Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, April 11, 1914, Page 3, Image 3

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F"1
three ways o' doin' things
—the right way, the wrong way,
an' a mixture o' both, an' dero
me if the last ain't wuss 'n
: the second. Thar's only :
one right way to get smok
" in' tobacco satisfaction reg
'larly, an* that's t' specify ■
U VELVET, an' adhere t'
specifications.^^^^^^.
VELVET, the Smoothest Smoking- Tobacco.
■ Full weight 2 oz. tins, 10c. .
*- " 11 ,n ' 11 "
IMPORTANT
Te The Thrifty
Start your nnvlnpi where they will return 5 per rent, interest.
We Own and Offer
HiRHISBI'IUi LIGHT Jt POWER COMPANY Ist and rrfuniltnK •"> per
cent. Gold boudu due 11)51!, Interest payable Febnmry ]nt and
AUgUHI Ist.
In SIOO-Pieces at an d interest
UARRISBtJRG RAILWAYS COMPANY'S B PKR CENT. HONDS due 1963,
Interest payable January Ih< and July tut.
In SIOO-Pieces at 101 and Interest
liicntn on loan I'riuii ytmr own hank lining theNe bondn aft collateral, or
It you prefer we will ucKot.nte loan.
Wc offer the above la sl,llOO bond* at Hlightly lower prices.
Monongiilu-ln Valley Trnctloo Company Ut and refunding mortgaiv 5
per cent, bonds due 1042. Interest June Ist nnd December Ist.
I SI,OOO bonds only, at 05% anil latere*!. r.nrnlngs nvnllalile for Interest on
outstundlDK MononiiUhela Valley Traction bonds are -Vi times Inter
est rliart'i's.
These bonds arc nil free of l'ennsyhanln Stntc ta.v anil also of the
present Income tax.
HENRY M. STINE & COMPANY
Stocks and Bonds
602-605 KUNKEL BUILDING
Bandits, Who Attempted
to Rob Passengers Are
Routed; One Man Shot
By Associated Press
New Orleans, La., April 11.—A day
light hold-up of passengers on Illinois
Central train No. 34 was attempted
to-day near Tangipahoa, La. Two rob
bers after shooting and wounding a
negro porter named Allen, escaped
without obtaining any loot.
The two robbers hoarded the trsiin
at Tangipahoa. Soon after it left the
station they entered a day coach and
commanded the passengers to hold tip
their hands. One bandit nourished a
pistol and the other began to relieve
the passengers of valuables. Allen at
tacked the man holding the gun and
was shot through the body. It is re
ported he was dangerously wounded.
As the negro fell one of the robbers
pulled the bell cord and when the
train slackened speed they jumped and
fled through the underbrush.
RUN TO IjEBANON
Members of the Harrisburg Motor
cycle Club will have a run to Lebanon
to-morrow. The start will be made
from the clubhouse at Green and
Maclay streets ul 9 o'clock. Dinner
will be served at the American House,
Lebanon.
CAN'T I'LAY ISAM, FN STREETS
Motorcycle Officer Paul Sheihass
was busy today notifying small boys
to refrain from playing baseball in
th»; streets and lots in residential sec
tions.
DANDRUFF SURELY
DESTROYS THE HI
and Causes It To Fall Out.
Girls —it you want plenty of thick,
beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all
;nr-ans get rid of dandruff, for it will
starve your hair and ruin it if you
don't.
it doesn't do much good to try to
Brush or wash it out. The only sure
way to get rid of dandruff is to dis
solve it, then you destroy it entirely.
To do this, get about four ounces of
ordinary liquid arvon; apply It at
uight when retiring; use enough to
moisten the scalp and rub it in gently
with the finger tips.
By morning, most If not all, of vour
dandruff will be gone, and three or
four more applications will completely
dissolve and entirely destroy, every
single sign and trace of it.
You will find, too, that all itching
tnd digging of the scalp will stop, and
your hair will be silky, fluffy, lustrous,
-ioft, and look and feel a hendred
times better. You can get liquid ar
von at any drug store. 1J is inexpen
sive and four ounces is all you will
'ieed, no matter how much dandruff
you have. This simple remedy never
fails. —Advertisement.
| PALACE THEATRE'
333 MARKET BTHEET
1 Shotvlaic Daylight Motion Pictures,
I I nliik the Exclusive i'nlvernal
I'roit'rnm. '
(H it PItOGtIA.M FOR AY:
J. Warren Kerrigan, In n Victor
dmiiiH, "4 Woiiiiui'N llonor."
Pauline ftuxli. M. .1. Muetliiurrle and
I.on Chancy, lu n tiolil Sen I ilraina,
complete lu 3 reel*. "Dlncord anil
Harmony."
Oonuld Maelloniilil nnil \ crn Sl«-
*nn In n I*o*vem comedy, "Too Much
Married."
Pearl White in a Crystal comedy,
"The Fat and TIIIII Of It."
OUR PROGRAM FJK TODAY
101 Dlxon 2-reel Indian drama, "In
the Woh*'» Fanm*."
Ilex drama, "The
Imp drama, "The tiamhler."
Eclair comedy, "At the Court of
Prince Make Ilclieve."
Joker comedy, "Mike mid Jake tin
la For Matrimony."
Admission—s CENTS—AII SentH
Coining, Friday, April 17th. Extra
■Special IllMtorlcal Feature. "WiiKh
liiKtou nt Valley Forge."
SATURDAY EVENING, TELEGRAPH APRIL 11, 1914.
Dorothy Arnold May
Have Met Her Death
in "House of Mystery"
Special to' The Telegraph
j Pittsburgh, April 11.—District At
| torney R. H. Jackson's cose against
Dr. C. C. Meredith, who, charged with
illegal medical practice and larceny,
was arrested Thursday "with Dr. H. K.
Lutz and Miss Lucy D. Orr, alias
Damms, alias Bennett, in connection
with the county detectives' raid on the
"House of Mystery," in Bellevue, was
strengthened yesterday by the posi
tive identification of the fur coat and
small satchel found in Miss Orr's room
| as the property of Mrs. Myrtle Allison,
of Wilkinsburg, who disappeared a
year ago. Bail aggregating $22,000
was furnished to obtain the release of
the trio.
The identification of the two articles
is considered by the district attorney
i most damaging evidence against the
j proprietor of the alleged private ma
| ternity hospital. Four persons, Mr.
i Jackson said, swore they belonged to
i Mrs. Allison, who is believed to have
| died in the house. These included the
salesman who sold the coat to her and
the nurse who attended her in Dr.
j l.utz's office prior to her removal to
| Bellevue.
As to the theory that it was the same
j establishment to which Miss Dorothy
i Arnold, the New York heiress, went,
j never to return, soon after she dis
• appeared from her sumptuous Forty
ninth street home in 1910, District
Attorney Jackson regards that still as
a strong probability. Xu word reached
him yesterday from the parents of the
srirl, nor did be communicate with
them.
I
Girl Dies Suddenly
From Heart Trouble
I Sara <'. Orossley, aged 20 years, 1710
| Susquehanna street, died suddenly yes
j terday morning while on u visit to her
sister, Mrs. Mathias Harvick, near
I Washington Heights.
| .Miss Crossley joined with a number
jOf friends in an evening party and
] retired as usual in good health. The
sister found Miss Crossley dead In
l/bed when she went to call her -it 5
j o'clock the next, morning. Coroner
jDeardorff. of Mechanicsburg, was call
ed in and pronounced death due to
heart trouble, following an attack of
j acute indigestion.
| The funeral will take place Monday
I a! ternoon from the home of the rnoth
l or, Mrs. Sara C. Orossley, 1710 Sus
!quehanna street. Services will be con
cluded by the Rev. Marry Nelson
I Bassler, pastor of Second Reformed
I Church.
Miss Wilson Orders
Bridal Slippers; Will
Be Size 7, Width C
Special to The Telegraph
i Lynn, Mass., April 11. A local
i manufacturer will furnish Miss Elea
! nor Wilson's wedding slippers. They
, were ordered by the President's
! daughter through a Washington re
tailer. The most expert workmen will
make them.
' The slippers are to be of White satin,
in in opera style, and will be finished
simply with rosettes of white, beaded
with rhinestones. They are to be size
i, width C, and will not be expensive.
j BORROW AUTO FOR JOY RIDE
Several young men last night with
out leave borrowed the automobile of
j Samuel S. Speese. the South Second
j street undertaker. After running
about the city for an hour the car was
abandoned at Twentieth and Derry
streets. The engine was still running
| when Patrolman Wilson found the car
j this morning at 2 o'clock.
CHANGE SERVICE HOUR
The Easter services In the interme
diate department of the Market Square
Presbyterian Sunday school will be
held to-morrow morning at 9.4 D
o'clock instead of this evening. The
change is necessitated by the large!
number of children who are unable to j
attend this eveuiuu.
