Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, September 25, 1914, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
SII Saturday and Monday I
I EXTRA SPECIALS I
I It is amazing to see what wonderful 8
values one can get at this store
for moderate sums of money
I Drf** Skirts of IS.OO Women**
Ml « n «' »»«" nnd niMrn'
■■ cloth cut lu the ■«.■■ A , ..
■ new styles. Ac- neweat all-wool,
tuHll> at Ira /I Ha mannish black Q
■ than dressmnkers' M Ulff and navy arrgr
WM price of the new- ■ ■H|
I I «f V CO rn 1
■ tunic over skirt. fcAJf fS3
I Suturday and Vp # A V
Mondiiy . .
Men's 91.00 a fa
■ heavy ribbed jffpAA , I
I Sweater Coats _ & Sj Mfl .
I with poeket. V Women'u and
! J? 8, . 40, *'• 44 ' H ■ rn. B 8 Misses' *3.00 ,
I J Value, New Dress kvAJ j
Skirl*. Cut with
I Itusslan lonic and
I fold tunle styles. /v a
Made of wool /Q E 1 1 feffll
L a £\. navy serice and ffi m%J gs|
Monday—Boys' Afl M S plaid mixtures. v£jy| Wfc. M © 38
nnd f.lrls' new /■ M K Two da>s' of »jfl
Sweater Coati /|U|V wonderful values AVI II . MB
with roll Collar kA "*» Ej at Smith More. "V/ E9
worth up to 91.00. Kaeh
Smltll'M 30e
Saturday and jm value \\ omen's
JM 11 new Fnll and mmm
Monday-—Boys' ■ |8 ter Undershirts
B %fl/fl9 nn<l pants; nil Wlffl I Bf
best 25c Illouse I ZTR m sixes, including; v MA ks2
llf It t b * very lnrne /. B| £0
Waist J* V extra size for . JH
stout women. izJtmi KJr
Ail sizes
Men's Khaki
#f || 3.50 value Wo-
Pnnts. Worth u| men's Kalneoats.
to •!.«>. Sntur- 9l*f fl £^l'w""e*r°. n '' it* 1 ffc QH |
day and Monday "" V Special'" wo Jhl ffl
days. Smith's W t 1/%/ (few
prlee, each ...... 1
Saturday and ■ ral I
Monday—Kxtra , 4A M| j<
Women'* and nnd 915 EgJ
Misses' newest Winter Coats for _ H '
Kill I model tall- f|*|| ftJII Women. Smith's fl* Jj UQ
fired nil wool %IL| m U store will sacrl- %/| /m J ra
Suits. Worth 918 g|j7| (ITI floe about 2 iloiieo A ||U I Zm @9 1
nnd S2O. Two *K V •W 4/ tine coats. All V ml
days' special .... * sizes. Your pick ; *
SMITH'S, 412 Market Street 1 1
Where Every Article Is a Money Saver m ;
David Leaves Wildwood Lake
in Search of His Lost Love
At Least That's One Theory of the Big Swan's Departure
Down Susquehanna River
Wildwood society, feathered, furred
and tinned, was all a-gog to-day again
over the latest escapade of David.
David, as is probably generally
known, is head of the swan family of
the lake; his responsibilities are grave
and many. Hence the scandal that
was stirred up when the discovery was
made that he had cooly and even con
temptuously ignored his wives Naomi
and Ruth and went out for a glide on
the Susquehanna.
The facts in brief are these: Some
time after 8 this morning David, who
had been last seen craning his neck
over the edge of the great conduit that
leads from the upper overflow of the
lake to the river, nearly a mile away,
suddenly disappeared. From the river
bank near Coxestown, less than an
hour later, Robert Coeyman spied the
great white swan on the Susquehanna.
Fred Swartz, Jr., saw the bird about
the same time and phoned the park
department officials. In due course
Assistant Superintendent Hoffert hur
ried to the upper end of the city via
automobile and captured David with
Diseased Blood
Galls for Help
Nature's Willing Workers are
Always at Your
Service.'
Tf It Is eczema, pimples, boils or worse—
your safeguard Is S. S. S., the famous
blood ptirifier. It is always lined up to
attark diseased blood. And it always does
the work. It d~es the work after disap
pointment. aster alleged specialists, mer
cury, iodides, strychnine, arsenic and other
destructive drugs that have reaped a har
vest of mistakes and left a host o{ Invalids
guessing as to what is to come. S. 8. S.
Is not such a drug as the cupidity or Ig
norance of man would be able to produce.
It Is Nature's wonderful contribution to
our necessities. It is wonderful because It
can not be imitated; can not be made any
other way than to assemble Nature's prod
ucts and produce what a host of men know
as 8. 8. 8., the world's greatest medicine.
There are people everywhere that had an
old sore or ulcer that defied all the salves
known. And yet 8. 8. S. taken into the
blood Just naturally put Into that old sore
the elements that made new tissue, new
tfesh, and covered It with a new coating of
healthy skin. Get a bottle of 8. 8. 8.
today of any druggest and be on the way
to perfect blood health. But beware of
substitutes. For special advice consult the
medical department. The Swift Specific Co.,
ISS Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. It is free
#nd has helped a multitude.
FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBITRG TELEGRAPH * SEPTEMBER 25, 1914
the aid of a boat after a long chase
and returned him to the bosom of his
family. Obviously that little spree of
David's was a closed chapter—from
all appearances.
But the social set at Wildwood is
still agitated about it. Some of the
more quacking tongues have even di
rected the finger of suspicion at
Mamie, the wild duck, outrageous flirt
of the lake. There have been other
reasons advanced, however. One is
that David, wearied of the surfeit of
love lavished upon him by Ruth and
Noami, sneaked away for a little party
of his own somewhat down the Sus
quehanna. Another is that his love
ior his first love and mate Phvilis has
never grown cold and he took the first
chance that offered, to follow her.
(The mystery of how and why Phyllis
suddenly left David a year "ago and
slipped down tjie sewer to oblivion has
never been solved).
Be this all as it may, the important
fact remains that David is back again
with his family, none the worse for his
debauch.
DRIB FOR BOYD
TROPHY IRE MADE
Country Club of Harrisburg and
Reservoir Golf Teams Meet
Tomorrow
Drawings were made at noon to
day for the first match for the Boyd
trophy between the golf teams of the
Country Club of Hfcrrisburg and the
Reservoir Park Golf Club, which will
be played to-morrow on the Country
Club links. The matches will start
at 1.30, and owing to the construction
work in progress, there will be a spe
cial ground rule allowing members to
lift out balls striking on the new
No. 6 and to play over, if they desire
balls striking wires.
This will be the flrat match for the
new trophy and the next will be
played In the Spring at the Reservoir
The line up of teams will be:
No. Country Club. Reservoir
1 R. McCreath, Capt. Perrv, Capt
2 Payne T. Devine, Jr!
3 Sides Pavord
4 L. McCreath Harris
5 McCormick Longnecker
® Ely Harry
7 Wright Fager
8 Bent Lesher
9 W. McCreath Nisslev
1" Todd Car,
11 Maguire Gilbert
12 Dohoney Laurie
18 Hlckok Richards
14 Dull Sauers
15 Hamilton or Reily Hunter
16 Herman or Hosford ..Devine, Sr.
SQUIRE COMMITS SUICIDE
Allentown, Pa.. Sept. 25.—Edward
J. Thomas, aged 40, Justice of the
peace of Quakertown, where he also
conducted a restaurant and bakery,
committed suicide early this morning
by shooting himself in the head In
the barn on his premises. Business
reverses are given as the cause.
