Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, December 03, 1915, Page 10, Image 10
10 i There Is Nothing Like i J |\l j , good clothes to keep a \, ' . ffi ■ \y/ man young m\ I Young Men Everywhere, || 111 \I \ I business and professional men and the j|i y j traveled public, are finding out these I j«\\ } things. They see the "know how" in \, . K H\\y ; the "CAMPUS TOGS" suits and over- \>< 1§ S f coats and the business of "CAMPUS \ r" jv|j W! '\ j j TOGS" dealers grows and grows. * ? Gjß 1\ ' ' PRICES 1 |j |\y sls S2O -$25 ,■1 |\\ / Met a - w - Ho,man nl Iw/ 228 Market s *- h l i jjj| \ Harrisburg, Pa. y ' Fires at Thief, Kills Baby in Her Own Arms Special to The Telegraph Kane, Pa., Dec. S. —Ana, 4-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Benik, of James City, was shot and killed shotrly before last midnight by her mother. At 2 o'clock this morning Dr. L. A. Larson, of this city, was summoned. He found the child lying dead in bed in :t pool of blood. Standing beside the bed of the mother, a bullet hole in the palm of her left hand, she told him she had heard a noise at one of the windows. Thinking it was a burglar, she picked up the child in her left arm and got her husband's revolver. As she passed the window she heard a noise, and, turning quickly, tired. As she did so the child leaned for ward, the bullet piercing her heart and continuing through the mother's left hand. As a result of the tragedy, decided by the coroner to have been acci dental, Mr. Benik asserts he will leave liis wife. Hebrew Institute Will Observe Maccabee Feast The Hebrew Institute will celebrate the festival of the Maeabees, sacred to the memory of the liero whose deeds the Jews jrratefuly recall on the Feast of < hanukah. On Sunday, at 2 o'clock, at the Synagogue Kesher Israel, State street, the pupils of the institute will display their work before the public in the Hebraic tongue. Joseph Claster will make the opening address, and music will be furnished oy Lewis Gold stein and Herman and Joseph Gold stein. who are known as Eli Goldstein's musical family. Harold Claster will conduct special services and a number of recitations will be delivered in three languages by many of the boys and IS YOUR STOMACH CLOGGED WITH WASTE? DrußKlot* tiiinrantrr to Upturn the Money IF ML-o-ua UOCN Xut Hellevc Yon It's a pleasure to sell a medicine when customers come in afterward and tell you how much good It has done them. Druggists everywhere can tell of this experience in their sale of Mi-o-na, the well-known stomach remedy. And that is the reason why they are always glad lo sell and recommend Ml-o-na. It rloes the work and ends all stomach distress just like the Mi-o-na people say it will. As a result of this suc- cess most every druggist goes a step further and sells Mi-o-na on a positive guarantee that unless it helps the pur chaser he can have his money back. That may seein rash, but customers liave said so many good words In Mi- ■i-na's favor that very few packages are likely to be returned. Anyone who has dyspepsia, whose food does not digest well, and who has to take thought as lo what he can eat, nnd when, can leave 50 cents deposit at any drug store and take home a box of Mi-o-na and if the remedy does not regulate his digestion and help his dys pepsia he can withdraw his money. This shows great faith in the merit of Mi-o-na. It is really a most unusual meciclne and the rapid increase of sales since It was introduced in Har risburg shows that it does all that it is claimed to do—relieves dyspepsia regulates digestion and enables those who use it to eat just what they want with no fear of trouble after. Sold by H. «'. Kennedy and any other leading druggist in this vicinity.—Advertise ment- Slippery Streets Are Hard on Horses Why wait until a snow storm comes before investi gating your supply of coal. Consideration of the dan ger that threatens horses when the streets are covered wi*h snow and ice should prompt you to order that needed coal for range or furnace now. Just 'phone Kelley and your order will be promptly filled. H. M. KELLEY CO. 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Streets OF THE HIGH LESTER PIANOS •MHmam—mmmmH' G. DAY, 1319 Deny Streeet. Both Phones FRIDAY EVENING. HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 3, 1915. ' girls. Rabbi Leon Album will deliver an address on the "Religious Problem Among; tlie Old Generation.' Those who will participate in the celebration will be Dr. Trienman, chairman of Young Men's Hebrew Association, who has issued in vitations to all of the members of the Young Men's Hebrew Association to be present at the synagogue on Sunday, at 2 p. m.. and be hopes that all mem bers will respond to the invitation. Mr. Hoffman, of the Newsboys' Asso ciation, will also attend with the news boys in a body. O. Goldberg, chair man of the school, and S. Krentzman will distribute the prizes to children. Among the boys who will recite in the three languages are: Harry Mlch olowitz, B. Koplowltz, Sam Abrams, Earl Dubin, Sam Freedman, Hyman Williams, Julius Katzman, S. Garan cig. Earl Alexander, Israel Furman, Albert Cohen, William Goldstein, Frank Fishnian, Morris Abramson, Julius Le vin, Teddy Levin, Harold Houck. L. Capln, Sam Isaacman. Nathan Blum, Israel Donowitz, Arthur Lack and Morris Michlowitz. "THE \RSENTEE," FEATURING ROB ERT EDKSOSi, AT THE REGENT TODAY ONLY Robert Edeson, the celebrated star, appears at the Regent to-day in "The Absentee." The play opens with a scenically lovely depiction of the Valley of Hope, where man is seen wandering in the guise of Ambition. Two roads widen before him. One leads to Success, the other to Failure. Here Pleasure and Ignorance struggle with him. When he realizes the truth of life happiness returns to him. At this point the pro logue fades into the story proper. Power, the Absentee, leaves Might in charge of his factory. Might lowers the wakes of the operatives without Power's knowledge and pockets the. difference. A strike results On his wife. Extravagance, and his daughter. Vanity, Might squanders his 111-gotten Kain while the employes of the mill are left to starve. Under the terrible stress of these unfortunate conditions two young girls, Happiness and Inno cence. go wrong, and Contentment, crazed by the death of his daughter, turns to Evil. Justice, the office steno grapher. becomes blind as she st£s down to write Power the truth about conditions, so she goes to him In per son. To-day the December number of Pic ture Progress will be given away free. Advertisement. AMERICAN MEMOAIi HEAD TO SPEAK AT ANNIVERSARY Dr. William L. Rodman, president of the American Medical Association and professor of surgery at Medlco- Chlrurgical college, Philadelphia, will speak this evening at the twentieth anniversary of the Harrisburg Acad emy of Medicine, at the Academy building, 319 North Second street. A large number of the members are ex pected to be present. Before the meeting Dr. Rodman and fourteen local physicians will be the guest of Dr. J. B. McAllster at the Harrisburg Club. MASKED MEN ROB LUMBERMEN Bloomsburg. Pa., Dec. 3.—Wtih two revolvers pressed against his head by two masked men as he sat reading in his home at Guava. In the northern end of the county, Parvin Kile, a pros perous lumberman, was robbed last night of more than SIOO. The robbers fled to the mountains. Makes Your Stuffed, Germ-laden, Catarrhal Head Clear as a Bell When you wake In the morning plagued with the tortures of head -ilds and catarrh, head, nose and throat btop ped up, air passages clogged with ob noxious catarrhal discharges that have collected during the night and you can hardly breathe Just put a little Hyomei Pocket Inhaler charted with the pleasant healing oli u" Hyomei be tween your lips. Hold it there while dressing and breathe the medicated, an tiseptic, germ killing air deep into your nose, throat and lungs with every breath you draw. By the time you are dressed your head will be clear as a bell, you 'will breathe with ease and comfort, eat your breakfast with a relish and gr about your day's work with a cle?/ brain and steady eye. This clean smelling, germ destroying air of Hyomei penetrates deep Jown Into every fold and crevice of the •.nem branous linings of your nose, throat and lungs where no liquid spray could possibly get and absolutely kills and drives out of your system every germ it finds there, heals the Inflamed swol len tissues and after the very first trial you notice a wonderful Improvement. A few weeks' use and every catarrhal germ Is killed and driven out of your system. Druggists everywhere think so well of Hyomei that they agree to give you a guarantee with every complete in haler set you purchase that If it does not satisfy they will gladly return every cent you paid for ft. but if using for the first time be sure to ask for the complete Hyomei Pocket Inhaler outfit as the smaller package does not con tain the Inhaler, H. C. Kennedy or most any other reliable druggist will gladlv supply you on request.—Adv. SEAPORT IS NOW NONALCOHOLIC Imperial Edict in Gateway to Rough Country Carefully Observed PERMANENT PROHIRITION Everyone Wants It; Town Was One of Gayest Reforc War Started (Correspondence of Associated Press) V ladlvostok, Dec. 1. Vodkaless \ ladlvostok has been realized in spite of the predictions that a seaport which is the gateway to a rough frontier country could not toe rendered nonal coholic. The imperial edict against alcohol has been so thoroughly enforced that but little liquor is sold. Punishment of bootleggers is so harsh that few men care to engage in the forbidden truffle, regardless of the immense profits It offers. Vodka Is the one drink which per sons of all classes of society cherish in Siberia just as in European Russia. Before the Czar's order against liquor vodka sold In Vladivostok at about fifty kopecks or twenty-five cents gold a pint. Harbin, which is located in Manchuria and consequently is under Chinese control, is the nearest place to V ladivostok where liquor is now sold and the liquor smuggled in from that point for secret sale in Vladivostok brings as much as five rubles, or about $2.50 gold, a pint. This price is pro hibitive for most men of the humbler cftsses. Yet a few of them manage to get liquor and an occasional drunken peasant is encountered through the streets. Few Attempts to Invade There seems to be little disposition on the part of persons higher in the social scale to evade the prohibition for alcoholic drinks in the restaurants and music halls. If the tip is heavy enough wine may be had in private dining-rooms at some of the cafes. But the waiters must be sure of their customers and subject them to the third degree before producing the for bidden beverage. The difficulty and expense of getting are so great that pleasure-lov ing Vladivostok has apparently de cided to get along without it and the cafes, chantants and music halls are making merry on ginger ale, coffee and Russian tea served with lemon. The charges for these drinks are quite as high as those for alcohol in or dinary timQS, so the spender who en joys liquor chiefly because it is cost ly can still feel that his money is being: kept in circulation. "I haven't taken any liquor for three months," the manager of one of the important banks in Vladivostok remarked to the correspondent of the Associated Press. "I don't miss it now and would feel rather guilty if I drank in violation of the imperial order. Most of my friends feel the same way. The folks in the banking business have all seen the economic value of prohibition. It has Jumped savings accounts up at a rapid rate." Order May Be Permanent When asked if the war order against alcohol would be made permanent the bank manager said he thought such action quite probable. "The women of Siberia are quite as keen to have per manent prohibition as the women of European Russia," he replied. "Thev are urging it in every way possible. It means more food and comforts for them and their children. Women talk to me nearly every day about it. Thev have money now in spite of the higher cost of living brought about by the war." | Before the war Vladivostok was one lof the gayest places in Asia. Its cafes ran at full blast until 6 or 7 o'clock in the morning and dinners seldom got under way before midnight. The miners, railway men, cattlemen and furhunters from Eastern Siberia all centered at Vladivostok, and the sail ors joined them in large numbers. But the war has brought many changes. Siberia has been drained of men of military age. Now the shipping has grown amazingly and there are sel dom less than ten freight steamers in the harbor discharging war supplies. (Consequently the floating population is large and the all-night revels would probably go on as usual were it not that liquor has vanished, the police require all places of amusement to close at 1 o'clock and take wanderers in custody who are not properly ac ! counted for at their lodgings by that time. Many Political Jokes So the dinner hour in the Siberian Paris has been moved up to 10 o'clock and the orchestra and performers in the cafes chantants open their pro grams at that hour. The gayest of these cafes is now offering a revue something after the order of those produced in European capitals. Poli tical jokes are the chief feature of the performance. One of the actors im personates the Sultan and deplores at great length the fate into which he has been trapped by Germany. An ! other actor caricatures Emperor Francis Joseph, with very exaggerated whiskers, and is given a sound drub jbing by a muscular young woman, dressed to represent Hungary, who charges the aged monarch with gross j mismanagement of affairs. Two young women, representing Rumania 'and Greece appear with baskets la ibeled "Neutrality" and endeavor to get a high bid for their baskets. The revue closes with a tableau in which Russia and her allies are all repre sented by young women who stand triumphant over actors representing down-east enemies. Women Run Circus Vladlvostoclc also has a circus which has enjoyed a run of several months and Is housed in permanent quarters. But the Czar has claimed most of the strong men and the acro bats for his army. So the performers are now chiefly womefi and animals. A few male performers who are neu trals still have a place in the pro grams. along with the trained dogs, cats, horses and parrots. Several clowns beyond the military age imper sonate Germans and delight the au dience wtih thrusts at the Kaiser. The attendance at the circus is con -1 fined chiefly to the cheaper seats and the standing space, where soldiers and sailors in uniform accompanied bv their sweethearts, applaud the per formance heartily. Moving picture theaters are numer ous in Vladivostock and very well at tended. War pictures are especially popular. In one of these theaters [the correspondent of the Associated Sohin^^nasGiftPioble^^A Toyland on Our Ist Floor and Basement lrlrS> We are showing * larger variety of children's toys than ever before. It will be to your advantage to eome here and compare prices. Imported toys as well as domestic toys are on display. American Model Builder Mechanical Trains IVES ELECTRIC TRAINS The World's Greatest Median- - _ ~ Qk*\rkfl*r El™ ical Wonder. Indestructible, Jj, j}() T*y highly entertaining, practical and " Some with baskets, all very nicely instructive; all mechanical prin- painted, from ciples clearly demonstra ted. DQLLS -jq Priced per set from 500 up to iIfCUD $7.50. Jointed Dolls, Dressed Dolls, Kid , _ Dolls, Charactei Dolls, 1 eddy Sandy Andys department Bears, Monkevs, etc.; special Dane- a cicver mechanical toy which win ACkf ing Bear at ' " delight the youngster * 1 • J "f jP _ A cute little fellow dressed in regi- qq _ lj2lCll6S f jQt mentals. Stands 15 Indies high "OC i Little Sister and Sl&rrfli&ZdKit ? i' jSA ———————————————— \ cunivinK jointed doll witli movable eyes Cl. m J mad human hair. d»i ne jmoking Otancl Special valuy. at O 1 .ZD Open face or hunting cases; iDv , . - I"n(^)) priced from $12.00 up. |r Ffl T ' Ladies' and Gents' Chains, n lnj "j ' ',4-y Bracelets and Bracelet Watches, Rings. Lavallieres, Pins, Charms. 1 1 ' '■ IT Tea e * s \ \ I | Made of aluminum. Just the ▼ I• . i V 1 i li. I-,! thincr for the children in their plav. Ladies srrr * _i {i j 12 pieces Desks r"T «t Fumed oak, Golden Oak and Ma- KItCDCII SctS in golden oak, fumed oak, mahog- hogany; brass tray 011 top ' Complete sets of 16 pieces, any and ivory finishes. Priced CO OC Rf)/' from $5.95 up. *jUL i; A Victrola in your home yt>U Will search in \Qin < . ® ronz Q e . will mean a most enjoyable Jk 1,1, f | ¥"■■¥■ Smoking Stand Christmas and will bring I fjOf J\ DCTXCr yll r I Glass Tray _ pleasure to your home every . J Match box attached. 0 f year. Victrolas ft Here's a real home gift, the rfttfl I - /* are P r ' $25, .$-40, " Mac'ey Tuscan Bookcase. I Sll .SSO, $75, SIOO $l5O and . Everyone has his favorite books. 1 s2oo. J Suppose you delight the family with this J . J* bookcase Christmas morning- Useful, beau- ■ *■■■■■■ HI ■■ SHUHf ■■■■■ BMHni tiful and equally important, economical. ■■■■ kl__Bh IBWffiS Everyone's books on his favorite shelf—the ■Mj H ■ ■ BBHD H H , lowest for the children—the top shelf for u ' ■ ■ H HC_ mother. This Macey case is the very latest 4 IBE. H H H ffiRBI JHf style in book cases. It has all-glass doors, —■ - I, and holds one-fourth more hooks, for the I ■ CllmDA * It does not look sectional, but it is. I I r&AI I | I.et us show you. fnUWfr ffW The price is low $16.05 j^p ■ - , dm) Liberal terms 6n credit purchases. Goods held - ~ ~ ra - zs for later delivery. Press saw a film purporting to show I warships preparing to move against the Dardanelles from which the ar tist failed to blot out the Brooklyn Bridge and the names on American battleships passing review. TRADE WITH SWISS GROWS Special to The Telegraph New York, Dec. 3.—The announce ment that arrangements to facilitate the importation into Switzerland of merchandise from neutral countries has been completed and put into operation lends considerable interest to the compilation made by the for eign trade department of the National City Bank on the market which that country now affords for American merchandise. These statistics show that the imports of Switzerland aggre gate nearly $400,000,000 a year and that her purchases from America are much greater than is generally sup posed, being In fact many times greater thap that shown by our own statistics of exports to that country. Mince Pie Is Barred by Colorado Dry Law ; Special to The Telegraph Denver, Dec. 3.—The Prohibition 1 law was interpreted from its various 1 angles by Governor Carlson and At- , torney General Farrar at a confer- , | ence yesterday with representatives of < the wholesale and retail liquor trades. ' | It was decreed that the dry lav/ ; forbids the manufacture for sale of mincemeat, plum pudding, brandied ; peaches, Italian macaroons and other 1 ' desserts in which intoxicating liquors J ' may be an ingredient. ] The question as to whether there , \ can be such a thing as an "intoxicat- ' ing food" was not definitely deter i mined, but the ban was placed on the i sale of liquor in any form for use in foods. ' DEER VISITS WILKES-BAHRE Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Dec. 3.—A large part of the business and residential sections here were given a thrill by the appearance of a large deer, which ran through the city for several miles before jumping into the Susquehanna river, swimming to the west side where it traveled for several miles through thickly populated boroughs and then disappeared into the woods. Hun dreds saw the deer, which old resi dents say is the first to appear in the streets here.ln the last half century. AMi MAIL. TO r. S. CENSORED London, Dec. 3.—A strict censorship was extended to all American mail to day. One thousand,women have been engaged to examine all letters now at Liverpool and destined for America. CASTORIA Ftf Intuits l!Kl Children. Bears the y/g-y, The Kir«] You Have AJwavs Bought s""™ SOCIAL MEETING FOR CAM!' • Special to The Telegraph 1 Annvllle, Pa., Dec. 3.—Members o® ( Camp 87, P. O. of A. will attend a. i social meeting as guests of Camp 16 i In Odd Fellows Hall In Main street, i A program will be gtven and refrcsh i ments served. Full lino of Grafanolas and Colum bia records. Spangler, Sixth, above • Maclay.—Adv. ANNOUNCE BIRTH OF SON Marysville. Pa., Dec. 3.—Mr. and i Mrs. C. I. Gault of this place announce the birth of a son, Norman Maelc Gault on Friday, November 26, 19 1 r.. Before her marriage Mrs. Gault was Miss Margaret! Woods of Duncannon.