2 Jacob Shelly's House and Barn Destroyed by Fire Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., Oct. 29.—Fire, swept by the high wind yesterday aft ernoon, totally destroyed the brick house, outbuildings and barn on the farm of Jacob ffheely, about two and a half miles south of Mechanicsburg on the Btate road, adjoining Mohler's Church. The men were working In the fields when fire was discovered about 3 o'clock In the back part of the house. With the assistance of neighbors a large part of the house hold furnishings were saved, but the wind carried the flames rapidly to the outbuildings and from them to the barn, which was a combined structure of wood and stone. All burned to the ground. With the exception of the stock, nothing in the barn was saved. The loss included fifty tons of hay, all of the season's crops and farming im plements. No theory is given as to the origin of the Are. The entire loss Is estimated at about SIO,OOO. Suffered Twenty-One Years- Finally Found Relief Having suffered for twenty-one | years with a pain in my side, I finally have found relief in Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. Injections of morphine were my only relief for short periods of time. I became so sick that I had to undergo a surgical operation in New Orleans, which benefited m© for two years. When the same pain caine back one day I was so sick that I gave up hopes of living. A friend advised me to try your Swamp-Root and I at once commenced using it. The first bottle did me so much good that 1 purchased two more bottles. I am now on my second bottle and am feel ing like a new woman. I passed a gravel stone as large as a big red bean and several small ones. I have not had the least feeling of pain since taking your Swamp-Root and I leel it iny duty to recommend this great medicine to all suffering humanity. Gratefully yours, MRS. JOSEPH CONSTANCE. Rapides Par. Echo, La. Personallv appeared before me, this 15th day of July, 1911. Mrs. Joseph Constance, who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. WM. MORROW, Notary Public. I/etter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., j Bingliamton, X. Y. I Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. lou ■will also receive a booklet of valuable Information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Harrisburg Tele graph. Regular fifty-cent and one dollar size bottles for sale at all drug etores. —Advertisement. THE economical use. of coal means burning the kind or size that is best suited to the needs of your range or furnace. Some drafts are stronger, and some grates different, requiring certain mixtures or sizes of fuel. Tell Kelley the facts and he will give you the coal that will give results. H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Streets COUPON gfl COUPON i 22225!! of T E 2 Five i WORLD rl DeLuxe A i Beautiful ► Style of A A Volumes J Binding \ How to get them Almost Free Simply clip a Coupon and present together with our M special price of t1.98 at the office of the 1 I Harrisburg Telegraph I * A Coupon IQ Q Secure the S TO!- tfjlO O > 1 and «pl>«/0 umes of this great tjCl ■ i Beautifully bound in da luxa styla; gold lettering; fleur-de-lis IJ k design; rich half-calf effect. Marbled sides in gold and colors. M I Full size of volumes Si" x B*. History of tba World for 70 can- ■ turiea. 130 wonderful illustrations in colors and halftones. Weight of Set, 9 pound*. Add for Pottage: * J | Local .... 9 crali Third Zona, mw to JOO mil*., 22 cti First aad Second Zone*, Fourth Zone, " 600 39 cte a k For jroater diatencm PP. Teritt A i Until further notice a big $1.50 1 k War Map FREE with each set ' A THURSDAY EVENING. HARRISBURG *&&££& TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 29, 1914 Charles Probst Attempts Suicide by Gas and Arsenic Special to The Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Oct. 29. —After he had made a desperate effort to take his own life by gas and arsenic, Charles Probst, 35 years old, formerly of Le moyne, was found unconscious yester day in a small room which ho had rented Just over the barber shop of David Price in West High street. Two empty vials of arsenic were near him on the bed and also a loaded revolver. He was finally revived after about an hour's work. Probst has-been at the county home for some time and last Friday came hero and rented the room. His only relative, so far as is known, Is a sister at Camp Hill. Use Gold or Lawful Money in Transfers By Associated Press Washington. D. C„ Oct. 29.—Notices from the. Federal Reserve Board were going forward to-day to member banks in the new system to use gold or lawful money in making transfers of reserve deposits to the regional institutions. The order also will apply to capital stock subscriptions to re serve banks to be made by the member institutions. It is aimed to provide the regional banks immediately with money and will permit the ready issue of reserve notes to member institutions. The transfer of reserves will be begun after the Secretary of the Treasury gives formal notification of the regional banks. "It Is the desire of the board," the notice to the banks stated, "to ar range for the actual physical transfer of the first installment In such a man ner as to create the least possible dis turbance to business conditions In any city or section." Swope Eloquently Boosts For Judge George Kunkel Among the speakers at the big Re publican rally last night was ex-Dis trict Attorney Swope, of Clearfield, an eloquent orator. In the course of his remarks Mr. Swope, who made a fine speech, aroused tremendous enthusiasm by a i reference to President Judge Kunkel, whose name was greeted with tu multuous applause. Mr. Wildman answered effectively some criticism of his legislative course by Jesse J. Lybarger and declared barger as a transcribing clerk of the last House had received the same compensation as other transcribers and then tried to get some cheap no toriety by pretending to return part of his salary for days he had not worked. Mr. Wildman declared there was no record at Capitol Hill of Ly barger's conscience fund, but there was a record in the State Treasury of the fact that he had received a check in full. State School Directors to Meet Here Feb. 4-5 The executive committee of the State School Directors Association met this morning at the city school board ottice. They set February 4 and 5, 1915, us the time for the next meet ing of the State school directors.. The first day's meeting will be held In the Technical high school auditorium and the second day in the Central high school chapel. After a short business meeting the committee adjourned. Corn Comes o>f as Easy as You Please! "Gets-It" Being Used by Millions! It is the first time that a real, sure as-fate corn cure has ever been dlscov- I ered. "GETS-IT" is the new corn isju" Find the Udr Who U.e. the World'. Greatest Corn-Cure, "GETS-IT." ender, based on an entirely new prin ciple. It is a new, different formula, never successfully Imitated. It makes corns shrivel and then vanish. Two drops do the work. You don't bundle up your toe any more with sticky tape and plasters that press down on the poor corn —no more flesh-eating salves that don't "stay put." no more hack ing at corns with knives or razors, no more bleeding or danger of blood poi son. No more limping around for days with sore corns, no moro corn pains. "GETS-IT" is now the biggest-sell ing corn cure in the world. Use It on any hard or soft corn, wart, callous or bunion. To-night's the night. "GETS-IT" is sold by druggists every where, 25 cents a bottle, or sent dtrect by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago.—Ad vertisement. , LUTHERANS WftRNED TO SHUN LIQUOR West Penna. Synod Threatens to Expel Chnrch Members ADied With Booze a call to Lutheran ministers to "refuse to officiate at any public function of any club thnt dispenses intoxi _ eating liquors" is oon • "|' 4 tained in resolutions V laoW adopted by the West • -• •■ifr Penns ,v 1 v a n 1 a Lu •-A -'Hff * theran Synod and ' rjJiT made public yesterday >/ Mat'L. by the Rev. Dr. Ellas D. Weigle, pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church at Camp Hill. V» A, The resolutions take • < the drastic step of threatening with expulsion from the privileges of the church members who manufacture or sell intoxicating liquors or who sign applications for liquor licenses. Such members will be "remonstrated with" by their breth ren in the church, but if they persist in their course extreme penalties will be applied. Reception at Pine Street.—A recep tion will be held in Pine Street Pres byterian Church this evening from 8 to 10 o'clock to which all the adult members of the church and Sunday school are Invited. Mrs. E. Z. Gross Is the chairman of the committee that has had charge of the arrangements. Prisoner Was Out of Sing Sing Many Times By Associate J Press Ossining, N. Y., Oct. 29. T. J. Mc- Cormick, warden of Sing Sing prison, now under suspension, admitted to day that David A. Sullivan, now serv ing a sentence in Sing Sing Prison for the part he played in wrecking the Union Bank of Brooklyn, had fre quently been outside the prison on au tomobile rides as the prison chauf feur. Mr. McCormick's admission was made on the witness stand in the in vestigation started here to-day by Ste phen C. Baldwin, of Brooklyn, Gov ernor Glynn's special commissioner. Serious Revolution Breaks Out in Haiti By Associated Press Port Au Prince, Haiti, Oct. 29.—A serious revolutionary outbreak oc curred In Port Au Prince last night as a result of the lunding here of Charles Zamor, a brother of the President of the Republic. The were shooting in the streets of the city throughout the night and the encounters continued to-day. The members of the ministry have taken refuge in the foreign consulates. The present revolution in Haiti has been going on since the United States recognized the government set up last winter by President Zamor. Observe Mitchell Day in Anthracite Region Hazleton, Pa., Oct. 29.—Mitchell day was observed throughout the anthra cite coal fields of Pennsylvania to-day. Mining operations halted while the nearly 200,000 men and boys in and about the collieries celebrated the termination of the six weeks' strike of 1900 under the leadership of John Mitchell, then international president of the United Mine Workers. This struggle, the first conducted by the mine workers in the hard coal belt, gained for the employes a ten per cent, wage increase and other concessions that paved the way for the longer and more bitter tie-up of 1902 which was settled by a strike commission. Every [year since 1900, October 29 Is a holi | day for the mine workers. Wilson Re-establishes Old Twelfth District Washington, Oct. 29. President Wilson has signed an executive order re-establishing the old Twelfth inter nal revenue district in Pennsylvania. No headquarters have as yet been se lected for the district of which the State will now have four. The follow ing twenty counties are included in ] the one re-established: Bradford, Carbon, Center, Clinton, J Columbia, Luzerne, Lackawanna, Ly coming, Monroe, Montour, Northamp | ton, Northumberland, Pike, Potter, Susquehanna, Sullivan, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming. Messengers Held Up and Robbed of $4,000 By Associated Press New York, Oct. 29.—Two messen gers employed by John T. Stanley, a soap manufacturer, were held up by two men with loaded revolvers and robbed of $4,000 to-day at the corner of Thirtieth street and Eleventh ave nue. The robbers escaped in a taxicab. RETURNS TO CANADA Joseph C. Winfleld has returned home to Canada after attending the Davis-Winfleld wodding festivities in this city. Mr. Winfleld was a guest at the home of his relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Winfleld. STOMACH MISERY' Mi-o-na Will Quickly and Safely Rid You of Indigestion, Sour Gassy Stomach When your stomach is out of order your food will not digest but lies like a lump of lead fermenting and stirely causing that feeling of fullness, sour taste in the mouth, coated tongue, biliousness, and many other warning signs of indigestion, which is not only distressing but often a dangerous ailment. Far too .frequently we hear of someone suffering a sudden collapse from an unexpected attack of acute Indigestion. It Is needless for you to suffer stomach distress for any druggist can supply you with Mi-o-na, a harmless, inexpensive and efficient remedy, es pecially prepared for bad stomachs. These small tablets give almost Imme diate and Joyful relief, while a few days' treatment strengthen and stimu late the digestive system. The flow of gastric Juices is Increased, then your food is properly digested: sour and gassy stomach, sick headaches, and other distressing symptoms of in digestion quickly vanish. You have no more sleepless nights or bad dreams, but wake up feeling refreshed, keen and fit for the day's work. If suffering any stomach distress do not wait—let Ml-o-na give you quick and lasting relief. H. C. Kennedy sells it with guarantee of money back If you are not satisfied. Advertise ment, i BRUMBAUGH FIRM FOR LOCAL OPTION Sends Telegram to the National Head of Anti-Saloon League on His Position Special to The Telegraph Philadelphia, Oct. 29.—An unquali fied pledge to use his influence unre servedly to obtain the passage by the Legislature of a local option measure agreed upon by the temperance lead ers has been given by Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh, the Republican candidate for Governor. The pledge was asked for by Dr. Perley A. Baker, national superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League and given freely and promptly by Dr. Brumbaugh, who has been a worker for temperance all his life. It is even more definite than utterances of Vance C. McCormick. The request for a definite expression of Dr. Brumbaugh's attitude was made in the following telegram from Dr. Baker: "Since doubt has been expressed as to your attitude on the question of lo cal option by temperance people of Pennsylvania would you mind wiring me direct stating your exact position on the question. Specifically will you If elected Governor of Pennsylvania sign a local ftptipn bill if passed by. the Legislature? Will you use your In fluence as governor to secure the pas sage of a local option measure that may be agreed upon by the temper ance leaders in the Legislature?" No sooner had Dr. Brumbaugh re ceived the message than he wined Dr. Baker as follows: "Telegram Just received. Am whole heartedly in favor of local option. Have worked for temperance all my life. If elected Governor of Pennsyl vania I will sign a local option bill if passed by the Legislature and will use my influence unreservedly to secure the passage of a local option measure that may be agreed upon by the tem perance leaders in the Legislature. I am greatly concerned that my posi tion has been misrepresented." This is the second pledge of that nature that Dr. Brumbaugh has given to the Anti-Saloon League of Pennsyl vania. It was sent to Dr. Moore last March. The correspondence on the subject was printed in The American Issue, the official organ of the Anti- Saloon League, on April 10 last un der the heading "Brumbaugh for County Option." EN ROUTE TO HAWAII By Associated Press Norfolk, Va„ Oct. 29.—The colliers Mass and Hector are on their wav from this port to-day to Hawaifi via the Panama canal. The Hector car ries a submarine, torpedoboat an her deck and structural steel for build ings at the port harbor naval station. Reininger Has Purchased Essex Woolen Mills Store E. J. Reininger. who has been the local manager for the Essex Woolen Mills Company at 14 North Third street, has taken over the lease and purchased the stock ami good will and will hereafter conduct tine busi ness under individual ownership. Mr. Reininger is well known locaJly, be ing a native of Harrisburg and having for years been associated with lead ing clothing establishments in the city. The Essex Woolen Mills store makes a specialty of made-to-measure cloth ing for men, ranging in price from Jls to $45. Mr. Reininger has Just completed re-stocking the store with a new line of materials for Fall and winter wear, including the latest in weave and pattern. BRUMBAUGH PASSES TITLE RIGHT BACK TO COLONEL ROOSEVELT [Continued From First Paffc] like 3,000 failed to hear Dr. Brum baugh. Not only did the Doctor hand back to the man who had desired him to remain as superintendent of schools in Porto Rico his jocular reference to woolly lambs, but he proceeded to use his switches on the scandalmon gers. "I want to settle for a generation to come the fact that slander and scandal will not win votes and buy offices in Pennsylvania," said he. "I have nothing to win or lose in this whole campaign. Do not let anybody blind your eyes with subterfuges, but look squarely at the facts. If you want a clean, capable, conscientious administration of your affairs, then the school teacher wants your sup port. for that is what he is pledged to give you, and I thank God to-night that I belong to the Pennsylvania German people, of whom it was said their word is as good as their bond. When I make a promise I keep that promise, and I won't say a single thing to get a vote that I won't do when the vote is Riven. Let us rally around the old flag and the old Com monwealth for a continuation of its splendid history and advancement of the dignity and honor of this great State of Pennsylvania." Dr. Brumbaugh's reference to Colo nel Roosevelt's attack was loudly cheered. This was the only reference he made to Colonel Roosevelt's state ment, though he may make a more detailed reply in the near future. As to Free Trade Once again, at the conclusion of his speech he referred to national issues, warning the voters against the free trade policies of the Democratic party. "I had the good fortune a year ago," he said, "to travel in the Fatherland, from whence my peoplo came more than 160 years ago, 1 saw how the people live, yonder in the valley of the upper Rhine, and I thank God to night that the people who work in Pennsylvania live in better homes than they do in foreign lands. Heaven for bid the day when Pennsylvania be comes a country of free trade, and it will become that under a policy that sweeps away the protection which a tariff under Republican principles gives to this country. "I want to say another thing, and I have never said this before: "In the heart of the city of London last summer, within the sound of the bell of Westminster Abbey, at the Headquarters of Free Trade of Great Britain, out of seventeen exhibits in the window to attract people and to promote frqe trade, eleven of the sev enteen placards contained quotations 'FROM WOOD RO W WILSON'S WHITINGS "AND SPEECHES HE IIAB USED IN ENGLAND AND ; QUOTED AS THE GREAT EXPON ENT OF FREE TRADE THROUGH OUT THE BRITISH EMPIRE.' [ "I tell you that is a hint. My father used to say 'a word to the wise is suf ficient, and many words won't fill a bushel.' " Dr. Brumbaugh'R words of warning were quickly followed up by Frank B. McClaln, the Mayor of this city and i candidate for Lieutenant Oovernor, I The Range that n I "Makes Cooking E?sy" I who was the second speaker at the first meeting. Mayor McClain, after describing the destructive effect of the Democratic tariff turned his attention to the claims of Mr. Palmer. He held up Mr. Palmer as an exponent of free trade, the writer of the metal sched ule In the Underwood tariff bill, which has hit Pennsylvania more than any State in the Union, and as a man who in his very speeches presents himself as a champion to destroy the good things that are without promise of better. McClain urged the election of Senator Penrose, who, he declared, had been the friend of every law passed in Pennsylvania and the nation for the benefit of the American work- Inimab. For Local Option Dr. Krumbuugh in his speech said: "I ani in favor of and am advocat ing the right of every county, county by county, to decide for itself whether or not intoxicating liquors shall be sold in that county, and I favor and advocate that the members of the in coming Legislature pass the resolution as required by law a second time, which was passed at the last Legisla ture, to submit to people of Pennsyl vania the question whether or not the Constitution shall be so amended as to give women the right to vote in Penn sylvania. lam also interested in this very important problem: Here is a great manufacturing