2 CENTRAL PA. NEWS ENOLA PUNS LIVELY FOURTH "Will Open Playgrounds and Hold Field Sports and Games on Independence Day Enola. Pa., June 13.—Independence Day will be celebrated here with a demonstration, the first of the kind ' ever attempted along the West Shore. Day will open the play grounds at 9 o'clock in the morning. .'An interesting program has been ar ranged, which will include basketball, •baseball and volleyball, tennis, bow ling and other interesting games. Re fresh ments will be served on the grounds. All members of the Play grounds League will be given tickets that will enable them to receive their share free and a small charge will be made to others to defray the expenses. Prizes will be awarded the winners in .the various contests. The committee 'ln charge of the Public Playgrounds will meet at the auditorium of the T. M. C. A. this evening, when final ar rangements will be made. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes j Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. LowßateExcursion PHILADELPHIA Via Philadelphia & Reading Railway, SUNDAY 1 Q JUNE SPECIAL FXC t HMO\ TRAIX LT. FROM V a re. A.M. HnrrUburs: I-.IW 6.2R Huutmelfttcw n svtatarii 1T.50 8.4,1 Her*liey M.4* Palmyra -..V1 Ann* file -..%<» 7.02! ( leona -.SO 7.05 I rim non . 2.M 7.111 IteiirilnK Terminal < Arrive) 10.05 IIETI RMVG Special Train will lea * e Philadelphia. Heading Ter minal, ut 7.00 p. m.. name (hue for al»o\e Ntatlnn*. Ticket* Kood only oa date of excar*lon on above Spe cial Train In each direction. Chil dren between 5 and 12 year* of age, S half fare. IIT SLIDE-BACK ' J§% UNION fkl SLITS Made by Manhat- I tan Shirt Co. ) ) $1 to $6 (( /]>\ 65?to$i?o0 V A Also B. V. D., J S I Superior and LpjoJ Rockinchair. Ask to see tliem. Forry's fIJL 3d St. Near Walnut Alspure Ice (All Pure) Is Cheap Other Things Are High Instead of going up until it becomes a lux ury ALSPURE ICE (All Pure Ice) stays at prices so low that everybody can use it freely and "never miss the money." The thing you cannot afford to do is to "skimp" your refrigerator. It's more economical to keep a large quantity on hand—than to have your refrigerator get warm over night and use up a considerable portion of your next day's ice to get the temperature lowered again. The use of ice is an economy, it enables you to keep meats, fruits, and vegetables that otherwise would "spoil." Plenty of ice will in the end reduce living ex penses. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster A Cowden St». Also Steelton, Pa. TUESDAY EVENING, 3 NEW COTTAGES FOR MASON HOME Pittsburgh Members of Frater nity Contribute $100,000; Cor nerstone Laying September The response of the members of the Masonic fraternity of this city to the appeal for an appropriate memorial building for Dauphin county for the home at Elizabethtown, has been fol lowed by an announcement that Pitts burgh Masons have contributed SIOO,- 000 for the erection of three cottages, j Ground w ill be broken in a few weeks 'and the exercises for the cornerstone laying will be held September 4. The cottages will be erected on the same place as the Daman Memorial building. The Philadelphia Freemason Hospital. Berks County Home and the Paul L. Lewis memorial cottages are Hearing completion and will be ready for dedication soon. Many improvements are being made on the farms at Elizabethtown. Sev eral hot houses are being erected, and other minor improvements are being made. The gardners are busy beauti fying the landscape. Central Penna. Notes Sfecial to the Teifgrjfh Marietta. George McLain. was struck in the left eye while playing ball with several companions yester. day. He was taken to a Lancaster hospital where the eye was extracted. Eliza hcthvillc. John Matter. East Slain street, was the third person to die in this place in five days. He was a candymaker and general storekeeper. He was ill two years. Marietta.—Mrs. Samuel Mason, 72 years old, died yesterday from the ef fects of gangrene after suffering in tensely for months. She is the last of the Gravbill family, being among the pioneer families of this section. Carlisle. Announcements of the twenty-third semi-annual trip of the Cumberland Valley Historical Society are out. The pilgrimage will be held on June 21 and will be from Carlisle to Antietam battlefield by way of Chambersburg and Hagerstown with visits to points of interest along the route. About 65 members are expect ed to make the journey. Waynesboro.—lnvitations have been received here for the marriage. Wed nesday evening. June 21. at the home of the bride, in Williamsport. Md., of Hobert Emmert Cullen. son of the late M. Emmert Cullen. member of the coal tirm of Victor Cushwa and Sons, and Miss Anna Cooke Darby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Upton Cooke Darby, of that place. The younsr couple will reside in Wilmington. Del. \\ aynesboro.—Borough Superinten dent J. H. Reber of the Waynesboro schools, and Mrs. Reber. w ill attend the sessions of the National Educa tional Asociation in New York city in July. I<e\vistown. Sarah E. Lenhart, aged 10 years was made blind in this place yesterday when she chopped into a piece of wood containing dynamite caps. COMMENCEMENT AT LYKENS Lykens. Pa.. June 13. On Sunday evening the baccalaureate address was delivered to the graduates of the Lykens High school in the Reformed Church by the pastor, the Rev. Sling hoff. He took as his text the admoni tion "Be Strong and of Good Cour age ' in the first chapter of Joshua. Special music was rendered. Including a solo. "The Pharisee and the Publican." Professor Botts; quartet. "Is He Yours?" Gittens. Hosier. Thomas and Boyer: "Guide Me. Oh Thou Great Je hovah," high school octet. The com mencement will be held as follows: Eighth grade. Tuesday evening in the United Brethren Church; class dav exercises. Wednesday evening, and the graduating exercises Thursday evening in the Opera House. The annual com mencement address to the class will be delivered by the Rev. Dr. M. H. Nichols, of St. Andrew's Methodist Episcopal Church. Philadelphia. ELECT HALIFAX TEACHERS Special to the Telegraph Halifax. Pa, June 13. The Halifax school board last evening elected teachers for the ensuing year, as fol lows: Principal, S. C. Beitzel; W. Le roy Brooke, Margaret R. Snyder. Jen nie Bair, Marie Smith, Carrie Shoop. ROBBERS AT HALIFAX Halifax. Pa.. June 13. Robbers broke into Joseph E. Eplus' barber shop and the factory of the Halifax Shoe company Monday night. Sturdy Muscles need the balance of keen brains and steady nerves. All three depend largely upon selecting food that contains the certain elements that each organ requires. Grape-Nuts —a delicious food made of whole wheat and malted barley, is a splen didly balanced ration, and includes the vital mineral salts —phosphate of potash, etc. —so frequently lack ing in the usual dietary. Grape-Nuts comes ready to eat with cream or good milk; has delightful flavor: is easily digested, and highly nourishing a wonderful builder of body, brain and nerve energy— "There's a Reason" Grocers everywhere sell Grape-Nuts 256 GRADUATED FROM PRINCETON Honorary Degrees Conferred on Gen. Wood, Samuel Rea and Many Others By Associated Press Princeton. N. J., June 13. Two hundred and fifty-aix men presented themselves to President John Grler Hlbben this morning and the class of 1916 was duly graduated In the one hundred and sixty-ninth annual com mencement of Princeton University. Ninety-two received the bachelor of arts degree. 108 the bachelor of let ters degree. 34 the bachelor of science degree. 17 made civil enginers and 4 electrical engineers. In addition 65 men were node masters of art by Dean Andrew Fleming West, who also conferred the honorary degrees. Major-General Wood was made a doctor of laws for his services In dan gerous positions. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge received the same honorary degree as "a states man of probity, dignity and power," for a generation in the halls of Con gress, and Judge Joseph Buffington, presiding judge in the United States Court of Appeals of the Third Circuit, Philadelphia, received the degree for his services, especially in the impor tant corporation casts that have come before htm. Samuel Rea. president of the Penn sylvania Railroad, was made doctor of science for his ser\ ices in extending and bettering the country's transpor tation facilities. Julian Aden Weir, president of the National Academy of Design, and Rolla Wells, governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and twice mayor of that city, were made honorary masters of art; John W. Baer. president of Occidental Col lege. California, was made of letters: Bishop Paul Matthews, of New Jersey .and John McDowell received the doctor of divinity degree, and Waldemar Lindgren. professor of geology in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, won the degree of doctor of science. The promise of a new chemical la boratory. filling a long-felt need of the university, was given in President Hib ben's announcement of gifts during the exercises. The name of the donor was not made public, but it is announced that he has already purchased a lot adjoining the campus for its early construction and thr.t plans were being drawn which would make it one of the most complete "in material and men" in the country. Cash gifts amounting to $294,000 were announced. Among the bequests announced was that of John A. McGlnley, of Reading. Pa., supplemented by the subscription of Reading alumni, making up the new "Reading scholarship." Harrisburg Man Gets Places on Committees !iAP. P. V K LI N"DLEV Harry E. Lindley, of Harrisburg, of Harrisburg council. United Commer cial Travelers of America, was ap pointed to membership on the ways and means and legislative committees of the organization for the coming year. Harrisburg council was very ac tive in the convention at Philadelphia last week, being represented by a party of 40 members and their wives who went down by special car. Mr. Lind sey, as a member of the ways and means committee, arranged the trip. STANDARD OIL KILLING TRADE Washington, D. C., June 13.—The Federal Trade Commission continued its inquiry into causes for the high price of gasoline. It sought to develop whether the Standard Oil Company, as | charged, had endangered the existence of independent oil jobbers in western states by fixing a low retail price for gasoline there and at the same time paying refiners such high prices for their product that independent jobbers could not do business profitably. HARRISBURG S&lfc&S TELEGRAPH SHALLY.M.C.A.BE SOCIAL CENTER? Social Workers* Club Puts Mat ter I'p to Directors Who Oppose It Shall the Young Mens Christian S Association be turned into a social center? Shall the old association idea be cast asida to make room for the | adoption of a community center in which the religious atmosphere would ! be subordinated to the social side? That was the problem which was | discussed by the Board of Directors of the V. M. C. A. at the regular monthly meeting last evening. A let ter from the Social Workers Club of (Dauphin county to the president of i the board was read, recommending, ] that the Y. M. C. A., together with the | Y. W. C. A. and a number of the bet i u-r equipped schools of the city in- I chiding Technical High School, be turned into social centers. The matter 1 was thoroughly discussed by the ! board and it was voted to refer the communication, which was signed by j John P. Guyer, to the trustees of the : Association for their investigation as ito the feasibility and legality of the proposition. The feeling of the board on the matter was in the main opposed lo any such action as suggested by the Social Workers' Club, but it was determined to give every attention to j tt>e proposition. In view of the fact that Edward i Roth, who. with his brother, Frank 1 Roth, have been conducting the gymnasium classes in the Y. M. C. A., will leave the city for Andover in the Kali, a committee was appointed to obtain the services of a paid in ; stridor who will assume his duties in : September. COURTHOUSE NOTES Appoint Viewers. Viewers were appointed to-day by the Dauphin j county court to assess benefits and | damages incident to the opening of Reel street from Mahantongo to Divi sion street with instructions to re port at September quarter sessions, i The viewers, named to-day at the sug gestion of City Solicitory D. S. Seitz.ar Earl E. GraelT, Henry Fahnestock and j Paul G. Smith. Wants SlttO Retained. Suit in equity was begun to-day by Margiana : Hauck against the Farmers' bank of Middletown to restrain Adam Hauck. :her husband, from attempting to draw upon his bank account of SIOO until he ! makes some effort to support her. She has sued the husband for desertion. Civic Club Chartered. The char- j iter for the Civic Club of Steelton, peti- j j tioned for several months ago, was j | granted to-day by Additional Law {Judge McCarrell. Won't lie view. Audit. —ln an opinion | i handed down yesterday Additional Law ! Judge S. J. M. McCarrell declined to re- | open and review the report of Eu- ' gene Snyder, this city, and Henry S. j Romanian, Philadelphia, audiors who' examined the accounts of Percy M. j Chandler, receiver for the Tradesmen's ; j Trust Company. Philadelphia. Trustees I of a fund which had been included in the receiver's examination objected to j the portion of the report relating to' this fund and petitioned for a reopen ing of the matter. Judge McCarrell pointed out that the report had al ready been accepted and that the court below had been sustained by the Su preme Court. Xante IlesiNtrnrs Tomorrow. —All the precinct election registrars in the city ! will be appoinetd o-morrow by the county commissioners following a final examination of applicants as to read- [ ing and writing qualifications, etc. ; Eighteen were examined yesterday. i Special Auditor I'aid. —Attorney Wll- j liam B. Boyd, special auditor who ex amined and reported upon the accounts of the prothonotarv, recorder and regis- ; ■ trar of wills, yesterday was paid *IOO lon accounts by the county commis- ! sioners. HUGHES ATTITUDE ONE OF 'AMERICANISM' [Continued From First Page] before making his speech accepting tne nomination. To Stay in New York This Week Republican leaders and personal and j political friends continued to call upon Mr. Hughes at his temporary head quarters to congratulate him on his nomination and to confer upon ar- I rangements for the campaign. One of I | the men expected lo call to-day was ; ex-lTnited States Senator W. Murray i Crane, of Dalton. Mass., member of ; the subcommittee to arrange a date and place for the official notification |of Mr. Hughes of his nomination. It was reported that Mr. Crane also j would discuss with Mr. Hughes the selection of a chairman of the Repub- i lican national committee. Mr. Hughes expects to remain here until Monday, when he will go to' Providence. It. 1., lo attend the com mencement exercises of Brown Uni- I versity, from which lie was graduated. Quarters in Chicago National Republican headquarters i will he established in New York, with ! a second office in Chicago, in the ! opinion of Herbert Parsons, member of the Republican national committee ; from this state. One of the first developments of the i day at Mr. Hughes' quarters was an i announcement by Lafayette B. Glen- i son. secretary of the Republican na- j tional committee, which indicated that i , it will be several da\s yet before any decision is reached on the question of the man who is to succeed Charles D. Hilles as chairman of the Repub lican national committee. Mr. Gleason said that a subcommittee of the na tional committee would "in a few days" call on the nominee to discuss the matter, Several names were undei 1 consideration, but one man's guess was ' as good as another, he said, as to who would be selected. I'se Movies in Campaign Another development was an an nouncement from the candidate's headnuarters that moving pictures would be employed to aid his cam paign. It is planned to throw on the screen throughout the country pic tures of Mr. Hughes "in order that the people may again become familiar with Charles E. Hughes, because he 1 has for so long a time been virtually out of public life." The screens will : also display important passages from Mr. Hughes' telegram to the national convention accepting the nomination. Bryan Has Plan to Induce Progressives to Support the Democratic Ticket St. Louis. June 13. William J> Bryan, newspaper reporter from Ne braska, arrived here to-day to "cover" the Democratic national convention. He asserted most emphatically that his repertorial role will be his first interest. But the former Secretary of State, 'chief builder of many Democratic platforms, including the one on which the party now stands, and author of Numerous peace treaties has a new ' treaty to propose to other Democratic leaders —a pact between the Demo crats and Progressives to induce most ;of the Bull Moose to support the | Democratic ticket next Fail. = | 11 ij |' I | . For more than a gen- | jjlj H H eration people everywhere J {d! Hjj have found delight in m m 1 Coca-Cola. j i|i ||l Times change, styles j [)' m H change, ideas change, but the fun- g§ SSI M damentally good things of this H Sj | 0i world change neither in themselves § Nsj m M \\\\ nor * n popular esteem. g M 31 | \\A\ For 30 years Coca-Cola §i, jm H WW as i ncrease d popu- HjS m H WW larity. That's because it is fun- M m H I W W damentally delicious, refreshing MM, ©j H WW and wholesome. || — == |fjj/ ffiSji/ Demand the genuine by H K j|j H encourage substitution. Mj| Three Harrisburgers Get C. E. Degrees at Lafayette Easton. Pa., June 13.—Three young men from Harrisburg will be grad uated from Lafayette College to-mor row. The list includes Francis A. March, Jr., son of Thomas S. March; Gerald A. Morgan, son of C. H. Mor gan. 1728 State street, and Leon N. Morgan, son of F. B. Morgan, 1726 State street. All three of these young men received the degree of civil engi neer. All three of them have been active in the undergraduate life at the college and have siood well in their classes. The class which graduated from Lafayette to-day was the largest in the history of the college; it num bered 117. BRASS PAY CHECK SAVES HIS LIFE [Continued From First Page] time chum, by accurately sailing a castiron stovelid at her opponent. Leonard Holland tried to shoot Le- Zu Zuto ' .the Grocerman and / fr hand him a nickel. He'll come// I back with the snappiest sinser^-f— --/ snaps you ever put inyour^— L=sesZ~~~2>i mmsi biscuit • COMPANY JUNE 13 1916. Roy Brooks, a quarrelsome fellow-1 workman, and officers said Leonard | would have succeeded had Brooks not j carried his brass pay check in his vest pocket. The bullet struck the bit of, brass, curled the metal into the shape j of a thimble, and painfully, though | not seriously, dented Brooks' flesh. | Edward Spittle had a painful hour or so while undergoing trial for bur glarizing the Fountain Springs Hotel, Williamstown. W. T. Hall, the pro prietor. brought the charge. Before the defense was ready to begin, how ever, the State admitted that it hadn't enough evidence to convict and Spittle was released. One Dauphin county criminal jury didn't believe William Lewis can catch sl3 worth of fish any night, he goes fishing. Lewis, in deprecating the charge against him of stealing metal from the railroad company, said he didn't need to steal but that he could make at least sl3 a night catching fish. He was convicted and got $5 fine and four months in jail. "Stab you; Why honey, how CAN yo say dat?" Rene Hammond ejacu lated when Ordella Grovea charged j him with stabbing her in the side. I Rene, charged with aggravated assault and battery, declared he didn't stab her at all; that he liked her and al ways had liked her. They had been drinking, he said—the two finished the "better part" of a keg of beer, and he guessed he might have cut her by accident as he whittled himself a chew of tobacco. The jury didn't be lieve that tale either and convicted him: For at least seven months, Mrs. David Collins is sure of domestic tranquility. Her husband pleaded guilty to surety of the peace on charges brought by the wife and Judge Kunkel sentenced David to spend a month in jail and to give good bond to behave himself for at least six months when he gets out. Other oases disposed of included: Mary Soper, charged with stealing shoes from department stores, con victed, sentence deferred until Friday; Robert Steel, felonious assault and battery, year to year and a half in the penitentiary; Edward Thomas, Harry Alleman and Abraham Scott, larceny and attempted larceny, sis months.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers