inaugurated a series of noon
day luncheons, at which the mem
bers gatl*«r to discuss local conditions
and frequently .to hear some outsider
upon a topic of contemporary, com
mercial interest.
"These luncheons have not only
stimulated interest in the chamber
itself, but they have been the means of
spreading Information that was not
general even in Harrisburg. For in
stance, some of the older members
have been surprised to learn that
there are sixty-seven large manufac
turing concerns whose products are
partly distributed from Harrisburg,
exclusive of local jobbers or local man
ufacturers."
State Opens Bids For
Asphalt For the Year
Highway Commissioner E. 31. Bige- '
low to-day opened the bids for fur
nishing asphalt in indeterminate Quan
tities to the State Highway Depart
ment. Xo awards were made, the
commissioner announcing that the
prices quoted would be posted and
that quantities would be bought as
needed from time to time from the
company that could furnish the as- 1
phalt at the lowest price with the j
freight rates taken into consideration. ;
The awards were made for standard i
brands for as much as needed, the bids
being freight on board at designated
points. When the department needs
asphalt it can order from the nearest
point and pay the freight. In this
manner the price stands fixed for a
year. There were many bidders, the
department having sought as many
as possible. The United Gas Improve- j
ment Company, of Philadelphia, bid
on its own specifications and the Union
Oil Company, of California, on ship
ments from California or New York,
while ethers bid on points which were
not clearly defined. The bid of the
United Gas Company was thrown out.
Former Merchant Prince,
Indicted, Sued by Wife
MRS. HENRY SIEGEL,
New York, April 2. Mrs. Henry
Siege!, who is suing the former mer
chant prince, now under indictment
for falsifying the accounts of his pri
vate bank, has issued a statement in
which she denies Slegel's allegations
that she was largely responsible for
the squandering of his own fortune
and the money of his depositors, who
were exclusively of the poorer class.
Mrs. Slegel declares that while her
husband was extremely parismonlous
in doling out money for household
expenses, he was proportionately lav
ish in squandering money for his own
pergonal entertainment. She declares
she is absolutely penniless and de
scribes her state as similar to that of
the depositors of her husband's de
funct bsnk
j MANUFACTURERS' SALE OF I
SAMPLE SUITS AND COATS
Jos. Steinberg Sons & Co., S. Lewis & Co., Tl> * Sin s« r Mf s* Co -< Levy Jacobs & Son,
Manufacturers of Ladies' Suits & Coats. Manufacturing and Manufacturing of Manufacturing of Ready-to-Wear
A. J. Letters & Co., Special Designers on Novelties Custom-Tailored Clothing for
Manufacturers of Ladies' Coats. Ladies' Suits. In Suits and Coats. Men and Young Men.
The Above Firms Have Placed Their Stock In Our Stores, Allowing Us 10
Per Cent, and Expenses and Are Willing to Wait for Their Money and Pay Us the
Costs of All Alterations. Now Is Your Opportunity to Buy a Fine Sample Suit Or
Goat. Pay Cash If You Have It. Credit If You \Vant It.
f 400 Ladies' Sample §4 A A Lot of 300 [Altering Done
fRT SUITS & COATS lil MEN'S SUITS rnrr
mV Value up to S2O. H 11 Many Styles and Cloths. L |J L L
Choice, OUR PRICE, $lO BW Choice, OUR PRICE,. $lO |j| P T
1 300 Ladies' Beautiful For Rainy Weather ——
/n Sample Coats X Men's Rain Coats
HL'-: I !l// /' Many Shades and Cloths. HJ| About 50 In This Lot.
I If Your Choice, PRICE, $8 Choice at $8 jKISmw
=sPff 100 Coats and Fine SI" 20() , n s
mJ mMM ßdress 1s K suits MEnk
;; <ai£ 'm Choice at aU ...$ 5 Value, sls. OUR PR1CE,..... $5
150 GIRLS' BEAUTIFUL m lII'SStPS
# cash Livingston's Q «T
II ijjr If You Have It. H WilljjwlUll W MARKET SQUARE If You Want It
Trial of Minister Is
Rapidly Nearing Close
New York, April 7.—The trial of!
Jacob E. Price, pastor of the Wash
ington Heights Church, before the ec
clesiastical court of the New York
conference of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, neared its conclusion to-day.
It was believed a verdict would be an
nounced by night. Mrs. Claura B. j
Dore, wife of the attorney who pre
pared the charges of unministerial
conduct against the pastor, was recall
ed to the stand and said she was quite
sure Dr. Price had kissed her twice.
Mrs. Hilma Dohl, another of the pas
tor's accusers, who said she received j
a number of letters containing threats, I
rushed from the trial room and said:
"I have set out to fight the devil
and his hosts and although he has
more devices than I ever dreamed of,
I intend to show that alienist in there
how much lie knows before I get
through with him."
The Rev. Dr. Frank Belcher, pastor
of the Five Points Mission, in sum
ming up for Dr. Price, said the accu
sations were mere "hallucinations."
HOT FROM THE WIRES
lrniy be brought about through trade
agreements in which capital and labor
have opportunity for full discussion,
Joseph Balentlne, of Cincinnati, presi
dent of the International Holders'
Union, to-day told the Federal indus
trial relations commission. Ho said he
did not approve an outside arbitrator.
Xcw York. — The question of whetlu
a convention shall be called in 1915 t*.
the revision of the State Constitutioi.
attracted but few voters to the pollt.
when they opened at 6 o'clock this
morning.
New York. Fourteen new indict
ments against Henry Siegel and Frank
K. Vogei, heads of the bankrupt Siegel
enterprises, Were handed in to-day by
the grand jury that has been investi
gating the failure of the Henry Siegel
and Company private bank and the
methods of the department stores con
trolled by the two men.
Terre Haute, Ind. The question of
a new wage scale was taken up to-day
by the miners of the Eleventh district,
who are in convention here. Shortly
after the morning session opened the
report of the scale committee was read
and the convention went into executive
session.
Pittsburgh. Van Blttner, president
of District No. 6. United Mine Workers
of America, issued a statement to-day
In which he charged that efforts were
being made in the Interests of nonunion
mines in the Pittsburgh district to
"throw the union mines into idleness,
and thereby permit the nonunion mines
to reap the benefit of Increased orders."
Washington, D. C. The average
condition of winter wheat on April 1
was 95.6 per cent, of a normal, compar
ed with 91.6 last year, 50.6 in 1912 and
I 85.7 the ten year average, the Depart
iment of Agriculture reported to-aay.
! The average condition of winter wheat
j in Pennsylvania is 93 per cent, of nor.
■ mat, and the ten year average is 88;
I New Jersey, 91 and 90; Delaware, 91
and 90.
Huston, Mass. Rain and lack of In
j terest made voting light to-day in the
special election in the Twelfth Con
j gresslonal District, to chooso a succes
sor to James M. Curley, Democrat, who
j resigned after his election as Mayor.
New York. Final arrangements
for the Passover celebration for the
Jewish soldiers and sailors whose re
lease on furlough was obtained a few
days ago, provide for services Friday
afternoon at the Temple Emanuel, at
which Dr. Silverman will deliver an
address and "America" will be sung for
the first time in a synagogue.
Philadelphia. The Government
rested Its case to-day In the trial ot
Emil Gerstel, of Reading, who is being
tried in the United States Court here of
aiding and abetting the misapplication
of the funds of the Penn National Bank,
of Reading.
Washington, D. C. As a frlendlv
act toward the Chinese Republic a bill
empowering President Wilson to detail
an army engineer officer to reclamation
work on the Hual river at the instance
of the Chinese Government, was favor
ably reported to the House to-day by
the military committee. The work is
to prevent Hoods and famine.
HAUM HEARING THURSDAY
A hearing in the case of William R.
Baum, the Harrisburg railway mail
clerk, charged with rilling a registered
letter pouch and embezzling *20,000
will be held Thursday morning at 10
o'clock before Leroy ,T. Wolfe, United
States Commissioner at his office, 16
North Second street.
Mayor to Address Farmers
in Convention Here
The first annual convention of the
Pennsylvania Threshermen and Farm
ers' Protective Association, as the or
ganization to be formed this after
noon will be designated, opened in
Chestnut Street Auditorium this after
noon and will continue to-morrow.
