14 ft ; Dives, Pomeroy Store Closed To-morrow in Observance of MEMORIAL DAY Rev. Cooke Reviews Work of Presbyterian Assembly The Rev, William B. Cooke, who kept Harrisburgers informed of the | Mother Gained 30 Pounds Father John s Medicine Gave Her New Health and Strength. Helped The Children. Mrs. Ida M. Butter, of Waierville, Maine, says: "I was so run down I could hardly do my work in the house, until I began taking Father John's Medicine. which built me up in flesh and strength. 1 gained 30 pounds while taking it. I have used Father John's Medicine for inv children with good success." (Signed) Mrs. Ida M. Butters. 3 7 King street. Watervilie, Me. >o Alcohol or Dangerous P. - usr=. | HAVE ROSY CHEEKS AND FEEL FRESH AS j A DAISY—TRY THIS! Says glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast washes out poisons. To see the tinge of healthy bloom in your face, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, to wake up with out a headache. backache, coated tongue or a nasty breath, in fact to feel your best, day in and day out. just try inside-bathing: every morning for one week. Before breakfast each day. drink a! glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of limestone phosphate in it as a harmless means of washing from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and toxins: thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully in- ! vigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases anil acidity anil gives one a splendid appetite fori breakfast. A quarter pound of limestone phos phate will cost very lit*4e at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate th.it just as soap and hot water cleans- ' es. sweetens and freshens the skin, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the blood and internal organs. Those who are subject to constipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, rheum atic twinges, also those whose skin is; sallow and complexion pallid, are as- j sured that one week of" inside bathing will have them both looking and feel ing better in everyway. I Took Quaker Herb Extract AND FEW HOURS LATER EXPELS A TAPEWORM Health Teacher has shown manyl testimonials from people who derived great results from the Quaker Reme dies. You have undoubtedly read! them and probably investigated and j found them true in every particular, j Mr. Walter Carberry reported that, his severe case of rheumatism in his 1 back and shoulders had disappeared after using Quaker Extract and Oil of j Balm. Mrs. Wittekind reported seemingly miraculous results in a most severe case of stomach troubles from which 1 she had suffered for years. She took the Quaker Remedies less than one month to obtain these wonderful re sults. James V. Levan cheerfully allowed it to be published that Quaker Herb Extract, Oil of Balm and Kidney Pills had cured him of Kidney and Bladder complaints and Lumbago. Bringing Dp Father $ $ <JJ> # # By McManm THIS >6 UERR>f MKKTS 1 MANY ] AW R(»T MA/zic I • <"°T W A 4RANDI BOY -HE«t> BEE* A>/ A Y POCKET f TIMES" ° ™<W»£ -J MONTH ?> OFF BOY-JUST LIKE £j| HTS MONDAY EVENING, activities of local people at the Pres- ! byterian general assembly, which ! closed at Atlantic City last week, has 1 prepared a general review of the eight j I days' session for the Harrisburg Tele- I graph. The Rev. Mr. Cooke says: i "In reviewing the eight days' session of the General Assembly the high points are these: "First, peace.—There was no fight ♦vithin or without. True to the genius 'of an assembly of Christian men an irenlc spirit pervaded the deliberations. Controversial questions between con stituent presbyteries of conservative | and liberal tendencies, as Cincinnati and New York, were settled by re affirmation of a broad faith. Legal questions concerning the responsibility of theological seminaries to the assem bly. especially l"nion and Auburn semi naries, are to be investigated by a strong legal committee. Race preju dice, expressed in opposition to the use iof the term 'Freedmen." flared up but : died down. An approval of woman's suffrage was laid on the table, as be yond the province of an ecclesiastical body. The daily devotional hour, ' placed at noon, was a time of refresh ing and helpful to meet the desire of the moderator, Pr. Marquis, that this be known as the 'Devotional Assem- I bly.' Pr. Marquis, president of Coe ! college, lowa, has arranged to give the whole of the coming year to the gen eral work of the church. The spirit nt" sympathetic service was prominent. "Second, construction.—After years of discussion and several failures two great agencies of education, the college board and the board of education, were merged into a General Board of Education. Of the thirty-six men to compose this new board. Pr. Eewts ; Seymour Mudge of Harrisburg, is one of the 18 ministers. A plan to merge the Freedmen's board into the Board of Home Missions was proposed and will be decided next year. The Wom en's Board of Home Missions has been incorporated and officers were approv ed. Forward work by all the agen cies was mapped out in accordance with the growing devotion, numbers and wealth of the church. "Third, inspiration.