town and there are other great manufacturing indus tries not far away, and back of your manufacturing plants is this wonder ful agricultural district. Do you know that in the past ten years twenty per cent, of the people who grow food in Pennsylvania have moved from the farms to the towns and the villages and cities of the State? In ten years we have lost one-fifth of all the people who grow food and we have added one-flfth to all the people that con sume food In Pennsylvania, and any school child can figure out how soon it will be at that rate of procedure when it will be necessary to pay the additional price of long hauls on food bought from people outside of our own Commonwealth. I say to you that we have got to turn our attention seriously, earnestly and effectively to the problem of making it pay to stay on the farms in Pennsylvania and cul tivate them properly, and thus secure a larger producing population so that larger supplies of food may come to our manufacturing centers and in that way reduce the cost of food to the consumer and enrich the man who tills the soil and rears his family upon the farms of Pennsylvania. How ever, if the farm is to pay and the people are to be socially and Intellec <SX2)®<2X2X2Xs)QsQ£)CsXsXS®®®®®®®®®®CSCy<sXa) | How To Make the | | Quickest, Simplest Cough @ Remedy ® Much Hot tor (linn the Readr- ffi ® Madr Kind nnd Tou Save 92, * ffl (•> Fully Guaranteed ® This home-made cough syrup is now used in more hohies than anv other cough remedy. Its promptness, ease and cer tauitv in conquering distressing coughs, chest and throat colds, is really remark able. can actually feel it take hold. A dav's use will usually overcome the ordinary cough—relieves' even whooping quickly. Splendid, too, for bron chitis, spasmodic croup, bronchialasthina and winter coughs. Get from any druggist 2>/ s ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth), pour it in a pint bottle and liil the bottle with plain granu lated sugar syrup. This gives you—at ft, cost of only 5*4 cents —a ftill pint of better cough syrup than you could buy for $2.50. lakes but a few miiuuc;i to prepare. Full directions with Pinex. Tastes good and never spoils. You will he pleasantly surprised how quickly it loosens drv, hoar»o or tight coughs,_ and heals the inflamed mem* branes in a painful cough. It also stop« ; the formation of phlegm in the throat • and bronchial tubes, thus ending the per sist ent loose cough. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound 9f genuine Norway pine ex tract. rich in guaiaeol, which is so heal ing to the membrane*. To avoid disappointment, be sure and a c k your druggist for "2% ounces l'incx," and don t accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or "ioney promptly refunded, goes with . The Pinex Co., f"t. tually happy on our farms—and un less they are they won't stay—then it follows that it is an absolutely logical necessity that now and at some time in the future wo have got to have good honest roads from the farms to the markets of Pennsylvania over which ilie farmer may haul a maxi mum load of food at a minimum cost to himself, and in that way aid in the enrichment of the farmer and reduce the cost of living to the consumer in the town and the village and the city. "Sore on Tills Jtoud Question" "I have traveled over Pennsylvania all my life. There are not many high ways in this Commonwealth upon which you could lose me. In the last Even Little Children enjoy the Winter Player-piano in the home —by its correctness their musical instinct is trained, and shortly they'll play it perfectly. Give your wife and children the benefit of good music. Monthly payments make it easy for you. WINTER & CO. 23 North Fourth Street Two Coal Yards Many Varieties Tn order to have a large variety of the best kind of coal we have two coal yards. One yard is on Allison Hill at 15th and Chestnut streets 011 the Reading railroad. The other yard is on the Pennsylvania rail road at Forster and Cowden streets. The coal from the Reading railroad gives different results from the coal from the Pennsylvania railroad. Anytime you have trouble making your fire burn as it should tell us about it and we will easily send you something that will please you. We will be glad to send you a -small amount for trial. United Ice & Coal Co. Fornter nnil fotvilpn Third and Boaa 13th and Cheatnut Hummel and Mulberry Also Steclton, Pa. eight weeks we have been on the roads of Pennsylvania nearly every day, and I want to tell you that I am sore on this road question in more ways than one, and you can trust me to see to it that if chosen to the office for which I have been nominated that department and every other depart ment of this State government will bo so officered and organized that it will do honest, efficient and prompt serv ice to the people of Pennsylvania, aivt the man that does not make good on the job will have to go; don't forget that; better bore that right down into your inner consciousness and remem ber when the election is over that is what you have got to have in Pennsyl vania."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers