Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 29, 1914, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE GLOBE THE GLOBE
Ladies' Coats—
Artistic Productions
HAVE you noticed to what extent of beauty the styles of Ladies' Coats are
interpreted this season?
To do so, you must inspect our varied assemblage of ultra imported
models. We're in the honor-list for value-giving and exclusiveness of styles.
A smart model of Navy Blue Zibeline trimmed
with black braid and belted effect, close-fitting AT
JK and flared skirt. Velvet collars and cuffs. $15.00
A charming coat of blue mixed Shetland Cloth ——
j y AX
.with cape effect—a loose-fitting, draped model
that has deep velvet collars. $18.50
Exquisite Coats of Bayadere Cloth in the _
Moyen-Age style—full satin lined and edged with AT
s '" c —Black, Green and Navy. $25.00
B| A stunning coat in the new Cossack model with
llfi-l 11 ' on £ wa ' st effect and full flare of Hunter Green <t»OA f\f\
-111 fcS! P woo! plush - ______
BjJP Ladies' Balmacaans Dainty Coats For
And mannish coats of Done- Little Girls
i , ... . Ages 6 to 14 years—Velour
\ gal Tweeds, Chinchillas and Cheviots, Chinchillas and
Cheviots at Homespuns. Some with
I . capes at
$10—512.75—515 $5.95 '
THE GLOBE
LADIES' COAT SECTION-SECOND FLOOR
FEEL FINE! KEEP BOWELS ACTIVE,
STOMACH SWEET Hi HEAD CLEAR
No odds how bad your liver, stom
ach or bowels; how much your head
aches, how miserable and uncomfort
able you are from constipation, indi
gestion. biliousness and clogged-up
bowels—you always get the desired
results with Oascarets.
They end the headache, biliousness,
dizziness, nervousness, sick, sour.
0? PRICE 10 CENTSI
CARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.
Efforts Made to Get
Best Food For Men
Washington, t>. C., Oct. 29.—Efforts
of purchasing officers of the navy to
secure only the most wholesome food
for the enlisted men are revealed in a
special order which Paymaster Gen
eral McGowan has issued to the officers
and chiefs in his bureau.
In it he declares that "our men are
no 'poison squad,' but human beinss,
and American citizens, for whom we
stand in the relation- of trustee insofar
as relates to the uqestion of food." He
says that "every effort to try on the
navy any experiments or tests of food
product whatever shall be promptly
suppressed. As the enlisted men have
110 choice as to what they shall eat
and because adequate and satisfactory
subsistence is the very foundation not
only of real efficiency but of discipline
itself, there is no class of purchases
for the naval services." he says, "that
need to be more constantly watched
than provisions."
PiEe
Remedy
Free
Sample of Pyramid Pilo Remedy
mailed free for trial Rives quick relief,
stops itching, bleeding or protruding
piles, hemorrhoids and all rectal
troubles, la the privacy of your own
home. 60c a box at all druuglsts. Free
■ample for triil with booklet mailed
free in plain wrapper.
FREE SAMPLE COUPON
PYRAMID lIRTTG COMPANY,
514 Pyramid Bidg., Marshall, Mich.
Kindly send me a Free sample of
Pyramid Pile Remedy, In plain wrapper.
Name
Street
City State
* ' \
The J. Edmand Skiff
Vocal Studios
r J. EDMUND SKIFF. Director.
In Harrisburg Tuesdays and Wed
nesdays. beginning Sept. 29th.
MISS R. FLORA WEIL, As
sistant.
Studio
23 North Third Street
Business Locals
YOU WOULDN'T BELIEVE IT!
But look at the calendar and see.
Christmas is here in less than eight
weeks. While you are feeling in prime
condition after your summer and Fall
outdoor recreation, that's the time to
sit for a Christmas photograph. It's
none too early, as it gives us ample
time to do the most efficient work.
Kellberg's Studio, 302 Market street.
—Advertisement.
Try Telegraph Want Ads.
THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 20, 1014.
gassy stomach. They cleanse your
Liver and Bowels of all the sour bile,
foul gases and constipated matter
which is producing the misery. A
Cascaret to-night will straighten you
out by morning—a 10-cent box keeps
your head clear, stomach sweet, liver
and bowels regular, and you feel
chc-erful and bully for months.
FEW FORES! FIRES
REPORTED IN STATE
Conklin Says That State's Reser
vations Have Escaped Any
Serious Blazes
~ "The State has
been very free of
% troublesome an d
> O disastrous for est
,6553* fires, considering
tlle cont * 11 ion s,
this year," said
Robert S. Conklin,
| J nSM tSffiSjaJO State commission
|£2JU [] fljM nTB" er of forestry, to-
B in? 1 ' day. Mr. Conklin
had just returned
''■ry ' -iirrn from a trip to sev
eral of the largest reserves and had
been in touch with the men In charge
of the State's million acres of forest
land.
