Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, April 24, 1914, Page 4, Image 4

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    4
MOORHEAD EMPLOYES AT RECREATION HOUR
MOORKEAD MILL
111 UPLIFT IRK
Employes Given Opportunity For
Recreation at Noon Hour
Each Day
Already the recreation room at the
new Moorhead Knitting Company fac
tory in Cameron street is becoming a
center of interest among the employes
of the model plant, and l'rom owner
to bobbin-winder the force is doing
its utmost to make it a factor that
will add to the worthwhileness < -f
living.
"When plans were drawn for the. new
building the Moorehead Company
made provision for the creation of a
big hardwood floor room where games
and dancing and educational enter
tainments might go forward. One of
the sights of the city is to be seen at
noon hour at the plant. At this time
employes gather here and coffee is
served by the management, while the
employes partake of their lunches.
The tables are easily cleared away,
leaving the big floor open for dances.
A definite program is followed each
week, consisting of dancing, meetings
under direction of the local Young
Women's Christian Association, talks
by management, entertainments by
elocutionists and singers.
Blood Tonic Has
Important Meaning
Put# the Right Sort of Vim
Where Most Needed.
To tons the blood means to enable It to
throw off accumulated Impurities, to In
crease the red corpuscles and to put the
blood-making organs into such active condi
tion as to produce that conscious sensation
•f what we feel as health.
This is the logical effect of using the
famous blood purifier. S. S.
Half the people you meet complain of
weary muscles, stagnant brain. Jangled
nerves, and a wonderful desire to lav down
«nd Just quit. Most of these people have
been using nervines that spasmodically tlaro
up the nerves only to die down again, as
die they must. Avoid nerve stimulants.
Bear In mind that this worn-out feeling is
cue to poor blood, to bacteria in water
rou drink: to the multiplying ot' destruc
tive germs in the blood faster than thev
can be overcome by the whit" corpuscle*-
and to what Is known as auto-toremia. that
condition where the venous or Impure blond
accumulates faster than it can be replaced
hy the red arterial blood.
S. S. s. has long been famous as a blood
and its action by elimination of
the irritating poisons that infest the blood,
la one of the very important things ro know.
Jou can get S. S. S. at any drug store,
•tit take no other so-called blood purifier.
. ji Purely a vegetable product,
•nd you wil make a great mistake to have
•om* enthusiast palm off a nr«<mir
or iodide of potash prpparation that niav
4h yon irreparable harm.
« S ' ?i„ 8 - ls Prepared by The Swift Specific
Co., 633 Swift Bldg., Atlanta. Ga., and if
you have any deep-seated or obstinate blood
trouble, write to their Medical Dept. for
free advice. It will be worth your while
to do to.
r %
Sulphur Vapor
Bath
Regular price SI.OO
For a Umited time only
50c
For Ladies and Gentleman
I-tulv Attendant
Health Studio i
Walnut near Second
Open 8 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Bell Phone 2102 R *
HARRY M. HOFFMANN
<Succeiior to J. J. OgcUbr)
UNDERTAKER
*lO NORTH SECOND STREET
Try Telegraph Want Ads.
FRIDAY EVENING, fiXftfUMSURG TELEGfIAPIi APRIL 24,1914.
M'COiIICK AGAIN
HOTLY DENOUNCED
Judge Bonniwell Scores Him For
His Labor Ordinance Veto
in Big Meeting
THE UNION LABOR LAEEL, TOO
Kensington People at Meeting
Hear Warm Address
by the Judge
Special to The Telegraph
Philadelphia, April 24.—Vance C.
McCormick and A. Mitchell Palmer
were declared not the caliber of men
to be elected to high public place in
Pennsylvania by Judge Eugene C.
Bonniwell at a Ryan mass meeting in
the big Kensington labor district last
night and Harrisburg affairs were
brought into the remarks.
Bonniwell charged that federal offices
were put on the auction block and
said that McCormick and his fellow
bosses had a voting trust that could
beat the New Haven railroad.
"Men must oppose the nomination
of Vance McCormick if they have any
hope for Democratic success," said the
judge. "There never were enough
aristocrats or corporate interests in
the Democratic party to elect such a
man Governor of Pennsylvania. The
man who, as mayor of Harrisburg, in
cold blood, declared that 15 cents an
hour was enough to pay a working
man may be fitted to serve as trustee
of the McCormick estate; but he is
not fit to be Governor of Pennsylvania.
This was not his only hostile act
toward the breadwinner.
The I'atriot's Label
"I have two copies of the Harris
burg Patriot. The one copy, dated
July 31, 1902, carries at the mast-head
of its editorial page the badge of In
dustrial freedom—the union label. On
that day David A. Orr, old-line Demo
crat, sold the Harrisburg Patriot. On
August 1, 1902. the next dav, the Har
risburg Patriot appeared, stripped of
its badge of honor, the union label
blotted off the face of the paper, and
the announcement made bv its new
owner. Vance C. McCormick, that he
proposed to follow out other policies.
What man who ever toiled with his
hands, and what son of a laborer.
Pure Olive Oil
is always assured
when you buy
illjgj OLIVESE
! mlQ&m This oil
is not
j i| only absolutely
j pure, but of the
Highest Possible Quality
j CANNED AT THE PLACE OF
PRODUCTION, ITALY
Gallons, Half-Gallons, Quarts
Pints and Half-Pints
j "Jill that the label Implies is tn the can "
A. L. CAPRINI, Pimburgb
Sole American Importer
GEO. A. GORGAS
Sole Distributor
16 N. Third St. P. R. R. Station
could vote in cold blood for an enemy |
of union labor such as this man's acts J
show him to be?
"His partner on the ticket, A. !
