2 CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA NEWS CARLISLE PLANS GREAT JUBILEE To Combine Molly Pitcher Celebration, Old Home Week and Fourth of July Parade Carlisle, Pa., April 24.—A movement has been launched here to have the celebration attendant to tlie unveiling of the monument to Molly Pitcher, the heroine of Monmouth on June 28, ex tended to more elaborate proportions and to include an Old Home Week and Fourth of July observance. It had been decided practically by the executive committee to have all of the events in one day. A movement had been on foot, however, to have an Old Home Week liere in the Fall and at the next meeting of the committee the plan of combining the two and moving the annual Fourth of July observance for ward several days will be presented. A tentative schedule for the new plan calls for the following program: Tues day, June 27, enrollment and greet ing of returned citizens with reception in the evening; Wednesday, June 2S, unveiling of Molly Pitcher memorial, parade by patriotic organizations and speaking! Thursday, June 29, firemen's parade, to Include all of the companies in the valley, various tests and con- i tests; Friday, June 30, industrial day. with an industrial pageant showing the town's business enterprises, baseball games and contests between represen tatives of local plants; Saturday, July 1. suffrage and military day, pageant under the auspices of the national suf fragists in honor of Molly Pitcher. 1 sometimes known as the "•original American suffragist"; military parades, and drills by guardsmen and Indian ca dets. Fireworks display would come on Friday evening and on Sunday pa triotic services and special sermons in the churches would follow. Many busi nessmen are in favor of extending the celebration. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. SPRING TIME is KODAK TIME Anybody can take pood pictures with a Kodak— You snap the Kodak— we do the developing and printing—lf you don't care to take the time. Hear in mind all KO DAKS are Cameras, BIT all Cameras are not KODAKS. KODAKS, CAMERAS, FILMS, SUPPLIES, OUTFITS KODAKS REPAIRED Gorgas' Drug Stores 16 North Third St. (Store Always Open) and Pcnna. Station ISRAI j MADE OF XKW Velvet Rubberj FOR SALE BY Harrisburg Harness &i Supply Co. 2XD AXD CHEST.MT STS. j 'mm m> '^l^' »M < w 111 « I MON-DAY EVENING, WHEAT SHOWING NEARLY AVERAGE Ninety-five Per Cent. Is the Rating Given by the State Agriculturists Pennsylvania's wheat ami rye crops were ninety-five per cent, of the average for April 1 in the last ten years acording to reports made to the statistical bureau of the State Depart , nient of Agriculture by crop reporters on the first of this month. The acreage devoted to both grains is larger than u year ago and the reports show that i seven weeks was the average snow 'protection during the winter Just over. The summary of reports issued de clares that twenty per cent, of the ground that will be used for this year's corn was ploughed last Fall and that livestock is up to the aver age in condition. ! The bureau has prepared a state ment showing the prices received by farmers for various produce as of April 1. Wheat Is given as Jll- per bushel, corn S2 cents, oats 52 cents, rye *>9 cents, potatoes J 1.16, hay $17.50 per ton: eggs 23 cents per dozen and butter 33 cents per pound. White Oak Tree, Two Centuries Old, Cut Down Carlisle, Pa., April 24.—Under a plan of road improvement, the supervisors of Silver Spring have had an ancient I white oak tree, a county landmark for two centuries, cut down The tree mea sured six feet in diameter. It was one of the original markers of the land of the congregation of the Silver Springs Presbyterian church, one of the oldest congregations in the country which was founded in 1734 and is mentioned in the original deed for the plot. Marks on the tree show it to be aged about two centuries. Readjustment Of boundary ilnes In the section made the tree come in the center of a road and for this reason It was removed. Discuss Japan's Protest to Immigration Bill Washington, April 2'.. Japan's protest against inclusion in the pfml ing Immigration bill of a reference to the Root-Takahira agreement restrict ing immigration of Japanese laborers, was discussed to-day by Secretary Lansing, Chairman Stone, of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee, and Chairman Smith of the immigration committee. Senator Sith later called a meeting of his committee for Thursday- when nn effort will ho made to modify the bill to please Japan. n \\\i\«; AM mm MEETING Hummelstown, Pa., April 24. A meeting of the Hummelstown High School Alumni Association will be held In the school building to-morrow even ing to make arrangements for the an nual alumni meeting. 