10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH P Established 1831 PUBLISHED BT THE TBLKGI!AI'II PRINTING CO. f E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER Secretary OUS M. STEINMETZ •. Managing Editor Published every evening (except Sun day) at the Telegraph Building, 218 Federal Square. Both phones. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation ahd Pennsylvania Associ ated Dailies. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New York City. Hasbroolc, Story & Brooks. , Western OfTlce, Advertising Building, I Chicago, 111., Allen. & Ward. \l Delivered by carriers at ji* #K> six cents a week. Mailed to subscribers at }3.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. Sworn dully nvrragc for the three ★ months ending Mar. 31, 1915. M 21,832 IT AT*I*B« for the y«r 1814—23,213 Average for the year : Average for the year 1912—21,175 / Aver* t;e for the year 1911—18,851 I Average for the year 1910—17,495 FRIDAY EVENING, APRII- 2 A MORAL ISSUE THIS is a period when the thoughts of the people turn to ward the church and when the religious side of our lives Is uppermost. Right living receives from tho events we commemorate by Good Friday and Easter Sunday a stimulus that we all acknowledge. , Pennsylvania is in tho midst of a struggle for a moral issue. It is great er than whether the people should rule. It is tho basic principle whether tho right shall rule. Local option is lieyond the realm of politics. It is a moral Issue. Next week the Capital City of Penn sylvania will be the scene of one of the greatest demonstrations ever known _ <n the Keystone State in behalf of any measure and men of all shades of political opinion and of all walks of life will come here to urge the enact ment of a local option law. They will I come to give their support to a cour ageous Governor who lights in behalf of a moral Issue. Local option should be remembered to-day, to-morrow and Sunday. Tues day the people of the State with re- fervor should demand the en- of the law now pending. HKSSK AND THE ONLY MAY B as stated ny tlie newspaper that championed the cause of Jesse i Lybarger in his unsuccessful PBampalgns for the Legislature in the Harrlsburg city district, that late candidate bas in his possession a State check for services he did not render there is a way for Jesse to ease his conscience and give a bright and shin ing Easter example of rectitude to the Commonwealth. Robert K. Young, Treasurer of Pennsylvania, receives all moneys for the State and there is a fund which offers a way for any dis turbed mind to shift its burdens. This kund is known as the conscience fund. V"o it are sent all anonymous payments all payments which cannot be charged to any other fund. Only a jew years ago the newspaper which heralded forth Mr. Lybarger's refusal to accept a check enriched this fund by a payment that was intended as a grandstand play, but unfortunately for It, some of the boards of tho grand stand tipped up before all was ready. It appears from the records of the State Treasurer that Jesse J. Lybarger received, retained and cashed a checK lor $175 drawn to his order In the early part of the session of 1913. It ■was in payment for a whole month's service as a transcribing clerk and the point was made by him, and trum peted forth, that he had been a clerk for only a half a month and was paid for a whole month. He apparently kept the check for two years and then cashed it. It looks pocketworn, but It bears ah endorsement by the afore said Jesse. The State has marked it "paid." It also appears from a statement made by Lybarger and printed in tho newspaper that was his backer, that he received from the Stato a check for sll2, representing payment for services presumably rendered In the first month of the present legislative session before his official connection with the State government was smit ten by the axe. This check is for sll2 and Mr. Lybarger rightly says he has not cashed it. He cashed that of 1913, but holds the check of 1915. It has not reached the State Treasury, al though he has had it some time. The way to the conscience fund has no toll gates. THAT TRADE BALANCE SECRETARY REDFIELD contin ues to point with assurance to our rising trade balance abroad as an Indication that business must be good in this country. We do have a large and growing balance, and Jt Is to be hoped it will be maintained after the war, but not on its present basis. Neither is this favorable bal ance due to any great prosperity in this country. Due to the war In Europe enormous quantities of wheat and other grain have been shipped abroad, and due to the same conditions our manufactur ers have not been able to import raw materials in the usual quantities. Large Imports of the proper kind are as essential to prosperity at home as large exports; more so in some in stances. It is only when commercial enterprise is being conducted on a large Bcale and with a substantial mar gin of profit that the country at large has money enough to make extensive purchases cn the foreign markets. If FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 2, 1915. 1 there is a continuous gain of imports I of raw products used for manufacture here It is a safe assumption that mills ! and factories In the United States are busy; the reverse is also true. There can be no doubt of the value of foreign trade reviews and figures as a business Indicator.hut it is the month to month record of imports and exports | separately and in itemized form which really counts. Secretary Redfleld asks the country to gulp the totals down without chewing, which is bad for tho digestion and leads to the blues the day following, when business condi [ tlons at home decline to adjust theni selves readily to the roseate expecta tions the Secretary creates for us. ' HOPE EOR SALARIED MEN THIS conversation between an executive and a subordinate asking for more pay is recorded in the Saturday Evening Post: Own your home? , No. Any Investments? Never been able to make any— salary too small. If you can't manage such things for yourself, how can you for the I house? A word to tho wise is sufficient. As far as saving and making money is concerned, there are two kinds of people in this world—those who are > always getting ready to do something, and those who go ahead and do it. The average salaried man's prob lem is a hard one. He must adjust his living expenses very closely to his in come. He has a "fixed use" for every penny that comes into his hands. Each year his salary may be in creased a few dollars, but these few dollars quickly find themselves "fixed" among tho expenditures. He still lacks a surplus. 1 Of course this system is wrong! We all know that. But the question is, how can the system be changed ? ' How can the average salaried man 1 "get ahead" without uncomfortably changing his way of living. There is a way. Not a mere theory, but a real way that other salaried men are now using successfully. You can save a dollar or two a week if you assume an obligation to put this aside in a savings account • bank, insurance, building associations, whatnot. You can adjust this amount to your cost of living and never miss it. You will not inconvenience your self. All that is necessary is to agree with yourself that your savings ac count deposit will be a "fixed charge" the same as your rent or your trades men's bills or your insurance prem iums, all of which you manage to meet because you ; lan for them in advance. Among the men and women in the employ of the Telegraph Printing Company 105 are doing this every week. Will you do it? NOW FOR ANOTHER IF plans now under way mature, as there is every prospect that they will, the unsightly coal wharf be tween the Market and Walnut street bridges along the river front will soon be eliminated. This will be one of the results of the decision of Council to erect a landing place on the island near the filter plant for the transfer of the electric company's river coal from barges to wagons. The effect will be to remove another obstruction from the long promenade at the top of the river wall. Critics of Council freely predicted that this would never be done. That it is being done Is not only an indication that the councilmen have an eye open to the best interests of the city, but that those who have been attacking them for political rea sons are not above reckless falsehood when it suits their purposes. Follow ing the removal of the Market street wharf it will be possible to do away with one of the two landing places up town and concentrate their traffic at one place. The good work has just been started. Now for the abolition of another eyesore. WILD FLOWERS THE Ohio State Journal quotes from an exchange on the pre servation of the wild flowers as follows: Our, wild flowers are in serious danger of extermination by Indis criminate picking. Will you not sound the word of warning, asking all lovers of wild flowers to pick them sparingly, also very carefully, so as not to disturb the roots? This warning applies especially to Harrlsburg and its surroundings. The Telegraph takes pleasure in doing as the State Journal has in sending the caution on. Time was when Wildwood Park, for instance, was the habitat of practically every variety of wild flowers • peculiar to Central Pennsylvania. Many varieties still thrive there in abundance, but despite the efforts of the park authorities to protect them the flowers are yearly diminishing in quantity. i This is because a few thoughtless ' people persist in tearing the plants , out by the roots and carrying the blos soms away, often discarding them when they wilt long before those who i have "picked" them have reached home. That is vandalism, nothing more nor less. How much better to let the flowers where they grow! How muclj I better to preserve them for the future than to carry them off to afford a few doubtful moments of pleasure at the expense of plant life. We have this splendid heritage of wild flowers In our city parks because those who went before us were thoughtful enough to preserve them. It is our duty to do as much for those who will frequent our parks after we are gone, as well as for our own pleas ure during the years we hope to be able to enjoy them. New version: Put oh your Easter bonnet, with the new blue ribbon on It, that cost full half of last week's pay; and In haste frantic, we'll hie us to Atlantic, to parade on our Easter Day. If the weather man haa any respect for the suffrage vote he'll hand out a nice day on Easter. "Billy" Sunday says he's going to "explode something" In Paterson. I When In Rome, etc., etc. f EVENING CHAT "I Few people knew that Bishop Ru dolph Dubs, whose funeral will take place Saturday afternoon, had a wide ! knowledge of the politics of Penn- I sylvania and the nation at largo and that aside from theology and the affairs of his church there was no subject he enjoyed more to discuss. He had personal friends in I almost every State who were influen tial in politics and at Washington he was particularly well known, having delivered addresses very frequently be fore congressional committees on mat ters of legislation. He took exceptions to the generally necepted theory that German-Americans are opposed to lo cal option and prohibition and in speech and through the columns of the paper of which he was for many years an able editor he waged a con stant and unceasing war on liquor. Bishop Dubs was a Republican in poli tics, but he voted for Roosevelt, hold ing with many others that in this he did so as a protest against the manner of conducting Republican affairs und that while he voted against the party candidate in 1912, ho was none the less of Republican faith. He number ed his friends by the score among the political leaders In Pennsylvania and could give any of them an argument well worth hearing when the policies of the party happened to Jangle with his own particular views. In early life he took such a prominent part In the political affairs of the Central West that lie might have had a legislative nomination, then equivalent to elec tion, in any one of two or three States at various times and he delighted to tell his intimates experiences of those trying days and of his preference for a humble pulpit to a place in the leg islature. He was a man who appre ciated the necessity of organization in politics and was not one of those who believe that every leader is a "boss" or every organization a "machine." Force of churacter, ability and eloquence would have carried Bishop Dubs far in the political world. A bishop of an other denomination once said to liim: "Dubs, if you had not been a bishop you would have been a United States senator." "Is that all?" was the cryptic reply of the venerable churchman as he smiled broadly. In spite of the fact that the river is not the safest or most comfortable place these days, there are some ven turesome youths who have been try ing the waters with boats. They do not go very far out, but they are on the river just the same. Yesterday a boy who had been paddling around was assked why he went out on the river so early. "Want to get lines on the current was the laconic rejoinder of the lad. "Why that?" "Aw, every winter the ice cuts the bottom and a lot of sand banks form and places where there was no current last year have got swift water. When you go out you want to know how the water's runnin' " was the reply of the expert young rivernian. I Speaking about the river, sure signs of Spring are to be noted about the stores where they sell canoes. There are half a dozen stores where boats are sold and some where canoes are made a specialty. They have been unpacking canoes for a week or more. One store displayed a dozen on one day and others expect a lively busi ness because of the probability that the river dam will be completed soon. Capitol Hill was a rather deserted village to-day. It was not only a legal holiday, but it appeared to be a day when everyone having any business was glad to get away. Most of the members of the Legislature went to their homes and the post office au thorities took a day off from the sort ing of bales of mail matter. Governor Brumbaugh admits that he overlooked something when he did not remind Judge C. N. Brumm, of Potts- Ville, that he had been the first of his rivals to call upon him at the Capi tol. The judge came at the Invitation of the Governor to talk over the effort to retire him. The Governor said that he had never met the strenuous Potts ville jurist until yesterday and that he had a pleasant time getting acquainted. When it was remarked that he had been one of his rivals he smiled and said, "Well, be was first of the others to come to see me." | Sheriff G. W. Richards, of Allegheny county, was at the Capitol yesterday. He is a former legislator and has been busy on legislation here. One of the encouraging signs of the times is the way newspapermen search the Scriptures. Among the special legislative correspondents and local men are a number who carry with them at all times a pocket edition of the Bible or New Testament. Often times, they say, when short intermis sions come In their strenuous and per plexing problems of the day, they find relief from their worries by brief snatches of inspiration in reading some favorite passage from the Book. Some of the most experienced say they have learned more about the effective use of English by reading the literature of the Bible than from any text book or other piece of writing. > | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE"! —F. I-lopkinson Smith, the artist author, is having trouble with his eyes. —William C. Freeman, of Cornwall, Is on a motor trip through New Jer sey. —R. J. Cunningham, spoken of for the next highway commissioner, has been engaged In manufacturing for soveral years. Before that he was a newspaperman. —Charles P. Charlton, of Philadel phia, has been elected president of tho Fire Zouave regimental association. —Morgan O. Morgans, well-known Carbon county mine superintendent, has been promoted to new collieries. —Sheriff J. H. Swartz, of Montgom ery county, is a grandfather for the eleventh time. —General Charles Miller, of Frank lin, has gone to California. I DO YOU KNOW— —"1 Tli&t tons of llarrislmrg stcfl are useil for making of lK)lts nnd rivets for ships? AN EVENING THOUGHT Slowly by God's hand unfurled Down around the weary world Falls the darkness; oh how still Is the working of Thy will! j —William Henry Furness. The Doctor Knew "I want, you to take a com plete rest," the doctor told the merchant. "Can't, I'm too busy," replied the weary patient. "But you must have rent STOP YOUR ADVERTISING," or dered the doctor. The physician knew the quick, est way to "STOP BUSINESS." Few merchants are troubled with too much business but they are worried when It grows slack. Slack tlmeH are Ihfrequent to the business that uses regular newspaper advertising and backs It up with good service. SPEAKER PLEASED WITH HOUSE WORK Says It Can Hold Three Sessions a Day If It Becomes Necessary to Do So Soon PUSHING BIG BILLS ALONG Robert S. Gawthrop Prominently Mentioned For the Next Chester Judgeship Place "The House is getting down to hard work and it will do hustness on a large scale next week. It is advancing i{s work and will hold two sessions a day and if necessary three," said Speaker Charles A. Ambler just before leaving for his home for F'aster. "1 am well satisfied with the way things are shaping up. The local option hearing on Tuesday will be the last of the big hearings