2 CENTRAL PA. NEWS FIGHTING WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC Prominent Men and Women Appointed on State Advisory Board of Purity Federation Carlisle. Pa.. Sept. 11.—Leray Bow ers Harnish. ot' Carlisle, a former newspaper man. now superintendent for Pennsylvania of the World's Pur ity Federation and in charge of the State of Maryland temporarily, to-day. in announcing the names of the Fed eration's State Advisory Board, said that his organization intended to pur sue an aggressive campaign in the direction of destroying the White Slave Traffic. The newly-appointed mem bers of the State Advisory Board are: The Rev. Floyd W. Tomkins. Rabbi Henry Eerkowitz and Mrs. Edwin C. Grice. Philadelphia: Congressman A. S. Kreider, Annville: Frederick A. Rhodes. >l. D., Mrs. L. Clyde Bixier. Suzanne S. Beatty, Pittsburgh: Presi dent Edwin K. Sparks. State College; the Rev. J. S. Fulton. P D.. Johns town: Prof. H. 11. Baish. Altoona: the Rev. George M. Diffenderfer, and Mrs. Edward W. Biddle, Carlisle. SrXTAY SCHOOLS OPEX Marysville. Fa.. Sept. 11. —For the first time since the issuance of Dr. Samuel Dixon's ban on all schools to prevent the spread of infantile paraly sis all Sabbath schools of town held sessions yesterday, although children tinder sixteen years were not admitted. The Rev. J. F. Wiggins, pastor of the Church of God. has returned home from a vacation at his home in New Holland. Yesterday services were held both morning and evening. ZAIMIS CONFERS WITH KIXG London. Sept. 11.— Reuter's Athens dispatch says that Premier Zaimis had another lengthy conference with King Constantino on Sunday after noon after which the cabinet met. In regard to the shots fired in the neigh borhood of the French legation, the dispatch says that the allies' demands have apparently been fully accepted although nothing has been otficiallv announced. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists. NEW STORE, 18 N. FOURTH ST.-^T Special Announcement We take pleasure in announcing the opening - of our new location at 18 Xorth Fourth street. "We formerly operated the jewelry department of a prominent Har risburg department store, and in order to give you better facilities and better opportunities to make your selections, we decided to open a store of our own, and promise to give you better values than ever. | In the opening of our new store we have had several things in view, particularly to give you the best service, and the biggest values to be had in Harrisburg, and we know if you will become curious and investigate you will find the above true. We ask our patrons of the past to continue with us as heretofore. We also ask the public of Harris burg and vicinity to call and inspect our new store, as well as our rich stocks of Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry. Taking this opportunity to thank you for your kind patronage in the past and hope to have the pleasure to greet you at our new location. We are Yours to serve you best, The Kohner Co. 18 North Fourth Street !' JUNIATA COUNTY "PAT "O Septembsr 12 to 15 SPECIAL TRAINS PORT ROYAL Thursday, September 14 j Leave Harrisburg Thursday. September 14, at 7.45 A. M., Xewport 8.45 j A. M., MUlerstown 8.54 A. M. Thompsontown 9.04 A. M. Returning, i leave Port Royal 5.55 P. M. for Harrisburg and intermediate stations. REDUCED FARE EXCURSION TICKETS | sold to Port Royal September 12 to 15, good on date of issue only from j Harrisburg. Altoona, Sunbury, Lewistown and Milroy and intermediate ! stations except those from which regular round-trip is 50 cent 3 or less. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD MONDAY EVENING, 'Find Missing Man's Body Hanging to Tree in Woods Reading. Pa.. Sept. 11. The body of Charles F. Peters. 56. cigarmaker. was found hanging to a tree in the woods northeast of Hampden Heights. Reading, by flower hunters. He had : been In ill health and is believed to i have committed suicide when he disap pea red two wefks sgo. His union card in a handkerchief under the tree brought about identification. A widow j survives. FARMER SEWS VP EYES OP HOG THAT ATE CHICKENS Sfcciat to the Telegraph Lambertvllle. Ic. J., Sept. 11.