"The only fires of any consequence
we have had have been in Center and
Potter counties and they were not very
serious," said he. "There have not
been many fires on privately owned
tracts, either. The weather has been
favorable for fires, but fortunately, we
have escaped and I hope will not have
any break in the good fortune."
Hoard Adjourns.— The State Board
of Public Charities adjourned last
evening after hearing York and Wil
liamsport people ask for appropria
tions for charities. Several of the
members went to Danville to attend
the meeting of the association of trus
tees and officers of State hospitals.
Established 1867
IMS?
In hermetically sealed sanitary cans.
Finest for table use and baking. Ask your grocer for it.
Send postal card for booklet of Prize Recipes to
P. DUFF 6c SONS, 920 Duquesne Way, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Remarkable Saving in Corsets
/' ~y Nußone and Spirella
Corsets used for demonstrations in broken sizes—
jl slightly soiled and mussed; below cost.
THIS WEEK ONLY
1 I jj jf $5.00 to SIO.OO Corsets now $2.00 to 00
IJ /I Other models for SI.OO and J^SO
Brassieres, Underwear and Hosiery
i f NURSES CORSET SHOP
lill. 8.30 A. M. 104 NORTH SECOND STREET—B.3O P. M.
1 U WW Maternity, Surgical and Ma<Je-to-order Corsefs.
The board will have its western Penn
sylvania hearings at Pittsburgh aftei
the election.
Can Give Where They Please. —Men
in the Auditor General's and State
Treasurer's departments, who include
Republicans and Bull Moosers, have
been told they can contribute to which
ever side they please. The Washing
ton party officials, it Is said, have not
been backward about asking for con
tributions.
Veterans Here. Among Grand
Army men here were General Robert
B. Beath and Colonel John P. Nichol
son, of Philadelphia.
Interest in Conference. People In
every department in Capitol Hill are
taking a big interest In the economy
and efficiency and welfare conference
to be held In this city in November.
The Department of Labor and Indus
try is in charge of arrangements as
far as the State government is con
cerned.
Local Payments. —Halifax" township
to-day received its check for $1,578.95
for schools. Mt. Holly Springs receiv
ed $1,147.96.
Water Supply Meeting. —The State
Water Supply Commission is In ses
sion to-day, clearing up its October
business.
Commission Meets. The Public
Service Commission met to-day in
Philadelphia to hear the Blue Moun
tain Telephone matter. It will take
up the New York Central merger to
morrow. The commission will meet
here next Wednesday.
To Speak To-nifilit, —Deputy Attor
ney General J. E. B. Cunningham will
speak to-night in Myerstown and to
morrow at Oberlin. Saturday night
he Bpeaks for the Republican ticket
in Chambersburg.
Norristown Visitors. Montgomery
Evans, one of the leading lawyers of
Eastern Pennsylvania and prominent
at the Montgomery bar, was at the
Capitol.
In Western Counties. —A. L. Martin,
director of Institutes, left yesterdav
for western counties where he wiil
make arrangements for the start of
institutes and for additional tours for
the farm advisors.
Lanaford Increase. The Panther
Valley Electric Light, Heat and Power
Company, of Lansford, has tiled no
tice of increase of st6ck from SIO,OOO
to SBO,OOO.
1
WILSON ENJOYS REST
By Associated Press
Washington, D. C„ Oct. 2 9.—Presi
dent Wilson is enjoying now prac
tically the first rest he has had since
entering the White House. Cabinet
meetings have been postponed, the
semiweekly conferences with the
Washington correspondents have been
called off until after election and he is
seeing only one or two callers a day.
DEDICATE LONGFELLOW HOUSE
Portland. Maine, Oct. 29.—The house
in which Longfellow was born was
dedicated to-day under the aus
pices of the International Longfellow
Society as a memorial to the poet.
Arthur C. Jackson, of Chicago, presi
dent of the society, delivered an ad
dress. The building, which for years
was used as a tenement house," has
been restored as nearly as possible to
its original conditjon.
MITCHELL DAY ECHOES
Tills Is John Mitchell Day and this is the way the
proprietor of the Patriot, Vance C. McCormlck, cele
brates the holiday set aside by the miners of the coun
try to do honor to the great champion of labor.
Prom the Patriot of October 10, 1902: "Mr. Mitch
ell and his associates insist they have a right to pre
vent men working in the mines. . . . That claim is
un-American, unlawful, unjust, unfair and intolerable
tyranny."
From the Patriot of January 10, 1903: "Mr. Mitchell
in various ways, attempted to evade the admission of
the guilt of members of the union."
From the Patriot, January 15, 1903: "The miners
knocked off for 'Mitchell Day,' to glorify the man who
had managed their campaign, and abandoned their
labor for a longer season of holiday enjoyment than
most persons in comfortable circumstances were able to
afford. In the presence of all this no word of advice or
criticism was heard from Mr. Mitchell."
From the Patriot January 15, 1903: "John Mitchell,
vrTafii TOn rciiDDLerown
PA. STEEL RUNNING
BETTER THAN OTHERS
Management Gets Order For 4,400
Tons of Rails From South
ern Railway
While the general winter prospects
for the steel trade is discouraging,
says the Iron Age, l a leading trade
publication, this morning, conditions
at the local plant of the Pennsylvania
Steel Company are far better than
elsewhere.
Although the local plant is operat
ing at an estimated capacity of less
than 40 per cent., its efficient man
agement has been able to land the
largest order for rails given out re
cently. This order is now being roll
ed at the local plant.
The Iron Age says:
"The winter prospects for the steel
trade is not encouraging. Other years
have usually seen back logs in the
shape of contracts for steel rails,
structural steel and other staple pro
ducts affording some basis for steadi
ness in steel works operations. Mill
books are almost bare of such busi
ness at this time. Current orders now
represent but a fraction of the capa
city of mills. It will be necessary to
go back a number of years to find a
time when steel companies had a
smaller tonnage of railroad business
than at present. Under these circum
stances it is noteworthy that the Penn
sylvania Steel Company has received
an order from the Southern Railway
for 4,400 tons of rails, the purchase
being made with money that had been
appropriated for other purposes. The
general rate of steel mill operations at
Pittsburgh is only 40 to 45 per cent,
of capacity, while the Chicago mills
are likely to drop to 30 per cent, this
week. • For part of the week no Chi
cago plate mills will be in operation.
"Prices are giving way. Billets,
sheet bars and wire rods are off 50
cents per ton, steel plates and steets
$1 per ton, and tin plates $2 per ton.
Lower than 1 cent per pound, Chi
cago, has been done on bar iron.
"Pig iron makers are no longer ex
pecting higher prices, as they are
showing more willingness to book or
ders for delivery extending into next
year at the best prices they are able
to obtain."
Cured His RUPTURE
I was badly ruptured while lifting a
trunk several years ago. Doctors said
my only hope of cure was an oper
ation. Trusses did me no good. Final
ly I got hold of something -that quickly
and completely cured me. Years have
passed and the rupture has never re
turned, although I am doing hard work
as a carpenter. There was no oper
ation, no lost time, no trouble. I have
nothing to sell, but will give full in
formation about how you may find a
complete cure without operation, If you
write to me, Eugene M. Pullen, Car
penter, 3IIA Marcellus A-venue Manas
quan, N. J. Better cut out this notice
and show it to any others who are
ruptured—you may save a life or at
least stop the misery of rupture and
the worry and danger of an operation.
Advertisement.
President of the Miners' Union, was somewhat late in
giving liis excellent official advice to the miners to use
every means to increase the output of the mines, and
thus contribute what they can towards relief from the
coal famine that has brought distress to the people."
From the Patriot of September 7, 1903: "The wisdom
of adding Labor Day to our list of legal holidays was
gravely questioned when the law was passed, and the
fact that the day is not generally observed outside of a
few of the largest cities, except by banks and financial
institutions, concerning which the law is mandatory,
would indicate that public sentiment has not changed.
. . . Some labor organizations in New York will make
to-day an occasion to gK rify a man who within a fort
night has been convicted and sent to State prison for
using his office in a trades union to betray and defraud
his fellows and extort money from employers and whose
whole career Jias been an unbroken record of selfishness,
greed, fraud and infamy."
ALL THIS FROM VANCE C. MeCORMICK WHO
SAYS HE IS A FRIEND OF ORGANIZED LABOR.
PHILA. GIRL TAKES
CHARITIES'PLACE
Takes Charge of Local Work Mon
day; Special Meeting of
Body Tomorrow
Miss Marie Wizemann has been
chosen to succeed Miss Agnes Wilcox,
resigned, as visiting nurse for the
Steelton Civic Club and Investigator
for the Associated Charities.
Miss Wizemann comes here from the
German Hospital, Philadelphia, and
has had a wide experience in charity
work. She began to learn her new
duties this morning and will take
charge o£ the local charity work Mon
day, when Miss Wilcox retires.
The Associated Charities Board will
hold a special meeting to-morrow
evening to get acquainted with the
new investigator and to transact other
business.
STEELTONSNAPSHOTS.
llold Case Under Advisement.—
S'.eve Koksandic and Mico Macakanja
were given a hearing before Squire
Gardner, last evening, on charges of
malicious mischief preferred over a
year ago. The case was held under
advisement.
Croatlons Meet. —Arthur R. Rupley,
congressman; Dr. J. H. Kreider, who
wants to be one, and W. H. Kell, ad
dressed a meeting of the Croation
Kreiner Club of Steelton in Croation
hall last evening. Many of the club
members are voters and many more
are not. Anyway they enjoy the talk.
C. 8. Davis 111. —Professor C. S. Da
vis, principal of the Steelton high
school, is ill at his home in South Sec
ond street.
BIRTHDAY PARTY
In honor of the tenth birthday of
their daughter, Margaret, Mr. and
Mrs. H. A. Hartman entertained at
tl.eir home, 535 North Front street,
Tuesday evening. Among the guests
were: Pauline Jones, Deona Mitchell,
Margaret Mitchell, Grace Brown,
Marion Wanbaugh, Nellie Levltz, Ruth
Plowman, Ethel McCosma, Harriet
McCosma, Ruth Given, Ida Reddy,
Mary Basom, Cynthia Lambkin, Mar
garet Hager, Mary and Margaret Hart
man, Mrs. Myrtle Newcomer, Mr. and
Mrs. H. A. Hartman and John H.
Hartman.
OBERLIN WANTS GAME
The Oberlin A. C. is without a game
for Saturday and would like to ar
range for one with any team averag
ing about 125 pounds in weight. Ad
dress Clair E. Wiße, Oberlin, Penna.
JOHNSON-WITMER
Oliver Dayton, Johnson, of Steelton,
and Miss Margaret Witmer, of Harris
burg, were married yesterday in the
parsonage of St. Mark's Lutheran
Church by the Rev. William B. Smith.
DAYHOFF HURT
Harry Dayhoff, right halfback for
the Steelton high school football team,
sustained a broken nose and a badly
lacerated face during tackling practice
Tuesday. He will be out of the Wil
liatnsport game Saturday.
WHISTLE TO SOUND
STJIRT OF PINK
Line Will Cover Route Two Miles
Long; Reception to Shupp
to Follow
Final details for the big parade and
reception to-morrow evening by the
Steelton volunteer Are department in
honor of the election of Chief John E.
Shupp, Jr., to the vice-presidency of
the State Firemen's Association were
arranged at a meeting of Chief Mar
shal Joseph H. Gerdes and his aids
in the Paxtang Hook and Ladder Hose
house last evening.
According to the reports handed in
last evening, there will be five bands
and more than 600 firemen In line.
The parade will form along North
Front street before 7.45 o'clock and
move when the Are whistle is sounded
promptly at the appointed time.
Chief Marshal Gerdes and assistant,
John Craig, with twelve aids, will head
the procession. Fire Chief Shupp and
a party of firemen will follow in auto
mobiles. The companies will parade
in the following order:
Citizens', with the Highspire Band;
Paxtang Hook and Ladder, with Bain
bridge Band; West Side, with the con
solidated Liberty and East End Bands;
| Hygienic Hose Company and the Lib
| erty Band of Middletown; East End
| Hose Company, consolidated bands,
I and the Baldwin Hose, with the Le-
I moyne Band.
I The parade will move over a- route
.about two miles long and will take
i about two hours to pass. After cover
ing the route of parade the procession
will countermarch to the Baldwin Hose
house and Markley's Hall, where a
reception in honor of Fire Chief Shupp
will be held and refreshments will be
served.
$5,000,000 Wanted For
Support of Ministers
By Associated Press
Washington, D. C., Oct. 29.—Plans
for holding a convention in Chicago
early In 1915 were made to-day at the
concluding meeting of the conference
ere inaugurating the campaign to
raise, during 1915, $5,000,000 for the
support of retired ministers of the
Methodist Episcopal Church. Reso
lutions were adopted urging particu
larly the organization of laymen to
work for the raising of the vast sum.
Representatives from other denomi
nations adrensed the conference in ex
planation of similar movements In
their churches.
RATES HELD REASONABLE
By Associated Press
Washington, D. C., Oct. 2 9.—Present
freight rates on produce In general
shipped from Pittsburgh. Pa., to desti
nations in other states, both east and
west, were held to-day by the Inter
state Commerce Commission to be rea
sonable and not unduly preferential.
It also was held that the railways had
justified the Increases In rates made
on September 10, 1913."
GAS, HEARTBURN,
INDIGESTION OR
A SICK STOMACH
"Pape's Diapepsin" ends all stom-*
ach distress in five
minutes
Time It! Pape's Diapepsin will di
gest anything you eat and overcome a.
sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach
surely within five minutes.
If your meals don't tit lomfortably,
or what you eat lies like a lump of
lead In your stomach, or if you have
heartburn, that Is a sign of indiges
tion.
Get from your pharmacist a fifty
cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take
a dose just as soon as you can. There
will be no sour risings, no belching of
undigested food mixed with acid, no
stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or
heavy feeling In the stomach, nausea,
debilitating headaches, dizziness or in
testinal griping. This will all go, and,
besides, there will be no sour food left
over in the stomach to poison your
breath with nauseous odors.
Pape's Diapepsin is a certain cure
for out-of-order stomachs, because It
takes hold of your food and digests it
just the same as if your stomach
wasn't there.
Relief in five minutes from all stom
ach misery Is waiting for you at any
drug store.
These large fifty-cent cases contain
enough "Pape's Diapepsin" to keep
the entire family free from stomach
disorders and indigestion for many
months. It belongs in your home.—
Advertisement.
BAD COLD? FEEL
HEADACHY, DULL -
AND jTOPPcD UP
First dose of "Pape's Cold Com
pound" relieves all
grippe misery
Don't stay stufted-up!
Quit blowing and snuffling! A dosa
of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken
every two hours until three doses aro
taken will end grippe misery and
break up a severe cold either in the
head, chest, body or limbs.
It promptly opens clogged-up nos
trils and air passages; stops nasty
discharge or nose running; relieves
sick headache, dullness, feverishness,
sore throat, sneezing, soreness and
stiffness.
"Pape's Cold Compound" is the
quickest, surest relief known and
costs only 25 cents at drug stores. It
acts without assistance, tastes nice, and
causes no inconvenience. Don't accept
a substitute. —Advertisement.
Cruiser Emden Was
Within Her Rights
By Associattd Press
Washjngton, D. C„ Oct. 29.—For the
German cruiser Emden to disguise her
self by dying Japanese flags was not
contrary to the regularly recognized
practices of war, naval officials here
pointed out to-day. Before firing on
a foreign ship, however, or commit
ting any other hostile act, they say,
the Emden would be compelled, under
International law, to haul down the
foreign flag and hoist that of her own
country. No objection could be made,
it was said, even If the Emden were to
fly the American flag to disguise her
self, provided she took It down before
attacking a vessel.
One naval officer recalled an inter
esting case during the Chlnese-Japa
ncse war when a small Japanese mer
chantman was painted the color of a
German commercial ship and entered
the port of Wei-Hal-Wel through a
cordon of blockading ships, steamed
around the port, obtained all the In
formation the Japanese desired and
escaped before the deception was dis
covered by the Chinese.
Copper Manufacturers
File Their Protests
By Associated Press
Washington, D. C., Oct. 2 9.—Repre
sentatives of four copper companies
in New York to-day protested to the
State Department that two Italian
steamers, the San Giovanni and the
Regina d'ltalia, carrying several thou
sand tons of American copper to
Italian ports, had been delayed by the
British authorities at Gibraltar.
No official information has been
received of the detention of the Italian
vessels from American Consul Sprague,
at Gibraltar, who yesterday reported
the seizure of the American steamer
Krooland, also laden with copper des
tined to Naples and to Greek ports.
Before taking official notice of the
seizure of these three vessels State
Department officials will await a full
report of the circumstances under
which they are detained. Consul
Sprague already has been asked for
details of the detention of the Kroon
land. It is understood here that Brit
ish warships held up the Norwegian
steamer Prosper 111, from New York
for Copenhagen, and took her to a port
In North Scotland.
LAST DAY FOR ARGUMENT
By Associated Press
Philadelphia. Oct. 29.—The final day's
argument in the greatest corporation
case ever considered by any court
opened with lacob M. Dickinson, for
mer Secreta.-y of War and special
assistant to the Attorney General, con
tinuing his address urging that the
United States Steel Corporation should
be disintegrated because it is violating
the anti-trust laws.
i are too often
with drug*
when their blood is
really starved. They need that
blood - strength which comes
from medicinal nourishment
No drugs can make blood.
SCOTT'S EMULSION is a highly
concentrated blood-food and every
drop yields returns in strengthening
both body and brain. a.
If you are frail, languid, ffiSk
delicate or aervons, take xj)
Scott's EmuUion after meals 1 W
for one month. No Alcohol MJjL.
7