2 fflffftftbT^nnayLVAmftreesflsi HOUSE KICKS WOMAN TO DEATH IN BARN Goes Into Stable Section to Gather Eggs and Has Skull Fractured Special to The Telegraph Le wist own. Pa.. Feb. 25.—Mrs. Charles Stimely, wife of a well-known farmer living near JJcClure, is dead as the result of being kicked by a horse. The woman to the barn t© search for eggs, and went into the horse section and one of the animals kicked her. Mr. Stimely found his wife lying in the barn upon some straw with heri skull crushed. She was about 4 2 years old and is survived by her husband and eight children. Important to All Women Readers of This Paper Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble and. never suspect it. Women's complaints often prove to ' be nothing else but kidney trouble, or j the result of kidney or bladder disease. , If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. You may suffer a great deal with pain in the back, bearing-down feel- , ings. headache and loss of ambition. j Poor health makes you nervous, ir ritable and maybe despondent: it makes anyone so. But hundreds of women claim that | Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restor- j ing health to the kidneys, proved to be j just the remedy needed to overcome 1 such conditions. A good kidney medicine, possessing j real healing and curative value, should ' be a blessing to thousands of nervous, j overworked women. Many send for a sample bottle to see ; what Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, i l.iver and Bladder Remedy, will do for j them. Every reader of this paper.! who has not already tried it, by en- | i-losing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., j Binghamton. X. Y.. may receive sam-! V>le size bottle by Parcel Post. You j can purchase the regular fifty-cent' and one-dollar size bottles at all drug I stores.—Advertisement . NO MORE RUNNING SORES (•corse A. Gorgas Sells An Ointment CaUcd San Cura That Is a Posi tive Relief It matters not how old. persistent or poisonous the sore is. San Cura: Ointment the powerful antiseptic, will draw out the poison and promptly heal the sore. So sure of this are the owners, the Thompson Medical Co., that they have authorized George A. Gorgas to return the purchase price if San Cura Oint ment doesn't do all this paper says it will do. Xo fairer offer was ever made. B. D. Dutton, Titusville. Pa., says: ; "My arm was covered with twenty four running sores and swollen to iwiee its natural size. San Cura Oint ment relieved the pain, drew out the poison and healed the arm in an in-j credibly short time. It is the greatest: compound lor healing I ever used." I The healing powers of San Cura I Ointment are little short of marvelous. | It gives relief, and is guaranteed to | help salt rheum, eczema, bleeding, j itching or protruding piles, ulcers, j boils, carbuncles, chapped hands and : chilblains. In cuts, burns, scalds and j bruises, it allays pain and is healing, j 25c and 50c a jar.—Advertisement. ' EDUCATIONAL Harrisburg business College 329 Market St. Fall term, September first. Day and night. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. Market Sq.. Harrisburg, Pa. ' Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE in Effect May *4. lilt TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Alarilnibur* S:O3, *7:50 a. m.. *8:40 p. m. For Hagerstown. Chamberaburg. Car. lisle. Mechanicsburg and intermediate stations at 6:03, *7:50, *11:51 a. m •S:4O, 5:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. in. Additional trains for Carlisle ant Mechanicsburg at #:4* a. m.. 2:13, I:J7, «:SO. »:30 a. m. For Dillsburg at 6:03, *7:50 and •11:13 a. m . 2:18. *3:40, 6:32 and «:3« p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, ! i. U. TONQB. OTP. A. ——i —— Reckless Coal Buying Why is it that less thought is given to buying coal than almost any other article. Coal is one of the largest items of expense and should have the most consideration. The reason why so many people have trouble with heating their house is because they think all coal is alike. If they happen to hit upon a good combination, well and good, but if results arc not as expected then they blame the coal. There are many things to be considered: the drafts, whether strong or poor; the size of the fur nace; the kind of furnace; the kind of heat; whether, hot air, steam, or hot water; the location of the house; etc. All these things have a bearing on the kind and size of coal required. We shall be glad to advise you. United Ice & Coal Co. Faratcr Co»rdea ■ Third aad Boas 15«h sad Ckeataut Hummel aad Mulberry Also Steelton, Pa. S L THURSDAY EVENING, Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Special to The Telegraph Selinsgrove. John Walborn, 79 ' years old, died last evening, due to the ! infirmities of old age. He is survived |by one son. Elias. pho lives here. I Funeral services were held to-day. Shippensburg. Mrs. David Har per. was buried to-day from the Pres ! byterian Church with services COH- I ducted by the Rev. C. A. Bosserjnan. Shlppensburg. Mrs. Berte Tritt died yesterday morning from heart trouble. Funeral services will be held Friday. Maytown. Mrs. Nancy I.onge necker, 94 years old. died yesterday. There survives a sister, three sons and I two daughters, thirty-nine grandchil dren and fifty-eight great-grandchll i drcn. - Marietta. —Kdward Anthony Kemp fle. ST years old. of Lancaster, died i yesterday. He served during the Civil war in Colonel Humbright's regiment, and was breveted lieutenant. His widow and four children survive. Fast land. Henry R. Peeples. 69 years old. died yesterday from the et fects of a stroke. Dr. J. A. Peeples, a brother, is his only survivor. Dillsburg. —Funeral services of Al bert White, who was killed on the rail road near Pittsburgh on Sunday, were held in Dillsburg yesterday afternoon at the home of his mother-in-law, Mrs. William Anderson, of York street, by the Rev. J. W. Long, pastor of the Methodist Church, assisted by the Rev. L. H. Early of the Lutheran Church. DEATH OF J. C. XESBIT War Veteran and Old School Teacher Dies at Mechaiiicsburg Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg. Pa., Feb. 25. J. C. Xesbit, a veteran of the Civil War, i died yesterday afternoon after several i ■weeks' illness due to a general break- | down. He was 76 years old and i taught school for a period of fifty years. Mr. Xesbit was a lifelong resi dent of this locality and was born in Warrington township, York county. He lived twenty-five years in Shep herdstown and moved here two years ago. when he quit active work. He was a member of the Methodist Epis copal Church and of the Colonel H. 1. Zinn Post. Xo. 415. Grand Army of the Republic. His wife and two sons. Arthur E., of Philadelphia, and Russel i H.. of Detroit. Mich., survive. Xo time has yet been arranged for the funeral. The Rev. J. J. Resh will offi ciate. assisted by the Rev. J .R. Shipe. Rurial will be made in Chestnut Hill Cemetery. MARRIED IX ILLINOIS Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro. Pa.. Feb. 25.—A tele-, gram was reeived in Waynesboro yes terday to the effect that Miss Ada Dale, of Hinckley, ill., aged 49, and Robert McCann. of Waynesboro, aged 24. went to Geneva. 111., last Saturday: and after securing a marriage license j were immediately married by the Rev. i Lyman Bayard. Mr. McCann is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward McCann, this place. He has been in Illinois for the past three years. He was for merly from Duncannon. Perry county. Before her marriage the bride lived on the farm of Stoddard Dale, her rich bachelor uncle. | WAREHOUSE ROBBED Special to The Telegraph Dauphin. Pa., Feb. 25.—Burglars I entered the warehouse in Erie street owned by the Ivinter estate and stole block and tackle used in painting. The warehouse is built so that it extends over a gutter and the thieves crawled through this glitter and removed a plank from the floor. BARN AND CONTENTS BURNED Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown. Md., Feb. 25. Fire destroyed the large barn on the farm of Charles Martz. near Beaver Creek, tenanted by Claude Xewcomer. to gether with a quantity of hay, fodder, corn and the wagon sheds and other outbuildings. All of the livestock was upii. The loss is about .<4.000. OLD-TIME REMEDY MAKES PURE BLOOD Purify j our blood by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. This medicine has been and still is the people's medicine be-] cause of its reliable character and its! wonderful success in the treatment of I the common diseases and ailments—, scrofula, catarrh, rheumatism, dys- j pepsia, loss of appetite, that tired feel- j ir.g, general debility. Hood's Sarsaparilla has been tested forty years. Get it to-day. Adver tisement. Take Care of Your Eyes and They'll Take C'are of You For advice, consult With H. C. Claster. 302 Market Street. con WOMIN ISKS FOR CIOIOEI Calmly Smokes After Being Found Guilty of Killing Her Husband Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown. Md., Feb. 85. —The first thing Mrs. Minnie D. asked for after being taken back to jail fol lowing her conviction by a Jury of murder in the second degree for shoot ing and killing her husband was a clgaret. She calmly smoked the ciga ret and then asked for her supper. The jury :n the case returned a verdict after deliberating 1 hour and 20 min utes. the first vote taken being seven for murder In the second degree. The jurors finally agreed upon a second degree verdict. Mrs. received the announcement from the foreman's lips without any show of emotion. The penalty is from ten to eighteen years in the penitentiary. Mrs. Leggett was found guilty of killing her husband. Clifton D. Leggett, by shooting him at their home on the night of January 10. She is formerly from Franklin county. Pa. BURNED BY TURPENTINE Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown. Md., Feb. 25.—Edward E. Phillips, an acountant in the em ploy of the Western Maryland Rail road in this city, was frightfully burned while heating a mixture of turpentine and grease to be applied externally for a cold. After igniting there was an explosion and the blazing mixture set fire to the room. Mr. Phillips' young son helped to beat out the flames with a pillow and aided his father in extinguishing the blaze on his clothing. TWO SURVIVORS MEET Special to The TAegrapk Marietta. Pa.. Feb. 25. —At the an nua reunion of the Survivors' Club, composed of twenty-two members some years ago. who saw service dur ing the Civil War. held last evening only two answered roll call—Captain W. D. Stauffer. of and Philip 1.,. Sprecher, of Ephrata. Cap tain Stauffer is secretary. The other survivors are General J. C. Muhlen berg. now traveling in California: Colonel Milton H. Weidler. from whom a letter was read from his home at Porltand. Ore., and W. S. Shirk, of Lancaster. HAGERSTOWN WEDDINGS Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown, Md.. Feb. 25. Miss Minnie Kiegle, of Elizabethville, Pa., and Clarence Zeigler. of Mechanics burg. Pa., were married here on Mon day by the Rev. J. William Ott, pastor of St. Mark's Lutheran Church. Miss Effle G. Waltzer, of Renovo, Pa., and Kenneth IT. Saville, of this city, were united in marriage on Feb ruary 22 by the Rev. Dr. A. B. Strat ton. pastor of St. Paul s United Breth ren Church. PALLS DOWN STAIRS Special to The Telegraph Shippensburg, Pa.. Feb. 25.—Sirs. Mary Foltz. who makes her home near Mowersyille, fell down stairs and broke both wrists. She is in a serious con dition. BOUGHT CHEMICAL TRUCK Special to The Telegraph Elizabethtown, Pa., Feb. 25.—Bor ough council has purchased a new chemical truck for the protection of the town and given it to the Friend ship Fire Company. Jt weighs 5,540 pounds and was tested last evening with success. FIXED FOR SUNDAY POOL PLAYING Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg. Pa.. Fe. 25. Five men, arrested on Sunday night, when Con stable C. K. Weaver raided the South Baltimore street pool room, plead guilty to breaking the Sabbath, on Tuesday, before Justice of th<> Peace J. K. Evans. They were fined $7.50 each and costs. WHEAT CROP MAY FAIL Special to The Telegraph Annville. Pa.. Feb. 25.—Manv form ers in this part of the country sttae that the wheat crop this summer will be a failure unless there is a snowfall before Spring weather arrives. It is a noteworthy fact that notwithstanding the fact that the price of wheat is $1.50 per bushel there is little being sold. TO MF.KT AT REK.V HOMK Special to The Telegraph Blain, Pa., Feb. 25. On Mondav evening the Women's Local Christian Temperance Union will meet at the home of Mrs. Samuel lieen. Comfort and Prosperity di pend to a large degree u,>on every-day health. And there's a great health advantage in eating the right kind of food. Grape-Nuts FOOD is made of choice wheat and malted barley and contains all the nutriment of the grains, including their min :ral elements which are vi rally necessary for the healthy balance of body, nerves and brain. Thousands who have at tained comfortable health by eating right, know "There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts —sold by Grocers every where. HARRISBURG ffißV TELEGRAPH SUFFRAGISTS TO MAKE STATE BLOOM : Plan to Have It Covered With Yellow Flowers This Summer as a Campaign Move IDEA IS TAKING WELL, TOO I Scheme Being Boosted by the State Headquarters in This City and Elsewhere The State of Pennsylvania is to be j converted into a huge yellow flower' garden by the suffragists this summer. From Lake Erie to the Delaware river, the whole State will blossom with the suffrage colors. Not a town or hamlet is to be overlooked. Every where one turns, the eye will be greeted with yellow blooms. In the suburban towns and the residential sections of the larger cities every suff ragist yard will boast a suffrage gar den. In the more congested sec tions. window boxes will help to carry out the suffrage color scheme. Behind this picturesque plan to let the people of Pennsylvania know that woman suffrage is the real and com pelling issue this year is a story of the kind that O. Henry would have liked to write—the story of a little woman who wanted to make a big contribution to the cause, and who made it, al though she never realized how big it really was. "I can't do much," she said, when she made her offer to the State asso ciation last December, "I haven't got the money. But I'm going to plant ray whole garden with yellow flowers this Spring, and I'm going to get my neigh bors to do the same, so that every one. in our little town will see the suff rage colors and know that our cam humble offering. To-day. howover, the That was her contribution to the State campaign fund—the idea of a suffrage garden. She died a few weeks later before either she or anyone else grasped the full beauty or the won derful possibilitiees that existed in her humble offering. To-day, however, the magnitude of her gift is appreciated, and early in May thousands of yellow gardens will be planted by suffragists in all parts of the State, and with each seed that is dropped will be a tender thought of the woman who contributed the idea that is to make the whole State beautiful. So that the suffrage project may be carried out to the fullest, the Penn sylvania Woman Suffrage Association has arranged with a master seedsman to supply boxes of seeds that will growj six of the prettiest varieties of yellow flowers. These flowers have been se lected with a view to having the period of bloom extend from July though November, so that the fragrant blos soms may be an inspiration during the intensive part of the campaign. In selecting the flowers, their sym bolic value has also been taken into consideration, with the result that taken in sequence, the six blossoms chosen tell the story of a suffrage cam paign that is scheduled to close in a jubilee of triumph. Beginning with "Golden Dawn," (Eschscholtzia), a yellow poppy-like flower that blooms from July until frost, the flowers chosen symbolize "Advance," "Persist ence," "Conquest." "Victory" and "Jubilee." Calliopsis. the "Advance" em blem, has golden yellow blossoms that bloom in abundance all summer long. They stand for the forward movement of Woman Suffrage. Calendula, signifying "Persistence," is a vigorous plant that is literally cov ered with bright yellow double flowers from early summer until late autumn. They are guaranteed to bloom with all the persistence of a loyal suffrage worker. Antirrhinum,which has been selected as the "Conquest" emblem, is a plant I that produces long graceful spikes of! pure yellow flowers that bloom pro fusely from July unti lthe middle of November. In the language of the offi cial seedsman, who is also a good suff ragist. "these flower spikes stand erect like loyal legions, signifying that the conquest for Justice is on." Zinnia, the "Victory" flower, is al most too well known to warrant de scription. The blossoms, borne on long stems, are of gigantic size, with full double petals of richest golden yellow—unrivaled In their brightness and truly emblematic of victory. For their "Jubilee." the Keystone suffragists have selected the yellow [ chrysanthemum and each and every j garden will contain at least one bed of| them, so that every suffragist will be; provided with a sheaf of them for the | election night celebration. It is less than a week since the first official notice of the suffrage garden idea was quickly sent out by the State Association to its various locals, but so instantaneous has been the response form all parts of the State that the j success of the plan is assured. News Items of Interest in Central Pennsylvania Special to The Telegraph Allen town. James Wambold, of the I I Duck Farm Hotel; Harry F. Cole, of Newside: Ambrose H. Weller, of Ma cungle; John J. Jones, of Alburtis: Henry M. Mertz of llokendaqua, high county, landlords, and Frank Mor tiz, a wholesaler at Hokendauqua, have been notified to appear in li- j cense court. Monday, to explain things j to the judge about the conduct of their places. Allentown. Fred G. W. Runk, a lawyer, announces himself a candidate ' for mayor of Allentown. his platform ! being a proposal to submit the sewer- j age question, now agitating the city, 1 to a vote of the people. Haaleion. A mysterious malady has made its appearance among goats at Parkview. Carbon county, across the Ijuzerne line. Nearly a score were seized during the night and found dead in their stables in the morning. I.ancavtcr.—William Gable, of Lltitz. has been held for nearing on the charge of hurling a stone through the window of a Reading Railway car. Mahanoy City. Set upon by rowdies to whom they would not lend money. Frank Bolch and Fred Warmick, two . prosperous contractors of Gliberton, | were seriously stabbed yesterday. Their j assailants escaped. Hainhurir. Daniel R. Dunkle had his anpolntment as.postmaster confirm ed by the United States Senate. He will succeed A. H. Byers, who held the office sixteen years. *oiider«oa. Ninety-five trees were sold on the property of the Lower Mennonlte Church in one day, and the sale amounted to about SSOO. I'aokerton. Miss Annabel McDan lel has been reappointed postmistress here. She has served at the local office twenty years as postmistress. DEATH OF MRS, HENRY MOVER Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa.. Feb. 2 s.—Mrs. Henry j Moyer, aged 47 years, a former resi l dent of Sunbury, died at Lebanon to day of heart disease. TIMBER FALLS OX WORKMAN Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa.. Feb. 25.—A .M. Gay lard was badly injured at the Charles Broscious planing mill when a heavy niece of timber fell from the second floor, striking him on the head. FRANKLIN CO. BAR ENDORSES GILLAN Addresses Open Letter to Voters' of County Asking Judge's Re-election to Bench Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro. Pa., Feb. 25.—Thirty three members of the Franklin i-ounty bar have addressed an open letter to the voters of Franklin county recom mending the re-election of \\\ Rush Gillan as president judge of the county courts on the ground of his efficiency and impartiality and on the further ground mat his retention on the bench will promote the orderly administra tion of justice. There is no question of politics in this recommendation of the great majority of members of the hnr. Republicans and Democrats alike have signed it. Es-Congressman T. M. Mahon is one of the signers. Seven former district attorneys have signed it snd the signatures of the leaders of the u«r are to be found at tached to It. . WEDDING AT 1.1T1T7. Special to The Telegraph Lltitz. Feb. 25.—A pretty wedding was solemnized last evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Gable, when their daughter, Miss Lillian Ga ble was married to Frederick Brack bill. "me ceremony was performed by the Rev. Taylor. STI DKNTS EXPKLI.EI) Selinsgrove, Pa., Feb. 25.—Five jun iors and one freshman were expelled from the, Miltiinburg high school, due to a, flag fight with the senior class. The graduating class went on a strike when they learned that the junior students had hauled down the class colors on the high school building. PI.AY AT DRY RI X Special to 1 lie Telegraph Blsin. Pa.. Feb. 25. On Saturday evening the Dramatic Troupe will pre sent their play. "Little Buckshot." at Dry Dun. Franklin county. The play was repeated here and delighted a number of audiences, this season, in different towns of the county. HIKK TO WATER WORKS Special to The Telegraph Annville. Pa., Feb. 25.—After an en joyable hike to the water works, three miles not of Annville. the following party was served a chicken waffle supper at the hotel: Miss Mary Wy and. Miss Ora Bachman, Miss Joseph ine Urich. Miss Rachael Shenk, Miss Florence Boehm and Miss Katherine Boltz. Frederick Race. Ralph Stickel. W. E. Mickey, Carrol Bechtel, Charles I.oomis and Robert Atticks. MI'SICAI.K BY tiI.EE CI.I B Special to The Telegraph Annville. Pa.. Feb. 25. Busy Bee class of the First United Brethren Church of Palmyra, taught by Mrs. P. K. Shiftier, will conduct a musicale in the Iroquois Theater March H. The Lebanon Valley College Glee club will be the attraction. INSANE MAN FIGHTS OFFICERS Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown, Md., Feb. 2 5. —After giving two officers a desperate battle, William C. Loclce, a farmer, residing near Falling Waters, was overpowered and locked up pending an investigation into his sanity. Locke, who is sus pected of having set fire to the barn of John 11. Swart/, n few nights ago, causing a loss of $4,000, had been under surveillance. SPELLING BEE FOR RELIEF Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa.. Feb. 25. The spelling bee for the benefit of the Waynesboro Relief Association will be held in the high school auditorium Tuesday evening. March 9. The cap tains of the teams will be Cashier J. H. Stoner, of the Peonies National Bank, and J. B. Long, of the J. B. Long Ice Company. PATRIOTIC SONS' BANQI'ET Special to The Telegraph Dauphin, Pa., Feb. 25.—The Patri otic Order Sons of America, Camp No. 424, will give a banquet in Odd Fellows' Hall. This will be given in honor of the fourteenth anniversary of | the camp and speakers from Steelton, Enhaut. Harrisburg and Dauphin will be present. The order has invited the I Civil War veterans to participate. HISTORIAN ON COMMITTEE Selinsgrove, Pa., Feb. 26. State ' Librarian Montgomery, of Harrisburg, has appointed a subsidiary committee ! to act in conjunction with the Penn sylvania Historical Commission in lo cating places that should Vie properly marked by the State. The local mem ber of this committee is William M. Schnure. secretary of the Snyder After the California Expositions —take a Little Sea Trip i ' Here's the idea! Go out to California by way of Denver. Colorado Springs, Pikes Peak, the Wonderful Royal Gorge ' snd Salt Lake Citv —all this by dav . light and, without extra charge, pro vided you travel on the Burlington ; Route !NTMKNT CONITKMKI) Special la The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Feb. 25. The United States Senate late Monday night confirmed the appointment of John W. Warehlme us postmaster of Waynesboro. Charles li. Fprney wns yesterday appointed postmaster at Sanatorium and Henry P. Mclaughlin at Mason and Dixon. DUDLEY 2yt inches NORMAN 2}{ inches ARR.OW COLLARS /• Prevents Dandruff Prevents Gray Hair j Keeps the liair from coming out. 50(* and SI.(H) Gorgas' Drug Stores Hi North Third Street Pennsylvania Station V, m ia More arc* and better erca. Ftp when they re scarce and everybody wants tlieni. Get the eggs in Winter which your neighbors can get only in Summer. Blatchford's "Fill the Basket" Egg Mash Solves the Feed ing Problem For You Mskee heni la? all the year round because it's I a natural egg-producing ration Contains dry mill: alfalfa, irrains, fish, beef scraps, lime store, capsicum, etc. The most perfectly bal anced egg food on the market. John ft. Moehrl, of Moehri 3ro*. - famone poultry farm at Msrahslltown,la..writes: The E(g Math is certainly - (tin" OS results in eggo and fertility." Pullets make la-era In I to • months. MHahy i hicks erow rapidly Into milk-fed fryera und command hi#heat market '•riern ivher* raised on BlataMnrd'a Milk Mash. Ulustratsd pamphlti Jrts. See your dealer. HOLMES SEED CO. KH-108 So. 2nd S!., Hairisturg, Piml IO