DELEGATES TO CONVENTION OF REXALL CLUB Of PENNA.
nil B 1H
*,pi
A
The etching shows a group of tli
which last night Nosed Its sessions her
State While here thev discussed ineth
Wooten, of Boston, international secret
'tibmcieium
200 Carpenters Will Start on Erec
tion of Huge Meeting House,
October 1
The Bogar Lumber
Company was award
ed the contract to
furnish lumber and
material to be used
In the construction
of the huge Stough
tabernacle, at a meet
ing of the executive
committee last even
ing. The lumber will
be supplied providing
the building may be
dismantled at the
close of the cam
paign and the lum
ber returned to the
company. A meeting will be held
Saturday evening to award contracts
for hardware, heating and lighting
fixtures. \V. S. Roebuck, chairman,
was authorized to superintend the
erection of the tabernacle according
to the Stough party plans. Council
will act Tuesday on an ordinance per
mitting the erection of the tabernacle.
More than 200 carpenters and la
borers will start erecting the taber
nacle about October 1.
M. C. A. C'horiiH to Sing. The
Rutherford Y. M. C. A. chorus will sing
at the evening service of the Park
Street United Evangelical Church, Sun
day evening. The Rev. A. M. Sweigert,
of Reading, will preach at both morn
ing and evening services.
Old Folks' Day, Stough
Meeting and Harvest
Home All in One Day
Sunday promises to he a busy day
at the Epworth Methodist Episcopal
Church, Twenty-first and Derry
streets. Old folks services will be held
in the morning at which Dr. S. C.
Swallow will preach the sermon. At
3.30 p. m. a mass meeting in the in
terest of the Stough campaign will be
held. Mrs. C. J. Hoppis, of Berwick,
will be the speaker. At 7.30 Dr. A. S.
Fasick, district superintendent, will
officiate at the harvest home services.
The choir under direction of Pro
fessor J. W. Sprenkle will render spe
ial music during the services and the
decorations will be elaborate.
Arrangements for the conveyance
to and from the church for these old
folks who are unable to attend other
wise are being made.
JUG WHISKY AND Dlll'NK
John Drunk and Mike Whisky were
two names found on the police docket
to-day., Both were foreigners. The
one could not tell his name at all.
while the other insisted that his first
name was "Mike" and when asked for
the other name kept saying "whisky."
It was so recorded.
MARK MET All POST POSITION'S
Twenty brand new standard metal
posts equipped with sockets for per
manent use in the city's streets for
roping off purposes, have been pur
chased by the city and to-day City
Commissioner W. H. Lynch, super
intendent of streets and public im
provements, went over Market street
and marked the positions.
Weather Conditions Are
Responsible For Lull in
War Areas of Europe
By Associated Press
London. Sept. 25, 10.15 A. M.—The
weather conditions which were excep
tionally favorable to modern military
operations during the first six weeks
of the war, have now changed radi
cally and are in the main responsible
for the lull prevailing in all the war
areas, with the exception of the com
bined Montenegrin and Servian assault
on the coveted province of Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
Accompanying the reports of bad
weather comes the ominous news of
;the presenct of disease. The opera
jtions in Alsac-Lorratne. are said to
have come to a complete stop on ac
count of snow storms.
Tobacco Question in
Navy Finally Settled
Washington. D. C., Sept. 25.—Navy
Department officials to-day were con
gratulating themselves over the set
tlement of the question of tobacco in
the navy which had been up for con
sideration for some time and had
caused much discussion and specula
tion. According to announcement by
Secretary Daniels, all apparently de
sirable brands will be admitted for
sale in the ship store afloat and the
commissary store at yards on an equal
footing of free and fair competition
with one another.
War Revenue Bill Is
Up For Final Action
Washington, D. 0., Sept. 25. —The
war revenue bill was up for final
action in the House to -day and as a
result of the adoption of the special
rule limiting discusston to seven hours
and barring amendments, an earlyj
vote was looked for. The passage of
the measure to-day by a substantial
; maJonty ( was assured. J
•■ delegates to the semi-annual meeting of tile Rrxall Club of Pennsylvania
nd'=^2 ar^d .°^ f Trade The delegates are from every part of the
arv of Roxa?| S rf 188I 88 The man wlt,h hands folded In center Is Thomas V.
t 11. HENSEL URGES
niUD SOOO
scm LOAD FOO Pi.
|AII Parties Should Unite For Bet
ter Highways; Commissioner
Bigelow's Address
Special to The Telegraph
Honey Brook. Pa., Sept. 25.—De
claring thnt the cause of good roads
should not be considered as political
but that all parties should unite in
furthering it, W. U. Hensel, ex-At
torney General, speaking at the an
nual banquet of the Automobile f'lub
of Chester county here last night,
brought the members of the club to
their feet with the following ringing
declaration:
"If there be any one thing which
might ternpt me from my political re
tirement it would be that I might
stump the State in the advocacy, not
of a $50,000,000 bond issue, but of a
$200,000,000 bond issue for the cause
of good roads in this State."
Prior to Mr. Hensel's speech the
banqueters listened to a few remarks
from Mayor Frank B. McClain, Lan
caster, candidate for lieutenant-gov
ernor, on the subject of good roads.
Mr. Bigelow Speaks
But the real feature of the evening
was the address made by State High
way Commissioner E. M. Blgelow. in
which he gave some straight-froin
the-shoulder truths about Pennsylva
via's roads and their improvement.
Commissioner Bigelow was the guest
of the club and arrived here from
Coatesville where he had been enter
tained during the afternoon by W. W.
Long, secretary of the automobile
club. He was called on for the first
speech and for nearly an hour he held
the club members' attention while he
outlined the conditions which have
confronted his department ever since
he assumed office. Commissioner Bige
low made an earnest plea to the mem
bers of the club to unite Jn efforts to
induce the next Legislature to make
adequate appropriations for good
roads.
He told the members of the changes
that have taken place in the last de
cade in the methods of modern road
building and pointed out that the
water-bound macadam road, once con
sidered the ideal Improved highway,
has outlived its usefulness in commu
nities where the vehicular traffic Is
such that the heavy auto truck and
the traction engine have access to the
highways and cause rapid disintegra
tion of the road. In New York, where
auto trucks carrying fourteen tons
are permitted to use the highways, he
said, the peril to the highways was
even greater than in Pennsylvania
where the limit was placed at twelve
tons, but he asserted that even here
the roads could not stand up under the
strain put upon them by such traffic.
Pennsylvania's Scenery
Commissioner Bigelow described the
beauties of Pennsylvania's scenery and
told how the auto tourist could travel
1.200 miles on State highways where
the beauties of nature were such as to
rival the finest in the. world. He dwelt
upon the defeat of the $50,000,000
bond issue and asserted that he be
lieved that many who had been mis
led into voting against it now regret
ted their action. Then he asked the
members of the club to use their best
efforts to get the next Legislature to
appropriate sufficient funds to carry
on the work of making Pennsylvania's
roads the equal of any in the United
States.
That good roads could he built at
moderate cost, he explained in de
tail. emphasizing the fallacy of main
taining that a good road could be built
to be lasting at any such nonsensical
sum as $4,000 a mile. The commis
sioner said that a good road must be
a road with sufficient permanency to
last without eating up maintenance
costs. Unless the road was well built
in the first place, he declared, it could
not last. "Build your roads not for
to-day or to-morrow, but for all time,"
he advocated.
T. Larry Eyre was toastmaster at
the banquet which was served by the
members of the Ladles' Auxiliary of
the Honey Brook Fire Company in
their handsome new hall.
Fleming's Bull Dog
Just Too Late to See
Him Before He Goes
Amos, Martin Fleming's bull dog,
this morning called at the Dauphin
county jail to see his master. Amos
was just too late; the train bearing
Fleming on his last long journey hut
one, pulled out of Union station at
8:45 o'clock.
Amos, whom Fleming hadn't seen
In more than a year—not since he
was locked up for shooting his moth
er-ln-law—was to have been brought
to see his master by a couple of
friends.
Fleming wrote a last letter to his
mother in Ireland. She doesn't know
of his plight and in his letter the son
told the aged woman that he "wasn't
sure, but he'd probably be over to see
her next summer."
5165 FOR GERMAN RELIEF
Contributions totaling $165 have
been received to date for the relief of
the widows and orphans of the sol
diers of Germany and Austria-Hungary
who have fallen in the great war of
the world by the special committee;
appointed for the purpose by the 1
American Aid Society for Germany !
ana Auetrm-Hufliwy, [
LACK OF BIG HOTEL
LOSES CONVENTION
OF STATE DOCTORS
Medical Society Members Favored
This City, but Couldn't Stand
For Bad Accommodations
Lack of hotel facilities lost to Har
rlsburg next year's convention of the
Medical Society of the State of Penn
sylvania. This announcement was
made by the Harrisburg delegates on
their return home to-day from Pitts
burgh, where this year's meeting was
held.
Harrisburg was the choice of 90 per
cent, of the delegates in attendance at
the Pittsburgh sessions and it was
agreed to come to Harrisburg next
year. Then someone inquired as to
whether there had been ajjy improve
ment in Harrisburg hotel accommo
dations. Harrisburg's delegates had
to admit there was not and the so
ciety reconsidered its action and Phila
delphia was selected. Dr. Oenslager
said to-day:
"Harrisburg delegates regretted the
necessity for giving vip next year's
meeting. The delegates were of the
opinion that Harrisburg could enter
tain a large crowd of visitors, hut they
feared the hotels would not meet the
requirements of the physicians. It
was at our own suggestion that Phila
delphia was selected.
Arrest Four Youths on
Charges of Robbing a
P. R. R. Storage House
Walter Rogers, aged 15 years, and
Prank Caruso, 13 years, were com
mitted to the house of detention and
Charles Rogers, 16 years, and Charles
Wagner, 19 years, were committed to
jail this morning to await a hearing
before Alderman Hoverter at his
office, 409 Market street, to-morrow
morning at 10.30 o'clock. The four
were charged with entering the stor
age house of the Pennsylvania Rail
road near the Paxton street bridge on
the nights of September 17 and 20
and taking wire valued at $25. Wal
ter Rogers and Frank Caruso are held
on another charge of stealing water
melons out of a freight car in the
same yards.
Republicans Open Fire
With Heaviest Guns
Special to The Telegraph
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25. As
soon as the war revenue bill was called
up in the House yesterday the Repub
licans opened Are upon it with their
heaviest artillery. The burden of all
the speeches made against the bill, by
which the Democrats expect to raise
$105,000,000 in additional revenue, was
that the tax levy now is unnecessary
and the money sought could be saved
to the Treasury through retrenchment
in governmental expenditures.
The sentiment of the House was fair
ly well represented in the vote for the
adoption of the special rule. The en
tire Republican side lined up against
it, and thirty Democrats also voted
against it.
The keynote of the Republican op
position was voiced by Representative
Lenroot. of Wisconsin, who said:
"There is about to be written another
chapter in the history of Democratic
achievement. It's title will be 'The
Hypocrisy and Incompetency of the
Democratic Party." "
The' Republican floor leader. Repre
sentative Mann, said:
"It would be unfair for me to exult
as a political proposition at the funeral
exercises of the Democratic party." He
predicted that the Republicans would
be in control again "shortly after the
election in November."
WANTS TO WEAR GIRDLE ONLY
William Pride, colored, who was
arrested six weeks ago after several
unsuccessful attempts to appear on
the streets in the Eighth ward clad
only in a girdle, is believed to be in
sane. Pride evidently Imagines he is
living in primitive times. A commis
sion on his lunacy has been requested.
RAILROAD'S APPEAL DENIED
The State Supremo Court has denied
the appeal of the ■ Pennsylvania Rail
road to take over the remaining prop
erty of the Pennsylvania Canai Com
pany as preferred creditor. The rail
road sought to. have interest coupons
which it had purchased as they came
due made a first lien on the assets of
the company ahead of the first mort
gage bonds.
HEADACHE STOPS,
NEURALGIA GONE
Dr. James* Headache Powders
give instant relief Cost
dime a package.
Nerve-racking, splitting or dull,
throbbing headaches yield in just a
few moments to Dr. James' Head
ache Powders which cost only 10
cents a package at any drug Btore. It's
the quickest, surest headache relief in
the whole world. Don't suffer! Re
lieve the agony and distress now! You
can. Millions of men and women have
found that headache or neuralgia
misery is needless. Get what you
for.^Adverttaeraeat.
Distinctively Individual
fTCFATIMAII
THE TURKISH BLEND H
i| W distinctive kroner of life
PERSONAL
[Other Personals on Page «.]
Birthday Taffy Pall
For Miss Ruth Swartz
The twelfth birthday of Miss Ruth
Swartz was happily celebrated yes
terday at her home, 1427 William
street with a taffy pull, games and
buffet supper.
In attendance were, the Misses Mar
tha Shearer, Henrietta Wohlfarth,
Wllhelmlna Wohlfarth, Martha Wil
liamson. Evelyn Stroup, Bessie Car
berry, Margaret Longenecker Frances
Swartz, Alice Thompson, Ruth Swartz,
Mary Hess, Delia Felker and Jemima
WaUace. Harry Swartz, Thomas Peif
fer. John Wilson, John Shambaugh,
Robert Swartz, Earl King, John War
den, Roy Young, William Swartz.
George Hess, William Felker, Herbert
Shambaugh, Simon Stroup, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Plack, Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Swartz.
AT MOTORCYCLE RACES
John W. Stormseltz. of 1230 North
Sixth street, started to Pittsburgh this
morning on his motorcycle to attend
the motorcycle races there to-morrow.
He will also visit his sister, Mrs. H.
George W. Walzer, at Pittsburgh.
MISS MARY KILGORE HAS
ENJOYABLE BIRTHDAY FETE
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Kilgore
arranged a delightful surprise last
evening in celebration of the sixteenth
birthday of their daughter, Miss Mary
Kilgore. Candy-making preceded
music and prize contests, and refresh
ments were served.
In the party were the Misses Helen
Bashore, Marian Byler, Elizabeth Kil
gore, Mary Kilgore, Verne Bomgard
ner, Irene Baker, Sarah Bloome and
Jane Himes; Mr. and Mrs. John Ba
ker, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Boyle
and son William, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Charles Boyle and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Kilgore and sons, Charles
and Howard, and Master Jack Boyle.
Invite Toronto Men
to Study Commission
Government Here
Representatives of the Chamber of j
Commerce of Toronto, Canada, who J
are investigating the various fc-rms of |
commission government in cities of
the United States, have been invited
to come to Harrisburg. An invitation
was sent to-day to Toronto by E. L.
McColgin, secretary of the Harrisburg
Chamber of Commerce. The Toronto
Chamber of Commerce has named a
commission to visit a number of cities
in Pennsylvania.
Deaths and Funerals
FUNERAL OF WM. E. GRUVER
Funeral services for William E.
Gruver, ager 27 years, 1829 Logan
street, who died at the Harrisburg
hospital Wednesday, were held from
his home this afternoon at 2 o'clock.
Burial was made in the Oberlin Ceme
tery.
WILLIAM BEIDLIOMAN
Funeral services for William Beid-'
leman, aged 36 years, who died at his
home, 218 Crescent street, Wednes
day, were held this afternoon at 2
o'clock. The Rev. Thomas Reisch,
pastor of the Christ Evangelical Luth
eran Church, Thirteenth and Thomp
son streets, will officiate. Persever
ance Lodge, No. 21, Free and Accept
ed Masons, of which he was a mem
ber, had charge of the burial, made
in the Paxtang Cemetery.
DEATHS AND FUNERALS
BURY FRANK FRITZ MONDAY
Funeral services for Frank F. Fritz,
aged HO years, who died at the Morris
ville Hospital, Morrisvllle, N. J., from
Injuries received in the Pennsylvania
Railroad yards at. West Morrisvllle,
will be held from his home, 2121 Jef
ferson street. Monday morning at 9
o'clock. Following the services the
body will be taken to Columbia, where
burial will be made. He is survived
by his wife and the following chil
dren: Harry, of Columbia; Mrs.
Charles Senear, of this city, and Mrs.
Charles Barkley, of Juniata.
IJOCAL OPTION BY 3R.000
Special to The Telegraph
Richmond, Va., Sept. 25. Scatter
ing delayed returns from yesterday's
election on the question of State-wide
prohibition increased the majority to
day. and it is now estimated that pro
hibition has been carried by 35,000 ma
jority.
W KOLBENSCHLAGS ll
'E$ FALL DISPLAY |pA
Tuesday, September 29 g
111 Wednesday, September 30 11
Bl nineteen fourteen IB
i©\ KNOX HATS f&jk
17 South Third Street JM/&
HARRISBURG. PA.
ELECTION PRIMING
corners in
[
Telegraph Company Is Lowest For
Furnishing Supplies and
the Ballots
in*? < ompany, the lowest bidder. The
contract calls for 48,000 official and
10,000 specimen ballots and 125 sets
of election supplies, including tabu
latlng sheets, etc.
The Telegraph bid $1.20 per set for
the supplies and $7 per thousand for
the ballots. Other bids included:
J- A. Thompson. $1.25 for the sup
plies only; Keystone Printing and
i Binding Company, supplies $1.25, bal
lots $8.50; Star-Independent, ballots
alone, $7.25. •
Filed Answer to Kane and Elk
Railroad Complaint. ln an answer
filed to-day to the complaint of the
Kane and Elk Railroad relative to
the awarding by the Public Service
, Commission of the permit to construct
■ a parallel line, the Gaffney and Jameaj
City road deny the allegations and*"
ask that the case be dismissed.
Commissioners Inspect Bridges.
| The County Commissioners yesterday
inspected the Manada, Swatara and
Spring creek bridges. County Con
troller H. W. Gough accompanied the
commissioners.
May Readvertise For Painting Bids.
—The County Commissioners did not
act to-day on the awarding of the
painting contracts, bids for which
were opened Wednesday, and the
chances are that a readvertisement
will be asked.
Prison Board to Meet. The Dau
phin County Board of Prison Inspec
tors will meet Saturday, October 3.
An Inspection of the newlv completed
lower tier window system will be
made.
OR CLOCK REPAIRING
or adjusting, Jewelry cleaning or
repollshlng. take It to
SPRINGER
-OH MARKET ST.—Bell Phone
Diamond Netting and Kngravlns.
| ELECTRIC WORK '
Bells, Telephones, Thermostats
and Electric Lights installed and re
paired. Twenty-two years' experi
ence concealing wires In homes
while occupied. We guarantee not
to soil plaster or paper and replace
all carpets.
YINGST EI.ECTRICAL CO.
1433 North Third St.
V •
Business Locals
"THE MORE CIVILIZED
People become the more consideration
they give to their surroundings when
they are eating." When you are not
among the refinements of your own
home you will find Menger's Restau
rant a neat, refined place in which to
eat your meals. Best the market af
fords prepared under the personal
supervision of Mrs. Menger. clean
nappery and homelike in Its appoint
ments. 110 North Second street.
COMING EVENTS
Leaves are falling one by one; coal
will soon burn by the ton. Is your
furnace in good shape? If not, you
will need a cape, new pipe or lining,
door or grate. Phone us now and
do not wait. We will get there on •
the run. Wm. W. Zeiders & Son.