CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR CHORAL UNION TO GIVE FESTIVAL THURS §1 ' ' ' lSf GEORGE SUTTON High class music will he rendered I by the Ha--isburg Christian Endeavor Choral I T at their seventh season May music festival on Thursday even ing. in the high school auditorium, corner Capital and Forster streets. j The choral union has been rehears ing for some time under the direction Df Prof. Frank A. McCarrell, the c.hor- j ister. Music from the anthem hook, entitled "The Convention Chorister," which was used at the fifth world's i and twenty-seventh international j Christian Endeavor convention held; In Chicago, 1915, will be rendered. The! choral union will be the chorus for j the big State Christian Endeavor con- ' ventlon to be held in this city in July, and will . make a big showing on Thursday evening. A number of high-lights will take part on the pro gram. A. C. Dean, president Harris i>urg Christian Endeavor union, pre liding. Prayer by the Rev. Joseph Dough-i erty, pastor Sixth Street United Breth- I ren Church; selections from the works j, of Gounod; chorus, "Unfold ye Por-" tals," (The Redemption); soprano and contralto duet, "O Divine Redeemer"; chorus, "Sanctus and Benedictus" (St. Cecilia Mass); tenor solo, "Forever with the Lord"; chorus, "Jerusalem! i O Turn Thee to the Lord," (Gallia);] remarks, the Rev. E. E. Curtis, chair- 1 man State convention committee; se-1 lections from Handel's Messiah, bass polo, recitation, "Thus Saith the Lord": aria. "But Who May Abide";! contralto solo, "He Was Despised"; j t-horus. "Surely He Hath Borne Our| rrriefs": soprano solo, "I Know That My Redemer Liveth"; chorus. "Halle-1 Congress Resigned to All Summer Session Washington, t>. C., May I.—Repre-; sentatives and senators have sent home ' for their Palm Beach suits and their j summer outfits, having at last sur r-ndered to the Inevitable prospects of 1 an all-summer session of Congress. The ; arrival of May 1, marking the conclu- i sion of five months of oratory and windjamming, finds Congress with lit tle progress achieved. Several appro- ! priation bills have reached the stage where they are about to be enacted into ! law. but twice as many have not been acted upon hy either Hoilse. The so-called legislative program of the administration, covering rural cred its, the Philippine bill, the shipping hill and various other propositions are still in the stage of formation. The two j features of the session, which can be i classified under the term "must." pre paredness and revenue, are not pro gressing satisfactorily. ' ——— —~~ ~ .. —** Good" Li wen" ' have enjoyed GooJ Livers f^ADTttfC by usinff Vmll I LI\J j •• C . J HUMP' Genuine 6»ers Signature T - ,-JA •> y * > lOber Bros. Livery ' In New Location Moved from their old location to their new building with larger quarters, No. 37 North Cameron Street. I ' v ' Hell Phone 2418 v ' ■ MONDAY EVENING, MRS. ROT G. COX j lujah"; quartet, soprano, Mrs. Roy G. I Cox; contralto, Mrs. H. L. Hertzler; tenor. Thompson Martin; bass, George Sutton. The officers are: President, J. Frank I Palmer; vice-president, Forest E. Schwartz; secretary. Miss Anna Mc- Kelvey; treasurer. Miss Mary B. De ; Hart; pianist. Miss Catharine Heikes. Sopranos Eleanor Jones, Helen Jackson, Ruth Fisher, Mae Hoover, i Mrs. Charles S. Meek, Mrs. Mabel j Drawbaugh, Beulah Drawbaugh, Airs. | Frank Shuster, Martha Shearer, Elda { Pannebaker, Mrs. Joseph Dare, Myrtle j DeHart, Margaret Shumaker, Mar 'garet Wilson, Ruth Bentz, Margaret Kunkel, Mildred Sharp, Margaret 1 Armstrong, Wilhelmina Dress, Mrs. John Conrad, Mrs. W. G. Hoover, Christine Miller, Mrs. E. E. Clark, Verna Lenker, Sara McGran, Mary Romberger, Mrs. George Deeter, Mrs. I C. E. Drabenstat, Cora Welrick, Ruth | Martin, Mrs. Harper Heisley, Carrie [ Kriaby, Annie Ludwig, Alma Yost, .Henrietta Waite, Emily Edwards, Mary Shupp, Edna Miller, Mrs.William Deal. Mrs. J. Frank Palmer, Eleanor j Rricker, Edna B. Hoover, Grace Long, Sara Arnold, Katherine Germer, Mrs. Etta Raysor, Elizabeth Gause, Ida M. i Sowers. Myrtle Sowers, Anna March, | Sara Wonders, Marguerite Brunner, Hazel Sowers, Lulu Johnson, Edna I Rintz, Mrs. Charles Hoke, Pauline Rife, Esther Smith, Mrs. George Mad , dux. Margaret Heikes, Grace Koowell, Mrs. H. D. Sollenberger. Ethel Har j bolt, Mrs. T. H. Clark, Maude Parker, Mrs. H. H. Hilbush, Lydia Kutz, Doro thy Maddux, Getha High, Mary Searle. I Ethel Wagner, Grace Yowler, Grace Deaths and Funerals MORIIT7, H. liAfBE Moritz H. I„aube, aged 78, died yes terday morning at his home, 420 Hummel street. He is survived by , his wife, Mrs. Anna Mary Lauhe. Funeral services will be held from his late residence Wednesday after noon at 2 o'clock, the Rev. Reinhoidt Schmidt, pastor of St. Michael's Ger man Lutheran church officiating. 1 Burtai will be made in the Harris ! burg cemetery. • , GEORGE 1,. KOKER George L. Koser, aged 62, died yes terday at his home, '39 North Thir teenth' street. He Is survived by his wife and five sons, Howard L.. Everett 8., Robert 8., of this city and Charles : X., and Ralph, of Mechanicsburg. Fu neral services will be held at the home to-morrow afternoon at 1 o'clock, and interment made in the Mechanicsburg cemetery. PROF. FRANK A. M'CARRELL i McKelvey. Gertrude Zeigler, Leah | Hangen, Mrs. Charles R. Bartley, Ida I Conner, Mrs. J. E. Watson, Martha ; Graham, Minnie Tittle, Mrs. F. J. Stees, Mrs. F. E. Schwartz, Mrs. John | Smith. ! Altos Hazel Drawfiaugh Doro- Ithy Hoke. Mary DeHart, Myra Ebner, I Mrs. E. S. Manbeck, Mrs. John Whist ller, Mrs. William Walton, Mrs. H. Fenstermacher, Helen McKelvey, Mrs. Daniel Reevie, Anna McKelvey, Mrs. A. J. Lightner, Anna Dimni. Mrs. C. ! L. Bressler, Bessie March, Viola Got walt, Mrs. H. W. Keitel, Mildred Burk holder, Ethel Valentine, Mrs. E. S. Schilling, Helen Richardson, Mildred Donmoyer, Annie Smith, Mrs. H. S. Williams, Mrs. U. F. Swengel, Mrs. C. E. Williams. Ida Dimm, Mrs. William Rapp, Frances, Shertzer, Marian Sheesley, Ethel Gever, Mrs. Sarah [ Hocker. ! Tenors Paul StaufTer, William I Maxwell, Leon Carman. S. B. Grubb. j Monroe Morrison, Ira Charles, Robert i George, Harry Phelps, J. Frank Pal mer, H. S. McKelvey, Harold Binga man, William Bailey, Carlton Don moyer. Lewis Markley, Charles R. Bartley, John Fisher. Bassos Henry Bruce, John Har der, Leroy Schreiner, A. G. McXear, James Lusk, Horace Nunemacker, i Henry Stewart, John N. Finley, Bruce Pryor, George Smith, A. J. Lightner, Markwood Myers, Harry Bretz. Chas. | Hoke, J. D. Crider, Robert Heikes, ; Ralph Manley, T. E. Stephenson, Stan ! ley Neidhamer, Forest E. Schwartz, I Walter W. Dum, Clayton Searle, W. D. I Farley, Ralph Westbrook. Working For Uninstructed Delegation From Maryland By Associated Prtss j Baltimore, May I.—Clear and mild | weather favored the voters of Mary land at the primary election to-day 1 for Senatorial and Congressional can-, didates and delegates to the State con -1 ventions which will nominate the dele i gates to the national conventions of the two major parties next month, j United States Senator Blair Lee, W. {Cabell Bruce and Congressman David J. I.ewis are the aspirants for the Senatorship on the Democratic ticket jand former Governor P. L. Goldsbor ough and Joseph I. France are atter , the Republican nomination. I The Republican organization desires an uninstructed delegation to the Re publican national convention but in ! Baltimore city some of the candidates j for delegates to the State convention (are pledged to work for a "Hughes or Roosevelt" delegation to the national Find Lost Woman's Body Sitting on Log in Woods Special to the Telegraph I Ashland, Pa., Mas' I.—The body of Mrs. Wiliam Hoover, no, of Ashland, I who wandered away- from her home Friday evening while In a state of I melancholy was found by a searching | party early Sunday sitting In an up- I right fashion on a log in the woods j near the State hospital. Death was due to exposure and ex | haustlon. SMITH HEM) FOK COURT : . New Bloomfleld, Pa., May I.—John Smith of Donnelly's Mills' at a hearing j here Saturday afternoon, was held for court on a charge of inciting Statta Barrick. 14-year-old dattghter of Wil liam Barrlck, to set fire to her father's barn a week ago. Smith was a suitor of the girl and her father refused con sent to their marriage. The girl was placed under arrest by a State Are marshal several daya ago. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always beam —i , Signature of HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH U^B*sSrr I Judge of Cigarettes? IWyr Can you recognize for 'lf*.- • I yourself the great cigarette ' ■ ■ Then Murad is certainly the ciga- I You won't have to be TOLD Murad II | is made of 1 7 Turkish tobaccos. If will be unmistakable to you. You won't have to b e TOLD I mu/iaa that Murad is far better than any WU/itvi COM/U Zj (j2/YIA^ 20c cigarette and many 25c ■^44JZ, TALES FROM THAT FAR 'SOMEWHERE' Corporal Llewellyn Writes From Trenches in Flanders to St&te Highway Attache From out of the vague somewhere over which the world war's dreadful "curtain" is ever falling, come queer stories that form the theme for many a magazine and newspaper tale; here [are Just a few more that might arouse ; the doubts of the skeptic were it not for the fact that a tighter in the trenefhes incidentally mentions thein in a letter to a relative in this city. Corporal Lewis Llewellyn, of the Brit ish army, is the writer; his letter Is to his cousin, Edwin Hess, an attache of the State Highway Department. The letter is merely an unostenta tious, personal note written In the trenches on March 3, 1916: Here is an excerpt: " * * • In England l-read of some of the miraculous escapes from death by pocket Testaments, cigaret cases, etc., diverting: the bullets and shrapnel, but I will truthfully say that I seriously doubted the accuracy of such state ments. Since living out here I have altered my opinion. A man from our platoon, while on a "ration for age' in tihe enemy's country, carried his ride slung across, lilb back. The party was chased by an enemy de tachment and raced for cover. A bullet struck his rille, smashed the slide bolt, lodged in the magazine and knocked five or the cartridKes —of a viip' into a shapeless mass. Beyond bruising him. the btillet'dld no harm. Had It no' been diverted It would undoubtedly have struck him In the spine. • • • other case deals with one of out; officers. A bullet struck him over the heart, and lifter he fell he dis covered that he was very much alive. Wonderlngly, he made a hasty search and discovered that his officer's whistle which he car ried in his left breast pocket had been smashed to a shapeless bit of" metal. * * * " As he writes Corporal Llewellyn said .a big. husky sergeant Is sitting; opposite | him. The sergeant Is an American, a former f'hlcagoan. who was in England j when the war began and enlisted In a spirit of adventure. "Can't say now whether or not he's sorry he joined." writes the corporal, I 'but when I say that I have felt so done up at times that death would have been a relief, and that he has suffered the same hardships, well—perhaps you can (draw your own conclusions. • • • •• And the letter is dated from "Some ! where in France." RECITAL BY MISS GREEN Special to the Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., May 1. On Saturday evening, May 6 a recital fon graduation will be given by Miss Rhcda Green, who has completed the course of expression at Irving Col lege, under the direction of Miss Jane Pea. Assisting will he Miss Anna March; of Norristown. a vocalist, also a student at the college. MODERN EQUIPMENT MifHintown. Pa., May 1. Reuben L. Auker, marble cutter, has just In stalled a moving crane, which can handle three tons and unload a wagon and convey the stone to any point of the yard. He has machine's for cutting and engraving atones which are operated with compressed, air. . 1 Church Services Closed on Account of Smallpox Special to the Telegraph j Chambersburg, Pa., May 1. Yes-1 ' tenia J' the local Board of Health or- j dered the closing of the Methodist! church, because Calvin Sites went to- J Sunday school direct from his home, i where his son Russell, is suffering J from smallpox. BOATHOUSE RAIDED West Fatrview, Pa.. May 1. Bur-1 ! gess Dosney and Borough Officer Shaull last evening raided a boathouse ! I along the Conodoguinet creek, on [complaint of residents of the lower, I section of the town. It is c harged that j gambling is carried on there. More | than twenty men from Harrisburg and ' from towns along the West Shore were j found in the place. No arrests were! made, but the men were warned as' to their future conduct. DEATH OF INFANT New Cumberland, May 1. —John Leaf, 2-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Leaf, died at the home of his | grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Leaf in Geary avenue yesterday morning. SUICIDE IV ADAMS COUNTY Special to the Telegraph Gettysburg. Pa., May 1. Frank Dorsem, aged 40 years, shot himself in the head at the home of his broth er-in-law, Clayton King, about two miles from here, and died soon after. BURGESS DIES Special to the Telegraph Marietta, May 1. —Former Chief Burgess John Kugle, aged 70, died yes . toi-'lay— MEMORIAL TO PASTORS Marietta, Pa., May 1. A hand some tablet was unveiled in the First Reformed church, Lancaster, to the membory of former pastors, the con gregation dating back to 18,»0. Another Girl's Life Saved By Quaker Herb Extract (Special York, Pa.) Catherine Myers is the little daugh j ter of Mr. B. H. Myers, who lives at No. 1596 Monroe Street. Horrible to j relate this sweet little child was af flicted with a tapeworm. Her father knew It, doctors knew It and the j neighbors knew It. It was also known I that unless this worm could be re -1 moved, death in terrible form would j SO on claim the child. All efforts were j made during the past year or more by doctors and specialists to relieve | the child but they all failed. Some ! succeeded In getting parts of the ; worm, but that only made matters I worse and Increased the worry. Now 1 what could or should be done? Must ; the child really die? Was there no | morn hope? It seemed not. At last; a ray of hope appears. The Health i «.anh«r cauie to this city, announce* 1 MAY t 1916. PIJAXS FOR FREE LIBRARY Special to the Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., May I.—Plans 1 for a free library for Mechanicsburg! were discussed at an open meeting of! the Woman's Club at the home of Mrs. I James L. Young. MOUNT UNION* WINS DEBATE Special lo the Telegraph Mount Union, Pa., May 1. • On] Friday evening the Mt. Union high j school team won in the debate with Mtfflintown high school, the teams; respectively representing Huntingdon) and Mifflin counties. ' EHOEPOUSHESI I Contain no acid and thus keep the leather soft, protecting it against « H cracking. They combine liquid and pasteina paito form and requira only half the effort for a brilliant lasting shine. Eaiy to use for i| H all the family—children and adults. Shine your shoes at home and j|| 1§ keep theaa neat. , THE F. F. DALLEY CO., Ltd. it ■ Buffalo, N. Y. H SI BLACK-WHITE-TAN 111 KEEPYOURSHOESNEATI ■ • ".m. '■■■■■ l | that the Quaker Herb Kxlract Will I re move tapeworms, complete with head, in a few hours. Mr. Myers saw this announcement and like a drown ing person grasping a straw he has tened to the drugstore and had no trouble in obtaining wonderful Quaker Herb Extract. He took It home, and the next morning; gave It to his child i according to directions. Then came I only less than two hours of terrible 1 suspense. Would this Quaker Herb j Extract save his child's life? Would i it really do so after everything else had failed? In other words, was hia little child destined to live or die? The I story was soon told, results were soon i known. The Quaker Herb Extract ; quickly proved Its most marvelous i powers. In less than two hour* the [child expelled the worm; It was alive, llt WM oomolete and unbroken haa.il Dickinson's Tribute to Its First President \ Special to the Telegraph I Carlisle, Pa., May I.—Dickinson 1 I college students,' the faculty and alum- ] ni to-day united to pay the annual trl r i bute to the memory of Dr. Charles j N'isbet, the first president of the insti tution. It is 132 years since the first .steps were made for the founding oC the college, the oldest in America. The celebration to-day consisted oC | a procession by the students, headed ' by the faculty and senior class in full academic costume, to the grave of the | president in the Old English graveyard ' here. | all. The child's life was saved. All I its mjseries banished almost Instan- < taneously and she is now in perfect health. The worm is indeed a mons ter. It is nearly 40 feet long. It liv really surprising how this little giiM really lived as long as she did witlfl such q. monster thriving In her sysS tem. Any person wishing to ascer-fl | tain whether all these facts are trucl , may call at the little child's home.l | Now, you sufferers everywhere, can! you any longer doubt the powers of 1 the Quaker Herb Kxtract after show ing all these results day after day? Jf you have rheumatism, catarrh or stomach trouble, call to-day nt Kel ler's Drug Store, 405 Market Street, and obtain this wonderful Quaker Herb Extract SI.OO per bottle or three hottles for $2.50. Oil of Balm 25 and 50 cents a bottle; Kidney I'llls 50 cent* a box. 5