Militant Suffragette
Succeeds in Having
Hearing Postponed
By Associated Press
London April XI.-—May Stewart, the
militant suffragette, who, with a
cleaver, tried to demolish a case of
valuable procelains in the British Mu
seum on April 9, created such a dis
turbance when charged to-day that
the police magistrate was compelled
to adjourn the trial. When the public
prosecutor opened the case against her
Miss Stewart shouted, "X have not
come here to listen to you to-day."
The magistrate remonstrated with
the prisoner, but she declared she
would not desist so long as Mrs. Em
mellne Pankhurst was being "tor
tured under the cat and mouse act—
the devilish work of Reginald
McKenna, the home secretary."
Then Miss Stewart threw a ball of
paper at the magistrate, whereupon
he and the public prosecutor gave up
in despair and ordered the hearing
postponed.
"May Stewart" was later In the day
identified as "Catherine Wilson," who
was arrested on March t6, X 913, in
the lobby of the House of Commons,
dressed in men's clothing and carrying
a concealed dog whip. She was sen
tenced at that time to six weeks' hard
labor as a suspected person.
German Kiss Captured
by the Law and Tagged
Special to The Telegraph
Leipzig, April IX.—What is a kiss?
When Is it offensive and when inof
fensive? Here are the answers as
laid down by the Supreme Court of the
German Empire:
"A kiss is a reaction upon the body
of another.
"A kiss always requires tne permis
sion of the person kissed.
"Without such permission one may
kiss only if one is sure of the other's
tacit consent, as in the cases of par
ents, children and lovers.
"If the kissee is not anly coy but
gravely objects, it is to bo assumed
that the. kiss is considered an Illegal
Interference with his or her personal
freedom and a violation of his or her
honor.
"Any one who inflicts a kiss in such
circumstances is guilty of assault and
battery.
Bank Bandit's Mother
Visits Him in Jail
Mrs. Annie Hohl, mother of Frank
G. Hohl, the Altoona bandit, visited
her son in Altoona jail yesterday,
spending almost the entire day with
her boy.
Hohl's mother resides in Harris
burg.
MEMBERS CONSIDERING
COMMITTEE'S STATEMENT
Washington, D. C., April XX.—Mem
bers of Congress and others who have
criticised the federal reserve bank or
ganization committee's selection of
bank cities and its definition of reserve
districts were discussing to-day the
statement of the committee in defense
of its position. They plan to analyze
the statement before making any fur
ther efforts to have the committee re
consider its selections.
ERECT IRON STANDARDS
The erection of the iron standards
in Market street are under way. Two
are already in pla<?e, at Fourth and
Market and Fifth and Market streets.
Work on laying the cable will start
Tuesday.
I jj|j I I
| |j] I The Hugo Coupon is printed for the Lum^
| Actual Si**; Bound in Red Irish Buckram Cloth; Gold Decorations
1 i
New Yorkers Buy at
Least 75 Tons of Sand
in Chickens Each Week
By Associated Press
New York. April 11, —The Humane 1
Society has appealed to the Depart- j
ment of Agriculture to put a stop to
"sanding" and "overcropping" of live
poultry. The Poultry Dealers Protec- I
tive Association says that chickens arc
starved for a day or more before the l
consignment arrived in Jersey City and
then fed on a paste composed of grain
pebbles and finely crushed stone. It is
said that from 150,000 to 800,000
pounds of sand is thus sold to con
sumers here each week at a fancv
price.
Fire Arouses Sleepy
Passengers on Steamer
I New \ ork, April 11. —Sleeping pas
sengers on the steamship Vauban ap
proaching New York early to-day
were aroused off Sandy Hook by an
explosion in the steerage. Fire fol
lowed the explosion, but was quicklv
extinguished. Investigation showed
that a Syrian, rifling the baggage of
a fellow immigrant, had opened a box
°L ea rtridges and In so doing set them
off. He was badly burned.
MAY COMPEL WITNESSES
TO ANSWER ALL QUESTIONS
Washington, D. C., April 11.—Jo-
k ' chlef counsel of the
, C< ? mmer ce Commission, ex
pects to begin early next week in the
! Supreme Court of the District of Co
lumbia, proceedings to compel wlt
™ " u, e N ew Haven Railroad In
wrlin answer questions con
cerning the operations of the Billard
to take similar steps to compel the
o the Anln° "°° ks and re «>rds
or the Billard Company, another nro
ceeding probably would be started ac
cording to Mr. Folk, at New Haven
corn*' 3S that 18 the seat of the oon "
To Take Hyacinths to
Civil War Veterans
Veterans of the Civil War who at
present are in feeble health and un.