—Be ' cause his family ror generations had followed the practice. Joseph Leigh, a i Pleasant Yalley farmer, told Magis- I trate C. C. Johns he could see no wrong in sewing up the eyes of the i hogs on his farm to prevent them from eating his chickens. ; According to the story the police say ' Leish told in court, the pigs on his j farm have a special liking for young i chickens and had learned to catch and devour the feathered stock. He said his father had taught him the . method of stitching tip the eyelids of I the pigs to prevent them from seeing the chickens. As they did less wan -1 dering in their blindness, the hogs also seemed to fatten faster. 10-Minute Service to Colonial Club Takes Effect Today The Harrisburg Railways Company I announces an improvement in the : schedule of cars running to the Colo nial Country Club, to take effect to : day. The regular ten-minute service |to Progress will continue and forty- I minute service to Linglestown will not | be changed, but the installation of the 1 switch at the Country Club makes it j possible to give speedier service to that • place. Cars will, under the new arrange ment, leave the Square on the hour, ten minutes after, half past, twenty minutes befoer and ten minutes before the hour. The run to the club takes twenty-five minutes. The same serv ice applies to Paxtonia. On the re turn trip the service will be similar, cars leaving the cdlubhouse at a quar ter before the hour, five minutes be t fore the hour, five minutes past the ! hour, twenty-five minutes past, twen ■ ty-five minutes before the hour, and ! every other hour a car from Lingles j town to Harrisburg passing the club 'at a quarter past the hour. The ten minutes service ceases at 9:15 and the regular schedule for the rest of the j evening will continue in effect, the last { car leaving at a few minutes past mid j night. REVOKES HOTEL TRANSFER ORDER Pontius House, Wiconisco, to Remain in Present Owner's Possession An or ier of court yJjJJUi made September 7 '° permit John H —transfer Hotel Pontius.Wico- S RVISmBK Keiser was revoked '•i'i BKISSHIw to-day by President Ay Judge Kunkel at L tSlr ' the request of Reiser's attorney, L. C. Carl, because Keiser failed to com ply with the terms of the transfer agreement. The attorney told the court that Keiser refused to pay all the costs of the proceeding or to remit about half of the year's license fee which Pontius had already paid. Adopt Baby.—Pernilssoin was given Charles F. and Julianna Fisher to adopt 4-year-old motherless Mary Eliz abeth. daughter of W. K. Boring. Appoints Guardian. The Central Trust Company was to-day appointed guardian for Ray Herbert, Helen Ger trude and Eugene Harold Crane, each of whom Inherit $135 front their father's estate. Inspect Fiddlers Elbow Bridge. Following this morning's meeting the County Commissioners to-day inspect ed the bridge across Swatara creek at Fiddlers Elbow, east of Hummelstown, with a view to making immediate re pairs. McCarrell On Bench. Additional Law Judge S. J. M. McCarrell sat with President Judge George Kunkel on the Dauphin county bench to-day. the first session of the post-vacation court. Judge McCarrell has only recently re turned from Eaglesmere. Transfer "Frist Call"—Transfer from D. C. Mingle to E. W. Jacobs of the Paxton Hotel, the "first and last call" to the thirsty of Allison Hill, was per mitted to-day by the Dauphin county court. Blubber, Penguin, Limpets and Seaweeds as Diet Kept Shackleton Crew Alive London. Sept. 11.—Life on Elephant Island in the Antarctic, as it was ex perienced by the marooned men of Lieu tenant Sir Ernest Shackleton' South i Polar expedition, who recently were 1 rescued and taken to Chile, is described I i in a message received from Punta Are nas, and published in the Daily Chroni- I cle. "The day began." says the description, "with breakfast, which consisted mere ly of penguin, fried in blubber, with a drink of water. The morning's duties consisted in clearing away snow-drifts and catching penguin. Lunch was serv ed at 1 o'clock, consisting of a biscuit with raw blubber. The afternoon was occupied with regular exercise over a track 100 yards in lengths. "At 5 o'clock, when darkness set, came dinner, consisting of penguin I breast and beef tea. Lacking tobacco i the men smoked grass from the padding in their boots, while the pipes were j oarved from birds' bones and wood. The members of the party took turns in [reading aloud from the only available I '>ooks, the Bible. and encyclopedia. • Browning. Bacon's Essays and Cat i Ivle's French Revolution. Saturday evening was always marked by a con ! eert. the feature of which was banjo i playing. A banjo was the only musicai I instrument in camp. 1 "On one occasion there was a wel come addition to the diet, when several undigested fish were found in the stom i ach of a seal and greatlv enjoved. (These were the only fish obtained dur ! ing our stay. Tn August there was a ' change in the diet when limpets were j gathered and seaweed was available as a vegetable. We were in the midst ot 1 one of these limpet and setweed lunches when the rescue boat was sighted. "'When was the war over?" was the Srst question we asked." DAVID B. MARK Master Bricklayer at Pipe Works Dies From Typhoid j David B. Mark, a master bricklayer I at the pipe and pipe bending works, i and a prominent member of the State Street United Brethren Church, died : from typhoid fever yesterday morning at his home, 6S North Seventeenth st reet. Mr. Mark had a wide circle of 1 friends in Lebanon, where he formerly lived, and cn Allison Hill. He was a i member of Harrisburg Lodge of : Moose, the Odd Fellows and a Leb- I anon lodge of the Patriotic Sons of America. No. 254. Surviving are Mrs. Mark and her I son. Harry 8., a student of medicine | at Hahnemann Medical College, Phlla , delphla, now at home: his father, Henry; two brothers and two sisters, 1 of Lebanon. Funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home and at 2.30 o'clock in the State Street United Brethren Church. Burial will be made in the East Har risburg Cemetery. The Rev. E. A. G. Bossier will officiate. WILLIAM BOTTGEXBACH Veteran With Long; Record of Service Dies William Bottgenbach. of German birth, died after a brief illness at his home, 1720 Susquenanna street this morning. He is survived by three sons, Harry, William D., and John S.; three daughters. Mrs. Emma Gulnrlne, Mrs. Ella Chandlee, Mrs. Catherine 1 Hankins, and six grandchildren. Mr. Bottgenbach came to New York at an early age and entered the upholstering business. In 1861 he en listed in the Seventh, New York volun teers, Company C. later enlisting in ! the navy and again returned to the army enlisting in Company X, Eleventh Xew York Cavalry. He was captured by the Confederates and held a prisoner at Libby Prison until the close of the war. After his release he j entered Company B, First Regiment, ' U. S. Cavalry and in 1871 he enlisted lin Sherman troop, U. S. Cavalry. He later came to Carlisle where he was married to Miss Sarah E. Leaney. Mr. i Bottgenbach was engaged in the up holstering business until the death of his wife in 1910, when he came to Har risburg and resided at 1720 Susque hanna street, until his death. Fu | " ' j | I' I l^j A CIRCLE of ex- I ceptional service travels wltk evertj Seripps^Booflx : car Universal Motor Car Co. 1745 N. Sixth St. HAHRISBURG tfEßft) TELEGRAPH •^: r Tojnsure Victor quality ,^lwjr !.V.Vv\" every Victrola nd every Victor MM|S lipi •*- ,^—w • NJ ovt jjj in this new Vi jljj The whole world knows that when Kreisler sets his fingers to the bow of his violin he summons music of the rarest beauty. And every Victor Record he makes is a page upon which is engraved the brilliance, the magnetism, the dignity of his art. gjjpli Haunted by the beauty of a forgotten theme of Beethoven's, tlllll Kreisler has woven the melody into a glorious composition of his own, and he plays it with alluring charm as his latest con i '"if tribution to the Victor library of great music. All Kreisler's poetry of feeling, his mastery of instrument, are here! And every lover of the violin, every lover of lyric melody in its high estate, will want this Victor Record. ISS^B Rondino (On a theme by Beethoven) Fritz Kreisler r~ Victor Red Seal Record 64600. Ten-inch, sl. ;?|p==^g3 Kreisler s art requires the finest of violins—and the Victrola is as much his instrument as the violin. He makes records !—■— j| only for the Victrola because it expresses his art with unerring truth. And this is the reason why practically all the world's .gplg| greatest artists are Victor artists. i|^H Go to your nearest Victor dealer today and have him play for you the new Kreisler ;E-' - record or any other Victor music you wish to hear. He will also gladly demonstrate to you IgU- —^ the various styles of the Victor and Victrola—slo to S4OO. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. Important warning. Victor Records can be safely and satisfactorily played only with §*l=^l3 Victor Pfetdle* or Tunw-tone Stylua on Victors or Victrola*. Victor Record# cannot be I Micly played on machines with jeweled or other reproducing points. N.w Victor Records doowstrmUd at sJI dUalccs thm Mlh U IM t —ah neral services will be held at his home Wednesday morning at 9:30' o'clock. The body will be taken to j Carlisle for burial. Mr. Bottenbach was a member of Post 201 G. A. R. at Carlisle, a member of the St. John's Episcopal church at Carlisle and while in this city attended the St. Paul's Episcopal church. Harrisburg Rotary Club Hears About Plattsburg Benefits "Plattsburg" was the subject of an interesting talK by E. J. Stackpol?, Jr., before the Harrisburg Rjlary Club to day at its luncheon at the Columbus hotel. Mr. StacKpole has spent the past two summers at Plattsburg training camp and is enthusiastic in his belief in it 3 practical benefits in a physical anc mental way us well as its value as an arm of the great pre paredness program of the nation. "Men of every walk of life are thrown together, with no favoritism tor anybody and 1 cannot think of any influence more conducive to true democracy than the associations at Plattsburg. Those who attend learn how to be good privates in the ranks and then how to be officers. Men go to camp pale and run down and they come back physically rit and ready for a winter of hard work." Mr. Stackpole noted that in three years the attendance from Harrisburg at Plattsburg had increased from nothing to 25 and made a plea for more recruits next season. COt'RT DISPOSED OF SCORE OF PLEAS OF GUILTY TO-DAY Pleas of guilty were heard to-day by the Dauphin County Court and the following sentences were imposed: Ray L. Kistler, theft of 80 pounds of lead, 4 months in jail and $5 fine; Garfield Stump, assault and battery, S5 fine and six months; Aaron Mar tin, ex-city dogcatcher, assault and battery, 810 fine anc costs; Taylor Wallace, stealing bicycle, $o fine and four months. In addition to these sentences the following nonsupport cases were dis posed of: John J. Green, $7 weekly for wife's support; Oscar Moeslein, $3 weekly; Charles F. SUner and Joseph Aogelo agreed to jp*y, their wives respectively $3 per week and S2O per month. Two Boys Entked From Home Found in Box Car George Rogers, aged 16, and 'Wil liam Shramp, 15 years, said to have been enticed from their homes at Coatesville by a colored man and woman, were found late last night in a box car at Enola. A third boy, whose name is said to be William I Cooper, escaped with the colored man. The boys were brought (o Harrisburg by Special Officer Deckard, of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and turned 1 over to the Police Department. Wilson's Sister Spends Comfortable Night; He Is Speeding to Bedside By Associated Press Xew London, Conn., Sept. 11.—Mrs. Annie E. Howe, President Wilson's sis ! ter, who was critically ill of peritonitis and complications here, passed a com fortable nirht, but is growing weaker, ' according to a statement Issued to-day : by Dr. H. M. Lee. the attending phy sician. Dr. Lee spent most of the night at Mrs. Howe's bedside. By Associated Press Long Branch, N. J., Sept. 11.—Can celing all engagements, President Wil son left here early to-day to go to the bedside of his sister. Mrs. A. E. Howe, who is critically 111 at her home in New London, Conn. The President motored to New York and will finish the trip by train. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years SEPTEMBER 11, 1916. * i Visit BANFF inike Canadian Pacific Rockies! J Magnificent at this time of the year t ■ Mountain climbing, riding, coachln;, >olf, sulphur pool., and social Ufa ■ flg in a sumptuous hotel of Canadian Pacific standard ■ M , .Qo via Great Lake* Steamships Bg £ A pleasant variation from the all rail route, only $9 above all fail round trip fare ■ I ' or ,hc shorter trip visit Montreal and Quebec with the IS unsurpassed hotels, Vigcr and Chateau Frontcnac. 5 raß f • n -n. ~^f r detailed information address Bf H f"• R. PERRY t Gen 1 Aft., Pass. Dept.. CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Hi gg 1231 BROADWAY/NEW YORK CITY B t I ! j|p||||i Overt fo Try it for Soodness Call us for Convenience wlfesw 5 fENBROOK BAKERY. ***** -n/SW'tSiJn Use Telegraph Want Ads Use Telegraph Want Ads