as far as the House is concerned and we have made special orders for important bills so that we can work on them steadily. There is a hard week ahead, but we will show a line record, lam sure. If we keep going as we will start off next week we will be ready for the appro priation bills as soon as the committee can prepare them." —The fixing of April 7 as the last day for presentation of bills in the House has cßUsed a rush on the Legis lative Reference Bureau to get bills into shape and several dozens are ex pected to be put in on Monday an<\ Tuesday. It is believed that unless they are important they will not stann much show, as the committees are loaded down with bills now, and the next three weeks will be devoted to clearing out so that the ways will be open for the appropriation bills. —Opinions are growing that the adjournment date may be set for May 20, but much depends on What the Senate does with the big bills. -—Robert S. Gawthrop, former dis trict attorney of Chester county and well known to many residents of this city, is prominently mentioned as the next judge of Chester county. He is being boomed to succeed Judge Hemp- I hill, who has resigned. —Prothonotary W. B. Kirker, of Al- j legheny county, has entered the race for renomination. D. B. Johns, a I former member and ex-county chair man, has started out for the place, I too. —Representative Beyer has prepar ed for introduction on Monday night bills with local option features to regulate moving picture shows, trad ing stamps, eating of pork on Fridav, selling of tea and coffee, sale of tobacco and other things. The scheme is to j decry local option, but it is doubtful if they will attract much attention af ter Monday at It.SO p. m. —George W. Allen, well-known here, became tin' jail warden of Delaware county yesterday. He resigned as county commissioner. —Half a dozen post office depart ments are expected to be made in the next week by the President. They will be of men urged by Palmer and his pals. —The appropriations committeemen are inspecting Philadelphia hospitals and institutions to-day and will spend to-niorrow in that city, too. —J. J. O'Neil, of Philadelphia, has been appointed a United States court deputy clerk. —The changes in the revenue office in this district becartie effective yes terday. LEAD US AGAIN Father, our hopes are bivouacked in our hearts, Our fears and prayers are all a-wing to Thee: Stretch out Thy holy,hand, we humbly ask, And lead up with Thy clear, all solving light Out of the desolate darkness of our time, As Thou didst in the bleak, black ages gone. Give us again the sight that we may see; Once more set spinning all the looms of Peace; Rekindle reason, faith, good-will on earth. j Lord, Thy almighty arm alone can quench The fire that girdles all the world with ; woe. Drench Thou the pyre of flesh and | bone and blood' Whose glare reflects the stubborn pride ! of kings And shows the fellowship of man at' end! The flower of sturdy nations withers fast, And fruits of mellowed genius rot! apace In shell swept trench of many battle- j fields; Babes sleep unmothered in their cradle nests, While orphaned children weep in wakeful dreams, And women robbed of father, husband, son, Trudge troubled through the dust clouds of the plow. Christ did not die upon the Cross for . this! —George W. Seymour, in New York, Evening Sun. I A NEW "INDOOR BPOHT" [From Cartoons Magazine.[ T. A. Dorgan, "Tad" the cartoonist, ' was dining alone in a restaurant in Fulton street, the other night. A stranger dropped Into the Seat oppo site and fell to discussing cartoons. "Now take my old friend Tad," said the stranger. "I like him personally. In fact we are the best of friends, but I as an artist he is punk." "You know Tad then?"' Tad asked. I "Know him! I should say I do." "I'll bet you *5 you don't know him," said Tad, reaching for his wallet. The $lO was deposited on the table. "Now" said the cartoonist, "how are : you going to prove that you would ! know Tad if you saw hlni?" "That's a cinch," chuckled the I stranger, as he gathered in the money. | "You are Tad." -- s_/JT' If the I;:: .1 phlegm closes- the wind pipe, the child will die. OofT's Coug Syrup will cut the phlegm loose In few minutes. Guaranteed by DruggiFfv and Grocers. 26 and GO cents™ No opiates. GOFFS COUGH SYRUP Merchant* & Miner* Tram. Co. "SPRING TRIPS" "BY SEA" bai.timoiik: to JAt'KSOM V11.1.K nnd return, 935.00 SAVANNAH final return, 92(1.20 BOSTOJi and return, $20.00 Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Through tickets to all points. l"'lne steamers. Best service Staterooms de luxe. Huths. Wireless telegraph. Automobiles carried. Heml for booklet. W. I\ 'AT HA lilt, G. P. A, Baltimore, Md. I OUR DAILY LAUGH I JL'ST AS EX- . - r^, PENSIVE. •**> I have a bridge •ngagement for l\ (his afternoon. X thought you /f V^l{ c = s never played/ %j jg 3 Neither I do: My engagement MJ Q Is with iny deu tist. ' r Ay- LITTLE ONES. \s7\ Unwed: I hear {/1 the stork haa \ *\r l ( i been making a / \J rI P t0 your yft Dadmore: A trip! Triplets. lIOW-DK.UU! Ily \MIIK Dinger Tills morning when T got to work I got tills message from a clerk: "The editor Is mad ns sin. And said that soon as you come hi He wants to see you In Ills room." And so I went to meet my doom. I found him In his easy chair— When he saw me lie tore lils hair. He started In to give me Ned— I don't know just what all he salil, But 'twas along this line: "Say, Wing. What.ever made you do a thing As that which you did yesterday. When In your poem you did say That It would be the last you'd write— By Jove, I didn't sleep last night." 1 Just kept silent all the while. And when lie stopped spilling his bile I answered him: "Why, you poor boob, I never thought you such a Rube. That was a little joke, that's all. For which 1 thought some folks would fall Who for my poetry fairly thirst — Don't you recall? 'Twas April lirst." BOOKS and gfia If Christopher Quarles the .amnus Ijomlon detective, hud been at Nice when James Gordon Bennett's villa was robbed of SB,OOO in Jewels, another good story might have been added to the volume of which this rival of Holmes is the hero. "Christopher Wuarles" (Dutton). One of the best stories In the book is "The Diamond Necklace Scandal." Prince Troubetskoy the noted sculp tor. painter and friend of Tolstoi, does not mince words when it comes to ex pressing his views on meat-eating. In a recent address In Boston he called those who eat flesh "walking ceme teries." Sentiment as well as economv seem to be pointing the way to vegeta rianism. "Meatless Cookery" has the advantage over most books on the sub ject of being liberal to the point of al lowing eggs, butter milk and even chicken in moderation. It will be a godsend to a novelty-seeking hostesses and a life-saver to the poor who cannot afford meat at the best of times much less now. Are "nerves" the expression of "growing pains of the soul" and will they vanish with the growth of a "radi ating, illuminating psychical body?" These are questions which the mem bers of the Philomusian Club, of Phila delphia, are asking themselves. To the searclilngs of these and other earnest seekers after light, Evelyn Underbill has a definite, personal answer, one that will clarify much that Is vaguo and difficult of comprehension in tile relation of soul and body. Collabora tor with Tagore in his translation of Kablr's poems. Miss Underbill Is the author of an anomalous book entitled "Practical Mysticism" (Dutton). That it is practical will be the verdict of every one who reads It, be he banker, broker. meichant. minister or lawyer. to stop dandruff and loss of hair with Resinol liere is a simple, inexpensive • treatment that will almost always | stop dandruff and scalp itching', and ! keep the hairthick, live and lustrous: ; At night,spread the hair apart and rub a little Resinol Ointment into | the scalp gently, with the tip of the fingrr. Repeat this until the whole scaiphas been treated. Nex: morn ing, shampoo thoroughly with Res inol Soap and hot water. Work the creamy Resinol lather well into the j thescalp. Rinse with gradually cool- j 1 er water, the last water being cold. Resinol Soap and V isinol Ointment easily heal c.zenia and similar Bkin-eruptiona. Sold by all druggists. For sample free, write to Dept. 27-S, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Harrisburg, Pa., April 2, 1916. Statement of the ownership, manage ment, circulation, etc., of t>"> HnrrlK lmrg Telegraph, required by act of Con gress, August 24, 1912. Editor, E. J. Stackpole, Harrisburg, Pa.; managing editor, (Jus M. Stelnmetz, Harrisburg, Pa.; business manager, Frank R. Oyster, Harrisburg. Pa.; pub lisher, The Telegraph Printing Com pany. Harrisburg, Pa., E. J. Stackpole, president. Stockholders: E. J. Stackpole, K. H. Stackpole. F. R. Oyster, Harrisburg, Pa. No bonds or mortgages. Average number of, copies of each Issue sold or distributed through the malls or otherwise to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date of this statement,at,7o7. tSigned) The Telegraph Printing Co., F. R. Oyster. Business Mgr. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2d day of April, 1915. (Signed) 11. B. MUMMA, Notary Public. (My commission expires March 9, 1919). Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE Tn Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnsbur* at 6:03. »7:DO a. m.. *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown. Chambersburg. Car lisle. Mechanicsburg and Intermediate stations at 6:03, *7:60, »11:63 a. m„ • 3:40. 5:3 a, *7.40. •11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m., 2:18; 3:27 6:30, »:30 a. m. For Dlllsburg at 5:03, «7:60 and •11:63 a. in.. 2:18. »s:4O, 6:32 and «:30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, 1. H. TONGU, ft, P. A. ■M' The Tire That Was Never Skimped You know the reason for Good- Last year we sold about one tiro year success. It's the basic reason for every car in use. We sold 14 for every lasting success. We times as many as we sold in 1909. simply gave the best. We gave it when we held a Price* Down minor place. We built a super- . ~ ~ , • i . r With multiplied output coat tire, excelling every rival in hve . A • I • came down. Again and again we important ways. . , , . , cut prices. Uur last big reduc gave !t in of small tion—made February Ist— wm output—when these costly extra Ae thjr(| years> totalin|t features compelled a price one- 45 per cen (_ fifth above our rivals. Yet Goodyear Fortified Tirea Men Found Out are built better than ever. We Users proved that these tires spend SIOO,OOO yearly learning savedtrouble.gavegreatermileage, ways to improve them. And they cut down cost of upkeep. They still retain those five great features, told others, and Goodyear sales found in no other tire that's built, grew fast. Soon Don't you think Goodyears t ' me now reached top (iOOD/SyEAR you found out place in Tire- VJ what such tirea dom, an d Fortified Tires I mean to you? they've held it No-Rim-C.it Ttr« > -"On-Air" Cured Any dealer will t,; n/>A With All-Weather Treads or Smooth 1 ever since. _ supply yotL Goodyear Service Stations—Tires in Stock Geo. W. Myers Bowman & Co. Ford Motor Car Co. Rex Auto Co. .Square Deal Auto Co. Jno. T. Selsnuui Nearby Towns J. B. Wat kins Tower City Dlllsburg Auto Supply Co. Dlllsburg W. 11. Tyson Millersburg I'. 11. Kcboeli Iterryshurg C. T. Romlierger Elizabethville l.ykens Motor Car Co. Lykens Juniata Garage MtfTlintown It rooks Voigcl New Cumberland Newport Auto & Garage Co. Newport IN HARRIS BURG FIFTY NEWS DISPATCHES YEARS AGO TO-DAY OF THE CIVI L WAR [From the Telegraph, April 2, 1865] [From the Telegraph, April 2. 1865] . „ _, , . Second Army to Join Grant Protest Rebel Notes in England Washington, April 2.—Warren's Telegraphic dispatches from Eng- forces joined with Sheridan's army, land state that Rebel notes are being Both are now marching toward Grant, protested In England. ' „ , , " . , Petersburg Attacked Gougli to Let-lure Pity Point, April 2.—Grant and " , .i. Sheridan aro now marching against: John B. Gough will lecture hi the Petersburg and Richmond. courthouse on April 7. The proceeds will go to the Young Men's Christian Steamer on Fire Association. New York, April 2.—Reports from _ 7~ the steamer General Sedgwick an- Mayor Submits Message nounce that the steamer General Lyon Mayor Roumfort submitted his an- was on fire off Hatteras. . Owing to nual message to the common council the hinh gale no boats could bo to-day. launched. )|ll A STAR OF HOPE !■£■ iat u ' ( * e ou " across life's JQrH troubled sea," as long as it will shine, is a good bank account. As long as you avc something to fall hack on in times of need it will re . ,r|j 1 lieve you of anxiety and distress, effilf—mßl especially when it is in a sound insti i* *'Jj mSI tution like the 3b : 1I*» First National Bank 224 MARKET STREET (r „ ; . - = —^ Start a checking account f —deposit any amount, any time- check it out Union Trust Co. of Pcnna. Union Trust Building Every man will be interested in what DOUTRICHS have to say on page 9. Read it.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers