Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 02, 1915, Page 8, Image 8

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    8
'T ta in 3(cwu4&a*<j
Your 4th of July and Vacation WANTS Are Here
Buy Them Tomorrow, SA TURD A Y, the Savings Are Great
TO-MORROW STARTS THE <S\ *2S2F m *£s &S
GREAT SALE OF GLOVES J£? d e . 8 a,,d 9i v i* c
of heavy silk, elbow length—full 16- .■■■"" Price, each ®
button—Gloves, all have double finger tips; all sizes; black or white
—every pair perfect—actual SI.OO value. 42 £\ _
Salnrrtav hH C. SATURDAY —Women's
Saturday V*/V Heavy Silk Boot Stock
—■————————-———— lngs; black, white. Palm
Beach, pink, blue. King
To-morrow—Saturday, THE BIG SALE OF CORSETS
tR. &G. Famous Her Majesty's - C ,
Lace Front
r i Corsets extra
I AfOPrC Baby Pins, Shirt Waist
vl Odd Pins, heavy gold plate;
Two new models, long or Saturday, O -
short skirt, medium high pair
*\ r\ bust, Swiss edge trimmed,
ll'l (111 graduated rustproof front
I \J \J stays with patent lock; sires ~\
Each Tfc" 5 Flags for
v., w . B . W|| Glorious
Latest model, line con- < whM ® or flesh color); llnest s\\ Fourth
til lace trimmed, ine- brocaded French couUUe, new ™ v
dinm bust, 4 rubber medium high bust; finely SILK FLAGS, 10x15
tipped hose support- trimmed; sizes 18 to 30; no- Inches (on black stick,
ers. Sixes 18 to 30 tual $2.00 value; tfjl spenr point); IC_
(as Illustration). Saturday, each «i»i.vvr special iiJC
R. &G. Summer Kabo. W 8., J. & 8., D. H. Guaranted Sun and Wa-
Corsets, strong venti- and C-B Corsets; sires terproof
lated net medium 18 to 36; all new models, 5x3 feet; special, each. 39c
bust, sizes 18 to Cn. worth up to 7Q~ 6*4 feet; special, each, 50c
50; Saturday... $2.00; Saturday #S7C Bxo feet; special, each, 98c
Heavy canvas bound brass
EXTRA—Tory heavy pure silk elbow length (16 button) Gloves, doubled . o>e!<> ' ,s ' douMe stitched
finger tipped: Paris Point backs; white, black or sand; also Kayser's TO** I
embroidered black Gloves, worth up to $1.50; Saturday, pair #UC |
' New Belts and
taffeta or messaline,
250,
1 J B atlimg Slippers
Sale Prices $1.39, $1.69, $1.98 Special, 250, 500
SASTRICH'S ffi§
New Officers Elected
by Reily Hose Company
Officers were elected by the Reily
Hose Company last night as follows:
TJ. W. Bowman, president; James Con
nors, vice-president; Harry Stroh, re
cording secretary; George Peters,
financial secretary; Edward Dapp,
treasurer; George W. Steckley, trustee;
Theodore Forshey, foreman; Russell
Hugglns, first assistant foreman; Os
car vValtz, second assistant foreman,
horse committee, John Boyd, John
Barr, H. B. Haretfen; Investigating
committee, W. J. Allen, Elmer Johnson
and H. B. Hamlen; delegate to state
convention. Edward Dapp; delegate
to Cumberland Valley convention. D.
,w. Bowman; delegate to Firemen's
Relief, Harry Stroh; delegates to Fire
men's Union, N. George Peters, Wil.
liam Murphy and James Connors; hose
directors, S. Blckert, William Stroh, N.
FreeS Bag
Charcoal
FOR
SUMMER COOKING
No Trouble No Smoke No Odor
No Danger
Makes a quick, hot fire in the stove or range at a
trifling cost.
Cooks a meal thoroughly without heating: the
kitchen uncomfortably.
The Ideal Summer Fuel
To acquaint you with the many advantages of charcoal
we have distributed thousands of small bags with the grocers
of Harrisburg and vicinity to be given out as samples free
of charge.
Get a Sample Bag at Once
TRY IT
If your grocer does not handle it, phone us and we will see
that you are supplied.
Full Sized
McCREATH BROTHERS
567 Race Street
COAL CEMENT
10 CANVAS TREAD TIRE FACTS
mQNSKio 1. 8000 mile* guaranteed—Ford
' ('■" 0000 mii r ».
If on-*ikld no chains r®.
3 * No PonrtnrM No Blow.
b * No I' 0 0" - Tread*.
*k/MRp .« y«twG r wa,\ 6 «• Peeling, Splitting or
El iW Cracking of Tread.
#/ BKr V *• T,re M '"■«*«■ Doubled.
*Mr * "V—W S *• Tlre Co,t c «*< '•> Half.
BUS H. * Wa ■ •• 2® P" cent. Gaaolene and
| Br CA\/FkCAv mill Engine Power Saved.
OAVtfuU to ffl if 10 - Le " Co f« **« r Mile than anr
\\B ON YOUR TIRES ML Let
mwHiS# HARRY p - MOTTER
V m ° U 1925 Derry Street
WnSwt. Harrlaburg, Pa.
jgßfflSy Bell Phone 3955.
General' agent for the Caavaa
- Tread Tire Co. of Utlca, N. V.
FRIDAY EVENING, * HARRISBURG %£££ss TELEGRAPH JULY 2, 1915.
George Peters, Christian Stroh, Wil
liam Murphy and W. J. Allen; chap
lain, the Rev. Amos M. Stamets; chem
ical driver. Archie Jones; truck .driver,
George Judy.
Active All Summer
on Fancy Work
American Women Embroider 'to Make
Their Time Pas* Profitably
, It would appear that the American
woman, to be happy, must be doing
something, which also must be along
the lines of utility or ornament. The
women of the Orient find their great
est enjoyment in supreme indolence
that knows no effort beyond the volup
tuous pleasure of doing nothing at
all. It is no donbt the Anglo-Saxon
leaven and an invigorating climate
that sustains our women in their cease
less activity, otherwise their energies
would surely be modified In the hot
summer months.
. This apparently is not the case, as
even those who go off on summer holl
days usually take with them as much
material to keep them busy as if they
stayed at home. It is very gratifying
therefore, to note with what eager
ness the women of this section grasp
the opportunity to secure the wonder
ful and complete outfit of new patterns
being distributed by this paper.
Patterns of the very latest design
by which any woman can make gar
ments, napery or articles of home
decoration are provided by this paper
in The World Famous Embroidery
Outfit. A coupon plan Is provided so
that regular readers may secure the
patterns without difficulty. Add to
three coupons Cone appearing In the
paper every day) sixty-eight cents to
cover cost of handling. With mail or
ders the sum enclosed should be sev
enty-five cents as postage and pack
ing amount to seven cents.
The pattern outfit In this extension
? ,°H r woman's feature departments
Includes more than 450 exclusive de
signs, a set of the best hardwood em
broidery hoops, a highly polished bone
stiletto, a package of specially selected
needles of assorted sizes, a gold-tipped
bodkin and complete instructions for
making all the fancy stitches, each
stitch being, illustrated and clearly ex
plained.
Fresh Beef Attracts
Wildcats to Freight
Car Near Millerstown
Attracted by the odor of two cars
of fresh beef, a mother wildcat with
her two kittens held a fast freight on
the main line of the Pennsylvania rail
road near Millerstown for more than
an hour yesterday while members of
the crew went to the rescue of a fel
low-trainman who was marooned"on
top of one of the cars.
The train of locomotive No. 3427
parted between the cars when a
coupler pulled out. Conductor '•Jack"
Weaver, of this city, left the caboose
and went forward to see what was
the matter. He found the bobcats in
charge. They set up a hideous howl
ing and caused the conductor to take
refuge on the top of a car. He was
finally rescued by Brakemen H. A.
Hohenfelt and E. S. Eckelberger, who
threw stones, ballast and their brake
clubs at the cats.
VICTIMS OF RHEUMATISM
H. C. Kennedy's Xo-Cure No-Pay Offer
Attracts Many Sufferers to Test
Kheuma
If Rheuma, the wonderful prescrip
tion for rheumatism sold by H. C. Ken
nedy and all druggists, does not cure
any purchaser, the druggist will return
your money without any red tape.
Rheumatism Is a dangerous disease;
because of its shifting nature it often
strikes the heart and proves fatal.
Any one with even a taint of rheuma
tism ought to drive it out as soon as
possible.
Rheumatism is caused by sluggish,
worn-out or over-worked kidneys,
which become clogged and fail to eli
minate the impurities from the svstem.
Rheuma acts promptly and directly
upon the kidneys; it cleanses them; it
absolutely renovates and leaves them
In perfect condition, able to do the
work nature intended they should do.
50 cents a bottle. —Advertisement.
Don't Faint
When you see a
BED BUG
Immediately phone for a bottle or
Knock Out
Bed Bug Killer
will not cause rust nor corrode
metal
250 the pint, delivered
FORNEY'S DRUG STORE
426 Market Street
OMINOUS MDSI
DIVIDJULFILLED
King Who Had Sown the Wind of
Sin, Reaps the Whirlwind
of Sorrow
SUFFERED DOUBLE BITTERNESS
The International Sunday School
Lesion For July 4 Is
Absalom's Failure
•
(By William T. Ellis.)
A curious notion prevails that
"summer literature' should be light
and exciting. The latter condition
is certainly fulfilled by the great
story that is crowded into the nine
chapters of the Second Book of Sam
uel, which tell of the experiences of
David after the Prophet Nathan had
accusingly cried, "Thou art the
man!" All the elements of a great
romance are here, even to the erode
aspects of the modern novel. The
tale is one of adventure and intrigue
crowded with plots and conspiracies,
with villians and with heroes. It is
a narrative as unlike usual dry his
tory as a novel is unlike a problem in
geometry. Every line is crowded
with human interest.
The study is one in royal retribu
tion. We find the king who had
sown the wind of sin, reaping the
whirlwind of sorrow. The ominous
words of the man of God to David
were terribly fulfilled:
"Wherefore hast thou de
spised the word of Jehovah, to
do that which is evil in His
sight? Thou hast smitten Uriah
the Hittite with the sword, and
hast taken his wife to be thy
wife, and hast slain him with
the sword of the children of Am
nion. Now therefore the sword
shall never depart from thy
house, because thou hast de
spised me, and hast taken the
wife of Uriah, the Hittitlte to be
thy wife. Thus saith Jehovah,
Behold, I will raise up evil
against thee out of thine own
house.'
The double distilled bitterness of
seeing his own sons share his traits
had to be drunk to the dregs by
heart-broken David. The sword re
mained in his house until he ended
his career in sorrow. Verily "There
is a way that seemeth right unto a
man, but the end thereof are the
ways of death."
Our Day's Crop of Ahsaloms
The classmate of a certain notor
ious murderer, whose wealth has en
abled him to make the process of
justice a travesty and an internation
al scandal, once said in my hearing,
"He was simply a selfish and spoiled
boy. He had his own way in all
things. Anybody who is allowed to
do as he pleases throughout youth, is
bound to become a menace to soci
ety." That modern instance paral
lels the case of Absalom, King David's
son, who was a spoiled boy. His
youth of self-indulgence bore its na
tural fruit of rebellion and anarchy.
Absalom is a timely character to
study. We have his prototypes with
us in abundance. Disdaining disci
pline, flouting filial fidelity and
spurning self-control, a class of pam
pered young men are growing up as
a menace to the social order.
Some of us who are not old fogies
yet view in real alarm these products
of the manicure tables, the barber
shops and the tailors. Like Absalom,
they are giving more thought to
their hair than to their heads. Their
personal appearance plays an over
large part in their thinking and in
their expenditures. "Now in all Is
rael there was none to be so much
praised as Absalom for his beauty;
from the sole of his foot even to the
crown of his head there was no blem
ish in him": all his blemishes were
within, and they were abundant.
So simple as scarcely to need say
ing, runs the profound truth that as
the youth Is trained or untrained,
the man will behave. Our land has
no greater problem than that of dis
ciplining its boys and young men
into noble manhood. This is one of
the chief merits of modern athletics;
they discipline the mind as well as
the body.
A Fop Without Principles
There seem to have been none of
the candid and simple virtues of the
out-of-doors man in Absalom. He'
was an over-sophisticated city chap.
He was too gifted in guile. Secre
tive, scheming, subtle, he lacked all
the large loyalties and principles
that make for real manhood. When
forgiven by his father for the coww
ardly assassination of his brother,
and restored to Jerusalem, he spent
four years In stealing the hearts of
the men of Israel. If one wants a
picture of the wiles of the modern
politician, he has but to read the
story of how Absalom undermined
his father's influence, and prepared
the way for his own rebellion.
Former Councilman to
Be Buried Tomorrow
Funeral services for Samuel J. Sour
beer, aged 59, who died yesterday
morning at his home, 431 South Seven
teenth street, <Tyill be held from his
late home to-morrow afternoon at
4 o'clock, the Rev. Dr. Clayton A.
Smucker, pastor of the Stevens Me
morial Methodist Church, officiating.
Burial will be made in the East Har
risburg Cemetery.
Mr. Sourbeer was a former member
oC the City Councils. He had been a
resident of the city for more than
twenty-five years and was employed
much of the time as a heater at the
Central iron and steel works. * He Is
survived by the following children:
Mrs. W. I. Shreiner, of Riverside; Mrs.
Charles Lear, of Mechanlcsburg; Mrs.
E. Clouser. of Shiremanstown; Wil
liam, Gilbert, George, Emory and Al
bert Sourbeer and Misses Ida and Dora
Sourbeer.
MRS. M. H. GRUBB
After a long illness, caused by a
complication of diseases, Mrs. M. H.
Grubb, wife of a retired merchant of
Liverpool, died Sunday morning at the
age of 61. She was burled Wednesday
afternoon. Services were conducted
by the Rev. H. W. Hartsock, of Camp
Hill, assisted by the Rev. W. C. Robins,
of Liverpool. Mrs. Grubb Is survived
by her husband. M. H. Grubb, and
two children, Alvin Grubb, of 1917
Penn street, and Mrs. Clyde McKelvey,
2058 Derry street, this city. Mrs.
Grubb is also survived by a brother,
John A. Deckert, a sister, Mrs. Jacob
Barner, of Pfoutz Valley, and two half
sisters, Mrs. Frank Rltter, 1340 State
street, this city, and Mrs. Clarence
Shoemaker, of Middletown. Mrs.
Grubb was a member of the Methodist
Episcopal Church of Liverpool.
MRS. BRIDGET ELMER
Mrs. Bridget Elmer, aged 60, widow
of Frank Elmer, 318 North Court
street, will be held to-morrow morn
ing at 8 o'clock from Sc. Patrick's
Cathedral, the Rev. TV P. Johnson offi
ciating. Burial will be made in the
Mount Calvary Cemetery.
li/T m i
"_ £ •*■*■
TALK IT OVER WITt MR HUSBAND I
And figure out how much you are paying for one or two rooms—then figure on a home of L
your own. Include in the latter figuring a dollar or so a week on your furniture. You will find C
t at you can live just as cheaply and besides do as you like without any inquisitive eyes to pry '
! into your affairs. Right now we are offering special inducements on complete outfits. The values I
3r J^ 3r ***? £ reatest this city, and besides we positively guarantee every piece of merchandise'
i sold. Come in and let us submit our prices, whether you are ready to buy or not.
SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY
( "flSSEfiff y Axminster Rugs ||||||f''
pTI 39c 98c ■
\ One to a customer One to a customer. ■ | |
| 1 WAGONS
FOR TKE ;
A 25 PER CENT. REDUCTION ON ALL PORCH FURNITURE AND REFRIGER- J
>ATORS GOES INTO EFFECT SATURDAY. C .
MILLER & KADES
i Furniture Department Store J
7 North Market Square |
•.Msf THE ONLY STORE IN HARRISBURG THAT GUARANTEES V ,
j kmp | TOSELLONCREDITAT |TT
Red Cross Relief Goes
Through Carranza Lines
By Associated Press
Washington, D. C., July 2. The
American Red Cross Relief Expedi
tion for Mexico City has safely passed
Pachuca within the Carranza lines
and has gone on toward Mexico City.
Whether it has continued on through
the capital defenses and into the cap
ital does not appear in to-day's re
ports from Consul Sllliman.
There was no direct word to-day
from Mexico City. The texts of re
ports telling of Chaos and rioting that
menaced foreigners will not be made
public until after President Wilson has
had an opportunity to thoroughly re
view them. All the important infor
mation come to the State Department
regarding Mexico Is being forwarded
promptly to the President at Cornish.
HEAVY WHEEL FALLS ON MAN
' Harry Wheeler, 1264 State street,
employed at the Shaffer Wagon Works,
South Cameron street, received a com
pound fracture of the right leg late
yesterday afternoon when an iron
wheel weighing 900 pounds fell on
him. He was admitted to the Harrls
burg Hospital for treatment.
Save The Baby
Use the reliable
HORLICK'S
ORIGINAL
Malted Milk
Upbuilds every part of the body efficiently,
Endorsed by thousands of Physicians,
Mothers and Nurses the world over foi
more than • quarter of a* century.
Convenient, no cooking nor additional
milk required. Simply dissolve in water.
Agrees when other foods often fail.
Sample free, HORLICK'S, Racine, Wit,
Substitute la"JuataaGood"
M HORLICK'S. the Original
GREEK BANDS ADVANCE '
INTO ALBANIAN TERRITORY
By Associated Press
Rome, July 1, via Paris, July 2. —
A dispatch to the Tribuna from Antl
vari, Montenegro, says two large I
Greek bands are advancing toward ■
Bcrat, Albania, after occupying the J
villages along the way.
1
WOMEN LOSE IN WISCONSIN ,
Madison, Wis., July 2.—Woman
suffrage failed conclusively for the
present legislative session yesterday.
The State Senate, by a vote of 14 to
17, refused to reconsider its vote in
killing the Grell resolution. pi
Absolnlely Wo Pain /
My latest Improved ippU* -ft
H4S»gpE*® iV si *«ce«. Including aa oxygen-
bed air apparatus, makes S
KH|e» extracting and all dea- «.0 . a>
W work posltjTely _ <%N hv x
palnleaa and to pe*» J'
feetly harmleoa. >
, a (Aje BO objeo.
EXAMINATION >/Ce™ %S
, free .. i X.VO / "kjce &s
a x anoy cement 60c.
X a\,\_* Gold Crowns and
HwMwrW S VxT Bridge Work, 13, H.Ts.
X ▲A V' x n 'K Gold Crown ....$6.00
Gtmdwta X X Ofltoa open dally ft.su a.
—— /<;> /-d"vfAftrJs°SiJSi
x V X M*.Bito 1R «,
X ~ jf BO Hoat WMB
f ft • CUT TBKBfS OW "
X/Vy X gAnnani
/320 Market Street
lOw tbo Hub)
Harritburg, Pa. it mat Hart •an
PAIITMN I Whon Coming to My Otftoo Bo
UfiU I lull ■ Buro You Aro In tho Right Plaoo.
GERMANS- TO BUILD PLANT
FOR ENGLAND'S BENZOL
Special to The Telegraph
South Bethlehem, Pa., July 2.—The
Carl Sill Company, a German concern.
It was reported in business circles
here, had just been awarded the con
tract to erect at the Lehigh Coke
Compafiy a benzol plant at a cost Of
$350,000. The product will be used
by the Bethlehem Steel Company in
the manufacture of explosives for the
use of England.
TRIELA BOBICH DIES
Triela Bobich, aged 45, 445 Myers
street. Steelton, died early this morn
ing at the Harrlsburg Hospital from
ineumonia.