6 You Can Play the skilledmusician. The Melodant accents the melody. The Phrasing' Lever gives correct control of tempo. The Diaphragm Pneumatics duplicate the human touch. The Sustaining Pedal introduces the loud effects at just the right points. These and other patented devices enable you to play the Angelus artistieallv the first time you try. Come in and investigate for yourself. A genuine Angelus costs only S7OO on partial payments; others up to $1,050. Choose Your Easter Victrola or Edison Diamond Disc Now Don't buy either until you have heard both demon ( „£^ Q strated side-by-side, for in no ? [Willi other way can you be cer t3jm one which Either will place all the world's best music at your JM c ° mma you must hear «Ts cide, for they are entirely * different. I Come in tomorrow or any time it's convenient. This is the only store in the city displaying all styles of Yictrolas and Edison Discs, SIS to $2/5. Dem onstrations any time it's convenient for you to stop in. COMPLETE STOCK OF RECORDS The J. H. Troup Music House Troup Building, 1 5 S. Market Sq. I 2 Austro-Hungarian Embassy Opposes Bill Pending in Pennsylvania Legislature By Associated Press "Washington, April 1. —The Austro- Hungarian embassy to-day presented to the State Department a note catling attention to the workingmen's com pensation bill pending before the Pennsylvania Legislature :ts being in violation of the treaty of 1829 between the United States and Austria Hun gary. The contention was made that discrimination against foreigners would be permitted. Objections were made to that sec tion which provides that nonresident widows or children of alien workmen would receive only t>s per cent, as much compensation as those of Amer- I The Blake Shop j <§ Closed Friday I | During Removal to New Location 1 1 I w "lARGER quarters. Larger stocks. Additional de g L, partments. Increased facilities. These are the jg advantages of the new storeroom to which we (§) will move after being at our present location for 0 % five years. This permits an improvement in service to keep pace with a rapidly growing business. In addition to an unexcelled assortment of wall papers and draperies for the Spring season, rugs and carpets in the H| H better grades of domestic patterns will be featured. || Will Open Monday at ' M | W r 225 North Second Street I OPPOSITE ELKS ' TEMPLE: THURSDAY EVENING. HARRIBBURG flfijjAl TELEGRAPH APRIL 1, 1915 ican workmen, and also to that section] under which no compensation would! go to nonresident parents or other de- j pendent relatives of alien workmen. Attorney General Brown said this' ; afternoon that he would await the { official notice before considering the j matter. "Flitting Day," but Few Changes Are Reported ■ I A comparatively dull "flitting day" but not so quiet as last year on the 1 i first of April is the report made by j | real estate dealers and transfer men of i ithe city. Probably 100 families are j i moving their household goods io dil'-I | fercnt locations and a few business j ;! firms are changing quarters. ! i I Among these is the Stieff Piano j store, which is moving- front 24 North i'»To°x- s,reet ,0 occupy the building at I j North Second, while a new build* I i, ™ inK erected on the old site. ;a. m. Blake ' moved his wall paper i 'J} ess 103 Xorth Second street I to 225 Xorth Second. IMCTKCTIVK -MAKKKI) FOR DEATH New York. April 1. Detective Amadeo Polignano, chief witness in the trial of Frank Abarno and Car nnne Carbon.-, charged with attemDt ing to se* off bombs in St. Patrick's Cathedral, arrested a man outside the courtroom to-day whom he said had given himself and another detective the Italian "death sign." WILJi spi :\K OX I 'ItKIvDOM Rabbi Freund will speak at Oliev Sholom Synagogue to-morrow evening on "Freedom and Its Responsibilities." Prinz Eitel Frederick Succeeds Von Kluck? KE. Reports come from Holland and Switzerland that the Kaiser hRS ap pointed his son, Prlnz Eitel Frederick, to succeed General von Kluck, wound ed by shrapnel recently. It is further rumored that General von Kluck had a stormy scene with the Kaiser just before being wounded and that he then rode to the front line of trenches, exposing himself to the gunlire, evi dently with the purpose of setting | himself killed. Poor, Old Stuffed Elk Again Wandering; Oil City Lodge Has Mailed It The much-traveled, many times kid napped, 800-pound stuffed elk that several patriotic Harrisburg Elks stole from the lodge of the Reading Elks last Saturday and placed as a trophy in the grillroom of the Elks home here on Sunday morning has gone. At 4 o'clock this morning two thiev ing Elks of the lodge in Oil City, Pa., worked their way into the rooms in North Second street and lugged the stuffed mascot to a waiting auto truck, took it to Steelton and consigned it by Adams express to Rank Parks, of Oil City, with instructions for him' to lock it safely in the lodgerooms there. The history of this stuffed elk would fill n book with public news and the secret intrigues centering around it that only two-legged Elks know of would require an addition to the State Library. After being stuffed it had its first i lodging in the lodge of the Elks at Tacoma, Wash., where it first tempted visiting Elks from the East, who swiped it and started a chain of crime that links together almost every large lodge of Elks in the country. Harry Cooper, of the Harrisburg lodge, has an auto and he says he is going to Oil City to recover tlie prop erty of the local boys, who, he savs, in tend to keep it. Activity Continues on Board German Cruiser By Associated Press j Newport News. Va.. April I.—Ac j tivity continued to-day on board and | about the German converted cruiser j Prinz Eitel Friedrich, whose three weeks' stay at the shinyard dock here is expected to be terminated witliin a ! few days. 1 Coaling of the vessel under super- I vision of officers of the United States Navy, which began late yesterday and continued throughout the night', had not been completed at 8 o'clock this morning, and there still was a consid erable part of the I.COO tons of fuel to be taken aboard. State School Teachers to Be Given Hearing Delegates to the sixth annual con vention of the State Teachers' league will be given a public hearing before the Legislature Tuesday afternoon. April 6. They will urge the lawmak ers to see that the provision in the code of ,1911, ruising the minimum salary to $45 and J55. is carried out. The convention will meet Tuesday 'morning in the Senate caucus room to hear reports of committees. After the hearing In the afternoon, officers will be elected and a round table con ference held. The executive and au diting committees will meet Monday evenin, April 5, at the Bolton House. | .SCOTT REACHES WASHINGTON J By Associated Press Washington, D. C., April I.—Brig adier-General Scott, chief of staff of the army, returned from his successful expedition bringing in the recalcitrant Piutes impressed with the belief that Tse-Ne-Gat, their leader, is innocent of the charge of murder, or that at least the evidence is purely circum stantial, and possibly furnished by un friendly Utes. HOW TO GET RID OF DYSPEPSIA Don't Krly on Medicine; Don't Go on Freak Diet; Common Sense and an Antacid L'minllj- All That Are Xeeded "If you have dyspepsia, indigestion, sour stomach, belching, distress after eating, heartburn or any other stomach trouble due to hyperacidity (the usual cause of stomach troubles), you siiouid take no medicine to act upon the stom ach Itself. That is positively not the way to cure the trouble. Again, you should not half starve yourself by going without the nutritious food that you need to rebuild waste tissues. Some foods are not good for people even when in perfeot health—very rich, sweet, highly seasoned dishes. Avoid these, but eat fairly substantial meals of plain foods. Eat slowly. Even if you drink nothing but water, you should not drink with meals. Drink before and after eating. Do not take pepsin or other artificial digestants. If you follow the foregoing simple In structions it Is probable that you will not need any medicine at all except, if vou want to rail it medicine, a little antacid after meals. The best antacid Is ordinary blsurated magnesia, which ran be purchased at any drug store. This Is not to act upon the stomach but on the contents of the stomach. The antacid, as you can learn by consulting vonr dictionary or encyclopedia, is merely to neutralize or counteract the excess acUl so the stomach can digest the food normally. Take a teaspoonful of blsurated magnesia in a little cold or hot water after each meal. You should get immediate relief even if your case Is severe. Careful, moderate eating and the use of blsurated mag nesia should put your stomach in nor mal condition in a short time; If you have not allowed dyspepsia to advance to the extreme stag* of developing stomach ulcers. —Advertisement. CK I FVlday as Usual—Bargain Day , The Great Fashion Season Is Upon Us i,Are You Ready For the Great Easter Parade?] 1 , BEAUTIFUL NECKWEAR, UNDERWEAR, SILK STOCKINGS, GLOVES, CORSETS, | HAND BAGS, BELTS, GIRDLES and STYLISH VEILS. i (EXTRA SPEClAL—California Rose Beads, black and colors; price elsewhere 1 $1.50. Here, Friday 4oC ' iT?VTT>A , « EXTRA SPECIAL , 300 dozen two-clasp French Kid Gloves: white, black. Finest 2-riai*p real French Kid Gloves, white tan; sizes 5y A to 8. Every pair guaranteed perfect. Selling 7Q elsewhere up to $1.25 pair. Our price / S»C l of Uio high price stores ask | | ————$2.00. Our d»1 QC ' I ex™?^7* I, rJTi , .k VerV My,ißh Klbo " SPECIAL, 2oc * 350 pr. | | Gloves, white or black, length White Sncde Two-clasp Washable FINESTTK I V'gixTvFS 1 ' and Si 00^Tniu!-*' sill Washable Gloves, heavy Gloves, self or black 12-button length, value I Price' pair " ' embroidered backs; pair stitched backs; white, '2.98; pair $1.98 I -! 39^and 690 500,750,980 ffSS | ' " \ ————— —a—— I I Perfect Silk Stockings—black, white and CORSET SPECIAL Her Majesty's! f newest colors—great specials. Pair, Rust-proof Corsets, long or short models, 1 I 25c, 50c, SI.OO [special 69cli ' K GOOD, INEXPENSIVE . . 1 I rX SE\Sf S BEAUTIFUL NECKWEAR FOR EASTER I % 190. 250, 500 Collars. Vcstces, Gnlmpes, Sels or Tics, Middies, Ruff, etc. I i GOWXS —SO, 3»>o, 500,090, 980 ( | 350, 500, 980 § ENVELOPE CHEMISE "-————y v ) (New) WONDERFUL 26-InchGRAY HUMAN HAIR I I 500,690,980 HANDBAGS An shadC9 or 3 «. a-s*™*, I 7r™ s wW,the $1.25 1 1 ■ ' SECURITY LOCK v ——J i I 35c, 50C! K 69C, 98C Vario,,s lea,hcrs a,,,, " l - EXTRA , wom^S^Rih- \ % CORSFT rnvriN tings; all the new John ,T. Clark's 200- hed Lisle Vests, deep i I (Ground A CTDir* I—l' C 4th and j | Floor j.- Market St.| TWO VIEWS OF AMERICAN SUBMARI 111 h If J|L ! - ""j " -ffi" ' "°* ' - ' ~~ i •• • .»•• ' ." . ' •".« - x ■ m ' : -r. . - • itmj j ♦ ' . " < : ft' " " ' CoeHrrt*r ow>r *wo»zaw The F-4 went down to the bottom of Honolulu Harbor in 720 feet of water during maneuvers of warships there. She held a crew of at least eighteen men under command of Lieutenant Ede. The F-4 was launched January 6, 1912, and was the first craft of the kind built by the Seattle Construction and Dry Dock Company. J. V. Patterson, president of the company, said that the F-4 was submerged twenty-four hours at her build ers' trial and could remain that length of time under water without inconvenience to the crew. The F-4, which cost,ssoo,ooo, is 142 feet 7 inches long, 16 feet 10 inches deep and 15 feet 3 inches beam. She was designed for a cruising radius of 2,400 miles, and is fitted with four torpedo tubes. ASSERTION By Ella Wheeler Wilcox Copyright, 1915, Star Company. lam serenity. Though passions beat Like mighty billows on my helpless heart. I know beyond them lies tlie perfect sweet Serenity which patience can impart. And when wild tempests in my bosom rage, "Peace, peace!" I cry; "it is my heritage." I am good health. Though fevers rack my brain And rude disorders mutilate my strength. A perfect restoration after pain I know shall be my recompense at k length. Aim so through grievous day and sleepless night "Health, health!" I cry; "it Is my own by right." I am success. Though hungry, cold, ill-clad, I wander for a while, I smile and say. •'lt is but for a time—T shall be glad To-morrow, for ftood fortune comes my way. God is my father. He has wealth un told; Tils wealth Is mine—health, happiness and gold." 7 oowow I This Establishment Has | Enjoyed a Reputation For § Good Pf for almost a centary., While the volume of business has been steadily increasing the I quality of work is far above the average. R Who does your printing ? g The Telegraph Printing Co. 1 Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo Engraving § HAKRISBURG, PA. | >
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers