Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, March 13, 1916, Page 3, Image 3
JSoamaizZ HEM—I9OI—I'MTKU , FOI'XDKU IWI Introducing Aladdin Aluminum * Cooking Utensils With a Full Week's Demonstration Aladdin Aluminum is practically new on the market; it is new to Harrisburg, and our method of making you thoroughly acquainted with its | special features, is by actual demonstrations — all of this week. The Aladdin Aluminum from which the utensils are made, is the outgrowth of three years' research and experimenting. It is the crystallization of all thus far known in practical aluminum making. Mrs. Mae Foster A ver\ capable and efficient cook, and an expert on Aladdin Aluminum will have charge of the demonstration. She'll tell you of its peculiar advantages. Special Demon stration Offer A six-quart Berlin Ket- '> tie of Aladdin Aluminum .. will be sold special during JnP| ..95c BOWMAN'S—Basement. Sample Blankets in A Sale of Timelv Note —(»."><• to $6.50 pr. I wenty-five pairs, we secured from a factory, having been a salesman's sample line. An excellent lot—both woolen and cotton —mostly plaids; a few plain colors with borders. I he wise homekeeper will recognize this saving amid rising prices. Pequot Pillow Tubing—4s inches wide; one of the best-made tubings. Yard, IBC\ Bleached Muslin in remnant lengths; 3(> inches wide; soft finish ;no dressing; to 10-yard lengths. Yard, i)f. Unbleached Pillow Case Muslin—l-5 inches wide; round, even thread; bleaches easily. Yard. 1 BOWMAN'S —Basement. i Bell System Shows Gain of $13,900,000 in Earnings By Associated I'ress New York, March 13.—An increase of more than $13,900,000 in (he gross earnings o ftlie American Telephone . and Telegraph company last year over 1914 is shown by the annual report "f President Theodore X. Vail, made public to-day. Total gross receipts of. i the company, not including the con- \ nec ling independent companies last ! year were $239,900,000. The com-) pany's net earnings were $41,117,487! urn! dividends amounted (o $29,100,-' 091. The Hell system. President Vail re ports, now connects 9,151,221 lele-| phones, a gain of half a million sta-j lions in a year. , estimated that $57. 000,000 will be spent in new construe- j on this year The company added 1,029,951 miles to its system, making a total of 18,505,545 miles. NATIONAL HANK CAM, By Associated Press Washington, March 13.—The comp troller o I'tlie currency to-day issued a call to all National banks requiring them to report to him their condition at the close of business on Tuesday, •March 7. (•KHAKI) (»I VKX VACATION By Associated I'ress Washington, March 13. Word has Konp to American Ambassador Gerard at Berlin authorizing hi mto leave his post for a vacation. I —the tooth paste A that is fighting the most general disease in the world. Use it twice daily. See your dentist twice yearly. Get a tube today, read the folder about this dis ease, and its symptoms and Wart the Senieco treatment tonight, 25c at your druggists. For •ample lend 4c, stamps or coin, to The Sentane! Remedies Co, Cincinnati, Ohio. A DENTISTS FORMULA I MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBUHG TELEGRAPH MARCH 13, I°>l6. AGED RESIDENT OF DAUPHIN DIES Morgan Gordon, War Veteran, Is Dead at Age of 8."), After Short Illness MORGAN GORDON Special to the Telegraph Dauphin, Pa., March 13. One of Dauphin's oldest residents, Morgan Gordon, died at his home In North | Erie street, on Saturday evening, after! u short illness. Mr. Gordon was eighty-five years, old and was born in Chester county.! lie was a millwright by trade and : married Miss Sarah E. Stringfeliow, j I of Downingtown, in 1859, and moved here about 35 years ago. Mr. Gor-! don was a Civil War veteran and be longed to Company G, One Hundred and Twenty-fourth Pennsylvania Vol- I unteers. , He is survived by three daughters, j Mrs. Lewis Kennedy, of Dauphin, Mrs. H. D. llooge, of Cincinnati, and Mrs. 11. M. Rhodes, of Dauphin, one son, I 11. M. Gordon, of New Haven, Conn.,' fourteen grandchildren and four great i grandchildren. Funeral services will be held on Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock, from his former home, the Rev. Francis J. i S. Morrow, pastor of the Methodist j Episcopal church, will be in charge, I and burial will be made in the Dau- ; ! phin cemetery. W. C. SUPI'LKK IS DKAI) By Associated Press .• Philadelphia, March 13.—William •C. Supplee, who was associated with ! his brother, C. Henderson Supplee in the Supplee Alderney Dairy company which conducts a chain of milk sta tions throughout the city and outlying towns, died to-day. Death was due to pneumonia. Mr. Supplee was in his forty-ninth year. He was born in Lewisburg, Pa., and same to Philadel-1 phia at an early age. i nfie Fined" Wonder of' t music from his violin, he feels a greater joy even than your 'music strains as he does, and feel a rapture, something, at least, approach- Put a record of his into the Vocalion, that marvelous newest phonograph which allows you to play yourself, if you wish. Press the wonderful Graduola device and give yourself up to the music! 'ffffyy^' Under your pressure comes harmony which fillip Now it softens to a sigh of tender beauty. Now it swells till the contrast thrills with its very quality M|||l of life. With one record you feel the sensation PI H'X of the violinist, and another a flutist, with a third a s ' nge,r — an< * so on t^ rouß ' l I ' ie j°>* ous ran 8 e 7| You are getting a pleasure never attained in phonographic art "till the Vocalion came." You are l ,ear i n S these waves of swelling tone undullcd, » unmuffled; for new inventions in sound production I > and sound preservation have eliminated all tone -11 clouding, all metallic qualities. Thus you listen to vital, rounded tone-developments new to the phonograph, even while you are experiencing an indescribable music-joy by seeming to play each Of course, you need not play the Vocalion —far •. from it. It will play of itself each record exactly 4 as t^ic recorc l stands, if you prefer it that way. It will, however, voice richer, sweeter tones than HH a • have ever phonographically been produced before, kv' 'V* No! This device which allows you to vary a jk single record as often, and to whatever degree of -'"'j If': stress you wish, is but an added phonograph jjss Mr- privilege, which the Vocalion only can give you. ' WMkMi An Invitation wrr#W e invite you tu come to ISowinan s ilnili , -yS<■/*/. floor) where onlv the \ ocalion is to be heard Jit: *zirz",r r 'tmm m&fdL »««■• .*•->•!»> . to every shade of your „ \V aßffiffif'j I yoti will appreciate the qualities ot the music feeling." WMtt' i Vocalion. , (Mm c-zkm ' nConventional Styles $35 to $75 * '?m\" " " 1 1 • "-.•.■■' . 1 1 ""iKmwjjFr sM * without the Graduola /r--v AEOLIAN m£ . WH VOCALION I fWi "/"•'• or^J6J al/ JSj&CCMIGMZ'd m MPJwJ wWr Mm WFUr JrjM • 'i'.f IIKM Ifllll-I.MTKD IOIM.KU IK7I m. A BEAUTIFUL BOOKLET DESCRIPTIVE OP THE A EOLIAN-VOCALIOS jp^IHAILED FREE UPON REQUEST. Cohvrji]lit to' 6. Th £ .4eolian Co. —— -- Send Patrolmen to Preserve Peace at Factional Election A factional argument over the elec tion of officers of the Kesher Israel congregation resulted in three patrol men being ordered'to the Church at ! Fourth and Slate streets yesterday afternoon. The election was held in the church yard and resulted as fol lows: David Goldberg, president; Sam uel Irishman, vice-president: Abraham | Dubip, secretary; Abraham Freed man, ! treasurer: Max Williams, first trustee; ; Meyer Cohen, second trustee, and Wolf Freedman, third trustee. One of : the factions, however, claimed that the rules called for an election of officers until Easter week, with the nomi nations next wek. The other faction, claiming that Goldberg has been elected, will take the case to court, if necessary, it is said. KAISER'S SON TAKES liKIDK ' Prince Joachim Weils Princess of Anlialt at Potsdam Berlin, via London, March 13. YOUNG PEOPLE'S MEETING,fc^s!^l P a»« t SPEAKERS: Rev. E. J. Pace, Rev. S. H. Littell, Of the Philippines.. ' Of China A meeting for all who are young and feel young. A delightful 15-minute song service in charge of the Christian Endeavor Choral Society. YOU CANT AFFORD TO MISS IT NO ADMISSION ' ' FREE WILL OFFERING r t « Prince Joachim, youngest son of Em- ! peror William, vvus married Saturday j to Princess Marie Augustine of An hnlt in the royal church at Potsdam, i only the kaiser and tlie kaiserin and (I few oilier members of the royal ! family and relatives of tlie bride were present. Prince Joachim, who is 25 years old, I is the last of the kaiser's six sons to j he married. lie was wounded by. a i jshrapnel splinter in the great Russian! i drive on Bast Prussia. Princess Marie Augustine will be 18 oil June 10 next. She is a niece of: the reigning duke of the little duchy of Anhalt. Will Apply Business Methods to Government Washington, March 13. An insti-j --tute for government research was in-j corporated here to-day. the funda-' mental purpose of which, according to Us incorporators, Is to apply the test of efficient business methods to' administrative and governmental ac tivities and to co-operate with public officers in prom ting efficiency. Announcement of the launching ofi the new undertaking was made to-day by Dr. Prank .J. Uoodnow, president of Johns Ilopkins University, who will head the institute's board of trustees to consist, of leading businessmen and educators of which Robert A. Brook lings, of St. Louis, will be vice-chair-, man. Water Flows So Fast Bullet Can't Cut It A stream of water, considerably less than one inch in diameter which moves with such amazing velocity that it can not be cut by a bullet or by the finest tempered sword, is described in the February Popular Science Month ly. "A factory in Grenoble. France," we are told, "utilizes the water of a res ervoir situated in the mountains at a height of two hundred yards. The water reaches the factory through a vertical tube of tlie same length, with a diameter of considerable less than an inch, the jet being used to move a turbine. Experiments have shown that the strongest men cannot cut the jet with the best tempered sword: and in some instances the blade has been ] " " I broken into fragments without de flecting a drop of the water, and with as much violence as a pane of glass may be shattered by a blow from an I iron bar. It has been calculated that ! a jet of water a small fraction of an j inch in thickness, moving with suf ! tlcient velocity, could not be cut by a j rifle bullet. "The engineers of some big water i power projects of the Far West are willing to wager that a two hundred I pound man, swinging a four-pound ; ax wltli all his might, cannot make a ; "dent" in the water as it emerges from the nozzle at the power house. Hury -1 ing an ax In a stream of water looks | like child's play, and the average two hundred pound visitor is likely "to [ bite." lie invariably loses. So great j is the velocity of the water emerging t'roni the nozzle In these modern pow er plants that an ax, no matter how keen its edge, is whirled from the [hands of the axman as soon as it 'touches the water. The water travels under a pressure exceeding 500 pounds to the square inch in many instances, and no power on earth can j turn it off at the nozzle, once it gains | momentum. It has the same effect on I J one's lingers as a rough emery wheel. 1 and will shave a plant with the nicety ' of a razor-edge plane." 'HANDS ON WATCH MOVE IN HKVKRSK WKKCTION A jeweler has devised a watch whicl". , runs backward, the figures on the dial j being arranged in opposite direction to the usual kind. The watch wa.« I invented at the suggestion of a left -handed person who complained that il was always hard for her to till time |on the average clock, because she .thought "left-handed." Willi the new l type of dial the process of reading j the hands was easier. Other left handed persons seeing the new watch j agreed that they could read it with ; | more facility than the other type. This 1 odd timepiece, which makes "time ; turn backward in its flight." is de ! scribed and Illustrated In the January ; Popular Mechanics Magazine. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S 1 THE ORIGINAL 1 MALTED MILK ' Cheap substitutes cost YOU tame price. 3