2 CATFISH BREAKFAST AT WILD CAT FALLS Well-Known Members From All Parts of Pennsylvania Are Present FAMOUS RESORT IS OPENED United States Senator Boies Pen rose Guest of Honor Special to The Telegraph Marietta, Pa„ May 29, —The twelfth annual opening of the Wild Cat Falls Association was held to-day at the clubhouse of the association along the banks of the picturesque Susquehanna river, opposite Marietta. It was the most successful affair ever held by the club. This morning at 8 o'clock a catfish breakfast was served to many of the guests who had arrived last evening at Witmer's Cross Keys Hotel, and few toasts responded to. As the men gathered for the parade, which started shortly after 9 o'clock. United States Senator Bois Penrose, who is the guest of ex-Congressman Cassel, was called upon for a few remarks and heresponded amid the cheers of the crowd. Here fancy Japanese par asols were given the men, and, headed by the Stars and Stripes and the Sam uel Loucks Famous "Wild Cat" Band, they paraded the main street to the square and, countermarching, took the steamboats at the foot of Walnut street for the resort. The band ac companies the men and in addition to the famous colored quartet of Pittsburgh, there was not a minute of the day that there was no music. At 1 o'clock a planked shad dinner, with all the accesories of the season, was served by the proprietor of the inn, Norman T. Pickle. At each plate was laid in a neat box a scarf pin, beautifully engraved with a wildcat, and inscribed as a memento of the day. This was the formal opening of the resort, and to-morrow there will be dancing all day, with music by an orchestra. Many toasts were responded too, and it was certainly an enjoyable day for the gathering. About 4 o'clock in the afternoon many who were from dis tant points began to leave. Among the places represented were Harris burg, Philadelphia, Scranton, Lancas ter, Columbia, Mountville, Mount Joy, York, Williamsport, Boston, St. Louis, Chicago, Middletown, Highspire, May town, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Greensburg, Coatesville and other places. The of ficers of the association are: Presi dent, H. I*. Hershey, Ilarrisburg; sec retary, Charles A. Grady, and treas urer, Henry S. Rich, Marietta. ELEVEN WILL GRADUATE Special to The Telegraph Halifax, Pa.. May 29.—0n Monday evening the sixteenth annual com mencement of the Halifax High School will be held in the Royal Theater. Those who will graduate arc William Pike. John Cooper. Almeda Bicksler, Elmer Chubb. Arthur Enterline, George Shenley, Gertrude Etzweiler, Melvin Sheetz, Paul Bowman, Arthur Hoffman and Herman Richter. HAND INJURED Special to i he Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., May 29.—Caught in a joining machine at a Sunbury plan ing mill, John M. Garman, of Sunbury, suflered the loss of a linger and bad lacerations of the rest of his hand. STRICKEN WITH GASTRIC ULCER Special to The Telegraph Subur.v, Pa., May 29. Frederick Christiansen, 45 years old, of Phila delphia, who conducts a flying-horse at a local pleasure park, was stricken ill of gastric ulcer in the streets of Sunbury yesterday and rushed to the Mary M. Packer Hospital, where an operation was performed. Doctors say it was the first operation of its kind the institution ever was called upon to handle, and that he appears to have every chance to get well. Statistics, they say, show that but eighteen out of a hundred recover from such an operation. ADDRESS TO BIBLE SOCIETY Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., May 29.—Columbia Bible Society at its annual meeting heard an address by the Rev. Leigh ton W. Eckard, D. I)., of Philadelphia, and elected the following officers for the coming year President, the Rev J. H. Pannebecker, IX D.,; secretary, the Rev. W. J. Lindsay; treasurer, William H. Moore. Richness In a Breakfast Dish —sweet, appetizing and easily digested—is supplied abundantly in the substantial nourishment of whole wheat and barley. Grape-Nuts FOOD made from the rich, nutritious parts of these grains, comes to you in the form of crisp, nutty granules, full of health-building properties. Grape-Nuts—long baked—is thoroughly dex trinized and digests usually in about an hour. Ready to eat from the package with cream and sugar—delicious! "There's a Reason" For Grape-Nuts —sold by Grocers everywhere. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG (&££& TELEGRAPH MAY 29, 1914. Woman's Back Broken by Log Rolling Over Her Special to i He TelS ;aph Duncannon, Pa., May 29.—Mrs. Fred Stubnon, of Watts township, had a narrow escape from instant death yesterday, when a heavy log rolled from a wagon and pressed over her, leaking her back and injuring her internally. Mr. Stabnon and a boy weer loading a heavy log on a wagon and had the one end on when it started to slide. Mrs. Stabnon grabbed a stick and was assisting them. Her husband warned her to get away, but she persisted in assisting. They lost control of the log and her husband trlde to stop it with a log hook, hut could not. The log struck and knock ed her down, then rolled over her. In falling she lay along side of a stump, which kept the log from rolling on her head, but her back received the weight of the log. The unfortunate woman was conveyed here and later taken to the Ilarrisburg Hospital. Great Pocahontas Announces Appointment of Officers Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., May 29.—Mrs. Sydney Dewalt, of Reading, who was this week elected Great Pocahontas of the Great Council of Pennsylvania, Degree of Pocahontas, at the convention which closed here on Wednesday evening, to day announced her appointment of Mrs. Sallie Clouser, of Reading, as first great scout; Mrs. Ella Mauger, of Philadelphia, as second great scout; Miss Harriet Jolby, of Brisbane, as great guard of the tepee, and Miss Margaret M. Lay, of Williamsport, as great guard of the forest. Witness Tree Chapter, D. A. R. Holds Election Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., May 29.—Witness Tree Chapter, Daughters of the Amer ican Revolution, has chosen the fol lowing officers for the coming year: Regent, Mrs. B. F. Hiestand; vice re gent, Mrs. H. N. Kehler; recording secretary, Mrs. H. S. Hiestand; cor responding secretary, Miss Josephine Buchanan; treasurer, Mrs. George At kins; registrar, Mrs. D. C. Denney; his torian, Miss L. S. Evans; board of management, Miss McClure, Miss Mif flin, Mrs. Levi Haldeman, Miss Alice Welsh and Mrs. G. W. Ely. DEATH OF JACOB H. BROWN special to The Telegraph New Cumberland, Pa., May 29. — Jacob 11. Brown died at his home in Fourth street last evening at 8.30 o'clock, of heart disease and dropsy. Mr. Brown was 72 years old and lor merly lived at Lewisberry, York coun ty, moving to New Cumberland about six years ago. He was a veteran of the Civil War, serving in Troop E, Eleventh Pennsylvania Cavalry. He had several narrow escapes during his service, at one time having his horse shot under him and at another his cap was shot off his head. He was captur ed and was in Salisburg prison for a time. He is survived by his wife, two daughters. Jits. William Erney and Mrs. H. F. Netynger, of New Cum berland, and two sons, Charles Brown, of Lewisberry, and 11. W. Brown, of Philadelphia. Funeral services will be held at the home on Saturday evening at 7 o'clock, conducted by the Rev. A. G. Wolf, of St. Paul's Lutheran Church. <>n Sunday morning burial will be made at Dover, York county. HONORS FOR SHEPHERDSTOWN Special to The Telegraph Shepherdstown, Pa., May 29.—Nor man B. Bucher and A. Glenn Mower graduated with honors in Mechanics burg High School, the former being valedictorian and the latter saluta torian. REUNION OF JUNIOR MECHANICS Newport, Pa., May 29.—The annual reunion of the Junior Order of Amer ican Mechanics will be held at Dun cannon on Saturday, June 13. G. W. Anderson, secretary of the reunion as sociation is working bard on the ar rancements for the affair. 12 CENTS PER MAN TO REGfISTER Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., May 29.—1t cost the taxpayers of Northumberland county $3,702 to register its 30,000 voters, or 12 cents per man, according to figures taken from the records in the office of the county controller. This was di vided among ninety-seven assessors. LOVE FEAST NEAR WAYNESBORO Special to The Telegraph . Waynesboro, Pa., May 29. —The an nual love feast of the Church of the Brethren will be held at; Price's Church north of town, beginning Saturday morning at 10 o'clock, continuing in the afternoon and evening, and Sun day morning and evening. About 1,000 peopic will attend. DEniCIHIL STORM IN PERRY CO. Barn Torn to Pieces and Early Fruits and Vegetables Destroyed Blaln, Pa.. May 29.—A terrific hail ad thunderstorm visited this section last evening, destroying the crops in many localities. Early fruit and gar den vegetables were literally cut to pieces. The heavy downpour of rain washed the nev.iy-planted fields. So severe was the storm in the locality of Center, several miles east of this place, that building were unroofed and blown doWn. The barn of Jacob Loy at Center, on the farm tenanted by Mapleton Shoop, wax shattered and torn to pieces, scattering the timbers in all directions. Burchtield's barn roof was torn off. Trees in this locality were uprooted, broken down and snapped off like pipe steins. In sec tionas where the hail fell the. thickest the ground is lying full of cherries un der the trees. . VETERIHIS TM TO SCHOOL CHILDREN Parade Will Be Big Feature of To-morrow's Observance; Start at 2 The most important event of to morrow will be the Memorial Day parade. At 1.45 o'clock tq-morrow afternoon the parade will form. The lirst division will form in Second street, right resting in State. At 2 o clock the parade will move over the following route, down Second to Mar ket, out Market to South Fourth, over the Mulberry street bridge to Thir teenth, out Thirteenth street to the Cemetery. The parade will be led by Chief Marshal Joseph L, Leonard, and will be followed by a platoon of police. Among things of interest to-morrow will be a baseball game on Island Park at 10 o'clock. Many of the Grand Army veterans to-day were busy visiting the city schools. Among those that visited schools were as follows: Allison, Comrades Dougherty, Ben der, McLaughlin; Boas, Comrades Hoffman, Campbell and Beaver; Cen tral High, Comrades Forncrook, Dun ning; Calder, Comrade Joseph A. Mis ten; Camp Curt in, Comrades Rhoads, Atticks; Cameron, Comrades, Watson, Glenn, Seabold; Downey, Comrade Cy rus Boon; Day, Comrade Fin I' Thomas; Fager, Comrades Bierbower, Mather Shearer; Forney, Comrades Newman, Weltzel, Garland; Foose, Comrades, Huggins, Urban, Ranch; Harris, Comrades, Suavely, Jackson. Peace; Hamilton, Comrades Clark and several 116; Lincoln, Comrades Gul ley, Hoover, Land Is, Santo, Walter; Ma clay. Comrades, Baker, H. S. Weit zel; Melrose, Comrade O. J. Farling; Penn, Comrades, Powell, Johnson; Reily, Comrades, Graham, Gardner, Challenger; Stevens, Comrades Long, Earp; Tech High, Comrade Fin I. Thomas; Vernon, Comrades Numbers, Major, Lumb; Verbeclt, Comrades Lu ther and John Bernheisel; Webster, Comrades Demming, French; Willard, Comrade Cox; Wickersham, Comrade Pugh; Woodward, Comrades Jackson and Walmer. The United Spanish War Veterans to-day made their announcements for Memorial Day. Camp 8 will assemble to-morrow at the camp rooms, 26 North Third street, at 8.15 o'clock, in full uniform, as directed in the camp commander's orders. Squads will pro ceed Ui East Ilarrisburg, Mt. Calvary and other cemeteries and decorated the graves of deceased comrades. In tl\e afternoon the camp will as semble at 1 o'clock sharp for the pa rade, in connection with the Grand Army of the Republic and other bodies, in full uniform. Special mark ers for graves of deceased comrades have been secured and will be placed on the graves. During the summer gravestones, such as are furnished by the United States government, will be secured and erected on all unmark ed, graves provided permission can be secured from the nearest surviving relatives. The Camp has secured the services of the West End Band for this occasion, which will ftirnlsh the music for the division composed of United Spanish War Veterans and For eign Service men. >lay Storm Tomorrow Warmer to-night, with probable thunder showers to-niorrow afternoon is the bef»t Memorial Day prediction the weather man can give Harrtsburg. It was eight degrees cooler at 8 o clock to-day than twenty-four hours ago. At noon the temperature was about equal to that of yesterday, and the mercury was still rising. Thunder storms are central over the Mississippi Valley, and Harrisburg may pet a downpour to-morrow afternoon. It will be six degrees warmer to-night than it was last night. OLD SUM SCHOOL WORKER IS DEM) Never Missed at Pine Street Dur ing Twenty-three Years Mrs. Alice Jane Mack, No. 3 South Ninth street, aged 64 years, widow of the late John H. Mack, for many •" A.li* years an ironworker 'BEM died at the Harrls * ' •■!■.. burg hospital yester / V'lyWlK- clay following a pro - <• lon ßed Illness. Death HJra(EBBI was due to a seneral breaking down as a BBNi. JLLMBMM result of an attack BBS*-- ■■ P -VJ of Briglit's disease. |,R? Mrs ' Mack was for a , " number of years em ployed about the Capitol as a janl tress. "Jane" Mack as Sirs. Mack was bet ter known, was a record attendant at Pine Street Presbyterian Sunday School having an unbroken attend ance of twenty-three years up to five weeks ago when she was taken ill. Mrs. Mack was a charter member of the Mothers' meeting at Pino street -chuerh and was a member of the church for thirty-eseven years. The funeral will take place Mon- HOMES OF REFINEMENT QUALITY, STYLE, AIR, LIGHT AND SUNSHINE. MODERATE COST THESE pictures show front and porch view of two houses ready for inspection on Seventeenth street, north of Rriggs, in one of the prettiest residential sections of the city. The houses are of solid brick construction throughout, stucco finish. Large living room with beamed ceiling, Elizabethan finish. Dining room has large triple casement windows, wood work finished in mahogany. Kitchen and laundry on first floor with toilet and fine white enamel tubs. Second floor has three bedrooms, finished in ivory white, with one-panel mahogany doors. Beautiful tiled bathroom, pedestal lavatory and complete with first-class fixtures. Two bedrooms on third floor. Houses beautifully papered; fine electric fixtures, steam heat throughout; large front porch 14x20 feet with cement tiling, and a large lot. Paved streets, grass plots and every mod ern domestic convenience complete. HOUSES OPEN FOR INSPECTION AT ANY TIME. SEE THEM AT YOUR CONVENIENCE WITH ASSURANCE THAT YOU. WILL NOT BE ANNOYED BY AGEXT OR REPRESENTATIVE. GEORGE A. SHREINER 17th and Forster Streets wa——BWE—iwiiii m mnmmtwuwmmamaammmmmmmmKaumMmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmmmmammmmxmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmaMmmmmmmmmmmmmk day morning at 10 o'clock. Serviceg tinue until 7 o'clock. Several interest-the Rev. Mr. Herman was about to church at Wiliamstown elected Har will be conducted by the Rev. Lewis 1,1 "ii£wn,m Will' NotVio.— I The Rev. S. accept this call. But on the contrary, risburg ministers to the offices of M v. ud ® e ; pas ?_ or °J V' 1 ! 16 MV" 6 !?* Winfield Herman, pastor of Zion Lu- although It was understood the Erie president, secretary and treasurer, re -1 resbyterian church. Burial will be theran Church, who ha» served in that church was about to tender him a call, snAf ,tiv<»lv• The linv r» r Mniuen M n iF a fA rl iL B 'r?, capacity since 1906, and for two years he forestalled that action by advising ' . ' ' ~ Feast" will Sunday even- Previous as assistant pastor, will,not go them against it. holder, of Trinity Lutheran; the Rev. ing at the Church of the Brethren, to Erie to become pastor of the Me- Harrisburgerg Oflk'ers. —A Sunday E. Victor Roland, Church of the Re- Hummel street. The feast will begin morial Lutheran Church. It was wide- School conference of the Eastern deemer and the Rev. E. E. Snyder, in the afternoon, at 1 o'clock, and con- ly rumored through his parish that Pennsylvania Synod of the Lutheran St. Matthew's Lutheran. Buy on Credit I AT LEADING DEPARTMENT I AND BEST CASH STORES I iVith Our Store Order Checks ||j They Are Accepted As Cash For Any and All Merchandise Purchased, Giving f You the Advantage of CREDIT TIME Together With CASH PRICES. I THEN PAY US IN I EASY WEEKLY PAYMENTS I If Paid Within 30 Days No Charge For Our Service I OUR PLAN IS THIS j| The largest and best stores allow us to send you to If them with our Order Checks. You select the goods you §j want, our check pays for them. You pay us back in small weekly payments to run not longer than 10 weeks. If your account is settled within 30 days there will be no charge of any kind. CALL, WRITE OR PHONE ORDER SYSra> You CREDIT Whore You Want It. BELL PHONE 2749R Lunchmen Restaurant-^ Roomy tables.. Seats eleven; perfect ventilation; cool In summer; warm In winter. .Complete equipment. Gas or gasoline. One man cooks and serves. No help. No Balaries. No high rent. Cars clear $35 to 160 a week. Big chance for cars In Steelton, Middle town, Newport, Lewlstown, Sunbury, Milton, Altoona, Huntingdon, Carlisle, Gettysburg, Shlppensburg, etc. "Ehls Model 1 car will be on display on va cant lot, corner Cameron and Derry streets, Harrlsburg, until May 28th hours 9 a. m. to B p. m., dally. Come and see the finest Lunch Car on the market. Sold on easy monthly pay ments. Lh H. Hllliard In charge. Try Telegraph Want Ads. (DUMAS) HOW TO GET IT Clip this Library Coupon and bring or send to the Telegraph office, with the expense item of 98c for the entire six volume set of books. This amount we ask you to pay to cover the cost of transportation, U. S. custom duties, handling, etc. If you desire to have the set sent by mail or express, all charges prepaid, add 17c, or $1.15 in all, and fill in name and address below. Name Address -
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