1 ■ True Secret of Keeping Youthful Looking (The Beauty Seeker.) •The real secret of keeping young-looking and beautiful," aa.vs a well-known hygieniat, "is to keep the liver and bowela normally active. Without these requisites, poisonous waste products remain in the system, pollut ing the blood and lodging in various organs, tissues, joints. One becomes flabby, obese, nervous, mentally sluggish, dull-eyed, wrinkled and sallow of face. "But to get liver and bowels working as tkey ought, without producing evil after-effects has been the problem. Fortunately, there ia a prescription of unquestioned merit, which may now be had in convenient tablet form. Its value is due largely to an ingredient de rived from the humble May apple, or its root, which has been called 'vegetable calomel* be cause of ita effectiveness —though, of course, it ia not to be classed with the real calomei of mercurial origin. There ia no habit-forming constituent in 'aentanel' tablets—that's the name —and their use is not followed by weak ness or exhaustion. On the contrary, these harmless vegetable tableta tend to impart tone and elasticity to the relaxed inteatinal wall. Sentanel tablets, which may be procured from any druggist—a dime's worth will do—will prove a revelation to any constipated, liver troubled person." | The Constipation Curse 1 Constipation - clogged bowels cause pain and sickness; 95 per cent of our ills, say the authorities. Sentanel Laxatives bring quick relief. All vegetable contain no calomel. Ten dose 3 for a dime at any druggists. Physician's sample free, upon request, if you men tion this ad% - ertisement. The Sen tanel Remedies Co., Inc., 800 Madi son Ave., Covington, Ky. Non-sieasy Toilet Cream keeps the bkin toft and Velvety In Rough Weather. An Exquisite Toilet Prep aration. 25c. (iOKUAS* DftUU STOKES 18 X. Third St- and P. 11. H. Sftloa^ TIME TABLE Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect June 27. 1915. i TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martinsburg at ' 5:03. *7:52 a. m., *3.40 p. tn. For Hagerstown, Chambershurg, far lisle. Mechanicsburg and Intermediate stations at *5:03, "7:f.2. *11.53 a. m. •3:40. 5:37, *7:45. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m., 2:16, 3:26, 6:30, 9.35 p. m. For Dillsburg at '5:03, *7:52 and •11:53 a. m., 2:16, *3:40, 5:37 and 6:30 I p. m. •Daily. All other trains dullv except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. J. H. TONGE. Q. P. A. EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce Troop fltillillnK 15 So. Market Sq. Day and Night School Venr I Commercial nnd Stenographic t'ournea Bell Phone Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping. Shorthand. Civil Servlee Thirtieth Yrnr ) :t-U Market St. llarrlsburg, Pa. OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman Bldg. 4 S. Market Sq. , Training That Secures Salary Increasing Positions In the Or.lte Call or send to-day for Interesting • booklet. "The Art of GfHlni: llooic In i the. World/' Hell uhuna 594-R. VOTERS TO DECIDE ON SCHOOL LOAN East Pennsboro Township Di rectors Plan Two New Buildings Enola, Pa., April 24. School di rectors of East Pennsooro township have completed plans for a loan of $40,000 and Solicitor J. E. Myers was instructed to have the details ar ranged so that an election may l>e held by the voters of the township. It is the intention of the board to build an addition to the Washington Heights School at a cost- of $6,000; ' heating apparatus $l,lOO, to take the ' place of the stoves that have been U!>ed in this building; $30,000 to be used for the erection of a 12-room building at Enola, to take the place ■ of the one destroyed by Are and $2,- 000 for the purchase of the lot on | which the burned building was erect ed. now owned by the Enola Realty I Company. The directors plan to have the I building erected and fully equipped I for the above amount. The insurance of $18,240 on the old building will be used in erecting a building near High land Park to be used for the new High School and the purchase of a suitable lot. The law requires that thirty days' before the resolution can be put to a vote and it must be advertised. Noth ing can therefore be done on the new Summit street building until June 1, but an architect will be employed to draw plans for a suitable building and all arrangements made for its erec ; tion. The assessed valuation of the town ship is about $1,300,000 and>the pres ent indebtedness $33,000. The tax rate is about 11 mills and with the pro posed increased indebtedness of $40,- 000. the directors do not expect to in crease the mill rate much as the bonds to be sold will be for 30 years. Dr. G. Frank Ritchie Dies at Mechanicsburg Mechanlcsburg, Pa., April 2 4.—After several months' illness I)r. G. Frank Ritchey died early yesterday morning a; his home in East Main street of grip and pleurisy, combined with nervous trouble. He was aged 50 years and i was a successful and well-known medi- j ! oal practitioner. He was a resident of Mechanicsburg the past five years, coming here from New Kingston, ' where he lived fifteen years. Dr. Ritchie was born in I-oysburg, ' Bedford county, June 13, 1865. He was graduated from Jefferson College in the class of 18S9 and commenced the practice of medicine at Pittsburgh. From there he went to Texas, thence i to New Kingston. He was a thirty- | second-degree Mason, being past mas- j ter in Eureka Lodge. No. 302, of Me- 1 clianlcsburg. He-was a member of the Business Men's League and of the Clti- I zer.'s Fire Company. His wife and one son, Frank Arthur, at home, survive. Of a family of ten children. Dr. Ritchey i« the first to die, and the following brothers and sisters survive: Dr. M. j M. Ritchey, James Ritchey and Dr. I Herman Ritchev, all of Harrisburg; V. ' H. Ritchey, druggist, of Carlisle: John and Howard, of Altoona, and Daniel, of Dillsburg: Mrs. John Green and Miss Ida Ritchey, of Harrisburg. The funeral service will he held to morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock, con ducted by the Rev. H. Hall Sharp, pas tor of Trinity Lutheran Church. Burial j will be made In the Longsdorf Ceme- I tery. New Kingston. Heavy Earthquakes Are Recorded at Georgetown; Seismograph Is Broken Washington, April 24. Two severe earthquakes were recorded on George-j town University seismographs to-day. The heaviest shocks came at 3.21 a. m. The first began at 11.31 o'clock last night and continued until 12.07 o'clock this mbrning. It was esti mated that its center was about I.GOO miles from Washington. The second series of shocks, decid edly stronger than the first, began at 3.08 a. m.. reaching a maximum in tensity at 3.21 a. m. At this point the needles of two of the seismographs were thrown off their recording drum, so severe were the shocks. The shocks continued until 4.12 a. m. Director Tonnorf said that the center of the second earthquake was 2,400 miles from Washington and he believed if it occurred in an inhabited zone it must have done considerable damage. SANTO DOMINGO SHAKEN Santo Domingo, Dominican Repub lic, April 24. A severe earthquake occurred here at 11.30 o'clock. No di mage was caused. Showing in Battle Practice Gratifying to Officers in Navy San Diego, Cal„ April 24. Naval | officers here expressed gratification to day over records made by vessels of the Pacific fleet at elementary and bat tle practice this year. The Maryland scored 16 hits out of 17 shots and the Cleveland 15 out of-16. In battle prac tice the Cleveland made 32 hits in 40. In torpedo practice Friday off San Pedro the destroyer Stewart scored | two hits in as many shots steaming at twenty knots. The range was be tween 3,300 and 4,000 yards. GOOD WORK Proper Food Makes Marvelous Changes. Providence Is sometimes credited with directing the footsteps by so sim i pie a way as the reading of a food ad ! vertisement. A lady in Mo. writes. "I was com- | pelled to retire from my school teach ing because I was broken down with nervous prostration. "I suffered agony In my back and , i was in a dreadfully nervous condition, irritable, with a dull, heavy headache ! continually, had no appetite and could j scarcely digest anything. I was un- ! able to remember what I read and ] was. of course, unfit for my work. "One day, as if by providence, I read the testimonial of a lady whose symptoms were much the same as \ mine, and she told of how Grape-Nuts food had helped her, so I 'concluded to try it. "I began with Grape-Nuts, a little fruit, and a cup of Postum. I steadily i improved in both body and mind. ! Grape-Nuts has done more for me j than all the medicine I have ever! taken. I am now well again and able to do anything necessary in my work. 1 "My mind is clearer and my bodv stronger than ever before. "There's . a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Ever rea«l the above letter? A new one appears from time to time, Tlic.v are genuine, true, and full of human interest. J RARRIF3URG TELEGRAPH (SttttSP^ I Uj|iuwasHC«i*iwn« m 1 REMEMBE I GOVERNOR HAS ! BUSY ITINERARY 'Goes to Boston Tomorrow; Starts Spcechmaking Tour Saturday Governor Brumbaugh was at the State Capitol to-day for the first time I since April 13 when he left for Wash- | ington and after clearing up accumu- j lated business, announced that he i would leave to-morrow for Boston j where he is to make two addresses. I On Wednesday, the Governor will I speak before the Merchants' Club on "Education a Factor in Preparedness" j and on Thursday before the Middlesex Club on "Grant." The itinerary for the Governor's speech making tour is being revised to-day. Instead of starting at Wil liamsp.ort on Friday he will likely I make his first campaign speeches in ! Huntingdon and Blair counties on Sat-j urday. A number of changes in the : list announced for next week will be I made so as to reduce the number of j talks and the mileage to be covered. The Governor showed traces of his ! illness when at the Capitol and ap peared to be tired after receiving nu -1 merous visitors. The Rev. W. X. Yates, Washington | : party candidate for State Senator, I may ask leave to amend the Republi can and Democratic petitions filed for him and which were returned as de fective. He discussed the situation with Deputy Secretary of the Com monwealth Godcharles to-day and will consult attorneys. He said this morning that he had not yet deter mined upon his course. Whether he will contest anyone else's papers is not known. Premier Confident New Chinese Cabinet Will Be Able to Restore Peace By Associated Press j Peking, China, April 24. Confidence in the ability of the new Chinese cabi net to restore peace was expressed to-day by Tuan Chi Jul, who on Sat ; urday accepted the premiership. In an interview granted the correspondent of ; the Associated Press. The first task of the cabinet, he said, would be to restore tranquility. Kang-Tung is the | ; only province in which fighting is now going on. Dickinson Students Favor Military Training Plan Special to the Telegraph j Carlisle, Pa., April 24.—Compulsory j military training for students at Dick inson College is being advocated and 1 I there is a sentiment among the mem-| bers of the student body In favor of; a plan of drill and the formation of cadet battalions similar to those of the Carlisle Indian school. The "Dlck- Insonian." the official school publica tion, Is devoting much space to a dis cussion of the topic. CANTATA AT ENOLA I Enoia. Pa- Asril 24, Washin*- I ton Camp No. 680 of the Patriotic ' Order Sons of America have secured j j the services of thirty mixed voices ; under the direction of Maurice P. ! j Simonetti, of Harrisburg, to render! [ the Cantata of "David" in the Enola i MlGHTlEST^rali'^^j iocopiotms^m mm il Great as are steam locomotives—yet far f ''? ft! Mi' J I greater are obstacles of mountain operation. To \ » / I successfully overcome these the steam locomotive has had * fl) ' / I to yield the sceptre to a mightier giant—the electric locomotive. I World supremacy in locomotives is now held by the powerful electrics of the "St. PauF' that haul the superb all-steel trains—' "The Olympian" and "The Columbian" over the completed unit of the electrified main line of this railway across the Great Continental Divide. This supremacy rests on their ability to pull heavier loads with greater speed over the mountains to master snow and cold —to effect vast economies in operation and to travel I farther without overhauling—than any other locomotives, either steam or electric. Electric operation adds much to the comforts and delights of travel. It means smoother riding and freedom from smoke, cinders, gases and other undesirable incidents unavoid- I able with steam travel. On your next trip to the Pacific Northwest journey vfa the "St. Paul" and enjoy the combination of luxurious service, electric travel through the mountains amid magnificent scenery not surpassed on the continent Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. I Send or call for detcriplioe lUeraturt. J. R. POTT, Dist. Pass. Agt. Hoonta 205-0-7 l'nrk Bids. rift aliurgh, Pa. 'APRIL* 24, 1916. United Brethren cliurch on Tuesday j evening, April 25. ji LECTURE OX OCEAX.CITV | Special to the Telegraph i Enola, Pa., April 24. —G. W. T. 11 Wcodside of Ocean City, N. J., will give a lecture on Ocean City at the Y. M. C. A. to-morrow evening at 7:30. No admission will be charged. Mr. Woodside will illustrate with lantern slide views the scenes of Ocean City.