This afternoon was taken up with
getting things under way. This even
ing Mayor Royal will deliver an ad
dress of welcome. B. E. Clark, editor
of the America Thresherman. will
I speak on "How Can Threshermen
' Secure Their Rights." Discussion over
highway department rules forbidding
use of traction engines on the high
ways will follow.
Man Who Shot Bird Two
Years Ago Is Arrested
| Nearly two years ago Jerry Bird, a
horsedealer, of t»2S Ash street, with his
wife, was driving through Kdgemont.
The day Was hot and sultry, and com
ing to a gentle spring purling from a
hillside, Jerry got out to drink. Bend-
Ins over he was joyously quenching Ills
thirst, when something stune him. At
the same time he head the report of a
shot-gun and saw a man running up
the hill.
Jerry Bird was confined in the Ilar
rlsburg Hospital several weeks while
the bir>l shots were being removed. To
"'•nvivt r, of Penbrook, was
r Jerrv.
Eltmoyef was arrested after a long
v-i. He was
nefore Alderman
flovi iw-i- and held under SI,OOO bail for
I court.
i Harrisburg Rotary Club
Will Meet This Evening
j The Harrisburg Kotary Club will
i meet this evening at 7.30 o'clock at
\yt: V. ~\ r . Cotterel annex, 18 North
.our? In addition to several
addresses delegates will be elected to
the International convention of Rotary
clubs to be held in Huston, Texas,
June 21 to 26.
Framing Bill For
Presidential Primaries
H
HIP 1
I Congressman "William W. Rucker, i
■of Missouri, chairman of the House
Committee on Presidential Flections
is to start the ball rolling for the
direct election o fthe President, and
a bill is now being prepared. Th's
lis soon to be introduced and Mr.
Rucker has already had conferences
with President Wilson regarding it.
The president In one of his messages
to Congress declared himself for this
I reform but there Is little idea among
the Democrats that the bill will be
| passed at this session.
Township Clerk Robbed
of Ballots by 25 Men
By Associated Press
Chicago, 111., April 7.—Upon the
votes to-day of women depended the
fate of more than 3,000 saloons in
Illinois outside of Chicago. In 324
townships in 67 counties they went to
the polls and officially expressed their
attitude toward the liquor traffic.
F. Scott Mcßride, superintendent of
the Anti-Saloon League of Illinois, as
serted women, using the ballot as a
broom, would sweep the dra,mshops
from 33 counties, increasing the total
of "dry" counties in the State to 63.
For fear that many of the women
: mifjht spoil their ballots in casting
| their lirst vote, nearly a half-million
I extra ballots were distributed at the
I polls. Fresh ballots were given to
I those who requested them.
Although twelve important propo
i sitions appeared on the ballot besides
| the names of the aldermanic candi
dates, most of the interest in to-day's
election was in the success of the eight
I women candidates for council and the
| genera! result of the women's vote.
The ballots for men in Pana town
ship were stolen from the town clerk,
j Walter Lester, early to-day by twenty
| live men, according to a report he
j made to the police. Printers had
I worked all night to get out the ballots
! with the liquor question on them as
i provided by a belated court decision.
; As soon as they were printed the bal
i lots were intrusted to Lester and he
| started to his office with them. Lester
was unable to identify any of the men
who took the ballots from him.
An effort was made to have more
ballets printed so that men could vote
later in the day.
TRAFFIC HELD UP
After spending fifteen minutes in
an effort to get a wheel on a truck
loaded with bricks which flopped on
the street car tracks at Thirteenth
and Market streets this morning, and
during the operation breaking a jack,
the truck proceeded to Sixteenth and
| Market streets, where the wheel again
j gave way and held up street car traffic
I for half an hour.
PLANS 91,000.000 FUND
Special to Tlic Telegraph t
I Scranton, Pa., April 7.—The Scran
ton Board of Trade has Just endorsed
the plan for a $1,000,000 investment,
found for the promotion of new in
dustries for the city. The move will
be made popular so that all classes of
people may subscribe. Subscriptions
of $lO will be welcome.
DOCTOR SAID THIS"
BABY MUST DIE
§this picture of her
would not live, but
I gave him Father
,Jo h n's Medicine
| and now he is well
medicine made him
bunk street, Athol,
Mass. Mothers
should remember
that Father John's
their children, be
cause it is free from alcohol or danger
ous drugs. It is pure and nourishing
and will build up the little ones In the
natural way. J
HOHL CONFESSES HE
IS ALTOONA BANDIT
[Continued from First Page]
Kohl, alias Wilson, as the man who
Shot him.
1 Chester Burket, teller and book
keeper, and Mrs. Shaffer, of the Union
Bunk, visited the jail and identified
the prisoner as the man who robbed
the bank and shot the cashier. After
they had left the prisoner questioned
District Attorney Patterson as to his
probable term of imprisonment in case
of conviction and tried to make terms
in retvri' for a confession.
The district attorney will not admit
that he made any promise of clem
ency, but said that about noon the
prisoner made a confession that he
was guilty of the robbery and shoot
ing.
AX UN-ECCENTRIC GENIUS
Eugene Field was at home among
the common people and he was the
life of the frontier settlement or min
ing camp in which he chanced to be
located. As a practical joker ho was
without a rival. He was constantly
plotting mischief of some kind to
amuse the boys and they looked to
him to relieve the monotony of the
camp. In Denver, then a small and
breezy city on the plains, he caused
quite a stir by inserting a notice in
the paper upon which he was em
ployed, to the effect that Wolf Lond
oner, the leading provision merchant,
had Just received a carload of fine
watermelons direct from Georgia, and
[ that every colored man would be
given one free that morning. Lond
oner wondered what had broken loose
when a mob of excited colored folks,
men, women and children, swooped
down on his store, and he had no little
difficulty in explaining that he had
been the victim of another of Gene
field's practical jokes.
Field was almost th«* only literary
genius I have ever known who was
entirely free from crotchets and ecc
entricities. He was at all times the
same, guileless, unpretentious fellow;
the same generous, free-hearted lov
ing friend, and he was never so happy
as when he was making others so.
He did not stint in the use of his gifts
to afford enjoyment to his friends.
He did not need to be coaxed. It was
enough for him that his readings and
recitals gave joy to others. There
might be few or many, and they had
Havana tobacco is not necessarily an indication of
quality, for there are as many varieties of Havana as
there are teas.
Neither is a Havana cigar necessarily a heavy
smoke.
To appreciate HAVANA TOBACCO AT ITS
BEST, smoke
M
Neither too strong nor too mild—but JUST
RIGHT for the taste that DEMANDS QUALITY
first of all
Made by JOHN C.
but to name their favorite sketch or
poem. He did not weary in thus giv
ing himself freely and without price.
He used to say, "Tell me what you
wish to hear and I will be glad to give
It to you." And he would respond
with all the naivete of a child to tsvery
request and with such evident heart
iness as to enchanco the charm of his
entertainment.— "Relly, Nye and
Field —Personal Notes and Recollect
ions," Eugene V. Debs, in National
Magazine for January, 1914.
Famous French
Recipe For Gray
Faded Hair
Ladies Delighted With It
You can remove every streak of
gray from your hair, and bring it back
to its natural, even color very easily.
You can stop that Itchiness of the
scalp overnight, and banish every par
ticle of pithy dandruff in a week.
You can make your hair so radiant
ly fascinating and abundant that it.
will compel the admiration of friends.
You can stop hair from falling anil
growing thin, and prevent further
baldness. You can look young again.
Just get a bottle of LeMay's Cream
of Sage and Quinirie, the famous old
French recipe at your pharmacist, a
large bottle Is only 50 cents. It la
a harmless vegetable tonic, free from
lead or dye.—Advertisement.
FOR CHILDREN'S
COUGHS AHD COLDS
Children catch colds and coughs
easily. When neglected these may
turn Into Croup or Pneumonia. Keep
a bottle of Goff's Cough Byrup in the
house all the time and stop -coughs
and colds before they become seri
ous, Goff's contains no habit-form
ing drußS —no Injurious opiates. It.
must help your child, or the dealer
will return your money. Get a 26c. or
50c. bottle today.
S.B. CI OFF k SONS CO., Camden, N.J.
7