able to leave their homes to-morrow
amlni'ntn i » ed o 5 a lsltln S committee
appointed by Post No. SX. who will
carry hyacinths to the comrades.
post m f eti nP last night a
delegation was selected to attend the
fown nVi D , ftniel Swergen. Middle
town. The funeral will take nlace
Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock
At a joint meeting of the Memorial
! h Ri f ? on ''! llttee ' s of the three posts of
1 f v ,' my ° f V 1 R®PUbllc. the
Sons of Veterans. United Spanish
ofmFore£n t r \ etera T ns ; * n «' Veterans
ot i oreii,n Service, Joseph L. lyeon
ard, a member of Post 58, was elected
Dav report & head the Memorial
Daj parade. The church in which
the annual Memorial services will be
attended on the Sunday preceding Me
morial Day will be selected at a meet
ing of the committee April 23.
SEE BODY IN RIVER
Intormation was received by tele
phone at the police department this
afternoon, that a dead body was seen
floating down the Susquehanna river
;at Speeeeville about 12.30. The bodv
s beheved to be that of liussell Uhl
the Wilkes-Barre man who was
drowned on Monday. A number of
rivermen were notified and went out
in boats to look for the body. There
is a reward of Si,ooo for the recovery
of the body.
THE Harrlsburg Polyclinic Dlspen
*?'"•» \v'l be open ilatly except Sunday
■t S i®. M. at Its new locution. 1701
North Second street, for the free treat
ment of the worthy poor
CALL 1991-ANY'PHONE.'#'
JT% FOUNDED 1871 m g
fijoumumd
WABRISBURG'S POPULAR DEPARTMENT STORE
SHOES! SHOES!
Special Saturday Evening
Bargains I \\
Buy Your Easter Sho?s / i \hlfi
At Bowman's To-nightV
Last minute bargains specially \
priced for the late shopper.
YOU can't afford to wear shabby shoes with your new Easter
outfit. 1 ake advantage of these specials and save. All
good styles and leathers that insure good service and best
values. BE EARLY.
Women's Kidney heel button shoes; Women's $2.50 pumps in gun metal
regular $3.00 value in patent colt and and patent colt, kidney heels, (£ 1 /»A
gun metal . All jfi cut steel buckles. Special vA»OSJ
s j zes Misses' and Children's White Shoes;
A splendid assortment of white shoes " s,zes; 85c, SI.OO, $1.25
in Nubuck and canvas, patent and gun Boys' $3.00 Sample Shoes in gun
metal in high TA « C y A Af| metal, tan calf and patent colt; button
and low cuts.. .. «pl»*sU 10 4**.UU and blucher style; all M
Third FIoor— BOWMAN'S. sizes
Last Days of the Hiawath
Monday and Tuesday
Thousands have visited the Exhibition during the week and have gone away
delighted.
Bring the children. It will be y'our last chance to see the Indians. . Thlrt , Floor
Dear, Dear, But Archie
Was Hard to Catch, Sir
Had it not been for the swiftness of
one David GUI, farmer at the county
almshouse, Paxtang Park to-day
would have one less animal In its zoo.
It all came about by Archie, the bis
huck deer of the zoo, walking out to
get a better view of ilie surrounding
countryside when a keeper left a gate
open. Archie strolled into the alms
house grounds and Gill gave chase.
After the chase had been druwn out
into a marathon of nearly an hour Gill
caught Archie. The buck was re
turned to the park.
Had Whiskers Made of | CAK HITS VVAGOX
Mattress Hair and Wire
_ collided with a wagon loaded with
On a charge of carrying concealed pipe at the east end of the Market
deadly weapons and impersonating an s ' ref! t subway. The end of the car
officer, John Cassell was this after- was damaf? ed. No one was injured.
noon given a hearing before Mayor . —a. ..m . t
John K. Royal and held for court. Kay'x Pile Unnoly. S(VI'AI«R DEAI."
Patrolmen Murphy and Shaffner, suffering with Piles and Consti
who arrested Cassell' late last night,
testified that the young man was "J an y years.
sneaking about the houses in the IviiyV I nvn'm'e T üb'lete'[*llOTh Koi't'
vicinity of Relly and William streets K "> , *' u ' Hemody ... r.tic / r.« CENTS
wearing a pair of false whiskers. The '"'.l# S!l , tls , He< V, wit ! l , the result,
latter were made with a wire and Kay Wu£ c© i%i!» n \ r >?on#^ rlt r to
tufts of hair taken from a mattress. * l»hiiu Pn ve,f
3