Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, April 27, 1916, Page 7, Image 7

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    | Adler-Rochester Clothes
{ Are Sold Exclusively by 1
* The New Store of Wm. Strouse ;
' Editorial „ u We u sell Adler-Rochester ]
I fTM 1E advertising policy of C othes because we know that |
I The New Store is to give &
| -*■ to the people correct infor- , i _ _«t i ■ i ■
, lio t n o on ou" *h ere are no other clothes to I
, truthfully state prices and « ,1 rrM at r» , *
! equal them. They are the finest J
" tailored—the most perfectly fitting 1
Ready-to-Wear clothes that the ?
tailor's art can produce. In our J
assemblage of clothes there's no • j
"hard-to-fit" man, for we've all sizes, £ iJL. f
all shapes, all styles and models for {
Men of Affairs; the Lawyer, the Doc- 5
tor; the Business Man. iSptsi I
In The New Store there's J
i price juggling—every garment is lljpSiff- I
j ed in plain figures and a child can, 1
5 buy here as safely as the parents.
I You have but to call—to look—
C to try on—you'll be convinced that ,
5 Adler-Rochester brings "clothes-pleas- '
? ure" even tho they're priced at only '
S2O to $35 ;
I Jh'yi4<i ; Storrr)f' !
j 1
DETECTIVES FIND
"DOPE" OUTFIT
[Continued From First Page]
in alcohol, in paste and lump"
form;
" Two pair of trimming scissors;
One opium pipe cleaner;
One spoon;
Two long needles, used to form
the "dope bubble" (this is the first
time in the history of Harrishurg
police that these have ever been
found in an opium kit).
The entire set probably cost slnO,
according to a rough estimate, and the
I Two-Day I
V 2 Price Suit Sale
Friday April 28, Saturday April 29
I will set a new pace in value giving to this city of Har
risburg and vicinity., Even those who wait expectantly to buy
in July will be gratefully surprised by this unusual money
saving feature offered this time in Spring fashionable outer
garments, for women and misses. 25 per cent, off on all silk
suits. All others at price. Come. Take your turn. Terms M
of sale strictly cash. No goods on approval, no telephone orders,
no mail orders. Alterations charged for at cost.
$13.50 Women's Suits. (t>/» HZI
Friday and Saturday, u)0« / 3
$16.00 Women's Suits. ȣ
Friday and Saturday, «J)0«V/Vr
$20.00 Women's Spring SUITS. 1 lTl\
Friday and HHH V A/\
Saturday «J) lUtUU w '
$25.00 Women's Spring SUITS. ) *
Friday and 1 9 CH UxKjStvA
Saturday «PIL.OU )
$30.00 Women's Spring SUITS.
Friday, and 1 CC fin (7 / jfl.
Saturday u) 1 OtUU A—/_ VV 1
$35.00 Women's Spring SUITS. /ij " \ \
Saturday" 1 ! $17.50 // \\ \
$38.50 Women's Spring SUITS. /[II if \ \
Friday and (1Q OC '/ I ■ 1 »
Saturday ij) 1 V j '
I SPRING COATS )
j are also suffering the knife. Fifty I] 1
i coats sold at $9.50, $11.50 and
$12.98. Friday and d» A QQ IJ'
| Saturday
r UNDER PRICED STORE 1
—w——■„— : — ——
THURSDAY EVENING,
| "dope" found would probably have j
| been sold at exorbitant prices.
Continue Search
Ever since the arrest of William
Phipps, charged with furnishing
"dope" to young girls, City Detective ,
Shuler has been working on the case, '
unearthing clues which may lead to a
number of sensational arrests. These
were strengthened with the arrest of
three more persons havtng "dope" or
, part of the outfit on them.
After shadowing the place for weeks
a raid was ordered at 9.30 o'clock this
morning. Officers Carson and Brine
were dispatched to aid Deteeti\es
Shuler and Spoees.
(•iris in Pajamas
Two of the girls placed under arrest j
were in pajamas. The officers rushed
into the house and hurried the occu-
{ pants into the police patrol, two de
• teetives remaining to Investigate. A
careful search of the entire house re
i vealed 110 supplies of any kind, and
! finally the sleuths climbed to the roof.
Just along the edge they found the
) suitcase, which had evidently just been
thrown there.
The inmates included Anna Grant,
| charged with conducting a disorderly
! house: Albert Wise and Ruth Poin
ik-xter. held on a serious charge; Kale
Parker, accused of being an Inmate.
All of them were lodged in jail under
bail and more serious charges will
piobably be preferred against them.
William 1,. Windsor, superintendent
j of the detective bureau, said that he is
; positive that the kit found this morn
; ing in the Calder street house is the
most complete ever located by police
j search, and other police otfiiials also
said that the records of former dis
j coveries were not to be compared with
the list of "dope" supplies in the kit
! picked up this morning.
Second Haul Made
This is the second haul made after
investigations by the police. After the
arrest of Phipps, an outfit was found
at his home in Bailey street, but little
: "dope" of any value was included.
1 Detective Shuler. using the bits of
i information gathered after weeks of
search, patched enough together so
that the Calder street house came
under suspicion. A watch followed
. und the raid nlanned. Tt Is hallamd
I that the inmates of the house, when
they found the police outside, tossed
(he suitcase of supplies and "dope" to
the roof while the officers made their
I way through the house.
It is believed that this was one of
the houses at which "dope" was ped-
I died, smoked and burned, and that big
I prices were asked for the smallest
iiiantilies.
A PENNSYLVANIA
WOMAN TESTIFIES
Back Hurt—Nervous—Sleepless.
1 Cherry Tree, Pe.—"Eight: .years aco
When my little girl was bora 1 came
n?ar ben
N hurt so when I
yL fr , would bend over
that I would have
to take hold of
Bonu * ( hlng with
'•< my hands to get
VIP- My hwsband
' I 'I .'HHP.III Sot me two hot-
J) (• i?I: Hi Ities of Dr. Plerce'3
Favorite Prescrip-
I yon, which I took and got along nicely.
' I could sit up, and my back did not
\ hurt me. Was so nervous I could not
sleep nights; my heart troubled ma
m*l my back had sharp, stinging pains
when I -would lean my head forward,
j I wrote to Dr. Pierce and was advised
to take 'Favorite Prescription.' I used
several bottle* and now I do all my
own work and tend to my garden and
flowers. May <»od bless you la mj
prayer."—Mas. Ellis W. Stutleb,
Boute 2, Box 85.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
speedily causes all womanly troubles
to disappear—compels the organs to
properly perform their natural func
tions, corrects displacements, over
comes Irregularities, removes pain and
misery at certain times and brings back
health and strength to nervous, irrita
ble end exhausted women.
It is a wonderful prescription pre
pared only from Nature's roots with
glycerine. Get it now! In tablet or
liquid form.
If you are troubled with indigestion,
Constipation. Biliousness, Bilious Head
aches, and a hundred and one ills which
depend upon an inactive liver—use Dr,
I Pierce's Pleasant Pellets.
HARRIBBURG fdßSh TELEGRAPH
GOVERNOR SPEAKS
TO BOSTON CLUB
"Education a Factor in Pre
paredness," He Says; Tells
What Penna. Is Doing
Boston, Mass., April 27. Governor!
Brumbaugh, of Pennsylvania, speak
ing here last night before the Mer
chants' Club on "Education as a Fac
tor in Preparedness," urged a length
ening of the period of training and I
told what Pennsylvania is doing in '
j the way of continuation schools and j
compulsory attendance at school to
improve the conditions of its future
I citizens, lie said in part:
"We have gone, In the United States,
far to put to the test a new theory of
i government—that the will of a majority
J expressed in law, constitutional and
; statutory, is the sole and adequate
J guidance for all the people. We have
| put democracy on trial. We have pro
claimed its adequacy. We have un
hesitatingly subscribed to its benefl- I
cent operations. We stake on it our
lives, our property and our sacred hon
or, We have at times, with bated <
breath. In the solemn hours of reflec
tion, asked ourselves whether after
all we have found in our democracy as
it works its issues the golden good we 1
are proud to acclaim it holds. What .
.gives this heart-tremor, this tender so- '
j licitude, this half-awakened fear that
perhaps we have not. after all, foundj
the pot of gold at the end of our rain- j
bow of hope and faith? Why are we
half-fearful to put our democracy fully |
to the test? Is it because we question
its fundamental lightness? Absolutely
110. What visioning souls wrought in i
Independence 11 all we hold sacred and ;
secure. The doubt is born, if at all. j
because we have not given to demo- j
cracy its adequate channels of expres
sion. We have not been fair to our j
dominant Ideals.
"What we need to do—and do It now
—is to make possible a complete rell
; a nee upon our theory of government
an<] put it to its fullest use. To do this
we must unhesitatingly lay larger reli
ance upon education. An unlightened
democracy is the hope of the nation. !
i The school is the hope of the repub
lic.
"This agency, devised by wise in
sight and carried steadily into the
generations of our advance needs re- 1
establishment and rejuvenation in these
stress years of our advance. The whole
theory of preparedness is fundamental
ly a theory of education. Our armies
| and our navies, the front line of pre
paredness; and our industries, the see-
I ondary line of defense, are alike de
pendent upon a trained, skilled. Intelli
gent, efficient citizenry. The resources
of a people, material and spiritual,
are Its safeguards. Kducatlon is the
guaranty of resourcefulness.
"Our educational system under con
trol of our fundamental theory of gov
ernment is not only the most potential
agency to stabilize our national ideals,
but it is the agency pre-eminent for !
their completes! realization. No equip
ment of material good can replace a ;
training of our people into a homo
geneous nation. This fact is empha- |
sized as one considers the far reaches
of racial ideals that here fuse and fash- j
ion this mighty people. From every land j
and from every climb they have come, j
they are coming, they will come, and '
unless these all pass the portals of our
educational system and in its halls get
essential baptism of American ideals
and achievements, and a keen under
standing of national purposes, we can
not hope for a nation whose democracy '
is its boast and Its certain permanence, j
"We turn then to the school and de- |
mand for It a much larger place in the J
American mind. It is increasingly mani- '
fest that It best of all our institutions j
trains for service, for efficiency, for liv- 1
ing and for promoting the government
whose agency it is. We must In the i
school train: First, for co-operation in
all civic duties; second, for competi- i
tion In al industrial activities; third, '
for moral steadfastness in all social
endeavor: fourth, for the intertwining
of these into one serviceable and sub
stantial system of national equipment.
"First—The meaning of play is: First,
physical preparedness; second, civic co
operation, team work, law; third, !
moral restraint, how to win and how
to lose.
"Second—The meaning of child labor
laws as a schoolmaster's act is to
lengthen the training period in t lie
interest of the State and of industry.
Its opponents are enemies of the State
and mistaken champions of industry. '
"First—The sad sudden break from I
school to toil.
"Second—The meaning of the Penn
sylvania law: First, none before 14;
second, none before sixth grade, co
operation; third, none for more than 51 1
hours, S in school: fourth, none until
physically tit: fifth, none until employ-!
ment is had and return to school when
employment ends; sixth, employment i
bureaus under State support.
"We have committed ourselves to
this vast enterprise—the making of!
men and women to be the republic |
there must be no looking backward. I
We must go steadily on until the proud
boast, "1 am an American citizen." shall j
be synonym to civic pride, industrial i
efficiency and moral and religious :
Worth. Then we' shall be prepared j
not for war —but for the peace that :
passeth all understanding and is per- I
manent."
SOCIAL
Other Personals on Page 4.
TAKES XAYAI, EXAMS
i Harold Smyser. a student of the
[Carl Schurss high school, Chicago, is
visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Smyser of
123 North Eighteenth street. Mr.
Smyser took the final examinations at
' Annapolis naval school a short time
'ago.
Mrs. John Oenslager, Jr., of lis
t South Front street, is going to New
; York to-morrow to see her mother,
! Mrs. Conelly, who is quite ill.
Mrs. S. J. M. McCarrell, of Docust
; street, is again confined to her room
' after Improving after an illness of two
months.
iliss Dorothy Duncan, of 1932 North
Third street, was a recent hostess for
j the Monday Five Hundred Club of
which she is a member.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sollenberger
, have returned from their wedding
trip to Philadelphia, and are residing
at 1323 Vernon street,
j Miss Margaret Williamson, of 1629
North Second street, is home after a
brief trip to Washington, D. C.
Mrs. James Henry Darlington and
Miss Eleanor Darlington have returned
home after a short stay in New York
City.
John Booker, of 530 Maclay street,
is visiting his sister, Mrs. Bruce Mil
ton Swope, in Pittsburgh.
Miss Augusta Mean and Miss Marian
Hean, of North Sixth street, are spend
ing the week in Philadelphia and At
l lantlc City.
Miss Mary Snyder and Miss Anna
Brenneman are home after an Easter
; holiday spent at the Glaslvn-Chat
: ham, Atlantic City.
Mrs. W . R. Thomas, of Norristown,
has returned home after spending
Easter with Mrs. K. E. Kreiger, at
' 14ISA Derry street.
Miss Kathryn Keene of Berryhllll
street has returned home after visiting
,Mrs. Karl Fogg in Philadelphia.
" J
Week-End Cleanup of Several
Well Known ;
|► I f
New Pianos
| and Player-Pianos j
► <
► Instruments that have never been off our floors—but styles that for some j*
► reason do not sell as fast as others. Rather than allow their newness to become i 4
soiled, with longer waiting to be wanted,
we offer them to-day, to-morrow and Sat-
That Will Move :
; Them Quickly '
and lucky are the people who get them so j 1 p ' <
► cheaply. Of course, being new, they are <
► fully guaranteed and even at these low < <
► prices we will arrange terms of payments I ] lifW\ 4
► to suit you. Note the well-known makes jJ i
* offered and the genuine reductions:
► <
5300 Weser Bros. . . . $195 SSOO Bush and Lane . . S3BO
j; $325 Fayette Cable . . $2lO SSOO Hardman $390 \
$350 Sterling $245 $550 Air-o-Player . . . $4lO \
\ $375 Merrill S2BO $650 Autotone $435 ;
! S4OO Estey $3lO $550 Chickering .... $475 ;
$450 Poole $360 1800 Emerson-Angelus . $675 'j
See Them This Evening or Early Tomorrow
Only One of Each at These Prices 1
STOOL, SCARF AND
►
! i J. H. TROUP Music House •
I : Troup Building 15 So. Market Square <
SIGNERS NEEDN'T
WRITE ADDRESSES
Dauphin Courls lntimalc Affi
ant in Nominating Petitions
' May Do So
Intimations were given by Dauphin
: county judges to-day in sitting in con- j
tests of nominating petitions for thej
May primary that the act governing!
such matters does n<TTTei|ulre thai u«.-;
I cupations, residences and dates shall
' be written in by signers, but does de
mand that the person making the atfl-
Idavit shall have knowledge that the
'data is correct. It was also intimated
that papers which were ruled defective
in some particulars could be amended,
i The court spent most of the day I
| hearing the contest of the Republican
nominating petition of A. B. Garner,
j of Ashland, candidate for the Repub
lican Senatorial nomination in the
! Schuylkill county district. It was
jcharged that residences, occupations
jand dates were tilled in by other than
I signers, some data following names
| being alleged to be in Garner's own
handwriting. There were also attacks
; upon the right of some persons on pa-;
| pers to sign a Republican petition. In i
i reply it was contended that the sign
ers did not need to write In all the
data, but that as long as the affiant j
had knowledge it was sufficient.
In the case of William Reid, of I
Scranton, who filed papers to run for
mine inspector in the Columbia dis
trict, it was charged that he was not
a resident of the disstrict. Reid con
tended that being a State officer he
need not be a resident of the district
in which he desired to be a candidate.
No decisions were rendered. To- j
'morrow the court will hear the Lan
caster, Philadelphia and Allegheny j
| eases.
K. A. SOCIETY MEETS
j The H. A. Society of Central high
school held an important business
meeting at the home of Henry Bittner,
'North Eighteenth street, near the ar
senal. It was decided to hold a straw
i ride to Hershey. The society will be
i chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Michael.
After the business refreshments
i were served to Jay Smith, Daniel
i Burkholder. Robert Michael, Homer
| Kreider, Ed. Cooke. Allison Skinner,
j George Slothower, Herbert Remmer,
George Spangler. Charles Wagner,
Thomas Senseman and Dee Strock.
I HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
1 TAKE STRAW RIDE TO-NIGHT
' The following members of the H. A. j
Society of Central high school and
'some of their friends will take a
straw ride this evening to Hershey
with supper at the cafe: The Misses
Ethel Fisher, Bethel Jones, June Beard,
| Margaret Comings, Dorothy Taylor,
Detha Fair. N'ita Spangler. Marion
iGolio, KaLhryn Earnest, Esther Shultz.
Gertrude Weston. Mary Jelley, and
William Blnklev. Henry Bittner. Dan
iel Burkholder, Edward Cook, Homer
| Kreider, George Slothower, Jay Smith,
' Dee Strock, George Spangler, Bobert
J Michael, Thomas Senseman, Allison
|Bklnner, Charles Wagner.
APR IT. 27, 1016.
"It Pays to Advertise"
Is Very Clever Show
"It Pays to Advertise" played at the
i Orpheuni Theater last evening; to one
of the largest audiences of the .season
—thus proving the truth of the text
Of the title of the farce. In passing it
may he said that of those who read the
advertisements of the show in the Tele
i graph and were induced thereby to at- j
• tend, were dozens of the city's best ad- !
vertlsers. They got some pointers,
many good laughs, a bundle of statis- ;
| tics and their money's worth of a \
good, clean play. It requires an artist
to put statistics tip in an entertaining'
form and a positive genius to impart !
such advertising information as was
| handed out at every turn last night in j
;a way that will he educational and I
j laugh-provoking at the same time. But
Don't Spread the Dust when
You Sweep—Collect It
"Making the dust fly" certainly d«- spread the dust to anothei part «l the
•eribes the usual method of sweeping, room with every stroke of the broom.
Even dusting caps don't really keep the r With y °"
... , . . room in half the tune with half the effort,
i hair clean and your throat becomes and you only have to sweep half as often,
literally choked. v because you get your rooms so much
But this is all past now. There is a cleaner every time you sweep,
better way to sweep—a dustless way. As one housekeeper expressed it, **lt
And it's so simple too. Just sprinkle a is just like having an extra maid"—
i little Komordust across the floor and she has so much time for other thing*
then sweep it ahead of you as you go. Yet Nomordust costs but a few pennies
Nomoraust holds the dust and keeps a month. Get a 10c can to-day at your
it from spreading. It enables you to get fa vorite grocer—he'll refund your mooey
the room much cleaner too, for you don't if you're not n.ore than pleased.
\ " Means juat what ft aajra"
Get the Green Can at All Grocer* —10c. 25^
I young "Ambrose Peale"—John Martin
stvie awa >* with the part in good
There is no use, short of a column,
in trying- to tell the story of "It Pays
to Advertise." Suffice to say that it
\vas as funny as a farce should be.
that its plot is far more convincing
i ban a farce plot usually is and that
the company was clever.
HI III.K CLASS OrriCKlts
. Mechanicsburg, Pa.. April 27.—At the
annual meeting of the Mechanicsburg
Bible and Tract Society, the reports of
| officers were heard, showing the or
ganization in good condition and af
| fording: relief to the poor of the town
An election of officers for the ensuing
year resulted: President, S. S. Bren
| ner; secretary. XT. F: Fish burn; an£
treasurer, the Rev. R. P. McClean.
7