Mitchell Palmer, ho must be beaten j
If the Democracy of Pennsylvania Is {
not to be disgraced. I am tempted
to say of him as Gratton did of Corry:
He found the house of the rich man
a convenient way to honor and place,
and that it was easier for a "statesman
with raidling talents to sell his friends
than it was for a lawyer with no talent
to sell his clients! This man has been
the protege of every boss in turn in I
his district. Mutchler found him, Hall
financed him, and he did Guffey's bid
ding while Guffey had power and
pocketbook.
Blast for Palmer
"Palmer said last night that ho was
opposthj? Ryan "because the men be
hind him are using his candidacy to
strike down the State organization.'
"Mr. Palmer ought to know who j
sold out at Allentown. He was part |
of the crowd that sold. He sat in I
their conference, if, indeed, it was held
in the back room of a saloon. They
ottered him the nomination for Gov
ernor; he was too cowardly to take it.
He had the opportunity that comes
rarely to men, the nest day on the
stage at Allentown, when he was in
troduced to speak, and he talked of I
the tariff; but he had no word of I:
condemnation for his then masters
who were paying his bills; no word
then of the betrayal of which he now
so glibly talks. And even in Sep
tember of 1910 he publicly declared,
at a meeting of the congressional can
didates in Harrisburg, that the action
of the Allentown convention was hon
est .decent and justifiable politics.
Morris is Flayed
"Now, as for Mr. Morris, I charge
him with being disloyal to the Demo
cratic ticket. I propose to show his
incompetence—or worse. There are
sixteen registered Democrats in the
Twentieth division of the Seventh
ward of Philadelphia, where the State
chairman lives. They aro mostly of
his own class and society—exclusive
and silk-stockinged. I find, according
to the official election returns, that he
has not supported any Democrat in
that division at any primary election
in 1911, when Michael J. Ryan was
the Democratic-Keystone candidate i
against the gang city solicitor, he re
ceived but one vote in this man's <
division, while his Republican oppo
nent received two in 1912. His intl
muto friend, the new United States
district attorney—by grace of Palmer
McCormlck and Morris—Francis Fisher
Kane, running for State delegate,
polled the enormous total of one vote.
"But the returns of the general elec
tion of 1913 show more clearly than
any others do the total unfitness of
this man to be the chairman of a po
litical party. While Robert S. Bright
his personal friend and slated candi-'
date for congressman-at-large, re
ceived 26 votes in Morris' division oti
Vovember 4 1913, D. Webster Grim,
the Democratic nominee for Superior
Court, received but 5, showing that
not only did he not support Senator
Grim, but that he made every effort
possible to prevent him from having
any vote whatever in his division. And
yet, while he Is to-day perverting the
office of chairman and misusing the
offices of the State committee in a way
scandalous In its openness against
Democratic candidates, he has the
effrontery to call upon decent citizens
to support such highhanded methods."
LEBANON' VALLEY COLLEGE DAY
In accordance with a custom which
has been observed for several years,
the coming Sabbath will be known as
"Lebanon Valley College day" in all
of the United Brethren churches in
Harrisburg and surrounding territory.
The pastors will exchange pulpits in
the forenoon and present the Interests
of that institution.
R. T. A. CLUB ENTERTAINED
Specie! to The Telegraph
Blain, Pa., April 24. —Last evening
the R. T. A. Club was finely enter
tained at the home of Miss Ida Mc»
Kee. Refreshments were served to
the following members: Miss Frankle
B. Drlmm. Miss Ida Kline, Miss Annie
Harkins, Mis Hazel G. Hench, Miss
Nellie E. Book, Miss Lee Dromgold,
Mrs. S. M. Woods and Miss Ida Mc-
Kee.
MEMORIAL DAY AT LEBANON
Special to The Telegraph
Lebanon, Pa., April 24. —-Members
of Sedgwick Post, No. 42, Grand Army
of the Republic, on Thursday evening
completed their arrangements for a
big parade of veterans on Memorial
Day. All of the local military organ
izations have agreed to turn out as a j
tribute to the old soliders of the Civil !
War and the procession to Mount. Leb- I
anon is expected to be the biggest one I
in recent years. i
JUST AS YOU BUY OTHER THINGS
tit you buy with the same demand for a value
equivalent for your money, you'll come here
and examine our
,T Q-.mnHza
We've spent months in the selecting of this
wonderful stock. We've chosen the finest
Ilk fabrics made m all the newest weaves, patterns
and coior effects and they are tailored into
that are the greatest values you ever
are from $5 to $8 less than anything like them
you can find elsewhere.
For to-morrow we have marked 100 Suits at sls and 75 Suits at
S2O that were made to sell from $4 to $6 more. We did this just
to open up 150 New Accounts to-morrow and prove to the "Skep
tical man" that we can sell him a Suit on our "charge account sys
tem" at less than "cash prices" in the
High Rent, High Price Disirict
We won't make much profit on these Suits but we want your busi
ness just the same. Give us a look anyway.
f '*j n»jg---»v ave U ' ts better for S3O and $35; but our
"specialty" is sls and S2O Suits to-morrow.
Specials in Ladies' Suits, Dresses, Skirts, Coats and Millinery
Hom ® Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. Fami: y
Furnishers 29*31-33 & 35 South Second Street Clothiers
OUR LOCATION MEANS A OREAT SAVING TO YOU
MARINES BOARDING GREAT BATTLESHIP NEW YORK TO FIGHT IN MEXICO.
T]'s Xe .?' York, which, with the battleship Texas, is the largest, in the American navy, is taking on hundreds of marines at the Brooklyn navy ya
to sai i tor .u*xico. I lie vessel was plated iu commission a few dais ago and at once orders were Issued for preparations to go south,
1