—Many felt that the powerful and pathetic plea of Dr. Robert E. Speer in presenting 'he cause of foreign missions struck the high note of the address. The largest ■ •rowd heard William J. Bryan. Two | Canadians. Editor MacPonald. of the Toronto Globe and Pastor Johnston of the Montreal church produced pro found impressions. Many unique per- • sonalities from Pr. Tully of Media at; •jv to the western elder who spoke of' hin sell as 'one of the green boys,' ironi the restrained culture of the city minister to the roaring enthusiasm of j an evangelist, all ages, sizes and kinds' were here, but all with some outstand ing excellence which brought interest. I The friendly reunions in formal meet- \ ings and dinners and In unexpected ' (encounters on boardwalk and in hotel exchange and on the pier made a run- : ining reception. Fourth, size.—The assembly num bered 886 commissioners, quickly! swelled to over 1,000 by committees, i friends and visitors. These represent ed 9.996 churches with 9,685 minis ters and 1.513,240 communicants. East :. ear the church did a business of $25,- 000.000 nearly $5,000,000 for benevo- I lence and over $20,000,000 for local 1 ; uses. It has work in every State of ! the l*nion. In Alaska, Porto Rico and ( Cuba, the Philippines and in a dozen 'foreign lands." j | Mrs. C. Cropper certified that her? inflammation sciatic rheumatism has ; completely left her since she took the | Quaker Remedies. j Mrs. Matthew Mangold stated that i she no longrer has any symptoms of catarrh. Quaker Herb Extract done i the work. Mrs. Andrew Shull, 2251 X. Sixth St. Her husband is very well known ■ and is an engineer on a passenger | train on the middle division. Fori I years Mrs. Shull was afflicted with aj tapeworm, which caused her to be I subject to all kinds of stomach com-1 i plaints. She tried many treatments, some severe, some mild, some expen sive, some cheap, and while at times she succeeded in getting pieces of the! worm it always thrived again, caus ing more trouble than ever before, i Oh. how anxious she was to get rid I iof it. She realized that unless she ex- j pelled it serious consequences would 1 jsurely result. But what should she! do? What should she take? Where | SENATOR MARTIN WHACKS PRIMARY Docs Not Like the Way the Law Is Operated in This State at All Senator Franklin Martin's declara tion against the present primary law at the meeting of the Cumberland 1 county Republican committee at Car lisle Saturday, has attracted State j 1 attention because it is the first state- j ment coming from a legislator since J the primary regarding the law which | seems to have fallen short in a good ' : many points. 1 Senator Martin, who is a candidate ' for re-election announced his stand as favoring increased mothers' pen- j sion and the submission of local op- i Hon and women suffrage questions to the vote of the people. He said as to j the primary laws, "I believe they have some excellent features, but on the whole they are a failure, and I am in favor of repealing all of them and going back to some improved form of the old convention plan. "I would suggest the repeal of all acts requiring signers to nomination papers. Under the present primary system the voters will not go to the polls for the reason that not one in ten can understand and vote intelli gently without assistance, the present blanket ballot. They will not ask for help and cannot remember the many names that are on the ballot or to read in a poorly lighted booth the in structions in fine print. The result is they remain at home or away from the polls and the primary election be comes a minority choice and not a majority and is becoming less and less at every election." HEAT EXHAUSTION Horaforrt's A«-ld V lump hit te Revives, refreshes, strengthens. Re lieves depression, restores the nerve force. Buy a bottle.—Advertisement. JAMES X HILL IS DEAD AT ST. PAUL [Continued From First Page] studying for the medical profession as he had intended and he secured em ployment in a country store. Early in 1856 he made a tour of the United States from Maine to Minnesota and decided to settle in St. Paul, Minn. Here he engaged as shipping clerk with the Dubuque and St. Paul Packet Company, and took the opportunity to make a careful study of all subjects . relating to river transportation, es pecially that of fuel. In 1865 he be came the agent of the Xothwestern Packet Company, and when this line merged with the Pavidson line in 186T he engaged in a general transporta tion and fuel business. In 1869 he formed the warehouse firm of Hill, Griggs & Co., and in 18 70 the Red River Transportation Company. Mr. Hill was the first to take coal into St. Paul and he opened the first com munication between St. Paul and Win nipeg. then Fort Garry, Manitoba, in 1872. Establishes Coal Company In 1875, with E. X. Saunders,' C. W, Griggs and William Rhodes, he es tablished the Xorthwestern Fuel Com pany, but three years later sold all his interests in the fuel and steamboat j companies, having acquired meanwhile (the capital stock and defaulted bonds lof the St. Paul and Pacific Railway, with Sir Ponald S. Smith, George Stephen and Xorman W. Kittson. This j road consisted of eighty miles, from St. Paul to St. Cloud, 316 miles from St. Paul to Rreckenridge, and about 100 miles of track not connected with 1 either of these lines, and besides being J33.000.000 in debt it was utterly dis ; credited on hoth continents. It was reorganized In 1879 as the Manitoba I Railway Company, with Mr. Hill as its general manager. He became vice president In iBS 2 and president In ! 1883. With keen busines sagacity and far-sifhted Judgment, he was the first , to propose a railway from the Great ; I Eakes to the Pacific Coast, despite the i 'hould she go for help? Was there ' really no cure for her? She did a wise thing, for which she j will ever be thankful. She called at ; Keller's Drug Store and convinced the! Health Teacher that she was afflicted* with a tapeworm and he therefore recommended the Quaker Herb 1 Treatment. Shf obtained it, took it' according to directions the next day after a few hours she expelled the; monster complete. It can never bother! her again; she is cured and Quaker! cured her aftar everything else had! I failed. Mrs. Shull will be only too glad 1 to acknowledge the marvelous powers! of the Quaker Remedies. If you suffer with rheumatism, ca-! tarrh, indigestion, constipation or any' stomach disorders, call to-day at Kel ler's Drug Store, 405 Market St., and ] I obtain this wonderful Quaker Herb; ; Extract, three bottles for $2.50 or I ! SI.OO a bottle. Oil of Balm, 25 and 50 ! cents a bottle. Kidney Pills, 50 cents | | a box. HARRISBURG fcjESA* TELEGRAPH | Are You Ready_ to_ Part? 1 The power of a nation in time of need They are making a survey of YOUR ||| J is the producing power of her industries. COUNTRY'S Industrial Resources. America must find out what this pro- They are helping \Ol R COUNTRY jl I H! ducing power is and then develop it. to FIND ITSELF and You! The capacity of every plant must be They are charting the channels of com- ==|| I |= gauged. merce. Sounding each source of supply. ==fl | ■ The ability of every man must be known. S° that > should the Da y break when i =H War must come — * == ]\ I For War i, Mechanical. yOUR ARMI £ S in thc fieW wi „ be g = It is Electrical. but the crest of a Wave of Industry =||| EEE . g (^ , j iem j ca i as wide as the American Continent and |||fl| as deep as the American Soul. =« I 1 It^t^ ning_ManUfaCtUring_Tr ' nS " That YOUR COUNTRY may know == ' what the Engineers are doing, the Asso- ===|j I It is EVERY phase of Engineering, ciated Advertising Clubs of the World ==3ll fused into a single industry— have pledged their services to the Presi- =|| I == nrr<j \r » r\ f 9 ' dent of the United States. And this ad -1 ne I\QtlOH S U€J6TISe vertisement, published free, is part of a === Thirty thousand Engineers today are nation-wide series to secure YOUR co- 3 === serving YOUR COUNTRY without pay. operation with the Engineers. ==|| j | "What Can I Do?" [ This is, doubtless, the question you are if so needed, to be a Soldier in Industry, ||| I asking yourself. behind the firing line, which is just as EEE 1 EE: Here is the answer: important as being a soldier on the firing == I Tf , line; if you are a business man, or a === I = If you are a manufacturer —co-operate f . , , = I = T- • . . professional man, or whoever you are = I = fully with the Engineers, so they can do —helpmobilizc"GOOD WILL" behind H I their job quickly and efficiently, if you this patriotic task of the Engineers, in = | are a working man—help your employer behalf of National Defense and "Inter- jsl I = to help the Engineers and be prepared, national Peace. COMMITTEE ON INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS Of the Naval Consulting Board of the United States = I == IN COOPERATION WITH THE AMERICAN; SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS } THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING ENGINEERS THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY ENGINEERING SOCIETIES BUILDING N WEST 39th STREET, NEW YORK =3= I Thi» publication tfaAly lunuu thin advertisement without charge. ] _ fact that that portion of the country was virtually unknown and that such a road would parallel two existing lines, the Northern Pacific, which had been constructed at enormous cost with the assistance of the Federal gov ernment, and with the Canadian Pa cific, which had behind it the re sources of the British empire, and to build which half a continent had been put in pawn. Built Great Northern From 1880 to 1893 he built and equipped the present Great Northern system, in all some 6,000 miles of track, extending from l.ake Superior ito Puget Sound, with northern and 1 southern branches and direct steam ! ship connection with China and Japan. |lt was constructed entirely without ; state or government aid, land grant | or subsidy, at a capitalization in stocks ! and bonds of about $30,000 per mile, ! and a! the rate of nearly a mile a day ' for every day of his control. The Great. Northern system, as it is called, ; is supplemented by a line of passenger ; and freight steamships on the Great '• Lakes surpassing in capacity and ! speed any before built. While Mr. Hill built up for himself and other shareholders of the road a I constantly accruing fortune, he also [created for the settlers along his line i $1,000,000,000 worth of wealth in real property, and this achievement is without a parallel in the history of ! our railroads. The reduction in rates \ of transportation had given the ship pers along the road practically i $67,000,000, this diminishing the com j pany's revenues by that amount. Nevertheless, up to 1905 the company had paid to stock and share holders about $50,000,000. while employes had ; received for their share over $100,000,000. Owing to its economy in operation, constantly increasing business and earning capacity, the Great Northern has made a steady de- ! crease in freight rates. He was married to Mary Mahegan and had two sons, James H. and Lewis | Hill, who served an apprenticeship in every branch of railroading and have j assumed prominent places in the man- j agement of the roads, and live daugh- J ters. Contributed to Belgians For several years James J. Hill had j been in the habit of insisting both to i his friends and to the public that he I was not actively engaged in business. ' Just how active lie was during the last two years of his life can lie judged only by little evidences of his master hand in questions affecting the Great Northern Railroad and the First Na tional Bank of St. Paul and by three: outstanding accomplishments in which his will and genius asserted them selves. From a world viewpoint it would be j hard to say whether his staunch sup port of the Belgian people, following; the invasion of the Germans, or the ] part played in the negotiations for the $500,000,000 loan to the allied govern- , ments is Ihe more important. From the time the work of succor- , ing the Belgians began Mr. Hill took a leading part in the movement. It will | probably never be known how much | money he sent to King Albert, an old personal friend, and how much he in duced others to send. MAY 29, 1916. Contend That Tobacco Industry Is Taxed to Limit i Washington, May 29. Demand for[] a "square deal" at the hands of thejj | legislators for the tobacco Industry < | was voiced by Jacob Wertheim of New I York, president of the Tobacco Mer- ] johants' Association of the United 11 ■ States, in his first annual address at'i ■ You Must Purify Your Blood In The Spring Are you simply dragging vour way through Hfe, suffering tortures . from some blood malady that has stolen your health, robbed you of the ability to enjoy life's pleasures, made the future a hopeless uncertainty, ana left you but a shadow of your former strong, •elf? If so, let us warn you to look to your blood, and you will likely find the cause of your trouble. Poisoned blood can be blamed lor more disease and suffering than any other thing, and there can be no health until the life fluid, that feeds and builds up every part of the body, is made pure and free from poison. J Whether your bad blood is shown by ma laria, rheumatism, catarrh, scrofula, contag ious blood poison, or some other blood dis order, you can be well, and again feel the bounding bouyancy of health that comes only with pure ai.d well-nourished blood. S. S. S. is the greatest blood remedy known. It is nature s own remedy, purely vegetable. ;the opening session of the organiza Ition here today. In this connection the speaker re ferred to proposed anti-tobacco legis jlation in the various states includlm restrictions against smokinß, which, h I said, if enacted, would result in unnec lessary loss of business to the industry Mr. Wertheim protested against th proposal to levy additional taxes 01 tobacco and contended that the indus try already is taxed to the limit. It goes right to the seat of the trouble destroj s the germs that feed upon the re< blood corpuscles, banishes every poison, an< sends rich red blood coursing through you veins. When you take S. S. S, you are not ex pcrimcnting, because S. S. S. has been th standard blood remedy for 50 years, am there are thousands of people who owe thei robust health and renewed vitality to it remarkable curative powers. Just now you need a reliable tonic. Thi aches and pains, the weakness, the lack o vitality, the absence of all desire to exert yourself, are your system's cry for relief fron starved and poisoned blood. Answer thai cry with S. S. S., the great blood remedj that drives out contagion and brings baci the blood of health. Get S. S. S. from the druggist today. It will give relief. If med. ical advice is desired, write our Medical De partment, Room 27. Swift Specific Comaanv Atlantr. C— r '
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers