• FRIDAY EVENING, . HARRISBURG Qtf£j£& TELEGRAPH JUNE 19, 1914. Puts Plate on His Tombstone Felling Where He Fought Civil War Veteran Wants to Be Sure That the Facts Are There and That They're Right / ■ ' m SjHBB r^l^r ftai ' ■' ; ,■" *; |U : .' ; :' : ' ; '-y> ' : THE VETERAN AND HI S TOMBSTONE PLATE Conducting his own memorial serv ices, John Eisenhower, a veteran of the Civil War, will next Tuesday put a brass plate suitably inscribed on the tombstone under which he expects to lie some day in the Enola Cemetery. "I want to put it up now so when I aie I'll know it's there," Servant Eisenhower to-day explained. Ser jeant Elsenhower is 71 years old, but (till hearty. The brass plate that he in-ill fasten on his tombstone is built to last a couple of hundred years, at least, it is said. It Is twelve inches long, six wide and >n its surface are engraved the names of the battles in which the sergeant participated: Kenesaw Mountain, Lltoy Creek, Buzzards Roost, New Hope Church, Siege of Atlanta, Peach Tree Creek, Resaca, Neildow Station »nd Battle of Jonesboro. Above this I SAYS BUSINESS IS GOOD By Associated Press Washington, D. C., June 19.—Busi ness conditions and their effect on the administration trust legislation pro gram were taken up to-day at the Cabinet meeting. Secretary Redfleld, Df the Department of Commerce, told the President reports received from many sources indicated that business i Was unusually good for this time of Sear. KOHLER NOW WITH FACKLER Robert Kohler, of New Cumberland, for nine year with Hale & Hoff, of that town, has accepted a position as sales man with the Fackler furniture store »f Harrisburg. Business Locals WHAT STERLING IS To silver the "Sterling mark on a tire or tube is to vulcanizing. It indicates the best possible repair work on tires. It means service and satisfaction. If Dur mark is on a repair job, and the work is unsatisfactory, bring it back to us. Sterling Auto Tire Company, 1451 Zarker street. THE FINISHING TOUCH To your summer comfort and good looks requires one of the new "Kin- Bard" straw hats. New high crowns with medium brim In the popular Straws at 1.50 to $3.00, and Panamas Bt 4 (o $5. Distinctly new hats that will appeal to the well-dressed man. Klnnard has them. 1116-1118 North Third street. FURNITURE COVERINGS T n preparing the bungalow or cot tage for the summer season, many uses wil be found for the pretty print- ' ed c.etonnes and sunfast fabrics. Al ways an attractive assortment, espe cially desirable for cushions, draperies Dr coverings. All critically selected 1 to conform with the season's most ! approved patterns. Harris, 221 North Becond street. NOTICE I HEREBY wish to inform the public [ have purchased the store of Harry Krleger, 670 Calder street M. J. KATZ, No. 649 Cumberland Street. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE NOTICE la hereby given that an ap plication will be made to the Court of Quarter Sessions, of Dauphin County, nn Tuesday, the 23d day of June, at 10 o'clock A. M., or the first sitting of the said Court thereafter, for the transfer 3f the Retail Liquor License now held by James Russ to Ellis P. Gourley, for the premises known as the Senate ilotel No. 2 North Market Square, Har rlsburg. Pa. j ELLIS P. GOURLEY, FOX & GEYER" 1 ' 1 His Attorneys. In Matter of the Estate of Mary ! fiwope Devor, late of the City of i Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Penn sylvania, aeceased. NOTICE Is hereby given that Letters Testamentary were duly issued by the Register of Wills, of Dauphin County, to the undersigned. All- persons Indebted to said Estate ire requested to make immediate pay- , roent, and those having legal claims ' igalnst the same wl!. present them without delay In proper order for set tlement, to DAVID SWOPE, Executor, No. 2013 North Sixth Street. Harrisburg, Pa. Dr to his Attorney, C. H. BACKENSTOE, ESQ., 14 North Third Street, Harrisburg, Pa. STOCKHOLDERS MEETING THE regular annual meeting of the stockholders of the Steelton Trust Com >any for the election of four Directors o serve for three years, and for such >ther business as may come before the neetlng will be held at its office, in : 'teeltoh, Pa., Wednesday, July 8, 1914, it 10:00 o'clock A. M. H. W. STUBBS, Secretary. Try Telegraph Want Ad 9. list of Civil War engagements are the words: "Private Co. C, 177 th Penna. Vols." This wasvthe company in which Mr. Eisenhower first enlisted. It last ed nine months, and shortly afterward, at Kenesaw Mountain, he was pro moted from private to sergeant for bravery. Me had entered the enemy's lines and stolen ammunition. So tlie captain made him a sergeant. The memorial plate will be fastened on the tombstone which now stands over the grave of his wife, who died a year ago. Sergeant Eisenhower and Samuel A. Greene, who made the plate, will fasten it to the stone. Those present during the fitting exercises will be his children and grandchildren. They are William Edward, Samuel, Morris J., Daisey, Dorothy and Charles Eisenhower and Mrs. Katherine Rei ser, all of this city. DOESN'T PHY TO ARGUE SOMETIMES Helpful Advice About Starting' Anything With a Woman Handed Out bationers w* ho was to have ap peared to-day was Pierce Stokes. Stokes, it appears, is now in jail. Only last evening he "got into an argument with a woman" it was explained to the court. Now he's in jail "Well," observed Judge Kunkel, "It's bad policy to get into an argument with a woman." Other cases disposed of by Presi dent Judge Kunkel were: James McDevitt attacking small girl, ten months in jail; Peter Slco tach, aggravated assault and battery, SIOO fine and five months in jail; Vita Dionesevic, convicted in March and directed to report to-day, did not ap pear and a capias was issued for him. Half a dozen others were directed to continue reporting on probation. Rutherford Returns from New York.—J. E. Rutherford, deputy to County Treasurer A. H. Bailet, has re turned from Allentown where he at tended the Pennsylvania State Coal Dealers Exchange convention. While away Mr. Rutherford spent a portion of the time in New York and up the Hudson river. At the Register's Office.—Letters on the estate of Mary A. Stanley former ly oi Lykens, and on the estate of Catherine Miller, Washington town ship, were granted to-day to Isaiah Daniels, Elizabethville. Enough Negroes for Jury.—Nearly enough colored men have applied to Sheriff H. C. Wells to complete the jury of twelve who must witness the Jianging Wednesday of Pascal Hall. Ten negroes have applied to date, three of which are physicians. The sheriff expects to have enough negroes to fill the jury and to allow a few negro physicians to serve in addition. Rig Day For Mercantile Licenses.— Sixty mercantile licenses, the biggest da,y of the year, were issued yesterday. After July t County Treasurer Bailey will institute prosecutions. IS THERE A MAIN SPRING To your business? Consider the Behr Bros. It makes good at all times. Spangler, Sixth above Maclay.— Ad vertisement. ABSENTEES CAUSE DELAY Washington, D. C., June 111. Con tinued absence of members of the House judiciary committee from the city has further delayed presentation of the ro port of the subcommittee which In vestigated impeachment charges against Federal Judge Emery Speer, of Macon, Ga. The report is not now ex pected to come before the entire com mittee before next week. SEE YOURSELF IN THE MOVIES Harrlsburg Telegraph Pictorial shov, ii\g the complete Flag Transfer parade at the Photoplay to-day and i Saturday.—Advertisement. THE SWEETEST THING OUT Is the Behr Bros. Player. Spangler, Sixth above Maclay.—Advertisement. ASTRICH'S New Models in Summer Skirts—Specially Priced man , ) jI ( jl Bgl HliiH I / GJaSi Good news for those who have been waiting for these ex ceptional skirts. They arrived to-day. Smart styles in the most wanted of the season's fabrics for Sport and Regular wear—in regular or extra large sizes. $1.98, $2.98, $3.98, $4.98 <1 Another Lot of Those Stunning $6 and $7 AO *yj AO WASH DRtSSES, & W0&54.30 FOR SATURDAY AT 1 ' 75 of these dresses arrived to-day. Beautiful array of ma terials, many of the one-of-a-kind dresses among them. New White Voile Dresses Oft The Regular $4 and $5 Kind at